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00:00Music
00:30What makes Valparaíso unique is that it's a small town in the middle of a cornfield.
00:40But where can we catch a train and get to Chicago in 34 minutes?
00:46We can also drive north for 8 minutes and reach Indiana Dunes National Park on the beach.
00:53The city center is great, the people are friendly, it's a good place to raise a family.
00:59Valparaíso gives us all the positive aspects of a small town: the feeling of safety, the feeling of trust.
01:05But something happened that broke that trust, a story that, if I had read in a newspaper article and seen that it was here, I wouldn't have believed to be true.
01:15Anyone who is capable of killing another human being is a diabolical person.
01:20Oh my God, what's happening? It was a horrible feeling knowing that someone was missing.
01:24All of that indicated that this was no ordinary robbery.
01:29That was the first time I truly understood what bad people were like.
01:35I remember my husband always carrying a loaded gun.
01:39I lived in constant fear that someone might come back to get me and end up killing me.
01:44Quiet Town, Cruel Crime
02:08AND...
02:19This was my mother's dream house.
02:24I was sitting on the porch, the front porch.
02:28July 21, 1999.
02:31I was 12 years old.
02:33It was a peaceful and pleasant day.
02:35Near dusk, as the sun was setting, a thunderstorm began, and my family and I would always sit on the porch and watch the storm approaching.
02:48So, that's how we spent the evening after dinner.
02:53Suddenly, around nine or nine-thirty at night, Robert, our neighbor, arrived home.
03:01He stopped in front of the garage.
03:06Then, a few minutes later, he came out of the house, walked through our garden, and asked if we had seen his wife, Lori.
03:15My dad and Robert were standing right here, like, way over there, so that my mom and I couldn't hear what they were talking about.
03:27You could see from his expression that he was worried about something.
03:31So, my father and Robert thought it best to contact the police.
03:37Emergency, how can I help you?
03:43It sounds like my house has been broken into.
03:46My wife is not at home.
03:48I think I need the sheriff to come here now.
03:51I understand. Were you robbed?
03:53I believe so.
03:55I am not sure.
03:56I found some bloodstains.
03:59There's a piece of paper with something written on it.
04:02My wife is not at home.
04:04And when I arrived, the garage door was open.
04:07Something is wrong.
04:08Something happened. I understand.
04:16I was the police inspector at the Porter County Sheriff's Office at the time.
04:20I was the youngest agent in the agency.
04:23I participated in the investigations for about three or four years.
04:26We are on our way to the location.
04:28The county police station received a call about a possible robbery followed by a kidnapping at the Kirkley residence.
04:35The victim's name was Lorraine Kirkley, but she is known as Lori.
04:39I understand, central.
04:40The police found Robert Kirkley standing in front of the house.
04:44He explained that he had just returned to his job in South Bend, Indiana.
04:49Starting the investigation.
04:51That's when Todd Schellenbarger arrived at the scene.
04:54I was an assistant district attorney in Porter County, Indiana, where the crime occurred.
05:01From that day forward, I worked intensely on that case every single day.
05:09That garage door was open when Robert Kirkley arrived home.
05:14Lori's vehicle, a green SUV, wasn't here.
05:18So, nobody was home and the garage was open.
05:21Something was wrong.
05:22Roberto became worried just seeing that before even leaving in the car.
05:29When he entered the house, one of the first things Mr. Kirkley saw
05:34It was a piece of cardboard glued onto the desk in the living room of the residence.
05:41which said, a Magnum 44 is pointed at your head, you witches.
05:48That's enough for anyone to conclude that something is very wrong.
05:53The house had been ransacked, and there were signs of a struggle in the kitchen.
05:58There were red drops on the counter that looked like blood.
06:02And there was a butter knife inside the sink with a little blood on it.
06:08Robert Kirkley found a brown envelope lying on the floor near the front door.
06:12And inside the envelope there was... there was a... letter.
06:20She said, "Larry, they're going to show you the house at three in the afternoon."
06:24I hope everything happens quickly.
06:26You need to get in and out quickly.
06:28The husband works late.
06:30I don't know what time my wife will be home, so hurry.
06:33Take at least one computer, stereo system, VCR, telescope, bicycles, jewelry.
06:38and all the money you have in the house.
06:40And in parentheses it said, "The wife is beautiful."
06:43See if you have lingerie.
06:45Burn this letter when you are finished.
06:47Don't talk about this with me on the phone, only in person.
06:51Sorry for the spaces after the letter K, but I had to use an old computer, not my own.
06:56Good luck, Norm Jacobs.
