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TVTranscrição
00:00April 16, 1988, in California, authorities remove the body of an Ohio businessman from a local doctor's office.
00:13He appears to have died of natural causes.
00:17There was nothing out of the ordinary to indicate anything suspicious at the time, and everything seemed consistent with the location and the testimony.
00:25But it doesn't take long for the investigation to take a bizarre turn, suggesting fraud and murder.
00:35This story had everything.
00:38And just when you thought it couldn't get any weirder, something else happened and took it to a whole new level.
00:45Given the amount of planning and/or preparation that went into carrying it out, this case has been described as the near-perfect crime.
00:55Along with the police, there are those who closely document the investigation, on film, on paper, and on tape.
01:04They are the first witnesses in the public eye.
01:07With their eyes, they capture the darkest chapters of crime.
01:10And there
01:23Columbus, Ohio, located in the American Midwest.
01:48In 1986, Melvin or Gene Hanson, 44, also known as Gene Hanson, and John Hawkins, 24, were newcomers to the city.
02:00Although they were close friends and business partners, the two were known for their strikingly different personalities.
02:07Gene seemed to be the loner type.
02:12He was in the retail business, worked in department stores in the south, and was a shoe salesman for a while.
02:21He was estranged from his family.
02:23His gay lifestyle caused friction between him and his parents.
02:27And they went several years without having any contact.
02:29In contrast to Gene's reserved nature, the younger brother, John Hawkins, is considered pleasant and sociable.
02:40John Hawkins is an interesting personality, dynamic, good-looking, and very charismatic.
02:47The women adored him.
02:49People enjoyed John's company.
02:51One thing people always told me about John was that when you were in a room with John Hawkins, he would make you feel like the most important person there.
03:02Shortly after arriving in Columbus, the two men opened a sportswear store called Just Sweats.
03:08When Just Sweats started, it was very popular, very fashionable.
03:12Being primarily a university town, or a college area, everyone wanted to be there.
03:16The coats were cool, the clothes were cool, John Hawkins was cool.
03:21He made these commercials where he danced with all those different models.
03:26Don't ask me how they did it, they hand-paint anything, anything at all.
03:30Come here.
03:32Cut.
03:33Very good.
03:34It was one of those places, a great place to be back then.
03:39Just Sweats started to grow; they had one on campus, and soon they were opening stores all over the city.
03:44It looked like a fast-growing business after they opened it.
03:48They always had money, a limousine to go out at night, always bought drinks, and were the life of the party in many Columbus nightclubs.
03:57But at the end of 1987, at the height of his success, Gene Hanson tells Just Sweats employees that he is suffering from a heart problem.
04:08Leaving the day-to-day running of the business to his partner, John Hawkins, he takes an extended trip back to California.
04:15He told people that he was sick, that he was dying.
04:18Months later, there is a dramatic turn of events.
04:24In Glendale, California, the local emergency room receives a morning call from Dr. Richard Boggs, a well-known local physician.
04:32He was calling because of his patient, Gene Hanson.
04:35When Dr. Boggs called emergency services for help, he appeared to be in a state of panic.
04:42He said that a patient was having a seizure and needed immediate paramedic assistance at the office.
04:50It was a very large office building, and there was nobody there at that time of the morning.
04:54It was Saturday morning when the paramedics arrived.
04:57Boggs appeared through the back door, looking like he was out of breath.
05:00He was agitated and ordered the paramedics to follow him to his office, saying he was trying to save one of his patients.
05:09He was lying on the floor.
05:11The victim's boots were on a pillow, elevated, and he appeared not to be breathing.
05:17He was possibly dead at that moment.
05:19However, Dr. Boggs insisted that they try to save him.
05:23So, they applied a three-electrode ECG to the body.
05:26They gave him electric shocks.
05:27But nothing seemed to work in resurrecting this particular individual.
05:36Following procedure, two police officers also responded to the call and went to the scene.
05:41According to Dr. Boggs, the incident began hours earlier with an unexpected phone call in the middle of the night.
05:47Boggs stated that he received a call from Mr. Hanson complaining of chest pains and instructed him to come to his office immediately to be examined.
06:02When Hanson arrived at the doctor's office early that morning, the doctor said he took him to an examination room in his office.
06:11And he began to check the pulse, he listened to the heart.
06:18He left Jane Hanson on the examination table and went to another part of his office.
06:24Suddenly, he heard a falling noise coming from the examination room.
06:30When he entered the room, he saw that Melvin Hanson was lying on the floor and appeared to be unconscious.
06:40He said that Hanson collapsed and died.
06:43He tried to revive him, but without any success.
06:47Although Dr. Boggs had a file detailing Jane Hanson's history of heart problems,
06:53The police suspected the sequence of events.
06:56For them, any doctor who had a patient complaining of chest pains
07:04And with a history of heart disease, any conscientious doctor would have said...
07:10Go to the nearest hospital, and I'll meet you there, instead of coming to my office for an examination.
07:20Also strange is the doctor's claim that the first attempts to call emergency services were unsuccessful.
07:26Meaning that he only managed to get help after it was too late.
07:31Dr. Boggs claimed that when he called emergency services, the line was busy.
07:34I can guarantee that on a Saturday morning, anything is possible.
07:38But on that particular morning, there weren't many calls to the emergency services.
07:42Within an hour, Craig Harvey of the Los Angeles Medical Examiner's Office
07:46A police photographer arrives to examine and photograph the body.
07:50My thoughts when I arrived at the scene were that it appeared to be a natural death.
07:57The deceased person appeared to be a patient of the doctor, who was aware of their medical history.
08:05There was a medical record with recent documented visits on it.
08:10The only thing that caught my attention was that rigor mortis was well established in the body.
08:20Which I thought was a bit premature.
08:24But he was a moderately robust person, without being large.
08:29So, I took that into account.
08:33A search of the deceased's clothing revealed a wallet, but with little documentation.
