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00:00This must have been one of her last photos, before everything happened.
00:24She hasn't even reached my age yet.
00:38My mother was born in Thailand.
00:40My father fought in the Vietnam War; that's how they met.
00:44When they got divorced, I went to live with my father and my stepmother.
00:49My brother went to live with my grandmother, and my mother went to live with her boyfriend.
00:53Me and his two children.
00:56We were getting closer, right before everything happened.
01:02I had started spending more time with her around that time.
01:06My father picked me up from school and he didn't say anything.
01:21He remained silent all the way home.
01:23He didn't say anything to me, nothing at all.
01:27I knew something was wrong.
01:30I just didn't know what it was.
01:31Judging by his expression, there was a problem.
01:38I couldn't believe it.
01:54I couldn't understand what he was saying.
01:57I mean, I understood that she had left, but I was unable to grasp the gravity of it.
02:07My father didn't say much, and I don't think he could have anyway.
02:11It was difficult for him, I know he loved my mother.
02:13I only remember hugging the team and saying that everything would be alright.
02:20That everything would be alright if we stayed together.
02:24But she was our mother, and I knew things would never be okay.
02:29Can we stop, please?
02:31Of course.
02:31No, no, no, no, no.
03:01My mother woke up every day before dawn.
03:09She always ran on different wheels.
03:18She would run when it was 40 degrees Celsius, and she would run in the rain and snow.
03:23And I remember she would arrive with the ends of her hair frozen, because the sweat had frozen.
03:31She did it for her own well-being.
03:34It was one of the few things she did thinking about herself.
03:38I think that gave her peace.
03:51May 23, 1988, was a Monday.
03:56I woke up to go to school.
03:57I lived with my mother, her boyfriend Perry, and my 12-year-old brother, Danny.
04:08The house was silent.
04:11Danny and Perry hadn't woken up yet.
04:14And my mother had gone for a run.
04:15It was a typical...
04:18Monday morning.
04:18I grabbed my backpack and went to school.
04:34As soon as I stopped in front of the door...
04:36She opened up...
04:39AND...
04:40Perry showed up.
04:41That's when he told me that...
04:47She hadn't returned.
04:51He asked when I had last seen my mother.
04:55And I said...
04:57Last night.
04:57She gave me a really nice hug and...
05:11She straightened my hair.
05:17She...
05:18He said he loved me, wished me goodnight, and...
05:22That was the last time I saw her.
05:24I needed that hug.
05:31And I needed to hear that she loved me.
05:33I found her diary...
05:55And I started calling people.
05:57Have you by any chance seen my mother?
05:59For friends?
06:00For the psychologist?
06:01Have you seen my mother by any chance?
06:02Then I picked up the phone book...
06:04And I started calling the hospitals.
06:06I didn't know what else to do.
06:17A little after five...
06:21A sedan stopped in front of my house.
06:26Two men in suits left.
06:27They were...
06:29They were...
06:31Looking down, somewhat melancholic.
06:36I knew they were going to leave us devastated.
06:48We've come to inform you...
06:50What do we think of Helene?
06:51They found her body in the middle of a pasture...
06:53A few kilometers from home.
06:56She was murdered.
07:07They told us that she had been raped.
07:10Raped.
07:12And also...
07:14Stabbed to death.
07:20I remember...
07:21Listening to my brother in his room.
07:26He screamed.
07:27He flew it away...
07:36Like a wounded animal.
07:49I couldn't do anything.
07:54I was suffering too.
07:57No!
07:59No!
08:00No!
08:01No!
08:02No!
08:03No!
08:06No!
08:10They spoke several times...
08:11They were going to find the person responsible.
08:14But they...
08:16They had no suspects...
08:18Not even theories existed at that time.
08:19Put...
08:20Many years...
08:22I waited.
08:23And I prayed.
08:24And I yelled at God.
08:25I argued with God.
08:26Put...
08:27Many years...
08:29I waited.
08:31And I prayed.
08:33And I yelled at God.
08:35I argued with God.
08:37In 1997, I was investigating archived cases.
08:50Homicide cases.
08:51I was the only investigator at the time.
08:54And there were about two dozen archived cases.
