1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:06,000 Tonight on Unsolved Mysteries. 2 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:09,000 A rock star turned computer who is alone in his car 3 00:00:09,000 --> 00:00:14,000 on the freeway, a desperate call to 911 and then nothing. 4 00:00:14,000 --> 00:00:17,000 The man in his vehicle literally vanished into thin air. 5 00:00:17,000 --> 00:00:20,000 What happened to Taylor Kramer? 6 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:21,000 Voodoo. 7 00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:24,000 The very word conjures up images of black magic, 8 00:00:24,000 --> 00:00:26,000 hexes and curses. 9 00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:29,000 But believe it or not, it's a very simple story. 10 00:00:29,000 --> 00:00:32,000 But believers insist Voodoo can be a force for good. 11 00:00:32,000 --> 00:00:36,000 Just wait until you see the incredible story of two doctors 12 00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:41,000 in Texas who turned to Voodoo to cure a dying man. 13 00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:43,000 Recently, this man lost custody of his children 14 00:00:43,000 --> 00:00:45,000 after a bitter court battle. 15 00:00:45,000 --> 00:00:47,000 Now police believe he is a killer. 16 00:00:47,000 --> 00:00:51,000 The victim was his ex-wife's attorney. 17 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:55,000 How do you treat an arthritic tiger with an attitude? 18 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:57,000 Perhaps you can call on Linda Tellington-Jones, 19 00:00:57,000 --> 00:01:00,000 a therapist with an unorthodox approach 20 00:01:00,000 --> 00:01:03,000 and an unconventional client list. 21 00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:04,000 Join me. 22 00:01:04,000 --> 00:01:07,000 Perhaps you hold the one vital clue that will help 23 00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:11,000 solve one of tonight's Unsolved Mysteries. 24 00:01:58,000 --> 00:02:03,000 I don't want any help yet. 25 00:02:03,000 --> 00:02:04,000 Yes, you can. 26 00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:07,000 I'm going to show myself. 27 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:09,000 OK, what is your name? 28 00:02:09,000 --> 00:02:12,000 Hello? 29 00:02:12,000 --> 00:02:14,000 Hello? 30 00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:17,000 That call to a 911 operator in Los Angeles 31 00:02:17,000 --> 00:02:21,000 marks a moment this man, Phillip Taylor Kramer, vanished. 32 00:02:21,000 --> 00:02:24,000 The question is, did he commit suicide? 33 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:27,000 And if he did, why have so many people seen him? 34 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:44,000 In the 1970s, Taylor Kramer was a bass player 35 00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:47,000 for the rock and roll band Iron Butterfly. 36 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:51,000 By the 90s, Taylor had settled down and become a family man. 37 00:02:51,000 --> 00:02:53,000 Taylor and his wife Jennifer have two young children, 38 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:56,000 a boy and a girl. 39 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:59,000 Taylor Kramer is also a math and computer whiz 40 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:03,000 who founded his own high-tech multimedia company in 1990. 41 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:06,000 For several weeks before his disappearance, 42 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:08,000 he had been working around the clock 43 00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:10,000 on an exciting new breakthrough. 44 00:03:10,000 --> 00:03:12,000 He said it's very simple. 45 00:03:12,000 --> 00:03:14,000 It's been here the whole time. 46 00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:18,000 It's so simple that no one has discovered it. 47 00:03:18,000 --> 00:03:20,000 I can't believe how close I am right now. 48 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:25,000 And he said, imagine Jennifer, a computer and a camera 49 00:03:25,000 --> 00:03:31,000 being able to find a missing child in a sea of thousands of people 50 00:03:31,000 --> 00:03:37,000 by just showing the computer a small piece of that child's face 51 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:41,000 and finding that child in a fraction of a second. 