The Terror Of The Night Stalker | The New Detectives | Real Responders

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in Los Angeles a serial killer eludes police for months the night stockers strikes at random kills and will the terror he inspires is enormous the clues he leaves are slightly but ultimately they're all detectives have to track him down investigators at the scene of a strangling rely on an experimental technique to raise invisible clues they have only one chance to get it right if they fail a killer will walk crime scenes can be misleading they can hold plenty of Secrets or next to nothing harvesting hidden clues is the first strike against the criminal to catch him detectives need to turn fleeting prints into lasting impressions [Music] despite their working familiarity with death Los Angeles homicide investigators were chilled by the scene they encountered in the affluent community of Whittier on March 29th 1985 the ransacked condition of the house spoke of robbery is the primary motive a VCR video camera and much of the couple's jewelry was taken but the perpetrator also had a taste for blood Vincent's Azara had been killed by a 22 caliber bullet his wife Maxine was shot in the head and mutilated [Music] the forensics team went to work but wouldn't find many clues though the killer had plundered the home with reckless abandon he had taken care to protect his identity technicians dusting for fingerprints determined that the intruder had worn gloves whoever had committed these murders left few traces behind the bullet slugs were too damaged to be abused after hours of scouring the home for clues detectives came up empty-handed the killer had appeared and gotten away clean but he hadn't covered all his tracks beneath an open window detectives located his point of entry distinct footprints marked the soil one of the two prints belong to the homeowner Vincennes Azara the other appeared to be the footwork of his killer technicians sprayed the print with a fixative then poured plaster into the indentation the shoe print was lifted from the ground and sent for analysis [Music] at the sheriff's crime lab criminalist Gerald Burke examined it I was asked to check pattern details size take measurements of the casts of the impressions and to see what kind of information I could get from from those shoe impressions with regard to manufacture make of the shoe size of the shoe things of that nature the more Brooke could learn about the shoes the better idea detectives would have about the man who filled them Burton knew the cast was from an extremely large sneaker but he couldn't determine what brand of shoe it was in his years of experience Burke had never come across a print like this it wasn't in their reference library of tread patterns he couldn't find it in shoe stores it had to be a newly released model for an off-market brand either way the print like the spent bullets led detectives to a dead end without a source of comparison Burke's analysis couldn't move the investigation forward thus Azara murders weren't the only case that had the Sheriff's Office puzzled at the same time detectives were trying to make sense of a homicide that had occurred less than two weeks before five miles away in Rosemead in LA County [Music] Maria Hernandez arrived home late one night and came face to face with the barrel of a 22 inside the condominium her roommate de Lopez Aki heard the gunshot she died almost instantly tell me what happened Maria Hernandez had been lucky the keys in her hand deflected the bullet she played dead until the attacker left she told investigators that the killer was a thin Hispanic man in his 20s dressed all in black he had black bulging eyes hollow cheeks and rotting teeth Hernandez had no idea why he wanted her and her roommate dead for a week the case went nowhere and then in an equally random way the psa's Aras were killed the 22 caliber slugs from both crimes were sent to the ballistics lab for comparison they were too distorted to positively link them to the same gun even so detective Gill curio of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office drew a connection between the homicides we had Maria Hernandez who's surviving victim in the Hernandez case you have her given us a physical description and a drawing of an individual that assaulted her we have a particular caliber gun in the cesare case we have no physical description but we have a shoe print and we have the same caliber gun not only did he see the two crimes as being connected Carrillo believed they were part of a much bigger pattern for weeks violence had been on the rise in Los Angeles County a four thousand square mile area of 88 cities night after night throughout the county the toll of murders sexual assaults and abductions grew the media was in a frenzy reporting crime after crime and with each episode the public's fear swelled [Music] the crime lab worked overtime to process the evidence gathered at the scenes they weren't coming up with much Carrillo looked for a common thread a spree of violence based on crime reports and conversations with witnesses he forged a radical theory his colleagues saw the crimes as LA's growing trend of violence while they assumed that the crimes had several perpetrators Carrillo believed they were all the work of a single man but Carrillo was new to the homicide department none of his colleagues bought his theory apart from the grotesque violence of the crimes there was no common denominator to suggest they were committed by one man the rookies instinct defied conventional wisdom the Sheriff's Department wouldn't entertain the idea of a serial killer until Carrillo could base his suspicions on a fact and until you had enough physical evidence or conclusive evidence it's difficult to sell everybody that one man was committing