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Philly Homicide Season 2 Episode 2
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00:12a 9-1-1 call comes in the longtime handyman sees his boss face down on the floor and he
00:21sees blood
00:23april kaufman has been murdered who would have wanted her dead april kaufman was a radio personality
00:30she was a veterans rights advocate she was highly regarded they were baffled by it some of the pagan
00:38motorcycle group was at her funeral why is it that these individuals from the motorcycle gang
00:44were paying their respects to april kaufman who do you think did it the pagans the most valuable
00:51thing that came out of the search was an informant changed the whole ball game drop the weapon
01:04listen let's talk
01:05room i'm gonna kill myself listen let's talk
01:26when the weather is warm the nearby jersey shore basically becomes a sandy suburb of philly
01:33it's also where i got my start as a police officer in north wildwood new jersey
01:38and as i learned back then bad things still happen even at the beach
01:57on may 10th 2012 a 9-1-1 call comes in around 11 a.m from 2 woodstock drive
02:07a man named billy gonzalez who is a long time handyman for this family he calls 9-1-1 after
02:13going into his boss's bedroom to see if she was awake he walks in he sees his boss face down
02:22on the floor she's still in her black nightgown and he sees blood
02:35at that point the police department is rolling to the scene
02:41upon entering the bedroom they've observed a pool of blood on the floor soaking into the rug
02:47and the victim laying on the floor lifeless at that point they see a cut on her arm but then
02:54police
02:55realize that the cut on her arm is actually a gunshot wound and then they also find that she has
03:02three
03:03gunshot wounds from two bullets with the victim confirmed dead police ask the handyman to identify
03:10her and it's a name that would be familiar to many philadelphia and south jersey locals billy gonzalez's
03:18boss is april kaufman people in the philadelphia area knew april kaufman well because of her work
03:25with veterans and because of the popular radio show that she had the king arthur radio show she was also
03:31known in the community as a philanthropist she owned a business so she was very well known she was on
03:36the
03:36media a lot and she was always doing things for others as investigators block off the crime scene
03:43word of april's murder begins to spread and soon her husband dr jim kaufman arrives at the time the
03:51911 call his place dr kaufman was at a wawa picking up some items he received the phone call from
03:58mr
03:58gonzalez and immediately returned to the residence to investigate what had happened to his wife
04:06upon returning to his residence which was now a crime scene dr kaufman immediately is confronted
04:11with the fact that his wife has been murdered he immediately begins to become emotional he starts
04:18crying and even vomiting on the scene
04:27linwood has had very very few homicides over the last 30 years
04:32so the linwood police department immediately contacted the atlantic county prosecutor's office
04:38that team arrived and worked collaboratively with the local linwood new jersey police department
04:44to secure the scene and to start investigating upon an initial scan of the room you would be looking
04:52for shell casings they're immediately looking for a weapon inside the bedroom you have a bullet in the wall
05:00in the plaster behind the bed they also see the gunshot wounds on april as well they take those bullets
05:09as well
05:11what's the condition of the scene you know are there drawers turned upside down
05:15are there items that are that are potentially very valuable that weren't touched
05:20there was no signs of a break-in there was no signs of a robbery at this point the detectives
05:27are
05:27going to sit down and they're going to say april kaufman has been murdered who would have wanted her dead
05:35detectives on scene begin to gather background information on april looking for anything that
05:39could help the investigation april told me that she was raised by her grandparents
05:46she was married twice dr kaufman was her second husband they had a beautiful home in linwood it
05:52was very large she was married to a doctor so you know they had a very nice home april kaufman
06:00was a radio
06:01personality she was a military veterans rights advocate and was highly regarded in the various
06:08communities where she operated i mean she was a player she's a very beautiful woman very well kept
06:16always had her lashes and you know her hair and everything was always nails were always done and well
06:23dressed we met in the summer of 2009 we hit it off you know she has a very vivid and
06:34lively personality
06:36she never met a stranger she was passionate is an understatement when you describe her drive to assist
06:47veterans and veterans causes she had a radio show that was broadcast on a weekly basis where she
06:56talked about providing better health care about providing better access to the va hospital
07:03she also went to walter reed a lot to visit the soldiers who have served the united states of america
07:10and abroad but were injured very badly
07:15the last time i spoke to her was two weeks before she died she had just gotten an award from
07:21governor
07:22chris christie for her community work i was very proud of her and we were going to go out and
07:28celebrate
07:37it was a pretty clean scene they were baffled by it understand that this is 2012 while it was