52 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:44,000 Taylor's research consumed him. 53 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:48,000 It was based on revolutionary theories about data compression. 54 00:03:48,000 --> 00:03:52,000 Ideas that his father, a former professor of electrical engineering, 55 00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:55,000 had developed 30 years earlier. 56 00:03:55,000 --> 00:04:01,000 My brother was just so excited in the fact that they had made this beautiful discovery 57 00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:03,000 that was going to help people. 58 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:06,000 And I believe, in fact, that that's real. 59 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:08,000 But my brother, just being the person that he is, 60 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:12,000 the excitement of it all and everything just overwhelmed him. 61 00:04:12,000 --> 00:04:15,000 Sweetheart, the hand of God has touched me. 62 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:17,000 Taylor, calm down. You're going to twist an ankle. 63 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:19,000 I can do no wrong. 64 00:04:21,000 --> 00:04:23,000 He's sending me the truth, babe. 65 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:28,000 The day before he disappeared, we went on a hike up in Thousand Oaks. 66 00:04:28,000 --> 00:04:33,000 And we hiked up to the top of the hill and we look across 67 00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:36,000 and you can see the whole Canaio Valley where we live 68 00:04:36,000 --> 00:04:40,000 and there's a cross up on the hill that belongs to one of the colleges nearby. 69 00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:43,000 And he turned around and he pointed to the cross and he said, 70 00:04:43,000 --> 00:04:47,000 look, honey, our house is right in the path of this cross. 71 00:04:47,000 --> 00:04:52,000 He started to see sacredness in everything. 72 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:57,000 Jennifer now blames Taylor's bizarre behavior on sleep deprivation. 73 00:04:57,000 --> 00:05:01,000 The day after the hike, Taylor left home around 9 a.m. 74 00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:04,000 He would visit his father-in-law briefly and go to the airport 75 00:05:04,000 --> 00:05:08,000 to pick up a business associate and his wife. 76 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:12,000 Taylor went to the airport as scheduled, waited 25 minutes, 77 00:05:12,000 --> 00:05:16,000 then inexplicably left before his friends arrived. 78 00:05:16,000 --> 00:05:18,000 He drove north toward his home. 79 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:21,000 Along the way, he made a series of phone calls. 80 00:05:21,000 --> 00:05:24,000 At one point, he left a message for his old friend Ron Bushy, 81 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:27,000 the drummer for Iron Butterfly. 82 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:29,000 Bushy? 83 00:05:29,000 --> 00:05:31,000 This is a creamer. 84 00:05:33,000 --> 00:05:36,000 I love you more than I have itself. 85 00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:39,000 His voice sounded stressed. 86 00:05:39,000 --> 00:05:42,000 He sounded maybe, like, scared. 87 00:05:42,000 --> 00:05:45,000 Maybe he'd even been crying. I don't know. 88 00:05:45,000 --> 00:05:49,000 But apparently, this cell phone call from his car was made to me. 89 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:56,000 And he also called Jennifer and a lot of other people. 90 00:05:56,000 --> 00:06:03,000 Hi, Jay. Listen, tell Greg, tell Greg I'm not going to be able to meet him at the airport. 91 00:06:03,000 --> 00:06:05,000 He'll understand, okay? 92 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:11,000 I said, Taylor, where are you? Where are you going? What are you doing? 93 00:06:11,000 --> 00:06:17,000 Sweetheart, I want you to remember that whatever happens, I'll always be with you. 94 00:06:17,000 --> 00:06:21,000 And I started to get scared and I thought something is wrong with Taylor. 