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TVTranscrição
00:00She was definitely terrified.
00:02Because Jared was at work and thought Brooke was okay, he didn't read all of her messages.
00:09When he finally looked at his phone, he saw that Brooke had texted him at 5:30 in the morning saying she didn't need to.
00:14More hitchhiking.
00:16Never mind, I'm fine. I'm going to a party in Rock Castle County.
00:23It wasn't until nine in the morning, when Brooke didn't show up at a car show she had planned to go to with...
00:29It was a friend who alerted the family, who began to worry.
00:32It was unusual for Brooke not to let her family know where she was.
00:37She was the type of person who would send thousands of messages saying, "I'm here and I'm coming home."
00:44at such and such time and I'm fine or we're having a lot of fun.
00:48I got worried when Matt, the guy she was going to the car show with, called me and
00:55He asked, "Do you know where Brooke is? I'm calling, but she's not answering."
00:59I said, no, that's too weird.
01:00We thought her phone had died or that she had drunk too much and fallen asleep, and that everything would be fine.
01:07She was going to wake up, charge her phone, and check her missed calls.
01:12Still, Brooke's silence was worrying, and the family called her ex-husband inside.
01:18Her boyfriend, Jared, told her about the messages she sent, first saying she was scared, but then
01:25that he was fine and that he was going to another party 32 kilometers away.
01:30Something seemed wrong.
01:32I thought it was very strange that Brooke was terrified and then suddenly wasn't anymore.
01:38Nobody knew anything about this party Brooke supposedly went to, and it didn't matter to the family at all.
01:44It made sense that she had gone there at 5:30 in the morning.
01:48How are you going to get to a party in another county if you don't have a car? Nobody's going to take you there.
01:54Searching and no one else knows you're there?
01:57That's highly suspicious, to say the least.
01:59Brooke's family panicked.
02:02Where was she?
02:06On the morning of June 22, 2013, 18-year-old Brooklyn Farthing failed to appear at the car show that...
02:15He planned to go with a friend.
02:16He also wasn't answering his cell phone, and his family feared something might have happened to him.
02:22Everyone was exchanging messages, trying to find out where Brooke was, where she had gone, and who she was with.
02:28Brooke left a party the previous night with a man who was a friend of her ex-boyfriend.
02:35This guy was older, much older than everyone else at the party.
02:41The man took Brooke to his house, which immediately shocked her family.
02:47The house was under foreclosure at the time.
02:50There was no running water, no electricity, nothing.
02:54I mean, there was no reason for them to have gone there.
02:58Brooke's ex-boyfriend, Jared, told the family that she texted him at 5:30 in the morning.
03:03morning,
03:04saying he was going to another party, 32 kilometers away.
03:08But when Tasha, Brooke's sister, called the owner of the house from where she was sending the messages,
03:14He said he had no idea where she had gone.
03:17He said he left the house to take care of the horses, and when he returned, Brooke was no longer there.
03:24But 15 minutes after Tasha spoke to him, he called back with disturbing information.
03:31He said, "Miss, I'm very scared."
03:34And I asked, "And what exactly are you afraid of?"
03:37And he replied, well, I don't know if it was Brooke or not,
03:40But when I went back inside, my house was on fire.
03:45It's certainly suspicious that a place where someone was last seen would suddenly catch fire.
03:54They discovered that at 7 a.m., the man called the police.
03:59saying that his room was on fire.
04:01The firefighters rushed to the house and found a burned sofa.
04:06After the fire at the residence was reported,
04:09It was the authorities who said things really started to get suspicious.
04:14Brooke's family panicked.
04:16Why didn't the man mention the fire at his house right away?
04:21Could he be hiding something?
04:23I don't know, in my head, I think he got scared and thought,
04:27Damn, they'll find out and they'll keep looking.
04:31Brooke's family went to the man's house, which the police were treating as a crime scene.
04:37The only sign of Brooke were her bag of clothes and her riding boots.
04:41All her belongings were there, including the shoes she was wearing.
04:46Why would Brooke leave her things behind?
