00:00Somehow, Hardiman discovered Munson's dementia at that meeting.
00:03Well, he must have.
00:05It was a pretty late meeting.
00:07In my father's last years, he struggled to stay sharp.
00:12But after an hour, especially in the afternoon, his basic recall always failed.
00:17He could tell every detail of what happened in his childhood, but he would forget what he had for breakfast.
00:22I remember the shame on his face when he couldn't find an answer.
00:26It was heartbreaking.
00:28So Munson tripped up and Hardiman saw it.
00:32Goodall saw it.
00:34My guess? That's why Goodall was in the meeting to begin with.
00:39He spends a lot of time with Munson. He had to know about Munson's decline.
00:43He was guarding the secret.
00:45Because if the board found out about Munson's dementia...
00:47Forget about votes. That would force his dismissal.
00:51So, Hardiman was going to expose Munson's condition, have him fired.
00:56That still only gets you halfway to motive.
00:58Why would Goodall kill to keep Munson as CEO?
01:02You said he was rich, had job options.
01:05I know. I've been digging into Goodall's life. He was the furthest thing from desperate.
01:09He donated lots of money, to tens of thousands, to various schools, hospitals.
01:14Whatever motivated him, his wife seemed to know.
01:16She vouched for his alibi, right?
01:18He lied to police about what time he got home.
01:20Yeah, there's no way she's going to talk to us.
01:22When Goodall's wife lied, she weighed privilege.
01:26Give it a shot. Track her down.
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