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TVTranscrição
00:02I felt like someone ripped my heart out of my chest.
00:05Who could have done that?
00:07A young mother brutally raped and murdered inside her home.
00:11People tend to be killed by people they know.
00:14She would never have betrayed Charlie.
00:17The crime seems cruelly personal.
00:19He took a butcher's knife and made sewing machine-like movements on her chest.
00:24There was a murderer walking free.
00:26Leaving a community in the grip of terror.
00:29Until detectives uncover the dark secret.
00:32He did this or something else.
00:35He was shaken and refused to give up DNA.
00:38Unmasking the cold-blooded killer.
00:40It makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end.
00:42I wasn't there to protect the beautiful girl.
00:49The Final Farewell
01:04That Saturday was a beautiful day.
01:06The sun was shining brightly.
01:08And I had had a free weekend.
01:11So I went to my beautiful sister's house for a normal visit.
01:17My sister.
01:19She had Joey, who was eight and a half years old.
01:22And Lisa was only eight months old.
01:24She loved having her children around.
01:28And I can still see the beauty.
01:30With her ponytail.
01:33Pink sweatshirt.
01:35I can see her sitting on the sofa now.
01:39She was laughing and passionate about life.
01:46The only problem was shin splints.
01:50To run.
01:51His shins hurt a lot.
01:54That's why she would sit on the sofa and put her legs up.
01:59She loved to run.
02:02That was his moment of peace.
02:04And she loved it.
02:07She ran eight kilometers straight.
02:11I couldn't run for five minutes.
02:16We had to be somewhere else by early afternoon.
02:20So I went to the door.
02:22Ah, it's so good to see you.
02:25And I said I love you.
02:26I love you.
02:27Oh, I love you too.
02:29If only I had known it would be the last time I would see her alive.
02:33I would never have left.
02:34I would have stayed there forever.
02:48This is Linda.
02:49At one year old.
02:51With a big smile on his face.
02:55Sandy was five years old when her sister Linda was born.
02:58They were raised on the quiet streets of South Minneapolis.
03:02Back then, we could run in the street, ride bikes, spend the whole day outside with just a sandwich.
03:09And we grew up thinking the world was safe.
03:12And our house too.
03:15Despite the age difference, the two sisters were inseparable.
03:19I loved her very much.
03:21But we were completely different.
03:24She had brown hair, she was blonde.
03:26She always took care of her diet, and I didn't.
03:29I drink coffee, she drank tea.
03:32You know, we were opposites.
03:34But opposites attract.
03:37Blood sisters and friends at heart.
03:39And that was it.
03:40I couldn't have chosen.
03:42A best friend.
03:46When Linda was just 18 years old, she married her childhood sweetheart, Charlie Jensen.
03:52Linda and Charlie got married on April 4, 1971, two months before she turned 19.
03:59They couldn't be happier.
04:01But the couple's happiness didn't last long.
04:04As happens in many marriages, things went wrong.
04:08And after seven years, they got divorced.
04:11But they never lost touch.
04:14Linda became a dental hygienist.
04:17And shortly after, she began a relationship with a local man named Robert Beard.
04:22Together they had a son named Joey.
04:25About two years later, I received a phone call.
04:28She had argued with Joey's father.
04:30She needed to get out of there.
04:32She and Joey needed a place to stay.
04:34And they came to live with me.
04:37It didn't take long for Linda to get in touch with her ex-husband, Charlie.
04:42Sometimes, she would simply disappear.
04:45And I wondered what might be happening.
04:49Linda and Charlie never stopped loving each other.
04:54They remarried when they would have celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary.
04:58I think she finally got exactly what she wanted.
05:03Which was to stay with Charlie.
05:08The happy couple settled into Charlie's house in Big Lake, Minnesota.
05:12And within a year, Linda became pregnant.
05:16I remember her calling me when Lisa was born.
05:19You know, it's a girl, it's a girl.
05:21Charlie was the love of her life, and her children were the apple of her eye.
05:26She was having a fantastic time in her life.
05:31But this good life would soon be interrupted.
05:41February 24th begins like any other day at the Jason's house.
05:50Charlie, a contractor, leaves early for work, while Linda takes care of the children.
05:55Lisa was still breastfeeding.