07:46a home that was in a very exclusive community you didn't have the prevalence of ring cameras or
07:54security cameras within the premises or anything like that so they are literally trying to understand
08:02who has been there you treat everyone as a potential suspect until you can eliminate them as a suspect
08:10william gonzalez was the first person on the scene and so he was the first person who was questioned by
08:16the police billy gonzalez worked for the kaufmans he was a long time handyman for them so he was able
08:25to
08:25go in and out of the house he had a key he was there several times a week he would
08:32do every odd job that
08:34april would ask him to do did mr gonzalez feel that he had been in some way mistreated uh you
08:40know by the
08:41coffin family was he not being paid the hours that he had worked was there a potential grievance between
08:46him and the family which could have manifested itself in a murder
08:57when the police speak with gonzalez further he says that he really liked working for the kaufmans
09:02they're a great couple they've always treated him well and they pay him well detectives then
09:08question gonzalez's wife and what she tells them is very similar to what her husband has said she said
09:14that the kaufmans were great people her account pretty much matched that of mr gonzalez so her story
09:21and his story check out back at the scene detectives turn their attention to the next logical suspect
09:29april's husband dr jim kaufman
09:33every time you have a homicide suspect number one is definitely going to be the the surviving spouse
09:40what would their motivation have been were they having problems
09:47jim and april have known each other for a long time and the first date that they had they went
09:52to
09:53the vietnam memorial in washington dc and jim continued to tell april about his time in vietnam
10:02he walks up to the vietnam memorial wall and was crying and that's something that really forged
10:10a relationship between the two of them veterans causes was something that april and jim really took on
10:17together they were an it couple they were you knew them when they showed up he was a successful
10:24physician with a successful practice and she was the wife that supported those initiatives that gave
10:31back to the community he described them as being very very happily married
10:39at the time that this murder could have occurred he's on camera at wawa he had a lock solid alibi
10:50with both dr kaufman and the family handyman cleared of suspicion investigators wrap up the crime scene
10:56with no clear suspect they went out looking for potential leads and they really didn't find anything
11:02which would have pointed at someone who wanted to commit such a heinous crime
11:13at the funeral there were so many people but there was also a massive media presence
11:18even national media because her story really was captivating to a lot of people everybody cried there
11:26was not a dry eye in the police detectives spot many familiar politicians and wealthy community members
11:35but they're surprised to see a very different crowd gathered on the edge of the memorial
11:41there's a group of men there who are wearing vests with various patches and they have intricate tattoos
11:48they're not exactly the guests you might expect who would be attending april service
11:53some of the pagan motorcycle group was at her funeral and led the funeral procession to a burial site
12:05the pagans have a very large presence in south jersey and philadelphia they even had an affiliation with
12:13the philadelphia mob they're known for running drugs running guns prostitution a number of different
12:21criminal activities definitely safe to say that murder would not be out of the wheelhouse of the pagans
12:27why is it that these individuals from the motorcycle gang were paying their respects to april kaufman
12:39coming up who do you think did someone in a motorcycle gang if the pagans were involved you know why
12:48it became clear that they weren't the happy couple that jim portrayed them to be
12:52have you ever served in any branch of the military no
13:08in may 2012 well-known radio host april kaufman is found shot to death in her home
13:15now homicide detectives are looking into a possible connection between april
13:20and members of the pagan motorcycle gang who attended her funeral
13:25if you're talking about motorcycle clubs in the philadelphia south jersey area the number one club is the
13:32of the pagans that's been that way for a long long time and they've emerged as probably one of the
13:40most violent and toughest biker gangs in america always involved in the methamphetamine trade
13:47they went to war with the hell's angels
13:50hell's angels were trying to establish clubs here in this philadelphia south jersey area and by and large
13:56the pagans the pagans drove them out at one point there was a large amount of pagans that served
14:04in the military so they also were interested in veterans causes which obviously would connect them
14:09to april according to local veterans groups in town april had interactions with many different kinds
14:16of bikers not just pagans because of her charity work they loved her can't remember any they had a bad
14:24thing to say about her and then next thing we know boom gone
14:35with the pagan lead going nowhere months tick by and the case stalls april's daughter kim pack grows
14:42restless kim was born when april was just 17 years old she calls her mom her soulmate her sister her
14:51best
