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00:10This was more than just a missing person case.
00:13The local father had been missing for three years.
00:19The floodwaters had risen.
00:23A torrential rainstorm uncovered human remains.
00:30We knew she was covering for him.
00:34Something happened on the job.
00:38Their last contact had been an argument.
00:43We believed it was a violent act.
00:47She said if they find that body, we are screwed.
00:53Hopkins County Errol Department uncovered what they believed to be a human skull.
01:04We took the hatchet and laid it right into the chop wound on the right side of the head.
01:10I looked evil in the eye.
01:14He had been killed by his own axe.
01:40The Ohio River runs into the Mississippi River.
01:47And Madisonville, Kentucky.
01:54It's a former coal mining community.
01:58There's a lot of peaks and valleys, so to speak.
02:02The wooded area is very thick.
02:07June the 29th, 2013.
02:10It's extremely hot and humid.
02:13Pouring down rain.
02:16Flash flooding.
02:19Even tornadic activity had taken place.
02:28Saturday, I received a phone call about what they believed to be a body at Continental Drive.
02:37After the heavy rains, the sheriff's department got a call from a resident.
02:41He said he saw what he thought was a remnant of a human jawbone.
02:49I arrived on scene.
02:52The yard was saturated still from rainwater.
02:57As I'm walking to the back of the yard, hanging out to the end of the culvert,
03:03I could see what appears to be the jawbone.
03:09With some of the teeth still attached,
03:12I felt confident those were human remains.
03:18In western Kentucky and Madisonville,
03:21they have a large culvert system.
03:24Those culverts will help to pull the waters out of the neighborhoods and fields
03:28and drain it appropriately back to the rivers.
03:33In this case, the floodwaters had risen,
03:36carrying these bones with them.
03:37And as the waters were seeded,
03:39the bones were left behind in the backyard of this individual's house.
03:46We had no idea who these remains belonged to,
03:49buried in the backyard.
04:17Madisonville.
04:19It really was beautiful.
04:26A lot of old coal mines, strip mines, and woods.
04:38Massaville, that was where you would want to raise a family.
04:48I have two brothers and three sisters. Family was everything to us.
04:56Growing up in Madisonville in the 70s, for the most part, it was just me, Bo, Matt, and Kim.
05:03It was a great life.
05:05We all went fishing or squirrel hunting.
05:08That was the thing with growing up in Kentucky. I mean, that's what we did.
05:13Bo was my older brother. He was 15 years older than I was.
05:19I didn't have a dad growing up, so he was the big brother everybody wished for.
05:30Bo was known for being a handyman.
05:33He was a painter. He did construction work, carpenter.
05:38That boy could do anything and everything he put his mind to.
05:43If Bo couldn't do it right, he wasn't going to do it.
05:47And that was the way he was about everything.
05:54Bo and Cindy met at my sixth birthday.
05:57She had a daughter, was my age.
05:59Of course, I'm about to her to my birthday.
06:02When Cindy dropped her off, Bo saw her.
06:07Bo and Cindy were head over heels from the very beginning.
06:12They made the cutest couple.
06:15Bo loved Cindy's daughter, Kelly, like she was his own.
06:21They got married, I think, a year later.
06:24And then two or three years later, she got pregnant with Dylan.
06:32Just seeing him starting out, it was a good feeling.
06:37They'd been married for over 20 years.
06:45On November 29th, 2010, Monday after Thanksgiving, Bo went to work.
06:53Bo worked for Sue Settle.
06:57Sue was down in Florida.
07:00Her house was on Continental Drive.
07:03Jessica Settle is Sue Settle's granddaughter.
07:06Her and her father were the ones living in the house.
07:10Bo kept an eye on her properties, took care of them for her.
07:15Someone had been breaking into Sue's garage.
07:20And he was going out there to put no trespassing signs up.
07:25Bo and Cindy got into a spat before he left.
07:28Because she didn't want him going to work during the holidays.
07:32He told her he wasn't going to be that long.
07:35But that afternoon, Bo never came home.
07:47Bo don't like to fight.
07:49He could not stand it.
07:50So he would get in his truck, and he would just drive.
07:53So when he didn't come back home,
07:57Cindy thought he might have been up at the farm.
08:00Bo would go up there and stay in the camper.
08:04I would have thought he would go to stay in the camper if he needed time.
08:09But he wasn't up there.