08:42All that was in the wallet were some credit cards with the name Melville Eugine Hanson on them.
08:49and a photocopy of an Ohio birth certificate.
08:53There was no driver's license, no other identifying information in the wallet.
08:59Nothing like the traditional kind we typically see in people's wallets.
09:06The body is transported to the Los Angeles medical examiner's office.
09:11where they take your fingerprints and prepare you for autopsy.
09:14The coroner found evidence of fatty tissue around the heart.
09:19This seemed to confirm the possibility that the deceased had died of a heart attack.
09:25There were no visible signs of a stab wound, gunshot wound, bullet hole, etc.
09:31No evidence of a crime had been detected in the report.
09:37The official cause of death was myocarditis, or inflammation of the heart muscle.
09:44Myocarditis.
09:45There was a corpse and there was a doctor who presented a medical record.
09:50showing that the deceased had a long history of heart disease.
09:54So, at that point, the medical examiner declared the death to be of natural causes.
09:58The news of Melvin's sudden death and Gene Hanson
10:02It reaches the business partner, John Hawkins, and the employees of Suedes in the east.
10:08John was in Columbus when he was informed that Gene had died.
10:13John announced to his employees, the people who worked at Just Suedes,
10:18that Gene had died.
10:20The store employees were saddened by Gene's death.
10:24He was a very well-liked guy at Just Suedes.
10:27And I think there was genuine sadness when they were informed that he had passed away.
10:35Gene Hanson's will named his business partner John Hawkins.
10:40as the sole beneficiary of his estate.
10:42John Hawkins' biggest concern after being notified of the death of his former partner.
10:50The goal was to ensure his body was cremated immediately.
10:56So, he arrived at the location the following day.
11:00He tried to take responsibility for the body and have it cremated immediately.
11:05Mr. Hawkins hired the services of a crematorium to have the body cremated.
11:12And when the crematorium failed to disperse the remains sufficiently,
11:19He went to another company that could achieve that.
11:21and hired her to disperse the ashes more quickly.
11:26and thus be able to return to the lightning bolt.
11:28On April 29, 1988, approximately two weeks after the death of his partner,
11:36John Hawkins sends a declaration of proof of death.
11:39to the insurance company where Gene Hanson had taken out life insurance policies.
11:45There were one and a half million dollars in insurance policies.
11:49who had been hired before Melvin Hanson's death.
11:52The beneficiary of all life insurance policies was John Hawkins.
11:58John Hawkins soon receives an initial check for one million dollars.
12:06At the same time, however, an agent at the insurance company
12:09is preparing to close the file
12:11when you notice an imperfection in how the body was identified.
12:17She examined everything and said it needed one more check.
12:22Since the medical examiner was responsible for identifying the body,
12:26She called the morgue and asked how they arrived at that conclusion.
12:30and what they did to establish the body's identity.
12:34Since the deceased did not have identification with a suitable photo,
12:38The identification was originally based solely on the word of Dr. Boggs.
12:43and his partner John Hawkins.
12:45To obtain supporting evidence before closing the file,
12:48A request is made to compare a photo and fingerprint.
12:51The decision was made by the Glendale Police Department.
12:58to request a Soundex.
13:00Soundex is a copy of the driver's license record.
13:06which the Department of Motor Vehicles has filed.
13:11The idea was to compare the photo found on Soundex.
13:16with the photo of the deceased found in Dr. Boggs' office.
13:22But when Gene Hanson's photo arrives, there's a clear discrepancy.
13:27The photo was sent to us.
13:30She was examined.
13:33And what we saw in the photo was an individual who was at least 40 years old.
13:38Gray hair, gray beard.
13:41The photo of the corpse was of an individual with striking red hair.
13:49Obviously younger, but he had a full head of hair.
13:54Gene Hanson's fingerprints were recorded.
13:57They were also requested and compared.
13:59to the fingerprints taken from the body in Dr. Boggs' office.
14:03Like the photos, they weren't compatible.
14:05Realizing that Gene Hanson's death was a hoax,
14:10The insurance company tried to prevent the check from being paid.
14:13one million dollars from the life insurance policy.
14:15But John Hawkins deducted the amount as soon as he received it.
14:18And now it couldn't be found anywhere.
14:22John Hawkins was seen leaving Columbus.
14:24with a million dollars in cash in a bag.
14:29He left his car at the airport and disappeared.
14:35What at first glance appeared to be a natural death.
14:39It was now something very sinister.
14:42I immediately thought we had a case of fraud.
14:46life insurance and possibly homicide.
14:50One of the problems we had,
14:53knowing that the deceased was not Melvin Hanson,
14:58The fingerprints didn't match; the question was who was dead.
15:01Where is the real Melvin Hanson?
15:05And where is John Hawkins?
15:10The police will soon discover the true identity of the body.
15:14in Dr. Boggs' office.
15:16And new clues point to a larger conspiracy.
15:19to commit the perfect crime.
15:23August 1988.
15:26In California, authorities are trying
15:29piecing together the clues of a bizarre fraud case.
15:32The true identity of a body
15:33which was declared to be from the Ohio businessman,
15:36Gene Hanson is now unknown.
15:39The real Gene Hanson is missing.
15:41his business partner John Hawkins
15:43and a million dollars in life insurance.
15:46Homicide is suspected.
15:47but there is still no evidence
15:49that the mysterious person was murdered.
15:51At the time, even though the fingerprints were different,
15:56the medical examiner had already determined
15:58that the death was due to natural causes.
16:01Therefore, we did not have a homicide.
16:03Not in the state of California.
16:05The only clue we had
16:07It was a body that had been misidentified.
16:10And our first task
16:12It was about identifying the unidentified person.
16:17And, unfortunately, the deceased had been cremated.
16:22We no longer had a body to examine.
16:24But we had a good set of his fingerprints.
16:27We had photographs of him.
16:30We could begin to investigate.