05:58In the middle of the night, Linda was breastfeeding Lisa, and Lisa was getting tired.
06:04Go, go, go, go, go.
06:06Grab your bag, brush your teeth, put on your shoes.
06:09So, she overslept and had to hurry Joey off to school.
06:14Bye, Mom!
06:15And he ran to the bus stop with a piece of toast.
06:21Charlie calls his wife repeatedly throughout the day, but she doesn't answer.
06:28Worried, he leaves work early to see her.
06:31He arrived home around four in the afternoon.
06:34He saw Linda's car parked at the entrance.
06:37Beautiful?
06:39Beautiful?
06:40Then, listen to Lisa, who was crying.
06:47And when he walked through the door and saw Lisa in the playpen, still in her pajamas,
06:54Linda always dressed Lisa.
06:57That wasn't normal.
07:01Charlie looked around and, on the other side of the bed, saw Linda's legs sticking out.
07:08She was naked and covered with a comforter.
07:11And there was a knife buried in it.
07:15Linda Jensen was dead.
07:20Charlie ran to the phone to call the police.
07:23Emergency.
07:24My wife is dead.
07:26I just got home.
07:27I went to the room and she had been stabbed.
07:30My God.
07:31Oh my God.
07:34While Charlie waits for the police, he calls Linda's sister, Sandy.
07:39I knew right away that something was wrong, because Charlie wouldn't call me, but Linda would.
07:44Hello, Charlie?
07:44Charlie said, "We lost Linda."
07:47What?
07:48And I remember saying, you'll find her.
07:50You'll find it.
07:52I understood what he meant, but I insisted.
07:54No, no, no, no.
07:56My legs buckled.
07:57I fell to my knees.
08:01I crawled under the kitchen table.
08:04And then I screamed, screamed, and screamed.
08:13Who could have done that?
08:19Responding to a phone call from Charlie Jensen, detectives from Sherburn County arrive at the scene.
08:27You receive a call to emergency services about a homicide.
08:33So, the task was to call everyone to the location and solve the case.
08:39It was Charlie who found the body.
08:41He was the husband.
08:42I was very anxious and very nervous.
08:44He said his wife had been stabbed and he found her in the bedroom.
08:48The detective saw the body under the duvet and, on top of it, a knife buried in her chest.
08:57There was a gaping hole in her chest.
09:01It looked like a sewing machine had repeatedly stabbed that knife to result in a wound of that size.
09:10While experts process the body in search of DNA,
09:14Detectives are searching the house for additional clues.
09:18There were no signs of forced entry, nothing was out of place, and the house had not been ransacked.
09:24The bed sheets were removed.
09:28And that was important.
09:29The criminal tried to ensure that no evidence was left on the sheets.
09:37A logical conclusion.
09:38Linda was sexually assaulted.
09:40The knife buried in Linda.
09:43Charlie wasn't sure if it was in the dishwasher, but it was from his house.
09:48Normally, if you plan to do something, you take the weapon with you.
09:52But if it was a matter of panic, then you grab whatever weapon you can find.
09:57Whichever one is within your reach.
10:00But the detectives have no idea who brutally murdered this young mother.
10:04Was it someone she knew?
10:07We didn't know yet.
10:09There must have been a great deal of anger involved in causing that kind of injury to that young woman.
10:14It was a very wicked act.
10:16From a demented individual.
10:20There was a murderer walking free.
10:28At age 39, Linda Jensen was raped and murdered in her home in Big Lake.
10:34The daughter, Lisa, was just a few feet from the body in her playpen.
10:39The horrific murder shocked the small town in Minnesota.
10:43And the police were looking for a violent predator.
10:46The fact that the weapon belonged to the property and the absence of any forced entry into the house.
10:52This led the police to believe that whoever assaulted and killed Linda...
10:58It was someone she knew or recognized.
11:02Investigators are searching the neighborhood for clues in this gated community.
11:07It was a matter of going out and talking to the neighbors.
11:10Hi, I'm Officer Mike.
11:12Good old-fashioned police work.
11:14There was an incident on the street above and I'd like to know if you have any information.
11:18We found that Linda Jensen was an ordinary American woman.
11:22She took good care of her children, and she took good care of herself.
