Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 1 week ago

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00It was a weeknight in the beginning of December, just a couple of weeks out from Christmas.
00:22Milford police received a 911 call from a distraught 17-year-old in Milford, Connecticut.
00:30Who would do something like this?
00:36Why would they do something like this with such violence?
00:41This video provided by a neighbor shows a threatening man.
00:45He's seen walking past a home holding an axe.
00:50Emergency services speed to the caller's home.
00:56Emergency services speed to the caller's home.
01:11What they find is truly disturbing.
01:14When the police arrived, it was apparent from the injuries to the victim's body that she was not alive.
01:26Lying on the kitchen floor is the caller's mother, 40-year-old Julie Minogue.
01:34It's an extremely violent attack.
01:38Police discovered Julie's three-year-old boy in the room next to where she was found in what they described as a trance-like state.
01:48The 17-year-old who called 911, when he heard Milford Police Department, he was not sure if it was the man pretending to be the Milford Police Department and was extremely fearful at that time.
02:05So he jumped out the window.
02:11I can't imagine what he was going through at that point.
02:16I think one of the big questions was, why did this happen?
02:19Who would do something like this?
02:21And why would they do something like this with such violence?
02:26Police search Julie's home for clues.
02:31When the police arrive at a scene like this, they have many, many questions.
02:35How did the person enter the home?
02:37Was anything taken?
02:39Any indications of a forceful entry?
02:47Detectives believe the intruder forced his way into the house and attacked Julie with an axe.
02:56They were able to observe an axe in the kitchen that appeared to contain a blood-like substance and hair.
03:11There were chop wounds to her head and abrasions on other parts of her body as well.
03:18After doing this for over 38 years, I think one of the questions we always have is how one person could do this to another person.
03:30I think one of the questions we have is how one person could do this to another person.
03:33I think one of the questions we have is how one person could do this.
03:35My name is Gerald Minogue, and my daughter is Julie Minogue, who was murdered on December 6, 2022.
04:02When I heard, I was just blown away.
04:11I was devastated.
04:12I was really devastated.
04:13I couldn't even see her.
04:16Her body was damaged so bad.
04:19No one could see her.
04:21It was just such a terrible, terrible event that they just didn't want to let the family know how their loved one went out of this world.
04:32How could something like this happen to somebody in, you know, the pristine state of Connecticut?
04:45Death by an axe is something that is something long, long gone.
04:49It's not something that you would expect to be, you know, hearing about, let alone experiencing it in your own family.
05:08My name is Trisha O'Reilly.
05:13I was Julie Minogue's very close best friend, like sisters.
05:19I saw it on the news, saw her whole condo complex, did not believe it, did not, did not believe it.
05:37I thought I was like, oh, it's somebody else in there.
05:40It's not, not my jewels.
05:45Then they showed her door.
05:49And I saw toys outside.
05:54So, to the floor, screaming, screaming, no, no.
06:05What happened here?
06:08How could something like this happen to a loved one?
06:11Time was very much of the essence here because we had an individual who was murdered in a horrific way.
06:28And we had someone in the area who had not been accounted for.
06:34Forensics officers combed Julie's home for evidence that could lead them to the killer.
06:40And send the murder weapon to the lab to test for DNA and fingerprints.
06:56Everybody had good things to say about Julie and the kind of person she was.
07:03They all say she was just a great mother.
07:06She was a welcoming person.
07:08She was a warm person, friendly to everyone.
07:12So, that is another factor that makes it tragic.
07:19The youngest of three, Julie Minogue was born and raised in New York.
07:24She has an older brother and an older sister.
07:29As a child, she was extremely sweet.
07:33Extremely considerate.
07:36She loved animals.
07:40This is Julie at high school graduation.
07:43Right here, she was 17.
07:45She had grown up from a, you know, a cute and pretty child to a very, very beautiful young woman.
07:54This makes me feel very proud because it was a milestone.
07:57She was graduating from high school.
07:59She just gave me the sense of a young woman that was, you know, ready to take on the world.
08:09Julie and I met at the obstetrical gynecologist office that we worked at.
08:18She just had a heart of gold.
08:21Her smile could light up the room.
08:23And her laugh was just vivacious and would be contagious.
08:34If you met her, you wouldn't forget her.
08:48Officers go door to door searching for witnesses.
08:53Did anyone see or hear anything?
