The Real Walter White | Forensics | Real Crime

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a handless corpse is washed up on a remote beach investigators have little to go on who is he where has he come from and who has murdered him so brutally in this case the science of pathology provides the investigation with crucial data a segment of skin proves to be key as science unravels the macabre story of operation red rocks a crime scene is a puzzle that has to be solved a whodunit a scattering of clues to be deciphered by clever detective work and the power of science [Music] red rocks is on the south coast of wellington it's a pretty wind-swept barren beach frequented by locals out walking their dogs or having a look at the seal colony that's sometimes around there but generally not many people are around there [Music] about eight o'clock a person was out walking their dog and found what they thought was a body on the beach however because of the fact that the body had some missing limbs wasn't quite sure so rung the police [Music] at that point we weren't sure what the tides were doing but given the waves seemed to be coming in closer and closer to the bank and actually picking the body up and moving it we felt that the tide was probably coming in we made a decision well we're actually going to need to go into the water retrieve the body and bring it up to you know beyond the high tide mark and two of us went into the water when i went to grab the body it was the first time i actually noticed that the ankles had been bound together using some sort of type of tape the body was dismembered the head almost separated and the hands completely severed it was incredibly surreal and here we were looking at quite a macabre scene it's very rare to find bodies in new zealand with hands or other limbs missing in circumstances like this so it was pretty obvious that it was a homicide the search began for clues as to who the victim was and where he had come from we had to search the length of the beach and on the other side of the road that took a lot of staff and that became quite a detailed crime scene examination where we used the expertise of the specialist search group who were able to come in and basically grid off an area and they searched pebble by working fastidiously to salvage what they could before the tide turned it was an unidentified body and nobody knew why or by whom so everything could be important you've got no idea what's potentially relevant or what's not i remember standing there looking at the staff who were on the beach doing this crime scene examination thinking wow what are they actually going to find on this barren beach after an initial wide sweep investigators focused in on four separate scenes there was where the body had been located that was where tarpaulin was located on the beach there was the area of water where the wolf police had found another tarpaulin the place had found what looked like car marks in the stones we found almost some quite deep depressions as if somebody's been wheel spinning we found cigarette butts near those car marks redrock's beach is made up of lots of really fine tiny pebbles so you do sink into that quite quickly and part of the scene examination found a very very distinct drag mark from the location of where a vehicle had been stuck right down into the water we found blood on some of the stones in that this what looked like a trail finding the blood on some of the dry stones above the high water map and then blood on the tarpaulin a bit further down and indications that a car had been there is a bit more than just coincidental you know when you've got an unidentified body with the hands cut off all potential evidence is tagged and bagged for further processing as officers continue work on the beach a post-mortem is already underway i'm meeting with pathologist simon stables to discuss what he can determine from the autopsy were there any observations that gave you an insight into what may have happened i think so just looking at the sequence of the injuries he had evidence of several blows to the back of the head one relatively high up and once in a slightly low down there was a small laceration just under the chin and he also had an abrasion on his forehead and that pattern of those injuries suggested me that he's hit face first on the ground what i think has happened is he's had one blow to the relatively the top of the head he's then gone forward another blow to the back of the head and then he's fallen to the ground and it's at that stage he then has further blows to the head he has then survived for a period of time because fluid has accumulated in the chest and fluid can accumulate in the chest after a person's had a head injury if he had died immediately of his head injuries that fluid wouldn't have accumulated he also had a large cut to the left and the front of the neck the crotted artery and the jugular vein they were cut and that was actually the fatal injury we needed to identify who the victim actually was so that was our primary focus at that stage obviously from the start we had to consider that was the purpose of the limbs being missing was actually to prevent identification [Music] the only items of clothing that he had on him were a pair of shoes and a pair of unbranded black socks and we had a pair of cotton trousers but the real item of value to us of significance was this black leather dunhill branded belt which unlike the rest of the clothing was quite unique the clothing is photographed and released to the public in the hope that someone would be able to identify the wearer [Music] the tape that bound the ankles is removed and examined often you can get in between the layers of the sellotape so as the cellotape's been wrapped around an item you can sometimes get dna or fingerprints contained within that so even though we have a body that's been in the water for perhaps at least 24-48 hours there's still a possibility that we may find evidence within the layers of that tape [Music] evidence that could identify the victim or his killer the tape is fumigated with super glue to show up any latent fingerprints we use superglue fumes which react with moisture and