11:28She loved to run, she used to run around the neighborhood.
11:32Hey beautiful!
11:33She visited and talked to people.
11:35She met a lot of people like that.
11:36And there?
11:37Hey!
11:38All good?
11:38Everything alright with you?
11:40She was very friendly, very open.
11:43She was a good person.
11:44The police find nothing suspicious about Linda's personality.
11:48Then focus the questions on the morning she was attacked.
11:53Did you see anything?
11:54Did you see anything out of the ordinary?
11:56Anything out of the ordinary?
12:00But unfortunately, nobody saw anything, nobody heard anything.
12:04So there were no clues to follow.
12:12With no witnesses to the crime, the police are resorting to an autopsy to understand Linda's final moments.
12:19There are some tests that are done as soon as the body arrives at the morgue.
12:25to identify any clues on the body before performing an autopsy.
12:29The medical examiner was able to find seminal fluid.
12:35And this confirmed that Linda Jensen was sexually assaulted.
12:42But in 1992, DNA testing was still being perfected.
12:47And the sample collected is not large enough to help the police.
12:51You may have DNA evidence, but if you can't identify whose it is,
12:55So what's the point?
12:57Then the detectives turn to the autopsy results.
13:02Initially it appeared that she had died from multiple stab wounds.
13:06But the absence of blood splatter at the crime scene
13:09This suggests that she was already dead when she was stabbed.
13:13If I stab you for the first time,
13:16The second time, the knife plunges into a pool of blood.
13:19Then I start stabbing the pool of blood and it splatters, but it wasn't like that.
13:22The medical examiner determined that the cause of death was strangulation.
13:27You could see the bruises on her neck, from his hands strangling her.
13:31Then he wanted to make sure she was dead.
13:34That's when he used the knife.
13:36He attacked and mutilated Linda.
13:39That was personal.
13:42Four days after the murder,
13:44The family gathers at Linda's funeral to mourn the devastating loss.
13:50When Linda was born,
13:52they told me,
13:54You have to keep an eye on her, you have to protect her.
13:57You have to take care of her.
13:58Because the older sister has to take care of her younger siblings.
14:02And I wasn't there to protect Linda.
14:07I remember walking up to Linda's coffin.
14:12and promise that until my last breath,
14:15I would do whatever was necessary.
14:18Because I didn't want that monster to go free.
14:26While those closest to Linda grieved the loss,
14:29The police are focusing on another family member.
14:33Beautiful!
14:35The person who finds the body
14:38It's usually at the top of the list.
14:41Charlie found the body; it was the husband.
14:44Okay then, let's investigate the husband.
14:48Charlie is taken to the police station for questioning.
14:51When we come face to face with the suspect,
14:54talking to him and listening to what he says,
14:57I observe his body language.
15:02Whether he is being truthful or lying,
15:07We observed him for quite some time.
15:11What they wanted with Charlie was to confirm his activities.
15:16the moment he woke up in the morning,
15:18until you call the police.
15:20Charlie and she woke up in the morning.
15:23He left for work very early,
15:26I worked in construction,
15:27and when he left home,
15:29Joe was at home,
15:30And Charlie first went to Rogers to get building materials,
15:35and then he went to a construction site.
15:38in Maplewood, Minnesota,
15:40which is located in the eastern half of the twin cities.
15:43The autopsy confirms that Linda died.
15:45between eight and ten in the morning.
15:49Charlie claims he has neither seen nor spoken to his wife.
15:52after he left home that morning.
15:57Charlie said he called at 9:30.
16:00He called several times.
16:03She wouldn't answer, she wouldn't answer, and she wouldn't answer.
16:06The police want to check Charlie's phone records.
16:10and her whereabouts at the time Linda was killed.
16:13They also retraced Charlie's steps.
16:16during the same morning period,
16:18so that traffic conditions would be similar,
16:20And if they did, they would know how long it would take.
16:23to make all those stops
16:25and travel between the two places.
16:28But he was alone.
16:29Did he have time to go there, kill her, and rape her?
16:34Detectives also need to consider
16:36If Charlie had any motive to kill his wife.
16:40Obviously, Charlie and Linda had already been married once.
16:43They divorced and remarried.
16:45We wanted to know the nature of the relationship.
