1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:07,000 This program is about unsolved mysteries. 2 00:00:07,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Whenever possible, the actual family members and police officials have participated in recreating the events. 3 00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:16,000 What you are about to see is not a news broadcast. 4 00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:26,000 In September of 1979, 19-year-old Mickey West vanished without a trace. 5 00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:31,000 Exactly seven years later, a note was found from someone who claimed to have witnessed Mickey's murder. 6 00:00:31,000 --> 00:00:34,000 But his identity remains unknown. 7 00:00:34,000 --> 00:00:42,000 Between 1890 and 1920, thousands of homeless children rode orphan trains to new families in the Midwest. 8 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:46,000 Today many want to find the brothers and sisters they never knew. 9 00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:52,000 In 1967, a five-year-old boy fell into a rain-swollen creek in Nutley, New Jersey. 10 00:00:53,000 --> 00:00:58,000 Two months later, his body was found in the river, three miles away. 11 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:05,000 In 1974, a New York banker boarded a commuter train to take him home to New Jersey. 12 00:01:05,000 --> 00:01:08,000 During the train ride, he vanished. 13 00:01:08,000 --> 00:01:13,000 Two months later, his body was found on the bank of a nearby river. 14 00:01:14,000 --> 00:01:21,000 In 1976, a 14-year-old schoolgirl left her home on Staten Island to look for a summer job. 15 00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:24,000 That afternoon, she disappeared. 16 00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:29,000 Two years later, her body was found in an abandoned shipyard. 17 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:37,000 What Link sees cases together is Dorothy Allison, a housewife from Nutley, New Jersey. 18 00:01:37,000 --> 00:01:42,000 She predicted where all three bodies would be found, while the other three bodies were found in the river. 19 00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:48,000 What happened to the victims, and remarkably in two cases, predicted when they would be discovered. 20 00:01:48,000 --> 00:01:55,000 Dorothy Allison and the authorities with whom she has worked claim she has psychic powers. 21 00:01:55,000 --> 00:02:00,000 In my lifetime, this is the most amazing thing that ever happened to me. 22 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:04,000 To see the ultimate results of everything that she had said. 23 00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:09,000 It's as though I turned on a TV station and got a picture. 24 00:02:09,000 --> 00:02:14,000 And this is what I get when I get a vision of something or a place or a person or anything. 25 00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:18,000 It's as though you're turning on, tuning in on a TV set. 26 00:02:18,000 --> 00:02:22,000 Dorothy Allison is called almost daily by police detectives. 27 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:27,000 And although she's never paid for her work, she's been asked to help in hundreds of investigations. 28 00:02:27,000 --> 00:02:34,000 In the next hour, we'll follow Dorothy Allison on a current murder investigation and explore two other unsolved mysteries. 29 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:39,000 We'll also tell you how our viewers helped capture a murder suspect and his teenage girlfriend. 30 00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:43,000 Join me. You may be able to help solve a mystery. 31 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:42,000 On September 11th, 1979, in a small town of St. Joseph, Missouri, a young woman named Mickey Joe West left for work. 32 00:03:42,000 --> 00:03:46,000 She was never seen again. 33 00:03:46,000 --> 00:03:53,000 Her friends and family suspect foul play, but her body has never been found. 34 00:03:53,000 --> 00:03:58,000 I think I know what happened to Mickey. 35 00:03:58,000 --> 00:04:03,000 I think I know who did it. And I think I know why they did it. 36 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:06,000 We have a suspect that we established the day after the disappearance. 37 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:11,000 We've talked to him several times. We know where he lives now. We know where he can reach him. 38 00:04:11,000 --> 00:04:14,000 We just simply have no evidence against him at this point. 39 00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:20,000 I believe that this person who's described as the number one suspect, I believe that he abducted her. 40 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:25,000 And within two or three hours of that time, I believe he killed her. 41 00:04:25,000 --> 00:04:30,000 At the time of her disappearance, Mickey Joe West was 19 years old. 42 00:04:30,000 --> 00:04:36,000 She was an outgoing, friendly girl who worked as a nurse's aide at the St. Joseph State Hospital. 43 00:04:36,000 --> 00:04:40,000 She was funny. She could make a bad situation into a good one. 44 00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:49,000 When I had bad days, I was at my worst end. She'd come in and everything would be all right because she'd say something funny. 45 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:55,000 Mickey became involved in the bitter marital dispute of a friend of hers, perhaps too involved. 46 00:04:55,000 --> 00:04:58,000 She began to receive threats. 47 00:04:58,000 --> 00:05:05,000 The last time I talked to Mickey on the phone, she was scared. She was afraid for her life. 48 00:05:05,000 --> 00:05:09,000 So she told me she was going to carry a hammer to work with her. 49 00:05:09,000 --> 00:05:15,000 That next morning, she got up and left her house and was on her way to the bus stop. 50 00:05:15,000 --> 00:05:18,000 And that was the last that anyone ever heard from her. 51 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:24,000 At this point, the only case we have is a missing person. We have no crime. We have a missing person. 52 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:27,000 We have no body to establish a murder case. 53 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:33,000 Without a body, we cannot convict anyone of murder. 54 00:05:33,000 --> 00:05:45,000 We have evidence that there were threats made to Mickey, that she was followed by this person, that he had a motive to do this, that he could have done this, and we just need the body. 55 00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:52,000 For seven years, no new evidence was found. 