Unnamed Officer
👤 PersonPodcast Appearances
We are now seeking Darren Mack, M-A-C-K.
June 12, 2006. He has not been found yet. He has not been arrested yet.
This story is unfolding almost by the minute.
That victim is now identified as Charla Mack, the estranged wife of Darren.
We're in a place on the hunt right now for a sniper. There was reports of at least one shot fired and maybe four or five.
Her husband. Do you remember what he said to you? He basically said that we need to go ahead and teach this guy a lesson and beat him up.
I mean, does he come right out and say, I want to kill somebody on the phone? Pretty much. He was saying he needed to get rid of him.
Totally trust this guy. Yeah. He's real secretive with what he does. He'll do it for three grand. It'll be real clean. Won't be sloppy or nothing.
He'll be wearing a red short-sleeved Marlboro shirt.
Resident hitman? Yeah, when we get word that somebody, you know, is trying to find a killer, well, we try to arrange for him to be the person. Well, that's very accommodating. Yes, it is.
How many have you done? We've investigated over 300. As far as arresting, it's somewhere 50 to 60.
$5.30 and eight Atari tapes. Eight Atari tape video game? But they were collectors.
I like the food. It's that simple? No, Denny's are easy to film from. Almost all of them have windows, wraparound windows.
I was eating pie, and he would walk up to me and say... And if my return was, and then he would know for sure it was me.
As long as nobody sees you, and he disappears from the face of this earth.
He's a child molester and a woman beater. He fears men. He runs from me.
I told him that I had some property that had a well on it, and that I was clearing the property and had to fill in the well anyway. So I would just take him, drop him in the well, fill it in, and no one would be the wiser.
He just kept fighting, but I'm sure it was aggravating, you know.
I know that there'll be a day when my daughter comes and sees me and I'll be able to present the facts to her and show her that I tried and did the best I could and that was the outcome.
Bill was working for an electrical contractor and marine light fell 70 feet. broke his neck and broke his arm. This was after he'd been shot. That's after he'd been shot.
And then I started calling him the Miracle Man.
He just said, this is an old friend that I used to go to church with 20 years ago in Alvin, Texas, and called up and needed a place to stay while he's looking for his own place.
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Well, I don't want anything from you except my daughter, which isn't yours to take from me.
Asked if he could use the restroom. And they heard him go in there. They think he threw up.
And he blacked out and passed out, and they called an ambulance.
You're a dead man, man. You're dead. Yeah? Yeah.
When you heard that Bill had died, do you remember what your first thought was?
Oh, yes. Yes, I was suspicious. But I told him that this absolutely had to be ruled a homicide before we could really do anything.
The bullet had passed through his neck and exited out near his ear.
If they come up with nothing, then I'm going to close this investigation. This is it? This is it.
You're still very emotional about this. Certainly. You miss your nephew.
Well, I'm going to say he looks somewhat older than the reported age of 44 years.
What's your wish list in this case? My wish list was everything.
So we have heart, spleen, brain, and liver. We have fingernails. We have fluid from the coffin.
Well, we'll look for hundreds of different types of drugs.
A great person, a friend, and like a brother.
No signs of healing. I think this is a fresh fracture. Could be stopping, could be a baseball bat.
It got to be kind of a joke, you know, a running joke with all of Bill's friends and everything. But we knew it was serious at the same time.
To continue this investigation, I need a definitive ruling that this was a homicide.
No. What are you doing? I'm wrapping it up. I'm probably going to close this case. That's it? That's it, unless some new information comes forward.
What kind of relationship would you like to have with your mom?
He brought her with him to work all the time on the weekends and stuff, you know.
What sorts of things did you guys do together?
Well, in the beginning, it seemed to work okay. Sonny, tell me you love me. Let me see it on camera.
Bill and Cassandra seemed to be coming together a little.
She did that... I don't want to say sneaky. She did that behind... I think you do want to say sneaky. Behind our backs. Neither Bill or I was aware that she was going for a divorce.
And this happened to be his old work address, which he no longer worked at.