95 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:24,000 And I said, where are you going? 96 00:06:24,000 --> 00:06:28,000 You just tell him that I'll meet him at the hotel at one, okay? 97 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:33,000 And really calmly and lovingly, like he normally talks to me, he said, 98 00:06:33,000 --> 00:06:37,000 and when I see you, honey, I have a big surprise for you. 99 00:06:37,000 --> 00:06:43,000 But I knew in my gut that Taylor wasn't going to be at the hotel. 100 00:06:43,000 --> 00:06:47,000 I just knew that he wouldn't be there. 101 00:06:47,000 --> 00:06:53,000 An hour later, Taylor made his last contact, the call to 911. 102 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:55,000 So, want me to help you? 103 00:06:55,000 --> 00:06:59,000 Yes, you can. I'm going to kill myself. 104 00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:01,000 Okay, what is your name? 105 00:07:01,000 --> 00:07:05,000 Hello? Hello? 106 00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:10,000 It's really hard to commit suicide and take your life and disappear. 107 00:07:10,000 --> 00:07:13,000 I mean, somebody's going to find you. Somebody's going to find the car. 108 00:07:13,000 --> 00:07:16,000 And the car and him are gone. 109 00:07:16,000 --> 00:07:23,000 No car, no body, no further activity on Taylor's credit cards or cellular phone. 110 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:27,000 However, after his family papered the Los Angeles area with posters, 111 00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:33,000 several people claimed they had seen Taylor Kramer near the area where he made his phone calls. 112 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:39,000 A pawn shop employee in Canoga Park, California, spotted Taylor in late February. 113 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:43,000 When he was here that day, he left the impression on me, 114 00:07:43,000 --> 00:07:46,000 and then when Chuck came in and showed me the picture, I was positive that it was him, 115 00:07:46,000 --> 00:07:50,000 because we stayed here and talked for a little while, so, I mean, I couldn't be wrong about it. 116 00:07:50,000 --> 00:07:52,000 That's why I'm 100% sure that it was him. 117 00:07:52,000 --> 00:07:57,000 Around the same time, Jan Biondi and her daughter sought Taylor at a garage sale. 118 00:07:57,000 --> 00:08:02,000 Then later that day, Kathy came by in the car and passing out the flyers and said, 119 00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:06,000 you know, he likes garage sales. He's been seen in this area. Have you seen him? 120 00:08:06,000 --> 00:08:10,000 And my daughter said, yeah, yeah, yeah, he was here this morning. 121 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:14,000 If Taylor Kramer did not commit suicide, what happened to him? 122 00:08:14,000 --> 00:08:20,000 On February 28, 1995, two and a half weeks after his disappearance, 123 00:08:20,000 --> 00:08:24,000 Jennifer believes he made one final call to his family. 124 00:08:24,000 --> 00:08:28,000 He called the house and the answer machine picked up, 125 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:32,000 and all Taylor said was, hello, hello. 126 00:08:51,000 --> 00:08:57,000 In a moment, an unexpected conclusion in the case of a missing husband. 127 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:14,000 Recently, we brought you a missing person's case that was perhaps one of the most unusual we have ever presented. 128 00:09:14,000 --> 00:09:18,000 Now the case is solved, and the outcome has proven to be true. 129 00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:23,000 It's all, and the outcome has proven to be just as odd as the story itself. 130 00:09:23,000 --> 00:09:28,000 In 1990, Christine Reinhard finally found the man of her dreams. 131 00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:32,000 She and Craig Williamson were married just a month after they met. 132 00:09:32,000 --> 00:09:36,000 The newlyweds were virtually inseparable. 133 00:09:36,000 --> 00:09:42,000 They bought a farm in Wisconsin and began to raise exotic fish for sale to gourmet restaurants. 134 00:09:42,000 --> 00:09:47,000 But in 1993, Christine Reinhard's perfect world was torn apart. 135 00:09:47,000 --> 00:09:54,000 That August, Craig drove to Colorado Springs, Colorado on a business trip and never returned. 