Moving Target | FULL EPISODE | The FBI Files

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across the country young men were being shot down the killer struck unexpectedly his attacks were unprovoked his sole motivation was racial hatred and after he killed he vanished [Applause] [Music] [Music] when a sniper in utah started targeting african-american men for death authorities launched a massive investigation with scant clues and no witnesses they found the yards stacked against them and they had no idea where the killer would strike next i'm jim calstrom former head of the fbi's new york office civil rights violations fall under federal jurisdiction so the killings become the fbi's business the investigation soon grew into a nationwide manhunt for a roving serial killer salt lake city utah on an august night in 1980 four youths walked through liberty park enjoying the last days of their summer twenty-year-old ted fields and eighteen-year-old david martin had just finished choir practice terry elrod had just begun dating david a few weeks earlier and it set up her friend karma ingersoll with ted this was their first date the four had met to jog in the park but decided to walk and talk instead they were too preoccupied with each other to notice a man watching them through the scope of his rifle when david martin dropped to his knees the others thought he was joking then terry felt something sting her arm and she knew he was deadly serious ted told the girls to take cover while he tried to help his friend [Music] then he too was shot down police and rescue units race to the [Music] scene david martin barely alive was rushed to the hospital but died hours later of three gunshot wounds ted fields the son of a police chaplain was dead witnesses told police they heard shots coming from an abandoned building across the street but no one saw the shots fired and no one saw the gunner detectives spoke with terry elrod at the nearby trauma center where she was being treated for her wound she was still badly shaken but told investigators what she could recall when she and her friends reached the intersection she thought she heard firecrackers [Music] david crumpled and she felt a sting on her arm she saw blood then realized that david was seriously wounded as she told her story she recalled something that had happened a few minutes before the shooting the group was almost hit by a car traveling the wrong way down a one-way street but she could not identify the make model or license plate and she never saw the driver salt lake city detective don bell didn't know why the youths were targeted these were young boys they'd never been in trouble with the police we didn't have an outstanding motive we didn't know whether it was something related to the girls whether something related to the boys or just a case of mistaken identity in the morning police returned to the crime scene to conduct a more thorough search in a field across from the park police found tire tracks technicians photographed and measured close to the tracks police recovered six bullet casings witnesses said they had heard the gunfire coming from the abandoned building now detectives believe that what they heard were the echoes the shooter had apparently hidden in the bushes lying in wait for the forcer to walk into range police matched the casings to the bullets that killed the two young men [Music] they sent the evidence to the fbi ballistics lab in washington dc to determine the type of gun the assassin used that would take time [Music] investigators tried to find other leads to the killer's identity bell started with the family members of the victims in particular terry elrod's father seemed like a possible suspect teach elrod led an outlaw biker gang and was upset that terry was dating a black man detective spent three days tracking him down when they found him he agreed to come in for questioning investigators were very thorough with him he said he'd been on a white water rafting trip and that friends could back up his story what i did just i didn't just have it what am i under arrest detectives weren't convinced they demanded elrod take a polygraph test he would pass and his alibi was corroborated police had no more suspects they returned to the liberty park crime scene to canvas the neighborhood one resident gary spicer told investigators he had seen something suspicious earlier that evening a car had parked close to his home and he went out to investigate hey yo buddy he saw a man packing or unpacking something in the trunk spicer asked what he was doing but the stranger simply shut the trunk and drove away spicer didn't see his face but told investigators that he was a slender white man [Music] he described the car as a camaro with chrome mags detectives thought the information was promising since the car was parked close to where they had earlier found the tire tracks two days after the murders police seemed no closer to solving it press coverage intensified and community outrage escalated we'd never had a homicide like this in salt lake city we'd never had people just gunned down especially young people gunned down in the middle of an intersection the general public wanted to know about the killings they wanted to know if they were race related with the possibility of civil rights violations concern grew in the justice department assistant u.s attorney steve snare was brought in to monitor the case members of the black community were particularly concerned and were somewhat vocal about whether this was racially motivated but at the time there were no clear answers fbi special agent curtis jensen from the salt lake city office was assigned to assist local investigators when i first heard about this case i was incensed it caused a great deal of concern among not just the black community but all of the community community in salt lake city they felt that there was an assassin loose and it could happen again as community pressure grew test results from the fbi ballistics lab in washington dc offered investigators a fresh lead