14:51friend it was really them against the world as april navigated single motherhood as the year went on kim
15:01was really frustrated with authorities she wondered why it appeared that her mom's investigation had stalled
15:09kim was adamant that jim kaufman was responsible for her mother's death because something just didn't add up
15:20there are certain things that didn't sit well with kim when jim spoke at the funeral number one he kept
15:28his sunglasses on and there were things that stuck out to kim that she felt were digs at her mother
15:35in his eulogy including him saying that he'll miss april berating him
15:41there was a fight over jim literally giving away her belongings whether it was jewelry whether it was
15:49personal effects just trying to erase any evidence of april's life within his life and kim was adamant
15:59about saying well if this was someone that you love that was the love of your life then why are
16:05you
16:05trying to erase them kim tells investigators about a major fight that april and jim had just weeks
16:13before the murder about a lie he had been telling her since the day they met kim tells investigators
16:19that her mom had recently learned that jim was in fact not a veteran april tells a friend of hers
16:28that
16:28she's absolutely mortified she knew that her mother had planned to divorce jen she didn't really i think
16:36understand the the full scope of the reasons but she knew that her mother wanted out that was a central
16:45central key to starting to unlock some of the motives
16:55two years after the death of her mother kim pack gets word that dr kaufman is seeking to get the
17:02proceeds of a life insurance policy that was taken out on her life for over half a million dollars kim
17:08pack is spurred into action she's like this is not going to happen and she files a wrongful death suit
17:13against dr kaufman that means that jim will have to be deposed jim is going to have to be in
17:23a court
17:23of law and answer questions by attorneys the deposition was really interesting and very telling
17:31under oath jim kaufman is asked about a broad range of topics from his large gun collection how many guns
17:38do you own approximately 18 to the state of his marriage to april it became clear to anyone that
17:46was investigating that they weren't the happy couple that jim portrayed them to be but kim pack's lawyers
17:53have one specific question that they want to ask under oath something that proves their contention that
17:58he's a liar have you ever served in any branch of the military no did you ever tell kim pack
18:05you were in
18:05the military yes and what you went through yes and that you carried bodies yes um and and the torture
18:11that you had gone through did you ever tell anyone that you were a green beret yeah kim pack lays
18:19out
18:19the fact that her mother knew that he was not the war hero he said he was that there potentially
18:25were
18:26marital problems here a short time after april learned that jim was not a veteran is when she started
18:33to seek a divorce that was kind of the last straw for his wife april she had been this advocate
18:41for
18:41military veterans and here is her husband claiming this whole false valor thing if april was threatening
18:48to expose him maybe this is a motive that was the impetus of kim's passion for trying to get justice
18:57for
18:57april because something just didn't add up with jim kaufman jim claims in the deposition that he himself
19:04was scared and was constantly looking over his shoulder after april's death going from stolen valor
19:11and divorce to homicide is a big leap what is it that he's seeking to prevent from happening
19:26it's july 11th 2014 and dr jim kaufman is being deposed in a wrongful death suit
19:33lawyers for april's family have just forced him to admit stolen valor but before they can press him for
19:39more details about the murder dr kaufman offers a new theory of who he thinks killed his wife well who
19:47do you think did it i thought um it was someone in a motorcycle gang what motorcycle count the pagans
19:57jim talks in the deposition about how he treated a number of pagans he was their doctor
20:04and he starts to describe how they became a little bit too interested in his personal life
20:10if the pagans were involved why why would you kill april she's just a radio host a veterans advocate
20:18one of the potential scenarios that jim gives is that some of the pagans went to rob him and april
20:24maybe intervened because she was at the home at the time after jim left
20:32jim claims that he hadn't brought up the possibility of the pagans being involved in april's murder
20:37because he was scared in the years after april's death
20:44but aside from having a gut feeling dr kaufman offers no physical evidence to corroborate his
20:50allegations that leaves investigators with nothing concrete to pursue nothing seems to move when it
20:57comes to the investigation you would think in 2014 with all of that new information from the deposition
21:02that something would be done it's never really been clear why the prosecutor's office did not move
21:09forward with that information i wanted her to have justice so every year i would post a picture of her
21:17saying justice for april her friends never forgot her daughter never forgot
21:31in the spring of 2017 damon tyner who at the time was a judge is then appointed to the atlanta
21:37county prosecutor's office he is appointed as the prosecutor
21:43when he first takes office he comes up with a list of cold cases that he wants the office to
21:49move