fingerprints and then we put a dye on that once the dye is fixed it is washed off and then a fluorescent light is used to expose any potential prints unfortunately in this case no fingerprints were developed on that tear leaving no clues as to who had bound the victim investigators make inquiries in the direct vicinity of where the body was discovered we located a number of residents who had been round in batches further round past the crime scene and some of those residents told us about an event that had happened on the saturday night where they had located a car a blue saparu that had been stuck in sand initially they were sort of chuckling here was a person who was foolish enough to bring a vehicle down into the red rocks beach so they actually helped him get out of the beach towed him out and he carried on his way so here we had a sighting of a blue sabaro the night before we find the body on the beach stuck so we're going well that's interesting could be relevant could be completely irrelevant and if it is relevant had the helpful locals just unwittingly assisted the killer in getting away investigators believe the hands were removed from the body washed up on red rocks beach to avert identification a post-mortem provides a cause of death a sequence of injuries and one other important detail even though both hands have been removed he still had a small amount of his palm skin left on his right wrist the hand had been removed roughly at this level there was another chop there and another one slightly further back and curving around the side here was a little flap of skin present at the autopsy with two fingerprint offices and i suggested this may be sufficient to identify him identifying an individual from a palm isn't as unusual as it sounds as fingerprint officer brent stinson explains our palms and our hands and our fingertips and the length of our fingers is all made up of the same ridge skin and it's all unique and identifiable to each person okay so i figured just to grab this far so i can demonstrate how we can take a hard print off that thank you thank some places you're more likely to get a palm print than a fingerprint yes areas that our hands would wrap around sometimes our fingers don't touch the end of the item and we're like more likely to find a palm on it such as if we're pushing the vehicle down the road we might push our hands on the on the back of the bonnet or our righteous palmer's area which is found down the side of our palm here which is quite common from when we're putting their hand down and writing letters or writing checks place the powder on here start to develop up the ridges of your palm quite different to the fingerprint isn't it in terms of the structure there yes they are the palm we break up into three areas one is the interdigital area which is the area underneath our fingers the thin area which is where our thumb is and opposite that we have the hypothenar area so how often would you use a palm print in the case currently we have about 25 to 30 of our daily workload would involve palm print identifications in this case the body had been in the water for many hours so working with the small piece of skin was going to be a challenge the easiest method was to remove the piece of skin and then photograph it flat we shine a torch at an angle and that highlights the ridges in the skin and then we take this in black and white because we find the contrast is easier to see the ridges and the ridge detail through this process officers were able to get a partial palm print not enough to get a match through the national database but it still could prove to be key [Music] this investigation attracted a large media presence because of the picab nature of the fact that the limbs were missing that actually helped us because it got that message out to a wider audience in new zealand the police ran a hotline and within a day of releasing information a concerned woman came forward and identified the victim as tony stanley she was obviously very close with tony they would have regular communication she didn't live in wellington so it wasn't like she was around there every day but they would certainly talk quite regularly on the telephone and send messages to one another she had been unable to talk or reach tony for two or three days which was highly unusual when the media was released around the belt and the description of the body she had that sinking feeling and knew oh my gosh there must be tony and immediately contacted our inquiry team to say hey look you know i haven't seen my partner now for three days and he fits the description that you're you're asking for the fingerprints team researched their records we obtained the hard copy of the fingerprint and palm print form and we did a manual check we looked at the photograph from the piece of skin and compared it against the palm print form and once i had established that there was sufficient characteristics and agreement i was then able to say that an identification had been made against tony stanley a day after his handless body is discovered police have made a formal identification [Music] once we established tony stanlak's identity and that he was the victim we went and looked through his house to see if we could find any connections to a person who might have killed him and any information about his movements prior to him being killed by checking bank and phone records police were able to locate cctv footage of the 62 year old victim on the last day he was seen alive so tony for all intents and purposes to everybody was a upstanding normal member of our society he had previously been a fireman due to a back injury had retired and he was a creature of habit like a lot of us are he would regularly go and buy coffee from the local cafe sit down and do the crossword in the paper it lived a very routine normal lifestyle the police were thinking that maybe been killed at his house so we were going to see whether it looked as if something might have happened and due to the nature and number of injuries wherever the murder happened there would be a lot of blood there was no suggestion that any sort of bloodletting type assault had occurred but investigators did find