Police Sergeant Turns Criminal | The New Detectives | Real Responders

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[Music] in hollywood a dead man isn't who he appears to be and someone just walked away with a million dollar insurance benefit now forensics must prove that murder was part of the package [Music] a police officer kills his wife in a creep car accident but investigators believe he may have been driven to homicide a simple farmer stands accused of murdering his brother and a town rallies to his defense so does forensic science they look death in the face every day of their lives that's from fragments of bone drops of blood and slivers of tissue they can piece together the shattered circumstances that bring the deceased to their labs everybody has a story to tell and each is a page in the coroner's [Music] facebook [Music] when someone dies their work begins coroners medical examiners and criminalists know that every kind of death leaves its subtle mark and they know murder when they see it [Music] early in the morning of april 16 1988 the glendale californian 9-1-1 dispatcher received a call about a man in cardiac arrest [Music] the call was placed by dr richard boggs a respected neurologist when paramedics arrived at his office he explained that the man was one of his patients named gene hanson who had a history of heart trouble the victim had credit cards in hanson's name before he called 911 said he'd done all he could to revive his patient but nothing worked [Music] gene hansen was declared dead at the scene at the la county coroner's office the body was given a routine autopsy the office seized 200 bodies each day and this one was just another face in the crowd [Music] seeing no immediate cause of death except for a few marks on the heart the coroner deferred to the diagnosis of the victim's personal physician dr bob's cause of death was listed as heart failure due to a dangerous heart condition [Music] the body was released to the hands of john hawkins henson's companion and his partner in their successful sportswear business he flew to california from ohio to claim the remains he had them cremated in respect for hansen's last request hawkins as his partner's sole beneficiary then received the first million of hansen's 1.5 million dollar life insurance policy usually that would be the end of the story but this story was just getting started five months after the death an insurance agent was closing hanson's file when she noticed something strange the face on hanson's autopsy photo didn't resemble the photo supplied by the department of motor vehicles to double check she requested that the thumbprint on file at the dmv be compared with the one from the autopsy no doubt about it these were two different men and that raised two vital questions where was the real hanson and who was the dead man the agent had uncovered something a lot more serious than insurance fraud though they're situated next to each other the difference between glendale california and north hollywood is like night and day but this is where glendale police went to solve the mystery of the dead man who wasn't gene hansen police determined from fingerprints and missing persons reports that the man was really a bookkeeper named alice greene he was last seen leaving a bar in north hollywood on april 15th the next day he was declared dead under an assumed name in dr boggs's office sergeant john perkins of the glendale police tried to sort out what happened a photograph of ellis green's body that was depicted in the in the doctor's office was taken to his elderly aunt and that photo was shown to her she identified that as being ellis green her nephew now we knew we had the real body the real name but we still didn't have an exact or proximal cause of death demonstrating how green died was only half the task before him investigators also had to prove that the real gene hansen was still alive by now months had passed if hanson were alive he had an enormous head start to find a hiding place john hawkins his partner in this elaborate insurance scam had also vanished along with one million dollars of insurance money michael john perkins police concentrated on the last person to see the victim alive dr boggs hello police paid a visit to him to find out about the man who died in his office boggs told them that he'd been a patient for years boggs knew him only as melvin eugene hansen or gene he had no reason to suspect it was an assumed name sergeant perkins examined them it was possible that dr boggs was telling the truth gene hanson's record showed that he'd been repeatedly warned about his condition but refused to follow doctor's orders but it was also possible that dr boggs was in on this elaborate insurance scam and the records themselves were doctored perkins pulled three ekg strips dated several months apart he wondered if they truly demonstrated the life-threatening heart condition that supposedly killed green he asked a cardiologist to analyze the ekgs the heart specialist told him that they indicated a mild common condition that wasn't fatal perkins was more suspicious than ever that dr boggs had intentionally faked the records but he couldn't prove it then he found the answer was right on the ekg strips simple enough for even a layman to understand late one night i was sitting at my desk and look at these these ekg strips and i'm going through them and i'm looking at them and suddenly it became very obvious one was was completely clean one had a a red dye halfway down the length of the ekg strip and the other one had a complete die from the entire length of the ekg strip and you suddenly think wait a minute these are all connected so i put them up on the desk and put them in to end and sure enough the fractures matched perfectly [Music] the red markings signaling the end of the roll formed one continuous darkening line across