56 00:05:52,000 --> 00:06:01,000 Then in 1986, a delivery man at a Kansas City shopping mall, 75 miles from where she disappeared, found a letter. 57 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:07,000 It was addressed to the St. Joseph police. He opened it and read, I need your help. 58 00:06:07,000 --> 00:06:11,000 I was with, and here we cannot mention the person's name. 59 00:06:11,000 --> 00:06:17,000 When he killed Mickey Joe West and hid the body, I can kill myself now. Please help. 60 00:06:17,000 --> 00:06:20,000 This letter was unsigned. 61 00:06:22,000 --> 00:06:28,000 About a month later, on October 2nd, another note was found in the same mall. 62 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:32,000 A security guard who worked in the mall found this note in a hallway there. 63 00:06:32,000 --> 00:06:42,000 It was obviously the same envelope, the same paper, obviously the same person had the same message on it, and it too was delivered to the police and opened the park and eventually to our department. 64 00:06:42,000 --> 00:06:49,000 Both of the notes named the man who has been and is now the prime suspect. 65 00:06:49,000 --> 00:06:59,000 The author in these notes said that he was with the person who had killed her, that he did not kill her himself, that he could not stand this knowledge that he had, and that he needed help. 66 00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:05,000 They were both unsigned, and so far we have not come up with any solid leads as to who the author is. 67 00:07:08,000 --> 00:07:18,000 Seven weeks later, three more letters were found. This time in St. Joseph, the town where Mickey was last seen, the first of these was discovered in a shopping mall. 68 00:07:18,000 --> 00:07:23,000 The same day another was found at a local truck stop. 69 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:29,000 Then a janitor found another letter in the same St. Joseph shopping mall. 70 00:07:29,000 --> 00:07:44,000 After the three notes were found in St. Joseph, we had a total of five notes, all established to be from the same author, all saying the same message, naming the same suspect, but getting us no closer than to making the case or proving the case against this person than we were before. 71 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:59,000 We've explored the possibility that the notes are a hoax, but we believe they're genuine because of the details that he's given us about the crime, because of the way they're written, because of the feelings that they express. They just seem realistic. 72 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:09,000 When we examined these letters, it was obvious to us that the person who wrote them was intimidated by the person who killed Mickey Joe. 73 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:14,000 These weren't letters written by a stranger. They were written by someone who was personally acquainted with the victim. 74 00:08:14,000 --> 00:08:26,000 They're deep-seated feelings of guilt, not guilt because the writer was personally responsible for having killed Mickey, but because he was present when it happened and wasn't able to stop it. 75 00:08:27,000 --> 00:08:40,000 On January 13, 1988, nine years after Mickey's disappearance, another letter turned up at a Kansas City Mall theater. It was addressed to the police and a local TV station. 76 00:08:43,000 --> 00:08:50,000 Eight months later, a reporter for the TV station, Thurman Mitchell, received a letter addressed to him personally. 77 00:08:51,000 --> 00:09:08,000 In this letter, the author said that if Thurman would come alone, he would show him where Mickey Joe West is. He said that he did not want the reward, that he was not interested in the reward. He said that he was not himself involved in the crime, that he needed help again. 78 00:09:11,000 --> 00:09:18,000 In response to this letter that Mr. Mitchell received, he did a new story, asking this person to come forward and contact him personally. 79 00:09:21,000 --> 00:09:25,000 He was asking that witness to call the telephone number on the screen and talk to us and we'll pass that information on to him. 80 00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:34,000 An on-air appeal proved unsuccessful. Today the letter writer remains anonymous. The case of Mickey Joe West is still unsolved. 81 00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:47,000 The author of these notes is the most important witness that we could have in this case. If he knows where she is, if he was there and he will testify, he is absolutely crucial. 82 00:09:48,000 --> 00:10:02,000 I would just like to ask him to come forward and tell us what he knows or if he doesn't want to come forward, write us a letter and tell us where she is in the letter or give us a phone call. Come forward in some way. 83 00:10:02,000 --> 00:10:10,000 We miss Mickey and it's been nine years and we just want to know what happened to her. 84 00:10:17,000 --> 00:10:32,000 Last month we broadcast a story about Dave Davis from Pittsburgh, Michigan, a man accused of murdering his wife. 85 00:10:33,000 --> 00:10:46,000 On July the 23rd, 1980, Davis and his wife Shannon were horseback riding on their farm 80 miles outside Detroit. Davis claims that Shannon lost control of her horse, fell and struck her head. 86 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:52,000 She was rushed to the hospital but doctors pronounced her dead on arrival. 87 00:10:53,000 --> 00:11:04,000 After a few days, Shannon's parents found out that Davis had taken out six large life insurance policies on Shannon. They had their daughter's body exhumed. 88 00:11:04,000 --> 00:11:12,000 The results showed traces of an animal tranquilizer as well as two injection marks, one on her wrist and one on her shoulder. 89 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:27,000 Police found out that Davis had indeed had access to the animal tranquilizer through a deer hunting group. Justice's arrest seemed imminent. Davis fled. He had not been seen since October the 13th, 1981. 90 00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:42,000 FBI and different ones had said don't discount the fact that he may already be dead. We felt like, no, he's out there someplace. He was a rugged outdoors individual. He was a survivor. 91 00:11:42,000 --> 00:12:02,000 We broadcast Davis's story twice. Within days of our second broadcast, Dave Davis was captured. A viewer identified him as a man named Davis Meyer Bell, who was living on the tiny island chain of American Samoa, 2,000 miles south of Hawaii. 92 00:12:02,000 --> 00:12:06,000 Davis, alias Bell, was arrested three days later. 