16:47We don't take anything for granted.
16:50I don't care how much you say it wasn't so-and-so.
16:53If we don't prove it, there will still be a question.
16:55until we can discard it definitively.
16:58While continuing to analyze Charlie's alibi,
17:01The police receive a tip pointing in a new direction.
17:07A witness came forward.
17:09after the police asked the public for information.
17:13And this woman says she saw a man.
17:18leaving the Jensen's house
17:20during the morning, at the time Linda Jensen was murdered.
17:24The witness, who was not at home
17:26during the initial police investigation,
17:28He claims that the pickup truck he saw was forest green.
17:31When you have nothing, everything is important.
17:33I want to find the person who drove in and out.
17:40Send me the address, I'm on my way.
17:42Tell me everything you know.
17:44There's so much evidence that I didn't even know existed.
17:46We are very grateful.
17:48Unraveling Crimes.
17:50New season on Investigation Discovery.
17:54One week after Linda Jensen
17:56She was found brutally murdered at home.
17:59A witness claims to have seen a green pickup truck leaving the scene.
18:02When that complaint came in, they thought they had something to hide.
18:06This witness could help identify a possible suspect.
18:11The detectives call the witness.
18:13to describe the man she saw driving the green pickup truck.
18:16That's great. Maybe more. Just a little more.
18:18His beard was quite thick.
18:20The police started seeing people.
18:22who might have had some connection to the case
18:26or with the family to see if they remembered anyone
18:28with some connection.
18:32The image doesn't resemble anyone Linda knows.
18:36Then the police release the composite sketch to the public.
18:40The description itself didn't have any particularly noteworthy features.
18:44A different kind of scar,
18:46that he only had one eye,
18:47An eye patch, nothing like that.
18:50That was a very generic description.
18:52of thousands of people in Minnesota.
18:57Nobody called to say they knew that guy.
18:59Or that he reminded him of someone.
19:03We were unable to identify who that person was.
19:06There was nothing left for us to follow.
19:10Determined to follow this lead,
19:12The detectives call the witness again.
19:14to relay your testimony.
19:16Tell me what you saw that day.
19:17I was on the sidewalk, picking up my mail.
19:21Unfortunately, what happened was that in her story,
19:24The details started to change.
19:26Had you seen that pickup truck before?
19:27No, that's why it caught my attention.
19:30It was once a green pickup truck,
19:31Then it became a brown pickup truck.
19:35And that worried the police.
19:37Because the truth usually holds up very well.
19:40I have no doubt that someone entered and exited by car.
19:44I really think she was a good citizen trying to help.
19:47But memory is a complicated thing.
19:49This is a problem with witnesses.
19:55When the police's only solid lead goes cold,
19:58Linda's family becomes even more frustrated.
20:02I wanted the case solved yesterday.
20:06You know, it didn't make any sense at all.
20:10How could she have been murdered?
20:12In a peaceful community?
20:14Who could have done that?
20:18In Sherburn County, a homicide has occurred.
20:20It was a very rare thing.
20:22Certainly not with a caring young mother,
20:25whose daughter was there.
20:27This terrified the people who lived in the area.
20:30With the community on edge and no clues,
20:34The investigators narrow their attention to the shortlist of suspects.
20:37starting with Linda's husband, Charlie.
20:40There are people you discard, and there are people who just wait in the corner.
20:44The danger is that we often forget about the people left in the corner.
20:48They think they've been discarded, but they haven't.
20:51Although Charlie's phone record has been confirmed,
20:54The details surrounding Linda's death point to someone close to her.
20:59It was a very violent murder.
21:01There were no signs of forced entry.
21:04And there are cases in which, even in a marital relationship,
21:09A forced sexual relationship occurs.
21:13And there was evidence linking Charlie Jensen.
21:17The crime took place at his house.
21:19He was at the house in the morning and he found her at four o'clock in the afternoon.
21:26My ex-husband was a homicide detective.
21:30And I knew that, normally, murders are committed by someone the victim knows.
21:37But Charlie would never pull a chair cord from Linda.
21:41I knew Charlie would never do that.
21:45Charlie reaffirms his innocence and agrees to take the polygraph test.
21:49The police concluded that Charlie was telling the truth.
21:53That he was in all the places mentioned.