two of the three strips allowing perkins to put them into sequential order but when he did so the dates that bogged wrote on the back of the strip were out of order and months apart these were fabricated ekg strips while perkins was making his discovery the case was progressing on a different front you want to check this area police were following the trail of ellis green's credit card purchases the dead man's cards were still active and still in use investigators weren't sure who was using them but they hoped it was the real gene hansen they tracked the card to a bungalow on key west florida the rental agent confirmed that the tenant was a man named ellis greene he had moved out weeks earlier and the apartment hadn't been rented since detectives look for any clues that could reveal the identity of the former occupant on a glass in a cabinet they found one a fingerprint it matched gene hanson's now they had proof that he was alive then in january 1989 nine months after his reported death gene henson traveling under another assumed name was stopped at the dallas-fort worth airport returning from mexico he'd been acting eccentrically enough for customs agents to pull him over and inspect his suitcases they found 14 000 in cash that he failed to declare thereby breaking the law they also found the ids for 13 people among them was ellis greens the dead man in dr boggs's office here was proof that he'd switched identities with the victim and pocketed some of his own death benefits he was arrested with gene hanson captured and the incriminating ekg strips police had enough to arrest boggs as well they knew they had him for conspiracy to commit insurance fraud in fact they uncovered evidence that he and hansen had pulled off some fraudulent claims in the past the two of them along with john hawkins staged car accidents for the insurance money dr boggs was the physician who signed off on their medical claims but was there enough evidence to prove that boggs actually murdered ellis green as part of the conspiracy without a body they didn't seem to have much of a case bodz claimed that they originally hoped to steal a body from the moor but that proved impossible then by gruesome coincidence the conspirators said they happened upon ellis green's body shortly after he died despite how unlikely the story sounded boggs challenged the prosecution to prove he was lying glendale police sergeant john perkins had to somehow turn an elaborate insurance scam to a case of homicide gene hanson the man who faked his own death and richard boggs the accommodating physician were already in custody perkins was eager to put all the pieces together and wrap it up but there was still no sign of john hawkins the beneficiary who fled with the million-dollar insurance payout and still investigators were short on evidence to prove what they strongly suspected that dr boggs murdered ellis green to pass him off as gene hanson we really needed somebody who could look at the entire pieces of evidence that we had that being the autopsy report some of the tissues there was a stomach content that was collected at the time of autopsy and and examined those from an independent view to look at the crime scene photos to give us some indication as to this person did not die of natural causes and that's when we brought in dr michael bodden michael baden is the executive director of the new york state police forensic science unit he's also an expert on the nuances that death leaves on the body he has worked on the congressional committees that investigated the deaths of john f kennedy and martin luther king jr in the case of ellis green baden had slides of his heart lung and liver tissue as well as photographs of the victim that were taken shortly after death [Music] from this evidence baden could determine two facts with confidence one green did not have a fatal heart condition and two his skin which showed no other marks was blue at the time of death suggesting lack of oxygen from these two facts baden reached a single conclusion green was suffocated except for the telltale blue color in the absence of a struggle suffocation leaves no marks its diagnosis comes from eliminating all other possible causes of death it's a diagnosis of exclusion a bullet wound we don't need a diagnosis of exclusion because we find a hole in the body a stab wound or a blow from a baseball bat all the marks on the body that we can see at autopsy but if something is put over the nose and mouth causing a person to die because he or she can't breathe and then that object is removed the hand or a pillow at the autopsy there's no specific finding that's going to say that he was suffocated the evidence was enough to convince a jury that the three men had planned the crime together and the dr boggs the healer was dr boggs a killer these three individuals were not strangers to crime they had hooked up probably four years before this particular murder and they had worked out different ways of committing insurance fraud and the plan that they evolved was somebody had to die that person they agreed was to be gene hansen and the only way that they could pull this thing off was with a doctor and that doctor was dr boggs police believe that boggs picked ellis green up at a bar the last place he had been seen he bought him some drinks to make him more compliant the victim's blood alcohol content was well above the legal limits [Music] [Music] just in case the victim was still sober enough to fight back boggs may have incapacitated him with a stun gun [Music] then the victim was smothered without putting up a fight perkins believes that the forensic pathologist's determination of murder made this case winnable dr bodden's testimony in this particular case i feel was was that last inning uh you're down by two uh and bases are loaded and dr boden came in and basically hit a home run for us in 1990 