93 00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:09,000 Any comment on the charges against you, Mr. Davis? 94 00:12:09,000 --> 00:12:10,000 I didn't do it. 95 00:12:10,000 --> 00:12:12,000 Police, your wife was poisoned. 96 00:12:12,000 --> 00:12:13,000 I didn't do it. 97 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:29,000 Police learned that four years ago, Davis had fled to American Samoa, where he lived in this house. Before that, he had lived in Florida, Haiti and Alaska, among other places. 98 00:12:30,000 --> 00:12:38,000 Two years ago, he married a 20-year-old Samoan woman. He told her that his first wife had died in a tragic accident. 99 00:12:38,000 --> 00:12:47,000 In American Samoa, Davis obtained a job as a pilot for a small commercial airline. He was apprehended on his way to work at the airport. 100 00:12:48,000 --> 00:13:00,000 Davis was extradited to Honolulu, Hawaii. He admitted his identity and voluntarily agreed to return to Michigan to stand trial. In return, federal authorities dropped charges of unlawful flight. 101 00:13:00,000 --> 00:13:15,000 Around the turn of the century, the streets of New York City were filled with starving immigrant children who had no one to care for them. The city orphanages overflowed. School classes and afternoon naps often took place outside of the city. 102 00:13:30,000 --> 00:13:41,000 The city was filled with people outside, even in the bitter cold. To alleviate the crowded conditions, the Children's Aid Society of New York came up with a unique plan. 103 00:13:45,000 --> 00:13:52,000 They began to put orphans on trains bound for the south and the Midwest, hoping they would be adopted by farm families along the route. 104 00:13:53,000 --> 00:14:10,000 Between 1890 and 1929, scores of trains carried at least 150,000 orphans into the heartland of America. Sadly, many of them were separated from their brothers and sisters, whom they would never see again. 105 00:14:11,000 --> 00:14:23,000 In 1910, two brothers named Algie and Johnny rode on an orphan train, along with a group of other orphans they headed for Arkansas, hoping to be adopted. 106 00:14:27,000 --> 00:14:37,000 When we left New York, none of us knew where we was going, but the guys at Tuckers knew where he's headed for. Fadville was the destination. 107 00:14:41,000 --> 00:14:54,000 When Algie and Johnny's train arrived in Fayetteville, Arkansas, prospective parents were waiting to look the children over. The brothers hoped they would be able to stay together. 108 00:14:54,000 --> 00:15:08,000 When they stopped, I raised it, lined it up to the side of the track. One thing I remember, I just wondered what they were going to do with me and Johnny. 109 00:15:08,000 --> 00:15:23,000 I had hoped that we'd both be in some home together. People come in and look at the kids. Some of them took them to make farmers out of them, or slaves out of them. 110 00:15:24,000 --> 00:15:30,000 Some people take them cause they loved them. How do you like this one? 111 00:15:30,000 --> 00:15:36,000 Oh, I like them. What's your name? Algie. Algie, you're going to go with me. 112 00:15:37,000 --> 00:15:42,000 When it came time to make the decision, the couple who took Algie only wanted one child. 113 00:15:43,000 --> 00:15:56,000 He took me and didn't want to take Johnny. Well, they just voted for it, and I just cried like I couldn't. But I just know they separated just from me. 114 00:15:56,000 --> 00:15:59,000 One father took Johnny and one took me. 115 00:16:00,000 --> 00:16:13,000 Finally, it took me a long time I got over that, but still, it come to my mind once in a while, we're easy. 116 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:19,000 And then the old man had raised me, I wouldn't have found all of it. I know it. 117 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:26,000 Happily, Algie and Johnny, the brothers who were separated when they rode the orphan train, had been reuniting. 118 00:16:27,000 --> 00:16:29,000 Power train, Johnny. 119 00:16:30,000 --> 00:16:39,000 Tonight, we will meet two other orphan train riders, Francis Murphy and Sylvia Wemhoff, who have been unable to find their lost siblings. 120 00:16:41,000 --> 00:16:50,000 In 1921, Sylvia Wemhoff, whose last name then was Voke, was taken out of a New York City orphanage to ride an orphan train to Nebraska. 121 00:16:51,000 --> 00:17:07,000 Her parents were dead, and she left behind an older sibling about whom she knew nothing. Sylvia was three years old, and the children on her train had been selected sight unseen by members of churches in Columbus, Nebraska. 122 00:17:08,000 --> 00:17:18,000 Sylvia was a very small child when she rode the orphan train. She was taken in a bit of a different manner because she was spoken for ahead of time. 123 00:17:18,000 --> 00:17:24,000 On your papers, there's a name and a number. The number will correspond with the number here. 124 00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:37,000 Numbers would be sewn onto the children's garments with their name and the birth date. The corresponding matching parent that had been found and located by the founding hospital would have a number corresponding to the number. 125 00:17:38,000 --> 00:17:41,000 And when they got to the train station, they would match the number and take the child. 126 00:17:44,000 --> 00:17:46,000 And this was the way Sylvia Wemhoff was chosen. 127 00:17:49,000 --> 00:17:54,000 Sylvia's last name was changed to Mick when she was adopted by the John Mick family. 128 00:17:56,000 --> 00:18:05,000 They had a small farm in Lindsay, Nebraska, and Sylvia, along with another orphan, a boy, was happily welcomed into the family. 129 00:18:06,000 --> 00:18:21,000 When I was about 17, 18 years old, and I began to question my mother Mick, whether I had any brothers or sisters. And if so, I wonder if we could ever get together. 130 00:18:22,000 --> 00:18:32,000 After years of searching, Sylvia located her birth certificate. It showed that she was born Stephanie Voek, spelled W-O-L-K. 131 00:18:33,000 --> 00:18:38,000 And that her mother Pauline Vitovich from Austria already had a child when Sylvia was born. 132 00:18:41,000 --> 00:18:48,000 Sylvia was adopted when she was three years old and today is 70. She is desperately trying to locate her missing sibling, 133 00:18:48,000 --> 00:18:53,000 even though there is no way to tell whether she is looking for a brother or a sister. 134 00:18:57,000 --> 00:19:04,000 The day after our broadcast, Sylvia's search came to an end. She learned that her brother's 72-year-old Joseph Voek was living in New York City. 135 00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:08,000 Voek's stepdaughter had seen our broadcast and recognized the names on Sylvia's birth certificate. 