04:50The only item she appeared to have taken was her cell phone.
04:53The fact that she wasn't even wearing shoes is what caught my attention.
04:58Her shoes were there, but she wasn't.
05:01That was very strange.
05:02Where was Brooke?
05:05According to the homeowner, the last time he saw her, she was sitting on his couch, smoking a cigarette.
05:11cigarette.
05:12But the sofa was destroyed.
05:14And to make matters worse, it was the only thing in the entire house that caught fire.
05:21When I say the sofa was burning, all that was left, literally, was the metal frame.
05:26It seemed very curious and suspicious to me that the last place my daughter was seen was the only...
05:33something that had been destroyed in the house.
05:40The house was not destroyed.
05:42We were still able to retrieve some of Brooklyn's personal belongings from inside the house.
05:46That's what worried us from the start.
05:49Brooke wasn't like that.
05:51If she were to leave, she would take her things with her.
05:53I would take all her things.
05:55She always carried what she needed.
05:58I had to bring the baby hair straightener, the makeup, the clothes.
06:02She was carrying a small handbag and a purse.
06:07Almost everything she could possibly need was there.
06:10I'd say it's fine, she could have left the small suitcase, but the purse?
06:15Even when she came to my house, she would carry her purse from the living room to the kitchen, from the kitchen to...
06:20The bathroom.
06:20That's how she was.
06:22Wherever she went, she took her purse.
06:24She was very attached to her things.
06:27Even when she was little, what was hers was hers.
06:30No one could touch it.
06:32She was barefoot.
06:34And that wasn't an area where you could walk properly barefoot.
06:40Kentucky police began searching the dense forest surrounding the house.
06:46We searched several lakes and wooded areas surrounding the residence.
06:53But it was 6,500 hectares of terrain that was difficult to search.
06:58The police brought horses, they brought sniffer dogs, they brought divers.
07:03It was very difficult because it was a forest with very rugged terrain.
07:08There were cliffs, slopes, and enormous holes that could fit a car inside.
07:13And there were lots of snakes, all sorts of things.
07:17The terrain was so bad that it made the search very difficult.
07:20They searched thousands and thousands of kilometers for her and still couldn't find anything.
07:28The police tried to locate Brooke's cell phone in the hope of finding some clue.
07:34They tried to track the phone to see if they could find her, but I think the battery died and with the phone...
07:40It was switched off and couldn't be tracked.
07:41When the police pulled up Brooke's phone records, they saw hundreds of calls and messages received from family members.
07:50and concerned friends.
07:51But no activity after the message she sent to her ex-boyfriend at 5:30.
07:57How could this beautiful young woman, who had her whole life ahead of her, simply disappear without a trace?
08:04She had gone to a birthday party, she was with her whole family, everything was wonderful, 100% perfect.
08:13She was all smiles, happy, laughing, full of life.
08:18And simply in less than 24 hours, we heard nothing more.
08:23A teenage girl from Madison County has gone missing.
08:28Jared, Brooke's ex-boyfriend, was taken in for questioning, but he had a strong alibi.
08:34I was working at the factory all night.
08:36The homeowner was also questioned.
08:40Just like everyone else who was at the outdoor party Brooke went to that night.
08:44But the police did not consider any of them suspects and seemed to have little information to go on.
08:51In the small town of Bahia, rumors began to spread.
08:55Some people speculated that Brooke's disappearance might be linked to other unsolved cases.
09:02Since 2005, more than a dozen young women, all with blond hair, have disappeared in the country's interior.
09:10What if Brooke had been kidnapped?
09:12That was awful.
09:14It would have been better for her to have escaped than to have been trapped in someone's basement.
09:18I have three daughters.
09:20And my biggest fear is that someone will take one of them.
09:23Because we hear so much about human trafficking, about people being kidnapped.
09:27And that terrifies me.
09:29That's my biggest fear.
09:31But it's hard to imagine how Brooke could have been kidnapped.
09:35The house where she was last seen was in the middle of nowhere, on a quiet, deserted street.
09:41exit.
09:42I think it's unlikely she went anywhere on foot.