something they weren't expecting [Music] sections of the house interior were set up as cannabis grow rooms now investigators had another element to consider was the cannabis linked to the murder several lines of inquiry were now underway i was receiving phone data on a daily basis large volumes of data so you have all of these numbers in there you're going well whose number is that whose number is that you know who are they talking to once you put that together in its entirety a picture begins to emerge as to who tony was communicating with perhaps on a daily or or at least regular basis so as we work through it became quite apparent that a person of interest to our inquiry in fact was in communication with tony very regularly in fact he was second only to tony's partner at that point if you were to statistically analyse the complete records the person of interest uncovered from phone records was daniel moore a 21 year old unemployed man we were able to establish that daniel moore and tony stanlake had got together to form a commercial cannabis growing enterprise tony stanlake had a lot of knowledge on how to do this and daniel moore was the person who was going to be the hands-on making it happen it wasn't i suppose friendly or matey type text they were always very matter-of-fact and you know just to do with around you know how's the how's the how's the growing working out you know i'm coming around to check on the plants those type of messages and it was the last group of messages that were of particular interest daniel had texted tony to say are you still coming over tonight tony replied yes i'll be there at seven and then just prior to 7 pm daniel had text tony saying shall i put the jug on and tony replied yes please i confirmed a meeting been organised and by tony responding to yes please put the jug on we knew that the meeting was going ahead because he was obviously on his way um you know put the jug on i'll be there surely sort of thing and then tony's phones stopped you know there was no outgoing either whether it be texting or telephone calls going out of his phone once we established the connection of daniel moore to tony stanlake we had a look at his background and what the police knew about him through our intelligence information daniel moore had a criminal record matched witness descriptions of the man stuck on the beach and was the registered owner of a blue subaru and that provided enough interest for us to actually put a plan together the next day to start following him three days after the murder victim is discovered police are covertly on the tail of their prime suspect he's on the move and he's towing a trailer he went from his family address and then went to another house in miramar at that address a lot of items were loaded into the trailer and then it was driven to the happy valley tip which was very interesting [Music] after he left the happy valley tip naturally we swept in and had a look and said what was left behind we kept following him to other places that day where he dropped off a large amount of hydroponics and cannabis cultivation equipment he then went and visited a number of people in the hutt valley and then went out to an address in wai nuyamata while he was at that address our officers were able to get a look down a back driveway and they saw the sabaru vehicle we were intensely interested in and that was a huge moment for the [Music] investigation you get some days during the investigations you never ever forget and i don't think anyone working that day will ever forget it it was fast we started detailing staff to go out to all the places that he'd been that day and we contained all of those as crime scenes and started having crime scene examinations at each place and started locating lots of interesting items at a crime scene you get one chance to to collect the evidence at that scene so you tend to collect as much as you can and then down the track uh a decision to be made which ones we're going to send to esr because you only get one chance at the crime scene you've gotta make sure you don't not collect something because you're not gonna be able to go back and get it we were sending people left right and center trying to actually contain scenes trying to keep out of the way so they're not seen by daniel moore but also obtain information feed it back to the base it was just a mess of people with information going every which way that day moving fast before anything was lost or destroyed it was immediately apparent that more had been disposing of crucial evidence there was a considerable amount of blood on the items and if you put them all together in a room there would be a lot of blood staining at that stage we'd made a decision to speak to him and so he was stopped in taranaki street he was detained and arrested once daniel moore had been interviewed at the station and his lawyer was here giving him advice the senior members of the team gathered together and we evaluated and assessed the information that we had at that time we also spoke to the crown prosecutor and we made a decision to charge daniel moore with murder [Music] a warrant was issued to search daniel moore's house it was three days since the body had been discovered would there be any evidence of where the murder had taken place [Music] it was a very interesting picture it was in a house it was a very up market house it was big it was spacious there were a number of young people living there that didn't have a lot of income there was a strong distinctive smell of cannabis as soon as you walked into the dress you could detect that as soon as you've walked into the garage it's evident that the room has been used there's a grow room you could see there was hooks in the ceiling which indicated there were grow lights had been hung from the hooks and chains the garage door had been sealed up to stop the smell of cannabis leaking out there were red spray can paint stains on the floor which looked as if they were over other stains i actually managed to use the scalp and sort of scrape through the paint and get a positive result for blood under it so it did suggest that somebody tried to cover it up there were bags of rubbish and rolls of