16:31and try to find out who that person was,
16:34starting with the records of missing persons.
16:39While investigators try to identify the deceased,
16:42the company that paid the life insurance
16:44files a lawsuit in Ohio
16:46against the missing beneficiary John Hawkins,
16:49demanding the return of the money.
16:51At the same time, the clothing chain Just Sweats,
16:54that the two men founded,
16:55It went bankrupt, exhausted of funds.
16:59The financial status of Just Sweats
17:02It was a house of cards about to collapse.
17:05And this happened at the moment when Hawkins
17:07He got what he wanted.
17:09Everything was shut down.
17:11When the story comes out in the local media,
17:15It is assumed that John Hawkins escaped.
17:17with the insurance money and the company's money.
17:21But Gene Hanson's fate is uncertain.
17:25Meanwhile, in California,
17:27The investigators get the first major clue in the case.
17:31After examining hundreds of missing persons reports,
17:34One stands out.
17:35A 32-year-old accountant,
17:38Alice Green,
17:39was last seen
17:41in a local gay bar
17:42on the night before Gene Hanson's recorded death,
17:45wearing sinisterly similar clothes
17:47found in the body
17:49in Dr. Boggs' office.
17:50When the investigator found the missing person report
17:55and saw the boots and the striped shirt,
17:58We were very excited.
18:01When the photo of that incident
18:03in Dr. Boggs' office
18:05of the victim lying on the floor
18:08It was shown to a dear friend.
18:10and for an aunt of Alice Green,
18:13the two identified as
18:15not being Melvin Hanson
18:17Yes, Alice Green.
18:18Despite the autopsy report
18:21in Alice Green's body
18:22still mentioning natural death,
18:24a homicide investigation
18:25It was now underway.
18:29We had a clear case.
18:30insurance fraud.
18:32The challenge was to prove it.
18:33that a homicide occurred.
18:34We believed that Alice Green,
18:36considering his age at the time,
18:38He hadn't died of a heart attack.
18:41When the local neurologist
18:43Dr. Boggs
18:44is confronted with the fact
18:45that the body that identified
18:47as being by Gene Hanson
18:48It actually belongs to another man.
18:50he immediately
18:51protests innocence,
18:52claiming that also
18:53I had been deceived.
18:57Dr. Boggs
18:58claimed that the man
18:59who died in his office
19:01she was the only person
19:02whom he knew as Gene Hanson.
19:05His argument has always been...
19:07that he himself
19:07had been a victim,
19:09that had been
19:10a natural death
19:11and that he did everything
19:12to resurrect
19:13the dead person
19:14and unfortunately
19:15couldn't save
19:16your life.
19:21But the police
19:22Dr. Boggs suspects
19:23He knows more than he claims.
19:25They discover
19:26that your medical clinic
19:27It is dying.
19:29giving it to him
19:30a financial reason
19:31to participate in the fraud.
19:32In many ways,
19:33under the guise of professionalism,
19:35he seemed to be carrying
19:36a double life.
19:38To have more money,
19:39the police discover
19:40that he manufactured
19:41and sold designer drugs
19:43directly from your office.
19:46Dr. Richard
19:47He was a neurologist.
19:49highly respected
19:50in Glendale, California.
19:53He was married
19:54and had children.
19:55At a certain point,
19:57He abandoned his family.
19:58and he started practicing
20:00your gay lifestyle.
20:02At that same time,
20:04your clinic started
20:05stumbling
20:06and he had
20:07many problems.
20:08We know that he stayed
20:11financially
20:12helpless,
20:13I had a lot of debt.
20:16and it was great
20:18financial distress.
20:21It was obvious
20:21that he was involved
20:22in other things
20:24that could be
20:25considered
20:26inappropriate.
20:29During the investigation,
20:31a recent incident
20:32He stood out.
20:34It involved a man.
20:35named Barry Pomeroy,
20:36which Boggs had addressed
20:38in a local gay bar
20:39two weeks before
20:40of a body appear
20:41in his office.
20:43Barry Pomeroy
20:44he was a man
20:45from the West Hollywood area.
20:47He had been
20:47flirted with by Dr. Boggs
20:49for several weeks.
20:50On one occasion,
20:51The doctor took him.
20:52all the way to Glendale
20:53for your office
20:54and suggested
20:56or asked
20:57Barry Pomeroy
20:57I would be very happy
20:59in doing
20:59a physical examination.
21:01It is clear
21:02that Barry Pomeroy
21:03did not refuse
21:04and it went
21:05an examination room.
21:07At a certain point
21:08during the physical examination,
21:11The doctor went to hug
21:12Barry Pomeroy
21:13hiding a weapon
21:15shock in the hand
21:16and used it
21:18on the nape of the neck
21:19by Barry Pomeroy.
21:20He had enough strength.
21:22to fight
21:22and resisted
21:23to the advances
21:24by Dr. Boggs
21:25which continued
21:26trying to get it right
21:26Barry with the gun
21:27Shocking.
21:30At the end,
21:31Dr. Boggs
21:31He stopped and apologized.
21:33by the attack.
21:33And despite
21:34by Barry Pomeroy
21:35to have provided
21:36complaint
21:36in the police
21:37local,
21:38there was
21:38No accusations.
21:40The doctor
21:41at that point
21:41I didn't have
21:42no history
21:43of violence,
21:43no reason
21:45for the police
21:47from Glendale
21:48suspect
21:49of some crime.
21:50Like this,
21:50again,
21:51due to lack of evidence
21:52to support
21:53the accusation
21:53of aggression,
21:55He was released.
21:55now the incident
21:58it was seen
21:58under a light
21:59different
22:00due to death
22:01by Alice Green
22:01a few weeks
22:02after.
22:03The police
22:03thinks the attack
22:04it may have been
22:05the first attempt
22:06to get a body
22:07to claim
22:08life insurance
22:09fraudulent.
