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Discovery Global Crimes
Serie Documental, Drama, Suspense
En este programa se investigan los misteriosos asesinatos que se entrecruzan con el mundo de "Playboy".

Categoría

Celebridades
Transcripción
00:01Carol Gold was really a pioneer being one of the first Playboy bunnies.
00:06A bunny in the 1960s made great money.
00:11And we were like rock stars.
00:14Playboy can give you the taste of the high life, but that doesn't last forever.
00:21She just blew through all the money and one day woke up and realized there was nothing left.
00:28Chuck said to Carol that if she didn't back him up, he was going to divorce her.
00:34She says she knew she was paying $75 a month into something, but didn't really know what.
00:40Just a few minutes into his conversation with detectives, he realizes, oh, wait a minute.
00:47This is about a murder.
00:52That was the beginning of my worst nightmare.
01:14Police get a call over the radio.
01:16A woman had called 911 saying her husband had been shot.
01:23So they rush over.
01:25They get there.
01:3151-year-old Chuck Gold was found dead and murdered inside his home.
01:41We have an apparent homicide.
01:45Mr. Gold expired from multiple gunshot wounds.
01:50We were told he'd been discovered by his wife, Carol.
01:59Carol Gold was 53 years old when her husband Chuck was found brutally murdered.
02:03It's a dramatic turn in the life of a woman who just decades ago was on a very different path.
02:10Working as a Playboy bunny.
02:12Experiencing this glamorous lifestyle and making more money than she ever thought possible.
02:20Carol was involved with the Playboy company at a very early stage in the early 60s.
02:26Back then, the magazine looked very homemade, cut and paste.
02:30It wasn't like the glossy, lavish thing that people saw in decades later.
02:37Hef started Playboy when he was 27 years old.
02:40He started HMH Publishing at the same time.
02:44HMH Publishing is his initials, Hugh Marston Hefner,
02:48and he just started that publishing company to do Playboy.
02:53The first issue came out in December of 1953.
02:57He didn't put a volume number on the first issue because he wasn't sure if there'd be a second one.
03:02The first nude pictorial in Playboy was a photo of Marilyn Monroe,
03:06and that feature would go on to become the centerfold feature.
03:12There really wasn't anything like Playboy at the time.
03:15There were nude magazines, but they were all pretty downscale.
03:19So he wanted to do something different.
03:23The Playboy lifestyle was supposed to be an aspirational, upscale, men's kind of fantasy lifestyle.
03:35Carol was from Chicago.
03:37And in 1955, she was a model in her teenage years.
03:42She did a lot of magazines and commercials and things like that.
03:47And so that's kind of how her life started in the public eye.
03:53And when Carol was only 15 years old, she had a friend who worked nearby HMH Publishing.
04:01And her friend thought, hey, Carol, maybe you can get a job there.
04:05Carol was in a Catholic school.
04:07And the Catholic priest had to approve anybody that wanted to work a job outside of school.
04:12And he approved it because it was just a publishing company.
04:16He didn't understand that HMH meant U.M. Hefner.
04:23Carol meets with an executive who really, really liked her at the time.
04:28And he hires her on the spot.
04:32The very first Playboy Club opened in Chicago on February 29, 1960.
04:37It was an upscale place for men to go.
04:41It was a private club.
04:43You know, you could have lunch or dinner and see great entertainment.
04:47And, of course, the women were wearing the bunny costume, which became very famous.
04:53The Playboy Bunnies were the hostesses and waitresses that worked at the Playboy Club.
04:57And they wore the very famous skimpy outfit, which is basically just a corset with tights.
05:08The bunny costume was based on the Playboy mascot, which is a rabbit.
05:15When Hef first started the magazine, he decided on the rabbit as a symbol and a logo.
05:21Because rabbits are very playful animals and they have a lot of sex.
05:28This is my Playboy Bunny picture. This is from Chicago.
05:33That was a really great job.
05:36Definition of a bunny in the 1960s was the girl next door, but somebody that was sexy and beautiful.
05:46A bunny in the 1960s made great money.
05:50And we were like rock stars.
05:52The money we made definitely was life-changing.
05:54In Chicago, we made more money.
05:57There was more celebrities that came to the Chicago Club.
05:59We met everybody and usually would have them sign our cuffs.
06:05Carol started off as a switchboard operator in Playboy's first offices.
06:11They used Carol as a fit bunny in order to design the original costume that the girls wore in the
06:181960s when the club opened.