06:57Robert said he didn't know anyone named Norm Jacobs.
07:03He and Lori had put the house up for sale because they wanted to move to South Bend, where Robert was working.
07:11There was a box from the real estate agency by the front door, and inside was a copy of the key so that the agent could access the house.
07:17Upstairs, the master bedroom had been ransacked.
07:24Lori's underwear was scattered on the floor, the bedspreads were rumpled, and the jewelry box had been rummaged through.
07:32But until then, he couldn't say if anything was missing from the jewelry box.
07:35Robert discovered that his computer had disappeared from his home office.
07:41And then he also discovered that the telescope had disappeared and that there were clippings from pornographic magazines pasted on the wall of one of the rooms in the residence.
07:52Who would do such a thing?
07:55This is not normal.
07:57In my career, I have never seen a robbery where something like this has been done.
08:03All the police officers working on the case had to initially focus on Lori Kinkley as she was.
08:09Could she have escaped?
08:12It is very rare for a crime of this type to be committed by a stranger to the victim.
08:17This typically happens in less than 1% of cases.
08:20Typically in crimes like this, the victim maintained frequent contact with their home office.
08:29We started by investigating the husband.
08:31Every time a wife disappears, we have to determine if the couple was experiencing any relationship problems.
08:40And that's what we did initially.
08:50That day, I saw Lori arriving home from work, as usual.
08:56I remember it very well.
08:58And I also remember seeing her go into the garage.
09:02And a few minutes after seeing her arrive, I remember seeing Lori in the driver's seat, pulling the car out of the garage.
09:11I don't remember seeing anyone inside the car with her.
09:18The police asked me if I had seen anything strange.
09:22And I told them that the day before, my best friend and I went out and it had just stopped raining.
09:29Then I saw a man riding a bicycle.
09:34He passed right in front of us and he was wet.
09:40More or less here.
09:42He came from Lori's garage and...
09:46He went straight ahead, then turned around.
09:48He would go back and forth, circling the block.
09:51I think he was driving around in circles for about an hour.
09:55He didn't stop, he didn't smile, he didn't wave.
09:59When he passed by, I'd say he was about three meters away from us.
10:04The mystery deepened.
10:14Investigators discovered that another robbery had occurred in the city in February 1999.
10:20And it wasn't an ordinary factory robbery.
10:23It was very, very strange.
10:25Someone broke into the Kirkley's house and left things behind.
10:30He left behind a collage of photos, which were of a woman who was not fully clothed.
10:35And some items were taken, but not valuable items, which are the kind of things thieves typically take from a house.
10:41Only random items.
10:43Clothes, the underwear drawers were ransacked.
10:47So, nothing made sense.
10:49When a thief enters someone's house to leave things behind.
10:58When we arrived, Robert seemed to have no idea what had happened to his wife.
11:04But at that time, we couldn't rule out his involvement in his wife's disappearance.
11:11We are looking for more evidence.
11:14For example, who attacks someone with a butter knife?
11:17You know, by the butter knife, stained with blood, and the note conveniently left on the front door.
11:24To make it look like it was a meticulously planned robbery.
11:30That's not how it happens.
11:32They don't break into houses for women's underwear.
11:36They don't bring a TV and a VCR.
11:39It seemed like something terrible had happened to Lori.
11:43That's not how it happens.
12:13I've spent my whole life here in Valparaíso.
12:23During my adolescence, I lived in a small neighborhood around here.
12:30There should have been about 100 houses.
12:35This small neighborhood was surrounded by a large cornfield.
12:39My best friend had a lake.
12:41So, we all went there to swim, hunt tadpoles, and things like that.
12:53When we were kids, we were allowed to go anywhere we wanted.
12:57We were going by bicycle.
12:59If the weather had been nice, we would definitely have been out on the street.
13:02I've always loved living here.
13:06It was a peaceful place.
13:07It was good.
13:08We didn't expect anything bad to happen.
13:11Just one scoop of ice cream?
13:13Two balls?
13:14Casquinha.
13:15I remember hearing rumors.
13:18People were saying that Robert might be the mastermind behind Lori's disappearance.
13:25I remember wanting to defend Robert.
13:32Very good.
13:33At no point did I think that Robert could have hurt Lori.
13:43Okay, go in, go ahead.
13:45Something like this had never happened before in Valparaíso, Indiana.
13:50Then, rumors began to circulate.
13:53Many residents made all sorts of assumptions that she had run away from the man or something like that.
14:00It was very painful to hear all that.
14:04I used to tell people, you're all crazy.
14:06They don't know what they're talking about.
