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00:03Authorities acknowledged that the plane was in good shape, and that unless the pilot was
00:08physically incapacitated, he should have been able to land it safely at the South Norfolk
00:12Airport just about a half a mile from here. Investigators combed the wreckage that might
00:17connect the pilot with the disappearance of a 23-year-old ODU student who apparently was
00:22linked romantically with the pilot and who disappeared from her Indian River apartment
00:26in Chesapeake early in November. Dark staining in the bathtub looked consistent with possibly
00:34blood. Her apartment chain had been cut with bolt cutters. She didn't leave on her own volition.
00:44She never really had a steady boyfriend. The relationships didn't work out.
00:50The wreckage was still smoldering. There's a very real concern now. He might be on the run.
00:56He became a prime suspect, and he's the only one that knew where she was at.
01:02I said, don't call Jeze in a lawyer, because you're going down.
01:08I wasn't giving up.
01:11This girl was somebody's daughter.
01:32January 10, 1982, was an unusually cold day.
01:41On that particular day, as I recall, it was windy.
01:47The temperature was around 10 degrees. It was bitter cold. You really didn't want to be outside.
01:55You wanted to be sitting next to a nice warm fire.
02:04I was a detective in the Chesapeake Police Department.
02:08There was a report of a missing person, and finding her was very personal for me,
02:15because I had a daughter, and this girl was somebody's daughter.
02:21So I was working every angle in my own private time to solve the case and find this girl.
02:28I was following up on every little piece of dust by myself.
02:39I stopped in the car in this farmland area.
02:42I got out. I left my daughter, Lori, in the car.
02:45She said, what are we here for?
02:48And I said, well, I'm looking for a grave.
02:57I walked around for a while, and right there in the field, I saw this oblong, depressed area.
03:08I couldn't believe my eyes.
03:10I turned around, faced the field, waited a minute or two, and then I turned back around.
03:17It was still there. I didn't imagine it.
03:19I was pretty sure that it was somebody's grave.
03:30By the time we got to the grave site, the sun was starting to set.
03:35So it had already started to turn dark, the wind is blowing, and the temperature is dropping.
03:45It's a very rural area.
03:47It's very desolate, very out in the middle of nowhere.
03:52It was a shallow grave in an active peanut field.
04:00The grave was pretty shallow, but the top seven inches of it was frozen.
04:07Just as soon as we got to unfrozen ground, you could start getting that old familiar smell of a body.
04:21Then after that, it was just a very few inches before we ran into the top of that blanket.
04:31It was just awful, awful to see that.
04:35I knew I had found her.
04:39We needed to know what happened to this person, who killed her, and why did she end up in this
04:46shallow grave.
05:05When I met Janice, I was in the military in Korea.
05:09Janice came to Korea in January of 1978, so she was assigned as my roommate in the barracks.
05:21She was born in New York and moved to Miami when she was maybe, I don't know, six or seven.
05:28That was one of the reasons she joined the Army, because she wanted to get away from Miami, see the
05:34world, you know.
05:35She was kind of shy, but it didn't take her long to, you know, follow my lead.
05:45We'd like to go out and party.
05:47In Korea, they had discos and cheap drinks, and that's kind of what we did.
05:55I was about two years older than her.
05:58It was partly that dynamic of the big sister, little sister.
06:03Just that unique experience of being a minority of women in the military there.
06:10She was my best friend.
06:17We both got out of the Army at the same time, and I'd been accepted into law school in Washington,
06:23D.C.
06:24In August 1981, she went full-time at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.
06:33She had decided she wanted to join ROGC, which is Reserve Officer Training Corps, to become an officer.
06:39We were just really into that aspect of it, you know, women's liberation, and we could have careers and do
06:45what we wanted to do.
06:47Of course, we weren't always welcome in our efforts.
06:50We had to deal with sexual harassment and discrimination.
06:53It was a challenge, but somebody had to do it.
07:05When Janice and I split up from Korea, we had started writing each other.
07:10She wrote long letters, and that's how I can remember all the stories about what was going on when she
07:15was going to school.
07:16And I'd read everything that happened to her and who she was dating.
07:20We told each other everything.
07:26But then a couple months later, close to the end of October, I tried to call her, but I don't
07:32get her.
07:33Try another day or two later, you know.
07:37A couple weeks later, November 13, I tried to call her job.