06:21And then she became a bunny after that.
06:26And she was really a pioneer being one of the first bunnies.
06:30This would have been a very unique experience for anyone.
06:33But for somebody who was coming from a Catholic school background, that just must have been something completely different.
06:39Because at the time, there was nothing like the Playboy Club.
06:43Carol helped supervise other bunnies and private parties.
06:47And she was always kind.
06:50She was easy to work for.
06:52And if you stepped offline, she told you.
06:56She was supervising a get-together.
06:59Frank Sinatra and some of his friends were there.
07:04And Mr. Sinatra asked her,
07:07Well, who are you?
07:08And she said, May I get you something?
07:09And he goes, Well, no, I just want to know who you are.
07:13You can sit and talk to me.
07:14And she said, Mr. Sinatra, I'd absolutely love to.
07:17And I think you're amazing.
07:19But I have to take care of everything here.
07:27The club was definitely an introduction to the good life for Carol and showed her what was possible.
07:32You know, you have all these wealthy clients coming in.
07:36I think Carol probably got used to the money and the lifestyle.
07:38It's a very easy thing to get used to and, like, want for the rest of your life.
07:44While Carol was working as a Playboy Bunny, she also put herself through school.
07:48She became a teacher and taught eighth grade at a Catholic school.
07:52It's so crazy that she was a Catholic school teacher by day and a Playboy Bunny at night.
07:57During this time, she met an engineering student named Kenny Cattini, and they got married.
08:03Carol's at the Playboy Club for five years before she and Kenny end up moving to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin,
08:10where they work at horse stables.
08:15That's when tragedy struck.
08:22Kenny died shortly after a riding accident.
08:29I believe he was running barrels at a horse show.
08:34And he fell out of his saddle and never regained consciousness.
08:42Kenny's passing not only left Carol as a widow, but she was taking care of their daughter and their newborn
08:49son,
08:50who was born in that same year.
08:59Carol was busy working at the stable and raising two kids when she reconnected with a childhood friend, Chuck Gold.
09:06Like Carol, Chuck also had two kids.
09:10My relationship with my dad in my earlier years was sporadic.
09:16My parents were divorced before I was two. They were separated.
09:20My mother and I lived with her parents, my grandparents.
09:26Chuck and Carol start dating, and that was in 1977.
09:30About a year later, they were off to Las Vegas to get married.
09:34She used her Playboy connections to get them set up at the Lake Geneva Playboy Resort.
09:43The Lake Geneva Playboy Resort was the very first Playboy Resort.
09:47An offshoot of the Playboy Club, kind of a bigger, better experience.
09:51And it was a very modern establishment.
09:54They had ski trails, they had golf courses, they had stables.
09:59It was just this amazing, huge retreat.
10:04Carol loved horses, and she and Chuck went on to open their own stable at the Playboy Club, Lake Geneva.
10:13It was a huge deal.
10:15I mean, if you're going to run a horse stable, what better place than at a luxury resort with all
10:19these wealthy customers?
10:25Carol was very good for my father.
10:27They had a really great dynamic.
10:30They worked well together.
10:32They would ride together, they would do all kinds of things together.
10:36By the summer of 82, my father and Carol knew that they were going to leave Lake Geneva.
10:42The main reason for the move was the winters were just too much for everybody,
10:46and they decided that Arizona was where they wanted to be.
10:51Carol and Chuck moved to Arizona with Carol's children, her daughter Allison and her son Ashton.
10:57The family settled into running the stables at Point Hilton Resort at Tapatio Cliffs.
11:06Chuck Gold had a business where they would do gunfight reenactments at some of the high-end hotels here in
11:15the Valley at the time.
11:17He was known to a lot of people as Black Bart.
11:20The original Black Bart was a gunslinger from like the 1880s.
11:25My dad is the personality.
11:27My dad would bring people in, and he'd be dressed as Black Bart, and people would just get a kick
11:33out of it.
11:37And Carol was the person responsible for all of the accounting and paying the bills and doing all of that
11:44stuff.
11:44That was Carol's role.
11:46By 1992, cash flow was not an issue at that stable.
11:50They had a going business, and that was without Chuck.
11:54And I can imagine when you add in the gunfight shows and the things that he did, they were doing
11:59quite well.
12:04They had this idyllic lifestyle.
12:07You know, it could have been a fairytale life.
12:12But it all changed on the night of October 20th.
12:25Dad and Carol were married in December of 78.
12:29They would have been married 14 years in December of 92, when he was killed.