14:08They don't know Lori.
14:09So, stop it.
14:10These rumors are just rumors, it's not true.
14:14I didn't know what had happened.
14:15But I knew it didn't happen.
14:18Because I knew Lori.
14:22Lori, and her husband Robert, were the ones we called Bob.
14:26They were our neighbors.
14:27They loved each other very much.
14:29And never, not for a second, did I doubt that they loved each other.
14:34Bob got a promotion at work and they were getting ready to move to South Bend.
14:39They were excited about this change.
14:42It would be a new chapter in their lives.
14:44They wanted to start a family.
14:46We were happy because we knew Lori would be an excellent mother.
15:00Everyone who read the newspapers understood that something serious had happened.
15:06And the odds were very bad.
15:09Looking back, the crime scene was insane.
15:16And I was surprised while covering the case at how strange that story was.
15:22Lori was an avid cyclist.
15:25She belonged to a cycling club called Crank Club.
15:28In fact, she was the president of the club.
15:30The police discovered that a neighbor of Lori's saw a cyclist near her house.
15:38And that he seemed suspicious.
15:40The police received this information and began investigating.
15:45When we work on a case like this, we always investigate close relatives of the victim, close friends.
15:54We were looking for significant clues.
15:57We contacted the club's members.
15:59And we asked if there were any male partners with whom she might have had problems.
16:05Or if the partners had problems with each other.
16:08We were told about Samuel Montgomery.
16:14We were told that he was going through a very turbulent divorce.
16:19That his ex-wife and her new boyfriend were also members of the Crank Club.
16:24And Samuel thought that the club members were taking sides in his personal problem.
16:33He had many fits of rage back then.
16:36Until he reached his peak.
16:40At one point, he was accused of trying to run over his ex-wife's boyfriend while he was riding a bicycle.
16:50And Lori, as president of the club, had to file a formal complaint with the club against Samuel.
16:57And what happened that day?
16:59Could the unknown man riding his bicycle through the neighborhood have been Samuel?
17:06We questioned Samuel about the incidents.
17:19He admitted that during the divorce proceedings he acted like an idiot.
17:25And he admitted what happened that led Lori to write the report.
17:30And he indicated that he had no animosity towards Lori.
17:33She did what had to be done.
17:35He also provided us with an alibi.
17:38A witness who confirmed her whereabouts during the period of Lori's disappearance.
17:43So, at that point, he was no longer a likely suspect.
17:47During questioning, Samuel told us there was another member named William Johnson, whom we should probably investigate.
17:57He told us that he heard Johnson making a very strange comment to one of the members of the cycling club.
18:04And when questioning other club members, we received the same information that, at one point, William approached one of the other women in the club and asked if she wanted to have relations with him.
18:18Then he approached a second woman at the club and asked how her groin felt after a bike ride.
18:24Due to these statements and his overall behavior, he was expelled from the club.
18:31This immediately piqued our interest, as this man made several sexual advances towards the women in the cycling club.
18:48We started receiving complaints from various parts of the city.
18:53There was more going on here than the crime scene suggested.
18:57A woman who lived in the same apartment complex as William Johnson told us that William approached her and asked if she could contact the police and provide a false alibi about his whereabouts on the night of Lori's disappearance.
19:13So, that put William Johnson at the top of our list of prime suspects.
19:27In '99, I was a nurse in the cardiac rehabilitation department with Lori.
19:36It was a small department, so we worked together all the time.
19:40And we had enough time to get to know each other.
19:44We got along very well.
19:46She was very intelligent.
19:47She knew exactly what she needed to do to excel in her role as a cardiac rehabilitation nurse.
19:55At that time, there were six nurses.
20:02And we also had a physiologist, David.
20:05He always helped us.
20:08Sometimes, it didn't help.
20:11At times, he would become very friendly and help us, you know?
20:17Doing things, telling jokes to us.
20:19But I had a feeling that maybe he felt uncomfortable.
20:25On Thursday, July 22nd, I was getting ready for work.
20:32A colleague called me and she said,
20:35I just want you to know, before you get here, that Lori is missing.
20:41I wanted to know what was happening.
20:45I felt powerless because I had no idea what might have happened where she was.
20:50The police questioned us and asked many questions, and one of them asked me to tell them when was the last time I saw Lori.
21:00The last time was before the afternoon gymnastics class.
21:06She and our physiologist, David, were getting ready for class, I think.
21:12And Lori had a strange expression on her face.
21:15And then, at one point, Lori looked at me as if she wanted to say something.
21:22Tell me something with a look.