22:11A warrant
22:12search
22:12it was executed
22:13in the doctor's office
22:14and at home
22:14by Dr. Boggs
22:15where did they find out
22:16receipts for various
22:17stun guns
22:18different.
22:20Dr. Boggs
22:22and her boyfriend
22:23at the time
22:23were present
22:25when we executed
22:26the warrant
22:27search.
22:28When he read
22:29the warrant
22:29and what were we
22:30looking for
22:31demonstrating arrogance
22:33Dr. simply
22:35He mocked the idea.
22:36that it was
22:37involved
22:38in any type
22:39of homicide.
22:42But with time
22:43the investigation
22:44gains new momentum
22:45mainly
22:46when they arise
22:47clues
22:47about the real
22:48whereabouts
22:49of the missing
22:50Gene Hanson.
22:53September
22:54from 1988
22:56in California
22:57the authorities
22:58They are investigating.
22:59a coup
23:00life insurance
23:01involving
23:01business partners
23:02Eugene Hanson
23:03and John Hawkins.
23:05The neurologist
23:05local
23:06Dr. Richard Boggs
23:07is also a suspect
23:08of being involved
23:09and may have provided
23:10the victim's body
23:11Alice Green
23:12for the coup.
23:15While the police
23:16in Glendale
23:17works to build
23:18a case
23:18a private detective
23:20hired by the insurance company
23:21Try to make progress.
23:22in the search for
23:23Eugene Hanson
23:24and John Hawkins.
23:26Searching through the trash
23:27left out
23:28from the house of Hawkins
23:29in Ohio
23:29he discovers
23:30phone bills
23:31old.
23:32They show
23:33numerous connections
23:34for a number
23:34in Miami
23:35in the days and weeks
23:36that preceded
23:37a faked death.
23:39The number in Miami
23:40It is registered.
23:40for Wolfgang
23:41and Fon Schnauden.
23:44Curiously
23:45the authorities
23:46in Glendale
23:46they also found
23:47a name
23:48in agendas
23:48address
23:49found
23:49in a search
23:50at home
23:50by Dr. Boggs.
23:52On a page
23:54the name was
23:54John Hawkins
23:55and your phone
23:57in Columbus, Ohio.
23:59On the opposite page
24:00the name was
24:01Wolfgang Fon Schnauden
24:02and the telephones
24:03in Miami.
24:06John Perkins
24:07from the department
24:08police
24:08from Glendale
24:09Go to Miami
24:10to investigate
24:10a possible
24:11appearance
24:12by Hanson.
24:13About that
24:14Wolfgang Fon Schnauden
24:15It maintains coverage there.
24:17and apparently
24:18left the country
24:18for a period
24:19prolonged period of time.
24:20Your contract
24:22rental
24:22nonetheless
24:23reveals
24:23A lot of things.
24:27In the contract
24:28rental
24:28he gives
24:29as references
24:30Dr. Richard Boggs
24:32and John Hawkins.
24:34After
24:34the whole situation
24:35came to light
24:37It became obvious.
24:38that Wolfgang
24:39Fon Schnauden
24:40It was Gene Hanson.
24:42The number
24:43social security
24:44by Wolfgang
24:45Fon Schnauden
24:45it was the same
24:46number
24:47social security
24:47of the missing
24:48Eugene Hanson.
24:50The dates
24:51birth
24:51They were identical.
24:55I showed
24:56to the broker
24:56real estate
24:57a photo
24:58of the individual
24:59that we knew
24:59like Melvin Hanson
25:01and he identified him
25:02like Wolfgang
25:02von Schnauden.
25:04Everything indicated
25:05that Gene Hanson
25:06I was living
25:07in Miami
25:07for months
25:08trying to pass as
25:09by a foreigner.
25:11Gene
25:12assumed
25:13identity
25:14by Wolfgang
25:14von Schnauden
25:15of nationality
25:16German
25:16living in the area
25:18from Miami
25:19where there was
25:19many tourists
25:20and residents
25:21Germans
25:22but their acquaintances
25:23in Florida
25:24in the area
25:25from Miami
25:25they suspected
25:27from him
25:27because he
25:28I didn't speak.
25:28German.
25:31The broker
25:31real estate
25:32from Miami
25:32that rented
25:33the coverage
25:33for Fon Schnauden
25:34also says
25:35John Perkins
25:36that he provided
25:37to your client
25:37the name
25:38from a surgeon
25:38Local plastic.
25:41Second
25:41this surgeon
25:42plastic
25:43Wolfgang
25:44von Schnauden
25:44He did reconstruction.
25:46facial
25:46did something
25:47in the eyes
25:48to appear
25:49younger
25:50and even
25:52consulted
25:53the doctor
25:53about change
25:54your impressions
25:55digital
25:55but he said
25:56that could not
25:56to do.
25:57Dead
25:58I was living
25:59in Miami
25:59at the same time
26:01the twists and turns
26:01bizarre aspects of the case
26:02not only confirms
26:03for the public
26:04What Gene
26:04Hanson still
26:05is alive
26:05but also
26:06reveals that he
26:07it could be a
26:07of the participants
26:08assets
26:08in fraud
26:09of the insurance
26:09of life
26:10It is possible
26:10murder.
26:11It became obvious.
26:14that there was
26:15a conspiracy
26:16that there was
26:16a coup
26:17in which he
26:17was involved
26:18and that
26:19It was much bigger.
26:20than we could
26:20to have imagined
26:21and that everyone
26:22the three
26:22they had to be
26:23involved.
26:25They were not
26:25businessmen
26:26They were swindlers.
26:27and Just Suites
26:29probably
26:30It was never planned.
26:31to work
26:32it was assembled
26:34just to be one
26:35vehicle
26:35to give
26:36their blows.