12:41On October 20th, 1992, Carol Gold had been at dinner with her daughter Allison.
12:48And from there, they ended up going back to Allison's house, where they watched some movies.
12:53Chuck Gold was supposed to be at a conference, and at some point, he had called and said that he
13:00was on his way home.
13:03And then Carol decided to go home.
13:07And when she came home around 10.30, she walked into their house and found Chuck shot dead in their
13:14kitchen.
13:17That's when she called 911.
13:23Got a phone call, and it was Richard Feingold on the other end of the call.
13:30Richard was my dad's friend.
13:33He goes, your dad's dead.
13:40And I made him repeat it three times, and I went, I don't understand.
13:46And he said, your dad was shot tonight, and that's all I know.
13:53And I just lost it.
13:58That was the beginning of my worst nightmare.
14:13Chuck Gold was bleeding from the head with eight .22 caliber bullet casings surrounding his body.
14:23I was assigned to the crime scene.
14:28The scene is processed.
14:31The front door was locked.
14:34There was no sign of a break-in.
14:38I walked around and looked at different things, and I discovered that one of the back doors is unlocked.
14:49The back door should be locked, and it's not.
14:57Your first thought is, is that, well, maybe it's a burglary gone bad.
15:06If that's the case, you will normally see things disturbed.
15:14But none of that appeared to be the case.
15:20The lead detective pulls Carol outside, starts kind of asking her about everything.
15:27Carol tells detectives that they had a really good relationship, that things were going well for them.
15:35Carol indicated that, in the past, Chuck had engaged in extramarital contact, but that they had gotten past it.
15:48It must have been really difficult for Carol, because, you know, she was a playboy bunny.
15:53She was one of the people to usher in the sexual revolution.
15:56And then to be married later in life, and your partner's unfaithful, it must have been hard.
16:07Detectives went on their search for information by going and talking to everybody that would have had some knowledge of
16:15what was going on in the Gold household or the business.
16:20One of the first people the detectives reach out to is Chuck's close friend, Richard Feingold.
16:27Mr. Feingold indicated that Chuck could be hard to get along with, and he might have a lot of enemies.
16:35Richard also tells the detective that, a number of years ago, Chuck had been in a relationship with a woman
16:42who worked at the horse stables named Linda.
16:44And the two were very happy together.
16:48The story was that Chuck was going to divorce Carol and live with or marry Linda when the divorce was
16:57final.
16:58There's information that Linda lived in the house at some period of time.
17:03But for whatever reason, Chuck ended the relationship.
17:09This was around October of 91.
17:14I knew that my father had affairs.
17:17I knew that Carol knew about them.
17:22I believe Carol had affairs, and I'm sure that my father knew about them.
17:27I don't necessarily know that I would call it unfaithful, because I think they knew, because that was just their
17:35dynamic.
17:42Detectives go on to interview other employees at the horse stables, and one of them has a story that Carol
17:49had a 14-year-old grandson named Ronnie.
17:53That was Allison's son.
17:56And at some point, Ronnie was staying with Chuck and Carol, because Carol's daughter, Allison, was out of town.
18:03Chuck expected Ronnie to do work at the stables.
18:09Ronnie didn't want to. He wanted to go hang out with his girlfriend. He had no plans of going to
18:13the stables.
18:15He allegedly told Chuck, well, I'm going to be at my girlfriend's house. And Chuck said, get to the stables.
18:22And he didn't get there.
18:23And that made Chuck really angry.
18:27And Chuck went off. And he told him that he wanted him gone. He didn't want Ronnie at the house
18:34anymore.
18:37Stable hands at the resort said they saw Chuck and Ronnie arguing loudly over the incident.
18:43As a result, Ronnie ran away.
18:49And this all took place just a week before Chuck's murder.
19:03There's some information that Carol Gold's grandson, Ronnie, had had prior run-ins or contacts with the police department.
19:14Ronnie was known for having a bit of a temper.
19:19Ultimately, investigators find out that Ronnie was with his girlfriend at the time that Chuck was murdered.
19:24And he was at school the next day.
19:26And he didn't even know that Chuck was killed until he was pulled out of school.
19:34Detectives also learn that in the weeks leading up to Chuck Gold's murder, he was in a real duke-out
19:41with another guy.
19:42And that happens to be Ashton, Carol's son.
19:48Ashton was 20 and lived with my dad and Carol.
19:52He was always very quiet.
19:56I think he was also very resentful because he resented having to do any of the work at the stables.