21:57Ultimately, the police concluded that there was nothing to suggest a motive for homicide at the scene.
22:03He was left feeling somewhat resentful and hurt.
22:07Charlie was suffering. She was the love of his life.
22:11And he was devastated. He would never get over it.
22:15You never get over something like that.
22:21Working with the theory that Linda knew the killer,
22:24The police ask Charlie for suggestions of a possible suspect.
22:28When the police questioned Charlie Jensen,
22:30One of the things asked was why he said it wasn't him.
22:33He was who he thought he could be.
22:35And one person Charlie suggested to the police was Robert Beard.
22:42Robert Beard is Joey's father.
22:46Linda had a relationship with him.
22:50Hello?
22:51We learned from Charlie that two weeks before the murder,
22:54There was an argument on the phone...
22:57This is our weekend. I already warned you.
23:00...with Robert Beard about his son Joey's visits.
23:04And you can't just show up out of nowhere and suddenly want to be the super dad.
23:09Charlie stated that he could be incisive.
23:12that he had a propensity for violence.
23:16Absolutely not. You are forbidden from coming here. Do you understand that?
23:21So it was Robert Beard?
23:25And stop calling me.
23:28The first thing we looked at was his past.
23:31We wanted to know if he had ever been arrested or convicted of anything.
23:35We wanted to know what kind of man he was, where he lived, where he worked.
23:38We wanted the complete profile.
23:48Investigators have a new suspect in the violent murder of Linda Jensen.
23:52A temperamental ex-boyfriend.
23:55Robert Beard is Joey's father.
23:59He called home and had an argument with Linda about visiting Joey.
24:06Apparently, he and Linda were having custody issues.
24:09And the police took the information about Beard so seriously.
24:11They thought he might be responsible for her death.
24:16So, Robert, I have some questions for you.
24:19Investigators are calling Robert Beard in for questioning.
24:24When Linda got back together with Charlie,
24:28Beard wanted to see his son.
24:30And Linda wouldn't let him see his son.
24:32I just want to see my son.
24:34Is it a crime to want to see my son?
24:36A crime is killing someone.
24:38Robert denies any involvement in Linda's death.
24:41And it provides an alibi for the police.
24:44Where were you?
24:45February 24th, Robert.
24:47He said he spent the whole day at home.
24:50He had no means of transportation to get to her house.
24:52He didn't have a car or a driver's license.
24:55It was too far for him to walk.
24:57There was no way to get to Linda's house.
25:02The fact that his alleged alibi cannot be confirmed.
25:07It was a good indication at the time that he might be involved in the crime.
25:13Do you have any idea what your son is going to say?
25:16What will happen when I grow up and find out that you killed his mother?
25:20Feeling the pressure, Beard asks for a lawyer.
25:23So, another warning sign, Suol.
25:27When people don't talk, you wonder why.
25:29And he was at the top of the list of suspects.
25:32Sherbourne County investigators believed it was him.
25:37But without concrete evidence, the detectives cannot prove Beard's involvement.
25:43Another clue leads to a dead end.
25:47It's a very, very boring job.
25:50You come in, form a team, work hard, and it doesn't work out.
25:54You have to try everything to find an answer.
25:58to solve this extremely difficult case.
26:01You go to bed at night thinking about him, you wake up in the morning thinking about him.
26:05What can we do? Can we change this? Should we do that?
26:09Yes... the load is heavy.
26:18In June 1992, four months after Linda's murder, the case went cold.
26:25I would call the police station three to five times a week.
26:30Without fail.
26:32It could be a one-minute call,
26:35But just so they would know I was there.
26:39I was never going to give up.
26:41This was very difficult for everyone.
26:44The truth is, we got to know the family.
26:49Sandy was shaken, devastated.
26:53The sister she loved was dead, and she wanted answers.
26:59Sandy channels her grief into action.
27:02pleading with investigators to stay focused on finding her sister's killer.
27:08Hey.
27:09I wanted justice for Linda.
27:12I took a picture of Linda.
27:15And he said, "That's my sister."
27:17That's who you're fighting for.
27:19And I left her photo with them.
27:27In 1999, Sherburn County got a new sheriff.
27:31He makes the unsolved murder of Linda Jensen his top priority.
