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00:13Smith's arrest, the brutality of the murder, and the bizarre chain of events that led police
00:19to him have been difficult to take in.
00:23When everything came to light about Brian, Alicia was double-guessing herself.
00:30Sometimes when I say it out loud, it's insane.
00:35You know, are people going to believe what I'm saying?
00:37He's a murderer, man.
00:39Because it's just such a wild story.
00:41The prosecution must prove the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
00:45They were afraid that this man wasn't going to be held accountable.
00:52You videotaped murdering Kathleen Joe Henry. Why?
00:57That's not me. I didn't do that.
01:00We didn't ever expect that. Somebody else was openly involved with him.
01:06Did you kill anybody in South Africa?
01:21As news spreads of a killer captured, and Anchorage tries to come to terms with Brian Smith's destruction,
01:30Alicia Youngblood is forced to relive the horrors she witnessed and tried so hard to stop.
01:37When my mom found out that Brian was arrested, she had definitely, you could tell, a mix of emotions.
01:45She was very happy that he was finally locked up.
01:51However, in the same breath, I think she was grieving because the man that she loved was not who she
02:00thought he was.
02:01There was a lot of mental anguish, which is why she reached out to Brian's wife, Stephanie, on Messenger.
02:14My mother would talk to her about, you know, how hard it was to know that he did all these
02:19horrible things.
02:24That is, you know, one thing you could talk about together.
02:32She was, you know, back and forth, when she got afraid.
02:43She felt responsible for the killings of these girls, especially for Kathleen Jo Henry, who was killed after she had
02:50tried to stop Brian.
02:52I think that's one of the biggest things she struggled with.
03:06Alicia had texted me asking me to call her.
03:13And it simply said, I really need my brother right now.
03:19So I was desperately trying to reach out to her and just couldn't believe that when Linda called me, that
03:34I was going to hear that my sister was dead.
03:41I just went upstairs and fell to the floor.
03:51I really had to be mature for my little brother.
03:56I tried not to cry.
03:59It was hard.
04:05On the 4th of July, she took her own life.
04:09Everything with Brian, I think, was a big factor in her suicide.
04:12I mean, it most definitely was.
04:16When I received the news about Alicia Youngblood, it was heartbreaking.
04:22I absolutely feel that she was another victim of Brian Smith.
04:27The whole thing is just such a huge tragedy.
04:34Kathleen Jo Henry, Veronica Abalchuk, and now Alicia Youngblood, all women whose voices were gone.
04:42And without Alicia's testimony at trial, what would justice look like?
04:52Brian Smith is on trial for both the deaths of 30-year-old Kathleen Jo Henry and 53-year-old
04:58Veronica Abalchuk.
05:00There was nationwide interest in this case.
05:05A silent but powerful show of force that missing and murdered Indigenous women will not be forgotten.
05:13It was a big step toward accountability.
05:17The essence of what happened to the two women that we hear about today is that they were treated as
05:24something other than human.
05:26It was, of course, a horrific story.
05:30Only the jury and the court staff could see those videos.
05:39But the videos were played and people could hear them.
05:50And I know that the members of the jury that had to view that won't ever forget.
05:56Every day, I followed the trial live streaming.
06:00And the general public believed that it was just Brian Smith harming Alaska Native people.
06:06Did the name become important in the investigation?
06:11Yes, he did.
06:13We didn't ever expect that other people would be openly involved with him.
06:18At the time of Kathleen Jo Henry's murder, there was text messages from Brian Smith to a friend.
06:25Can you describe what those messages were?
06:28The first one I noticed, the message is,
06:30Hey, you up? I'm having fun.
06:34About 7.08 a.m. on the 4th of September, he responds,
06:38I was not up, comma, sounds like you were having a lot of fun.
06:44At 9.20 a.m., Mr. Smith sends a text message,
06:48I have something to show you, something I can't keep for too long.
06:54That was alarming, because this would have been the time that he had Kathleen Jo Henry's remains in his truck.
07:03And then responds at 16.53, saying, give me one minute.
07:07It appeared that Brian Smith was working his way to involving this man.
07:15Immediately, this man became somebody that we wanted to find and talk to.
07:19And so we brought him in for an interview.
07:26Yeah, I thought something you need to tell us.
07:32Yeah, he scared me.
07:33He made a comment about like, oh, I got myself a sex doll.