Did you believe that? No, sir, I didn't. Did you ever believe it? No, sir.
And he was very strong, emphatic about the fact that it was lies. that he would never do that to his daughter. And you believed him? Yes, I did.
Which doesn't happen in Harris County, especially where a sexual assault of a child is concerned. I mean, it just doesn't happen.
In state Texas, it's considered a terroristic threat. So he got arrested. That's right.
I had not completed smoking my cigarette outside the courthouse before the bailiff was tapping on the window saying, jury's back.
You're not too popular around here. That's why I'm in town, to take care of you.
It was the first of several threats from several people.
So he kept a real close eye and was real careful about who he was with. And watched over his shoulder all the time.
The guy was in just horrible condition. He had lacerations all over his head from being beaten.
There's no doubt in my mind. Her brother and her husband came to do it, and there was somebody driving the car.
He and his brother-in-law wanted a professional to do it. He was dead serious and very determined. I mean, he'd come to do business, and that's what he wanted done.
The beginning of the recording, there was another voice in the background that said, whispered lightly, okay, it's recording now.
It's recording. This is the one you molested. I want you out of my life.
It's very obvious that the conversation was coaxed. It's just sad for a child to be either brainwashed or fed these things.
Nein, es gab nie etwas, das ihn zu dem Bild verbunden hat.
I was called on the case within the first hour that it occurred. I was the one who tied Tim Masters to this case.
But back in Fort Collins... The case had gone cold. It sat there until 1991.
See if you can't put enough of the puzzle together to arrest him, Masters.
Tim Masters had told him that he knew that Peggy Hetrick's nipple had been either cut off or bitten off.
My key piece of the puzzle had got blown out of the water. For Linda Wheeler, that was it. I started having my doubts.
I was very verbal about, I'm not sure we're on the right track. I am not comfortable with Tim Masters as a suspect anymore.
I wasn't very popular with that opinion.
I was told I could not take it to the FBI. I was not able to... Sie sagte, sie sei aufgewachsen und ausgestresst.
There was not enough evidence to make an arrest.
Ich sah, was in der Hammond-Hauswohnung passiert ist, und ich sah, was er getan hat. Ich war überrascht.
Ein sehr berühmter Mann mit einer sehr kranken Verwirrung, die ich einfach nicht verstehe.
Es gab einen jungen Studenten, der im Haus saß. Und als sie auf dem Boden saß, dachte sie, es sei seltsam, dass es dort viele Lichter gab. Sie dachte, sie könnte etwas in der Ventur sehen, direkt vor der Toilette.
Man könnte übersehen, wo Peggy Hedricks Körper war.
I'm a police officer. I'm a homicide investigator. And all of a sudden I went, the system failed.
Es gab viele Leute, die wirklich stark fühlten, dass Tim Masters ein sehr weiblicher Verbrecher war.
Das Körper wurde einfach entdeckt.
Ich meine, es gab kein Blut auf dem Körper.
Und das erste Haus, das ich an die Kante ging, war das Haus von Clyde Masters.
He was a very quiet kid, a very introverted kid.
And had veered to the left as he was walking through the field and had stopped for a few moments. It became very obvious to me that his son must have seen the body.
One deep stab by a long knife into her back, which killed her very quickly.
Er musste definitiv angeschaut werden, ja, definitiv. Und es war sehr einfach für alle, eine Art Pack-Mentality, sich auf ihn zu fokussieren.
Sie war eine sehr intelligente Person, sehr artistisch. Peggy war meine älteste Schwester. Sie hat weltweit gefahren.
We probably average one or two homicides a year somewhere in that area.
Piper was like, she was like a little pied piper. All the little kids would just come up and circle around her.
Piper is wonderful about taking them outside and doing things and has more patience, probably, than I did. And she frequently would come pick up my son with rollerblades or his bike and take him out to the park for a day, just being outside all day.
Now, she had to look in the rearview mirror and saw this police parade behind her, right?
Starfleet is here to make sure no one commits murder.
At any point, did you sense that Piper was being accused of this murder?