21:23And I asked, "Is that guy messing with you again?"
21:27And then she just turned around and didn't...
21:31She didn't answer.
21:35On many occasions, Lori asked me,
21:38Something disappeared, did you see?
21:40I left it right here, but it disappeared.
21:43Someone was making fun of her, you know?
21:48Trying to make her think she was losing things.
21:52Many members of the cycling club, in their testimonies, said that William Johnson was a strange person.
22:09And he had strange, uncomfortable attitudes towards the women at the club, and we should question him urgently.
22:17He seemed very nervous while he was talking to us.
22:21He said he had left the club in November of the previous year.
22:25and that he hadn't seen Lori since May of that year.
22:30He had no information about her.
22:33And when we questioned whether he could provide an alibi for the night Lori disappeared,
22:38He provided no information about where he was or what he was doing.
22:41or anyone who could prove where he was.
22:45But there was no evidence that he had ever been to the Kirkley residence.
22:54So, we remain vigilant for any evidence that might have some connection to him.
23:00The note found in the house seemed to be a potential clue to the involvement of real estate agents.
23:16That's why we arranged a meeting with Larry Hitz and Norm Jacobs.
23:22Visit your brokerage firm to discuss the matter.
23:25Our detectives went to question the two horsemen and the company executives.
23:32They were, in fact, unaware of all their tenants.
23:36It was a very large company.
23:38They had never heard of the Kirkleys.
23:40They didn't work directly with the public.
23:43The two of them were able to give us alibis about where they were on the night of the disappearance.
23:47And they gave us access to the computers and printers.
23:52to compare them with the handwriting on the letter that was found in the house.
23:56When they compared the letters in the letter with the printout made by their computer,
24:00They were not compatible.
24:02It has been proven that neither of them had any connection to Lori's disappearance.
24:08So, we started to wonder
24:10Why would anyone risk so much to teach a potential robbery and kidnapping?
24:17While Robert was being questioned by the detectives,
24:28The county police notified us about the burnt remains.
24:32than what looked like a Ford SUV in this cornfield here.
24:38From the start, the police sent out an alert.
24:41in an attempt to locate the whereabouts of Lori's car, a green SUV.
24:46Finding the case was of paramount importance to the investigation.
24:50There was no license plate, and the vehicle's identification number had been erased in the fire.
24:55One of our researchers,
24:57who had already worked on a similar case,
24:59He went to the cornfield and he noticed right away.
25:02a pattern of flames inside the vehicle
25:04which indicated that an accelerator had been used.
25:07Upon examining the area,
25:08They found a gallon of gasoline.
25:10which had melted in the fire.
25:12So, they started checking the area.
25:14They searched for a possible body, but found nothing.
25:16Soon after, the car was examined.
25:18and they found the vehicle's identification number
25:22And it was proven that it was indeed Lori's vehicle.
25:25The kidnapper left behind
25:27spent cartridges inside the vehicle.
25:31What did that mean?
25:32Did he want to divert the focus of the investigation?
25:35Or it was a clue that Lori was murdered.
25:37With a firearm?
25:40The person responsible for this kidnapping
25:43left notes insulting the investigators,
25:47Insulting the victim's family.
25:49And he wasn't satisfied.
25:50He went further, he got rid of the vehicle.
25:53He burned it and left it there.
25:54so that the investigators could find him.
25:57How did this happen?
25:58As someone in our community
26:00kidnaps a person,
26:01drives a vehicle to the cornfield.
26:04And does it burn?
26:05A vehicle that everyone knows
26:07that the whole city was looking for.
26:10How did he do that?
26:19I was going home after
26:21spread posters about the disappearance
26:24And I received a call from our secretary.
26:27And she said that Lori's car
26:28had been found
26:30and that he was burned.
26:31I asked if she was inside the car.
26:34And the secretary said no.
26:36I was so relieved.
26:38About that,
26:39our coworker, David,
26:40He called and spoke with my daughter.
26:4213 years old
26:43to find out if I was aware.
26:45of something.
26:46When I got home,
26:47I called David.
26:48and told him that her car
26:50had been found
26:51and he said
26:51This doesn't look good for her at all.
26:54And I said
26:54Don't lose hope.
26:56They just wanted to get rid of the car.
26:57She may still be safe.
26:59At that time,
27:07I was already a reporter.
27:0812 years ago
27:09and then
27:09I was an investigative reporter.
27:11for another 10.
27:12This crime shook
27:13the community.
27:16Wherever I went,
27:17people asked me
27:18about the case
27:18And that was the only one.