richard boggs was found guilty of first-degree murder and fraud he was sentenced to life without possibility of parole it took three years and a worldwide manhunt before police caught up with john hawkins on the island of sardinia in 1995 both he and melvin eugene hansen were convicted of fraud grand theft and conspiracy to commit murder hansen was given life without parole hawkins received 25 years to life the work of the medical examiner undermined the murderous conspiracy of gene hansen and his cohorts but whether a crime is ingenious or devilishly simple the forensics required to solve it is equally complex on the rainy night of november 27 1992 just after 9 30 p.m a passing motorist reported what looked like an accident on hawaii's volcano highway police arrived to find a van facing the wrong way apparently after spinning the responding officer recognized the owner of the band to be ken matheson a sergeant on the police force ken was badly shaken up his wife yvonne fared much worse ken had tended to her in the back of the van until help arrived she had lost a lot of blood [Music] by strange coincidence yvonne matheson was a nurse who helped deliver the responding officer's first child weeks before paramedics moved her into the ambulance to rush her to the hospital at hilo the hospital where she worked became the place where she died when ken matheson's fellow officers heard about the incident on the police radio they went to see him at the hospital [Music] matheson told one of his colleagues that his wife's death was a terrible accident she was driving the van when they started to fight things escalated and raged beyond reasons yvonne jumped out of the open window of the moving van [Music] said he slid over to steer the vehicle then backed up to look for his wife that's when he ran over her yvonne and ken matheson had once been divorced but then decided to give their marriage a second chance it seemed to be working this time give or take the usual rough spots then this tragedy destroyed it all according to hilo police any accident that results in death is considered negligent homicide for this misdemeanor matheson could expect a maximum fine of one thousand dollars and a year in jail long day at the least he'd be fined 100 or be sentenced to 100 hours of community service don't worry in any case he'd be able to keep his badge he didn't protest the charges as in any sudden death a complete investigation would have to be conducted it was a formality the death of yvonne matheson was unfortunate and tragic but police had no reason to doubt ken's story while the investigation was underway matheson stayed on active duty with the police force but after inspecting the scene of the accident hawaii county police noticed some minor inconsistencies between the roadside evidence and matheson's story at first they seemed hardly worth mentioning each year tourists flock to hawaii to escape the cares of their daily lives the sun the surf and the primal fiery beauty of the volcanoes exert their cleansing influence for hawaii's inhabitants life in paradise goes on just like anywhere else crimes are permitted accidents happen and investigators are charged with determining which is which in hilo traffic investigators inspected the area where the wife of sergeant ken mathison lost her life they found relatively little blood on the highway compared to what was found in the van though it was a little peculiar they wrote it off to the rain and the fact that ken matheson had rushed his dying wife into the van after he struck her at the police impoundment lot the van had its own story to tell [Music] it was routine procedure for a vehicle involved in a fatal accident to undergo a mechanical inspection it negates any future defense claims of faulty equipment police also had to be sure the van was safe to drive before they could release it to matheson because of the nature of this accident the undercarriage was thoroughly inspected hawaii county police traffic investigator martin pelazar was surprised by the relative lack of damage he found there however when he was done inspecting the outside the interior of the van caught his interest i peered inside from the outside and i could see blood stains blood stains on the driver's side window blood stains on the plastic cover to the panel area fronting the steering wheel blood stains up above there was a heavy concentration of blood and hair on that bolt there was no reason for blood to be in the driver's portion of the vehicle elazar needed a closer look but to search inside the van required a warrant he asked deputy attorney general kurt spong to request one the warrant came through in the nick of time three months had passed since the incident according to spun their main piece of evidence almost slipped through their fingers you do a mechanical inspection and once all the mechanical inspections and the search warrants are finished you return the van to the owner and in this case uh the van was authorized to be returned to the owner fortunately matheson hadn't picked it up yet the van was secure the release authorization was cancelled a search warrant for the band's interior was issued now sponge had to face the dismal possibility that sergeant matheson's story might be a lie and though they still had the van another piece of vital evidence was lost forever we decided that this case was possibly more than a negligent homicide and because of that we decided we should probably have a forensic pathologist do an autopsy in this case however at that time we found out that the body had been cremated [Music] yvonne matheson's body had been autopsied three days after her death on the island of hawaii the coroner is also the chief of police a pathologist from a nearby hospital is retained as a consultant the pathologist was told that the death was accidental but a pathologist specializes in natural