07:38We were by the back of his truck and he flipped a thing back and it was a body.
07:42I didn't think anything of it because I know that sex dolls nowadays are pretty high tech.
07:47Okay.
07:47Did you know that was a real body the night you saw it?
07:50No.
07:50I had no idea that that was a real body the night that I saw it, but I didn't want
07:53to believe it.
07:54I wanted to believe that that was a sex doll.
07:57You know what I mean?
07:58Like, I don't want to think that he's a killer.
08:00So why didn't you call anybody or say so?
08:03Okay, I didn't know what to do.
08:06It is frustrating.
08:07I felt like there was more that he could have told us.
08:10I think there was more to it.
08:11And after I interviewed him, we obtained the Facebook messages on Brian Smith's phone.
08:17His friend had sent him an article for the Kathleen Joe Henry's body being found at mile 108.
08:24And they talked about the thought it would have snowed by now more.
08:27It would have been covered up.
08:28And this man sent a message roughly to the account of, am I in the clear?
08:37But we were never able to prove that he was directly involved with any of the murders.
08:42And in Alaska, failure to report a violent crime is not a felony.
08:46It's just a violation.
08:48And ultimately, this man is not charged.
08:54It was very shocking.
08:56Other people knew that Brian Smith was up to no good.
09:01We didn't get to hear from the other man in the trial.
09:04He was called to testify, but his attorney stepped in and stopped him so that he wouldn't incriminate himself.
09:16The defendant violently and brutally murdered two women.
09:21That is why the state is asking you to convict Mr. Smith of the crimes charged
09:26and that the state has probed its case beyond a reasonable doubt.
09:32Mr. Smith, would you please rise?
09:34Mr. Smith, would you please rise?
09:36I remember being overwhelmed, waiting for the verdict.
09:43Will the jury find the defendant, Brian Stephen Smith, guilty of murder in the first degree, is charged in count
09:50one?
09:53It was like joy for justice, but also hurt and pain.
10:01There are people in the community that will be forever affected by what this man did.
10:17I am part of Community United for Safety and Protection, and what we are is a group of sex workers,
10:24sex trafficking survivors, and allies that work towards creating better laws that have to do with sex work.
10:31I have been working as a sex worker for about 20 years now, and you know, it can be dangerous.
10:38That is why I am a sex worker advocate.
10:41When I heard about the trial, I found out that Valerie was a sex worker who had turned in this
10:49information that stopped a murderer.
10:52So I went to trial every day, and I really wanted to know why this man was able to do
10:58so much harm to my community.
11:01And the text messages that came out between Brian and his friend were damning.
11:09Why isn't his friend being investigated? What is really going on with this?
11:17By the end of the trial, there were definitely more questions than answers.
11:23Before Brian Steven Smith was to be sentenced, I went to the courthouse.
11:28Anyone can go do that.
11:32And I pulled out the sentencing memorandum, and I printed that out, and I was glancing through it, and at
11:38the very back, there was a forensic artist sketch and three images.
11:46There was a third victim.
12:01I work closely with Amber, and for myself as a retired police officer to be working with a sex worker,
12:10as unlikely as an alliance as it is, where you know,
12:13I was united with wanting to see justice for Alaska Native women.
12:18When I saw the images that Amber found, three graphic images of an Alaska Native woman who appeared to be
12:25deceased, I was surprised.
12:30I don't understand why the Anchorage Police Department didn't take those images and distribute them to the public, so that
12:37the public can help us identify her.
12:40After the trial, we reached out to the FBI and provided them the photos of the unknown female, and they'd
12:46come up with a sketch that they provided to us.
12:51The plan was to share it out to the public after the sentencing.
13:00After Amber found the images, we shared them as quickly as we could, because we wanted that person to be
13:07identified.
13:09We shared it on social media, and we had her identified within an hour.
13:18People said, that's Cassandra Boscovsky.
13:27When we found out about the pictures, I hurt.
13:32It's hard.
13:36She's our family.
13:38We love and miss her very much.
13:46I feel outraged and angry.
13:48We've been looking for Cassandra for years.
13:53Years.
13:54And she's been dead this whole time.
13:59It's not right.
14:06I'm Cassandra's first cousin.
14:09I was eight years old when she was born.
14:12She always run up to you, behind you, jump on your back, or making every piggyback ride.
14:21Five years have passed, and we did not hear anything until July 2024.