08:12Then Tuesday, two days later, Cindy asked us if we had not heard from Bo.
08:19No one had seen him. None of our family.
08:22I called Bo's phone.
08:26I kept calling and sent and texted,
08:29What's going on?
08:31By Wednesday, I was like, okay, now I am ticked.
08:36By Thursday, Bo had been missing for four days.
08:40He was always involved with his daughter and son's life.
08:45Bo would not have stayed out of his kid's life that long.
08:52Cindy called and did the missing persons report.
08:55That was all that we knew to do.
08:59I was detective at the Hopkins County Sheriff's Office when this case first arose.
09:04One of the deputies took a missing person report.
09:10Cindy Hale told us that they had actually argued right before he left.
09:16She felt that there was more to the story than just him out and not returning home.
09:21Typically, in an investigation of a missing spouse, the spouse is the first person of interest.
09:29But she was with family members.
09:31When he had gone missing, she was not a suspect in the disappearance of Bo Hale.
09:39Mr. Hale had already been missing four days, so we were already behind on trying to locate him.
09:46The family gave us the description of Bo Hale's truck and told us they were concerned this was more than
09:53just a missing person case.
09:55Cindy Hale told us that Bo was a handyman.
09:58He had gone to the Continental Drive address to do some work for the homeowner.
10:03We went to the address.
10:05We couldn't find Bo Hale's truck.
10:10Investigators learned that the owner of the home was Sue Settle, and she had retired to Florida.
10:16Her son, Mike Settle, and granddaughter, Jessica Settle, were living at the home.
10:21At that time, Mike Settle was not in the home.
10:28Jessica and her boyfriend, Craig Davenport, were together inside the house.
10:33They said they didn't know where Bo Hale is.
10:36They told us that Craig and Bo were involved in an argument in the driveway.
10:41She said that Bo had run away.
10:45We brought Jessica in and interviewed her alone.
10:50She was pregnant at the time and under duress.
10:53Jessica told us Bo and her boyfriend, Craig Davenport, didn't like each other because items had been missing,
11:00and Bo thought he might be stealing property.
11:03Bo was there to watch over the house.
11:06Because of Jessica Settle's statement, we believed that something may have happened between Craig Davenport and Bo Hale.
11:16Based on the weather, I was worried because if someone's injured outside, hypothermia can set in very quick.
11:23It could cause you to die sooner.
11:25The search and rescue team from emergency management formed a search line, and they would search acres and acres of
11:32property around the house on Continental Drive.
11:36One of the members of the search team was able to locate a hatchet cover that was identified that belonged
11:44to Bo Hale.
11:46Bo received the hatchet from our dad.
11:51After daddy passed, Bo had that hatchet with him everywhere.
11:56He kept it with him all the time.
11:58It was something that meant so much to Bo.
12:01That's how we knew there was something wrong.
12:09Law enforcement were able to remove that cord and found a Smith & Wesson hatchet.
12:16We used cadaver dogs.
12:18The canines used articles that belonged to Bo Hale to obtain a scent, and they followed that odor to a
12:25front porch.
12:27.
12:46Handyman, Bo Hale had been missing for several days.
12:51During the course of the initial search of the neighborhood on Continental Drive.
12:55One of the members of the search team discovered the hatchet cover discarded in the ditch that belonged to missing
13:01person, Bo Hale.
13:04It was something that he took tremendous pride in, and he wouldn't just leave laying about.
13:10The fact that the hatchet cover was found alone, we believed that something bad had happened to Bo Hale.
13:22Mike Settle, the resident there on Continental Drive, wasn't present in the home at that time for questioning.
13:30Searching Hopkins County, Continental Drive, we were just unable to locate him.
13:37Bo was still missing, and Mike Settle was missing. That made Mike Settle a person of interest.
13:45Everyone's a suspect during the course of an investigation.
13:49Maybe Mike Settle ran away and possibly had something to do with Bo Hale going missing.
13:56But there's also Craig Davenport, Jessica Settle's boyfriend.
14:00As part of our investigation, we interviewed Craig Davenport.
14:05About the last time he saw Bo Hale, Craig Davenport admitted that their last conversation was an argument.
14:12We were able to locate some text messages from Craig Davenport to Bo Hale.
14:18Craig was upset about being called a thief, and it was being insinuated that he was stealing things from the
14:23Settle's garage.
14:25He had an injured arm.
14:28He was wearing a cast.