examiners determined that the weapon had been a six-shot rifle either a marlin or glenfield 3030 after searching gun shops and classified ads for recent purchases investigators assembled 150 weapons that match the description [Music] they tested each one none had fired the bullets found at the scene by now it was likely that the assailant had fled the area and perhaps the state so the fbi sent out nationwide teletypes to local and federal agencies describing details of the crime including the weapon and shell cases with still no suspects a 50 000 reward was offered to promote the public's help [Music] calls flooded in all were checked none panned out most who came forward were after the money and had nothing solid to offer but one showed a hint of promise a young woman claimed she might have met the killer she identified herself as mickey a part-time prostitute she was reluctant to talk to police until detective bell assured her she wouldn't be charged if she came in for an interview she was actually a struggling college student and so she would go out two days a week and work on one of the streets that a lot of the prostitutes worked on she told the detective about a man she had met sometime in august close to the time of the killings mickey was walking down the street when a man in a camaro pulled up and asked if she wanted to party she hadn't planned on turning any tricks that day so she said no he said he'd make it worth her while she relented since she needed the money and the man didn't seem threatening he spoke with a southern accent and introduced himself as bill hagner he drove her to the regal inn motel just getting ready to go in the room mickey noticed that hagman had weapons she described two long guns that stood in the corner and one silver handgun hagman didn't talk about them and mickey was afraid to ask she also said that the man had tattoos on both arms on his left forearm was an american eagle on the right the grim reaper [Music] after their stay at the motel hagman offered to treat her to lunch then drive her home at an intersection on the way to the restaurant he pulled out his handgun and said something she would never forget he explained that he was a contract hitman for the ku klux klan and said do you want me to kill those [ __ ] she says put the gun away she was very concerned about what he was going to do he then says it's real easy i've done work like this before you just walk up you shoot them you walk on everybody's concerned with them falling no one pays any attention to you mickey was terrified but was able to talk him out of killing the pedestrian afterward hagman dropped her at her apartment where he briefly met her roommate bell wondered if mickey was reliable or just another false witness looking for the reward money even if her story was true hagman's role in the case was unclear did it have anything to do with our killing or was this just a bad guy that was blowing through town and trying to you know make this part-time hooker be impressed with his ability of being a hitman or something if mickey could identify the long guns she saw in the motel room her story would have more weight especially if she identified them as either a glenfield or marlin rifle which the fbi had determined to be the murder weapon mickey told bell she didn't know much about firearms and didn't look at the weapons for very long the detective insisted she tried but the gun she chose from the photos didn't match either murder weapon mickey's story seemed like another dead end despite his doubts bell made an appointment for her and her roommate to come back and work with a police sketch artist [Music] meanwhile investigators continued to pursue the hundreds of leads that poured in public pressure was mounting the community feared that the sniper could strike again and police didn't know that he already had three weeks after the double murder of two young black men in salt lake city the killer's identity remained unknown then the investigation took an unexpected turn local authorities received a response to the national telex sent by the fbi police in cincinnati were investigating a similar unsolved double murder that happened two months earlier on a late evening in june 1980 thirteen-year-old dante brown and fourteen-year-old daryl lane walked to the candy store close to their homes they never saw the man watching them danger struck quickly they didn't have a chance [Music] [Music] oh cincinnati police raced to the scene they found daryl lane dead dante was still alive but in serious condition both boys have been shocked [Music] officers talked to onlookers hoping someone had seen something but no one had detective mike o'brien of the cincinnati police recalls that the coroner provided investigators with their first clue the coroner responded to the scene and he had already performed a post-mortem examination on one of the young men and was able to tell the trajectory in the direction the shots were fired in the car owner pointed them towards the train tresses 75 feet away police combed the trestle among the overgrowth they recovered four spent rifle casings ballistics analysts determined that they were shot from a 44 ruger carbine rifle months had passed since the double murder in cincinnati and detectives had no suspects no one knew why someone would want to kill the teenagers this wasn't the typical homicide when you have two children 13 14 year old children that are shot sniper style shooting with no clear motive two children on their way to a candy store it obviously had the city and the neighborhood in an uproar when o'brien heard about the salt lake city sniper he invited the detectives to cincinnati to compare the cases more closely to salt lake city detective bell the connection was significant it revealed a breed of killer not encountered before 1980. once we were made aware of this information we were pretty much convinced that we were dealing with the same killer from back east and this was actually our real first involvement with what is commonly now referred to as a as a