causes of death such as disease even so he could tell that the victim's injuries didn't jive with ken matheson's account the pathologist noted injuries to the victim's head arms and hands that weren't consistent with being run over or tumbling out of the vehicle but the interpretation of these injuries lay outside the scope of the consulting pathologist's training [Music] it was really a job for a forensic pathologist who specializes in death by unnatural causes still puzzled by his findings the pathologist was sure to photograph every aspect of the victim and to take tissue samples now that the victim had been cremated they were all that was left a tragic accident case was now turning ugly sponge knew there was enough cause to open a homicide investigation but without a body there might not be enough evidence to resolve it the original pathologist's photos and the evidence from the ban would have to be enough he braced himself for the inevitable public outcry [Music] in some ways it's kind of a no-win situation if you investigate and find out that the police officer is innocent and you announce that everybody says well it's swept under the rug because this is a police officer and if you investigate the case and you find out that the officer is guilty and you charge them everybody says you're only charging him because you're buckling under the public pressure and he's actually innocent sure enough six months into the investigation widespread criticism forced sergeant ken mathison's superiors to put him on desk duty while he remained a suspect the press coverage brought to light an intriguing incident a witness who read about the case in the papers told investigators that on the night of the accident he stopped to help shortly after 9pm as he pulled over a man possibly ken mathison stepped from the back of the van and shined a flashlight in his eyes he told the samaritan that no one was injured the police had already been called then he sent him away [Music] investigators now suspected that perhaps the passerby interrupted the crime in progress they just had to prove it martin one of the interesting things about in hawaii deputy attorney general kurt spohn faced the unhappy task of investigating sergeant ken matheson for murder to find out more about the blood spatter in the driver's area of matheson's van he asked a colleague to locate the best blood spatter expert in the country a couple of days later he told me that it was someone by the name of dr henry lee who was the head of the connecticut state forensics laboratory henry lee who is now commissioner of the state's department of public safety uses the laws of physics to uphold the laws of justice his expertise is reading clues written in blood he's not afraid to get his hands dirty in the process like any substance blood is affected by gravity and momentum every kind of bloodshed leaves behind characteristic clues stabbing will create a dripping pattern the relatively low velocity of the weapon doesn't propel blood too far from the source [Music] a speeding bullet on the other hand creates a bloody mist and a bludgeoning wound produces large spatters that can spray far [Music] by examining the tiny tails behind each drop of blood lee can determine the position of the victim and the amount of force used to create the injury from this and from the size of the wound he can determine the type of weapon used and deduce the circumstances of a person's death [Music] lee is perhaps most famous for his work on the o.j simpson trial he's also helped identify victims in mass graves in bosnia [Music] as soon as lee received the photos taken from the matheson case he poured over them and became suspicious [Music] he felt he was definitely looking at a crime scene after i received the photograph did the detailed examination my initial reaction something is wrong with this case some far plate took in place inside the van from the photographs of the driver's side window lee could tell that the blood at the front of the van was spattered at medium velocity suggesting blunt force trauma it appeared the victim was struck multiple times the blood stains on the window also contradicted matheson's assertion that his wife dived out of it at the time of incident this window was up approximately 200 medium velocity blood spider was noticed in this area alone lee needed to see the van first hand to trace the trajectory of the spatter [Music] strings were connected to each droplet to determine their common point of origin it turned out to be the driver's seat area about the height where a person's head would be these findings showed the damage was inflicted before she left the vehicle the photos from the autopsy showed that the victim's head had sustained enough damage to kill her once dr lee determined that a struggle had occurred in the van investigators knew that ken matheson was lying his motive for killing his wife was probably money if she died in an accident he would be paid 595 thousand dollars and if she died in an automobile related accident he'd be paid 675 thousand dollars [Music] based on the evidence ken matheson was arrested on his day off [Music] police pieced together the murder while yvonne was driving ken matheson struck her with a blunt object she probably stopped the vehicle or he gained control and brought it to a stop he continued beating her to the brink of death marks on her hand suggested she had tried to defend herself in the dark matheson probably didn't realize he was leaving the blood spatters that would be his undoing once he was sure that his wife wouldn't survive he carried her out of the van and ran over her he carried her back into the van and waited for someone to stop and call for help we had you know a gut feeling and a lot of suspicions we didn't have any hard evidence so dr lee's blood spatter analysis is what gave us our first piece of really