27:20Views emerged
27:21By the dozens,
27:22If not by the hundreds.
27:24They got in touch.
27:24because they smelled a strong odor.
27:26or by some strange noise
27:28which they thought they had heard.
27:30But when we saw
27:31the area
27:32where the vehicle
27:33It was found burned.
27:36that one
27:36It was real proof.
27:38tangible.
27:38That could be
27:39the great opportunity
27:40that the police needed
27:41to perhaps resolve the case.
27:44Then,
27:45The case took a turn.
27:47Then,
27:52There I was, sitting there.
27:53in the living room
27:54as a child,
27:5512 years old.
27:56My mother
27:57He asked me to play.
27:58Throw the trash out.
28:00I remember that I was
28:00very annoyed
28:01with that
28:02because I wanted to leave
28:03to play with friends.
28:05Then I picked up the trash.
28:06and I walked towards
28:07to the trash can
28:08and when I was arriving
28:10I looked down.
28:12I saw a plastic bag.
28:12transparent
28:13and while I was playing
28:15throw the trash out,
28:15out of the corner of my eye
28:17I saw
28:17an envelope
28:20who said
28:21Please give this.
28:22to Mr. Kirkley.
28:23Tell your wife
28:24She is missing.
28:26So I quit.
28:27the garbage bag.
28:28I was out of work for a while.
28:29looking
28:30for that ticket
28:31And I looked at him again.
28:32And I thought,
28:33I thought like this,
28:34Something is wrong.
28:41This is the ticket.
28:42that was
28:42in the envelope
28:43that I found.
28:44It's the first time.
28:45I'm going to read it.
28:47Dear Mr. Kirkley,
28:49I am really sorry
28:50by his wife.
28:51She went back home.
28:52while the robbery was taking place.
28:54She did not cooperate.
28:55even with a Magnum 44
28:57pointed towards the head.
28:58When I grabbed him
28:59and I tried to cover
29:00her mouth,
29:01she bit
29:01the tip of my finger.
29:05I didn't have
29:06the intention
29:07to kill her,
29:07but unfortunately
29:08I had to do it.
29:09You will never find it.
29:10the body.
29:11Tell the police officers
29:12that the case
29:13It's closed.
29:18That's scary.
29:19The police station
29:39received a call
29:40from a concerned mother
29:41who reported
29:42that your son
29:4312 years old
29:44found a bag
29:45next to
29:46from a trash can
29:47which could be related
29:49with the case
29:49of the disappearance
29:50from Lorraine.
29:55At that time,
29:56my mother
29:56I didn't want to
29:57that I knew
29:58of real importance
30:00from what I had found,
30:01he knows?
30:02From the letter
30:02next to the trash can.
30:04I was in seventh grade.
30:05I don't think I even knew.
30:06that evil existed
30:07at that level.
30:08This is the set.
30:16housing
30:16where the young man
30:18it found
30:18a plastic bag
30:19on the ground
30:20next to the trash can.
30:21At the beginning
30:22we think it is
30:23from a joke
30:24who was just someone
30:24trying to get attention
30:26in this case.
30:27It was no joke.
30:28Inside that bag
30:29They had personal items.
30:31that belonged
30:32Laurie Kirkley.
30:33The key ring
30:33who had the key
30:34of the SUV
30:35who was missing
30:36and a tennis shoe
30:37cycling
30:38which belonged to Laurie.
30:39These two items
30:40were shown
30:41to Robert Kirkley
30:42and he confirmed
30:43that belonged
30:43Laurie Kirkley.
30:45Then,
30:45we learned
30:46that letter
30:47it was written
30:48by the true
30:48kidnapper
30:49and that said
30:50what had he done
30:51with her.
30:51She is dead.
30:53Abandon the investigation.
30:54You will never find it.
30:55the body.
30:56They will never solve it.
30:56the case.
30:59No print
31:00digital was found
31:01in the bag.
31:02The detectives
31:02they searched
31:03the set
31:04housing.
31:05No one reported it.
31:06having seen someone
31:07next to the trash can.
31:07putting anything
31:09on the ground
31:10or something similar.
31:12Then,
31:12at the end,
31:12we didn't have
31:13no clues.
31:16For me,
31:18the person who was
31:18doing all that
31:20I was trying
31:21to control us.
31:23It was as if
31:24he wanted
31:26that we would accept
31:26everything he said
31:27so that we
31:28if we closed the case.
31:29with so many questions,
31:34no response,
31:35we decided to call
31:37again people
31:37closest
31:38from Lori
31:38for a new
31:39testimony.