traveling serial killer this was a new concept to everybody not just out in salt lake it was a new concept anywhere in the country that killers would just travel across the country [Music] while police from both states met in cincinnati to search for answers detective bell in salt lake city followed up on the slim lead from the prostitute named mickey she told him that she'd spent time with a man named bill hagman at the regal inn motel he carried guns and drove a camaro like one described by witnesses close to the crime scene at the motel bell found a registration card signed by hagman and dated august 16th four days before the murders the address hagman listed was in kentucky we had the fbi run the name through their entire database they had nothing on that name so we felt fairly confident that everything he'd put on this registration slip was was fraudulent fbi labs in washington dc dusted the card for latent fingerprints but found none they also analyzed hagman's handwriting and noted some unique characteristics that would make it easy to identify they had no proof he was the killer but he was the only lead they had although it was a long shot a team of 20 detectives spread out to search other motels in the area they carried copies of hagman's regal in registration card hoping to match his handwriting in the event he used a different alias agent jensen recalls the extensive search and they conducted a search of all motel rooms from ogden which is 30 miles north of salt lake to provo which is 30 miles south and they located about eight motels where this individual had stayed using false names each one different using phony addresses and using false license numbers for his car local investigators also discovered the suspect had stayed at the scenic motel on august 20th the day of the murders it was just nine blocks from the shootings in liberty park [Music] though hagman used different names at each motel the fbi labs confirmed the handwriting was the same one of the cards yielded a fingerprint but a check in the national fingerprint database turned up nothing is this one of your motel registrations at the sandman motel they got another detectives discovered that his registration card listed a camaro with its license plate number okay now i see a license but a second license number was written in the margin by the motel's owners he must have been in his late 70s early 80s he went out every night around three o'clock in the morning and would take all of his motel registration slips and walk by all the cars and check their license plate numbers against what were put on the cards because he was so sure that his guests were going to steal a pillow or pillowcase when the owner checked the plates on hagman's camaro against his registration the numbers didn't match so he recorded the correct kentucky plates in the margin of the card a dmv search revealed the license plate in the camaro were registered to a member of a prominent louisville kentucky family the salt lake city detectives shared their discovery with detectives in cincinnati they immediately responded to louisville and made contact with the police agency there and tracked down the actual registered owner of this car he had in fact sold the car to another person some months before the louisville man showed detectives the sales receipt police took down the name of the purchaser the car's mileage and its brand of tires but their troubles weren't over the purchaser had used a false name the seller worked with a police sketch artist to render a composite of the buyer a slender white man with a kentucky accent back in salt lake city mickey and her roommate were also providing detectives with a composite sketch of the man who called himself hagman at the same time i met with mickey the part-time hook and her roommate and her roommate was actually an artist a student was studying art and she did a freehand drawing to begin with and then we asked her if she could work with our composite and she did and she put together a composite of this man when the composite drawing from louisville arrived in utah detectives compared the two renderings they were remarkably similar investigators now had the face of the suspected serial killer investigators hunted a serial killer who had murdered two young african-americans in cincinnati and two more in salt lake city they now had a sketch of their suspect but league detective don bell still had no name and no hard evidence connecting him with the murders we didn't have anything to charge him with however we did find a motel that he stayed here in salt lake for tonight since he left without paying we immediately applied for a warrant which was granted and we charged him with defrauding an innkeeper or failure to pay we issued that warrant under every single name that had been found on every single motel registration card the fbi entered the warrant the license plate and all of his aliases into the ncic the national crime information center a computer database that links over 57 000 law agencies nationwide on september 25th 1980 over a month after the salt lake city murders the fbi database paid off when officers in boone county kentucky arrived at a local motel to arrest a pair of jewelry thieves the manager told them that one of his patrons was complaining about the lights and noise from their vehicles seven eight police cars in the parking lot with the red lights going and the radios blaring and and another person living in this motel took offense of being disturbed by all this noise and called the manager's office and said what are the cops doing there and how come it's so noisy and you know i'm going to leave if you don't quiet down and so the manager went out and approached one of the boone county officials and said you know my tenant is really upset that you're causing all this trouble when the sergeant asked who was complaining the night manager told them that the calls were coming from room 80. the sergeant ran the license plate of the camaro registered for the man in that room the computer check tied into