21:49on and one of them was april's case very little investigative work was done from what i could see
21:57when i took over the investigation five years later dna testing was not done on several pieces of
22:05evidence there was never an arrest there was never anyone in custody
22:10while several people were questioned they were not retained in custody we were starting from scratch
22:20i wanted to look into jim kaufman
22:24for all intents and purposes he did have an alibi he wasn't there when the murder occurred because he
22:30was either at work or at the convenience store but that didn't mean that he was not involved in the
22:37homicide but as it turns out the new prosecutor isn't the only one looking closely at dr kaufman
22:46one of our investigators said you know you really need to speak to the local atlanta county fbi field
22:53office i convened a meeting and i asked them about this case and what was interesting about it
23:00the fbi reveals that they have an active investigation looking into a health insurance fraud ring
23:05and they believe that dr kaufman is involved in 2017 we're in the throes of the opioid epidemic
23:13the fbi was working with their local partners we're investigating heroin cases those trafficking in
23:19heroin we're also looking at those trafficking in prescription drugs diverting legal drugs for illicit purposes
23:27we were taking a look at who the health care professionals were who were prescribing outside
23:31of the norm in the course of these cases that we were working looking at diverted prescription drugs
23:38we had come across the name of dr kaufman
23:44dr kaufman was definitely as an endocardiologist prescribing painkillers
23:48outside of what would be the threshold that we would expect this was a state investigation into
23:56jim kaufman selling drugs illegally investigators requested the list of patients that were prescribed
24:04narcotics by dr kaufman on that list of names are people associated with the pagan motorcycle gang
24:14coming up he said i can give you information about the biggest unsolved murder in atlanta county
24:21suddenly investigators are there they're surrounding his home
24:24no i'm not going to jail for this drop the weapon listen let's talk room i'm going to kill myself
24:32drop the gun
24:51in 2017 the opioid crisis is in full swing and the fbi suspects that dr james kaufman is writing fake
24:59scripts for some of his patients including members of the pagan motorcycle gang
25:09the more scripts that the doctors wrote the more money that they got paid the more scripts that any
25:15individual got filled they got paid they learned with respect to the pagans dr kaufman was writing scripts
25:25for an inordinate amount of opioids and other pain medicines
25:31what would happen was a presumed patient would come in they wouldn't even be in there 10 minutes and jim
25:39would write them a script and they would leave they would get it filled and they would give it to
25:44a member of the pagans who would then sell these or have someone else sell them out on the open
25:50market for
25:51an inflated price
25:55you have jim kaufman scamming insurance companies then you have him flooding the local market with opioids
26:07that is critical because atlanta county was in the middle of an epidemic crisis
26:14of opioid addiction and overdose deaths
26:18but investigators need someone to talk and talking to cops is not something pagans do
26:25there's a strict code about how you conduct yourself pagans have the same thing as organized
26:30crime figures they don't cooperate you don't cooperate you don't give anything up you don't
26:35even talk to law enforcement and guys have been beaten for that very reason
26:40with no chance of getting a pegging to flip investigators decide to obtain a search warrant
26:45for jim kaufman's office in hopes of finding evidence of the illegal pill mill
26:54the time was set morning was set we knew his routine
26:59from the moment he left his house and took his daily trip to wawa
27:03and then came to the office we had a number of agents and officers on the scene
27:15you have members of the swat team you have detectives you have federal agents they're all
27:21taking over this parking lot of this small doctor's office he was in the office alone
27:36he goes back into the office he closes the door he comes back out with a handgun drop the gun
27:44drop the gun hey drop the gun drop the gun you're on the scene you're thinking i need to get
27:52that gun
27:53out of his hands i need to get the gun on the ground drop the gun let's talk i'm not
27:57going to jail
27:57for this so we just have search warrant that's it put the weapon down drop the weapon listen let's talk
28:06listen let's talk sir yes changed the whole ball game
28:14and it turns into a multi-hour standoff they weren't there to arrest dr kaufman they were there to
28:21collect evidence of a crime
28:25you're thinking there's nothing in a health care case which would cause you to pull out a gun and
28:31start waving it around dr kaufman thinks we're here to make an arrest for the murder
28:38investigators have no idea if kaufman will shoot himself or come out and turn the gun on them
28:44for the next 45 minutes the standoff continues
28:49hands up as high as you can the only way we can guarantee your safety is keep cooperating please
28:54walk backwards ultimately jim decides to surrender his weapon and be taken into custody
29:05that day jim kaufman was arrested for weapons offenses
29:10we're gonna have an ambulance come and check you out make sure you're okay i'm okay this is just