07:42Then they said they didn't know where she was and hadn't seen her since November 2.
07:49I was horrified.
07:51I said, that's not like Janice.
07:54She wouldn't leave like that.
07:56Right away, I called the police.
07:58There's no explanation for her not to be at school or work all that time.
08:03I knew that something was really wrong.
08:07The same day that Eva called police, Janice's manager in her campus job made a phone call to the ROTC
08:14unit,
08:15asking if anyone there had seen Janice.
08:18Janice's instructor, who supervised and coordinated Janice's activities,
08:23whose name was Captain Dwight Bedingfield,
08:25then called Janice's mother in Ohio to see if perhaps she'd gone home to visit her parents.
08:31And right away, she was very concerned.
08:35She said it was not typical for Janice to just stop coming to class.
08:40Bedingfield agreed.
08:41Her track record on campus was, as a good student,
08:45someone who came to class, made good grades, followed a closely regimented schedule.
08:50At that point, Mrs. Starr had said that she wanted to have a missing person report filed.
08:55Captain Bedingfield is then asked to call the Chesapeake Police Department
08:59to officially file a missing person report.
09:05I was the only female detective in the department.
09:09I was called on the radio, and they said that there was a report of a missing person.
09:22The first thing I did was go to the apartment complex where Janice Stark lived.
09:30I knocked on the door, and I didn't get any answer.
09:34The manager came over and said she hadn't been seen in a few days.
09:40And I said, well, her car is there.
09:43So he let me in.
09:47I went inside and went through the house.
09:55The house was very neat and orderly.
10:02I went into the bathroom, and I found her eyeglasses, and I found her contact lenses.
10:09So I knew she had not gone somewhere.
10:15She had two spare rooms.
10:18One of her rooms was very neat.
10:21But the other room had been ransacked.
10:25There was stuff on the floor.
10:27The suitcases were there, just wide open.
10:34There was something really bad going on in that house.
10:43She described him in her letters.
10:45He was like a golden god.
10:48But he had a wife and a kid.
10:51He terrified her.
10:53He said, I really think you should get some life insurance.
10:57I just knew she wasn't here anymore.
11:17I had called the police department and said my friend Janice Starr was missing.
11:24And they said, oh, she's been reported missing this morning by the ROTC office at Old Dominion University.
11:36I got a call from dispatch to respond to an address to assist Detective Lewis with a missing persons case
11:42and to process a scene there.
11:47I met Kay at the front door of the apartment.
11:50She explained to me what she had.
11:53I noted several things that jumped out at me when I came in.
11:59A small chain link that appeared to have been cut laying just inside the doorway.
12:07I informed Kay that bolt cutters were used to cut the chain link.
12:12Somebody else tried to come in.
12:18There was a purse sitting on the dining room table.
12:22Kay went into the purse and Janice's wallet, her checkbook, the keys for her car were all in the purse.
12:33In my experience, a woman does not walk out the door without her purse.
12:41In the bathroom, there was a dark colored staining in the bathtub.
12:47And it looked consistent with what I would expect to find of body fluids or possibly blood or something like
12:55that.
12:57I collected several swabs of that.
13:03And then I pointed out to Kay that the toilet seat was up.
13:10A woman living alone does not usually have the toilet seat sitting up.
13:14That's a dead giveaway for a male being in the apartment.
13:23We found several journals that Janice had written.
13:36She kept a log like almost every day, sometimes two or three times a day, she wrote down everything that
13:43happened.
13:45Detectives went through entries in Janice's journal looking for a suspect.
13:50One of the people mentioned in her journal is a guy named Randy.
13:55She wrote me about Randy.
13:57She was just like very smitten with him.
14:00He was very handsome.
14:01He had curly golden hair and a nice tan.
14:04And, you know, she described him in her letters to me.
14:08He was like a golden god or something, you know.
14:10So they hit it off like right away.
14:13They were together only a couple weeks.
14:15But he moved in.
14:17They were supposed to split the rent.
14:20She was kind of like that.
14:22When she fell in love with somebody, she just moved very fast.
14:27But the relationship didn't work out.
14:30He told her at the end of August he was going to be moving out on September 1st.
14:37Janice had written that Randy, when he left Janice, he had not paid his portion of the rent.
14:41And he'd also stole an expensive camera, a boombox, and some cash that Janice had there.
14:55He left with a lot of Janice's money.