08:58Every day I would go there and open the folders.
09:00Folders that were older than me at the time.
09:02And I would review the cases and decide which ones we would investigate.
09:06Lisa's case was the first one I examined.
09:09Why...
09:10It was the most recent one.
09:12Lisa Reinau was an exemplary student.
09:15A 14-year-old girl who lived with her mother.
09:18And me...
09:19And me...
09:20And me...
09:21And me...
09:22And me...
09:23And me...
09:24And me...
09:25And me...
09:26And me...
09:27And me...
09:28And me...
09:29And me...
09:30And me...
09:31And me...
09:32And me...
09:33And me...
09:34And me...
09:35She usually left the house.
09:38He walked a short distance to school.
09:41He would attend classes and then return.
09:44One day...
09:45Her mother returned from work and received a call from the school.
09:48Saying that Lisa hadn't gone to class that morning.
09:51With each passing second, Maggie, Lisa's mother, grew more anxious.
09:56Maggie's boyfriend...
09:58He decided he was going to go out and look for Lisa.
10:01And to retrace the route she took to school every day.
10:05At some point, he looked down at a wooded ravine.
10:08Just before where the school grounds began, he saw something.
10:13He saw that it was a body and also saw that it was Lisa's.
10:23That girl was someone's daughter.
10:25We were talking about a 14-year-old girl who was abandoned in the forest during winter.
10:31Frozen.
10:33That she was naked and had been murdered.
10:36I try not to get too involved in the cases.
10:46But no matter how hard we try, they saw something personal.
10:49When we look at a picture of a child and see how they died.
10:54No child should die like that.
10:57What I wanted to do was examine the physical evidence.
11:02Examine the crime scene.
11:04As an investigator, my job is to provide answers and not allow the person responsible for that tragedy to go unpunished.
11:12But I never thought I would come across a serial killer.
11:22I remember my aunt telling me to say goodbye.
11:25So I can touch my mother and give her a kiss.
11:27But I was afraid to touch her.
11:36They had put a lot of makeup on her.
11:39Too much makeup.
11:42Have you ever seen a mannequin?
11:44That's what she seemed like to me.
11:47At that age, it was like a mannequin lying there.
11:52She looked a bit like my mother.
11:55But it wasn't her.
11:59This is my last memory of my mother.
12:12I knew the case had been closed.
12:18My team and I went to the police station about four years later.
12:24They called us and asked if we could pick up her items because they no longer needed them.
12:29Thanks.
12:33I didn't know what I had gone to get.
12:36I was very anxious.
12:38The police officer gave us a brown envelope.
12:44Inside it were his wallet and his jewelry.
12:49I found it very, you know, strange, bizarre to think that they had given me things that had already belonged to her.
12:59It was as if everything had become real again.
13:06And from that moment on, I came to accept that I would probably never know who had killed my mother.
13:14When Alissa was killed, the police couldn't find the culprit.
13:30Fear spread through the community.
13:32Every parent who had a child studying at that school feared that their own child could be the next victim.
13:38The main piece of evidence they found at the crime scene was a lit cigarette.
13:45The cigarette was five meters from Alissa's body, completely out of context.
13:50There was unknown blood on the tip we lit.
13:54And then we discovered there was saliva on the tip of the filter.
13:58And we knew that the saliva on the tip of the filter wasn't Alissa's, but someone else's.
14:03We just didn't know from whom.
14:04At the time, investigators focused on relatives or acquaintances of the family.
14:10And then, they followed clues about other individuals who frequented that area.
14:15But they had no idea who had killed her.
14:27At the time of the case, in 1993, DNA testing was a novelty.
14:31But by 1997, testing technology had advanced, and we could use evidence with confidence.
14:40We started by requesting warrants to collect saliva from people and permission to conduct DNA tests on individuals.
14:49In the case of 1988, Helene Chirica was murdered not far from home while jogging.
15:08Helene Chirica's case was filed away at the time, literally abandoned in a storage room, gathering dust.
15:17Helene Chirica's running route had been murdered.
15:20Helene's running route began in the neighborhood.
15:23And then, she would take a rather isolated road that led to what is now a park.
15:30But there were trees on both sides of the road.