all the crimes that were had been committed up until that time before he could prove his theory Carrillo needed a more definitive pattern to emerge he wouldn't have to wait long in the weeks following the Cesaro murders seven victims throughout Los Angeles County were wakened in their beds women were found with handcuffs thumb cups or electrical cords before being sexually assaulted houses were turned upside down valuable stolen suburban bedrooms were now the most dangerous place in Los Angeles everyone was sleeping lightly in early June just three blocks from mrs. Araz house a deputy's wife was roused from her sleep she thought she heard a window opening someone was in the house hearing the couple's movement the prowlers slipped away the deputy called the Sheriff's Department in the daylight investigators found gouge marks where the Prowler broke in the deputy pointed investigators to the flower bed where he covered some evidence with a shoebox beneath it was the imprint of a large athletic shoe the waffle pattern was familiar it looked just like the tread found outside the Zara's house it was the break detectives have been waiting for if this print matched the print found at the Cesaro murders it would support Korea's theory that one man was stalking LA's neighborhoods but if that were true it meant that one lone killer had managed for one year to defy LA's best and brightest now that he had a basis for comparison criminalist Gerald Bourke examined the to plaster casts taken from the crime scenes he determined the prints were made by shoes of the same model but not necessarily by the exact same shoe because both prints were left in coarse dirt Burk was unable to identify the subtle marks that make each shoe unique things like little Nicks and cuts and scratches or or something that can be used as an identification more or less like a fingerprint in in one shoe sole to another this was of little help to detectives in a county of 7.5 million people they could not track a man solely by his tread marks but it was all they had to go on and it kept showing up again and again since the Cesaro murders the large waffle pattern was found in the mud outside a Monterey Park homicide and was stamped in blood inside the home of a severely beaten old woman in Monrovia Burt had three casts and one shukran to work with the crimes remained unsolved the shoeprints remained a mystery then a summer intern casually walking by a lab table made a pivotal observation she said oh that's anivia and everybody just stopped and looked at her and said are you sure he said yeah I got a pair of my trunk so she comes and she goes the trunk of her car and pulls out this pair of avea shoes and that's when everything broke loose avea was a new brand explaining why the department had no information on them in order to learn everything they could about this shoe investigators went to a VA headquarters in Portland Oregon the company's designer identified the model number of the shoe that made the print pressed for more information I asked him to be a little bit more specific and he said that that he actually designed that shoe and and that he had a patent on that in that particular shoe sole design and that there were no other patterns that were that were close the pattern was from an aerobic shoe that had only been on the market for four months only thirteen hundred pairs had been manufactured avea provided Burke with a number of souls from the factory so he could accurately determine the size of the shoe that left the print the rate of motion and the texture of the ground can greatly distort the impression the only way to size the shoe was to compare tread patterns the pattern details on the sole increase as the shoe size increases down here in the in the bottom of the chute actually the mid portion of the shoe you'll see that there are a number of Chevron's and these Chevron's actually increase in number with the increasing shoe size and the plaster casts although they weren't good enough quality to record the the avea logo they were good enough quality to allow me to count these these pattern elements these pattern details after counting the lines on the plaster casts Brooke was able to identify every cast he had as coming from a size 11 and a half shoe when he examined the marketing material from the manufacturer he realized what a crucial discovery he made of the 1300 pairs of this model manufactured only six had been shipped to Los Angeles of those six only one was an eleven and a half only a handful of men in the country own size 11 and a half of years coreos improbable theory of a single killer was now glaringly real when you start throwing the odds of more than one person wearing that particular model and size of shoe it becomes it narrows it down quite a bit that not more than one person is committing the crime so you have physical descriptions coupled with physical shoe prints you've got I mean that's a neon sign saying come and get me that's one manly one very dangerous man that required countywide attention and getting him wouldn't be easy they didn't know who he was but terror had a name the media dubbed him the Night Stalker the Sheriff's Department organized a task force of homicide detectives Carrillo teamed up with Frank Salerno from his experience hunting some of LA's most deadly serial killers Salerno knew what kind of challenges they faced it's very frustrating you know there's one individual out there that's committing all these crimes and very violent serious crimes and you want to you know you want to bring it to an end as quickly as you can the task force started small then swelled as evidence accumulated at one point we had about 75 investigators working in the end Bureau at that time and we were using one-third of them just to investigate the Nightstalker series The