14:58She had money stashed, and he knew where it was, and he took it.
15:02And that was pretty devastating to her.
15:07Detective Lewis takes Janice's address book and made a phone call to Randy.
15:12She reaches him in New York State.
15:15He told me that he had a wife and a kid.
15:20He left to go back and reunite with his family.
15:25So she was devastated.
15:27The man that she thought was going to be Prince Charming turned out to be a lowlife.
15:33I knew whatever happened to Janice, maybe he had something to do with it.
15:39He knew if he had done these things to Janice, he could be capable of more.
16:04Detectives in Chesapeake, Virginia, think they may have a break in the missing person case of Janice Starr.
16:15They'd suspect Janice's ex-boyfriend, Randy, could have had something to do with her disappearance.
16:21According to Randy, when he left Virginia, it was a few weeks before Janice had gone missing.
16:28He stayed in New York, and he had not been back to Virginia.
16:33So now detectives need to verify Randy's alibi, but that would take some time.
16:51They hadn't found Janice yet.
16:58So I was like, OK, I've got to go down there and find out what's going on.
17:04I came down to Virginia and went to Janice's apartment building.
17:10But she wasn't there.
17:14And then I went to the police department, and detectives asked me to sit down.
17:19And they said they already knew about Randy, so they asked me, who else was she dating?
17:25I pull out one of the letters from Janice.
17:28We wrote long letters.
17:30We told each other everything, a lot of details.
17:33I showed them there was one other guy she mentioned.
17:36And she was an officer, her ROTC instructor, named Captain Dwight Bedingfield.
17:43He was the one who reported her missing.
17:46He was 35, so a lot older than her.
17:50She was flattered by the intentions she was getting from him.
17:54But because of him being her instructor and her being an ROTC cadet,
17:59they had to keep the relationship secret.
18:04She wrote, Dwight wanted me to go on this boat trip.
18:07And Dwight and I are going here.
18:09And Dwight and I are going there.
18:12He was wooing her, taking her out, showing up frequently at her place.
18:19But there was also stuff that's a little concerning.
18:23Bedingfield asked her to drink a lot of alcohol and take pills.
18:28He took her out on one of the small planes.
18:31He flew close to the ocean, did all kinds of acrobatic tricks.
18:36And he, like, terrified her.
18:39He took her out to the beaches.
18:40And because of the weather, she almost drowned ten times.
18:47I kind of would say something about it.
18:50But, you know, I knew she was going to do what she was going to do.
18:54I couldn't get through to her.
18:58The things that Eva said about Captain Bedingfield, based on the letter from Janice, seem almost too far-fetched to
19:06be true.
19:07The male police officers thought Eva was just trying to get somebody in trouble.
19:12I didn't think that.
19:15The relationship with Janice was against both university policy and military policy.
19:21He was a career military officer, an army captain.
19:25He was well-respected, known as a strong officer, and a good family man.
19:31To some of the detectives, most of whom were males, it seems someone like Bedingfield was not capable of doing
19:37something like that.
19:38After all, he was the one who had just filed the missing person report.
19:43And there was still the issue of Randy as a suspect.
19:49She believed what the letter said, you know, whereas the men were kind of like, almost as if I had
19:55made up the letter myself.
20:00And then Janice's mother called the station, and she was very worried.
20:05She didn't know what to think.
20:07She told me that the woman called her to say,
20:10Janice is with me, and she'll be getting in touch with you in a few days.
20:16And she's just fine.
20:19I mean, I was shocked.
20:21It didn't make sense, because I was convinced something bad had happened to her.
20:29That phone call made some of the detectives think it was very unlikely Janice was really missing.
20:36There were guys in the detective bureau who believed that she'd probably run off with a guy or something like
20:42that.
20:44But Kay and I felt like there was definitely something wrong.
20:49Everything that I had seen at the scene led me to believe she didn't leave on her own volition.
21:01We knew that the bolt cutters had been checked out.
21:05I said, don't call just any of the lawyer, because I got you by the short hairs.
21:11You're going down.
21:14You're going down.
21:27When Janice Starr's mother told me she got a phone call saying, Janice is with me, it was suspicious.
21:35I didn't really buy that.
21:36It was like, what's going on here?
21:40That was very, very strange.
21:42Al and I thought, something was up.
21:48It seems strange, but I never make any assumptions until I have some kind of proof or evidence.