136 00:09:54,000 --> 00:09:59,000 Craig's disappearance launched Christine on a heartbreaking 18-month search. 137 00:09:59,000 --> 00:10:04,000 She traveled to Colorado Springs, posted flyers, asked questions. 138 00:10:04,000 --> 00:10:07,000 She went to the hotel where Craig was last seen. 139 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:12,000 Every lead came to a dead end, but Christine refused to give up hope. 140 00:10:12,000 --> 00:10:16,000 I know he's alive, and I know someday I'll find him. 141 00:10:16,000 --> 00:10:20,000 The trouble is I don't know when, and I just have to keep hanging on. 142 00:10:20,000 --> 00:10:23,000 The hardest part is hanging on. 143 00:10:27,000 --> 00:10:32,000 Shortly after our broadcast, Christine Reinhard's long odyssey finally came to an end. 144 00:10:32,000 --> 00:10:36,000 However, it was a far cry from the joyous conclusion she had hoped for. 145 00:10:36,000 --> 00:10:39,000 Here's Keely Shay Smith with the details. 146 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:44,000 After seeing himself on our program, Craig Williamson phoned Christine from Key West, Florida, 147 00:10:44,000 --> 00:10:46,000 where he was working as a handyman. 148 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:54,000 Craig was now going by the name of Ron, and he bore little resemblance to the loving husband Christine remembered. 149 00:10:54,000 --> 00:10:58,000 The phone rang and he said, hello Christine, this is Craig. 150 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:03,000 And it didn't really sound like him, he sounded like a shell of himself. 151 00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:08,000 From what phrases he used and things like that, I knew it was Craig. 152 00:11:08,000 --> 00:11:14,000 But his voice was really very weak, and I was just shaking. 153 00:11:14,000 --> 00:11:17,000 I was in total shock. 154 00:11:17,000 --> 00:11:20,000 Craig Williamson recounted a harrowing tale. 155 00:11:20,000 --> 00:11:25,000 All he could remember was that he had been attacked by an unknown assailant in Colorado Springs. 156 00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:31,000 What followed were two years of severe amnesia, painful headaches and frequent blackouts. 157 00:11:31,000 --> 00:11:35,000 Two years with virtually no sense of who he was. 158 00:11:35,000 --> 00:11:41,000 When I saw this whole thing on Unsolved Mysteries, I realized that I was Craig Williamson, 159 00:11:41,000 --> 00:11:44,000 but I didn't know who Craig Williamson was, I didn't have a clue to who he was. 160 00:11:44,000 --> 00:11:47,000 I knew that he had a family someplace. 161 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:54,000 I knew that he was married, I didn't know that he had a fish farm, I didn't know a lot. 162 00:11:54,000 --> 00:12:00,000 Last September Craig and Christine met in Colorado Springs, Colorado. 163 00:12:00,000 --> 00:12:06,000 Christine hoped that a tour of the area where Craig had disappeared might help to jog his memory. 164 00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:08,000 Does that look at all familiar to you? 165 00:12:08,000 --> 00:12:18,000 It doesn't. It looks familiar from the Unsolved Mysteries segment, but there's nothing here, I feel nothing, no attachment to it. 166 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:26,000 In the end, Craig remembered nothing, and the reunion Christine had long dreamed of ended in a bittersweet parting. 167 00:12:27,000 --> 00:12:34,000 Neither Craig nor I are the same people we were two years ago before all of this happened. 168 00:12:34,000 --> 00:12:40,000 We're still very good friends and we're always going to stay connected, but we can't go back. 169 00:12:40,000 --> 00:12:46,000 He's not there. He doesn't have any sort of emotional attachment anymore, and I just have to accept that. 170 00:12:46,000 --> 00:12:50,000 We are not the same people. We still love each other, we still care for each other, 171 00:12:50,000 --> 00:12:56,000 but we've decided it's best for us to go our separate ways and still be friends and we still love each other, 172 00:12:56,000 --> 00:12:59,000 but we're not the same people that married. 173 00:13:04,000 --> 00:13:11,000 Everything I've done has been worth it. The search, all the effort that I've put in trying to find Craig was worth it. 174 00:13:11,000 --> 00:13:14,000 I would do it all over again and I can't imagine doing it any other way. 175 00:13:15,000 --> 00:13:21,000 Craig Williamson is now living with friends in California, hopefully receiving the medical treatment he needs. 