15:33A farmer in the area called the police saying he had found a body in the middle of a pasture.
15:40The police went to the scene and immediately concluded that it was Helene's body.
15:45She had been raped and, in addition to being strangled, had suffered a deep cut to her neck.
15:52I remember reading that file and, seeing all the brutality, seeing the crime scene, seeing the photographs, I thought, wow!
15:59The case needs to be investigated and examined.
16:01There were no suspects.
16:03We were at a dead end.
16:05Some time after her death, I found out that my... that my mother had had an argument with Michael.
16:27Michael was my coworker and friend.
16:31I was 17 years old and he was about 5 years older than me.
16:35He had asked me out several times, but my mother had forbidden me from dating him because he was too old for me.
16:42My mother's boyfriend, Perry, told me a story that had happened a few weeks before her death.
16:50Michael had come to see me, and she asked him to leave.
16:57What happened between you and my mother?
17:00Look, I went to visit you and your mother went crazy on me.
17:03She had to push him off our balcony because he was yelling at her.
17:11Michael acted strangely in the days and weeks following her death.
17:18He tried to kill himself and ended up in the hospital.
17:25That was bothering me.
17:28Perry wouldn't immediately think of him as a possible murderer of my mother.
17:33But Michael's behavior was very suspicious, and that made it much easier to suspect him.
17:41If I hadn't met him, if I hadn't been his friend, if I hadn't hung out with him, they wouldn't have met.
18:01It was a very difficult time for me knowing that I could have brought into our lives the person who killed my mother.
18:11I was sure it was him.
18:14I was sure it was him and that it was my fault.
18:21I was sure it was him.
18:25I was sure it was him and that it was my fault.
18:39Michael, why don't I tell you what happened?
18:44I already told you that I don't know anything about Elaine.
18:46He was questioned about my mother's death and he said he knew nothing about it.
19:16They found Chris's body.
19:27He was beaten to death with a baseball bat.
19:31So, right after he pleaded guilty to Chris's death,
19:36The investigators wondered if there was any chance he might have killed my mother as well.
19:42And it was a very easy conclusion to reach.
19:48I was sure it had been him.
19:50He was the culprit, and it was only a matter of time before they found out.
19:53Michael was one of the main suspects from the beginning.
20:18Because he had a relationship with the family.
20:22There was a conflict between him and Elaine.
20:24He had violent tendencies.
20:26At the time, he was seen as someone who was violent.
20:29someone capable of having committed the murder.
20:33During the initial investigation,
20:35The police interrogated Michael to try to find out if he had any connection to the crime.
20:40He had a motive and he had had opportunities.
20:42The investigators worked very hard,
20:45But they didn't get anywhere.
20:46He remained a suspect for a long time.
21:01We went to the medical examiner and collected samples.
21:05Microscope slides from Elaine's autopsy.
21:09We were certain that those blades
21:11They contained the DNA of the unknown individual who had raped her.
21:14At the same time, we sent Michael's saliva DNA sample to the lab.
21:21If the samples matched, he was guilty and we could charge him.
21:26So it was just a matter of patience.
21:28But we spent the whole time waiting for the call.
21:31I had no idea how that would affect my life.
21:47How it would affect my brother's life.
21:51It was more difficult for the team.
21:53Because he knew her better.
21:57He was older and understood more than I did.
22:02The team couldn't hold on.
22:04So he turned to drugs to cope with it.
22:08Sometimes, when he was using drugs,
22:11no matter what it was,
22:12I would grab the blanket and the pillow.
22:14and I was going to stay with him in the car,
22:17Because I wanted to make sure he was going to be okay.
22:19I thought that if I were there,
22:24The chances of something bad happening were lower.
22:28He was lost.
22:31That's why I felt I needed to take care of him.
22:35The team always seemed a bit lost.
22:38He never felt comfortable anywhere again after that.
22:49That event ended up taking something away from me.
22:57Many people say it was his choice.
23:00But would he have taken that path if she were here?
23:03I don't think I would.
23:07I miss him so much.
23:09He was my best friend.
23:10That's what happened.
23:32Michael was always the prime suspect in that case.
23:36And that was a good guess.