29:13procedure i know you're a doctor but we have certain things we have to file okay because jim was
29:19threatening suicide he also has to be taken in for a psychiatric evaluation
29:29we searched the office and the home that day we found a lot of paperwork we seized all the records
29:37of
29:37every patient we got cash out of the home large amounts of cash but the most valuable thing that came
29:45out of the search of dr kaufman's office and the seizure of the records of all of his patients was
29:53an informant when investigators go through the medical records they see the name andrew glick
30:00andrew glick was the president of the cape may county chapter of the pagans
30:05we had already had an opportunity to review his records and saw that every time that he did visit he
30:12was prescribed percocets opioids and a host of other medicines uh but he was getting treated presumably
30:21for diabetes from what appeared to be in his files there was some evidence that he would have been
30:27involved in the pill mill operation the investigators came up with a plan the prosecutors put something out
30:34in the news telling patients if you are a patient of dr kaufman's we likely have your medical records you
30:41can come to us and we can give them back to you investigators are shocked when andrew glick comes
30:46in to get his records andrew glick did come into the office to collect his files which gave us the
30:52opportunity for an informal questioning the investigators asked him what did you have to do with april kaufman's
30:59death he hesitated he said i want to talk to my lawyer andrew glick realizes he has a problem
31:09and he immediately retained an attorney this was definitely something that got the wheels turning
31:14the detectives the agents sat down and said what's our next step
31:33five years after april kaufman's murder investigators believe that both april's husband
31:39dr james kaufman and members of the pagan motorcycle gang know who killed her
31:45now they're face to face with andrew glick the president of the local pagan chapter
31:52the investigators asked him what did you have to do with april kaufman's death
31:58andrew glick is a major drug dealer he's dealing coke he's dealing meth and he's still doing all of this
32:06while this cloud of suspicion is hanging over pagans and also dr kaufman so after he leaves the office
32:12even knowing that they're focusing on him he freaks out a little bit
32:18and just as he moves drugs from a stash apartment that he has in ocean city to his home in
32:25egg harbor
32:25township is when everything goes down we noticed that he was moving boxes and product from there to his
32:35home we got a search warrant for his home
32:38he's in his backyard suddenly investigators are there they're surrounding his home
32:45and he knows it's over
32:49illegal drugs diverted prescription drugs you know you name it it was there
32:54andrew glick at this point is taken into custody
32:59looking at what you would be prosecuted for under state statute at that point he was potentially
33:03looking at decades behind bars and that's when andrew glick flips
33:10he said i can give you information about probably the biggest unsolved murder in
33:14ellenic cabinet
33:21when the head of the pagans begins to talk he starts with dr kaufman
33:27andrew glick claims that they were running a pill mill in association with dr kaufman
33:32but it was the pagans running the pill mill
33:35dr kaufman would get paid cash and then the pagans would be able to take those pills and either
33:41they resold the pills or some of the pagans took the pills themselves
33:47glick saw kaufman as a guy who a part of him wanted to be a biker wanted to be a
33:51tough guy but he
33:52couldn't really be it so he did it vicariously he was by being around those guys by being part of
33:59the
33:59pill mill it might go back to the whole fake military thing it was somebody who wanted to be
34:05something he knew he wasn't with details of the pill mill confirmed investigators turned the
34:12conversation to what they really want to know about april kaufman's murder once andrew glick started
34:18cooperating he told a story about how april kaufman was upset with dr kaufman over stolen valor
34:26he had painted a picture that he was a vietnam war hero she had threatened to expose him for that
34:32she
34:32also threatened to expose him for running the pill mill operation this is something that dr kaufman
34:38could not handle divorce would have been very very expensive not only would he have lost his
34:44good name in the community standing there was a financial incentive as well andrew glick fills in a
34:50lot of blanks for us he gave us a name and that was ferdinand freddie argiello
35:00freddie argiello was a member of the pagans he was a petty drug dealer through his relationship
35:08with jim kaufman i guess he was the mastermind of hey write me a script for uh some opioids so
35:16we can
35:16sell them out on the street collect claims kaufman and freddie argiello were cut from the same cloth they
35:23both were motivated by getting money and that's what this was all about as things started to unfold
35:34with the kaufman marriage jim was very nervous that april was on to him about the stolen valor he shared
35:42this with freddie she's threatening to go to the police about the drug operation and that can't happen
35:51he was like well she has to go
35:58eventually fredagiello agrees to take the murder contract for fifty thousand dollars
36:05but at the same time fredagiello didn't want to do this himself and that is why he started shopping