Now, Fred Jablon is a professor at the university here. Yes. As you look for suspects or thinking about possible suspects, what thoughts went through your mind?
Like bad grades or Fs and stuff like that? Absolutely.
The suspect turned around and shot at Scott Davis. Scott then returned fire with five rounds from a shotgun. The suspect was able to hop the fence and run off.
She's a sweet, young college girl who was experimenting with sex and who knows what else. And unfortunately, it led to her death.
Not going to put any blame on her, no. But we're certainly going to incorporate her activity. And I think that's fair.
He went back to his cell and immediately said, to one of the deputies, it's a big chess game and I just made a huge move, let's see what they do. That's pretty devastating stuff.
It's pretty close to a tie, I think.
The task force was mainly created just so that we could handle the volume of information that had to be processed.
We see a female running down the street in her nightgown. She's waving her hands over her head. She states over and over again, my God, they're shot. Everybody's shot. I'm yelling to the female, how many are shot? Are the suspects gone? All she keeps saying is they're shot. She's a police officer. She's shot. And at that point, I ran as fast as I could towards that home.
The night watch sergeant was on the scene and he just turned and looked and said, it's Izzy. I knew immediately he was referring to Officer Lovadina. I wasn't sure how bad she was hit. Once I got through the door, there was a look of relief on her face that there was police officers there.
Nick was being tended to by doctors, and I asked if he could give me more of a description. Now that he's had a little bit of time, The doctor yelled, no, nobody's coming in here. Nick yelled right back, no, she's coming in, she's getting a description.
As a prosecutor, every case becomes personal to you. Rose had called me and asked if I would talk to Sam, who was nine at the time.
He came down in a school uniform and he sat down and he pulled out his note card. He had this little three by five note card and he had a series of five or six questions written on the note card. He wanted to know, you know, the strengths and weaknesses of our case. He wanted to know what the punishments potentially could be.
You don't want to over-promise something to a child because they're looking at you as, you know, the adult. They want to trust you and you don't want to violate that trust. He's been through so much.
LaDale Nathan was 16 at the time, but a juvenile court judge decided to certify him to stand trial as an adult.
None of this that he's saying is true. The challenge with respect to Mario Coleman's case was our eyewitnesses were all identifying him as being the shooter. However, the DNA on the murder weapon was to the juvenile, LaDale Nathan. Our belief was that they were switching guns constantly throughout this particular case and that LaDale Nathan was the last to have touched that gun.
during the sentencing of Mario Coleman. Traditionally, what happens is the victim's family has a right to address the court or to address the defendant. When Rose stepped up, she was not forgiving.
I was right there with Rose. I could understand where she was coming from. And I completely agree with what she said.
Yeah, just stay right here. Take your time.
He just wanted to scare him. He wanted to send a message. I think that's Darren Mack's ego because he didn't kill him. State may call the next witness.
When I first heard that Charla had been killed, it was like somebody punched me in the chest. And you're thinking, it just happened, maybe. Maybe somehow if you can get to her and turn back time real fast, you can save her.
And what was the name you told the detective?
When you provided the name Darryl Mack, who were you thinking of?
Well, I think the defense recognized what they had to do to push his buttons.
Right? There's no evidence to suggest there was any relationship between Judge Weller and Charlemagne.
This case shouldn't have turned into family court proceedings involving Judge Weller and other cases. This was about Judge Weller being shot as he stood defenseless in his chambers.
Now the fun begins in our minds. Now we get to hear Darren Mack hit the stand and try to sell his story.
And Darren Mack shook our hands and thanked us for being professional, for acting like gentlemen. What was that meeting like? It was a little unusual.
Darren Mack is always the victim. In family court, he believes he's the victim. In the criminal proceeding, he thinks he was the victim. You know, Darren Mack is not always the victim. He doesn't get what he wants, and then he tries to get himself out of the situation he finds himself.
A first responder told us a shot hit Judge Chuck Weller in the upper chest.
There's nothing that unusual, unfortunately, about a domestic violence homicide.