23:37But we ruled it out as a contributor to the DNA.
23:42that we recovered from Helene's body.
24:05Examining the cases,
24:06They had clear similarities.
24:09In the case of 1988,
24:11Helene Chirica was murdered near her house.
24:15The Lisa Hennel case in 1993
24:18It wasn't in the same community.
24:20But the place was a 10-minute drive away.
24:24The Chirica case was drawing attention.
24:26It was a crime of opportunity in the morning.
24:30The person should know that
24:31That was her running route.
24:33And I should have seen her before.
24:36The criminal parked in the pasture.
24:38so that she wouldn't know he was there.
24:41The person waited.
24:42and had planned it.
24:44In Lisa's case,
24:51The type of crime was very similar.
24:54It was a morning attack.
24:55He waited for Lisa on the way to school.
24:57And he waited for Helene to leave so he could run.
25:00The two were attacked immediately.
25:02and dragged to a more isolated location
25:05where the criminal committed homicide
25:07and sexual assault
25:08or attempted sexual assault.
25:09And then he ran away.
25:11I examined the evidence.
25:13and the modus operandi
25:14In both cases.
25:16It became clear
25:18that they could have a relationship
25:20And nobody had thought of that.
25:23I started to think
25:25who was the same killer.
25:26But who was he?
25:27Where was he?
25:28Was he already dead?
25:29He was imprisoned.
25:30or was loose
25:31committing other homicides
25:33Without me knowing?
25:34It was my job.
25:35try to find out
25:35whether there was a connection between the homicides.
25:37It was my job.
25:38to prevent that person
25:39or find out who it was.
25:45Few cases filed.
25:47are resolved
25:48and solve them
25:48It's a lengthy process.
25:50He respected the investigators.
25:51originals,
25:52But I was a different kind of individual.
25:54a different investigator
25:55and I was going to examine
25:56the evidence
25:57In my own way.
26:09One of the things I did
26:19I was thinking
26:20There are similar cases.
26:21to Lisa Reynel
26:23in 1993
26:24and to Elaine Schwick's
26:25In 1988?
26:28We checked the files.
26:30paying attention
26:30to the crime scene,
26:33at the time,
26:35to the modus operandi,
26:36to the type of homicide,
26:37how they were killed,
26:39Was there sexual assault?
26:41It was an attack
26:41Especially violent?
26:56In the case of Bundy Anderson,
26:58She was killed at home.
26:59in a residential area
27:01in 1986.
27:04It was a violent attack.
27:05with sexual assault,
27:06stabbings,
27:08Similar to the other cases.
27:10She was stabbed.
27:11several times on the neck,
27:13then it was played
27:14naked witches
27:15in the bathtub
27:15with arms
27:16tied behind their backs.
27:18I knew I had been raped.
27:21The suspects
27:22investigated
27:23at the time of the case
27:23Anderson
27:24it was only
27:25individuals seen
27:26by the area
27:27at the time,
27:28like this,
27:29he knows,
27:30family members,
27:31but
27:31no one stood out.
27:33in the initial investigation,
27:34nor in the following years
27:36like a promising suspect.
27:38The case
27:38Anderson
27:39It cooled down quickly.
27:46The fact
27:47It was that I had
27:48three cases
27:48and my instinct
27:50He said there was
27:51a connection
27:52and I was going to follow
27:53My instinct.
27:55It is worth it
27:55take the three cases,
27:57put them
27:57side by side
27:58and begin
27:59to examine
28:00every little detail
28:01to see if they would appear
28:03more similarities
28:04between them.
28:06There was an interval.
28:07small between the case
28:08Anderson, 86
28:08and the case
28:09Shurika of '88.
28:12So we
28:12think,
28:13good,
28:13It is a period
28:14too short
28:14in an area
28:15small
28:16to have
28:16three women
28:17randomly
28:18murdered
28:19form
28:19so brutal.
28:20That was when
28:20we started looking
28:21for those cases
28:22and in case
28:22from Lisa
28:23In another way.
28:25We conclude
28:26what it was about
28:26of a murderer
28:27in series,
28:28responsible
28:29by several
28:29murders
28:30in that region.
