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00:00Closed Captioning by Kris Brandhagen. brandhagen. brandhagen.com
00:30there's still so many things we don't understand about this case and probably never will
00:36we just have bits and pieces of some kind of strange puzzle and even if we could put them
00:44all together i don't know if i want to see whatever picture they make
01:11yeah my name is joseph kirby i am a former lead detective sergeant in san bernardino county
01:18i was supervising the major crimes unit between 2007 and 2015. san bernardino county is about 60
01:27miles east of los angeles and is a part of california's inland empire region we have a
01:33population of about two million we've seen our share of violent crimes gang related homicides
01:38relatively large-scale drug busts what have you we probably ran upwards of 65 murders a year
01:46in the san bernardino county sheriff's homicide bureau which is higher than the national average
01:52but i had never seen anything like what happened to the sheridan family on alton avenue nobody had
02:14i was friends with tiffany sheridan
02:22our kids went to the same elementary school when you have kids that age and you meet a lot of
02:30parents that you don't always care for but tiff and i we just hit it off we were supposed to
02:37meet at
02:37this restaurant for lunch but she never showed and i just i figured she had forgotten so i let it
02:45go
02:45um but then lauren came home and she said that sam hadn't been to school in a few days and
02:52um i kept
02:53calling and i kept texting but i never got a reply back and i just knew in the back of
03:02my head that
03:02something is wrong i'm will martinez i'm a deputy sheriff with the san bernardino sheriff's department
03:21me and my partner were the first officers to arrive on scene we got a call regarding a welfare check
03:27for
03:27residence in the shinden hills nice area it was a gated community as i remember
03:46the whole thing felt weird something about it was just off
03:54police department
03:59police department anybody home
04:28my partner called out
04:33we identified ourselves again but there was no movement
04:37hello
04:42anybody home
04:48mother of god
04:53this was a crime scene
05:08i think about it
05:10i think about it every day
05:12i have nightmares about it
05:14i think about it
05:23i believe in the way
05:23i think about it
05:29but i think about it
05:33i think about it
05:41i think about it
05:43i think about it
05:44that is
05:47when i saw that i was floored i looked at my partner and i said oh my god he's back
06:21and i said oh my god
06:44Hi, my name's Lexi Taylor.
06:47I'm a senior homicide detective for the San Bernardino PD.
06:50I worked as a patrol officer for about nine years
06:53before being offered a job in the Homicide Bureau,
06:56and that's when I started working with my partner, Joe Kirby.
07:00Growing up, my mom worked two jobs
07:02to support me and my older brother.
07:04It's a rotating door of less than great men,
07:07you would say, come and go on her life.
07:09I think that's when I first started thinking
07:12that maybe I would like to try to help people.
07:14You know, maybe I could help someone like my mom
07:17out of a tough situation.
07:19I actually never intended to be a cop.
07:21I had aspirations of being a drummer in a metal band,
07:26but one of my friend's brothers was in the academy,
07:28and I thought it sounded cool.
07:30I liked how you had to think on your feet,
07:32use your brain as well as your body.
07:34After a couple of days in training, I was hooked, man.
07:40That is how I have always approached my career in law enforcement,
07:44try to be there for people when things are at their worst.
07:48Fuck, it was never worse than on this case.
07:53Between 1993 and 1995, there were three murders
07:56in Riverside and San Bernardino County
07:58that we eventually realized were serial murders,
08:02and which had some ritualistic aspects.
08:13I think this is it.
08:16Yeah.
08:18Okay, she was covered with a blue tarp.
08:20You could see it easily from the road.
08:23This is a service road.
08:24Not a lot of people come down it.
08:27It was just horrible.
08:28I mean, you never expect to see something like that.
08:32On August 8, 1993, the torso of 24-year-old Shifra Gutierrez
08:38is discovered in San Bernardino National Forest.
08:42She had been dismembered,
08:45the genitals mutilated,
08:47the uterus removed.