26:39While the police
26:40looking for both of them
26:41partners in crime
26:42also tries
26:43to build and organize
26:44the accusations
26:45against the third
26:46suspect
26:46the doctor
26:47Richard Boggs
26:48it was him
26:49who first
26:49declared
26:50that the body
26:50by Alice Green
26:51it was actually
26:52by Gene Hanson
26:53while he
26:54continues to claim
26:55innocence
26:55the police
26:56thinks he
26:56participated
26:57of death
26:57Green
26:58and offered
26:58a medical record
26:59fake for the body
27:00a history
27:01heart problem
27:02was a key factor
27:03in the statement
27:04from the autopsy
27:04death
27:05due to natural causes.
27:08Many of our team
27:09examined
27:10this medical record
27:11trying to prove
27:13that she was fake
27:14but actually
27:15the form
27:16seemed to document
27:17an extensive
27:18historical
27:20of heart disease
27:21by Mr. Hanson
27:22I had notes.
27:24I had the appointments
27:25the exams
27:26electrocardiogram
27:27It had everything.
27:28that a token
27:29genuine
27:29would have to be a patient
27:31with history
27:32of heart disease
27:34but how to get
27:35this elaborate
27:37medical chart
27:38used
27:39to deceive
27:40the doctor
27:41coroner
27:41and prove
27:43what
27:43which was false
27:44the three strips
27:47electrocardiogram
27:48on the form
27:49are examined
27:50meticulously
27:51I went to several
27:55doctors
27:56several cardiologists
27:57experts
27:59that make electrical
28:00to tell me
28:01if the result
28:02of this model
28:03electrocardiogram
28:04in particular
28:05would indicate
28:06that the person
28:07was having
28:08an attack
28:09or any type
28:10medical problem
28:11and in each situation
28:14doctors
28:15They said no.
28:16which is not like
28:17a fingerprint
28:18where you can see
28:19something different
28:19or unusual
28:20they just said
28:21which appeared to be
28:22sinus tachycardia
28:23a type of heartbeat
28:24rapid heart rate
28:25And that was all.
28:27It was very frustrating.
28:29right off the bat
28:29John Perkins
28:32he is sure
28:32that the record
28:33doctor
28:34It's fraudulent.
28:34but he can't
28:35to test
28:36hoping to find
28:37something that doctors
28:39they can't
28:39He studies the file.
28:41in his office
28:41one night
28:42he examined
28:45three exams
28:46electrocardiogram
28:47that reflected
28:47three exams
28:48separated
28:49electrical
28:49during a period
28:51several years
28:52made for
28:53the alleged
28:54Mr. Hanson
28:55he examined
28:56these strips
28:57examined
28:58the tips
28:59bites
29:00where the paper
29:00had been
29:01cut
29:02this way
29:04he discovered
29:05that the tips
29:05bites
29:06they were in agreement
29:07perfectly
29:08meaning
29:09that were not
29:10three exams
29:11separated
29:12made in a period
29:13several years
29:14It was a strip.
29:15continuous
29:16that Boggs
29:17It had torn.
29:18in two places
29:19creating three
29:20separate tests
29:21and falsified
29:23the date
29:23like this
29:25your analysis
29:26it was a
29:27important
29:27discovery
29:28because it showed
29:29conclusively
29:30that Boggs
29:32had manufactured
29:33a graph
29:34false
29:34used
29:35to deceive
29:36the doctor
29:36coroner
29:37electrocardiograms
29:40revealed
29:40the paper
29:41by Dr. Boggs
29:42in fraud
29:42of the insurance
29:43of life
29:43now the police
29:44I should find out
29:45a way
29:46to prove
29:46that Ellis Green
29:47had been
29:47murdered
29:48although not
29:49to have more
29:49your body
29:50October
29:54from 1988
29:55the police
29:56from California
29:57are you looking for
29:58business partners
29:59Melvin Eugene Hanson
30:00and John Hawkins
30:01both wanted
30:03for fraud
30:03insurance
30:04after staging
30:05death
30:05by Hanson
30:06the third suspect
30:07It's the doctor.
30:08Richard Boggs
30:09that the police
30:09suspect
30:10to have murdered
30:11an accountant
30:11local
30:12Ellis Green
30:13to offer
30:13a body
30:14for the coup
30:15knowing the name
30:18false
30:19and the phone
30:19that Jean Hanson
30:20I was using
30:21in Miami
30:21during the month
30:22of his death
30:22forged
30:23the authorities
30:24begin
30:25searching
30:25evidence
30:26documented
30:27of a plan
30:27coordinated
30:28between the three
30:29men
30:30we gathered
30:33records
30:33telephones
30:34of the three
30:35suspects
30:35from the area
30:37of Grandale
30:38Columbus
30:39Ohio
30:39and Miami
30:41Florida
30:42we insert
30:43in a bank
30:44data
30:44we print
30:46and we begin
30:48to do
30:48the connections
30:49necessary
30:50we reviewed
30:52more than
30:52ten thousand
30:53connections
30:54telephones
30:54during the
30:56period
30:56time
30:57in which
30:57we were
30:58searching
30:59to establish
31:00what type
31:00conspiracy
31:01it was
31:01how it was
31:03expected
31:03there was a
31:04peak of
31:04connections
31:05among the
31:05suspects
31:06on the days
31:06around
31:07of the events
31:07key
31:08of the case
31:08including
31:09the first
31:10attack
31:10failed
31:11with weapon
31:11shock
31:12of the doctor
31:12Boggs
31:13against
31:13Barry
31:13Pomeroy
31:14looking
31:17the records
31:17telephones
31:18one can see
31:18development
31:19of a pattern
31:20these calls
31:21preceded
31:22the contact
31:22with
31:23Pomeroy
31:23at night
31:24in which he
31:24was attacked
31:25by Boggs
31:25until now
31:26in which he
31:27was addressed
31:28and transported
31:29to the doctor's office
31:30by Boggs
31:30and after the failure
31:32of the doctor
31:33Boggs
31:33not killing
31:34Barry
31:34Pomeroy
31:35you can
31:36observe
31:36these connections
31:37priorities
31:38among the
31:39three
31:39Hanson
31:40Hawkins
31:41and Boggs
31:42and I can only
31:43imagine
31:43what they talked about
31:44I failed.