09:45I don't think she was taken by some stranger.
09:48Furthermore, Brooke knew people in the area.
09:52If she was having problems, why didn't she try asking for help?
09:55Her Sunday school teachers were across the street.
10:01Exactly on the other side.
10:03She could have crossed the street, used the phone and said, "Mom, come pick me up."
10:08Wherever Brooke was, the family believed that something terrible had happened between the time she sent the message.
10:15message for ex-boyfriend,
10:17saying I'm scared, and the strange message about going to a party.
10:21I don't think she wrote the last message.
10:26I believe that message isn't even from her.
10:31But if it wasn't Brooke who sent the last message from her cell phone, who was it?
10:36And what did that person do to the young woman?
10:40In June 2013, 18-year-old Brooke Fardin disappeared from the small town of Berea, Kentucky, without a trace.
10:49Since Brooklyn disappeared, we have searched thousands of acres, and we have spared no effort.
10:57The last place she was was in a house where there was a fire.
11:01The homeowner said she was sitting on the sofa smoking.
11:07He thought she had fallen asleep and the cigarette had set the sofa on fire.
11:13The sofa was useless as a clue because it was completely burned.
11:17The homeowner maintained that he knew nothing about it and was not involved in Brooke's disappearance.
11:25I'm not happy with this story. I don't believe his version of events.
11:30Brooke's family feared the worst.
11:33There was something on that sofa, and he knew he needed to get rid of it.
11:38In Brooke's last message, at 5:30 in the morning, she said she was going to a party in Rock.
11:43Castle.
11:44But investigators never found any evidence that this party actually took place.
11:50And Brooke never told anyone.
11:52And I thought, who could Brooke possibly know in Rock Castle?
11:56She told me she was going to get a ride home with Jared, and that I should leave the door unlocked.
12:01And I did it.
12:03But she never came home.
12:06There's one more thing.
12:07The owner of the house where Brooke was last seen,
12:11I worked in road maintenance.
12:13which means he knew the Paria area inside and out.
12:18And the family believes that if anyone knew where to hide a body, it was him.
12:22He knew all the more remote roads because that's what he did for a living.
12:27I walked through them every day.
12:29He knew every inch of land in that region.
12:32Every exit, every back road.
12:35He knew everything.
12:39But the man continued to claim innocence.
12:42And the years went by without any new clues.
12:47Today marks three years since a teenage girl from Madison County disappeared.
12:51Five years have passed since teenager Brooklyn Ferden disappeared.
12:56Six years after the young woman's disappearance,
12:59The case remains a mystery and the police continue to search for answers.
13:04We are looking for someone who can come forward and give us some new leads.
13:08Brooklyn Ferden's family continues to search for her.
13:11I think the hardest part is that we don't have any answers.
13:16We left it in the hands of the police force.
13:18Because, you know, what else could we do?
13:22Investigators continue to receive leads.
13:25But they say they still don't have enough evidence.
13:28to identify a suspect or someone involved.
13:31We spoke with several people during the investigation.
13:34Does anyone know what happened to Brooklyn?
13:37but we are not authorized to disclose information about suspects.
13:40without having enough data for us to accuse anyone.
13:43I think what stalled the case is that no body was found.
13:49Brooke's family had to come to terms with the harsh reality.
13:53that she may no longer be alive.
13:56It's easier for me to think that she's dead.
13:59If I spend every day thinking that she might be alive somewhere,
14:04I'm going to go crazy.
14:05And now it doesn't even matter anymore whether I think she's dead or not.
14:11If she's somewhere, I can't go to her.
14:16I need my baby to come home.
14:18She needs to be respected and she desperately needs a tomb.
14:26The family offered a reward of $14,000 for information.
14:32They maintain a Facebook page and a website searching for Brooke Fortham.
14:37hoping that someone will give some clue.
14:39Many people still call.
14:41Many people send messages on Facebook saying
14:44We are still here, we haven't forgotten you, and we continue to pray.
14:48They are determined to get justice.
14:51There are days when my mother can't get out of bed because of this.