27:35seven years after the crime.
27:39Bruce Anderson, who was one of the initial investigators,
27:43He became sheriff and had made a promise.
27:45for the family that wouldn't retire until the case was resolved.
27:49Here we have hours and hours of interrogations.
27:52Anderson and his investigators have a room dedicated to the Jensen case.
27:57We will bring this case to a close.
28:00Not just for me, for my team, for the community,
28:03For the family.
28:05I'm not going to make any excuses.
28:06Bruce Anderson said he didn't care how long it would take.
28:09and called the unit the archived homicide cases department.
28:14You have to get inside his brain.
28:16That's what we have to do.
28:17When we work on these cases, or in any case,
28:22We have to try to get inside the criminal's head.
28:26What prompted him, why did he do it?
28:31how was he going to do it?
28:34He can be as ordinary as anyone.
28:36and simply fulfills his fantasies.
28:41Then, try to return to normal life.
28:43hoping not to be discovered or arrested.
28:49You become more cautious around people.
28:52I hate to say it, but it's true.
28:55In these cases, you work 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
28:59When we get involved in this type of case,
29:02or any investigative case,
29:05You work day and night here.
29:07You won't forget.
29:09And when we look at society in general,
29:12We want to think that everyone is wonderful.
29:15But deep down, we know they aren't.
29:18Everyone has a dark side.
29:20And it is only your mind that controls you.
29:23so that you don't have to be...
29:26What are these people?
29:31The first task on the list for the cold homicide unit.
29:35It involves re-evaluating the DNA collected from the crime scene.
29:38We found semen.
29:40This was the first case I worked on.
29:43where we collect the DNA.
29:45Initially, they couldn't use DNA in this case.
29:48because it's a very, very small sample.
29:51In the seven years since Linda's death,
29:53DNA technology has evolved significantly.
29:58And it got to the point where they can take a minimal sample.
30:01and transform it into a larger sample,
30:03which can be used for testing.
30:05With the killer's DNA profile,
30:08The police launch a search to find someone who is incompatible.
30:12We wanted to systematically rule out suspects using DNA.
30:17The police collected around 80 DNA samples.
30:22including by Charles Jensen and Robert Beard,
30:24men who, at one time or another, were considered possible suspects.
30:30But no one is a match for the DNA extracted from seminal fluid.
30:34found in Linda Jensen's leg.
30:36The police found nothing at that time.
30:40With no leads, detectives are once again appealing to the public.
30:46They offered a reward.
30:48They also worked with the press.
30:50to try to get some information from people
30:53to see if anyone knew anything,
30:56But he didn't tell the police beforehand.
30:59The police say that someone always knows something.
31:03We are looking for someone who wants the money.
31:05But, more importantly, we're looking for someone who will look at this poster.
31:09Look at the mother and the daughter,
31:10Read this story and you'll be compelled to say that this is wrong.
31:13The homicide unit creates a disc and reports the incident.
31:17and receives an anonymous call with a very promising lead.
31:22The man who called said he heard it at the gym.
31:25A conversation among other people about how Linda Jensen had been killed.
31:30The witness stated that this conversation took place on the day of the murder.
31:35The witness claims to have delayed reporting it.
31:38because I wasn't sure if the information would be useful.
31:41That's one of the difficulties of asking people for directions.
31:44We want to go back in time and recreate something.
31:48which wasn't important to you at the time,
31:51which wasn't significant, but which would be very important now.
31:56The whistleblower said that the man he heard
31:58discussing the details of Linda's murder
32:00He was a bodybuilder named Richard Christie.
32:03Hey!
32:04I am Richard.
32:05We discovered that Richard Christie frequented the same gym as Linda Jensen.
32:11So there was at least a possibility that the two had interacted.
32:16The detectives go to the academy to talk to Christie.
32:20So I found him, I spoke to him.
32:23And I asked him about Linda Jensen.
32:27Hey?
32:27He said he knew her and actually thought they had something going on.
32:31You look beautiful today.
32:32Thanks.
32:33She seemed to like him, and he seemed to like her.
32:35because he even gave her flowers,
32:37Which is strange, since he knew she was married.
32:40Thanks.
32:41You're welcome.
32:41I thought it was the funniest thing I've ever heard in my life.