136 00:19:09,000 --> 00:19:14,000 On September 25th, Sylvia flew to New York and met her brother Joseph for the first time. 137 00:19:15,000 --> 00:19:21,000 Joseph, your sister Sylvia is here. 138 00:19:25,000 --> 00:19:27,000 I'm so happy. 139 00:19:27,000 --> 00:19:32,000 I'm so glad. I'm so happy to see you. 140 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:43,000 We hugged each other and we were just really thrilled and happy that we finally finally got together. 141 00:19:45,000 --> 00:19:52,000 I had heard I had a sister and I was awfully pleased when I saw her and thankful, thankful to God. 142 00:19:53,000 --> 00:19:56,000 Yes, that's me on there. 143 00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:04,000 Most brothers and sisters grew up sharing their lives together, but for Sylvia and Joseph, love and memories are just beginning. 144 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:14,000 The next man we will meet is Francis Murphy. In 1928, when he was 11, he too rode the orphan train. 145 00:20:15,000 --> 00:20:21,000 His baby sister Margaret and his mother, who was too poor to take care of him, were both left behind. 146 00:20:24,000 --> 00:20:30,000 When I got on the train, I didn't really feel that I was being wrenched away from somebody. 147 00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:40,000 I didn't know that much about my mother so that it wasn't a matter of tearing me away from her because I was away from her all the time anyway. 148 00:20:41,000 --> 00:20:44,000 It was a big adventure more than anything else. 149 00:20:45,000 --> 00:20:50,000 As a kid in New York, you have to remember that we didn't know the West. 150 00:20:51,000 --> 00:20:59,000 And what we knew was from the picture shows we saw of cowboys and Indians and baby engineers and going that direction. 151 00:21:00,000 --> 00:21:05,000 That was the biggest thrill that a kid in my time could really expect. 152 00:21:11,000 --> 00:21:16,000 Francis' excitement soon turned to sadness. 153 00:21:18,000 --> 00:21:22,000 Hello, I'm Camille Mitchell at the Children's Aid Society. I brought your boys. 154 00:21:23,000 --> 00:21:27,000 And stop after stop, potential adopted parents would be waiting to pick their child from the crowd. 155 00:21:28,000 --> 00:21:30,000 But not all the children found new parents. 156 00:21:31,000 --> 00:21:41,000 Francis, who had boarded the train in New York with such high hopes, began to realize that none of the families along the train's route wanted him. 157 00:21:42,000 --> 00:21:44,000 Hi, Lewis. Welcome to our family. 158 00:21:45,000 --> 00:21:54,000 Fourteen or fifteen children that were leaving, they just got off the train with their belongings and it didn't look Francis usually staying on the train. 159 00:21:54,000 --> 00:22:01,000 And he would see the crowd and get smaller and smaller until finally he was the only child left on the train. 160 00:22:01,000 --> 00:22:03,000 Bye-bye. 161 00:22:15,000 --> 00:22:20,000 Francis never was adopted. He went from family to family as a foster child. 162 00:22:24,000 --> 00:22:28,000 In spite of his early hardships, Francis' life turned out well. 163 00:22:29,000 --> 00:22:34,000 He became a high school teacher, married, and had five children and six grandchildren. 164 00:22:37,000 --> 00:22:43,000 Francis Murphy rode the orphan train sixty years ago, developed heart disease in 1987. 165 00:22:44,000 --> 00:22:47,000 And sadly he died soon after we filmed his interview in November. 166 00:22:47,000 --> 00:22:53,000 Francis' wife and family have continued his search and they ask that we present his story despite the fact that he is gone. 167 00:22:54,000 --> 00:23:01,000 They hope to unite the family who still loves Francis, the family he never knew and wanted so desperately to find. 168 00:23:02,000 --> 00:23:06,000 It was extremely important to Francis to go ahead with this interview. 169 00:23:07,000 --> 00:23:10,000 He'd been looking forward to it for literally months. 170 00:23:12,000 --> 00:23:16,000 And just the hope that he would find somebody. 171 00:23:17,000 --> 00:23:21,000 Particularly his sister was important. 172 00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:26,000 He didn't know much about love growing up. 173 00:23:28,000 --> 00:23:33,000 And he found out as he got older and had a family of his own. 174 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:38,000 I think his finding, Margaret, would be an extension of that love. 175 00:23:38,000 --> 00:23:45,000 It's still very important to us that we finish what he tried to do. 176 00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:56,000 Francis Murphy's sister, Margaret, would be about sixty-two years old today. 177 00:23:57,000 --> 00:24:02,000 She was probably born in either Yonkers or New York City and she may have been adopted. 178 00:24:03,000 --> 00:24:06,000 Francis and Margaret's mother was healed of Harding Murphy. 179 00:24:07,000 --> 00:24:10,000 Their grandparents were John and Elizabeth Harding from Nova Scotia. 180 00:24:11,000 --> 00:24:14,000 Francis' father was Martin Murphy. 181 00:24:33,000 --> 00:24:36,000 These are affidavits from police departments around the country. 182 00:24:37,000 --> 00:24:39,000 Attesting to Dorothy Allison's psychic powers. 183 00:24:40,000 --> 00:24:43,000 The use of psychics and police work is almost always controversial. 184 00:24:44,000 --> 00:24:48,000 Frequently they're inaccurate. All too often they are shoddard. 185 00:24:49,000 --> 00:24:52,000 But there are a few who do indeed seem to have a special gift. 186 00:24:53,000 --> 00:24:56,000 The unexplainable ability to predict details still locked in the future. 187 00:24:57,000 --> 00:25:01,000 An ability which in itself is an unsolved mystery. 188 00:25:03,000 --> 00:25:15,000 On December 3rd, 1967, five-year-old Michael Cursix and his older brother went out to play at around 8.15 a.m. 189 00:25:16,000 --> 00:25:22,000 As he were playing, Michael lost his footing, fell into a churning river, was swept away and drowned. 190 00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:33,000 Two hours before Michael's accident, at 5.56 a.m., Dorothy Allison woke from a horrific nightmare. 191 00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:38,000 Her lucid and frightening dream predicted Michael's death. 192 00:25:39,000 --> 00:25:43,000 I saw this little boy in a pipe. His hands were like this in the dream. 193 00:25:44,000 --> 00:25:47,000 They were clasped together and they were very black. I didn't know why. 194 00:25:48,000 --> 00:25:49,000 They were so black because he was so white. 195 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:52,000 I saw this tremendous illumination of light. 