14:56The person who did this to Brooke, I don't know how they sleep at night.
15:00She'll pay for this someday.
15:03Above all, they want answers.
15:06They just want to know where Brooke is.
15:09We often don't get all the answers.
15:13And it's possible that I might spend my whole life without ever seeing my daughter again.
15:18But I continue to pray for a resolution.
15:21Please have mercy on us.
15:24Let us know where she is.
15:28I just want my baby back.
15:31Will Brooklyn ever be found, dead or alive?
15:38Nearly 5,000 kilometers away, in Canada,
15:42Another family has been waiting even longer for justice.
15:46This unsolved mystery began in the small, quiet town of Sennet,
15:51in Victoria, British Columbia.
15:54It's a beautiful place with friendly people.
15:56Everyone knows each other, they know who everyone else is.
15:59We all feel safe.
16:01In 2008, 24-year-old Lindsay Bilziak,
16:05She was on her way to becoming one of the best real estate agents in Sennet.
16:09She was one of the youngest brokers.
16:13Everyone liked her very much.
16:15She was ambitious.
16:16She was a great salesperson because she knew what she wanted and she went after it.
16:21Lindsay was known for having a huge heart and being affectionate.
16:25Lindsay was, quite literally, the most cheerful person anyone could meet.
16:30She was a radiant person who made you feel great, made you feel at ease.
16:41He was a very social person.
16:43Everyone loved her.
16:44Work was Lindsay's top priority.
16:48Her cell phone was never turned off.
16:50He was always responding to emails, phone calls, and messages.
16:54ensuring good customer service.
16:56In fact, she was the definition of a successful woman, long before people even talked about it.
17:02But her love life was also important to her.
17:05And after a few years of an on-and-off relationship,
17:08She had moved in with her boyfriend, Jason Zaylo.
17:11Lindsay and Jason had a great relationship.
17:14He was great.
17:16In January 2008, Lindsay received some promising news.
17:20She was contacted by a couple who wanted to see one of the real estate agency's most expensive houses.
17:25When Lindsay received the call about the sale of a million-dollar house,
17:31He called me right away.
17:32She became very excited because she thought,
17:34Great, if I can close this sale, many doors could open for me.
17:39But no one imagined the nightmare it would become.
17:44He called the police.
17:46It's the worst thing you can experience in your life.
17:53Lindsay Buseak was a successful real estate agent in the small Canadian town of Sennet.
17:59in British Columbia.
18:00At the end of January 2008, a woman called her interested in buying a house.
18:06more than a million dollars.
18:08Exactly the type of high-level, high-commission sale that Lindsay wanted to make.
18:13She wanted to enter the multi-million dollar real estate sales segment.
18:16I was very motivated to work in high-end luxury sales and succeed.
18:20I know that all she wanted to do was take care of our parents.
18:25To help our family, to ensure that everyone was treated well.
18:29But one detail of the connection seemed strange.
18:32Lindsay was not the real estate agent responsible for the house that the woman said she wanted to see with her husband.
18:37The woman called Lindsay's cell phone, which surprised her.
18:41They mentioned Lindsay's client and said,
18:43Ah, your client so-and-so told us to call you.
18:46The woman also insisted that they only wanted to see a house.
18:50which was new, recently built.
18:52They weren't interested in seeing any other properties.
18:56They were rather vague.
18:59They knew very well what they wanted.
19:01And it seemed like they were only interested in a single house.
19:07As much as Lindsay wanted to make the sale,
19:09She began to feel apprehensive.
19:11She was bothered by the woman's extremely strong Spanish accent.
19:16She felt they were forcing the accent.
19:19Lindsay was extremely nervous about the visit.
19:22To be sure, Lindsay called the client.
19:25The woman said she had recommended her to see if she could get more information.
19:29But the customer didn't answer.
19:31She decided to show the property to the couple herself.
19:35But she told her father that she was going to ask her boyfriend, Jason, to accompany her.
19:39She assured me that her boyfriend Jason would go with her.
19:44Lindsay's boyfriend, Jason Zaylo,
19:46He was a mortgage broker who financed most of her sales.