the fbi database turned up the warrant from utah boone county sheriffs went to room 80 a slender white male with a southern accent answered the door inside officers saw two shotguns on the bed [Music] they cuffed it and brought him in for questioning this time the fugitive registered with his real name joseph paul franklin they notified salt lake city investigators that they had their man detective bell and his colleague were on the next plane to kentucky but when they arrived boone county sheriffs had alarming news the fugitive had escaped from his low security room [Music] at some time during the interview the detective briefly leaves the room to get a something to drink for this subject and himself and it's at that point that this individual makes his escape out the window and is gone investigators still held his camaro his weapons and wallet containing his driver's license and photo salt lake city detective bell recalled how closely the photo matched the two composites looking at that license it was almost eerie it almost looked like that the composite that had been built in kentucky and the composite that i built out here in salt lake that we had done it using joseph paul franklin's driver's license the suspected serial killer was still one step ahead the fbi issued a federal warrant for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution was killed right at the scene investigators hoped the resources of the fbi could stop the killer before he struck again the fugitive's face and description flooded the media nationwide agent jensen spearheaded the manhunt for the fbi he was almost immediately put on the 10 most wanted list because of the notoriety and because of the seriousness of the crime the fact that he was a suspect not only in this uh crime but in the the assassination of a number of black people all across the united states these were cases that hadn't been solved to make the most wanted fugitives list franklin's file was reviewed among hundreds of others special agents at fbi headquarters decide the 10 most wanted based on a suspect's immediate danger to society that the suspect won't stop killing until he's caught news of the killer's escape brought a flurry of sightings including one from a kentucky teenager he said a man had offered him a hundred dollars to take him across the river to a shopping mall in cincinnati investigators swarmed the mall to interview anyone who thought they'd seen him they discovered the suspected serial killer and purchased new clothes and had his hair cut and died franklin had changed his appearance and still had a source of cash [Music] back in kentucky evidence technicians scoured the camaro for clues they took photos of its tires hoping to match them with treadmarks found near the crime scene in salt lake city they matched for detective bell it was a major breakthrough the tires were sort of a new prototype that were only being released east of the mississippi so for tires to show in a dirt field in salt lake city they would have had to have been purchased at that time east of the mississippi that placed that car with that man in our city at the fbi ballistics lab in washington dc examiners analyzed the weapons franklin had left behind they hoped to determine that one of the guns was the murder weapon [Music] he had two rifles and two handguns the fbi was able to compare the ballistics of these weapons with the bullets that were recovered from the victims bodies these did not match the fbi also searched the ncic database for criminal records and outstanding warrants for joseph paul franklin they discovered that franklin had legally changed his name his birth name was james clayton vaughn the information allowed investigators to dig more deeply into his past joseph paul franklin a suspected serial killer targeting african-american men had escaped from police in kentucky and was still on the run the fbi had determined that he changed his name from james clayton vaughan agents and local detectives traced his history to his hometown in birdtown alabama they spoke with people who knew him for cincinnati detective michael bryant a clearer picture of the fugitive started to emerge birdtown is described as basically one side of the track is black and the other side is white and so there was a lot of racial tension in his upbringing there was a lot of problems between whites and blacks in that area his mother had relatives that had been in world war ii on the side of nazi germany franklin at one point it said he had read mind comp and was very impressed with this writing joseph paul franklin had selected his new name to honor one of his heroes hitler's chief propagandist paul joseph goebbels the fbi tracked his movements over the previous year and found that they coincided with several unsolved bank robberies that that's him that's that's him agents also learned that two years earlier he had sent a letter threatening to kill president jimmy carter because of his pro-civil rights views the president was currently campaigning in the south where franklin had last been spotted the election was just weeks away if franklin was going to make good on his threat it would be soon detective bell remembers that the fbi and secret service rushed into action well they decided that joseph paul franklin also james clayton vaughn was definitely a threat to president carter because he had written that he would like to kill him so they passed pictures of joseph paul franklin in every city that the president was going to visit the fbi had to get to franklin before franklin got to the president we were able to through contacting his friends determined that during the process of his flight he was selling his blood plasma to obtain money to live on and as a result of that we sent bulletins out to all of the blood plasma centers in the southeastern part of the united states clinics across the south receive packets from the fbi with information on the killer now suspected of murder in at least seven miss states are you okay i'm just so dizzy i'll lay down there for a minute