20:03We found out that Ashton had a history of using hard drugs.
20:09Ashton apparently got hooked on an opioid and owed people money for drugs that he allegedly bought.
20:18Ashton was addicted to a drug called Nubain.
20:22And he was taking it, I guess, to work out.
20:24And it was some sort of steroid that helped him pump up.
20:30And Dad told me that Ashton had got caught smoking weed at the stables.
20:36I think that was the final straw for my dad and really pissed him off.
20:41He was livid because it was their livelihood.
20:45And marijuana wasn't legal then.
20:48So the thought that they could have lost their contract with the resort was first and forefront in his mind.
20:58One of my last conversations with my dad, we talked about Ashton and that things were getting complicated.
21:07And that he didn't know how much longer he was going to be able to stay the way things were.
21:14Chuck had reached his breaking point with Ashton and decided it would be best if he just kicked him out
21:19of the house.
21:26Knowing this information that Ashton and Chuck had had this big disagreement, detectives go and question Ashton.
21:34Who tells them that they had smoothed things over.
21:36It wasn't that big of a deal.
21:38Everything was fine.
21:40Ashton had an alibi for that night.
21:42He was with his girlfriend somewhere in public.
21:46And there were other people that verified it.
21:54But detectives got a call from a family member who said that Ashton was out looking at new Cadillacs.
22:01And the family member found something wrong with that.
22:06Chuck has been dead, you know, two weeks.
22:08And now Carol's son is out there looking at new cars.
22:18So two weeks after the murder, on November 5th of 92, the detective goes back and questions Carol.
22:26When detectives brought up Ashton and supposedly this fight, she talked about the fact that Ashton had been abusing some
22:37drugs.
22:40Chuck said to Carol that if she didn't back him up and get rid of Ashton from the house, he
22:47was going to divorce her.
22:51But she believed that Ashton and Chuck had worked out whatever upset him and that everything was good between Ashton
23:02and Chuck.
23:05When asked about owing people money for drugs, Carol said that they discovered that he owed about $1,200 to
23:14somebody and they just decided to pay it for him.
23:18And it was supposed to be the end of it.
23:27At some point during the investigation, detectives got a call from the insurance company, which is not uncommon.
23:35Insurance companies will often call investigators on questionable deaths.
23:40And their question is, is anybody in the family involved?
23:46Because there's this $150,000 accidental death insurance.
23:56I can't imagine Carol wanting him dead for money for the simple fact that he was the one who helped
24:03make the money.
24:04It doesn't make sense.
24:09One of the stories that Carol had told me was when her husband Kenny died, there was money and that
24:18she just kind of blew through all the money.
24:21And she just one day woke up and realized there was nothing left.
24:27So she pretty much had to start over.
24:31A lot of bunnies talk about how the job paid so much more just from tips than they would have
24:38made any other job that would have been available to them in the early 60s.
24:43I think it would have been really difficult for someone like Carol, who at such a young age had such
24:48financial freedom, and that's a very hard lifestyle to transition out of.
25:01When I went to Phoenix after the funeral, I looked at Ashton, and at that moment I realized that Ashton
25:10was wearing a ring and a bracelet that were my grandfather's.
25:18So I walked over to Carol, and I went, I noticed that Ashton was wearing grandpa's ring.
25:26And she looked at me and she said, well, yeah, dad said he could have them.
25:33And I said, you're mistaken, because dad and I talked about it last time I was here, that whatever was
25:42grandpa's would go to me.
25:43So he would never have let Ashton wear grandpa's ring and bracelet.
25:47Well, Steffi, he did. Well, no, Carol, he didn't.
25:51I think that's the first time I really thought about it and really went, oh, my God.
26:01Are they both involved?
26:21Who are you?
26:22It does not take long before the answer to that question becomes complex.
26:27When I was 25, I could answer that, my name is Carol, or Miss Cotini.
26:34I am the eighth grade teacher, or good evening, I'm your bunny, Carol.
26:40Can you imagine my eighth graders telling their parents that their teacher was a playboy bunny?
26:45Neither could I.
26:55The detective ends up confronting Carol about that accidental death policy, something that she hadn't talked about at all in
27:02that first interview.
27:03And she says to the detective that she didn't know about it until after Chuck died, that Chuck was the
27:10one that organized this.
27:12She knew she was paying $75 a month into something, but didn't really know what, and that's what that was.
27:20Every time detectives find something that undermines what she said before, she has to modify her story.