19:51Former semi-professional hockey player,
19:54He was also a big man.
19:55On the afternoon of Saturday, February 2, 2008,
19:59Lindsay and Jason went out to lunch together.
20:02They paid the bill at 4:24 PM and left in separate cars.
20:07Lindsay asked Jason to meet her at the house at 5:30 AM.
20:11But first, he stopped by a workshop to see a friend and lost track of time.
20:16Jason wasn't there.
20:18He was busy having a beer with friends at a car repair shop and was running late.
20:25Jason texted Lindsay at 5:29 p.m.
20:29saying that he was on his way.
20:30Okay, see you in a bit.
20:32She replied, I have to go.
20:34Then, Lindsay accessed the digital lock from outside the house to retrieve the keys.
20:39The two potential clients showed up and greeted her at the door.
20:43Several independent witnesses heard her testimony.
20:46At 5:38 AM, Jason sent another message to Lindsay,
20:50saying that he would arrive in a few minutes.
20:52This time, she didn't answer.
20:56At 5:45 AM, Jason arrived at the house.
20:59which was one of only four buildings,
21:01on the well-maintained dead-end street.
21:03A friend was with him in the car.
21:05The two noticed the front door of the house opening and closing again.
21:11People were leaving the house when Jason arrived by car.
21:17They saw him as they were leaving and went back inside the house.
21:22Jason said he thought Lindsay was still showing the property to the couple.
21:27So he parked the car and waited.
21:30He remained seated in the vehicle under the pretext of waiting for Lindsay.
21:34At one point, Jason drove the car onto another street.
21:38He waited for at least 20 minutes.
21:4110 minutes in one place and 10 minutes in another.
21:44Lindsay continued to ignore the messages.
21:48And a little after 6 p.m.,
21:51He and his friend decided to go back to the house and go to the front door.
21:56She was locked in.
21:57But Jason could see Lindsay's shoes lying at the foot of the stairs.
22:02Something was wrong.
22:04He immediately called the police.
22:07Jason and his friend noticed that the door to the back terrace of the property was open.
22:12They jumped the fence and ran inside.
22:15What Jason found in the Master Suite upstairs was horrifying.
22:21Lindsay Buziak was found stabbed in a house in Sanish.
22:24They stabbed her more than 40 times and cut her throat to the point of almost decapitating her.
22:35I collapsed to the ground.
22:37It's something you never want to hear, or can hear, in your life.
22:42It was unbelievable.
22:43We never, ever thought that something like this could ever happen to us or to our family.
22:51Lindsay.
22:53The violent murder left the community shaken.
22:58This kind of thing doesn't happen in Victoria.
23:01It doesn't happen.
23:03It didn't make sense.
23:05Who would want to kill a young woman like Lindsay?
23:08Lindsay became friends with everyone she met.
23:11She had no enemies.
23:13The police focused their investigation on the mysterious clients who lured Lindsay to the house.
23:19They had several independent witnesses who saw a man and a woman outside shortly before the appointed time.
23:25about death, talking to Lindsay.
23:26And they were a couple that Lindsay didn't know.
23:28Witnesses described the couple as having a culotte-like appearance, being well-dressed, and about 10 years older than Lindsay.
23:34The description of the man was relatively generic.
23:37He was between 30 and 40 years old, about 1.80m tall, and had dark hair.
23:43The description given to the public of the woman was a bit more specific.
23:47Between 35 and 40 years old, with short, blond hair.
23:50She was wearing a very striking dress that drew attention.
23:54The dress had a print in the colors red, black, and white.
23:58And the police had enough information about the woman who was using him to create a composite sketch.
24:04But I had no more clues.
24:06The couple disappeared.
24:08No one in the neighborhood saw them leaving the house, and no one knows where they went.
24:15The police were also unable to collect enough DNA to identify the attackers.
24:21What was most frightening was that it looked like the crime scene had been meticulously cleaned.
24:27Well, it was to be expected that, considering the severity of the attack, we would have more success collecting things like the
24:34DNA, hair, or fibers, but in reality, that's not the case.