08:58One thing police immediately do is look around and sort of canvas the neighborhood to see if anybody has doorbell cameras or surveillance cameras.
09:10It was important for them to determine whether or not there were either witnesses that saw someone in the area or surveillance cameras that may have detected someone in that area.
09:24It's an extremely personal and violent type of crime.
09:29Police wanted to find the suspect as soon as possible.
09:33Given the brutality of the attack, investigators wonder if Julie was killed by someone close to her.
09:52Julie was married with one child at 20 years of age.
09:57And immediately you could see her calling was to be a mother.
10:04Julie had two sons with her husband before they divorced.
10:08And a third son with a former partner.
10:12She was a nurturer, especially of her children.
10:16She was a terrific mother.
10:19She enjoyed the feeling that there was, you know, somebody that relied on her for their care.
10:25She did absolutely anything and everything for her three sons.
10:32Her boys were the light of her life.
10:36This was on Thanksgiving, which was, I believe it was that year, November 28th.
10:45This is her son in the Coast Guard.
10:47He had flown in to be there for Thanksgiving.
10:50This is her middle son, the 17-year-old.
10:53Obviously that's the baby and that's my daughter.
10:56This one is important because it's the last picture of her whole family together.
11:04And a few days later, she was murdered.
11:08Julie's autopsy report is released to the police.
11:20It confirms she was killed with the axe.
11:24Based on the autopsy report, Ms. Minogue was killed by numerous, numerous chop force injuries.
11:38More than 11 to her head as well as other parts of her body.
11:45Blunt force objects as well.
11:47I am haunted by exactly how she felt during those last few moments of her life.
12:00The fear, the pain, the hurt that came her way.
12:08I just can't get it out of my mind what she had to go through.
12:20No human being, no living being should ever, ever have to leave this earth in that fashion.
12:27Milford's a small city on the Connecticut coastline.
12:42Connecticut's known for wealth, but Milford's more of a middle class community.
12:48There's not a lot of ostentatious wealth there, so it's your basic sort of shoreline city in Connecticut.
12:57There's a little harbor, a beach, parks, schools.
13:02The nature of a homicide occurring on a weeknight in the city of Milford is not a common occurrence.
13:09The killing made a lot of news just because of the facts and the sort of horrific circumstances involved.
13:20We have an individual who just bludgeoned a woman to death and was on the loose.
13:28When people heard that a mother of three had been killed inside her own home,
13:33there was an outcry in the community.
13:38There was an outpouring of grief, really.
13:44There's a tremendous outpouring of support that we received.
13:48There was a big vigil that took place.
13:53A lot of people organized fundraisers in her memory as well.
13:57The loss was felt throughout the community.
14:11With her killer at large, detectives delve into Julie's personal life.
14:16Could the answer lie there?
14:20Police say that when there's a crime scene that's very gruesome,
14:25that's often an indication that the perpetrator was somebody who knew the victim
14:30to sort of inflict that level of violence.
14:36After her divorce, Julie started dating.
14:40She, like a lot of people, she got onto one of these dating sites.
14:46Her most recent relationship was with former Marine Ewan DeWitt.
14:50Mr. DeWitt was a college graduate, one of eight children, and a United States Marine Corps veteran.
15:05They started out, you know, very, very slow, just, you know, chatting back and forth,
15:11and then getting together on some daytime activities.
15:13She met Ewan for the first time at a dog park.
15:21She was walking her dog.
15:23Lexi, she was a cute little golden retriever.
15:27She was a very strong woman because she was raising children on her own,
15:32and she was working full time.
15:33And she wanted somebody, you know, who she saw as strong as her, that could, you know,
15:40could carry the load and help her, you know, get through the challenges of being a single parent.
15:48They hit it off. They started dating.
15:54And because she had children already, he got to know her children.
15:57He had played sports. He was nice to them. And they got along.
16:06When I first met him, my first impressions were pretty positive.
16:11Very slowly they were, but surely they were, they were building a relationship that would,
16:16you know, mushroom into much more as time went on.
16:19He and I had a good, you know, kind of relationship of, as me being Julie's best friend.
16:34She seemed happy. She seemed happy.
16:38And as long as she was happy, of course all of us were happy.
16:43You know, I felt good because she finally found somebody which I thought was, you know,
16:47going to be a solid partner for the future.
16:53The other thing I was informed about is that he was a recovered alcoholic.