31:45this time
31:46I need
31:46Help next time
31:47It's a big one.
31:49conspiracy
31:50only of the three
31:51because they
31:51they didn't care
31:52for more
31:52nobody
31:52only one
31:53to the other
31:54the same
31:55standard
31:55becomes
31:57obvious
31:58when
31:59Alice Green
31:59He was murdered.
32:01furthermore
32:04a connection
32:05charged
32:05on the card
32:06credit
32:06of the doctor
32:07Boggs
32:07it was done
32:08from a bar
32:08just
32:09two blocks
32:10from where
32:10Alice Green
32:11it was seen
32:11last
32:12time
32:12at night
32:13that disappeared
32:14also
32:15called
32:15attention
32:15a quick
32:16phone call
32:16of
32:17John Hawkins
32:17in Ohio
32:18for a
32:18number
32:19unknown
32:19in Glendale
32:20same
32:20morning
32:21that Alice Green
32:21he appeared
32:22dead
32:23no
32:25we knew
32:25what number
32:26It was in Glendale.
32:26but
32:27we investigated
32:28and we discovered
32:28to be of a
32:29hotel
32:29in Glendale
32:30investigators
32:32they went there
32:33and they discovered
32:34what
32:34same
32:35time when
32:36the paramedics
32:37they were
32:38attending
32:38in the doctor's office
32:40of the doctor
32:40Boggs
32:41Wolfgang
32:42Eugene
32:43Von Snowden
32:43an identity
32:45used
32:45by Mr.
32:46Hanson
32:46was
32:47registering
32:48at this hotel
32:49what was
32:50two blocks away
32:50from the doctor's office
32:51Mr.
32:52Boggs
32:52that connection
32:54one minute
32:55he took
32:56Mr.
32:56Hanson
32:56to be
32:57somebody
32:57what we thought
32:58being in Miami
32:59at the time of the crime
33:00to be
33:01someone present
33:01in Glendale
33:02at the time of the crime
33:03Our
33:05theory
33:06It always has been
33:07the one that
33:07Dr.
33:08Boggs
33:08and Mr.
33:09Hanson
33:09had gone
33:11bars
33:11looking for
33:13someone who
33:13were
33:14reasonably
33:15like
33:15with Mr.
33:16Hanson
33:16and they
33:17they found
33:18Mr.
33:18Green
33:19and of some
33:19form
33:20They attracted him.
33:20all the way to the doctor's office
33:21and they killed him
33:22Both
33:24they were here
33:25right away
33:26that occurred
33:26the murder
33:27and John Hawkins
33:28it was still
33:28in Ohio
33:29waiting to act
33:30with a copy
33:31of the will
33:31by Melvin Hanson
33:32Records
33:35confirm
33:35that one
33:36Gene Hanson
33:37flew to
33:37Los Angeles
33:38one day before
33:39of his death
33:40and returned
33:41to Miami
33:42one day later
33:43but how
33:44Wolfgang
33:45and Von
33:45Snowden
33:46This was a coup.
33:48highly planned
33:50not only for
33:51to defraud
33:51insurance companies
33:52but also
33:53to commit
33:53a murder
33:54Although the evidence
33:57circumstantial
33:58of a conspiracy
33:59be strong
34:00an obstacle
34:01key
34:01I was on the way
34:02of the case
34:03the body
34:04that passed
34:04as being
34:05by Gene Hanson
34:05and that was
34:06by Alice Green
34:07and that supposedly
34:08died of natural causes
34:09of myocarditis
34:10The most critical part
34:12for us
34:12It was that death
34:13was considered
34:14natural
34:14You can only have
34:16an accusation
34:16homicide
34:17if the doctor
34:18coroner states
34:19that the person
34:19died as a result
34:21homicide
34:22which is death
34:22by the hands
34:23from another person
34:23We needed
34:25someone
34:25that refuted
34:26what was
34:27in the report
34:27from the doctor
34:28coroner
34:28that this
34:29had been
34:29a death
34:30of natural cause
34:31Although the body
34:32had been
34:33cremated
34:33the police
34:34still had
34:34hope
34:35of a second
34:36opinion
34:36They take
34:37photos and slides
34:38fabric
34:39from the autopsy
34:39original
34:40for the cardiopathologist
34:41Dr. Michael
34:42Fishbein
34:42a recognized
34:43specialist
34:44in the area
34:44Dr. Fishbein
34:46looked at everything
34:47in two minutes
34:47and said
34:48that the person
34:48He did not die.
34:49of myocarditis
34:50Now the part
34:51more difficult
34:52it was to convince
34:53the doctor
34:53coroner
34:54Dr. Fishbein
34:55offered
34:56extensive documentation
34:57and examples
34:58how myocarditis
34:59he would be
35:00in the terminal direction
35:01And it wasn't
35:02Nothing compares
35:03even for me
35:04a layman in the field
35:05to say
35:06that Alice Green
35:08He did not die.
35:09that problem
35:10They reassessed
35:13they reconsidered
35:14and then they changed
35:15the cause
35:16of death
35:17to
35:18indeterminate
35:20Although a cause
35:22indeterminate
35:23death
35:23leave open
35:24the possibility
35:25homicide
35:26the police
35:27still hopes to limit
35:28for a cause
35:28alternative
35:29Dr. Michael Baden
35:31another specialist
35:32was also consulted
35:33We took samples.