14:29One day, I wake up to my phone ringing.
14:32It's about eight or nine in the morning.
14:34And Detective Lee's like, oh, Marcella?
14:37I was on FaceTime with him.
14:39So he showed me the forensic sketch.
14:43He just said, I need you to let me know if this is Cassandra or not.
14:49I didn't even have to really take a double look until I knew it was her.
14:56And he said that we also got three images of crime scene that we'd like for you to take a
15:03look at.
15:05It took me, like, not even two seconds before I said, yes, that's my cousin Cassandra.
15:10That is her.
15:14I just burst into tears.
15:20What the heck?
15:22Why did the police not contact us to let us see these photos in 2019?
15:31They're not doing their jobs like they should be.
15:37For almost five years, there were no significant leaves in Cassandra's case.
15:42And the file which bore her picture gathered dust.
15:47But the truth has a way of making itself known.
15:57Back when we arrested Brian Smith at the airport...
16:00Mr. Smith, I'm Detective Lee of the Anchorage Police Department.
16:03One of the techs with the Computer Crimes Unit found some other images that we were able to then print
16:08out and confront him with.
16:21Who's that?
16:26That's a girl that we met and we were...
16:33We screwed a little bit and...
16:36One of the images that we showed him was either Asian or Native female lying on a grassy area.
16:42And we weren't able to tell in the photo if she's alive or dead.
16:46And then she was passed out...
16:48Drunk out of her mind, yeah.
16:50Where's she at now?
16:52I don't know. I left her there.
16:54So she found her way home.
16:57He insisted that when he left, she was alive, just very intoxicated.
17:00And that was the last place that he... that he saw her at.
17:05Where'd you go?
17:09Um...
17:09I can't remember.
17:14There's a park over here.
17:16Probably it's a shy little Baptist church.
17:18Yeah, there's like a... there's a little creek there and there's a pathway.
17:21There's two big fields here.
17:27This area is part of the Chester Creek Trail Park.
17:33Brian Smith indicated this location was where he was with the unknown female that we had in the photos.
17:41We had the search team come out and conduct a pretty extensive search of this large park area
17:46to see if they could find anything that might be consistent with what we saw in the photographs.
17:53Nothing was found that day.
17:57I sent those photos out to officers, to different agencies.
18:03And...
18:04Cassandra Baskowski's name was one that was mentioned.
18:08But I was never able to verify if it was Cassandra or not because we don't have her body.
18:14I found a couple relatives and I spoke to Marcella Baskowski.
18:18And it didn't appear from what I was hearing that she had any recent contact with Cassandra.
18:24So, I felt she should be listed as missing until we know if she is deceased.
18:30It's a bad situation and, you know, we want to be able to tell the family more.
18:35We need solid evidence.
18:37And we don't have that.
18:43Back when I was with the Anchorage Police Department from 1983 to 2003, I first heard the term NHI used
18:49by police officers in Alaska.
18:51That stands for no humans involved.
18:55That means when a patrol officer rolls up to a scene and there's a deceased person.
19:00And if they happen to be a person without a home who had challenges with alcohol and lifestyles,
19:04the patrol officer would evaluate, we're not going to devote any resources to determine how and why this person died.
19:14When I look at the amount of work the Anchorage Police Department did or didn't do with Cassandra Lee Baskowski,
19:19I can't help but wonder if because of the challenges that Cassandra faced in her life,
19:24the Anchorage Police Department did not dedicate the amount of attention that they should have.
19:33No humans involved.
19:35It's offensive.
19:36I find it offensive as a police officer that people would suggest that.
19:43You're dispatched to a crime and you're there to investigate no matter who they are, no matter what they do,
19:49whether they live in a box or live in a house, you're investigating a terrible crime against a person.
19:56Who you are, who your background is, does not sway us one way or another whether we're going to investigate
20:01that case.
20:11APD, they don't seem to know what happened with Cassandra.
20:17So I decided that I was going to confront Bryan Steven Smith.
20:22I don't know how he's going to react.
20:24It's kind of scary because I'm going to be in close proximity to him.
20:30And he is a serial killer.
20:39While Bryan Steven Smith awaits sentencing, many whose lives were upended by his malice wait for answers.
20:48But would he give them?
20:51Right now, I'm feeling pretty stressed and very jittery.
20:57During this visit, I want to ask Bryan Steven Smith some difficult questions.