176 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,000 Christine has moved to Wyoming to begin life anew. 177 00:13:25,000 --> 00:13:31,000 In a moment, two doctors are desperately ill-patient and a journey into the shadowy world of Voodoo. 178 00:13:44,000 --> 00:13:46,000 Tonight, foreigners and people are in hiding. 179 00:13:46,000 --> 00:13:51,000 Worry that they may be the next victim of an alleged killer named Kelly McGinnis. 180 00:13:51,000 --> 00:13:56,000 All the result of a custody battle that began in bitterness and apparently ended in murder. 181 00:13:59,000 --> 00:14:03,000 It happened just one month ago yesterday, August 12th, 1996. 182 00:14:03,000 --> 00:14:10,000 Thomas Meyer, the city attorney of Greenville, Illinois, was found shot to death in the alley behind his office. 183 00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:15,000 One of the first to respond to the scene was John King, Greenville's chief of police. 184 00:14:15,000 --> 00:14:18,000 Thomas Meyer was his best friend. 185 00:14:19,000 --> 00:14:26,000 It was one glance and I knew that it was him and there was no life left. 186 00:14:28,000 --> 00:14:32,000 67-year-old Thomas Meyer had suffered multiple gunshot wounds. 187 00:14:32,000 --> 00:14:37,000 There were no witnesses to the shooting, but fingers were pointing at Kelly McGinnis from the start. 188 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:41,000 McGinnis and Meyer had recently clashed in this courtroom. 189 00:14:41,000 --> 00:14:47,000 Meyer had represented McGinnis's ex-wife in a legal action regarding the custody of their two young children. 190 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:53,000 Kelly McGinnis felt that the children would be better off with him. 191 00:14:53,000 --> 00:14:55,000 He desperately wanted to be the custodial parent. 192 00:14:56,000 --> 00:15:04,000 But the result was that Mrs. McGinnis was awarded custody and Mr. McGinnis was awarded a visitation, a fair amount of visitation. 193 00:15:05,000 --> 00:15:09,000 McGinnis apparently refused to accept the decision as final. 194 00:15:09,000 --> 00:15:17,000 Just hours before the murder of Thomas Meyer, McGinnis was back in the courthouse, reportedly still angry about being denied custody. 195 00:15:17,000 --> 00:15:24,000 No one knows what was going through his mind, but he was next seen near the alley where Thomas Meyer was shot dead. 196 00:15:25,000 --> 00:15:30,000 We have witnesses that put Mr. McGinnis at the scene just prior to the shooting, 197 00:15:31,000 --> 00:15:38,000 and Mr. McGinnis was seen leaving the area shortly after the time of the murder. 198 00:15:39,000 --> 00:15:43,000 When police went to McGinnis' home to question him, no one answered the door. 199 00:15:43,000 --> 00:15:46,000 When they broke it down, McGinnis had vanished. 200 00:15:47,000 --> 00:15:49,000 A day went by. A week. 201 00:15:49,000 --> 00:15:53,000 Some speculated that McGinnis had taken his own life. 202 00:15:53,000 --> 00:15:58,000 Then ten days after the murder, McGinnis mailed five letters from Central Illinois. 203 00:15:59,000 --> 00:16:04,000 Two went to area newspapers and complained about corruption in the judicial process. 204 00:16:04,000 --> 00:16:09,000 He wrote in part, clearly the only winner in a divorce case are the lawyers, 205 00:16:09,000 --> 00:16:12,000 their gains being made at the expense of the children. 206 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:18,000 The other three letters went to relatives and a friend, in one of them. 207 00:16:18,000 --> 00:16:25,000 The letter was very apologetic to his family, although it wasn't an admission of the offense. 208 00:16:25,000 --> 00:16:29,000 It alluded to that. It appears to be very sorry for what happened. 209 00:16:29,000 --> 00:16:34,000 He makes mention of the fact that he will probably never see his children again, 210 00:16:34,000 --> 00:16:37,000 and he's very remorseful for that. 211 00:16:39,000 --> 00:16:42,000 The killing has shattered Greenville's sense of security. 212 00:16:42,000 --> 00:16:45,000 Murders just don't happen here. The last one was ten years ago. 213 00:16:46,000 --> 00:16:48,000 Now some fear the killing hasn't stopped. 