14:33Because of his admission, we requested that he submit to a polygraph examination, which he did.
14:40During our interview with Mr. Davenport, we asked, do you know what happened to Bo Hale?
14:48Do you know where Bo Hale is?
14:52Did you cause harm to Bo Hale?
14:58Craig Davenport passed the polygraph.
15:05We couldn't find Bo Hale.
15:07Bo Hale's family were all deeply and genuinely concerned that something nefarious had happened to him.
15:19As family members, we started searching.
15:22The flyer that we posted around town and different places showed that Bo was 5'10", 155 pounds, black hair,
15:32blue eyes.
15:34My husband and I, and then Cindy and their daughter Kelly, were going to take flyers up and down Continental
15:41Drive to the different houses to let them know, hey, we're out here searching for my brother.
15:46We knocked on the next-door neighbor, Mr. Ferguson's house.
15:52He opened the door.
15:57And said, you're looking for that truck, aren't you?
16:03George Ferguson had called to have the truck towed because it was parked behind his house.
16:11We were not sure if it was Bo's truck that Mr. Ferguson actually had towed.
16:17He towed my sister where they towed it to.
16:22As soon as we pulled into that company's driveway,
16:28we saw the truck.
16:30We was like, we knew that was Bo's truck.
16:35I was just so nauseous and, of course, crying, and my little sister was crying.
16:42Bo just did not walk off.
16:44Something had happened.
16:47So we called law enforcement and tell him we had found his truck.
16:51We need one of y'all to get out here.
16:56We went to the tow company,
16:59viewed the vehicle.
17:04Mr. Hale had left his wallet behind in the vehicle.
17:08Most people don't travel without their identification
17:11and a means of obtaining money.
17:13At that point, I absolutely believed that there had been foul play.
17:18Bo didn't run away.
17:23We started in the driveway,
17:25and we searched the woods and the neighborhood.
17:30We used cadaver dogs.
17:34The canines used articles that belonged to Bo Hale to obtain a scent.
17:41And they followed that odor to a front porch
17:48that belonged to the residence of Mr. Ferguson.
18:12During the search for missing person, Bo Hale,
18:16Cadaver dogs used articles that belonged to Bo Hale to obtain a scent.
18:20And they followed that odor to the address of Mr. Ferguson on Continental Drive.
18:32We told him cadaver dogs went to his residence.
18:36Mr. Ferguson told us that he didn't know what happened to Bo Hale.
18:41Bo Hale's truck had been towed from Mr. Ferguson's residence.
18:46We tried to gain some information from him as a witness, how long the vehicle had been there,
18:50what was the specific purpose for him having it towed, did he know who it belonged to.
18:55Mr. Ferguson told us that the vehicle had been parked behind his house for a couple of days,
19:00and he didn't know who it belonged to, the neighbors didn't know who it belonged to.
19:08Mr. Ferguson had no type of criminal history, but there's always a potential that Mr. Ferguson
19:14placed the call to have the vehicle removed to remove suspicion from himself.
19:19It was early in the process.
19:21You never know where an investigation is going to lead you.
19:29At this point in the investigation, the sheriff's office received a phone call from Mike Settle,
19:34a person of interest.
19:36We had been looking for him since the disappearance of Bo Hale.
19:43We learned that Mike was incarcerated at the time that Bo went missing.
19:48We were able to quickly eliminate him from suspicion.
19:52But Bo Hale was still missing.
19:56The case just sat there day after day after day, weighing on us.
20:06The weather turned colder.
20:10We went in December to January to February.
20:19There had been no new leads, no sightings, no contact with the family,
20:23no recovery of remains that could be linked to Bo Hale.
20:27The case went cold.
20:33I know at one point Cindy went up in the helicopter.
20:37And they searched all around the different counties.
20:42If it was even just a possibility, we would go there and check.
20:52Our family never gave up, kept looking for him.
20:56We wanted his picture out there because nobody was talking about him anymore.
21:03They, in newspaper articles, I mean, that's how we kept him in the news.
21:10Two years later, on the anniversary of his disappearance,
21:14we had candlelight vigils for Bo with his wife Cindy.
21:19All these people came out for him.
21:22When everybody lit their candle at the candlelight service, it just glowed.
21:30I made my mother a promise that I would never give up.
21:36Hope I'm finding my brother.
21:42Two and a half years after Bo's missing persons cases filed,
21:47everyone in the community felt that there was more to it.