28:42Then
28:42we reviewed
28:43each
28:44of the cases
28:44and we selected
28:46the evidence
28:46most suitable
28:47for an exam
28:48of DNA.
28:51We had
28:52DNA,
28:53all that was missing was
28:53solve.
28:57It was the first
29:07once I
29:08I agreed.
29:08with a killer
29:09in series.
29:10That was when
29:11we found out
29:12that the three
29:13cases had
29:13relationship
29:14and that the same
29:14person was
29:15responsible
29:15for the murders.
29:18It was someone
29:19that still
29:20was loose
29:21committing
29:22this type
29:22of crime
29:22and the suspect
29:24I was imprisoned
29:24or was
29:25dead.
29:25we send
29:27the results
29:28to the police
29:28state
29:29from Maryland
29:29so that
29:30were
29:30included
29:31in the banks
29:31data
29:32DNA
29:32of the country.
29:33I was
29:44in my backyard
29:45gathering leaves
29:46in the fall
29:46in Maryland
29:47when I received
29:48a message
29:49to connect
29:50to the laboratory
29:51state criminal.
29:53They told me
29:54that had
29:55a result.
29:58Alexander Wayne
29:59Watson Jr.
30:00The name
30:01it didn't mean
30:01nothing for me
30:02at the time.
30:03Alex
30:13was a friend
30:14of the son
30:15older
30:17boyfriend
30:18From my mother.
30:19At the time
30:20I came to the house
30:21once or twice
30:22at most
30:22when I went to visit her.
30:29That's why.
30:30that she opened
30:30the door.
30:31She knew
30:32he.
30:32she opened
30:34the door
30:35because he
30:35pretended
30:36that had
30:36gone there
30:37to see
30:37the friend.
30:50I entered
30:51in the car
30:52and he
30:52He started the race.
30:54He doesn't
30:54took me
30:55home
30:55turned
30:56in the sense
30:56opposite.
30:57where to
30:57where to
30:57we
30:58Are you going?
30:58And he
31:00he said
31:00what you
31:00would
31:01if I
31:01tried
31:02I'll rape you
31:03or
31:03do something
31:04like you?
31:06He froze.
31:06the doors
31:07It was very scary.
31:08and to think
31:14and to think
31:14and to think
31:14that I
31:14I was there
31:15with him.
31:21Where to
31:22Are we going?
31:23Where to
31:24I want
31:24I'll take you.
31:28He turned
31:29in the sense
31:30opposite
31:30and said
31:32what
31:32you
31:33would
31:33if I
31:33tried
31:34I'll rape you
31:35or
31:35did
31:36something
31:36like you?
31:41I looked
31:42for him
31:42and said
31:43I go
31:43show
31:44for them
31:44what it was
31:45you
31:45because I
31:45I go
31:45to leave
31:46all
31:46the brands
31:47that I
31:47if possible.
31:48Leave me alone
31:55to go out.
31:59He me
31:59he left
32:00to go out
32:00of the car
32:01and me
32:03I thought
32:04in that
32:04time
32:04all.
32:06I think
32:06in what I
32:06I know today
32:07and how much
32:08I have been
32:08close
32:08of death
32:09without even
32:10to have realized.
32:13I think
32:14that my
32:14mother looked
32:14for me
32:15in that
32:15night
32:15and she
32:16me
32:16protected.
32:18He
32:27had been
32:27convicted
32:28by one
32:28murder
32:29in 1994
32:29in the municipality
32:30neighbor
32:31in which
32:32he attacked
32:32brutally
32:33a woman
32:33in the office
32:34her
32:34and there
32:35viscerated
32:35with a
32:36do.
32:37Then
32:38we begin
32:38returning
32:38in time
32:39where he
32:39he had
32:40worked
32:40where he
32:41he had
32:41purple.
32:42Us
32:42we knew
32:43that he
32:43had been
32:44created
32:44good
32:45close
32:45from the
32:45community
32:46where
32:46you
32:46cases
32:47Anderson
32:48and
32:48Chewika
32:48they had
32:49what happened.
32:51In January
32:5293
32:53he lived
32:54in a
32:54condominium
32:55very close
32:55to the house
32:56Lisa's.