196 00:25:53,000 --> 00:25:58,000 Almost as though he had been in a... it seemed to me like a vacuum. 197 00:26:01,000 --> 00:26:06,000 For weeks the authorities searched the river, but there was no trace of Michael's body. 198 00:26:08,000 --> 00:26:14,000 A month after Michael disappeared, Dorothy went to the police and insisted that someone listened to her story. 199 00:26:14,000 --> 00:26:19,000 I had a dream of this little boy stuck in a pipe. 200 00:26:20,000 --> 00:26:24,000 The one brief newspaper article about the case did not contain a picture of Michael. 201 00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:29,000 The police were startled when Dorothy accurately described the clothes he was wearing. 202 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:33,000 He had on this green snow suit. 203 00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:41,000 Underneath the snow suit he had on a polo shirt with stripes and underneath that another shirt with a metal pin to it. 204 00:26:41,000 --> 00:26:44,000 And also he had his shoes on the wrong feet. 205 00:26:45,000 --> 00:26:50,000 There was a possibility that this could have been a hoax. There's always that possibility. 206 00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:58,000 When she came up with this description, I became overwhelmed because I knew this boy. I knew this family. 207 00:26:59,000 --> 00:27:03,000 It just got me to a point where I had to know more about what she was dreaming. 208 00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:06,000 Maybe there was something more that she couldn't remember now. 209 00:27:07,000 --> 00:27:08,000 Maybe just questioning her would bring more of it out. 210 00:27:09,000 --> 00:27:14,000 But we were going to work with her because she just got me. She just got me. 211 00:27:16,000 --> 00:27:23,000 When I started to talk to Don, I kept telling him that I saw the number 120, but whatever that meant, I don't know. 212 00:27:24,000 --> 00:27:27,000 I also saw the number eight and didn't know what that meant either. 213 00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:34,000 And I kept insisting that his body would be found behind the school. I insisted on that. 214 00:27:39,000 --> 00:27:43,000 As a search for Michael continued, Dorothy's clues began to mount up. 215 00:27:44,000 --> 00:27:56,000 The number eight, the school, the parking lot behind an ITT factory, number, gold lettering on a window, and the number 120. 216 00:27:57,000 --> 00:28:02,000 She had mentioned the number 120 the very first day that we were together. 217 00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:05,000 And we thought, well, maybe it's an address. 218 00:28:06,000 --> 00:28:10,000 And in the area that we were in initially, there was no 120. 219 00:28:11,000 --> 00:28:16,000 Then we thought, well, maybe it would be January 20th, the month and the day. 220 00:28:17,000 --> 00:28:20,000 That came and went. No significance whatsoever. 221 00:28:20,000 --> 00:28:25,000 But that 120 kept coming up. And to me especially, and I couldn't understand why. 222 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:28,000 By now they were starting to lose their patience. 223 00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:32,000 And Don for carers says, my God, I'm trying, but I don't know what you're saying. 224 00:28:33,000 --> 00:28:37,000 I said, well, look, he will be found on February 7th, and then our troubles will be over. 225 00:28:38,000 --> 00:28:39,000 You will know the story of Michael Perriss. 226 00:28:40,000 --> 00:28:45,000 The day the boy was found, it was 120 in the afternoon of February 7th. 227 00:28:45,000 --> 00:28:48,000 And I was told that the baby was found. 228 00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:55,000 The spot where Michael's body was found coincided with several of Dorothy's clues. 229 00:28:56,000 --> 00:29:03,000 Dorothy's vision of a number eight was echoed by the fact that elementary school PS 8 stands on the riverbank nearby. 230 00:29:05,000 --> 00:29:08,000 Across the riverbank, there was a sign that the baby was found. 231 00:29:08,000 --> 00:29:12,000 And I was told by the fact that elementary school PS 8 stands on the riverbank nearby. 232 00:29:15,000 --> 00:29:20,000 Across the street is a lumber yard. Next door is an office building with gold letters on the window. 233 00:29:23,000 --> 00:29:28,000 Directly across the river is a local ITT factory at its parking lot. 234 00:29:29,000 --> 00:29:34,000 And when Michael was found, he was wearing exactly the same clothes that Dorothy had dreamt. 235 00:29:34,000 --> 00:29:40,000 And although his galoshes were on the correct feet, his undershoes were indeed on the wrong feet. 236 00:29:44,000 --> 00:29:50,000 We backtracked. And everything that she was saying now fit into place, just like a puzzle. 237 00:29:51,000 --> 00:29:56,000 You pick up a piece and you toss it around until you link it and show the picture. 238 00:29:57,000 --> 00:30:00,000 It means nothing. But now everything seems to fit in place. 239 00:30:00,000 --> 00:30:04,000 We started, I started to kick myself for not knowing what she was talking about. 240 00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:13,000 There have been many, many times that I struck out completely and I really wanted to find a child and got no answers. 241 00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:19,000 Till today, I don't know why. But there are several cases where I never come up with anything. 242 00:30:20,000 --> 00:30:22,000 Not even one little clue that I know of. 243 00:30:22,000 --> 00:30:29,000 Dorothy Allison has lived in New Jersey all her life. She has four children and her husband Bob is an engineer for a construction company in Manhattan. 244 00:30:30,000 --> 00:30:37,000 When Dorothy was 14, she had the first indication of her psychic abilities when she correctly predicted the death of her father. 245 00:30:38,000 --> 00:30:43,000 Since the Michael Kersick's investigation, most of Dorothy's cases have been homicides. 246 00:30:44,000 --> 00:30:48,000 Many of the victims have been victims of the murder. 247 00:30:48,000 --> 00:30:53,000 Most of Dorothy's cases have been homicides. Many of the victims have been children. 248 00:30:56,000 --> 00:31:00,000 I've often thought to myself, why does this happen to me? Why not somebody else? 249 00:31:01,000 --> 00:31:08,000 Because it has been very hard on me emotionally, physically. It has not been a happy thing for me at all times. 250 00:31:09,000 --> 00:31:21,000 On December 20, 1974, a New York banker, John DeMars, left his Manhattan office to ride the train home to New Jersey. 