24:37It seemed as if someone had executed a plan that was too methodical.
24:42There was little or no forensic evidence that pointed to anyone.
24:45The police had only one clue.
24:48A phone number written in Lindsay's address book.
24:52They discovered that the number belonged to a prepaid cell phone, purchased at a convenience store in Vancouver, by a
24:59A person using a false name and a false address.
25:02The phone was activated for the first time shortly after the mysterious couple contacted Lindsay.
25:09The day before her death, the cell phone was transported from Vancouver to Sennet by ferry.
25:17After that, it was never activated again. That cell phone simply disappeared.
25:22Could there have been some connection between the cell phone, the mysterious couple, and Lindsay's death?
25:28Whatever happened, rumors began circulating that Lindsay's boyfriend might be involved.
25:35My intuition was telling me boyfriend, boyfriend, boyfriend.
25:42For Lindsay's family, Jason's behavior was strange. Plus, there was this video.
25:48He staged a reenactment a few days after her death.
25:53I went in and I started yelling, Lindsay, Lindsay, Lindsay, then I ran up the stairs.
25:59Lindsay's family thinks Jason's calm behavior in the video is strange.
26:05Did you see anything, hear anything, smell anything?
26:08Try to go back to the moment when you entered the house.
26:12I think it took about two seconds from going through the door to going upstairs.
26:20Everything we have, everything we feel, everything we think, and of course, as a father, you have...
26:26an intuition from someone who thinks they were involved.
26:31And it's not just Lindsay's family that doubts Jason.
26:35Some rumors around town suggest that he might be hiding something.
26:52In early 2008, 24-year-old real estate agent Lindsay Busek was found violently stabbed in a house that showed...
27:01to customers.
27:02The buyers she met have disappeared, and her family suspects her death was the work of someone else.
27:08that Lindsay knew.
27:10The cruelty of her murder was personal. It was personal. It was definitely personal.
27:17She was brutally stabbed, and that indicates a very strong motive from someone with a lot of repressed anger.
27:23And these types of murders only occurred in cases of fits of rage, where a domestic situation arose that led to...
27:31One person loses their temper and kills another.
27:34Lindsay had asked her boyfriend, Jason, to come over to the house because she was afraid to be alone with...
27:40The mystery customers.
27:42But he didn't arrive on time, and her family wanted to know why he waited so long to enter the room.
27:48home, and why he parked the car on another street.
27:51He arrived late, saw the people, drove past the house, and parked.
27:58Who does this?
28:01A person who cares about you will stay there sitting, walk around, park the car on another street,
28:09Waiting more than ten minutes before doing something?
28:14Jason was questioned by the police, but he had a solid alibi.
28:19Security camera footage showed him leaving a car dealership with a friend at 5:30 PM.
28:26in the afternoon,
28:27At the same time, witnesses saw Lindsay greeting customers at the entrance of the house.
28:32Investigators believe she died shortly afterward, but Jason only arrived at the house fifteen minutes later.
28:40Furthermore, he passed a polygraph test and insisted that he would never harm Lindsay.
28:47After questioning him several times, the police turned to other leads.
28:53He is no longer a suspect.
28:55If it wasn't a crime of passion, could it have been some kind of conspiracy?
29:00The police explored a new theory.
29:02They thought Lindsay's death might be linked to a drug cartel.
29:06Investigators discovered that, while visiting his father in Calgary in late 2007,
29:13Lindsay made contact on Facebook with someone who was later arrested in the dismantling of a huge network of...
29:20traffic.
29:21Lindsay was linked to an individual who had been arrested in Calgary shortly before her death.
29:29And he was caught with a huge amount of cocaine.
29:32That was in mid-December, in December 2007.
29:39And in February 2008, she was executed.
29:44Could there be a connection between the drug seizure and Lindsay's death?
29:50It's undeniable that Lindsay had some kind of contact with this person.
29:54This does not mean that she was involved in illegal activities.
29:57but who had a certain degree of connection with people who were highly involved.