21:50That it was probably a homicide, but no one could prove it.
21:54But the sheriff asked me to go back and give it a second look
21:58to see if there was any stone unturned.
22:06I remember the morning of June 29th, 2013, very vividly.
22:11I remember I said a little prayer,
22:13Dear Lord, give me an opportunity, a chance of solving this case.
22:21Five minutes later, I got a phone call about some bones in the yard.
22:26At the location of Bo's last known whereabouts,
22:29we had searched the area two and a half years before.
22:33We had just got six inches of rain in a 24-hour period.
22:40I arrived on scene and spoke to the occupant, Mike Settle.
22:45He had located what he believed to be bones in the backyard of his residence.
22:52Scattered in multiple places throughout the yard, we found rib bones.
22:58We were able to locate two gloves that had hand bones in them.
23:03And we were able to locate boots with foot bones in them.
23:10Kentucky sweatshirt that had arm bones and shoulder blades.
23:16And as I'm walking to the back of the yard, I can see what appears to be the jawbone.
23:23Some of the teeth still attached and then some loose teeth.
23:25These are, in fact, human remains.
23:34As we continued processing the scene, law enforcement found a tarp approximately 75 to 100 yards from the residence.
23:44Closer examination of the tarp revealed blood stains.
23:49Our next goal was to figure out where this tarp came from.
23:53The majority of the smaller bones were found in Mike Settle's backyard.
23:59And this is downstream from where we believe the original origin of bones came from.
24:06The neighbor George Ferguson's place is uphill from Mike Settle.
24:12So we went out to interview Mr. Ferguson.
24:15And he told us that he didn't see the bones.
24:18He pulled the tarp out of the culvert in an effort to unclog the drain.
24:24This is what we believe caused all the bones to start flowing down the stream from inside of the culvert.
24:32At this point in the investigation, we still had not established the identity of the remains that we recovered.
24:39We still had not located all the bones.
24:41This was a complex excavation to remove asphalt from basically the entire intersection to remove that culvert.
24:50So instead, we utilized the fire department.
24:54And they shot water through the culvert, in essence, cleaning it out, washing everything out of there,
24:59while we caught what came out the downstream side.
25:06And then one of the deputies saw something that was reflecting the light in the crack of a 10-inch
25:11culvert.
25:13We were able to remove that culvert and found that what was reflecting the light was, in fact,
25:22a Smith & Wesson hatchet.
25:25Now, that was a critical piece of evidence, because we know that Bo Hale's been known to carry a Smith
25:30& Wesson hatchet,
25:31which was given to him by his father.
25:34If this was, in fact, Bo Hale, who murdered, killed, and then stuffed Bo Hale's body in a culvert on
25:43Continental Drive.
25:47The belt and shorts found contained car keys that matched Bo Hale's truck.
25:52He had Bo's truck towed from behind his residence, and he has human remains that are showing up in his
25:58backyard.
25:59I was numb and furious, because he had been there the whole time.
26:19Two and a half years after Bo's missing persons case is filed,
26:27a torrential rainstorm uncovered human remains,
26:34a hatchet,
26:36and a tarp,
26:39and ditches and culverts behind Continental Drive.
26:43The detectives were able to locate a large portion of the bones,
26:47but we were still missing one big piece of evidence that we were looking for,
26:51the skull.
26:53Finding the body was one thing, but finding the truth behind it was another.
26:59And the homicide.
27:00The skull is an excellent piece of evidence to building a story behind what might have happened.
27:06We had no idea who these remains belonged to, buried in the backyard.
27:11But we suspected were Bo Hale's.
27:15Culverts, they're very deep, so a body could remain there for a while without being discovered.
27:23We sent the bones and white tarp that we located to the forensic medical examiner's office in Louisville, Kentucky to
27:30be examined and to establish DNA.
27:34And we sent samples of DNA that we had collected from the family members in hopes that that would identify
27:39the remains we had located were in fact Bo Hale.
27:44At the time that he went missing, Bo did in fact have a men's wedding band on with three small
27:50diamonds on it.
27:52The wedding band was never recovered from the scene with the bones.
27:57Detective Troutman checked the pawn records and found that in the days just after Mr. Hale had gone missing,
28:05a ring matching that description had been pawned at a local pawn shop by Jessica Settle.
28:12That was a big turning point in the investigation because it indicates a direct connection between Jessica and the disappearance
28:20of Bo Hale that night.