31:40The husband,
31:41Robert,
31:41he was called
31:42and he offered
31:43to pass
31:44by the test
31:44of the polygraph.
31:45The agent who conducted
31:50the test
31:50said that Robert
31:51it seemed to be
31:52trying to control
31:53your breathing.
31:54What
31:55he can
31:57suggest
31:58manipulation.
32:01I have no idea.
32:02if he was
32:02trying to control
32:03breathing
32:04or if it was
32:04terribly
32:05worried
32:06with his wife,
32:06he understands?
32:07But,
32:08In my understanding,
32:09failed the polygraph test.
32:10At the end
32:12from the interrogation,
32:14It became clear
32:14what was
32:15physically impossible
32:17that he was
32:18at home
32:19during the
32:20period
32:21in which the kidnapping
32:21it happened.
32:23Polygraphs
32:24They are flawed.
32:25that's why,
32:25the courts
32:26They don't recognize him.
32:27as proof.
32:29They measure
32:29the changes
32:30in breathing
32:32of a person,
32:33body temperature,
32:35the heartbeats,
32:36but Robert
32:37It was visibly
32:38shaken about
32:39what happened.
32:40with Lori,
32:41what can affect
32:42these biological functions.
32:45At that moment,
32:46Robert was acquitted.
32:48of any suspicion
32:48in this case.
33:00The twist
33:02in case
33:02emerged
33:04when a woman
33:04reported
33:05that I knew
33:06the person
33:07what did
33:08The first robbery.
33:10when lady
33:12He entered the police station,
33:13I saw that it was about
33:14from one of the coaches
33:15swimming
33:16of my son.
33:17Then,
33:18It was very peaceful.
33:19Talk to her.
33:20During the interrogation,
33:21she said
33:22to the investigators
33:22that discovered
33:23some items
33:24missing persons
33:25at her house.
33:26The TV,
33:27the videocassette
33:28and the camera
33:29They had been robbed.
33:32That was the point.
33:33turnaround
33:33that's what we were expecting.
33:34It was truly incredible.
33:36that she has
33:36achieved
33:37report
33:38the husband.
33:41The investigators
33:42They succeeded.
33:42search warrant
33:43and then
33:44they searched
33:44The whole house,
33:45but they didn't find it
33:46tangible evidence.
33:47Until one of them
33:48investigators noted
33:49existence
33:50from an attic
33:51at home
33:52and the reason
33:53of not having found
33:54the entrance to the attic
33:55It was because,
33:56In addition to a secret room,
33:57he also had
33:58a secret entrance.
33:59when the investigators
34:04They went into the attic.
34:05They saw that the walls
34:06they were covered
34:07of pornographic images.
34:09They were cut.
34:10from magazines
34:10and glued to the wall
34:11in a way
34:12similar
34:13like the photos
34:14were glued
34:15on the wall
34:16from the residence
34:17by Lori Kirkley
34:18in the first robbery.
34:20We identified
34:21the main suspect.
34:23He wasn't
34:23a cyclist.
34:24He was a colleague
34:25work
34:25by Lori Kirkley
34:26who worked
34:27side by side
34:28with her.
34:28he was a man
34:29called
34:29David Malinsky.
34:32People
34:33with whom is he
34:33worked
34:34they didn't know
34:35this dark side
34:36by Malinsky
34:36But it was there.
34:38We had
34:39how to locate it
34:40immediately.
34:58David Malinsky
35:01was taken
35:02for questioning.
35:04He was a colleague.
35:05work
35:05by Lori Kirkley
35:06in a center
35:07cardiac rehabilitation.
35:09He was a physiologist.
35:10in the same location
35:11where Lori Kirkley
35:12She was a nurse.
35:13He had the possibility
35:14to observe it
35:15to know where she lived
35:16and what was she doing
35:18During the day.
35:20And he said
35:21to the investigators
35:22that he was responsible
35:23for the first robbery
35:24at Lori Kirkley's house
35:26and that they were
35:28living through an affair.
35:30Can you explain it to me?
35:31What was its purpose?
35:32in committing that robbery?
35:34Its purpose
35:35it was to make the husband
35:36from Lori
35:37to think that you
35:38Did they have an affair?
35:39To end their marriage.
35:41That's what I wanted.
35:42What could happen?
35:43That's what she
35:44I wanted it to happen.
35:45David started
35:46telling a story
35:47amazing.
35:49He said
35:49to the investigators
35:50that he and Lori
35:51were having
35:52an extramarital affair
35:53about six months ago.
35:54What happened
35:55So that they could stay together?