21:03I want to ask him about the harm that he's done.
21:07And about Cassandra Lee Baskowski.
21:21We're just going to have a conversation.
21:23All right.
21:25So this is part of the interrogation.
21:28I'm going to pick up from what you're talking.
21:30Yeah, well, yes, if you want to kill someone, yeah, a prostitute is probably your best bet.
21:38Yes, and that is true.
21:41Whenever there's a murder, prostitutes or homeless people like that, those are the people that die and no one ever
21:50knows about it.
21:53Or a prostitute.
21:55Yeah, or a prostitute, yeah.
21:56I mean, somebody like me.
22:00No, you...
22:02I still do sex work.
22:03What are you talking about?
22:05Oh, I didn't know you were active.
22:08Yeah.
22:08Oh, okay.
22:13So, I want to talk about something else.
22:18I want to talk about these pictures the police took off your phone.
22:24Located on Smith's phone, images of an unknown woman.
22:27Oh, yeah, yeah.
22:29All depict the female in dark clothing, laying on the ground in an outdoor environment.
22:34Can you tell me a little bit about that?
22:37Okay.
22:37Now, that lady, I believe she must have been a prostitute.
22:42Do you remember what she looked like, the woman?
22:48She was either native or she was Filipino.
22:51She had like an olive skin.
22:53So, how about her?
22:58No.
23:00No?
23:01She was on the phone when you were arrested.
23:04Yeah, yeah, there was three pictures.
23:06Is that your shoe?
23:11That is a black shoe.
23:13Was that from my phone?
23:15That's from your phone.
23:16Yeah, that's her.
23:16She was rolling around.
23:18That's with the foot there as well.
23:22Is that blood?
23:23That looks like blood to me.
23:27No.
23:27It looks like scratches and it looks like blood.
23:29Oh.
23:31I actually, I didn't remember those photos like that.
23:35I thought there was a, you know, I don't remember that.
23:40Yeah.
23:41That looks like blood too.
23:49I don't remember taking that.
23:52But you just told me that, that you remember that picture.
23:57No, this one.
23:58Yeah.
23:59I think, I think I remember that one.
24:02That's the same picture.
24:10This was on the phone when you were arrested at the airport.
24:15When they were interrogating you.
24:16This is one of the, some of the deleted pictures from your phone.
24:22Those pictures are pretty graphic.
24:24I mean, I think anyone would be able to remember taking those pictures.
24:33And you videotaped murdering Kathleen Joe Henry.
24:37Why?
24:40That's not me.
24:41I didn't do that.
24:42If I was going to do that, I mean, those videos are worth a lot of money.
24:46What do you mean those videos would be worth a lot of money?
24:50Snuff videos are worth money.
24:58And you said along the lines, like, I want these families to have closure.
25:06Cassandra's family deserves closure too.
25:08Who's Cassandra?
25:10The woman in the pictures right here.
25:14I know that's Cassandra.
25:17In those pictures, I know that's Cassandra.
25:20Why do you not want to say it's Cassandra?
25:24I don't know that lady.
25:26Zach doesn't even look like that lady.
25:28No, it's not after what happened to her.
25:41I'm pretty angry, really.
25:44I really, really wanted him to tell me more than what he told me.
25:48But he didn't identify her.
25:51He has no remorse.
25:53He has no humanity in him.
26:05The courtroom was full.
26:07Everyone wanting answers.
26:10How many years would Brian Smith go to prison?
26:15I found out that they're going to sentence Brian Stephen Smith.
26:18And I'm hoping the judge will bring Cassandra's name to add to his sentencing.
26:26Your Honor.
26:28As you're aware, the defendant had on his phone images of a woman whose identity has not yet been 100
26:34% confirmed.
26:36The district attorney included the three actual images of Cassandra Baskowski encouraging Judge Kevin Saxby to sentence him to the
26:45maximum possible.
26:47Your Honor, the defendant Brian Smith is a person that should never be permitted to walk among us.
26:52He should spend the rest of his life in jail.
26:56I agree.
26:58And in this regard, I find that it is necessary to confine for essentially two life sentences.
27:09He was sentenced to 226 years.
27:12It felt justified, like they had listened.
27:15But I wish we could remove Brian's name from this story.
27:20Because they were taken from us in the most horrible manner.
27:29I want Kathleen, Joe Henrys, and Veronica Bauchuk's families to know that there are people who care.