32:57In truth
32:58Lisa
32:58passed
32:58in front
32:59to that
32:59condominium
33:00every morning.
33:01us
33:16we were
33:17until then
33:17in a group
33:18and they
33:20they brought him
33:21using
33:22the jumpsuit
33:22from prison
33:23and
33:23handcuffed.
33:24he
33:27sat
33:27in a
33:28chair
33:28in
33:28wall
33:29opposite
33:29and
33:30there was
33:31guards
33:32of the
33:32two
33:33sides
33:33from him.
33:36I
33:36I took
33:36some
33:37minutes
33:37to
33:37to understand
33:38what
33:39the police
33:40no
33:40he was
33:40there
33:41to
33:42us
33:43protect
33:43from him
33:44but
33:46Yes
33:47to
33:47protect it
33:48of us.
33:48I
33:50I hope
33:50for that reason
33:51moment
33:51there is a lot
33:52time.
33:54Why
33:54my
33:54mother?
33:56Why?
33:57I
33:57I wanted
33:58to hear
33:59personally
34:00what he
34:01I had to say
34:01about that.
34:03Why
34:03in that
34:04morning
34:05in that
34:06road
34:06in that
34:07day
34:07why
34:09she
34:10he
34:12had passed
34:13at night
34:13getting high
34:15in the park.
34:18she doesn't
34:19was targeted
34:19no
34:19he was
34:20persecuted
34:21he was
34:22purely
34:22one
34:23crime
34:23of
34:23opportunity
34:24he
34:26no
34:26he requested
34:26sorry
34:27he
34:27no
34:29showed
34:29none
34:30emotion
34:30he
34:31he was
34:31very
34:31cold
34:32but
34:37I could
34:38to look
34:38us
34:38eyes
34:38of
34:39assassin
34:40from the
34:40my
34:40mother
34:40and
34:41to say
34:42to
34:42he
34:42as
34:43he
34:43he had
34:44destroyed
34:45life
34:48her
34:48and
34:49as
34:50he had
34:51attempted
34:51destroy
34:52my
34:52and that
34:54I am not
34:54ia
34:54more
34:56to leave
34:56that he
34:56had
34:57that
34:57power
34:57the first
35:08thing that
35:09I
35:09I asked
35:09he was
35:09you
35:10if
35:11remember
35:11from me
35:11and he
35:12he said
35:12right away
35:13no
35:13never
35:14you
35:14vi
35:14what
35:15all
35:15world
35:15you knew
35:16what was
35:16lie
35:17he
35:19no
35:20replied
35:20neither
35:20to a
35:21question
35:21simple
35:22no
35:23I mean
35:23what
35:23would have
35:23helped
35:24but
35:24to the
35:24less
35:25he
35:25would demonstrate
35:26some
35:26remorse
35:26but
35:27no
35:27there was
35:27none
35:28none
35:30he
35:31no
35:32he had
35:32none
35:32expression
35:33none
35:33emotion
35:34nothing
35:34it was
35:35as
35:35if
35:36no
35:36had
35:36soul
35:36he
35:37no
35:37if
35:37bothered
35:38with
35:38our
35:38presence
35:39there
35:39he
35:39no
35:40he had
35:40none
35:40remorse
35:41none
35:42I perceived
35:46that it wasn't going to
35:47achieve
35:47the answers
35:48that I
35:48I wanted
35:48then
35:49I
35:51only
35:52I went
35:52although
35:53yet
36:14we have
36:15lots of
36:15questions
36:16without
36:16response
36:17us
36:18no
36:18we know
36:19why
36:20he
36:20he did
36:20that one
36:21somebody
36:22able
36:22of
36:23commit
36:23that
36:23type
36:24of
36:24crime
36:24and
36:25continue
36:25walking
36:26for the
36:26world
36:26without
36:27count
36:27nothing
36:27the
36:27nobody
36:28and
36:28apparently
36:29without
36:29remorse
36:30who
36:30he can
36:30imagine
36:31what
36:31raisin
36:32through the head
36:32of
36:32somebody
36:33like this
36:33and
36:36What a shame.