hard evidence in 1995 ken matheson was sentenced to life imprisonment for kidnapping and murder he's not eligible for parole for 25 years sometimes the coroner's findings can only tell part of the story when that happens forensic criminalists like dr lee give a voice to the victims who would otherwise be silenced forever victim died she cannot testify physical evidence speak for her matheson's simple but gruesome crime was undone by some forensic details that he just didn't count on but can the same forensic science that proves murder also be used to prove that no murder was committed experts in new york state hoped it could the town of munsville in central new york is one of those quiet picturesque places that blends unnoticed into the landscape as motorists rush past in june 1990 it became an unlikely battleground for a most unlikely soldier [Music] the trouble started in a shabby farmhouse outside of town delbert ward 59 awoke at dawn to milk his cows he tried earlier to awaken his brother william but he didn't move william hadn't been feeling well lately delbert thought it best to let him sleep delbert would take care of the chores without him today the four ward brothers were quiet and simple-minded they'd spent their entire lives on the dairy farm it was their universe all they had and all they knew reclusive and childlike the brothers even shared their bed probably as they had done since boyhood william the oldest is also the smartest and strongest he ran the show delbert was his right-hand man the other brothers roscoe and lyman occasionally pitched in to help out but on this day june 6th delbert was on his own even after he finished his chores he couldn't wake brother william something was wrong the men didn't know what to do because the ward brothers had no phone delbert and roscoe walked to a neighbor's house to call for help their fourth brother lyman watched after william until it arrived 20 minutes after delbert placed the call state troopers and the madison county coroner appeared at the farm william's body was examined no signs of foul play were noted it seemed that 64 year old william died peacefully in his sleep [Music] his body was transported to the medical examiner's office while police interviewed the surviving brothers in the following days the brothers tried to get on with their work it would be difficult without brother bill delbert's life would be much harder and his troubles were just beginning at williams autopsy the assistant medical examiner took tissue samples and careful notes no indicators of natural disease were noted in the report however something unusual demanded attention pinpoint size hemorrhages in william's eyes mouth and windpipe these tiny spots called petechial hemorrhages can have a number of causes often it's the first tip-off to death by suffocation the assistant medical examiner couldn't rule out death by unnatural means on the death certificate cause of death was listed as pending further study the district attorney was contacted and told the case was bothersome and here's where communication apparently began to break down [Music] the message was passed along to the state police and the suspicions about the petechial hemorrhages became garbled along the way now the possibility of homicide became a certainty [Applause] delbert was taken to the station for questioning he was interviewed for four hours according to attorney ralph cognetti in albany new york delbert was confused by all the attention he only wanted to return to the farm so he was soon willing to say anything he signed the confession tell them what they want to hear and they'll let you go home and that's in fact what they said to him they certainly didn't let him go home after he confessed but if you have an opportunity to read the confession it really sounds like a harvard dissertation and you you you know certainly inside that that did not come from from delbert's lips [Music] nevertheless the confession coupled with the autopsy results were enough to arrest delbert [Music] later a grand jury handed up an indictment against him for second-degree murder [Music] to the people of munsville population 400 it was absurd to think that delbert would or could have killed his brother they believed the state had it all wrong when his bail was set at ten thousand dollars the whole town chipped in and raised the money in a matter of hours the kindness of the neighbors and the plight of delbert ward earned an article in the new york times the groundswell of support for delbert began to grow a friend of the wards brought ralph cognetti into the case based on his conversation with delbert cognetti was convinced of his client's innocence a review of the evidence suggested that the homicide charge was based more on delbert's confession than on the physical evidence from the medical examiner's office as cognetti was putting his defense together he received a fateful call [Music] the man identified himself as cyril wecht the name meant nothing to cognati i hear was a gentleman who explained he was a forensic pathologist from pittsburgh and he read the article read the story about the boys and was willing to review whatever evidence we had without any cost to us in other words what you're telling me is dr cyril wecht's reputation spreads far beyond the walls of the coroner's office in pittsburgh where he works as the chief forensic pathologist for allegheny county he's helped investigators on the assassination of robert kennedy and is consulted in the death of elvis presley besides degrees in medicine wept also holds a degree in law he'd read about the delbert ward case in the new york times and it piqued his interest he requested william ward's case file after i reviewed the case file which included the autopsy report my initial impression was that there was an inadequate basis for any forensic pathologist to conclude