it's gonna take just a few minutes on october 28th franklin entered a clinic in the tampa area to sell his plasma technician prepping him recognized the tattoos from the fbi packet the grim reaper and the american eagle is this your first time giving blood oh my gosh i'm so dizzy [Music] franklin figured selling his blood was safer than robbery for a man on the run i'll do it all the time he was wrong the technician phoned the number the fbi provided federal agents surrounded the clinic and moved in to arrest franklin this time there would be no mistakes the killer went quietly without a fight franklin was taken to salt lake city to stand trial for the murders of ted fields and david martin but detective bell suddenly found the entire homicide case in jeopardy the county attorney didn't feel that we had a strong enough case it was purely circumstantial as far as he was concerned and he wasn't willing to go to court on on just a purely circumstantial cases but the federal government through the fbi decided to step in at that time and they felt that they had a very good strong case to bring civil rights violations against him the civil rights conviction would present obstacles of its own prosecutors would have to prove not only that he had committed the homicides in utah but that he was motivated out of racial hatred [Music] the fbi held suspected serial killer joseph paul franklin in salt lake city while federal prosecutors built a case to prove his murders were racially motivated agents reinterviewed his associates family and two ex-wines in order to get a clearer picture of franklin's racial beliefs agent jensen sent his team to franklin's hometown of birdtown alabama we were able to go back and meet with people that knew him and we were able to develop a a history of him if you will as to what he was like the fact that he had been associated with the ku klux klan he'd been associated with the american nazi party the fact that he'd been arrested a number of times for disorderly conduct and in some instances because he possessed a weapon prosecutors pursued witnesses who could testify to franklin's whereabouts and his racist views at one motel a manager agreed to speak at trial about his encounter with franklin the police had found a motel where he had stayed before the shooting took place and he'd gone and registered registered in the office and then he went to the room pulled down the covers and found a black hair in the in the bed this upset him greatly and so he uh became irate went to back to the office and yelled and screamed and and made a number of racial statements against black people wherever they went investigators found witnesses who remembered franklin's car assistant u.s attorney steve snarl recalls that franklin's camaro proved crucial to his case the car that mr franklin was driving was unique it had a unique color it had red pinstriping that was a custom kind of striping it also had unique interior features and non-standard tires and other features that were noticeable to various witnesses who had observed the car in the salt lake area and he pulled up the investigative team also interviewed two young women who had ridden in franklin's camaro we came up with two girls a lady by the name of sandra and another one by the name of ronda who actually at four o'clock four four thirty quarter to five on the day the killing were hitchhiking a couple of blocks away from the park this man in the camaro picked them up and they needed to get to the downtown bank to deposit their paycheck before it closed at five as they got in the car franklin asked them if black people hung out in the park one of the girls who was dating a black man said yes before he dropped them off he handed them printed cards that said take off your clothes bell sent the cards to the fbi lab and examiners were able to conclusively match them to similar cards found in the glove compartment of franklin's camaro the timing of the women's story was also compelling they actually saw him again that night a block and a half away from the park at 8 30. so little by little we're putting him almost in the park at the same time the victims were at the salt lake county jail franklin was held in a double lockup since he had previously escaped from police custody [Music] while there he became friendly with robert herrera an inmate serving time for burglary herrera had more recently been disciplined for brawling with a black inmate although the fight was not racially motivated franklin assumed herrera held the same hatred of african americans he looked to herrera as a confidant agent jensen recalls the importance of this relationship he told herrera he confessed to herrera that he had shot the two joggers in salt lake city and also confessed to a homicide in oklahoma city herrera arranged a meeting with the fbi and local investigators he had a proposition for them [Music] herrera would become a federal witness against franklin if the state would guarantee his early release [Music] franklin told herrera why he shot the couples in liberty park he said he believed people of different races should never mix when franklin saw the black men walking with white girls in the park he felt they should die investigators were not convinced they could trust herrera a confession to a convict would not ensure a successful prosecution you know we've got one phone two people we have to coordinate out here too when investigators requested more information herrera told him about franklin's whereabouts following the salt lake city murders well i can tell you what he did after the shootings he did the shootings he left here he went north to a town north of salt lake ogden he took the freeway across nevada through winnemucca battle mountain reno and into san francisco and he sold the rifle that he killed the kids at a flea market outside of the bay area agents and local investigators needed to confirm herrera's story if they could find the rifle franklin had used in liberty park investigators would have the peace they were missing detective bell sent