27:37We were grateful that Brian Stephen Smith was sentenced to 226 years in jail.
27:42But we were frustrated that Cassandra Baskowski was not respected.
27:47Where is Cassandra? Where is Cassandra?
27:51I believe that Cassandra was murdered.
27:56These women can't say anything.
27:58They're covered in blood.
28:01With the hand, the red paint over the mouth, they're hollering, help me.
28:09Cassandra does not have justice.
28:10Something has to be done.
28:13We must fight.
28:16We can't let Brian Smith get away with her murder.
28:26Where is Cassandra? Where is Cassandra?
28:31Where is Cassandra?
28:32Cassandra's family at the protest.
28:34I saw their frustration with the Anchorage Police Department.
28:38So, I reached out to her family and said,
28:41Can we file a presumptive death petition for you to get things moving forward?
28:46And they said, yes, absolutely.
28:49As quickly as I could, I helped Marcella to file the presumptive death petition.
29:00The presumptive death hearing is held when a person has disappeared and cannot be found, and it appears that the
29:06person has suffered death from accidental or other violent means.
29:12Right now, APD says they don't have enough evidence to charge Brian with Cassandra's murder because they do not have
29:20her body.
29:22If she's declared deceased at this presumptive hearing, maybe APD will actually pursue, you know, some kind of justice for
29:29the Buskowski family.
29:32The jury must decide, has sufficient evidence been presented that the missing person has met death?
29:42Marcella is the person who directed this whole thing.
29:47So, from looking at these photos, does that look like Cassandra to you?
29:54Yes, it is, Your Honor.
29:58I felt like I was a detective, a attorney, and a witness all in one day.
30:06I was super proud of Marcella.
30:08I think she was empowered there to realize she could file these petitions when she was up there interviewing the
30:15witnesses during the trial before the jury.
30:20Okay, Detective Lee, if you had these photos, why didn't you bring them to my attention?
30:26Because this isn't the type of photo we're going to release to the public, and we're not going to show
30:30that, you know, until we can find solid evidence of who this person is.
30:35It's difficult for me to criticize the police, but what in police work is ever 100%.
30:43DNA is not 100%, fingerprints is not 100%, witness identification is not 100%.
30:51It's not that we're keeping secrets, it's not that we're holding back information from people, we're trying to preserve the
30:56case so that we can find justice for that victim in the future.
31:02With Cassandra, the case is open and we will continue to investigate.
31:10The jury have reached a verdict.
31:14The jury unanimously find that there is sufficient evidence from which it may be fairly presumed that Cassandra Lee Boskovsky
31:22has met death.
31:28That she is presumed to have come to her death by homicide on or about the 19th day of September.
31:44It was very shocking to all of us because they could have considered her death undetermined.
31:52They put it down as homicide.
31:57It was really heart-wrenching for the family.
32:02For me, kind of a big sigh of relief that that part is over, but we still got a long
32:10way to go.
32:17We don't know where she is.
32:21And we want her remains found.
32:27Confirmation of Cassandra's death did not guarantee closure.
32:31For the Boskovsky family, their nightmare would only continue.
32:38The area where Ryan, Stephen Smith, saying that this happened, where he left her, that's Appa Ingra, 20th and Ingra.
32:51I'm wondering where she is.
33:00Brian Smith won't tell us where her body is.
33:04If he won't tell us about Cassandra, what else is he hiding?
33:09Are there more Alaska Native women that are victims?
33:15Brian Smith, how many other women have you killed?
33:30It's very important to the Alaska Native culture to put their family to rest.
33:36If your family is not put to rest the right way, so your spirit and your soul wanders in this
33:45limbo state because they're not resting.
33:52These events are so tragic.
33:55And they tear the fabric out of a community.
33:58I couldn't imagine what it's like as a family going through these events.
34:01We try our best to get to the end results, and things happen.
34:05This case is something that you never forget.
34:13Brian Smith was drawn to Alaska because people think that they can come up to Alaska to get away with
34:19crime.
34:21They think that Alaska's a very large state, so there's a lot of geographical room to disposal bodies.
34:31Have you ever fantasize about killing somebody?
34:34Well, not fantasize, but myself and people I've been talking to, whatever, you know,
34:40we've often sat down and thought of what's the perfect murder, you know?
34:43What would you do? How would you do it?