214 00:16:50,000 --> 00:16:53,000 McGinnis' ex-wife has left town with her children. 215 00:16:53,000 --> 00:16:55,000 And there were abouts a secret. 216 00:16:56,000 --> 00:16:59,000 McGinnis' own attorney is under the protection of U.S. Marshals. 217 00:17:00,000 --> 00:17:04,000 Guards have beefed up security at the courthouse, and Ann Callis Ranji, 218 00:17:04,000 --> 00:17:08,000 the judge who ruled on McGinnis' custody suit, has gone into hiding. 219 00:17:09,000 --> 00:17:14,000 Judge Ranji is very concerned for safety. She's expressed that to us. 220 00:17:14,000 --> 00:17:18,000 Also, I've spoken on a daily basis with her family members. 221 00:17:19,000 --> 00:17:21,000 She just wants him caught. 222 00:17:22,000 --> 00:17:27,000 But no one wants McGinnis caught more than Thomas Myers Widow Barbara. 223 00:17:28,000 --> 00:17:33,000 I just pray that he will come forward without hurting anyone else. 224 00:17:34,000 --> 00:17:38,000 The McGinnis family, I'm sure, is suffering as much as we are. 225 00:17:39,000 --> 00:17:42,000 His parents, his siblings, his children, his ex-wife. 226 00:17:43,000 --> 00:17:46,000 You know, we need some healing for everybody. 227 00:17:51,000 --> 00:17:55,000 When we return, meet Linda Tellington-Jones. 228 00:17:56,000 --> 00:17:59,000 Can her mysterious healing touch soothe a savage beast? 229 00:18:21,000 --> 00:18:28,000 If you're a person and you're in pain, you can find a specialist somewhere to treat you no matter what the problem. 230 00:18:29,000 --> 00:18:31,000 But what if you're not a person? 231 00:18:32,000 --> 00:18:35,000 In the animal kingdom, Linda Tellington-Jones is a one-woman Mayo Clinic. 232 00:18:36,000 --> 00:18:39,000 She uses her own special healing technique she calls the T-Touch. 233 00:18:40,000 --> 00:18:43,000 The results are very similar to the one in the animal kingdom. 234 00:18:44,000 --> 00:18:46,000 She's a very special person. 235 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:49,000 She uses her own special healing technique she calls the T-Touch. 236 00:18:50,000 --> 00:18:53,000 The results are phenomenal, truly an unsolved mystery. 237 00:19:00,000 --> 00:19:05,000 Keiko the Killer Whale won hearts around the world when he escaped to the open sea in the film Free Willy. 238 00:19:07,000 --> 00:19:10,000 In real life, Keiko suffers from a troublesome papilloma, 239 00:19:11,000 --> 00:19:13,000 a strange wart-like growth beneath his pectoral fins. 240 00:19:14,000 --> 00:19:17,000 During the ten years Keiko has lived in the adventure kingdom in Mexico City, 241 00:19:18,000 --> 00:19:20,000 no one has been able to cure it. 242 00:19:21,000 --> 00:19:23,000 Enter Linda Tellington-Jones. 243 00:19:24,000 --> 00:19:27,000 When I was asked to work with Keiko with the touches, 244 00:19:28,000 --> 00:19:30,000 I really didn't know if it would help him or not. 245 00:19:31,000 --> 00:19:35,000 What I was hoping is that these little circular touches would actually affect the cells 246 00:19:36,000 --> 00:19:39,000 and help to reduce the effects of this virus like papilloma. 247 00:19:40,000 --> 00:19:44,000 Keiko's handlers were amazed to see results almost immediately. 248 00:19:46,000 --> 00:19:49,000 The day after Linda was with Keiko, 249 00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:54,000 we saw big changes on the papilloma. 250 00:19:55,000 --> 00:20:00,000 It was very thin and it wasn't broken as always is. 251 00:20:03,000 --> 00:20:07,000 So he was active also, he was like kind of very happy. 252 00:20:10,000 --> 00:20:15,000 Linda Tellington-Jones claims she has helped thousands of animals 253 00:20:16,000 --> 00:20:18,000 during the twenty years since she developed her teetouch. 254 00:20:19,000 --> 00:20:23,000 However, there are skeptics who suggest that Linda's touch is no more than a pleasant massage. 255 00:20:24,000 --> 00:20:27,000 To get a first-hand look at this mystery, who went to Out of Africa, 256 00:20:28,000 --> 00:20:30,000 a wild animal park in Phoenix, Arizona, 257 00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:34,000 Janine Ford, an anchor woman with KPNX TV, 258 00:20:35,000 --> 00:20:37,000 our NBC affiliate in Phoenix joins us from the park. 259 00:20:40,000 --> 00:20:46,000 The Out of Africa Wildlife Park showcases hundreds of different kinds of exotic animals 260 00:20:47,000 --> 00:20:48,000 from all over the world. 