his team to the flea market outside san francisco they interviewed gun dealers and other witnesses so they saturated the flea market and they did come up with witnesses who remembered joseph paul franklin and remembered that he was selling guns but we could never find the gun even without the weapon herrera's story was confirmed franklin's movements following the murders would be critical for the prosecution well this was pretty good information because we'd never been able the fbi ourselves no one had ever been able to find out where mr franklin had gone after doing the killing after agents corroborated his story they met with herrera again he told investigators about other crimes franklin confessed to franklin admitted shooting hustler publisher larry flint crippling him in 1977 for portraying black men with white women in his magazine franklin also said he shot vernon jordan the president of the national urban league in may of 1980. federal prosecutors felt they had enough to bring the civil rights case to trial well the prosecution was an involved prosecution involving 65 witnesses and approximately 100 different exhibits however we managed to expedite the case and move things along and telling our story and recreating the actions and things that took place the trial lasted five and a half days and we were done the jury deliberated just five hours finding joseph paul franklin guilty of the federal civil rights violations the judge sentenced him to two life terms was furious that he was going to prison for the rest of his life but more so because an african-american prosecutor helped put him there [Applause] in a rage franklin jumped out of his chair and threw water on the attorney he was quickly subdued by the marshals and carted away in an interview following his sentencing franklin finally admitted to investigators what motivated the killings in utah and across the country he said himself that he is a racist that he had a plan to assassinate as many blacks as he could this was his whole purpose after the successful federal trial the salt lake county prosecutor felt he could win a state homicide case against franklin franklin was escorted to the courthouse where he had spent the last two months during the federal trial during a recess he was left unattended in a holding room before the court officer returned he freed himself and pried the door off its hinges franklin had escaped no one knew how he escaped from the holding cell but when the jailers went to bring him back into court before the jury came in he wasn't in the conference room it looked as if joseph paul franklin was free once again to continue his path of terror the elevator was his only way out and only operable with a guard's key but a marshall found the control panel dismantled franklin had hot wired it using only a dime and a paper clip he was able to take the plate off the elevator the prisoner elevator and strip the wires and call the elevator to that floor and then he disappeared police closed off the streets as jailers searched the courthouse for the fugitive the rest of us we immediately put out an area-wide alert that this man had escaped and we brought every available officer there there was scouring the downtown area the same time the jailer decided that maybe he noticed that the top panel on the elevator had been loosened so he climbed up on top of the elevator and noticed some movement in the dust and thought well somehow he's in this building so that particular jailer started crawling every single air duct in the courthouse he found him franklin scurried like a rat in the ductwork always remaining out of his reach but when franklin came to the end of the duct the second guard was waiting that's a bracelet right here he was back in custody within an hour get him out of here we cleaned him off and combed his hair and brought him back in and the jury was none the wiser they just got an extra hour for lunch over his next 17 years in prison franklin confessed to 16 murders in eight states in all that time he never admitted to the double homicide in cincinnati hi detective mike o'brien never gave up [Music] he continued to build his case hoping to convict franklin of the cincinnati murders o'brien's break came when he was able to convince franklin to interview with melissa powers an assistant district attorney from cincinnati the minute that mr franklin walked in the room and sat down and miss powers introduced herself told him who she was why she was there he said you know i did it i killed those two kids in cincinnati immediately as he sat down which was what i've been trying to get him to do for some 17 years he did in a matter of about 30 seconds in 1998 franklin received two more life sentences for the cincinnati murders in missouri he was sentenced to death for two others franklin would never have another opportunity to escape detective don bell remained haunted by franklin's rampage of violence i don't understand this type of killer that he would actually just take a complete stranger and because of their race and who they were standing by or talking to he would feel it necessary to kill him he's one of those those few people that i just have absolutely no explanation for and i it's it's still hard for me to understand for the families of franklin's victims peace had finally come franklin would never be free to kill [Music] again [Applause] [Music] you
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Channel: The FBI Files
Views: 780,446
Rating: 4.6490593 out of 5
Keywords: FBI, FBI Files, FBI Documentary, Documentary, Crime, Crime Documentary, Crime Patrol, True Crime, True crime daily, Unsolved, Crime Stories, Crime Documentaries Full Episodes, Full Episode, unsolved true crime, fbi files full episodes, we got him, mystery, solved, investigation, police, criminal, prison, jail, Moving Target, Moving target FBI files, white, white supremacist
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Length: 49min 53sec (2993 seconds)
Published: Sat Aug 22 2020
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