17:02And I was, you know, alcoholic or not, if he was a recovered alcoholic,
17:06I felt that that takes more strength than a weakness.
17:11And then when she became pregnant, that was when he asked her to marry her.
17:18He gave her a beautiful ring.
17:21Julie enjoyed being her mother, so she was excited.
17:24And he showed excitement as well.
17:27Julie moved in with DeWitt. And in September 2019, she gave birth to a boy.
17:37Three years later, the devoted mom was dead.
17:40With the family and community demanding answers, police get a major break.
17:49When the police went door to door canvassing the neighbors to find footage,
17:55they were able to find two neighbors who voluntarily provided their door surveillance footage.
18:01Their ring doorbell systems actually captured an individual walking by at around the same time in close proximity to the time of the murder.
18:14What they discovered was pretty shocking.
18:19The footage showed a person walking through the frame holding an axe and walking in the direction of Julie's condo.
18:27This is almost certainly the person responsible for slaying Julie.
18:36But who is he?
18:39Using state-of-the-art software, forensic video analyst Nick Barrero can pick out details not obvious to the naked eye.
18:47I've seen a lot of videos in my career. I've analyzed thousands of hours of video footage.
18:56And it's very rare to see somebody just walking down the street holding an axe in the middle of the night.
19:06This is shocking video.
19:08Because this video was recorded with a ring camera, we can trust that the timestamp in the bottom right corner is accurate.
19:19Ring videos are synced with the cloud and the timestamp can be trusted because of that.
19:27An accurate timestamp is important in any investigation because it helps the investigators establish a timeline.
19:31And now we know the exact moment that this suspect passed by here on his way to the victim's house.
19:41This video was recorded at 8.56 p.m., just minutes before Julie's son called 911.
19:49Anytime we have video of a suspect, initially the instinct is to let's get the best view of this person as we can.
19:57Let's enhance their face. Let's see if we can get any facial details to help identify this person.
20:03So that's what we'll do in this case.
20:08So currently I'm searching frame by frame for the best possible starting point, the best possible image of this suspect's face.
20:18Now that we've selected this frame, I'm going to make some adjustments.
20:28So what I've done here is I've adjusted the brightness and contrast and I've done some sharpening to try and extract as much detail as we can from this suspect's appearance.
20:40Although we can't see his face clearly, we can see that he has some facial hair, a goatee or a full beard.
20:47We can see his hat is blue with some sort of a white logo on the front.
20:53We can see that he's wearing a darker blue or black sweater or jacket over the top of a lighter blue shirt.
21:05These types of details can lead to the suspect's arrest and ultimate prosecution.
21:10As police search for the man with the axe, they learn more about how DeWitt and Julie's relationship changed after their son was born.
21:29That time I visited the hospital. It was the first time that I saw some areas of concern on my part for on Ewan.
21:42He was kind of annoyed, I would say, that that, you know, all of a sudden there's this new new individual and this individual is getting all the attention.
21:53For some reason, he relapsed and started to drink again.
22:00And when he was drunk, DeWitt's mood would change.
22:05On this particular Saturday, he was supposedly taking care of the baby, but when she came home, he was drunk.
22:14Very drunk. That turned into an argument.
22:17She was holding the baby. She was walking down the stairs. Not only did he push her, she got up.
22:32And he picked up a playpen and threw it at her, okay, with the baby in her arms.
22:37And she covered the baby, of course. And it hit her in the head.
22:46This could have been a really big disaster. My daughter had to go to the emergency room and had to have five staples put into her head.
22:54Julie called the police, who arrested DeWitt for domestic violence.
23:01She just needed to be constantly reminded by me, by her parents, by her other friends, that you did nothing wrong.
23:13You did nothing wrong. You did nothing wrong.
23:22A protection order was issued against DeWitt.
23:27She moved out. She ended the engagement. She ended all, the entire relationship.
23:34And she started to pursue custody, full custody of the baby.
23:52Detectives have the door cam footage of their prime suspect.
23:55Julie's traumatized teenage son confirms that it's his mom's ex-partner and father to his three-and-a-half-year-old brother, 42-year-old Ewan DeWitt.
24:12He definitely recognized Mr. DeWitt, and he knew it was who it was that had done this to his mother.
24:19He'd been home sick from school that day, was upstairs asleep when he heard noises and yelling, when he came down the stairs into the kitchen.