28:25Jessica Settle was incarcerated at that time at the Hopkins County Jail.
28:30We interviewed her about the ring that she pawned at the pawn shop.
28:34She denied that it ever belonged to Bo.
28:37We had at that point discovered that Jessica Settle has a drug problem.
28:42Her memories and statements are questionable.
28:46When we got into specific questioning regarding her boyfriend, Craig Davenport, a lot of our answers were vague.
28:56I told Jessica, when you're honest with me with everything except for Craig Davenport,
29:01it causes me to be suspicious about Craig Davenport.
29:05We believed that he had something to do with Bo Hale being missing, but he passed the polygraphs and there
29:11was no evidence to generate an arrest warrant.
29:15July 2013,
29:20we got the results back from the medical examiner in Louisville.
29:25The reddish-brown substance was suspected to be blood off the white tarp and the bones found in a residence
29:34of Continental Drive.
29:38It was a 99% match to the DNA of Bo Hale.
29:45Investigators had identified the tarp as being material that Bo Hale would routinely use as a drop cloth in his
29:55painting business.
29:58In a case like this, everyone's a suspect, including the neighbor, George Ferguson.
30:03It both struck toll from behind his residence, and he has human remains that are showing up in his backyard.
30:10I had had multiple interviews with George Ferguson.
30:14He was concerned about crime in that neighborhood.
30:18We're talking about someone who's never even had a speeding ticket.
30:23There was no evidence that would link George to any foul play involving this case.
30:30We asked the Hopkins County Road Department to excavate and clean out the culverts behind the residence of Mike Sittle.
30:37They got the track hole there.
30:41They decided to use the track hole to remove this concrete slab.
30:47The waters would flow downstream, and the slab was acting like a dam.
30:53When they removed the concrete slab, they immediately called me to come back out to the scene.
31:04I remember very vividly where they removed the slab.
31:16There was a human skull.
31:23This is the piece of evidence I've been missing.
31:25This is the head. This is the skull.
31:27This is maybe going to tell me what happened to Bohel.
31:54July 25, 2013, Hopkins County Road Department.
32:01Uncovered what they believed to be a human skull.
32:04The Kentucky State Medical Examiner was able to locate 10 bones in total.
32:17They were also able to pull up a belt.
32:24And as they pulled the belt up, the belt was found to be intertwined with a bunch of sticks, was
32:28attached to some shorts.
32:32When they put their hands inside those pockets, they pulled out car keys.
32:41The other pocket contained a cell phone.
32:45The Kentucky State Medical Examiner was able to locate a cell phone.
32:46The law enforcement collected the new pieces of evidence in hopes that that would identify remains we had located.
32:53I meet with the Kentucky Medical Examiner at the lab.
32:58We began to piece together the bones we found the day before.
33:03We established that these bones, in fact, matched the skull in all probability, was the same victim.
33:11The medical examiner was able to locate a fracture in the orbital bone of the skull.
33:17That fracture was consistent with the hatchet that we recovered from the 10-inch culvert.
33:23It was that point in time that we determined the cause of death.
33:29We took the hatchet and laid it right into the chop wound on the right side of the head.
33:35Someone struck him in the head with the hatchet and subsequently killed him.
33:40The serial never matched the cell phone of Bo Hill.
33:44The Kentucky's matched Bo Hill's truck.
33:47This was more than just a missing person case and more than just a death investigation,
33:51but actually a homicide.
33:53It was time to notify the family.
33:59I was furious.
34:02Bo had been killed by his own axe.
34:06It's just, it's hard to put into words.
34:14I could not hear any more than what happened to my brother, and I don't want to know.
34:22Cindy loved him so much.
34:25She was crying, hurting heart, bursting.
34:33On August 9th, 2013, we had a memorial for Bo.
34:41Bo had friends that, from years when we were teenagers, that showed up, let us know that,
34:50yeah, Bo was still loved just as much.
34:59With the recovery of the remains, the recovery of what we believe would be the murder weapon,
35:05the case ramps back up as a homicide investigation.
35:11I went back into the original interviews two and a half years ago.
35:16The prior investigators said, during the interview, Jessica Sittles, the boyfriend,
35:21Craig Davenport, had a fractured left arm.
35:24It's not only suspicious, it's a red flag for law enforcement.
35:31Their last contact had been an argument.
35:37After finding the hatchet, we believed it was a violent act.