08:50The coroner gave a best guess estimate.
08:52She'd been there two weeks, but it's difficult to tell.
08:58Shifra was my best friend in high school.
09:01She was a dope bitch.
09:05She just had this joy for living and this lust for life, you know.
09:10And she was funny as fuck.
09:14Um, she wasn't a bad person.
09:16You know, she just, um,
09:19I don't know, she just got into some bad shit
09:21like a lot of people out here do.
09:23I was always telling her, I was like,
09:25this is dangerous, Shifra.
09:27You know, you gotta stop doing this.
09:30Oh, shit, I said I wasn't gonna do this.
09:33There's an area off the 91 in the Casablanca neighborhood,
09:38and that's where Shifra was last seen.
09:40But we do know she went up to a room at a motel
09:43called Dean's Corner that was frequented by sex workers,
09:46and there was a man with her,
09:48but the clerk couldn't remember what he looked like.
09:50He could have killed her there.
09:52Uh, it could have been strangulation, for example.
09:54Uh, we'll probably never know.
09:56What we do know for sure is that she was somehow moved
09:59from that room without anybody noticing.
10:01Or somebody noticed and just didn't care.
10:05But we got our first lead.
10:08A name.
10:10All guests had to fill out a ledger,
10:12and the suspect had written down the name,
10:14Albert Shiny.
10:17And the case went cold.
10:18I don't need to tell you that, especially at that time,
10:21sex workers and marginalized people tended to get
10:24the short end of the stick in the criminal justice system.
10:27I'm not saying it was right.
10:28I'm just saying it was and is the reality.
10:33So it was written off as an isolated incident.
10:37But we were wrong.
10:40A grisly crime scene has police on high alert in Arlonza tonight,
10:44not far from the Riverside Municipal Airport,
10:46where the body of 82-year-old Ambrose Griffith was discovered murdered
10:50in his apartment earlier today.
10:52Mr. Griffith was disabled and apparently suffered from MDS,
10:55a blood condition that required daily assistance from a caretaker.
10:58Nine months after Schiffer Gutierrez is killed,
11:01Ambrose Griffith is found murdered in his assisted living facility.
11:04On the night of June 3rd, 1994, someone scaled the backside of his building
11:10and entered his unit through a sliding glass door that was apparently left unlocked.
11:15He was bludgeoned with an oxygen tank that was in his room
11:18and then stabbed more than 30 times with a box cutter.
11:22That was brutal.
11:23And you got to understand, this guy was bed-bound.
11:26I mean, he could not walk or could barely walk on his own.
11:28So he was totally defenseless to the attack, which was obviously unprovoked.
11:33No one else in the building heard so much as a peep from his room.
11:38So it must have happened fast, which is some comfort, I guess.
11:45One of his eyes was also removed.
11:47It was a sloppy scene, murder committed by someone in a frenzy
11:51who was not thinking it through at all.
11:53It's probably why we were able to get our first real clue.
11:57The print was run through the system, but nothing came back.
12:00The lab guys stayed on it for weeks, but it was only a partial.
12:03No motive, 82-year-old victim with no family and few friends,
12:08except a few people that lived in his building who were just as sick as he was.
12:12The police didn't make any connection to the Gutierrez murder.
12:16Not yet.
12:23We want to thank everyone from the Riverside Police Department with their continued support.
12:29Someone out there knows what happened to our little boy.
12:36And we are begging for you to help us return him home safely and unharmed.
12:45Noah Lafon was abducted while walking home from school on October 7, 1995.
12:50He was 12 years old.
12:53There were no witnesses and pretty much no information to go on.
12:58Uh, there was a pretty extensive search and media effort this time to try to find him.
13:03Uh, we were doing door-to-doors.
13:05This was the first case I was on involving a child.
13:08So I really threw myself into it.
13:10I'd get off work and I'd go join search and rescue.
13:14People put in hundreds of hours, but days turn into weeks,
13:18and it gets harder and harder to stay positive.