35:36of all fabrics
35:37that were preserved
35:38of the body
35:38by Alice Green
35:39He examined
35:41the strips
35:41electrical
35:42read the report
35:43from the coroner
35:44the report
35:45from the pathologist
35:46And one of the parts
35:47more reviews
35:48it was the one with the photos
35:49taken
35:50by Alice Green
35:51on the ground
35:51from the doctor's office
35:52by Boggs
35:53Alice Green
35:55it had an appearance
35:56unique
35:57called cyanosis
35:58And cyanosis
36:00It's the appearance.
36:01dark blue
36:02purple
36:03in the head
36:04which shows
36:05that before
36:06of death
36:07there was a shortage
36:08oxygen
36:09The opinion
36:12by Michael Baden
36:13it was that the individual
36:14had died
36:15as a result
36:16of asphyxiation
36:17Although the whereabouts
36:19by Dean Hanson
36:20and John Hawkins
36:21even if it was unknown
36:22the police
36:23now there is evidence
36:24enough
36:24to accuse
36:25all three
36:26suspects
36:26conspiracy
36:27to commit
36:28murder
36:29and fraud
36:29Three people
36:31in that case
36:32were necessary
36:33so that this homicide
36:34if it worked
36:34Melvin Hanson
36:36He was one of the three.
36:37He was
36:38the guy
36:39who had to die
36:40Hawkins was the brains.
36:43and unfortunately
36:45Dr. Boggs
36:46It had to be by force.
36:47in this situation
36:48in this relationship
36:49January 29th
36:53from 1989
36:54with the case
36:55taking shape
36:56there is a development
36:58lightning fast
36:58in the east
36:59in Texas
36:59at the airport
37:01Fort Worth
37:01from Dallas
37:02customs agents
37:03they write down a man
37:04with appearance
37:05suspect
37:05getting off a plane
37:06from Acapulco
37:08Immigration officers
37:09They looked at him.
37:10and they thought they looked like
37:11drug trafficker
37:12they detained him
37:14and they began to examine
37:15your belongings
37:16finding
37:17$14,000
37:18no money
37:19that he didn't have
37:20declared
37:20But what really
37:21raised suspicion
37:22That's because he had
37:2316 different pieces
37:25identification
37:26including
37:28the
37:30homicide victim
37:31Alice Henry Green
37:32and a book
37:34late
37:35from the library
37:35from Florida
37:36about how to change
37:37your identity
37:38when the police
37:40They checked the names.
37:41found
37:42in the identifications
37:43in the database
37:44including Wolfgang's
37:45and von Schnauden
37:46they quickly realized
37:48that the man detained
37:48it was actually
37:49Melvin Jean Hanson
37:51I found it almost poetic.
37:54this man will return
37:56by a foreign power
37:59with so many indicators
38:02revealing
38:03and not be
38:05better prepared
38:07to enter the country
38:08without being detected
38:10with Hanson detained
38:15in Texas
38:15the police
38:16in Glendale
38:17California
38:17also arrests
38:18immediately
38:19Dr. Richard Boggs
38:20before he escaped
38:21or destroyed evidence
38:22when Dr. Boggs
38:25was brought back
38:26to the police station
38:27we sat
38:27and we inform
38:28constitutional rights
38:29from him
38:30he showed himself
38:31pompous
38:32and arrogant
38:33he thought
38:34because he is a doctor
38:35I didn't know
38:36what was I talking about
38:37that this case
38:38It would never take off.
38:39he refused
38:41to respond
38:41any of our questions
38:43and the interrogation
38:44It ended there.
38:45formal charges
38:46were done
38:47publicly
38:48against the three men
38:49We had every reason to.
38:51to believe
38:52that Dr. Boggs
38:52and Melvin Hanson
38:53were present
38:54and they committed
38:55homicide
38:56by Alice Green
38:57so they went
38:58accused of this homicide
39:00but while Hanson
39:02and Boggs
39:02They are being held.
39:03John Hawkins
39:0426 years old
39:05considered head
39:06behind the coup
39:07remains at large
39:08John Hawkins
39:11was an individual
39:12difficult to find
39:13I describe it.
39:14like being a chameleon
39:15which could be
39:16anything
39:17he could become
39:19whoever wanted to on that day
39:20and everyone
39:21I would believe him.
39:22he won
39:24trust
39:25anyone
39:26that I knew
39:27he was carrying
39:29everybody
39:29in the conversation
39:30and it did not put down roots
39:32but the style
39:34playboy lifestyle
39:36It's difficult to hide.
39:37that soon
39:38would lead the police
39:39the first clue
39:40concrete
39:40of his whereabouts
39:41February 1989
39:46Gene Hanson
39:47and the doctor
39:47Richard Boggs
39:48were arrested
39:49accused
39:49fraud
39:50insurance
39:50and homicide
39:51together with
39:53a third suspect
39:54John Hawkins
39:55that remains at large
39:56the police
39:56claims that they
39:57They faked the death.
39:58by Gene Hanson
39:59killing
39:59and using the body
40:00from another man
40:01now known
40:02like an accountant
40:03from Glendale, California
40:04called
40:05Alice Green
40:06news
40:07of an advance
40:08in the bizarre case
40:09They run all over the country.
40:10while they wait
40:13extradition
40:14by Gene Hanson
40:14to California
40:15the authorities
40:16They go first.
40:17Dr. Boggs
40:18on trial
40:19a big question
40:22was there
40:23same homicide
40:24They certainly had
40:26the experts themselves
40:28to affirm
40:28that the victim
40:29died of causes
40:30natural
40:31our experts
40:33they would say
40:33that the victim
40:34died as a result
40:35of crime
40:35that was one of
40:37major battle lines
40:38in case
40:38beyond the debate
40:42manufacturing
40:43from a medical record
40:44by Dr. Boggs
40:45for the dead
40:45It was evidence.
40:46conviction
40:47as well as the testimony
40:49of a secretary
40:50from his office
40:50which explained
40:51that the real
40:52Gene Hanson
40:52He was well known.