21:57This phone call was something that could not be taken lightly.
22:01So detectives began the process of running a trace on it.
22:11At the same time, the results came back on the swabs that I had taken from the bathtub.
22:17They couldn't tell us whether they were blood, human, body fluids, whatever.
22:23Because DNA was kind of new and just being talked about, I mean, it was disappointing.
22:35So after she came down to the police station, Eva and I went out to Janice's.
22:45And we went through the apartment together.
22:48Eva was Janice's very best friend.
22:51She knew everything about Janice.
22:53So she was extremely helpful.
23:00Kay wanted me to see if there was anything out of place or missing.
23:05And in her bedroom, I noticed her red Korean blanket was missing off the bed.
23:12It was one of those items that a lot of people bought in Korea.
23:17I told Detective Lewis that she was very proud of that blanket.
23:21It was a very prized possession of hers.
23:27While I was at her apartment, we found a letter addressed to me, sealed, but not yet mailed.
23:35And so Detective Lewis let me read it.
23:40It was like a daily entry.
23:42Okay, this is what happened this day, things like that.
23:45And she mentioned she got life insurance policies.
23:50It's like every revelation that only makes it worse.
23:56Janice wrote, if something happens to me, have them look at Dwight.
24:06So she was feeling very nervous.
24:10Kind of like a premonition.
24:12That's when I just knew she wasn't here anymore.
24:20The entries in Janice's letter show that Captain Bedingfield was the beneficiary of Janice's two life insurance policies.
24:31The phone call determined they were valued at over $300,000.
24:36This is the smoking gun type evidence.
24:47I needed to talk to Dwight Bedingfield.
24:50And so we called him to the police department.
24:55You know, he was a good looking guy.
24:58Tall, very military stance and everything.
25:04I was talking to him, but the male police officers, you know, they were very intrusive.
25:13I don't know, just talking, man talked to him.
25:15It had nothing to do with the case.
25:17I guess that was his way of connecting with the men.
25:21I had to interfere with that to get him back on point.
25:28Detective Lewis came right out and asked him, are you having an affair with Janice?
25:34He denied it.
25:35He showed them his wedding band, said, hey, I'm a married man with two kids.
25:39That's not something that I would do.
25:42The detectives asked Bedingfield about the life insurance policies with him as the beneficiary.
25:50He didn't try to deny it.
25:52He said, yes, with the new students, I make sure they've looked out for themselves.
25:58He said she didn't want her parents to be the beneficiary because she didn't want them in her business.
26:08From a law enforcement perspective, the letter from Janice indicating that she was having an affair with Bedingfield
26:15could not be taken as fact because there was nothing that could prove it.
26:21The misogynistic society that we had at that point, he was one of the boys.
26:26He was, you know, look at him, he was a captain.
26:32All the men in the department, they immediately, like, boy, he's, yeah, he's a great guy.
26:40I didn't feel that way.
26:41I was very suspicious of him, and they were not accustomed to women challenging them.
26:49Hard-headed, they called me.
26:52But I never uncovered anything that indicated that he'd done anything to harm her.
26:57And I couldn't make the arrest.
27:10Meanwhile, there was news about Randy, Janice's ex-boyfriend.
27:14His alibi was verified.
27:16His employer verified the fact that he'd been at work and he had not been out of New York.
27:21And this was enough to rule out Randy as a potential suspect.
27:24Randy used her, but physically, he had never done anything to harm her.
27:34I wasn't giving up.
27:36I just believed that Dwight, it was a monster.
27:42I did really extensive investigating and canvassing every day.
27:50And then every night, I went home to my daughter, Lori.
27:54And that was a huge reminder that Janice's mother didn't know where she was.
27:59And I couldn't imagine that.
28:11I went to Old Dominion Police Department, and I showed the officer a picture of Janice,
28:16and I showed him a picture of Dwight.
28:18And he said, oh yeah, yeah, I know them.
28:21They were together a lot.
28:23You know what?
28:25He borrowed boat cutters from me.
28:30And I remember when we went into Janice's apartment,
28:34there had been one of those little chain locks, and it had been cut.
28:39I said, did he bring them back?
28:41And he said, yeah.
28:43I got his receipt right here.
28:49Kay collected the boat cutters and got them over to the lab.
28:51And they were able to establish that the cutters matched the cuts on the chain link
28:59at the door of Janice's apartment.