13:22Three months later, in January, his body is discovered in a shallow creek near Silverwood Lake.
13:31He had been weighed down by concrete bricks and his body was in pretty bad shape.
13:39There were multiple lacerations to his abdomen and his liver had been removed.
13:4512 years old.
13:47Whole life ahead of him.
13:50Oof.
13:52We also found a box cutter, the weapon, as well as Noah's school backpack and all its contents.
13:59This is where we got our second lead.
14:01It was a page that had been written on and then torn out, but you could still see an imprint.
14:09Caliban.
14:11What the heck was Caliban?
14:13A bird from the Caribbean, we found out.
14:15Or a character from Shakespeare.
14:18I mean, was this some kind of a code?
14:19Was it another Zodiac killer?
14:22About two weeks after his body was discovered,
14:24the Riverside Police Department received a letter in the mail,
14:28provided details of the three killings.
14:30It was unreleased information only the police would know,
14:34which basically proves whoever wrote it was the killer,
14:37or at least someone who had direct contact with the killer.
14:40And there was a message.
14:45Thanks for not catching me.
14:48Learned a lot.
14:50Ten transits remain.
14:51Isn't it insane?
14:53I'll be back.
14:56Was he telling us he was planning on killing ten more?
14:58Was that what he meant?
15:00This was the first time we realized this was an actual serial killer.
15:04It's worth mentioning the jurisdictional problems that can arise when someone commits
15:09a murder across county lines.
15:10It can make connecting them a lot more difficult, but this guy wanted us to know.
15:16He wanted us to know what he did, and he wasn't finished.
15:20And he signs a letter with that symbol.
15:24Years went by.
15:25The cases went cold.
15:27Detectives at that time figured whoever was responsible for the three deaths
15:31was either incarcerated for another crime or had died,
15:35because they probably wouldn't have stopped killing on their own.
15:39But as soon as I saw that symbol on the ceiling, I realized that was the killer from 95.
15:45He wasn't bluffing in his letter.
15:47He hadn't stopped.
15:49He had just taken a 15-year break.
15:52Why?
15:54We're still trying to figure that one out.
15:57One thing's for sure.
15:59If his first murder spree had felt sloppy and unplanned,
16:02this new one was anything but.
16:21The suspect gained entry through a first-floor bathroom window,
16:24cut through a screen on the side of the house,
16:26then attacks Ted and Tiffany sometime after 1.15 AM,
16:30after Tiffany sends her last work email.
16:33There was bruising on Ted's face, struck by a blunt object.
16:38We think the suspect probably roughed him up as a form of intimidation,
16:41and convinced him and Tiffany to go downstairs willingly.
16:45It's a little girl, Samantha.
16:49Yeah, it looks like she put up more of a fight.
16:52Some of the furniture in her room, her comforter, all disturbed and in disarray.
16:57Suspect zip ties their hands and feet,
17:00wrapped some duct tape around their mouths.
17:02You see this guy, he'd gotten smarter.
17:04He had learned from the murders in 95.
17:06Less sloppy, more methodical.
17:08I mean the buckets.
17:09What the fuck?
17:11Pardon my French.
17:13He ties the three of them to chairs around the dining room,
17:19deliberately facing each other, you understand?
17:21He places their feet in these five-gallon painter's buckets.
17:25He prepared these things ahead of time, like they had their names on them, literally,
17:30like Ted, Tiffany, Samantha, written out.
17:35He draws three lines on each of them, like the kind you'd find on a measuring cup.
17:41Except this wasn't for measuring out rice.
17:44It's for their blood.
17:46By volume.
17:55The suspect used a box cutter to make a small six-centimeter incision through the skin on each victim.
18:06And the result was fatal blood loss.
18:09There's about a gallon and a half of blood in the human body.
18:13It takes maybe 15 minutes for that to drain out, but you can be dead in as soon as three.
18:19The femoral artery is at your groin, basically, at the top of your thigh.