24:37When he saw the condition that his mother was in, he fled back up the stairs, barricaded himself in his room, and called 911.
24:50Obviously, it's a horrific circumstance, but if the 17-year-old had tried to confront the suspect in some way, things could have gotten worse.
25:04I never saw anything like that coming. I mean, I never did, okay?
25:08And, you know, should I have? I don't know, but I never saw it coming.
25:12I never saw it coming.
25:21Police launch a manhunt for Ewan DeWitt.
25:25At this point in the investigation, no one really had any idea why Mr. DeWitt would murder the mother of his child.
25:32Despite Julie securing a protection order, DeWitt had been given visitation rights to their son.
25:42At the time, all visitation was to be supervised, so he wasn't supposed to be near her at all.
25:49She wasn't thrilled about that, but she realized that these are things that a father should have if he wants.
25:54As time went on, DeWitt's behavior became increasingly menacing.
26:01The event that really turned this into, you know, from ugly to uglier is when he thought that there was this prearranged meeting that they had that, you know, she didn't agree to.
26:16She had other plans, and she never agreed to it.
26:20Things escalated.
26:23The texting.
26:25Not just a one-sentence text message.
26:29Long, lengthy paragraphs.
26:34With probably every word was a curse word.
26:37They're vulgar, they're harassing, you know, he calls her names, he accuses her of, you know, leading them on, things like that.
26:50So just rantings, I guess, would be a fair description.
26:55Hundreds a day. Hundreds.
26:59Just evil.
27:01The threats against her, direct to her, was like a long Santa Claus list of just never ending.
27:14Like, you know, like the list just goes on and on and on.
27:18It was one text after another, and it was just repetitiveness of just evil, sheer evil madness.
27:31Julie was petrified.
27:33She turned to the Milford police for help.
27:37She explained to the police that she has order of protection against Ewan DeWitt, and she's scared of him.
27:48Disgusting, evil text that she showed the Milford police department.
27:54She was terrified, absolutely terrified, because he would say he was going to make sure that no one sees you again.
28:06The policeman looked at the text and said, well, there's enough here to, you know, that he violated the order of protection, and I'm going to, you know, request an arrest warrant so that we go and arrest him and get him out of your life.
28:18The arrest didn't happen. Increasingly fearful, Julie tried something else to protect herself and her children.
28:28In November of 2022, Miss Minogue also made an application to civil court for a civil restraining order to preclude Mr. DeWitt from having further contact.
28:42She went into court just to strengthen everything that she had received.
28:51What I can tell you is that Mr. DeWitt did not want the order put into place.
28:59So on December 1st, 2022, Julie went to court.
29:08Did there come a time, ma'am, that you had to go to the police recently?
29:14Yes. Yes. I was getting harassing text messages.
29:18And this is the number of text messages that you got from Mr. DeWitt?
29:24Yes. The police counted them as to 220.
29:28OK.
29:29It was over two days.
29:31Are you fearful of being in Mr. DeWitt's presence?
29:35Yes.
29:38They asked Julie, she was on the stand, if she feared for her life.
29:44She looked right at me.
29:48She had tears in her eyes.
29:50Her voice was shaking.
29:52And she said, yes, I fear for my life.
29:57Hearing Julie's voice in that hearing, you really hear her sort of desperation for something to happen.
30:06Are you fearful for the safety of your minor children?
30:15Yes.
30:16Is that fear heightened because of his alcohol problems?
30:20Absolutely.
30:25Lo and behold, the judge said the restraining order was granted.
30:29And I think that she felt very safe.
30:34She felt that she was, she had done everything possible.
30:40She thought that in a matter of time, he was going to be behind bars and he was going to be no problem to her.
30:44The entire time, I just kept praying to God to keep her safe, keep the kids safe.
30:56Five days later, Julie Minogue was dead.
31:01DeWitt is the prime suspect.
31:03The doorbell footage reveals another potential factor behind the murder.
31:18As he walks by here, there is a bit of a, not a stumble, but he crosses one leg over the other.
31:26That either looks like hesitation, like he's not sure where he's going and he changes direction at the last second as he's taking a step.
31:37Or potentially, he knows where he's going, but it's certainly possible that he is just losing his balance at that point because he's intoxicated.
31:46And if that's the case, it could go to his state of mind when he was committing this act.
31:52This video seems to indicate that he had been drinking heavily that night.