35:58She said
35:58who was not happy
35:59with her marriage.
36:01It was just another relationship.
36:02more physical than anything else.
36:04I still love
36:05My wife.
36:06He was trying
36:08convince the police
36:09that Lori wanted to run away
36:10from home,
36:10who did not love
36:11her husband,
36:12who was not satisfied
36:13with the life he had.
36:14when in fact
36:16It was the opposite.
36:17I know that David
36:18and Lori
36:18They weren't having an affair.
36:20They were friends.
36:22Lori loved Robert.
36:23They had
36:24an amazing relationship.
36:26And she was very
36:27dedicated to family.
36:30David stated
36:31that together
36:32they planned
36:33and they executed
36:34the two robberies
36:35at home
36:35to prepare
36:37the scenario
36:38for the kidnapping
36:39from Lori
36:39in July.
36:41But he stated
36:42that didn't come out
36:43from home,
36:44that it wasn't
36:44ready
36:45to do that.
36:45What happened
36:47right away?
36:49We had a
36:49discussion.
36:52She questioned
36:53if I
36:54I would or I wouldn't.
36:57He's talking
36:57in leaving
36:58his wife
36:59And escape?
37:01That.
37:02What happened
37:03after?
37:05She said
37:05that he was going away,
37:06that would disappear.
37:07She said
37:08Where to go?
37:09He didn't speak.
37:10During the interrogation
37:11from David,
37:12the investigators
37:13They saw a bandage.
37:14on the middle finger
37:15from his right hand.
37:16When they removed
37:17the bandage
37:17and they looked,
37:18what did they see
37:19it seemed to be
37:19bite mark
37:21human
37:21on his finger.
37:23On the ticket
37:23that was found
37:24next to the trash can,
37:26the author said
37:26that Lori
37:27had bitten
37:28the tip
37:28from your finger
37:29during the fight.
37:30You've arrived.
37:30to hurt Lori?
37:32No,
37:32I didn't hurt anyone.
37:33Any physical stalk?
37:34No,
37:35sir.
37:36Do you know where Lori is?
37:37now?
37:38I don't know.
37:40Malisky was arrested.
37:41initially accused
37:42for both robberies.
37:44We knew that he
37:44He could get away with it.
37:45of these accusations,
37:46We couldn't leave
37:47that this would happen.
37:48Then,
37:48we had to take
37:49A big decision.
37:51We were going to move on.
37:52and accuse David
37:54homicide
37:55without having the body
37:56of the victim.
38:00When I was informed
38:01that David
38:01He had been arrested,
38:02I was shocked.
38:04And then,
38:06I thought,
38:08will they
38:09Were they mistaken?
38:10But,
38:11when I stopped
38:11something to think about,
38:12David
38:12used to mess
38:13with Lori
38:14during work.
38:16He was the only person
38:17which made sense.
38:21While I was
38:22in prison,
38:22David
38:23said to two
38:23prisoners
38:24that were
38:25being released
38:26to the location
38:26some photos
38:27polaroid,
38:29what he said
38:29that,
38:30by chance,
38:30the police
38:31if you found them,
38:32He would be dead.
38:33David learned
38:34the lesson.
38:35There is no honor.
38:36between thieves.
38:38After he told
38:39to the two companions
38:40of cell
38:40Regarding the photos,
38:41they introduced themselves
38:42to the police
38:43and they helped us
38:44to find
38:45the photographs.
38:46the photos showed
38:50a woman
38:50tied up
38:51and being abused
38:53sexually
38:54inside the room
38:55main
38:55by David Malinsky.
38:57She was
38:58identified
38:59like Lori Kirkley
39:00by her husband.
39:02We caught
39:03the photos
39:04and we send them
39:05to a pathologist
39:06and based
39:07based on their knowledge,
39:08he declared
39:09that Lori
39:10possibly
39:11She was dead.
39:11And that was it.
39:14a test
39:14extremely powerful
39:16that, even without
39:16recovery
39:17of the body
39:18from Lori,
39:18proved
39:19that Lori
39:19He had died.
39:29The supervisor
39:30from Lori
39:31witnessed
39:32in the trial
39:32that David Malinsky
39:33I felt very angry.
39:34from Lori
39:35by her
39:36to do certain
39:37job functions
39:38which were
39:39your responsibility
39:40and that he ended up
39:41missing out on a promotion
39:42at work
39:42for Lori
39:43and he stayed
39:44angry at Lori
39:44Because of that.
39:46That's why he
39:46broke into her house
39:47to scare her
39:48or punish her.