32:44It was a pleasure to see.
32:45Thanks.
32:45Also.
32:46Legal.
32:47She would never have betrayed Charlie.
32:49That's something she would never have done.
32:52Sometimes people misunderstand friendliness as something extra.
32:57You know, maybe he wanted more from that relationship.
33:00Maybe he went to her house and everything went wrong.
33:07Hey.
33:07Hey.
33:08Hey, how's it going?
33:09This would explain the absence of forced entry into the house.
33:13If he went there and knocked on the door, Linda probably recognized him and let him in.
33:20home.
33:21Christie has no criminal record.
33:22Then, the investigators ask if he agrees to provide a DNA sample.
33:28If he were innocent, he would be discarded and the police would never knock on his door again.
33:34After seven years, police believe they are close to catching Linda Jensen's killer.
33:42But when the DNA test results come back, Christie is not a match.
33:51It was a dead end again.
33:54You get frustrated because you want to solve the case.
33:58Pure and simple.
33:59We weren't going to give up.
34:01We were going to stay on top of it until it was resolved.
34:09Then, a few months later, a witness comes forward with a shocking revelation.
34:14Jensen.
34:15In June 2000, a woman called the sheriff's office saying she had information about a man she...
34:20I was dating someone in the early 90s.
34:22His name is Kent Jones.
34:24The two had an extramarital affair, and during that time she mentioned Linda Jensen's name because, at the time, everyone...
34:31The world was talking about the murder.
34:34At the time, his reaction worried her.
34:41We were watching the news and he got very agitated.
34:46But you would never imagine, you know, an acquaintance committing such a violent crime.
34:52But, as time goes by, you start to remember and perhaps gain a more objective view of that person.
35:01We checked his name and it turned out he was a neighbor who lived on Kiri Corner, 800 meters from the family's house.
35:07Jensen.
35:09It makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end.
35:11Perhaps he was the culprit.
35:24People Magazine, Inside the Cults, Fridays at 10:05 PM on Investigation Discovery.
35:34Eight long years after the murder of Linda Jensen, a witness comes forward and names a neighbor,
35:42Kent Jones.
35:43Hey beautiful!
35:44Angela Renner was in a relationship with Kent Jones at the time of the murder.
35:52At one point, Angela asked Kent something about the beautiful Jensen, because she lived in his neighborhood.
36:00And he said that he knew her, that she would run past his house and they would talk.
36:05And then she asked, and he got very nervous and denied having met her.
36:10Soon after, the witness ended the relationship with Jones and kept this secret for eight years.
36:18She felt bad for not speaking for eight years.
36:23Because her life was somewhat chaotic, but now she wanted to report it, not for the money or anything else.
36:30But only because he thought Kent Jones had probably killed the beautiful Jensen.
36:38Detectives investigate Kent Jones' past.
36:42So, investigating his past, we discovered that he had children, was married, and was a scout leader.
36:50He was important within his church, but he had also been accused of domestic violence.
36:57It certainly piqued our interest.
37:01Detectives retrieved the statement given by Jones during the initial investigation in the neighborhood.
37:07He gave a statement claiming he did not know the beautiful Jensen.
37:12He didn't see anything suspicious that day.
37:15Let's talk to him again.
37:17My first impression was that he seemed very anxious and very nervous.
37:21His wife was in the living room; we were at their house.
37:24I asked about the beautiful Jensen and he said he had no idea, they had never met her.
37:29And the wife said, yes, you remember her, she came to our house,
37:32Because he was the leader of the Boy Scouts, she wanted to talk to him about Joe and join the group.
37:38Ah, it was her.
37:39That's when we saw that he was lying.
37:43Jones is asked to provide a DNA sample, something that would easily rule him out as a suspect.
37:50I explained about DNA, explained that everyone had provided it, and asked if he would be willing to provide it.
37:56He said, no, I'm not going to provide it.
37:58I told my colleague Randy, "Did he do this or something else?"
38:02He was shaken and refused to provide the DNA.
38:05That was definitely a warning sign.
38:10Based on the witness's testimony and the accusation of domestic violence,
38:14The police obtain a warrant to collect Jones's DNA.
38:18I went with a search warrant, and a very large police officer accompanied me.