31:57Based on the information that this suspect was a recovering alcoholic that was slipping and struggling to stay sober.
32:08And then just recently found out that his ex-girlfriend had obtained a restraining order against him.
32:14Certainly seems like motive for what we see in this video.
32:21Despite the manhunt, police appear no closer to finding DeWitt.
32:29Until, out of the blue, they get a call.
32:35While looking for DeWitt, police got a tip from an unexpected source.
32:41DeWitt's own mother called them and told them that he had just called her and confessed to having killed Julie.
32:47DeWitt's mother said that my son just called. He said he killed his girlfriend.
32:57She indicated that he was wandering around and she did not know where he was.
33:03It's hard to know exactly why DeWitt's mother called police, but in some way maybe she wanted to see him be held accountable.
33:16DeWitt's mother gives detectives his cell number.
33:20Almost immediately after that, police called Mr. DeWitt.
33:26He answered his phone, but would not engage in any conversation.
33:30The police were able to ping Mr. DeWitt's phone and find the general area of where the phone was located.
33:40They went over to that location, which is in a neighboring town close to the border of Milford.
33:46There was a bar at that location. The police provided a picture to some patrons of Mr. DeWitt.
33:56They indicated he had just left there and gone into the back parking lot.
34:04DeWitt was found pretty soon after in a trailer.
34:09When the police arrested Mr. DeWitt inside that trailer, he did not resist.
34:20Anytime there's a homicide and there's a suspect at large, I think there's a sense of relief in the community when the suspect is taken into custody.
34:29I was glad that he was locked up at that point, and I just wanted to make sure I did everything in my power that he stayed that way.
34:40Held in custody, detectives questioned DeWitt.
34:46I'm sure police wanted to learn why he would do something like this and with such violence to the mother of his three-year-old son.
34:57What would have caused Mr. DeWitt to commit this crime and to commit it in such a brutal manner?
35:06According to police, he said that he had just, quote, had enough and sort of snapped.
35:16He, at some point, made comments, well, I did it. So, in that sense, he did confess.
35:25That night, the suspect had taken a Lyft rideshare from his home in Roxbury, Connecticut.
35:37He had an axe with him in the vehicle.
35:42And then it dropped him off outside of Julie's condo, and he stormed into the condo and killed her with the axe.
35:52While her three-year-old son and 17-year-old son were in the home.
36:02Despite DeWitt's confession, he offers no real clue to his motive.
36:08I'm not sure we'll ever learn why all this really happened.
36:13How could somebody hate somebody that much that they say they cannot live?
36:18I can't understand it.
36:31More than two years after the murder, to avoid facing a jury, DeWitt takes a plea deal.
36:38I think the family accepted the plea deal in a way to avoid a trial and having all of this evidence have to come out again.
36:48Trial is truly emotional, something I think we all wanted to avoid, especially from the fact that the eyewitness, my grandson, would have to testify.
36:58It would have been almost impossible not to have him testify.
37:05It's absolutely horrific to have to put a child on the stand, and especially a child who witnessed his mother get brutally murdered.
37:16There was another witness on the night of Julie's murder that proved crucial to DeWitt's conviction.
37:28The doorbell footage was important because it corroborated other evidence that we had from her son, who was present for some of the circumstances that night.
37:42Something I talked to both prosecutors and defense attorneys a lot is how much camera footage has changed how courts work.
37:53Surveillance footage from cameras we see all over the place makes what happened clearer in ways that weren't so clear before.
38:00During the sentencing hearing, Julie's family give impact statements on the effect of her death.
38:10Finally, after almost three years, my daughter's life was brought to light again.
38:17She was part of the discussion again, where up until that point, everything was about the defendant.
38:22So it's really an emotional thing. And we had a chance to speak and say what we felt about the whole thing, and that was very emotional.
38:33Calling this painful is a gross understatement.
38:36Julie's sons were even denied the ability to see their mother's remains during her viewing due to the brutality committed by the defendant when he murdered her.
38:44I will always carry the weight of the horrible thought of the pain, horror and fear of my daughter experience those last few moments of her life attack viciously by an axe by an evil monster.
38:58In a lot of homicides, the defense will try to put a psychiatric report together about a defendant who has mental health issues.
39:12In this case, we learned that the suspect allegedly had PTSD and alcohol abuse problems after serving in the military.
39:19So I think part of the defense effort was to try to put that together in a report to try to help mitigate the behavior he was accused of.