36:36what
36:36the
36:36Lisa
36:37no
36:37you have
36:38grown
36:38to
36:38to have
36:38one
36:38family
36:39what
36:40the
36:40Mary
36:40Elaine
36:41Shurica
36:41no
36:42you have
36:42seen
36:42your
36:42children
36:43grow
36:43and
36:43what
36:43the
36:44life
36:44from the
36:44daughter
36:44from the
36:44Bunten
36:45Anderson
36:45you have
36:46been
36:46permanently
36:47destroyed
36:47when she
36:48it lost
36:48the
36:48mother
36:49in
36:49infancy
36:49it is a
36:53waste
36:53so
36:54big
36:54and
36:55the
36:55fact
36:55of
36:55only
36:55one
36:56individual
36:56to be
36:56responsible
36:57and
36:57very
36:57sad
36:58and
36:59as
36:59investigators
37:00we can't
37:01to repair
37:01that
37:02however much
37:02what
37:02let's work
37:03or
37:03however much
37:05what
37:05let's find
37:05DNA
37:06in a
37:06case
37:07and the
37:07guilty
37:08it is
37:08prisoner
37:08that
37:09no
37:09he has
37:09repair
37:09the
37:15my
37:15mother
37:16was
37:16here
37:16for the
37:17time
37:17right
37:18no
37:20it was
37:20what
37:20I
37:20I wanted
37:21no
37:23it was
37:23what
37:23I
37:23needed
37:24but
37:25it was
37:25the
37:26time
37:26her
37:26let's
37:32us
37:37see
37:37of
37:37new
37:38no
37:44I
37:45no
37:45I have
37:45anger
37:45from him
37:46no
37:47I have
37:47same
37:47to feel
37:49anger
37:50from him
37:50only
37:53me
37:53decreases
37:53but
37:56I
37:56I hope
37:56what
37:57he
37:57you have
37:57one
37:57relationship
37:58with
37:58God
37:59and
37:59I hope
37:59what
37:59he
38:00know
38:00what
38:03he can
38:03to be
38:04forgiven
38:04for the
38:04what
38:05he
38:05he did
38:05why
38:07I
38:07I believe
38:08in that
38:08I believe
38:09what
38:09independent
38:10of
38:10what
38:10we do
38:11the
38:12forgiveness
38:13and
38:13possible
38:13he was
38:20that's why
38:20that I
38:20I stopped
38:21to go
38:21the
38:21church
38:22I
38:23no
38:23I liked
38:24when
38:24they said
38:25that I
38:25needed
38:26forgive him
38:27to
38:27to enter
38:27node
38:27sky
38:28and
38:30what
38:30if
38:30he
38:30if
38:31regret
38:31he
38:32I would go
38:32to
38:32the
38:32sky
38:32I
38:33I have
38:34one
38:34big
38:34problem
38:35with
38:35that
38:35I
38:37no
38:37the
38:38I forgave
38:38put
38:38nothing
38:38and
38:40I think
38:40what
38:40never
38:41I go
38:41forgive
38:42the
38:51Jennifer
38:51I wanted
38:52send you
38:53one
38:53message
38:54Hey
39:00Kimberly
39:01I
39:03I know
39:03as
39:03today
39:03it is a
39:04day
39:04difficult
39:04to
39:04you
39:05but
39:07I
39:07I want
39:08what
39:08if
39:08remember
39:08of
39:08one
39:09thing
39:09the
39:11your
39:11history
39:11and
39:11the
39:12your
39:12history
39:13and
39:14although
39:14all
39:15us
39:16let us feel
39:16the
39:18same
39:19pain
39:19all
39:21we had
39:21experiences
39:22very
39:22different
39:23know
39:25what
39:25I
39:26I am
39:26here
39:26and
39:27I
39:27I am
39:27praying
39:27put
39:28you
39:28today
39:28you
39:30survived
39:30the
39:31so much
39:31thing
39:32and
39:34also
39:35go
39:35survive
39:36the
39:36that
39:36day
39:36okay
39:37good
39:37I love
39:39you
39:39also
39:41you
39:42I love
39:42goodbye
39:42version
40:05Brazilian
40:05vox mundi
40:06goodbye
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