Like a lot of couples, they grew apart and 10 years after the marriage, Charla and the defendant decided to get a divorce. What made this case somewhat unusual was that Darren Mack also tried to kill a judge. Things became fairly contentious very early in the divorce proceedings before Judge Charles Weller.
Darren Mack is essentially, you know, he's a spoiled brat. I mean, the kid was raised with a lot of money, he got everything he ever wanted, and now he found himself in family court. Things weren't going his way, he wasn't getting what he wanted, and he took matters into his own hands.
He didn't say anything, but you could see his facial reaction. It was almost like he absorbed it and realized it might be a good idea.
When she got in her car, with Erica that morning and the dog, her intention was to drive Erica and do the exchange. And never in a million years did she leave her house that day and think, I should be worried about this.
Although we don't know exactly what happened, we know she put up quite a fight. Ultimately, she lost that fight. Charlo Mack was 5'4", 120 pounds. Darren Mack was close to 6'2", 200 pounds. Charlo Mack didn't stand a chance.
The next question was, who fired the bullet? Well, if there's a common denominator between Charlo Mack and Judge Weller, it's the defendant, Darren Mack. Certainly that doesn't prove he fired the shot. Several other things will.
We're not in the information business. We're purely a commercial business.
The number one reason why you find yourself in this situation is because you want to buy something.
Like I said, you're under arrest and this doesn't mean that you're under arrest, okay?
Did you ever meet him romantically? No. Never? Okay.
Even though I didn't believe he did it, I knew that there were a lot of people that believed that he did do it, people that I respected very much.
When I did the timing test the very first time, It was exactly 65 seconds.
Yeah, and I probably couldn't do that again if I tried.
Not just the polygraph convinced me, it was the interview that took place afterwards.
He seemed to crumble. He just seemed to lose it for a second. And you felt very strongly that he was about to confess. And then suddenly he would draw a deep breath of air and straighten up and square his shoulders up and almost grit his teeth and say, I didn't do it.
Okay, listen, a couple things for those of you that haven't done shotgun training.
Female employees are being threatened. I think they got the right man.
I think that he felt like it. He was just smarter than us bunch of dumb cops here in Evansville. We wouldn't be able to figure it out.
Yes, I am. In my eyes, Patrick Bradford does not deserve to live.
No, we didn't. Did you search his house or his car? No, no, we didn't search the house, we didn't search the car. He was just not a good suspect as far as we were concerned at that time.
There was still a part of me that felt sorry for Patrick. That sounds terrible, but it's true. He's a police officer, and there's that feeling that police officers have for one another, that you always have that feeling.
He had a good sense of humor, and he was good with people. We have the barrel. This is the magazine. This is the fore end.
I had a lot of respect for him. I thought he was a good, hard-nosed cop. I guess I saw some of myself in him because I wanted to be a policeman more than anything in the world, and I really believe that Patrick felt the same way.
I think that there's a side of him that was a very dark side, very dangerous.
There's no question about that he didn't care for Tammy. He was known to have kind of a hot temper and was definitely a guy that you had to look at. Minnis and his partner visited Vincent that same morning. His wife was standing just a few feet away. I would watch his wife and kind of look for surprised looks or whatever, and I didn't see anything like that. We both felt that this was a waste.
Tammy Lohr was an athlete. She was a jock, and she was strong as a moose. Dawn was very frail, very small, and I don't think that she could handle Tammy with a hand grenade and a machine gun.
I just have a hard time believing that Evansville City Police officer would stab his girlfriend to death, kill the dog, set the house on fire. That happens someplace else. That doesn't happen here.
Now, granted, Mr. Lofton was an old man, but still, he didn't smell smoke, he didn't see smoke.
August 3rd is the date of this paper, and it's already starting to name him a policeman among slaying suspects.
If Patrick did not do this, we had to prove with 110% certainty that he did not do it because there would always be people that would say, oh, the Evansville Police Department covered this up, and they were taking care of one of their own.
I thought that, you know, there's no way, there was no way at that time that he could do all this stuff in 65 seconds.