Night Stalker held Los Angeles in a reign of terror during the summer of 1985 night after night people were struck down in the place they used to feel safest their own homes pressure to solve the case was tremendous but until detectives like guilt Oreo uncovered the night stalkers identity they couldn't calm the panic gun sales went out burglar alarm systems went up everybody was locking their windows and doors during a very very warm summer and you're talking about something that just took over the entire county of Los Angeles law enforcement took to the streets detectives canvassed neighborhoods where the night stalker had struck hoping that someone recognized him they found nothing but petrified residents and they knew better than to go at night after dark people weren't opening their doors to anyone sergeant Jon Yarborough was responsible for collecting evidence connected to the crimes in one house I found a couple who had abandoned sleeping in their bed they created dummies in the bed the husband was sleeping routinely in the garage and the wife was sleeping behind a television with the portable portable telephone I mean that was the kind of fear and panic that developed over this case whether he killed his victims or let them live seemed as random as the rest of his behavior those who survived his attacks described as Maria Hernandez had a tall man with bulging eyes he was saturated in a ranked leathery odor the help of an I dedicate a staff artist created a likeness of the man that attacked them detectives knew what he looked like but he thwarted every effort to find him the night stalkers unpredictability made his next movement impossible to anticipate most serial killers conform to a regimented routine this one seemed to work at random he hit neighborhoods all over Los Angeles his victims both men and women varied an age ethnicity and economic background his MO was all over the map what we had was a man that sometime used a gun sometimes used a knife sometimes used blunt force trauma some he raped some he didn't some he strangled some he just stomped to death some he robbed some he didn't the only thing he never changed was his shoes to trap the nightstalker Gerald Burke had to become an expert in the killer's footwear he was dispatched to any crime scene that seemed remotely linked to him I was out at 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning on one side of the county and at 6 o'clock in the morning I would be called to another side of the county and I was just all over the place and though detectives could track the killer by his shoe prints they always lagged one step behind him on July 5th they followed his tracks to the posh community of Sierra Madre that morning 16 year-old Whitney Bennett woke up backwards in bed she had a searing headache while the Bennett family slept just feet away the girl had been beaten near death with a tire iron she remembered nothing about the attack but the familiar calling card was there sergeant Jon Yarborough speculated that the killer had two reasons for wearing the same shoes over and over again first they were functional they allowed him to move surreptitiously or run if he needed to secondly they've never let him down but psychologically it may have been the good luck shoes he always wore them they were always successful he was he was always able to do what he wanted to do when he was wearing these shoes so they had a good feeling for him the brutality of the crimes advertised the killer's lack of remorse and his delight in causing death I would say that he's a very good example of the predator type offender who clearly just does not care about the victims that he comes in contact with and he achieves a degree of thrill from it that motivates him now is he intelligent and cunning and clever well he was certainly clever enough the Night Stalker was crazy like a fox and just as hard to corner the task force wasn't enough if detectives were going to capture this serial killer they needed to spread out investigators made a videotape for LA County 63 police departments on the tape Carrillo detailed the evidence gathered from the crime scenes the suspect was a young Hispanic male who always wore of ears an expert cat burglar it was impossible to tell if his primary motive was killing or robbery as the body count grew a few patterns emerged he seemed to target yellow or beige houses he sometimes drew pentagrams at the crime scene but this information brought detectives no closer to identifying the horrible face that wanted Southern [Music] the violence reached a frenzy as the summer of 1985 wore on by early August the Night Stalker was suspected of killing 13 people and attacking 10 others his activity in and around Los Angeles seemed to be accelerating law enforcement braced for his next asau and then nothing for the first time in months nights were passing peacefully but not for long on August 18 the night stalkers struck again this time in San Francisco Peter and Barbara Penn a couple who lived in a yellow house were found murdered it was the typical pattern forced entry in the middle of the night brutal murders pentagrams and stolen valuables the unpredictable Night Stalker had just expanded his territory by 380 miles the entire state was now under his grip where he'd strike next no one could predict San Francisco mayor Diane Feinstein called a press conference to calm the citywide hysteria but she divulged sensitive forensic information detailing the sneakers and the ballistics findings detectives believed the night stalker was following his case in the media all along he had enjoyed toying with law enforcement now that he knew exactly what they had on him the advantage was his he was likely to change his MO and he was sure to discard his signature Footwear but a few good things came out of the media