that this was an asphyxiation death from suffocation smothering there simply were not adequate findings for such a diagnosis using the assistant medical examiner's original notes wecht formulated a more mundane diagnosis william ward died of heart disease the number one killer of men his age in america the ward brothers had in fact told authorities that william had been in poor health for years but he refused to see a physician his symptoms were consistent with cardiovascular disease supporting west's theory but the prosecution believed that william's illness may have provided a motive for his murder did delbert ward kill his brother william the state of new york said he did according to their theory delbert suffocated his brother to release him from his failing health they said that it may have been a mercy killing but it was murder nonetheless the prosecution pointed to delbert's odd behavior on the day of william's death when delbert couldn't rouse his brother at the crack of dawn like he normally did he went about his chores anyhow to the prosecution that lack of concern suggested guilt to ralph cognetti it said more about the realities of life on a farm it was a point that the prosecutor jumped on how could a person who was so concerned about his brother's well-being go and mill cows what came out at trial and what i'm sure the jurors knew because we had one or two dairy farmers on the jury was that if you don't milk a cow when it needs to be milked and that cow is going to get very ill cogniti and cyril wet stuck with the idea that william died of natural causes but they had to prove it the victim had already been buried all wet had to work from were the autopsy records those same records and tissue samples that the state claimed showed nothing unusual besides the petechial hemorrhages that's not how wett read them he was confident that he had everything he needed to prove ward's innocence according to the thin tissue samples gathered at william ward's autopsy along with the medical examiner's data william's heart was enlarged and his coronary artery suffered a blockage of 20 percent his right lung was heavily scarred and weighed twice as much as his left his liver and spleen also were enlarged without a drastic change in habits death by heart disease seemed inevitable but wecht had to undermine the prosecution's assertion that he was murdered to be relieved of his suffering though had only photographs and tissue samples of william ward to work from he called upon his vast experience on other cases where he had examined the bodies directly he noted the petechiae the telltale red hemorrhages found in the victim's eyes and mouth to the state these were clear signs of strangling they eclipsed all other symptoms while it's true that petechial hemorrhages can indicate smothering they're not enough to prove it beyond a doubt unless a person is somehow incapacitated before he's smothered the body will likely show signs of a struggle william wards did not no injuries around the mouth in the mouth and the tongue the gums no injuries on or around the neck no evidence of increased fluidity of the blood no evidence of increased blueness of the blood no aspiration of gastric contents that will occur as a person struggles so we had none of it for the defense there was no evidence of murder william simply died in his sleep of heart disease the homicide charge was the result of an unfortunate series of miscommunications that had grown out of control or you can take the incident seen by one person and then passed on to a second into a third and then when you get down to the sixth or the tenth or the fifteenth you'll find that that story bears very little relationship to the original creation to the original version coming into the case as an outsider wet was immune to the preconceptions that delbert ward was a murderer by looking at the case with a fresh perspective he won delbert's freedom on april 5th 1991 delbert ward was acquitted of all charges it grew like a bomb almost it started small and then by the end of the trial he became what he is today really a a legend certainly in that part of the state cyril wept believes that the situation that delbert ward found himself in was not unusual he's seen many cases that were tainted by a medical examiner's wrong assumptions an investigator's speedy conclusion or a simple misunderstanding unfortunately these errors tend to compound themselves we work closely and constantly with homicide detectives with police with district attorneys we hear their versions consciously subconsciously those versions begin to take hold and the mind then begins to work and you build up then your own impressions ultimately your own opinions and conclusions that fit in best with us [Music] no matter how mysterious or suspicious of death may appear the truth can be resurrected in the lab every day the forensic skills of the medical examiner foreigner and crime scene expert prove that the most important witness to a death is the deceased [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Music] you
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Channel: Real Responders
Views: 1,021,735
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Keywords: police documentary, the new detectives, investigation, police investigation, true detectives, real crimes, real detectives, private detective, serial killers podcast, crime documentary murders 2020, crime documentary murders, crime documentary murders solved, true crime youtubers, serial killers never caught, new detectives documentary, the new detectives season 4, crime reenactment, investigation discovery, serial killer documentary, wife killer, wife killers documentary
Id: -MHx5GF1ssk
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Length: 52min 34sec (3154 seconds)
Published: Mon Sep 21 2020
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