carpet out in another garden which seemed slightly odd not far from the back door of the address was a human error fireplace there was evidence that recent fire taken place the suggestion that the hands that had been cut off the deceased were not found anywhere at the beach so there was the thinking that somewhere along the line stuff must have been got rid of the ashen remains from the potbelly stove were examined further we emptied out all the contents but also picked out solid identifiable bits all the burnt debris they look like bits of a cell phone and a battery could this be the victim's phone the task of recovering anything from the burnt debris was given to document examiner delwin walsh we were looking at it as a physical exhibit this is the actual phone here is it yeah so that's the biggest piece that we had and we could tell straight away what we were dealing with but most of the pieces are broken and fragmented and some of them are absolutely tiny we could see some things were still attached that look like they might be chips this is a picture of one of them it just looks like a sort of ashy square something's charred the hope was that some kind of identifying information might still remain but first it had to be carefully cleaned we've used cotton buds to pick up the ash and remove it and because of the way the characters are formed on the chip we can actually see some text there and you can very clearly see that serial number yeah it's identifying data so what i did next was actually contact those chip manufacturers they were able to say that they had been sent to samsung in korea and they were also able to say based on their chip data that they were going to be used on the cdma network how do you link that to a specific phone at that point there were only 13 samsung phones which had been sold in new zealand for use on the cdma network by comparing all of our fragments to each of those there was only one model of samsung phone that this could have been and that was a samsung 361 and that was the model of the victim's phone this detailed work provided investigators with another piece to the puzzle and the pieces were falling into place lab results had confirmed blood on the tarpaulin found at the beach was that of tony stanlake police had evidence of more purchasing atar paulin the day of the murder its packaging was found in the rubbish at his house esr now had results on the blood from the beach the two blood samples matched the dna profile of the deceased person the stan lake as well as results from the three cigarette butts they got one unidentified male from a cigarette but one unidentified female from another cigarette butt and the third cigarette butt to match to mr daniel moore the forensic evidence located at red rocks was crucial the cigarette butt had daniel moore's dna on it that's the same location as the savaru was observed by the local residents and then at that place where the drag marks were into the water there were blood spots where the dna identified tony stanley so that put more the car and stan lake all at that particular scene and that was a very crucial piece of evidence to show that he had been there and disposed of the body daniel had him on the tap hollands and dragged him down to the water's edge and i guess got him out into the water as far as he could thought okay job's done gone back to his vehicle and realised oh heck i'm stuck uh and now i've got a problem it's dark it's cold you know the natural thing to do if you're a smoker is probably standing next to your car have a couple of duries while you're trying to work out how the heck am i going to get my car out of here while i've got a body floating in the ocean next to me he would have been the only person down there had it not been for our people coming from their batches to watch the all blacks test match in town [Music] there was mounting evidence to say daniel moore had disposed of the body but could they prove he was the killer the grow room and moore's house became a focus for investigators the area had been cleaned and its contents dismantled and disposed of but traces of blood had been identified under the red paint could investigators retrieve any further evidence and what tail would this room tell the focus then becomes to work out what was that garage like at the time what was there and where is it now and how we're going to put it back and reconstruct what's happened we'd recovered an awful lot of bits of wood and equipment from the tip we took all out and we laid it all out and then started reassembling it and putting it back together we could match up nail holes we could match up other forensic evidence in terms of paint and bits and pieces from that we've then created what we believe is a good reconstruction of actually what the physical scene of that garage was at the time we noticed that when we were doing the examination of the skirting we could see where a cupboard had been because it was a clear patch of dust and you could see that something had been moved we measured that and then we measured the cabinet that was in the garage they matched exactly and when we opened up the two doors of that we found that there was a lot of blood spatter on the inside the bottom shelf and below so it's actually the very bottom level of the cupboard so it looked like it had happened somewhere near this cupboard in front of this cupboard chemicals in the luminal reagent that we use they react with hemoglobin which is found in blood and there's a chemical reaction and one of the products of that reaction is a very small amount of energy in the form of light and that's why the blood will glow so you're doing it in the dark so you basically do a fine spray across this wall and it lets it start to glow and you can actually sort of see lines between the garage door and the master bedroom there was quite a big wall and i found quite a lot of tiny tiny specks of blood on it and it was only when we luminoled that we found out that that whole wall had been white and we could see the white marks basically if you've got a dry blood stain on something you get a wet cloth all you're doing is dissolving it and smearing it around and that's what the luminol