hype San Francisco newspapers publicized the items of jewelry stolen from the pans a $10,000 bounty was placed on the night stalkers head informants started coming out of the woodwork and informant Donna Myers told police that a man named Rick from El Paso and given her a bracelet led some rings he was very tall like the description of the Night Stalker Rick had terrible teeth smelled bad and was always spouting off about the virtues of safety police learned his last name was Ramirez police now knew who he was but they still had to find him the Los Angeles phonebook was full of men named Richard Ramirez a fingerprint lifted from a stolen car at a crime scene pointed the finger of blame at a single suspect when Ramirez his name came up they pulled all the Ramirez's had been arrested which there were numerous of them Richard Ramirez and they may physically checked it just like you would by eye and made that identification once they determine which Ramirez they were after surveillance personnel were deployed all over Los Angeles they concentrated on Places Ramirez was known to frequent one of those places was the bus depot uniformed officers and undercover cops swarmed the station but since they were looking for a man attempting to leave LA they didn't pay attention to arriving passengers Ramirez returning from Tucson spotted the undercover officers before they saw him he slipped out of the bus terminal and went to an East LA bodega or some breakfast he quickly realized that he was the center of attention El Matador they whispered the killer police were called the chase was on Ramirez men were his life along the five freeway he ran like a gazelle he literally ran at a full sprint probably a good two three miles kept going went over ten foot sound walls crossed eight lanes of the five freeway right here the fugitive made his way into a residential neighborhood of East LA I saw his only way up but it wouldn't take him far [Music] police had receded the man they protected from attack was the man they've been hunting for months their prime suspect Richard Ramirez [Music] at the police station all eyes move toward his shoes they weren't Avia's the Night Stalker was too clever to wear those again but they were size 11 and a half it seemed they had their man but they didn't have his shoes as always it appeared the Night Stalker remained one step ahead of them both Carrillo and his partner Frank Salerno believed that Richard Ramirez was The Night Stalker but they didn't have the notorious sneakers to build their case the detectives would need to carefully draw together the web of evidence their first task was to interview the suspect his demeanor surprised them very soft-spoken for a lack of a lot of education he was well-spoken also probably the thing that sticks in my mind the most is when you walk into an interview room with with a suspected killer is you usually introduce yourself you tell him who you are and I walked in and sat down he says you're Frank Salerno Ramirez knew of him from the hillside strangler case involving a pair of high-profile serial killers Salerno helped nab six years earlier transient detectives learned that their suspect had a vast working knowledge of serial killers throughout history thank you he knew all of their names their methods and the details of their captures he had followed the Nightstalker case in the media so he never admitted to any crimes Ramirez engaged detectives in a conversation about LA's latest serial killer he would talk to us in the third person I didn't do this but the Night Stalker might have done this and the nightstalker might have done this and this and what do you think he did done over here Ramirez never confessed so investigators look for hard evidence to tie Ramirez to the crime spree inside his wallet they had found a claim ticket for a piece of luggage at the bus station [Music] everything was removed and photographed the bag contained a revolver and several kinds of ammunition including 22 caliber cartridges the evidence was bagged for further analysis the shells and slugs collected from various crime scenes were taken to the ballistics lab to compare against those taken from the bag they matched also Ramirez fingerprints were found on some of the items confirming that the bag and its contents belonged to him most of the night stalkers surviving victims picked him out of a lineup the eyewitness accounts ballistics fingerprint and shoe print evidence provided police with enough to arrest Ramirez for the Nightstalker crimes three years after the arrest the case finally went to trial by this time police suspected that he had killed 16 people and assaulted 11 others the suspect made no show of repentance during a preliminary hearing he sported a pentagram on the palm of his hand he waived it about shoving hail Satan though no size eleven and a half a BA aerobic sneakers were recovered among Ramirez belongings it was the prints found at eight of the crime scenes that helped the case together they formed an irrefutable physical link between the string of burglaries rapes and murders eyewitness testimony tied the man in court to weather crimes when no print was present the most expensive trial Los Angeles had yet seen came to a close after more than a year with a victory for the prosecution in November 1989 Ramirez was sentenced to death 19 times Richard Ramirez was one of the most horrifying monsters to terrorize the country but whether a killer takes many lives or only one the motivation to kill remains the same murder is the ultimate selfish act on September 2nd 1990 in Des Moines Iowa William helm and his brother stopped by the home of his estranged wife to pick up some tools the house was locked there was no sign of his wife he could see their son playing unsupervised he became alarmed [Music] Susan Susan Susan [Music] then he found her in the bedroom helm called the police [Music] officers arrived to find a woman's nude body lying in bed a blanket was pulled up to her chin Susan helm a 24-year old housewife was last seen alive at 2:00 a.m. when neighbors picked up a child she'd been babysitting the same clothes she'd been wearing the previous night were crumpled on the bedroom floor police asked William helm about his relationship with his wife he told them they were separated and he had moved out he said he had last seen her the day before when he dropped off their son they learned through interviews with a couples friends that there had been a history of domestic violence a police report stated that William had assaulted Susan nine months earlier [Music] nothing in the house seemed out of place there were no signs of a struggle no indication of burglary [Music] Captain James Trotter of the Des Moines police department led the investigation we have a routine that we go through on all crime scenes particularly indoor crime scenes and we start from the outside work towards the center to preserve as much of the evidence and photograph it as we possibly can the forensics team methodically combed the house in search of the smallest clue as to what took place though the victim was nude they found no evidence of sexual assault technicians couldn't find hair fingerprints or blood samples to link the killer to his crime the ligature mark around her neck told of a brutal death by strangulation detectives formed some theories because of the way in which the body had been covered they believed that the victim had been killed by someone she knew someone who cared enough to conceal her nudity from strangers usually what happens is that after the crime has been committed and they think oh my god somebody's going to see my wife or girlfriend or cousin or whatever the circumstance is and they'll cover them up so it's a good clue simply that it's just a clue to lead us in a direction in our investigation as the bedding was examined they uncovered another clue beneath the blanket the body had been placed on top of a sheet and on that sheet was an oily marker that looked like a shoe print the print wasn't distinct enough to be used for comparison but it suggested that the body had been moved and so we concluded from that that more than likely someone stood on the bed and maybe pulled or lifted the body onto the bed the oily shoe print was made by automotive grease embedded with small metal fragments william helm welded mufflers for a living though the print made him the prime suspect it would be difficult to build a case against him the physical evidence it seemeth would only prove something he'd already admitted that he entered the home gone into the bedroom and found the body helm was brought to the police station to make an official statement investigators tried to pin him down about any physical contact he may have had with the victim's body when he found her helm claimed that he hadn't moved the bedding at all he'd only used his fingertips to check her pulse at the wrists and neck and so it was critical that we have some physical evidence otherwise we were only going to have a circumstantial case and probably not anything that we could arrest anybody for detectives hoped that the body would disclose the secrets that the rest of the house had been hiding more than a shooting or stabbing strangulation requires close contact with the victim surely the killer left something behind [Music] detectives used an alternative light source to search for care or fibers again they found nothing unless a substantial clue surfaced soon there would be no way to catch this killer as investigators finished their search of the crime scene they realized that they were being watched after leaving the police station helm had returned to the scene of the crime he pulled a lawn chair out of his car and set up an observation post on the neighbors lawn peculiar behavior for someone who just lost his spouse that type of interest is usually the spectators who don't know these people and normally the family is somewhere else consoling one another Elms detached interest in the case fueled detective suspicions they asked him to come to the station for another interview after almost two hours of questioning police obtained enough information to get a warrant to collect samples of his hair saliva blood and hand prints in order to prove that Elm had killed his wife police would have to find evidence that he was the one the bottom ear if trotters team could find Helms fingerprints on a portion of the victims skin that had been beneath the blanket they'd be able to test his story but they faced a big obstacle in the field no one had ever successfully lifted finger or palm prints from a body before des Moines police had tried and failed six times before at a crime scene it is difficult to control the variables required for success proper timing temperature and humidity were crucial the experimental technique to raise fingerprints from skin had only succeeded in laboratories if they could make it work at a real crime scene it would bring Criminal Investigation to a whole new level of precision the technique relies upon super glues ability to turn the human touch into a permanent imprint years ago workers at a super glue factory noticed that if they weren't careful they left their fingerprints on the blue packaging and because of their exposure to the glue fumes these fingerprints couldn't be wiped off vaporized super glue or cyanoacrylate ester adheres to the oil deposited by the human touch it attaches to fingerprints on hard substances such as glass or metal creating a thin shell over the ridged pattern it actually seals the print under a layer of plastic in most cases this pattern can then be dusted and lifted with tape