- hace 3 días
Discovery Global Crimes
Serie Documental, Drama, Suspense
En este programa se investigan los misteriosos asesinatos que se entrecruzan con el mundo de "Playboy".
Serie Documental, Drama, Suspense
En este programa se investigan los misteriosos asesinatos que se entrecruzan con el mundo de "Playboy".
Categoría
✨
CelebridadesTranscripción
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.
Comentarios