I called Patrick and said, hey, we've got exactly what we need to, you know, clear you.
I went into his room. He was laying in the bed. He had a hard time talking. He was in obvious, obvious signs of pain. And he told me he has no enemies, he has a happy family. His life seemed perfect and just could not think of anybody that would want to hurt him.
It wasn't, well, I couldn't tell if it was red or not, but yes, there was moisture on my knee, and I assume that it probably came from blood. Who got blood on themselves at the crime scene.
He's been interviewed. He's not in custody at this point. There's nothing to indicate that he went to the Crow residence that night.
At this time, we have not been able to discover signs that would indicate that there was forced entry. The possibility is that it could be a family member or an acquaintance or a stranger.
She's the only surviving witness of the crime.
Craig had entered the room, put his hand on his mother's and said, Mom, this is Craig. And her blood pressure went from, I believe it was 98 and skyrocketed to about 140. Her eyes got really wide and it appeared that she had been shaking as if she was afraid.
We decided we were going to put an ad out for a yoga instructor and see what would happen.
Somebody that identified herself as a yoga instructor and said that wanted to meet with us at a particular hostel. And we said, this is our chance.
And I saw two individuals sitting there at a table off to the left as soon as I walked in. He says one was a woman. She looked like Caitlyn, but not 100%. So I thought, well, how can I approach her or get close enough where I start asking questions where she doesn't suspect something? So I decided that I was going to speak to her in Spanish. So I spoke to her in nothing but Spanish.
So I got a little closer because I saw that she was trying to get to Google Translate on her phone. And she'd raise it up to me and I got even closer. And I noticed that she had a bandage on her nose and possibly her lips were swollen. And I saw her eyes. The eyes are the exact same ones that I saw in the picture. And this is her 100%.
The receipt for surgery. Plastic surgery. Plastic surgery.
We, the jury, found the defendant, Caitlin Armstrong, guilty of the offense of murder...
She did some pretty intelligent things. The thing that people don't know is you don't have to be just smarter than one, two, three, or four of us because there's a team of 20 plus people. You have to be smarter than a lot of people to get away with it.
We look for friends. Sometimes we look for family.
One of the things that I did was collect as many photos as I could.
What did the sister say? The sister ultimately said that her sister had come to visit her, had stayed with her a couple of days, but that she had dropped her off at the airport in Newark. And last she heard, she was going to board a flight back to Austin, but then called her back later and said that she decided that she was going to drive back.
We had other intelligence indicating that she was staying in hostels in Costa Rica. And I don't know if you know anything about Costa Rica, but Costa Rica has a lot of hostels, a lot, an unbelievable amount of hostels.
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I think from the get-go, we were told, you're going to be in for a surprise because a lot of the women in Santa Teresa look just like Kayla. A lot of them.
With the older daughter missing, it was very suspicious. We didn't really know how suspicious it was until we saw what we saw when we got here. Left for police. Bounce yourself if you're in here. We clear the house and in the living room, based on the blood splatter, there was a serious assault, probable murder that occurred.
It starts from there and kind of goes all the way out in the dirt. It goes out towards the cardboard? Yeah. That's not good.
We're kind of dealing with what I would describe as like a two-headed monster.
This is Benson Street. And for me, this is just another welfare check. But we don't know what we're walking into.
And we were scared to death.
The state of Iowa law requires that somebody go to jail on a critical domestic. I can't believe I'm going to jail. Well, she's got a mark on her face.
I started to drive up Range Road and I noticed the car. Walked up to the car and noticed Salonia's body inside the car. It was very, very, very obvious that she was deceased.
There are several cases throughout my career that stick out to me, and this is probably the main one.
I mean, her death, you know, didn't just go in vain. I find some peace in that.
Salonia's body was in between the bucket seats of the car with her torso over into the back seat of the car.
I did see a substance that had been placed on the body. It was a white liquid-type substance on her torso and stomach area.