35:41Craig Davenport is now the number one suspect.
35:49At the start of the investigation, Jessica Sittles' boyfriend, Craig Davenport,
35:55passed a law enforcement polygraph.
35:58A polygraph is designed to pick up a person's consciousness of guilt through sweat and a
36:04pounding heart rate and increased breathing. If you don't have a conscience, you won't trigger
36:11the polygraph.
36:14We believe Jessica Sittles was covering for Craig Davenport. At this point, she was pregnant with
36:20his second child. They continued to have a relationship even after Bo went missing.
36:25Jessica was what we needed to prove our case.
36:32During this investigation, we conducted approximately three interviews with Jessica
36:36while she was in jail.
36:39None of the three interviews provided any new information towards what might have happened to
36:44Bo Hill. At this point, we decided to pull her jail phone records for the past couple of weeks.
36:50We did find something pretty interesting.
36:53If September of 2013, Jessica Sittles warned her boyfriend, Craig Davenport.
37:01If they find that body, we are screwed.
37:23During this investigation into the Bo Hill murder, we found a jail phone conversation between Jessica
37:29Sittles and Craig Davenport. In September of 2013, in which she tells Craig that they find out that those
37:37remains of Bo Hill's were screwed. They were involved. This was a turning point for our investigation.
37:45We'd already established that the hatchet that was covered at the scene was the same hatchet that Bo
37:50carried with him on a daily basis. Craig Davenport, he was the last one who had contact with Bo Hill.
38:00He put himself there at the scene.
38:04Jessica Settles was covering for Craig Davenport.
38:12We went out to the Hopkins County Jail, told Jessica, we found Bo Hill, and we listened to your
38:21jail phone calls. We know that you're directly or indirectly involved with Bo's murder.
38:30Jessica finally decided to come clean. She provided us with a letter that she had received from Craig
38:36Davenport. Are you going to turn that over to the state's evidence, the state's custody for evidence?
38:42Okay. Will you tell me what alarms you about this letter?
38:44It alarms me that at the very end he tells me, he tells me to flush it after I read
38:49it.
38:50And he's trying to lay out your story for you. And then he brings in mention of your kid.
38:57He talks about us for a second, but then immediately goes into he passed a law detector and they don't
39:03have any evidence. That letter was threatening in nature, reminding her that he had custody of their
39:10child. And if she ever wanted to see that child again, she would keep her mouth shut.
39:15In exchange for immunity from prosecutors, Jessica told law enforcement she had witnessed the murder
39:22from the window of the house, and Craig knew that.
39:27Most of the evidence in this case was circumstantial. Until Jessica came forward,
39:34it was what we needed, the final piece of the puzzle.
39:39On November 12, 2013, Craig Davenport was arrested and charged with manslaughter and a second degree.
39:50As a result of Jessica's statement, Craig Davenport told us his side of the story of what happened.
40:02On the night of November 29, Craig said when he walked outside the house,
40:08they got into a verbal argument.
40:12He blocked a hatchet swing by Bo Hill.
40:18He claimed that the hatchet came loose from Bo Hill's hand.
40:27When Bo Hill turned around to leave, Craig struck him in the head with a hatchet and subsequently killed him.
40:37Craig then decided to go to the garage, grab the white tarp,
40:41roll Bo Hill's body up and hide it in the culvert up the street.
40:50For two and a half years, Bo Hill's body was wrapped up in a tarp and a culvert,
40:55buried in the backyard.
41:01Commonwealth Kentucky versus Craig Ryan Davenport.
41:05In order to avoid going to trial, Craig Davenport pled guilty.
41:13In October of 2014, Craig Davenport was formally sentenced in the Hopkins Circuit Court
41:19to a seven-year sentence for second-degree manslaughter,
41:23a five-year sentence for tampering with physical evidence,
41:26and a five-year sentence for intimidating the participant in a legal process.
41:40Craig Davenport was in prison less time than Bo was in that culvert.
41:47I've looked evil in eye. Bo will get his justice when Craig Davenport has to stand before God himself
41:54and answer for what he did, not only to Bo, but to my family.
42:01We lost the angel.
42:04Bo was a wonderful man that would do anything for his family.
42:08He loved and cared for everyone.
42:12I want Bo to be remembered for the wonderful man, father, brother, and a hero to his nieces and nephews
42:26that he was.
42:29He is always with me.
42:42Transcription by CastingWords
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