27:28And she does that.
27:31The one thing about doing police investigations is that if you've got somebody that's telling you the truth, it doesn't
27:39change.
27:40But there isn't anything that detectives found at that point that shows that Carol actually did it.
27:56In early November, detectives went back and made a second contact with Ashton.
28:04It's possible that that drug problem is connecting to the murder.
28:10The detective comes up with this plan to confront Ashton and kind of makes up the fact that he knows
28:17a drug dealer that Ashton knows is involved in this murder.
28:22He doesn't actually know that for sure, but he thinks if he brings that up to Ashton, he might get
28:25more information out of him.
28:27The trouble with lying to suspects or investigative leads is that if you guess wrong, then they know you're just
28:35fishing.
28:40The detective says, you know, it'd be really helpful if you could give us a name of any of these
28:45drug dealers that you're associated with or have worked with.
28:50And Ashton panicked a little bit.
28:54And then he gives up Bob Pryor.
29:00Bob Pryor was Ashton's drug dealer, and that's where he got his nubane from.
29:05Bob was also a physical trainer at a gym, which Ashton joined.
29:11Bob Pryor is one of those guys that if you work certain assignments, his name probably would have come up.
29:18He would have been known to the Phoenix Police Department.
29:22The detectives are very familiar with Bob Pryor and his rap sheet.
29:26They have an informant who knows about Bob Pryor.
29:32September of 1993, the detective is able to get in contact with Dan Goddard, who is the CI.
29:41CI is confidential informant.
29:44The detective asks Goddard if he knows Ashton.
29:49And Goddard tells the officer he had met Ashton once.
29:54And there was a conversation relayed to Dan Goddard that Ashton had told Pryor that he hated his stepdad so
30:01much, he was willing to pay to get him killed.
30:09The detective asks Goddard if he knows where Bob Pryor was on October 20th, 1992.
30:17And Goddard says, yeah, I was with him.
30:21Goddard was driving Bob Pryor around and he tells the detective they stopped at a gas station, which was conveniently
30:28right around the corner from the Gold's house.
30:30He said that Pryor was wearing a heavy jacket.
30:35He's got a gun.
30:38Mr. Goddard talked about it being a small caliber pistol or gun, probably a .22.
30:48And he talks about a silencer.
30:52Bob Pryor got out of the car with a .22 caliber gun under his jacket.
31:00That gun matches the casings that were found around Chuck Gold's body.
31:09Dan Goddard tells the detective Bob Pryor disappeared for a period of time and he didn't know where he went.
31:18And suddenly Bob Pryor and Ashton moved from investigative lead to the suspect column on your police report.
31:33When detectives start looking into Bob Pryor, they find out in an unrelated case, police took $9,000 in cash
31:41and a bunch of weapons from his house.
31:44Bob Pryor had been complaining that he wants that stuff back, so this is the perfect ruse to get him
31:52into the police department.
31:55The decision was give him a call, tell him we're giving his guns back, just have him come on down.
32:01And he came down and he didn't get his guns back, but he did get interviewed by detectives.
32:10But just a few minutes into his conversation with detectives, he realizes, oh wait a minute, this is about a
32:17murder.
32:20Now that detectives have the attention of Bob Pryor, it's their chance to say to him,
32:25So Bob, just how much were you paid to carry out a hit on Chuck Gold?
32:33And eventually he starts to crack.
32:36Bob Pryor tells them it was $9,000 and the police had seized that when they took his guns and
32:42drugs.
32:46Bob pretty much gives himself up almost immediately and admits that he was involved in this plan.
32:53But he's got a lot more to tell the detectives when he says Carol Gold was really the mastermind.
33:10Carol Gold had it all when she was a Playboy Bunny and she lost that.
33:15She has this thriving business with Chuck and there was probably the fear of losing that too.
33:20She wasn't going to go through losing it all again.
33:25Faced with the threat of Chuck divorcing her, Carol was probably scared and angry.
33:36During his interview with detectives, Bob Pryor gave some statements that implicated Carol and Ashton
33:44as being the people that had hired him for $9,000 to kill Mr. Gold.
33:57He'd also implicated them in a prior separate murder attempt on Chuck where Carol and Ashton put rat poison in
34:08his dinner.
34:11But he didn't die.
34:15He didn't like the way it tasted and threw it away.
34:20With this new information, the detective heads back over to the horse stables and arrests both Ashton and Carol for
34:28murder and conspiracy to commit murder on Chuck Gold.