I was a patrol officer for the Hammond Police Department. I was dispatched to a missing persons call on Apple Street in Hammond, Louisiana. The complainant, Reginald Reed, explained to me that his wife had left home the night before and had not returned, and he was concerned and wanted to file a missing persons report. I had received a description of the car from Reginald.
Why do I know that name? Like, that sounds so familiar. But it took a little bit of time for it to go, oh, no. Oh, no. Oh, my gosh. No way.
Paul came across as just an under the radar person that was always so kind of calm and quiet. He was just so utterly unremarkable.
656 to the Fish and Game at Cameron Bridge. Go ahead.
He just was like this respected source of information in the hunting and fishing space.
I think I would have considered him a friend. You know, if we were doing some sort of hunt camp, I would have not even thought twice about inviting him.
I've always trusted my gut instinct when it comes to people, especially men. I never had any feeling that he was unsafe.
Paul was super active in the hunting community. It seemed like he was constantly hunting, always sharing where he was headed or where he just got back from.
You guys want to come inside and talk? That'd be great, man.
Probably. Jackrabbit Lane? Yeah, exactly.
I honestly don't know. I mean, I probably, I've been to a bunch of phishing access sites for one reason or another.
Anything else you want to ask me while I'm here? No, we're good. We're good now.
I am gutted. I've known him most of my life. It makes me mad to know him. How dare you?
And I always thought Stephanie and Danny were super cool. Danny was like my friend's cool older sister. They were the most down-to-earth friendly people.
It was a lot of shock. You know, learning about Dani dying, it came in stages. You know, there were the rumors all of a sudden of somebody died. Initially, I just heard somebody drowned.
The rumor started flying of maybe it was a murder. And then we're all like, what?
It just was like this strange roller coaster of, did someone? Should we be worried as a community?
There was so much other speculation. I remember thinking, man, what if? What if? It just caused fear.
You don't want to sound cliche, but Livvy was a perfect child. She was kind and loving. That's why she went into nursing.
We were having sex. Just, I met him that Monday, and we saw each other every day.
What do you think of Matthew Edgar's story? Chat now with the 48 Hours team on Facebook and X.
She's in this car right here behind us.
I kind of love it if I'm being honest.
Yeah, it's time to call police.
When he came in the door, I just went and started throwing whatever at him and went for him. And I just remember saying, you killed my daughter. You killed my daughter.
She loved you and she was good to you and your kids and to your family. What made you think that this was the answer to anything that was going on?
911. What are you doing? So what are they looking like to yelp?
I just was like, are you serious?
What in this case struck you as the most powerful evidence against Matthew Edgar?
from him saying that he was gonna kill them, her, till him being at the scene, till it being his gun.
What do you think of that theory?
It was so far-fetched. It was just a crazy story to try to distract people from the truth.
You can get DNA transferred from just touching something.
There were other people's DNA on Matthew, and Livy was excluded as a contributor to those DNA samples.
I have not. And you understand why that would be hard for people to believe? Yes.
She just started frantically telling me that Matthew was gone. Matthew had run, and he had taken a gun with him. She was afraid he was going to kill himself.
Are you serious? Like, he's gone? He shouldn't have even been out on bond. Then he had an ankle monitor on. What happened with that?
Morris Chestnut is Watson. Now streaming on Paramount Plus and new episodes return Sunday, February 16th on CBS.
So a case that's already very difficult for you has now become, I'll use the word, impossible.
It made it much, it didn't help, that's for sure.
That was a terrible, crazy time for me, knowing that he's out there, supposedly loved my daughter, but murdered her. And me, the one that's actively trying to make sure that he goes to jail, what would he have done to me?
See a timeline of the night of the murder at 48hours.com.
but her car was right here before this sign.
I just want everyone to remember what happened here, what Livy had to go through.
I just felt it as a mother. I was like, he's coming here. He's not far.
Where is she taking them to?
I'm going to jail for something I don't even know nothing about.
Can somebody get my parachute and my seizure medicine?
Does it give you, I don't know what the word is, not any peace, but in prison he will likely suffer for decades?