shows you can't see it anymore but it is actually still there [Music] the strongest luminal reactions were in the garage and showed evidence of blood pooling close to the cupboard the luminol suggests that maybe he was left bleeding up near that corner by the bench because that's where we got the biggest reaction and that seemed like a good candidate for where that cupboard had originally been there was a long what looked like a drag mark so basically you're getting a long positive line of reaction consistent with something with traces of blood on it being dragged along potentially the body assumed would have been wrapped and there was a small obviously small amounts of blood and body fluid that had leaked out that trial went down the hallway out into the entranceway down the steps along the front path and ended on the driveway which is where mr moore used to park his vehicle police know after leaving the house he drove to red rock's beach to dump the body cctv footage captures daniel taking his car through a car wash 25 minutes after witnesses have helped him off the beach this is about how long it would take to drive from red rocks to the car wash [Music] moore's vehicle was seized would there be any links in moore's car to the grizzly murder forensic scientist janina neal carefully examined the interior mainly i was interested in determining if there are any visible blood stains in the car we initially look at it just with very bright lights to see if there are any stains that actually look like blood what did you find so we found several areas of visible blood staining in the vehicle mainly in the back of the vehicle as you can see here so we carried out luminal testing all through the car in the front and the back and in the boot of the vehicle and what did you discover using the luminal the majority of the back seat actually reacted with luminal so almost the whole of the back seat gave this reaction apart from one particular area in the middle of the seat you can see here this is what we call a void area or an actual area of negative reaction so there was no reaction in this particular area and of what was of interest was that um it had this area had a particular shape and you can see i've drawn around it here and it has the to me it had the shape of an axe that really is a very distinctive axe shape isn't it definitely so what did that suggest to you so what that implies is that there may have been object such as an axe placed on the seat if a subsequent object such as mr stanley's body if it was wrapped in a tarpaulin if there were traces of blood on the outside of that tarpaulin they would have transferred to the seat apart from the area that was protected you know there was underneath this axe an axe was among the many recovered items moore had disposed of so the accident was brought here on to be examined urgently the examination of that showed there were bloodstains on the handle of the eggs which we sampled and that blood was shown to come from mr stanley the head of the axe because there was a possibility had been used to chop off hands or been used on the neck of the deceased it was examined pretty extensively for blood stains but i found no traces of blood on the head of that axe and that included in going into the area where the head of the axe joined the handle to try and see if there had been clean up if there had been any residue left there caught in that area but no no blood was found on the head of that axe what were the weapons of murder and where could they be found the case against daniel moore is rapidly growing odd pieces of information discovered at the victim's house are now making sense the absence of evidence is not always the evidence of absence in this case what we didn't find was actually very very important tony's partner had told us that whenever they went out together tony would always go into his bedroom and take cash from his bedside drawer we didn't find a lot of money a lot of cash and tony was a person who did everything in cash everything in 20 bills all the money gone the keys to his car are also gone but the cars still parked in the drive so if he had driven over to daniel moore's address to check the cannabis how did it get back when the vehicle was examined the windscreen wipers were on the most powerful setting which for us spoke volumes about well clearly the car's been used on a rainy day a very heavy rainy day as it was the night tony was killed police suspected moore had returned the car after committing the brutal murder when we looked at the cell phone records we could actually trace calls and text messages that daniel made on the journey in tony's car from his address back to quarry and see which cell towers he pinged through as he made that journey when he arrived in kurori he has committed a burglary at the address he'd gone in removed an unknown quantity of cash we think it was probably quite a large amount of cash he has the cash but no way of getting home and at this point he's also run out of phone credit we had a witness at the local fish and chip shop that could remember a young maori male come into his fish and chip shop and ask to use the telephone what was really unique about that encounter was firstly daniel was very wet from the rain and secondly daniel had said i need to use a telephone to call a cab and he pulled out a hundred dollar note and said look i'll give you a hundred dollars to use your telephone police and the owner was of course quite shocked and was like oh no you can just use my phone you're only ringing a cab don't worry about it from there obviously we were able to identify the cab company from the phone records from that they were able to identify the taxi and its route to daniel moore's home verified with cctv footage of him stopping on the way to purchase more credit for his phone cctv footage also reveals what moore did preceding the murder especially in the hours before his final meeting with tony stanley so the day of the murder daniel had bought several items including a melon tin and axe and secateurs and other items once we'd established that we asked the forensic pathologist dr simon stables to come back to wellington and conduct a final