29:04Dwight Biddingfield actually signed out the boat cutters that were used to cut that chain.
29:11At this point, he became a prime suspect.
29:16It was huge.
29:20He wasn't as smart as he thought he was.
29:24And so I was on him like ugly on an ape.
29:43In the very beginning of the search for missing college student Janice Starr,
29:47detectives found that Janice's apartment chain had been cut with bolt cutters.
29:52The U.S. campus police officer showed Detective Lewis the records log,
29:57which showed that the bolt cutters had been checked out by Captain Biddingfield,
30:01but had been returned the next day by an ROTC student by the name of Ron Robe.
30:08An ROTC student, Ron Robe, tells Detective Lewis that on the morning of November 6,
30:13Biddingfield asked to borrow Ron Robe's car.
30:17Robe said that when Captain Biddingfield had the car until about noon that day,
30:21and then when he returned it, he asked Robe to return the bolt cutters on behalf of Biddingfield.
30:28Dwight said to him, look, I spilled something in the trunk of the car,
30:32and I'm sorry, but I did clean it out.
30:36Robe noted an unusual odor, something like rotten cabbage.
30:43I immediately confiscated the vehicle and turned it over to the ID text.
30:50They searched the car and found in the trunk of the car,
30:54dark hairs and a piece of a Korean blanket that tied it to Janice.
31:02I know he had Janice in the trunk of the car, no doubt.
31:09Now with the evidence, there is probable cause,
31:12and a judge approved a search warrant to have Biddingfield's apartment and vehicle searched.
31:20We already knew that the bolt cutters had been checked out by Biddingfield,
31:24but we had not had enough what's referred to as probable cause to actually make a physical arrest.
31:33We show up, knock on the door.
31:38He lets us in, and we present the search warrant.
31:44We searched him, and we searched the apartment, but there was nothing there.
31:49And then we searched his car,
31:53and we found more life insurance policies on other girls,
31:59and he was the beneficiary.
32:06And that's when he said, I'm going to call my lawyer.
32:09And I said, don't call just any of the lawyer, Dwight,
32:14because I got you by the short hairs, and you're going down.
32:20And I looked at his personal life again,
32:23and I found he was in big trouble financially.
32:26He had left his wife and moved into an apartment,
32:29and so he was still paying to support his wife and kids
32:36and keep an apartment.
32:39I saw a clear picture that Janice's life insurance policies would be helpful.
32:44He needed the money, and he was the beneficiary.
32:49At the same time, trace results on the mysterious phone call
32:53that Janice's mother received came in.
32:55The call originated from the apartment residence of a Deborah Keck George.
33:02And I came up with an address for her.
33:07Deborah George told me she was one of Dwight's many girlfriends.
33:12And I questioned her, and she was very evasive.
33:16But she finally started talking.
33:19She took out a life insurance policy
33:22and listed Dwight Bedingfield as the beneficiary.
33:27Detective Lewis told her that Captain Bedingfield
33:30is a potentially dangerous predator.
33:32I told her he was desperate for money
33:35and working whatever angle he had to work
33:39to get money and get away with.
33:46He was crazy.
33:47I'd just never been around anybody like that
33:51that could mesmerize somebody with one hand
33:54and cut the throat with the other.
33:58Deborah George eventually admitted that Bedingfield
34:01had asked her to make that phone call to Mrs. Starr
34:03in order to confuse the detectives.
34:07He told her to say to the Starr family,
34:10that Janice is with me and she's just fine
34:14and she'll be getting in touch with you in a few days.
34:30Three days after the interview with Deborah Keck George,
34:33the Chesapeake Police Department receives a phone call
34:35from another woman who claims to have had an affair
34:38with Bedingfield.
34:40She says that Bedingfield told her
34:43that he's the prime suspect in the investigation
34:45and said goodbye to her.
34:47She said his behavior was very troubling
34:49and she believed that he might be suicidal
34:52and on the run.
34:59This is a guy with high-level training in the military,
35:02not to mention he's a licensed pilot.
35:05There's a very real concern now that Bedingfield could just disappear.
35:16That same day, at around 4.30 p.m.,
35:19every phone at the Chesapeake Police Department lights up.
35:23There's a plane crash at South Norfolk Airport.
35:28The police department called me and said,
35:30get to the airport right now.
35:32So I used lights and siren and I got there.
35:38The wreckage was still smoldering.