38:21He needed to provide me with DNA.
38:23And so he did.
38:30Bingo, we did it!
38:31When we find a DNA match, we have certainty.
38:34And that's how we caught him.
38:43In July 2000, I was at work.
38:47And the secretary said, Bruce called.
38:51He told the woman to call him immediately.
38:53The only Bruce I knew was Bruce Anderson, the sheriff.
38:56I called and he said, "Sandy, this is the phone call I promised you."
39:03And he said, bring everyone who needs to be here at six o'clock.
39:08We'll arrest him when you're here.
39:12Kent Jones is accused of the rape and murder of Linda Jensen.
39:18The detectives determine what they believe happened on that terrible day.
39:23We believe Kent Jones saw the victim on several occasions.
39:28He spoke to her and I think he fantasized about having sex with Linda.
39:37And he decided to fulfill his fantasy.
39:41He went over there, and she opened the door.
39:44Hi, how's it going?
39:46So she rejected him and things went sour.
39:50He got angry, you know, he got furious.
39:53He either knocked her unconscious or subdued her in some way.
39:57He sexually assaulted her.
40:00While he was raping her, he strangled her.
40:04After she was already dead and motionless,
40:07He pushed her out of bed.
40:10He went to get a large knife from the kitchen.
40:16He came back and stabbed her.
40:18He took the comforter and put it over her.
40:22and placed the knife back in the open hole.
40:29He fulfilled the fantasy, but he didn't escape it.
40:34In November 2001,
40:37Kent Jones is on trial for the murder of Linda Jensen.
40:41I wish he would be confined to solitary confinement.
40:44in the dark,
40:46without contact with the outside world for the rest of their lives.
40:49I think he should never be allowed to see his family.
40:52Because he took my sister away from us.
40:53For Linda's family,
40:56The trial forces everyone to relive the horror of that day.
41:00Looking at all those autopsy photos,
41:03which are horrible,
41:06One thing that has never left my mind,
41:09that the medical examiner said,
41:11It was that there was a dried tear on her cheek.
41:17It was the worst pain I've ever felt in my life.
41:21It was as if someone ripped my heart out of my chest.
41:25Everything that was done to her,
41:27pain and fear,
41:29because she wasn't just fighting for her own life.
41:32She didn't know what was going to happen to her daughter.
41:40However difficult it may be to comprehend this senseless crime,
41:44No one is prepared for the bomb about to explode.
41:48In the trial,
41:49Kent Jones stated that he had consensual sexual relations with Linda Jensen.
41:59What he was trying to do was explain why his DNA was there.
42:04because it was the most important piece of evidence in the case.
42:09He said they had had sexual relations the day before the murder.
42:14The medical examiner said that based on her training and experience
42:17and all the information from the crime scene and the autopsy,
42:20That homicide had occurred during a sexual assault.
42:27I had no doubt whatsoever that Kent Jones had done it.
42:31that Kent Jones was a murderer and a rapist.
42:34After three hours of deliberation,
42:37The jury found Jones guilty of first-degree murder and criminal sexual conduct.
42:44He was sentenced to life imprisonment.
42:47People ask me what a murderer looks like.
42:49That doesn't exist; a murderer doesn't have a specific face.
42:52There is nothing about Kent Jones that leads us to believe he could have done that.
42:57But in my experience, that's what happens.
42:59He could live next door and be the kindest person in the world.
43:10I went to the beautiful woman's grave.
43:13I placed flowers on the grave and said,
43:15We found him.
43:17He's under arrest, he's locked up.
43:21You can rest in peace.
43:25The pain, the pain won't go away.
43:29The scar will always be there.
43:31When the bells hit really hard, I go to my happy place.
43:34which is in her living room, with her sitting on the sofa,
43:37laughing, with her hair tied in a ponytail.
43:40This is my happy place.
43:43I love you.
43:44Oh, I love you too.
43:46If I had known that would be the last time I would see her,
43:49I would never have left her house.
43:51That way, I could have protected her.
43:55But we got justice for the beautiful woman.
44:01That's what counts.
44:03We got justice for Linda.
44:05Brazilian Version
44:07DPN Santos
44:09D poopos
44:09D Mein bicho
44:13D handful chị do
44:13D
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