36:12around the idea of hiring a hitman eventually fredagiello was able to identify two individuals
36:21francis and joe muholland who would go ahead and take the contract and kill april kaufman
36:27they're not related frank muholland is described as a drug addict that needs money
36:33and joe muholland is the guy who drives frank muholland to april's home on the morning she's killed
36:41these homicide investigators have spent years waiting for this information but i can tell you
36:47from experience glick's words are not enough detectives need evidence that will convince a
36:52jury beyond a reasonable doubt andrew glick gave us a lot but of course you know we can't take him
36:59on his
37:00word best corroboration is going to be him wearing a wire the actual practice of wearing a wire is
37:08going against everything that andrew glick has been holding himself out to be as a member of a
37:15motorcycle gang this is a big step for him to be taking make sure this is button good when you
37:20get
37:20out okay before you get out make sure it's pointing straight when you're walking in like
37:25you know while you're walking on he's not looking just adjust it
37:36after years of delay a witness has finally emerged in april kaufman's murder case
37:42it's the president of the local pegan motorcycle gang and he's agreed to risk his own safety to prove
37:48he's not lying during the fall of 2017 glick out of jail wearing a wire engaging a
37:57conversations with a jello trying to corroborate what it is that he told us
38:02make sure this is button good when you get out okay before you get out make sure it's point
38:07straight when you're walking in like you know while you're walking on he's not looking just adjust it
38:12it's difficult work you're going in and talking to someone about a potential crime that happened
38:19years ago and that just doesn't fit the script you know you're not going to show up at someone's
38:23house and say hey remember the time that we got together and we killed somebody
38:26i'm going on the predicate between the wires oh well it isn't really people do weird
38:33andrew i hear you buddy glick wears the wire and he starts to tell fred what's going on like no
38:41this
38:41is a real case they were asking me about april they got nothing and i want people to talk right
38:48but anybody that's going to open their mouths and say stupid things your lawyer or my lawyer will eat
38:54them alive because you're going to be losers he just proceeds to confirm everything because he's
39:00talking to someone that he feels comfortable with where's the film of you handing this guy money
39:05for the film of him handing me there is no film if taking a look at what evidence we had
39:12you know what
39:13freddy had said uh on tape how we could corroborate uh glick as a cooperating witness there is probable
39:20cause that freddie jello was the ringleader behind the murder of april kaufman
39:30the decision was made to go ahead and get an arrest warrant and take freddie jello into custody on
39:36january 9th of 2018. there's no drugs in here what what are you looking for there's nothing in here
39:44legal i mean there's nothing it's what we do on every policies on that day fred all jello and six
39:50others connected to both the pill mill and april's murder are arrested all agree to testify against dr
39:57kaufman who is still being held on gun charges subsequent to the arrest of freddie jello it's
40:03during this time that we received a phone call
40:08that dr kaufman was dead apparently had taken his own life by hanging himself in the jail cell
40:19with the walls closing in james kaufman ended his own life and therefore cannot be tried for his
40:26wife's death but fred all jello and his co-conspirators can and with the philadelphia
40:32and south jersey media present the trial for the murder of april kaufman begins
40:39andrew do you know who that is yes i do and who is that uh that is fred all jello
40:44and did he have any kind of nickname in the club yes he was known as miserable one percent
40:50was that miserable one percent yes nervous andrew uh a teeny bit
40:57during the trial it's revealed that the suspected trigger man frank mahalin has passed away and his
41:04driver joe mahalin testifies against fred all jello ultimately the jury finds fred all jello guilty of
41:12murder and the state of new jersey sentences him to 30 years in prison or jello is also found guilty
41:19in
41:19federal court on drug charges and there he receives a life sentence algello now 62 must serve 55 years of
41:28his life sentence before being eligible for parole he'd be 117 years old but the true mastermind of april's
41:36murder is her husband dr jim kaufman
41:50i believe if april was still alive she would still be working with the vets
41:57you know working with things that she enjoyed or felt passionate about this is another example of
42:07men behaving badly a man with power and prestige and money literally believing he can get away
42:14with murder because he has power prestige and money the murder was cheaper than divorce
42:22james kaufman said he had an empire worth about five million dollars and he wasn't going to give her
42:29half of it i think this case inspired many of the investigators to to never give up i'm proud of
42:38the
42:38work that the men and women of the office did to get this family justice i don't have hatred in
42:47my heart
42:48and no matter what the sentence anyone will serve in this case it just doesn't bring her back
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