Cindy Hogan is awaiting trial. If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.
We got all the DNA results back, and there were some holes in the case. There were no fingerprints taken or DNA lifted off the gun. There were DNA samples from Livy that showed there was another man.
Now streaming, Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh takes command.
Peter Van Sant reports, the blackout murder of Libby Lewis.
Gather your people. We're going to need every one of them.
Isn't that a... Darcy Bass's daughter.
You didn't know if she was dead or alive?
In Section 31, a new Star Trek original movie on Paramount+.
I don't believe it. I don't believe it. Oh, my God.
We don't know what we're looking for.
Her dream was to go on to college, become a nurse, and then become a physician's assistant.
Section 31 is just a place for people to bend the rules.
She was loved by all the residents there.
Yes, and she loved it. That was her passion.
Starfleet is here to make sure no one commits murder.
Don't miss Star Trek Section 31. Now streaming exclusively on Paramount+.
I think in Livvy's eyes, she was definitely thinking she had a friend.
And in Montana's eyes, what do you think?
I think that she was jealous. I think that some people get close to people and they have another reasoning behind it.
And so do you think in some ways a dangerous love triangle had formed?
Yes, definitely a dangerous love triangle, yes.
He shot my kid? Where's my kid? I don't care. Where's my kid? It's a blur. Will y'all tell me something? Where's my kid? Where is she at?
Livy writes to Matthew, I want to be in our home with you, but I can't do the way you act when you drink.
No, she didn't tell me that. Probably figured that I would go do something crazy, and she didn't want me probably getting in trouble.
Evidence of physical abuse, correct?
And do you have that photo?
He was continuing a relationship on with his ex-wife and had my daughter in the middle of it, not knowing that she was being manipulated by all of them.
Huh? She's not alive. I want to see my child. I just needed to know, is she alive or is she dead?
Libby Lewis, where is she? Where is she at?
Laid eyes on her this morning.
But there is no recording of that call. It's easy to make allegations. It's difficult to prove those allegations.
There is no evidence that places Dana Chandler in or near the Harkness residence on July 6 or 7, 2002.
Did you or any other members of the Topeka Police Department ever find an eyewitness that put the defendant, Dana Chandler, in Topeka, Kansas, on either July 6 or July 7, 2002? No.
That didn't make him a suspect?
All this time, they've been trying to put her in Kansas when this happened. And for nine and a half years, they've come up dry.
I expected a big turnout, but not this big.
Today, I rise to adjourn in the memory of Angelina Gonzalez. who tragically passed away last month at the age of 17. Angelina was a bright life in the lives of all who knew her, a passionate cheerleader and student at Azusa High School. She brought energy, joy, and a spirit to all events she attended.
But that joy and that spirit was cut short when she was killed by her boyfriend and her future was robbed. Angelina will never walk down the aisle. She will never grow old. She will never fulfill all her dreams. It is unfortunate that domestic violence continues to rob us of incredible people and torture others.
Of course, there were signs, but as domestic violence goes in our society, bystanders stay silent until it's too late. Recently, Angelina had taken on a new challenge by joining the school's wrestling team, embodying her fearless nature and determination to succeed in everything she set her mind to. Angelina, she had generosity, she was selfless,
She was always the first to lend a hand or offer a kind word, and her radiant smile had always lit up a room. Angelina loved her family, friends, and teammates fearlessly, and her kindness left a lasting mark on everyone she met. Beyond her achievements, Angelina's true legacy lies in the love she gave so freely.
She lived her life with a heart full of compassion, a soul full of dreams, and an unwavering dedication to lifting others up. Angelina, your spirit will live on in the hearts of all who knew you. And though our time with you is short, your impact will remain eternal. Angelina has reignited my fire, to continue to fight abusers in the fight to keep families safe in domestic violence situations.
Once again, she was a beautiful soul, and she will never be forgotten. She is survived by her loving parents, siblings, grandparents, and a wide circle of friends and classmates who will forever cherish her memory. Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in adjourning in the memory of Angelina Gonzalez. Thank you.