examination and start to compare the items that we'd identified daniel is buying as to perhaps having real relevance to forensic evidence on the body did you get an insight into how many different tools or what he'd use to kill the victim i think there's been multiple weapons used here at least two possibly three we have a cut to the neck that's something sharp potentially a knife a scalpel was collected as evidence but no traces could be found to link it to the victim then we have the injuries to the wrists where we have definite chop marks on the right wrist and a very clean chop on the left so that would say another sharp implement something with a little bit heavier so that would be consistent with a meat cleaver a meat cleaver was also collected but again no victims dna the blows to the head the size of the fractures and the splits to the skin would be consistent with a mallet a mallet was also recovered dr stables compared measurements from the mallet's head to injuries on the victim's skull and the results were telling the measurements of some of the head injuries to tony distinctly matched the dimensions of the mallet that daniel had bought on the top of the head of the mouth there were visible small stains of blood and quite numerous which were what we call spatter or impact splatter stains and those stains occur when there's some force applied to liquid blood to distribute it in small stains the same kind of blood patterning that was found in the bottom of the cupboard i was asked to sample the handle of the mallet so there was a trace of dna found but didn't produce a dna profile we took samples from the of blood from the face of the mallet and the top of the mallet and both of those samples the blood was sent for dna testing and came back that the dna could be from mr stanley the mallet had been purchased by moore the very morning of the murder it showed premeditation this was before tony was brutally murdered so it proved that daniel moore had been planning this but why why was he planning to murder daniel moore figured out after a while that he didn't need tony stanley he could do this all himself and he'd have more profit so greed took over and we believe that is the motive of why war killed stan lake once daniel moore decided to murder tony stanlake he started planning he started purchasing the items that he would need and use in the murder he arranged for tony to come around at a time that was suitable for him to do the killing that night of the six daniel had text everyone to say no one's to come around the old man's gonna be here you know you can't come home until i say it's okay to come home [Music] they've gone out into the cannabis cultivating room and tony stanlake wouldn't have seen it for a while he's very interested in it he would have been in front daniel would have let him go in front daniel moore was behind him with the mallet [Music] once tony's fallen to the floor he's then hit him a number of times with the mallet mr stanley was on the ground close to that cabinet when he's been struck in the back of the head causing that blood to spatter across the garage into the base of that cabin it may have been then that the offender had assumed he had passed away and then some time later he showed signs in fact he was still alive and that's when he then came back and then inflicted the other injuries to the to the neck [Music] dr stables confirmed the hands had been removed sometime after death wear is not known and the hands have never been found daniel moore left the body at the address for a couple of days it's quite unusual and probably reflects his overconfident personality and it certainly appeared he was confident he would never be caught for this murder [Music] during the days tony stanley's body was left lying in the garage witness accounts have daniel out spending a lot of cash cash the police suspect he stole from stan lake daniel was doing a lot of shopping a lot of entertaining every time he'd go out with a group of friends clubbing he would be paying for all the drinks and using 20 bills he was flashing a lot of cash around and texting everyone about it one of the texts he sent to a friend was de popo don't know nada well that didn't prove to be true it turned out the police did know within four days of finding the body they had the killer and a very strong case the case was heard in the wellington high court and at the end of the day a jury convicted daniel moore of the murder of tony stanley daniel moore was sentenced to life in prison with a non-parole period of 18 years one of the things which highlighted for me was finding that very small piece of palm on the wrist and that was sufficient to get an identification on this gentleman so even though the hands are missing he was actually still identifiable by his hands it was a really interesting case to work on everything from becoming quite close with parts of tony's family and you know helping them and the journey that they had to face working through this but also the different forensic elements obviously the phone data aspect of the case was very very large this case was not solved by one phase it was solved by a number including technology forensics the community provided excellent support all of those put together was what actually resolved this in the end and it was the sum of all parts pathology and fingerprints officers did outstanding work in identifying tony stanlake enabling the investigation to move swiftly before the killer could cover his tracks and get away with murder [Music] you
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Channel: Real Crime
Views: 528,318
Rating: 4.76156 out of 5
Keywords: real crime, crime documentary, true crime, Forensics, forensics tv show, criminalistics, forensic science, criminal investigation, murder, murderer, tv show - topic, full episode, solving crimes, hidden clues, crime scene, crime scene investigation, crime documentary full episodes, forensics S2 EP1, forensics nz, breaking bad, real life breaking bad, drug deal gone wrong
Id: p8FC8XtXDj0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 44min 56sec (2696 seconds)
Published: Tue Sep 08 2020
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