251 00:31:23,000 --> 00:31:29,000 He was happily married with two young children and habitually called his wife if he was going to be even five minutes late. 252 00:31:29,000 --> 00:31:37,000 But on this day, when his train stopped at Nutley, John DeMars was not on board. He had simply vanished. 253 00:31:40,000 --> 00:31:45,000 Our first thoughts were maybe he embezzled money. We didn't find anything wrong with the bank. 254 00:31:46,000 --> 00:31:50,000 Maybe he ran away with another girl. We found out that that wasn't true. 255 00:31:51,000 --> 00:31:53,000 We just couldn't find this fellow, so I went to see Dorothy. 256 00:31:54,000 --> 00:31:59,000 I said, Dorothy, I'm looking for a male adult that's been missing for more than 24 hours. 257 00:32:00,000 --> 00:32:02,000 Her first words worked to me was, he's drowned. 258 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:07,000 I said, he fell off the train. He said, how could he fall off the train in the water? 259 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:12,000 I said, no, I said, you received misinformation. He fell off the train. He's in water. 260 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:18,000 So I said, well, can you give me any other clues as to where I would find him? 261 00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:24,000 I said, I see a row of tires, a little park with children down a hill on the sleds. 262 00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:30,000 I see a fire engine that children play on, and I see this man in this water here. 263 00:32:31,000 --> 00:32:33,000 Then she told me that she sees a bow and arrow. 264 00:32:35,000 --> 00:32:37,000 Now, where do you find a bow and arrow? I thought she was crazy. 265 00:32:42,000 --> 00:32:47,000 Two months after the disappearance, the father and his teenage son were target shooting with a bow and arrow 266 00:32:48,000 --> 00:32:50,000 on a bluff overlooking the Pesach River. 267 00:32:55,000 --> 00:33:00,000 One of the arrows missed the target and landed a few feet from the body of John DeMars. 268 00:33:03,000 --> 00:33:09,000 The body was found on February 22nd. Dorothy had mentioned the number 222. 269 00:33:10,000 --> 00:33:14,000 Nearby was a park where rows of tires had been arranged to make a sled run. 270 00:33:15,000 --> 00:33:22,000 The question remained, how did John DeMars, a train passenger, drown in the Pesach River? 271 00:33:23,000 --> 00:33:27,000 The authorities theorized that DeMars dozed off on the way home. 272 00:33:28,000 --> 00:33:31,000 The train made an unscheduled stop on the Pesach River Bridge. 273 00:33:32,000 --> 00:33:36,000 The conductor opened the door to let another passenger off the back of the train. 274 00:33:37,000 --> 00:33:39,000 John DeMars still half asleep. 275 00:33:39,000 --> 00:33:45,000 Thought he had reached his station, he stepped out into space and fell into the river below. 276 00:33:47,000 --> 00:33:50,000 Chills go up and down your spine, believe me. 277 00:33:51,000 --> 00:33:56,000 You look around, you look at your notebook, all these notes that you wrote down three months ago. 278 00:33:57,000 --> 00:33:59,000 And everything that she had said was exactly there. 279 00:34:00,000 --> 00:34:02,000 Everything that she had said. 280 00:34:03,000 --> 00:34:06,000 How Dorothy can do these things? I don't understand psychics. 281 00:34:06,000 --> 00:34:08,000 I don't know how Dorothy's mind works. 282 00:34:09,000 --> 00:34:12,000 All I know is Dorothy told me, Ellen, go outside and cross the street. 283 00:34:13,000 --> 00:34:16,000 I would go out and cross the street because I don't know what she's seeing for me. 284 00:34:18,000 --> 00:34:25,000 Ellen Jacobson and her husband Bill became involved with Dorothy after their daughter disappeared from home in 1976. 285 00:34:37,000 --> 00:34:47,000 On May 15th, 14-year-old Susan Jacobson left her Staten Island home to interview for a job at a local ice cream parlor. 286 00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:53,000 When Susan didn't return for dinner, her parents contacted the police. 287 00:34:53,000 --> 00:35:00,000 We were basically told that our daughter was 14, she had a boyfriend, and she ran away. Point blank, that was it. 288 00:35:01,000 --> 00:35:09,000 And there's nothing they can do because if she ran away, they don't have manpower to go and look for 14-year-old girls who run away. 289 00:35:10,000 --> 00:35:12,000 So we had nothing. 290 00:35:24,000 --> 00:35:30,000 Two weeks later, the Jacobsons asked Dorothy to help. She immediately went to Staten Island with her husband Bob. 291 00:35:32,000 --> 00:35:36,000 Dorothy knew nothing about the case and had never met the Jacobsons. 292 00:35:38,000 --> 00:35:42,000 When Dorothy came, she was so down to earth it was impossible to believe. 293 00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:47,000 I had visions of, um, oh, a gypsy woman. 294 00:35:47,000 --> 00:35:52,000 I had visions of somebody laying out a deck of cards and reading cards to me or reading my hand. 295 00:35:53,000 --> 00:35:58,000 And Dorothy's first reaction when I came in was with the coffee, put the coffee card on. 296 00:36:00,000 --> 00:36:02,000 What does 256 mean to you? 297 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:07,000 She immediately asked me what the number 2562 would mean. 298 00:36:08,000 --> 00:36:12,000 And I said, well, I could turn it into February 5th, 1962. 299 00:36:12,000 --> 00:36:14,000 I said, that's my daughter's birthday. 300 00:36:15,000 --> 00:36:18,000 She said to me, how about the number 408? What does that mean? 301 00:36:19,000 --> 00:36:23,000 I'm a total shock. I don't know what she's looking for. I said, 408. She says, maybe it's 405. 302 00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:26,000 I said, my daughter's who was born that time. 303 00:36:27,000 --> 00:36:30,000 She says, what's more? I said, excuse me. She says, what's more mean? 304 00:36:31,000 --> 00:36:34,000 I said, what do you mean more? She says, M-A-R. I want to see M-A-R. 305 00:36:35,000 --> 00:36:41,000 I said, please, let's go to the police department because the vision that I got from the police department is that I can't go to the police department. 306 00:36:42,000 --> 00:36:46,000 The vision that I got right then in May was that Hadouan had been strangled by the boyfriend. 307 00:36:47,000 --> 00:36:50,000 And that she was at this place with this big M-A-R written in red letters. 308 00:36:51,000 --> 00:36:54,000 So I went to the police department and tried to explain, but to no avail. 309 00:36:57,000 --> 00:37:00,000 The authorities were unwilling to work with a psychic. 310 00:37:01,000 --> 00:37:06,000 So Bill Jacobson decided to investigate the many clues that Dorothy had come up with on his own. 311 00:37:07,000 --> 00:37:21,000 It was an abandoned car, the letters M-A-R, smell of oil, two sets of dual church steeples, dual smokestacks, swamps, marshes. 