34:48Alaska, apparently, is like the best place to do it.
34:53You can drive a hundred miles somewhere, dump something, and no one's ever going to find it.
35:01If you want to get your rocks off and that's your thing, come to Alaska.
35:05Alaska is a place where you can come and take advantage of women and murder them and discard them.
35:14What a f***ing party for a serial killer.
35:23There needs to be a change in the law when it comes to reporting a crime, a violent crime against
35:29an adult.
35:31At this point, the failure to report a violent crime against an adult is only a $500 fine.
35:37It's not even a misdemeanor, it's a violation.
35:41So I would like it to become a misdemeanor so people like Brian's friend don't fall through the cracks.
35:52Thank God for the women in this story who made their voice be heard.
36:00The amount of courage that it took for her to contact the police.
36:04My mom would make those risky moves to go help them look for the body.
36:09She's a hero.
36:11You know, I am proud.
36:13You know, she is the unsung hero here.
36:19This man would still be on the streets if Valerie hadn't done what she did.
36:23And she did the hard thing.
36:25Like, it would have been a lot easier for her to just sell that phone, but she did the hard
36:29thing.
36:30She's brave.
36:33We want people to remember Kathleen, Veronica, and Cassandra as the loved, respected women that they are and that they
36:43were.
36:47I will remember these women as a catalyst for change in Alaska as a whole, not just Anchorage.
36:57We're not going to be silent anymore.
37:00Moving forward, how missing murdered indigenous women, Alaska Native women, and our people are treated.
37:08It will be different.
37:10It will be different.
37:13Too often, the victims of such violence are left with the burden of repair.
37:19Something the families of Kathleen Jo Henry, Veronica Abalchuk, and Cassandra Buscofsky know all too well.
37:27They have met these challenges with resilience, but a chilling question lingers.
37:33Did Brian Stephen Smith kill before arriving in Alaska?
37:40There's no doubt in my mind that he has killed more than the women that we know of.
37:45When my mother was texting Stephanie the night before she passed, she was texting her in great detail about the
37:52things that Brian had said.
37:53And one of the most disturbing things was that there were multiple women victims in South Africa.
38:03Alicia talked to the cops about South Africa in August of 18.
38:12When Miss Youngblood came to the headquarters here, she was very torn up, being very emotionally distraught.
38:20How did you get into that conversation?
38:24The murders in Africa.
38:25He just, he just spreaded it out.
38:29At first it was four.
38:31And now he's telling me it was five.
38:34He numbers the ladies as he killed them.
38:37Women he was murdered.
38:41I've sat across from Brian, and we've talked about South Africa.
38:45I know he is a serial killer.
38:49Do I think Brian Smith has other victims?
38:53Yes.
38:54He's the monster that created this tragedy.
38:57I would deem Mr. Smith a true monster.
39:06You've told Alicia that you killed multiple people in a fantasy that you had with her.
39:11I mean, you even told her you killed some people in South Africa, and that's why you left South Africa.
39:16Okay, so then she took everything I said as real then.
39:19Well, at least that.
39:21Okay.
39:21She was right.
39:22Yeah.
39:23Yeah, so she, she, you know, so I can understand why she would have.
39:29When the news gets back to South Africa, are there going to be any investigations in South Africa?
39:33Did you kill anybody in South Africa?
39:34No.
39:36When I told Alicia about that, well, that's one of those boasting things that you can't, you know, she can't
39:41disprove it.
39:42So, you know, it was, it was a thing like that.
39:47And so we don't need to be looking at other people?
39:50No.
39:51Okay.
39:52Okay.
39:52We probably won't take you at that word for it.
39:57It's terrifying to think that there are more victims out there that might never get justice.
40:03Thank God he got caught.
40:05That piece of shit, Brian Smith.
40:10If he didn't get caught, he'd still be doing what he does.
40:16He's sitting where he needs to be.
40:19But maybe there is another Brian Smith somewhere around here because murdered indigenous women are still popping up all over
40:26the place.
40:27So until something does start to happen and people understand the problems that face our state, people are still going
40:35to travel up here and take advantage of women.
40:39We are in a crisis and it has to change.
41:21That's because it's به if it's even worse than 50 years.
41:25It has to change.
41:25Also, a person takes this marriage to the境 deity and to the upper core and watch our SP.
41:26So like saying that, I don't know who that's happened.
41:33You
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