39:51When I was called
39:52to testify,
39:53I told myself
39:55that I wasn't going to look
39:56For David Malinsky.
39:59But I looked.
40:01I was terrified.
40:02because I had to
40:03witness
40:04that he was the man
40:05that I had seen
40:06riding a bicycle
40:08in front of the garage
40:09from Lori
40:10and Robert.
40:11That required
40:12lots of planning.
40:14He stole
40:14the control
40:15from the garage door
40:16and made a copy.
40:18He left the pickup truck.
40:19him at a post
40:20gasoline
40:21near the house
40:22from Lori,
40:23rode a bicycle
40:24all the way to her house.
40:25and waited
40:26that she would arrive.
40:29When she arrived
40:30at home,
40:30He attacked her.
40:31and through
40:33of threats,
40:34he put it
40:34in his own car,
40:36he put the bicycle
40:37him in her car
40:38and then
40:39followed
40:39to his house
40:40where everyone
40:41the others
40:42horrible events
40:44of the case
40:44They occurred.
40:57When I left
40:58of the court
40:58at the end of the trial
40:59and feeling happy
41:00because we did
41:01everything we achieved
41:02up to that point,
41:03but we still wanted
41:05recover the body
41:06from Lori
41:06For her family.
41:08Her family
41:09I needed
41:09That's the answer.
41:11David didn't pay attention.
41:12No more testimonials
41:13up to that moment,
41:14but I felt that
41:15like David and I
41:16We went to college together.
41:18perhaps he would agree.
41:19in talking to me.
41:21And we ended up having
41:22a long conversation.
41:25He said he was
41:25possessed by a spirit
41:26malignant
41:27and that he had succeeded
41:29get rid of it
41:31when turning
41:32for God.
41:32I think he wanted to.
41:34confess,
41:35but I also think
41:36that he wanted
41:36maintain the possibility
41:37from an open appeal.
41:38Then,
41:39David refused.
41:40to say where
41:41Lori was buried.
41:42in 2005,
41:52David had
41:54a crisis
41:55of consciousness
41:56and it arrived
41:58one point
41:58in which he
41:59He called the police.
42:00and decided
42:01Tell the truth.
42:02And he said
42:03who wanted to help
42:04the police
42:04to recover the body.
42:06He accompanied
42:06the investigators
42:07to the property
42:09from his father,
42:10a rural property.
42:12We arrived at the location,
42:13they dug
42:14and they found
42:14her body
42:15one and a half meters
42:16depth.
42:17The autopsy showed
42:18that she died
42:19by strangulation.
42:20The body was returned.
42:21to the family
42:22and was buried
42:23next to her parents
42:24and other relatives.
42:26It was a case
42:27very dark.
42:29Some scholars
42:30we were told
42:31just by looking
42:32everything that happened
42:33and the way it was done,
42:35they said
42:36that if we didn't have
42:37David was arrested.
42:38possibly
42:40he would have become
42:41a serial killer.
42:52That's very sad.
42:54Knowing that
42:55someone had the life
42:56taken this way
42:57by one
42:59individual
43:00in whom he trusted,
43:02someone with whom
43:02They worked side by side.
43:05It's simply
43:05devastating
43:06knowing that someone
43:07whom she considered
43:08a friend,
43:09a coworker,
43:11It could be that cruel.
43:14That's scary.
43:18I think that
43:18my father
43:19was the best
43:20Lori described it.
43:22He described her.
43:23How exuberant.
43:24All these years,
43:2521 years later,
43:26I always think
43:27at my friend Lori's.
43:29I think that
43:30It never existed.
43:31someone who had
43:32a smile
43:32so beautiful
43:33as much as Lori had.
43:34she always
43:36I was happy.
43:38Brazilian version
43:39Audiocorp.
43:40Audiocorp.
43:40Audiocorp.
43:41Audiocorp.
43:42Audiocorp.
43:43Audiocorp.
43:44Audiocorp.
43:45Audiocorp.
43:46Audiocorp.
43:47Audiocorp.
43:48Audiocorp.
43:49Audiocorp.
43:50Audiocorp.
43:51Audiocorp.
43:52Audiocorp.
43:53Audiocorp.
43:54Audiocorp.
43:55Audiocorp.
43:56Audiocorp.
43:57Audiocorp.
43:58Audiocorp.
43:59Audiocorp.
44:00Audiocorp.
44:01Audiocorp.
44:02Audiocorp.
44:03Audiocorp.
44:04Audiocorp.
44:05Audiocorp.
44:06Audiocorp.
44:07Audiocorp.
44:08Audiocorp.
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