35:41The pilot had been ejected from the plane
35:44and was lying in a ditch over 300 yards away.
35:48He was laying in the field and his head had turned sideways.
35:54It was a perfect profile of Dwight Bedingfield.
36:08The single-engine Cessna crashed into a field
36:12off Battlefield Boulevard in Chesapeake
36:14around 4.15 Tuesday.
36:16December 1, 1981, I got a call from Jean, Janice's mom,
36:21and she said Dwight killed himself.
36:24The pilot, 35-year-old Dwight Bedingfield,
36:27an army captain and woman's ROTC instructor
36:29at Old Dominion University, died on impact.
36:33The fact Bedingfield did not attempt to land at the airport,
36:35he circled for a half an hour
36:37and crashed at a 50-degree angle, which is steep,
36:41leads to the theory the crash was suicide.
36:48I really was shocked.
36:49I never dreamed that he would kill himself.
36:54As soon as he killed himself, that was a confession.
37:01With him dead, I didn't know if I could find Janice's body.
37:06But I needed to find her for her mother.
37:10Not knowing is a terrible place to be.
37:15A plane crash was major news locally and regionally,
37:18and now with Bedingfield gone
37:20and no longer at the department of ROTC,
37:23a lot of students were more willing to speak freely.
37:26They were more willing to share information
37:28that shed a light on what might have happened to Janice.
37:33At that point, the student came forward
37:36with a very valuable piece of information.
37:42She said there was this one time
37:44when Bedingfield took her for a ride.
37:48They drove an hour west of Norfolk
37:51to a secluded area in the country.
37:54She remembered the whole trip
37:56because he told her,
37:58write all this down
37:59because I'm going to take my Cub Scouts.
38:01out here camping.
38:03I have to be able to find it again.
38:06She said they turned onto a farm property
38:08and Bedingfield looked around and said,
38:11yeah, this place will do.
38:27I drove over to that location.
38:29I got out.
38:30I left my daughter, Lori, in the car.
38:33I walked around the farmland.
38:36And then I saw this oblong, depressed area.
38:41And then I said,
38:42that looks like somebody's grave.
38:50So the guys came out.
38:52We were there for hours.
38:54We dug until we came to her blanket.
38:57And then we knew for sure.
39:03Because of the temperatures that we had had since November,
39:07you could make out the dark hair
39:10and the facial features.
39:14We had Janice's dental records from the military.
39:18So the medical examiner was able to establish
39:21that, in fact, positive identification was, this was Janice Starr.
39:33The high-ed bone had been broken.
39:36You see a high-ed bone broken.
39:39It's strangulation, manual strangulation.
39:45I called Janice's mother.
39:49I said, we found Janice,
39:51and she's not with us anymore.
39:58We feared the worst.
39:59We believed the worst.
40:00But knowing the finality of it, that she was gone.
40:04So I was totally devastated.
40:07I lost my best friend.
40:13I don't think there was any question
40:16that Benningfield was the perpetrator.
40:21I think he came over.
40:24He tried to kill her.
40:26And she fought hard.
40:36Investigators believe that for the next several days
40:38after her murder, Captain Benningfield left Janice's body
40:42in her apartment in the bathtub.
40:45Hence the ring around the tub.
40:49The extra bedroom looked like somebody had gone through it.
40:53Things scattered all over the place.
40:55We think that Benningfield did that
40:57and cut the chain link on the door of the apartment,
41:01trying to make it look like it was a burglary.
41:07Finally, on November 6th,
41:09he borrowed the car from Ron Robe,
41:11and Janice's body was transported
41:13in the Korean blanket in the trunk
41:15and taken to the site in Southampton County
41:18where she was buried in the backyard of a farm.
41:31I just sobbed.
41:34Finding another woman's daughter was just devastating.
41:39But I had achieved my goal to solve the case
41:43and find Janice.
41:50The saddest part is she was so young.
41:53There were so many things she missed out on.
41:56She was more like a sister to me than a best friend,
42:00so I always wanted to honor her, remember her.
42:03And I like to remember the happy times,
42:08the good times that we had.
42:10Allison's body says
42:10So either,
42:11or at her house or at her or at her,
42:14or at her house or at her house or at her house,
42:14and phen蹈 the typ that she was very simply
42:17who would rather stand as a girl to with her.
42:31And the girl who babysacdom,
42:35Friendliness

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