but lifting a delicate print off a textured oily surface like skin is a tricky procedure if there were any prints on Susan Helms body they wouldn't survive a trip to the coroner's office the slightest change in temperature or the lightest brush against the body could ruin them the testing would have to be done where the body lay in the lab the technique had succeeded only on prints less than four hours old Susan helm had been dead for more than 12 hours but it was the only hope police had of tying the murderer to the crime the first step was to build a tent around the victim a plastic drop cloth was wrapped around the frame and secured [Music] temperature within the 10th must be increased to speed the evaporation of the glue in the field it's difficult to control [Music] liquid superglue was placed in aluminum dishes and set on burners inside the tent the glue was heated for 10 minutes until fumes filled the structure technicians allowed 30 minutes for the glue to set after the fumes settled technicians moved in whatever lay beneath the plastic would make or break the case if they could find a good quality print they might be able to catch a killer but if history were any guide they'd find only a degraded print or none at all and that meant a killer would walk the plastic was peeled back from the body technicians searched for the ridges of a human fingerprint with a halogen flashlight shining the light at an angle helps the prints stand out passing over the lower portion of the victims abdomen the light revealed a pattern it wasn't a fingerprint it was larger and more distinct than they could have imagined the print from practically an entire hand the potential proof was there for the investigators to see but success still seemed just beyond their grasp for the first time in forensic history scientists had been able to coax a latent print from a human body outside of the laboratory but collecting the print would be another matter lifting it with tape would likely destroy it scientists needed to lift the print photographically the photographed print from the victims belly was delivered to the Des Moines police department crime lab where it was compared to the print taken from William helm when comparing to fingerprints identification technicians use a computer to look for matching patterns because palm prints are so intricate technician Jerry Wilson had to make the comparison manually the time-consuming task requires him to pinpoint areas where ridges joined converge or form dots using those patterns as reference points Wilson compares the prints for similarities and we look for these same identical points in the same relative the unit space in each between the latent and the ink print and the same amount of intervening ridges and we also look for discrepancies as if there's unexplained discrepancies then you have to either eliminate the print altogether or explain why there is a discrepancy technicians found no such discrepancies between the prints instead they identified a highly unusual formation on both there was a double loop formation in the palm print which is very unusual and that helped to locate the pattern area and it made the comparison much easier between the inked and the latent print right here we've got an upward ending read Wilson can call two prints a match if they share eight common revenues right there in the helm case technicians stopped counting nine of the new nor did it was one of the most obvious matches their office had ever come across the discovery of william helms palm print on his dead wife's belly proved he was lying he was the ones who's placed her into bed [Music] it seemed police had caught the killer with a drop of balloon but to make a conviction stick they needed to connect him directly to the murderers act the victim wasn't strangled with bare hands the killer had used a length of wire police had enough evidence to obtain a search warrant for Helms apartment there they found the final piece of the puzzle [Music] the garage a piano wire stretched between two wooden handles has only one purpose strangulation though tests in the lab showed no trace evidence on the wire its gauge was consistent with the marks on the victim's neck [Music] trotter piece together a likely scenario of the murder on the morning she was killed Susan and William Powell had argued for the last time William became enraged and took her life [Music] he tried to cover his deed with a blanket but the persistence and methodical attention to detail of the Des Moines police department produced the clue that marked him as a killer [Music] William Powell was convicted of first degree murder in the strangling death of his wife he was sentenced to life in prison without parole the forensic evidence in this case was extremely important because of the lack of other witnesses and blood and all those other kinds of things that you can typically use to prove your case so the finger per the palm print in this case was was the turning point for us by making sense of obscure prints forensic scientists helped expose the crimes of Richard Ramirez and William hell thanks to advances in technology murderers like that longer escape the lasting impressions they [Music] you [Music]
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Channel: Real Responders
Views: 221,227
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: bombs, bomb, bomb disposal, mail explosive, explosive disposal, police documentary, the new detectives, forensic science, investigation, detectives, police investigation, cold cases, criminals, crimes, true detectives, sherlock holmes, real crimes, real detectives, private detective
Id: V7o7VcWgq5k
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 53min 31sec (3211 seconds)
Published: Mon Jul 13 2020
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