39:31Mr. DeWitt's attorney mentioned in his sentencing comments that Mr. DeWitt had acted impulsively.
39:39There is no indication based on the record of this case and the evidence that this was an impulsive act.
39:50Mr. DeWitt took a Uber or Lyft ride from quite some distance away concealing an axe in his pants to go to Ms. Minogue's home.
40:04There's no indication that this was an impulsive act.
40:07When prosecuting attorney Margaret E. Kelly challenges the defense's case, DeWitt shows his true colors.
40:16There is no indication whatsoever that this was an impulsive act.
40:22This was a cold, calculated, well thought out.
40:26That's f***ing horseshit.
40:27Watch your mouth.
40:29Sit down, sit down, sit down, sit down.
40:31Mr. DeWitt, if outbursts like that continue, I'm left with no other choice but to remove you from the courtroom and the sex.
40:40That'd be great.
40:41You and DeWitt is sentenced to 40 years in prison for the murder of Julie Minogue.
40:50I don't think any sentence can make a murder victim's family happy.
40:58I think that the Minogue family was very gracious and patient during the entire process.
41:04And I certainly recognize that they wanted more years, but I think all in all they understood why the court made that offer.
41:16Forty years for a person's life doesn't sound like a lot, okay, I'll be honest with you.
41:25But when I put the pieces together that he's 45 years old now and that he'd be getting out of jail in his 80s, okay, you know, he's probably going to die in jail.
41:39I think that this murder just highlights the horrible effects of domestic violence.
41:48Julie's family and a lot of her friends and domestic violence advocates would say this absolutely could have been avoided and there were a lot of warning signs.
42:00Julie's murder highlights issues around domestic abuse and failures by the authorities to protect her.
42:09Julie did everything in her power.
42:13She dotted her I's, crossed her T's, did everything that you are supposed to do or we have been told as women with domestic situations to do.
42:23Every domestic violence homicide obviously is tragic.
42:30I think what caused such an outcry after this one was the fact that Julie had complained to police a month before the killing.
42:43I mean, we have Julie's own words.
42:46She wrote in that affidavit asking for the restraining order.
42:50I mean, she literally wrote, he's going to kill me.
42:53Those were the last words of her statement, which are profound in light of what happened.
42:58They always told her that they would take care of this and that she would be okay.
43:05They always assured her that they were going to arrest him.
43:10She was always told this.
43:15Didn't happen.
43:18Obviously, Julie's family will never be the same after this.
43:23One positive thing that happened was the community outcry was so profound that lawmakers in Connecticut passed changes to laws to give better protections and warnings to victims of domestic violence.
43:39That included a GPS alert system to give victims in high risk domestic violence cases more of a warning that the perpetrators are nearby.
44:06My daughter's death, as terrible as it is, will save people's lives now.
44:13Unfortunately, she couldn't take advantage of that.
44:16But now other women can take advantage of it because of, you know, what happened to my daughter.
44:25I still reach for the phone to call her every day.
44:30Good times, bad times, good things, bad things.
44:36I know she's with me, with all of us.
44:42She should be here.
44:43I just can't believe that it happened and how it happened.
44:57Julie's youngest child is now in the care of his half-brother.
45:04The children are, for the most part, doing very well, okay, I would have to say.
45:12But there's no doubt that there's a lot of pain and there's a big hole that's left.
45:18It's a shock you never get out of.
45:21I still am in shock.
45:24And, you know, every birthday that comes up, you're having it.
45:28You have, you know, somebody that's not there.
45:31Every Christmas, every Thanksgiving, every special event, she's not there.
45:36And that hurts, okay?
45:43They lost the best, best person in their life.
45:49And it's just the saddest thing in the world is that you hear it all the time.
45:58She should be here.
46:01But it's the truth.
46:06That's why this is true.
46:09It's such a full time.
46:10It's the new voice.
46:11It's the new voice that's happening around the world.
46:12And it's the new voice.
46:16All right.
46:17Every Christmas time is on earth.
46:18You can tell us about my life.
46:19It's the new voice.
46:20And it is my goal.
46:21All right.
46:23What are your goals?
46:24I think the next day.
46:25I think the next day is your dream.
46:27The next day is your dream.
46:29You can tell us about your dream.
46:31The next day is your dream.
46:33The next day is your dream.
46:35Oh, my God.
Comments

Recommended