34:37Detectives bring Carol back in. They've got more questions for her.
34:41This time, she clams up. Carol wants a lawyer.
34:47Carol's released. There was no physical tie to Carol.
34:55But they charged Ashton and Pryor with conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and first-degree murder.
35:11After Carol was released, the detective goes to talk to John and Sharon Novoselke, who were good friends of Carol
35:18and Chuck's.
35:21He had talked to them before, but he wanted to go back just to see if he could find out
35:25any other information that could help.
35:29The Novoselkes end up giving the detective a piece of information that gets him one step closer to solving the
35:35case.
35:37John and Sharon indicated that it was a really, really bad time in Chuck and Carol's marriage.
35:47But probably the biggest piece of information they tell the detective is that they know Chuck did not know about
35:56any kind of insurance policy.
35:59Chuck had been denied insurance, I'm assuming life insurance, because of health issues.
36:08The detective was able to obtain handwriting samples for Chuck and other family members.
36:17But the handwriting analysts told him that Chuck did not sign the application for the insurance.
36:28And that, in fact, his signature was done by Carol.
36:35The application was fraudulent.
36:40And I later found out that Carol hired an attorney to get the money.
36:48And the police were trying to not release the money because they still hadn't cleared her from being a suspect.
37:00But they didn't have enough to hold the insurance company from not paying it.
37:11In December of 1994, the trial starts for Ashton and Bob Pryor.
37:17But it's a deadlocked jury in the end, and eventually it's declared a mistrial in 1995.
37:26They got a hung jury, and that's probably because they couldn't connect the dots.
37:31If I was having trouble with it sitting in the gallery, I'm sure the jury was too.
37:41Not long after Bob's mistrial, he manages to get himself into big trouble on unrelated charges,
37:49federal charges having to do with drug distribution.
37:51So what he decides to do is plead down his sentence by promising to testify in future trials against Ashton
38:01and his mom, Carol.
38:05In 1995, on 2nd of August, Ashton and Carol are rearrested for the murder and conspiracy of Chuck.
38:15I've covered so many of these murder-for-hire cases, and it's usually spouse-on-spouse.
38:22And the spouse killers think they're so clever, but they always make a stupid mistake.
38:30Document scientists determined that Chuck hadn't filled out the insurance paperwork that Carol had,
38:39which undermined her story that she didn't have any information about the life insurance or how much it was for.
38:49It would be pretty hard to explain that away.
38:57After Carol's second arrest, the detective is hoping she's going to come forward with anything more than she did the
39:04first time.
39:04So they pull her into a room to interrogate her one more time.
39:09In the final interview, Carol makes statements admitting involvement in the case and makes a statement,
39:18you're on the right track, but the wrong train.
39:25And she never clarifies what she means by that.
39:29I believe that they conspired together, Ashton and Carol, with a third party that was the trigger man.
39:43From the day that she was arrested in 1993, I never heard from her again.
39:49Not a single person in the family ever heard from her again.
39:53She never called to say, it's not true.
39:56I'll take care of it. I'll explain it all.
40:00Not once.
40:05There's no betrayal worse than that.
40:18August 4th of 1997, the trial of Ashton and Carol started.
40:25During the course of the trial, Ashton pleads guilty to conspiracy.
40:31And is later sentenced to 18 years in prison.
40:38And the trial proceeds against his mother.
40:40At the end of the trial, the jury comes back with guilty on two counts, conspiracy and murder one.
40:51She's sentenced to 25 to life with the possibility of receiving parole.
41:00Thanks to that deal that Bob Pryor had cut, he was only sentenced to 20 years in a medium security
41:06prison.
41:13I felt my dad got the justice he deserved.
41:23It was tough, being in court every day.
41:28But sentencing took place a month later, where I was able to give my victim impact statement.
41:34I apologized to the judge, but I told Carol to rot in hell.
41:39And that's one of the hardest things that's been for me, because I loved her.
41:44She was part of my family.
41:48And she broke my heart.
41:56Carol's ultimate fear was losing her wealth and losing her share of a thriving business.
42:02Playboy can give you the taste of the high life, but that doesn't last forever.
42:07And when Carol was afraid she was going to lose her marriage, her lifestyle, her business,
42:11she was prepared to kill to make sure that didn't happen.
42:16The moment the wife was not together.
42:16Beloved Lahind Lahind lah is one of the toughest things even though,
42:17And there's here in her life.
42:18She's in a family.
42:18She's a person and she's in a family.
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