18:23If you're sitting upright, gravity just kind of does its thing.
18:28The technical term for this is exsanguination.
18:31Part of what really earns that term ritualistic, in my opinion, is anything done post-mortem.
18:39So, you know, normal homicide, you stab a person, shoot a person, you get the heck out of there.
18:45You don't stick around.
18:46Every second you wait is another second to get caught.
18:49From what we can put together, our suspect hung around another two hours at least.
18:56He leaves the house, comes back with a 24-foot extension ladder that he gets from his vehicle,
19:02and then he goes to work painting this thing on the ceiling.
19:06And it's not a small room, and he goes almost wall to wall.
19:10It's almost 20 feet, and he does a good job.
19:14He's careful, does a couple of layers, almost no drips on the floor, and he positions the bodies.
19:21And all this, he does without any neighbors hearing a sound or seeing a thing.
19:28No fingerprints, no DNA left at the scene, uh, no motive, no relation to the victims.
19:36Three days later, another letter arrives in the mail.
19:50A gruesome discovery was made just this morning by a jogger of a human head here in Parris Hill Park.
19:57The jogger Chelsea Lunsford has been coming here every weekday morning for two years.
20:01She enjoys the serenity of the landscape and was not prepared for what she would find.
20:06My friend was just telling me how I should bring mace or stun gun or something with me when I
20:10go running,
20:11and, um, yeah, I guess she was right.
20:25On the night of November 8th, the suspect entered the home of the two victims, Tamara Latour and her
20:31boyfriend, Glenn Sandweiss, through a dog door in the back of the house.
20:35They were watching TV in the living room.
20:37Volume was up, which allowed him to sneak up on them undetected until the last minute.
20:43According to Mr. Sandweiss, he attacks Tamara first, uses a stun gun to incapacitate her.
20:49We think the suspect was not expecting Sandweiss to be home, but Sandweiss says that he seems confused.
20:56There's a brief struggle before Sandweiss is overpowered by the suspect, brought to the floor.
21:01That's when the attack with the propane torch begins.
21:05He literally burns this guy's face off.
21:09Is there anything else you can run over there that would help us catch who did this?
21:14Like what?
21:14Uh, anything, anything he might have done or said?
21:19I don't know.
21:20I don't know.
21:22He was just rambling to say that he wasn't gonna hurt us.
21:28He had to be afraid.
21:30I'm still gonna go.
21:40He is.
21:41Oh God, what are we doing?
21:49What do you want to know?
21:51What the fuck do you think happened?
21:56You really think I was going to be able to be a teacher looking like this?
22:01Standing up in front of a group of fifth graders?
22:05You'd be terrified.
22:07Woo!
22:08You're still working education.
22:10Doing what?
22:12Telling my story?
22:15Huh?
22:17Trying to be inspirational?
22:20I can't work.
22:23Got no friends.
22:27Nerve damage.
22:29Feels like my face is on fire all the time.
22:33I'm already dead, man.
22:36I'm just not on the ground.
22:39Like Tamara is.
22:43Fuck.
22:46You got what you need. I'm fucking done.
22:49Give me my money and get the fuck out of my house.
22:53Tamara's head, the sculpture, the weird trinkets on the ground, all of it was carefully examined.
22:59And once again, no fingerprints, no DNA left behind.
23:03We had nothing.
23:05Until we got lucky.
23:07A woman who works at the strip mall down the street from the park said she had seen a guy
23:12with a truck unloading several garbage bags into a dumpster the morning of the murder.
23:17White truck.
23:18Red lettering, she said.
23:20So we pulled footage from a credit union's ATM at the strip mall, and it wasn't a great angle.
23:26We'll see you next time.
23:28We'll see you next time.
23:30We'll see you next time.
23:31We'll see you next time.
23:31We'll see you next time.
23:31We'll see you next time.
23:31We'll see you next time.
23:31We'll see you next time.
23:32We'll see you next time.
23:32We'll see you next time.
23:32We'll see you next time.
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