30:02Police suggested that Lindsay may have been targeted by someone who thought she was part of the network of
30:08drugs or that she was an informant.
30:10The theory put forward by the Sennett police was that Lindsay's death was a case of mistaken identity.
30:16Lindsay was killed because someone feared she knew too much.
30:22A major clue was the prepaid cell phone used to contact the young woman.
30:28It is standard procedure for drug traffickers to use phones that are difficult to trace.
30:32Investigators also believe that the violent nature of Lindsay's death is consistent with drug-related executions.
30:41But her family doesn't believe that.
30:43Most of our friends used drugs recreationally, and Lindsay was my only friend who never did.
30:51It came close to that sort of thing.
30:53Lindsay was not involved in drug trafficking.
30:57She was not an informant.
30:59She wasn't a snitch.
31:01The person involved in the drug bust in Calgary,
31:05She found him on Facebook and asked for his phone number.
31:10How does this turn into a contract killing?
31:14I think people create a story because they need a story.
31:21Two years have passed without any progress.
31:24Until February 2010, on the second anniversary of her death,
31:29Lindsay's family has joined forces with the estate board to offer a $100,000 reward for information.
31:37But two more years passed, still without any clues.
31:42In 2012, Lindsay's father increased the reward to $500,000.
31:47He was so desperate to find his daughter's killers,
31:52He begged them to come forward and confess, and made a radical proposal.
31:56He also suggests that if someone comes forward, they can leave the country with a new identity.
32:02Everyone experiences grief in a different way.
32:04And my father's job was to follow the clues and analyze every aspect of the case.
32:11I admire that because I, personally, don't have the strength to do that.
32:17The mantra of each day of my life is
32:20I need to do something to see these people arrested and exposed for the horrific crime they committed.
32:29The family created a website dedicated to getting justice for Lindsay.
32:34But it wasn't until August 2017, nine long years after the young woman's death,
32:41That's when a disturbing confession appeared on the website.
32:44She says, "I killed Lindsay, and those idiot cops will never be able to prove it."
32:49I remember thinking at the time that it was just a prank.
32:52Perhaps someone is trying to get attention.
32:55Lindsay's name was misspelled in the confession.
33:00And the police quickly announced that it was just a cruel prank.
33:04The unsolved crime haunts the inhabitants of the small town of Sennet.
33:09The police don't know who her killers are or why they killed her.
33:13A brokerage firm in the city created the Protect app for other brokers to use if they don't feel secure.
33:23There's a help button here.
33:24If things get tight, alert friends and family immediately.
33:27People don't see the work of a real estate agent as a potentially dangerous activity.
33:32But we are in contact with strangers every day, all day long.
33:37Eleven years after the murder, Sennett police say the investigation remains active.
33:44and believes that someone in the community can help them solve the case.
33:49Someone knows something, and eventually that person will come forward and speak.
33:53Based on my experience in criminal investigations,
33:56The stranger the facts of the case, the closer to home the answer is.
34:00This was planned and executed by people close to Lindsay Buziak.
34:04That's what I believe in.
34:06We prayed that they wouldn't be able to bear the guilt.
34:09so they can tell a relative or say something unintentionally.
34:15It's clear that someone knows something, that they know exactly what they did.
34:20Most importantly, 11 years after it happened,
34:23It's about letting the whole truth come to light.
34:25And that someone who knows something should come forward and do the right thing.
34:29Lindsay's family wants the police to do more.
34:33and she is frustrated with how long it is taking to get answers.
34:37I pressure the police all the time and they tell me to be patient.
34:41They say these things take time.
34:44They're not saying anything. The police aren't saying anything.
34:47We know Lindsay is gone, we know she's not coming back.
34:51All I want is justice for my daughter.
34:55It is their duty, their job, to investigate and find out who killed my daughter.
35:02Arrest the culprit.
35:03If they are not prepared to do this,
35:06I'll pressure them every day until that happens or I die.
35:13I'll solve this damn murder right now.
35:16Will we ever know what really happened to Lindsay Buziak?
35:22Brazilian Version
35:24DPN Santos
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