312 00:37:23,000 --> 00:37:34,000 We searched a vast amount of Staten Island and the confusion of it is that you don't know distance and time and you can't tell past, present and future. 313 00:37:37,000 --> 00:37:42,000 Eventually we got into a place that is called Downback. 314 00:37:43,000 --> 00:37:57,000 In this area is an abandoned shipyard that was apparently active in World War I and we found a rock and on this rock were painted in red letters, the letters M-A-R. 315 00:38:06,000 --> 00:38:22,000 All the clues that she had given me helped me by way of getting me to the area of ground where Susan was eventually found. 316 00:38:23,000 --> 00:38:32,000 When I saw the M-A-R I was astounded and I felt it had to be the area. 317 00:38:33,000 --> 00:38:37,000 I have to call Dorothy, I have to get her over here, I have to show her what I found. 318 00:38:38,000 --> 00:38:46,000 When Dorothy saw the M-A-R on a rock she said, this is it, this is where your daughter is, now we need the cops. 319 00:38:47,000 --> 00:38:56,000 We need the dogs, we need the bloodhounds, we need to drag through the swamps and marshes but we had none of that. 320 00:38:57,000 --> 00:39:05,000 We searched as much as we could by ourselves, we felt that we had done a good search, unfortunately we never found my dog. 321 00:39:05,000 --> 00:39:21,000 Twenty-two months later three boys rot muskrat hunting in the precise area were built and searched. 322 00:39:22,000 --> 00:39:30,000 Just one hundred yards from the M-A-R letters they discovered the remains of Susan Jacobson concealed in two oil drums. 323 00:39:30,000 --> 00:39:45,000 From the place where Susan was found you could see almost all at the same time, dual church steeples, smokestacks, the abandoned car, the rock with the letters M-A-R. 324 00:39:46,000 --> 00:39:56,000 Susan was found in an oil drum which is a smell of oil and Dorothy had also said that Susan was in water but she didn't drown. 325 00:39:56,000 --> 00:40:04,000 The autopsy revealed that Susan had been strangled and her body dumped at the bottom of the water filled hole. 326 00:40:06,000 --> 00:40:12,000 Dempsey Hawkins, Susan's boyfriend, was arrested, tried and convicted of her murder. 327 00:40:14,000 --> 00:40:25,000 Dorothy knew that my daughter was murdered. She admitted to us maybe nine months after my daughter's disappearance to the fact that who did the murder, she named the person to us. 328 00:40:27,000 --> 00:40:35,000 And everything that she said, she said how she was murdered and where and what Dorothy said came true. 329 00:40:40,000 --> 00:40:43,000 In the three cases we have seen Dorothy's success has been astonishing. 330 00:40:44,000 --> 00:40:51,000 But keep in mind that over the years Dorothy has worked on hundreds of investigations and in many she was unable to come up with information that helped the authorities. 331 00:40:52,000 --> 00:40:59,000 In a moment we'll follow Dorothy on a current murder investigation to see exactly what she does and how she does it. 332 00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:05,000 Last March we looked for a case where we could examine Dorothy Allison's psyche gifts. 333 00:41:06,000 --> 00:41:10,000 We found a homicide in Hagerstown, Maryland with a police at a dead end. 334 00:41:11,000 --> 00:41:15,000 They agreed we could ask Dorothy to assist in the case and film the investigation as it happened. 335 00:41:15,000 --> 00:41:22,000 As you'll see Dorothy came up with the name of a possible suspect but for legal reasons we have chosen to disguise this name. 336 00:41:23,000 --> 00:41:29,000 We gave Dorothy absolutely no information on the case. She didn't know the name of the victim or the state where it happened. 337 00:41:30,000 --> 00:41:32,000 She didn't even know it was a murder case. 338 00:41:37,000 --> 00:41:44,000 Dorothy was contacted by Sergeant Keith Watenscheid of the Maryland State Police who is in charge of the ongoing investigation. 339 00:41:45,000 --> 00:41:49,000 Mrs. Allison. Yes. How are you? Fine, thank you. How are you? 340 00:41:50,000 --> 00:41:59,000 Knowing absolutely nothing about the case Dorothy drew up a list of clues the night before Detective Watenscheid's call and then dictated the list in several conversations the next day. 341 00:42:00,000 --> 00:42:05,000 What we should do is be looking for a janitor in school, somebody that worked in school as a janitor. 342 00:42:05,000 --> 00:42:12,000 I feel there's some kind of kidnap, abduction of some kind or something like that. 343 00:42:13,000 --> 00:42:18,000 I also feel that I'm dealing with a suspect who has suicidal tendencies and something wrong with the feet. 344 00:42:19,000 --> 00:42:26,000 The numbers one and seven were very important whether it's 71 or 17 I don't know just yet. 345 00:42:27,000 --> 00:42:33,000 The clues were random images that might relate to the victim, the murderer, friends or even the police. 346 00:42:33,000 --> 00:42:40,000 I feel also that this person wears glasses and sometimes a wig to look different. 347 00:42:41,000 --> 00:42:43,000 A wig? Yes. 348 00:42:44,000 --> 00:42:56,000 When I was talking to Dorothy on the telephone she mentioned about a police officer possibly in disguise wearing a beard that he now doesn't have and a wig or hairpiece of that nature. 349 00:42:56,000 --> 00:43:02,000 That kind of keyed upon me because I'm a policeman I don't film in disguise but I am in plain clothes. 350 00:43:03,000 --> 00:43:13,000 I wear a hairpiece and I just took a beard off two days ago I was on vacation and she could have been keying in on me which is possible. 351 00:43:18,000 --> 00:43:22,000 Dorothy flew to Hagerstown with her husband Bob to meet with Detective Watenscheid. 352 00:43:23,000 --> 00:43:27,000 Immediately after they landed Dorothy had a name for the authorities. 353 00:43:28,000 --> 00:43:33,000 Mrs. Elson, how are you? I'm sorry to watch you but stay pretty. How's your flight? Great. 354 00:43:34,000 --> 00:43:38,000 I will have a name for you. Beautiful. 355 00:43:39,000 --> 00:43:44,000 Okay and I also have some other things that I got it's kind of scribbled but there's a name for you okay. 356 00:43:45,000 --> 00:43:50,000 It's either Chuck is in nickname and then it's either Bernstein or Goldstein the last name. 357 00:43:50,000 --> 00:43:57,000 When it comes to psychics if you looked at me in general sense I would tell you I think they're a bunch of baloney 358 00:43:58,000 --> 00:44:03,000 but I'm keeping an open mind towards Dorothy Elson because I want to solve this case very badly. 359 00:44:04,000 --> 00:44:15,000 For four years a police have been unable to solve the case of Laurie Zimmerman a 15 year old school girl who in April 1984 left her aunt's house and simply disappeared. 