40:54by the doctor
40:54Dr. Boggs
40:57he claimed that
40:58Gene Hanson
40:58the man who died
40:59in his office
41:00she was the only person
41:02that he knew
41:02like Gene Hanson
41:03but your receptionist
41:05I had no idea.
41:06whose dead person it was
41:07she identified
41:09a photo
41:09by Gene Hanson
41:10as being
41:11of the true
41:12Gene Hanson
41:12and opened a huge hole
41:14in its history
41:15things like that
41:16that emerged
41:16in the trial
41:17They practically sealed it.
41:18the whole conspiracy
41:19and they showed
41:20that the three men
41:22they acted in unison
41:23and they planned
41:25all of that
41:25on July 12
41:28from 1990
41:29Dr. Boggs
41:30is considered
41:31guilty
41:31of all the accusations
41:33and is convicted
41:33life imprisonment
41:34without right
41:35conditional
41:36while the prosecutors
41:38they prepare
41:38for the trial
41:39by Gene Hanson
41:40the search for
41:41co-conspirator
41:42John Hawkins
41:42continues
41:43I appeared on television.
41:45three times
41:46to talk about this case
41:47despite the history
41:49where he was
41:51and of people
41:52who were with him
41:53nothing was
41:54current
41:55nothing was
41:56really
41:58concrete
41:58with regard to
41:59to the current
42:00whereabouts
42:00by John Hawkins
42:01in the summer
42:02from 1991
42:04after an update
42:05about Hawkins
42:06will air
42:07on European television
42:08a new one emerges
42:09promising track
42:10an informant
42:11Amsterdam league
42:12and claims to know
42:13John Hawkins
42:14although the fugitive
42:15do not use anymore
42:15that name
42:16according to the informant
42:17Hawkins is using
42:18a fake name
42:19British
42:20and is sailing
42:21in the Mediterranean
42:22with your son
42:22he just wanted to make sure
42:24security
42:25of your son
42:26which was also
42:27traveling with Hawkins
42:29back then
42:30both
42:32apparently
42:33they boarded
42:33on a catamaran
42:34towards
42:35the island of Sardinia
42:36following the information
42:37the authorities
42:38immediately
42:39contacted
42:40the officers
42:40of intelligence
42:41naval
42:41based
42:42over there
42:42in 24 hours
42:45they located
42:46the catamaran
42:47anchored
42:47at the end
42:48of a small
42:49pier
42:49and they
42:51in fact
42:52they observed
42:54Hawkins
42:55Get out of the car.
42:55in the parking lot
42:56and to go
42:57to the boat
42:57where he was confronted
42:59and then arrested
43:00without any printing
43:04digital in the archive
43:05the Italian police
43:05confirms he is the real Hawkins
43:07through a
43:08unique identifier
43:09they used
43:11a characteristic
43:12Mr. Hawkins' physics
43:14call
43:15vitiligo
43:15which is the absence
43:17pigmentation
43:18on the skin
43:19in that case
43:20It was in the area
43:21of the genitals
43:22by Mr. Hawkins
43:23that era
43:24the only characteristic
43:26physical
43:27that they knew
43:28that could
43:29identify it
43:30after three years
43:34on the run
43:34the suspected head
43:35of the case
43:36fraud
43:36and homicide
43:37He is finally detained.
43:38Melvin
43:41Eugene Hanson
43:42and John Hawkins
43:43finally they will
43:43on trial
43:44with the same
43:45accusations
43:46who condemned
43:46Dr. Richard Boggs
43:48murder
43:49fraud
43:50and conspiracy
43:51to commit
43:51both
43:52they were
43:55on trial
43:55together
43:56basically
43:57they passed
43:58by the same
43:59evidence
43:59that we had
44:00during the trial
44:01by Boggs
44:02almost the same
44:03witnesses
44:03were available
44:04for us
44:05Hanson admitted
44:07that was
44:07in the doctor's office
44:08by Boggs
44:08right away
44:09that we believe
44:10that Alice Green
44:11He was murdered.
44:12he never said
44:13that was
44:13in the same room
44:14that Boggs
44:15and Alice Green
44:16but said
44:17that was
44:17outside
44:18who heard
44:18suspicious noises
44:19but I had no idea
44:21than what was happening
44:22This was very unusual.
44:24he positioned himself
44:25in the doctor's office
44:26at the same time
44:26of the homicide
44:27as for Hawkins
44:30because I'm in Ohio
44:31at the time of the murder
44:32he denied
44:33any knowledge
44:34of the crime
44:34one thing
44:37that John Hawkins
44:38tried to leave
44:39very clear
44:39It was that it didn't have
44:40no idea
44:41of whom someone
44:42he would be murdered
44:43in this case
44:44who had the impression
44:46that they would
44:47to get a corpse
44:48from a morgue
44:49or somewhere else
44:50the two of them went
44:53convicts
44:53one for homicide
44:54and another for conspiracy
44:55to commit homicide
44:57one went to jail
44:58perpetual
44:58and the other
44:5925 years
45:00the doctor
45:03Richard Boggs
45:04He died in 2003.
45:05of AIDS
45:06but Melvin Dean Hanson
45:07and John Hawkins
45:08remain behind
45:09of the bars
45:09in California
45:10no sentence
45:12can bring back
45:14the victim Alice Green
45:15a man
45:16which became
45:17an innocent pawn
45:18in an attempt
45:18to commit
45:19the perfect crime
45:20if it weren't
45:22through the different
45:23people
45:23at different times
45:25who didn't know
45:26about this elaborate plan
45:27doing your job
45:29and being aware
45:31this would have been
45:32the perfect crime
45:33Yours too.
45:43friend
45:43sustainable
45:44and
45:4426.2
45:45Vlad
45:46and
45:47and
45:48the
45:48the
45:49I am
45:49the
45:50to the
45:50to the
45:50to the
45:52to the
45:53to the
45:54to the
45:54to the
45:54to the
45:56to the
45:58to the
45:59Caption by Adriana Zanotto
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