360 00:44:16,000 --> 00:44:21,000 Eight days later Laurie's partially naked body was found in the forest 12 miles away. 361 00:44:22,000 --> 00:44:28,000 She had been beaten and suffocated. The coroner found a foreign object lodged in her throat. 362 00:44:30,000 --> 00:44:39,000 I feel that she was in front of a library when she met these two brothers or two cousins or twin friends of hers right from her own neighborhood. 363 00:44:39,000 --> 00:44:42,000 She didn't meet somebody there their name could be. 364 00:44:43,000 --> 00:44:47,000 Within minutes of leaving the airport more thoughts and images flooded Dorothy's mind. 365 00:44:48,000 --> 00:44:53,000 I feel that she had been raped. I'm Ben Merrick. 366 00:44:54,000 --> 00:45:02,000 I know that if I had to see her I don't know why but I get a feeling she has something in that of her head as though somebody hit her with something near her head. 367 00:45:03,000 --> 00:45:04,000 I'm getting something on the head. 368 00:45:05,000 --> 00:45:09,000 Her job is broken two places but that of course wasn't the cause of that. 369 00:45:11,000 --> 00:45:13,000 I get more of a suffocation. I know I can't breathe. 370 00:45:14,000 --> 00:45:17,000 There's something hot whatever it is I feel a lot of things around this girl. 371 00:45:18,000 --> 00:45:19,000 Tremendous amounts of people. 372 00:45:22,000 --> 00:45:29,000 No I think I'm getting a feeling of what actually there's a choking going on in her throat too. 373 00:45:30,000 --> 00:45:31,000 She's choking on something. 374 00:45:32,000 --> 00:45:39,000 And this is during the attack you know she's choking. 375 00:45:40,000 --> 00:45:41,000 I think you know what I'm getting at. 376 00:45:42,000 --> 00:45:45,000 There's a force on the throat but it's more of a choking type. 377 00:45:46,000 --> 00:45:47,000 Exactly. 378 00:45:48,000 --> 00:45:52,000 I feel you were girdling on something right that type of situation I'm getting. 379 00:45:53,000 --> 00:45:58,000 There's no way that Dorothy Alson would have known about an object being in the victim's throat. 380 00:45:59,000 --> 00:46:08,000 She related that it didn't seem to her to be a choking of the hands around the throat but as a choking of some type of object down inside the victim's throat. 381 00:46:09,000 --> 00:46:16,000 And I was very surprised that she keyed in on this because this is a point in the investigation that we did not make public. 382 00:46:17,000 --> 00:46:27,000 She definitely absolutely walked down the street and she goes as far as the library and then she is picked up in this yellow car that I described to the real old. 383 00:46:28,000 --> 00:46:30,000 Well here's the library right here on the left. 384 00:46:31,000 --> 00:46:35,000 After 24 hours in Hagerstown Dorothy had come up with literally dozens of possible clues. 385 00:46:36,000 --> 00:46:43,000 Many seemed unrelated to the case. Others would seem misdirected. Keith Wattenchate's hairpiece for instance. 386 00:46:44,000 --> 00:46:48,000 And the janitor Dorothy mentioned may have been Laurie's stepfather not a suspect. 387 00:46:49,000 --> 00:46:54,000 The individual she named at the airport Chuck Goldstein or Bernstein is also not a suspect. 388 00:46:54,000 --> 00:46:58,000 Though according to Dorothy he may have some information. 389 00:46:59,000 --> 00:47:02,000 But some of Dorothy's clues did seem connected to the crime. 390 00:47:03,000 --> 00:47:06,000 For example Dorothy had seen the numbers one and seven. 391 00:47:07,000 --> 00:47:11,000 She learned that Laurie had been laid to rest at the cemetery in plot 17. 392 00:47:12,000 --> 00:47:14,000 Dorothy had mentioned the name Cleveland. 393 00:47:15,000 --> 00:47:20,000 The last street sign before the crime scene was at a turn off called Cleveland Town Road. 394 00:47:20,000 --> 00:47:24,000 Dorothy had talked about an old church. 395 00:47:25,000 --> 00:47:29,000 Half a mile from where the body was found there was indeed an old church. 396 00:47:30,000 --> 00:47:40,000 All these clues might be coincidences but they might also be part of a mosaic that once assembled will create a picture of what happened to Laurie Zimmerman. 397 00:47:41,000 --> 00:47:49,000 At the crime scene Dorothy experienced the strongest sensation that she'd felt during the entire time. 398 00:47:50,000 --> 00:47:51,000 A higher investigation. 399 00:47:52,000 --> 00:47:57,000 But as far as that name I feel that I feel him stronger than anybody right now in this area. 400 00:47:58,000 --> 00:48:07,000 I feel that he's the one who took the girl here and the reason he murdered her was because she was reluctant to let him do whatever he wanted. 401 00:48:08,000 --> 00:48:12,000 So she screamed out loud and he panicked and I believe that he hit her on the head. 402 00:48:13,000 --> 00:48:14,000 You know the head area. 403 00:48:15,000 --> 00:48:16,000 I believe that he killed her that way. 404 00:48:16,000 --> 00:48:20,000 But I do believe that this man that murdered this girl. 405 00:48:21,000 --> 00:48:23,000 I think he should start looking for him. 406 00:48:24,000 --> 00:48:25,000 Okay. 407 00:48:26,000 --> 00:48:28,000 In fact that'd be positive that he is the one. 408 00:48:31,000 --> 00:48:38,000 Detective Wattensheet has run the name that Dorothy mentioned through the police computers but there are no known suspects by that name. 409 00:48:39,000 --> 00:48:41,000 In total she came up with 50 different clues. 410 00:48:41,000 --> 00:48:48,000 Only when the crime is solved we know how many of Dorothy's visions are really connected to the murder of Laurie Zimmerman. 411 00:48:55,000 --> 00:48:58,000 For every mystery there is someone somewhere who knows the truth. 412 00:48:59,000 --> 00:49:00,000 Perhaps that someone is watching. 413 00:49:01,000 --> 00:49:02,000 Perhaps it's you. 414 00:49:11,000 --> 00:49:13,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 415 00:49:14,000 --> 00:49:16,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 416 00:49:17,000 --> 00:49:19,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 417 00:49:20,000 --> 00:49:22,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 418 00:49:23,000 --> 00:49:25,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 419 00:49:26,000 --> 00:49:28,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 420 00:49:29,000 --> 00:49:31,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 421 00:49:32,000 --> 00:49:34,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 422 00:49:35,000 --> 00:49:37,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 423 00:49:38,000 --> 00:49:40,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her. 424 00:49:41,000 --> 00:49:43,000 I believe that he's the one who killed her.