261 00:20:49,000 --> 00:20:53,000 And while the handlers here can take care of most of the behavioral issues, 262 00:20:54,000 --> 00:20:56,000 these are wild animals and there are some problem cases. 263 00:20:57,000 --> 00:21:01,000 For instance, this 400-pound Siberian tiger named Brendle 264 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:04,000 has been known to unexpectedly charge her fence, 265 00:21:05,000 --> 00:21:08,000 scaring visitors and creating problems for her handlers. 266 00:21:10,000 --> 00:21:12,000 At first, she seemed open to Linda, 267 00:21:13,000 --> 00:21:16,000 but in an instant, the encounter turned ugly. 268 00:21:25,000 --> 00:21:27,000 Linda had even less success with Cheddar, 269 00:21:28,000 --> 00:21:32,000 a temperamental African caracal whose paws may have nerve damage. 270 00:21:39,000 --> 00:21:45,000 Fortunately, Cheddar, unlike the other cats, had been declawed and Linda was not hurt. 271 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:49,000 Undaunted, she went on to bigger game. 272 00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:56,000 Kipling, a 400-pound Bengal tiger, has joints that are inflamed and very painful. 273 00:21:57,000 --> 00:22:01,000 Perhaps the tea touch can help him, but what exactly is the tea touch? 274 00:22:03,000 --> 00:22:08,000 They're a collection of circular touches done all over the body 275 00:22:09,000 --> 00:22:13,000 with the intent of waking up to functioning of the cells. 276 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:18,000 To make the connection, I did the big circles and said, 277 00:22:19,000 --> 00:22:20,000 feel you, feel you. 278 00:22:21,000 --> 00:22:25,000 And then when I really went into the joints, it's a very directed connection 279 00:22:26,000 --> 00:22:29,000 so that he really feels the intent of waking up those cells. 280 00:22:30,000 --> 00:22:31,000 It's like turning on the electric lights of the body. 281 00:22:34,000 --> 00:22:37,000 It seemed to calm him down and his body relaxed 282 00:22:37,000 --> 00:22:44,000 and his breathing came heavier, so he was going into a deep, relaxed state by her touch. 283 00:22:45,000 --> 00:22:50,000 When she got to a point where it was obvious his joints hurt him, he reacted, but not violently in any way. 284 00:22:51,000 --> 00:22:55,000 So now we know where to touch and where he really needs it, just from what she did with that session with him. 285 00:22:57,000 --> 00:23:00,000 Linda now faced her biggest challenge. 286 00:23:01,000 --> 00:23:04,000 Genesis, another Siberian tiger, doesn't have an off button. 287 00:23:04,000 --> 00:23:10,000 He is prone to attack almost anyone, even on occasion, handlers he's known all his life. 288 00:23:12,000 --> 00:23:13,000 He has attacked me. 289 00:23:14,000 --> 00:23:19,000 I have a personal experience with Genesis where he actually went through my arm and way into my arm. 290 00:23:21,000 --> 00:23:25,000 I'm hoping that with Linda's touch that we'll be able to work with him because he needs touch. 291 00:23:26,000 --> 00:23:32,000 He very much wants to be handled and yet he's so dangerous, so I'm hoping that I will be able to be in there with him without getting hurt. 292 00:23:35,000 --> 00:23:38,000 It was too risky for Linda to go inside the tiger's enclosure. 293 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:48,000 From outside, Linda guided Bobby in performing the T-Touch, while another handler, Shay Erickson, kept Genesis pacified by letting him lick her fingers. 294 00:23:49,000 --> 00:23:50,000 Now go back toward the shoulders. 295 00:23:51,000 --> 00:23:57,000 If there's a way you can keep him sucking and you reach back and you can get to the neck and shoulders, 296 00:23:57,000 --> 00:24:04,000 and at least give him a little bit of relief on the shoulders because of course when he's protecting his, when he's putting so much pressure on his shoulders. 297 00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:11,000 In the first session, Genesis remained wary and alert but relaxed enough to stretch out on his side. 298 00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:16,000 The primary contact is the hand where he feels safe up on the shoulder and the other one just kind of moves back. 299 00:24:18,000 --> 00:24:21,000 And up there along the top of the scaffold where the right hand is, that's where it kind of gets sore. 300 00:24:21,000 --> 00:24:26,000 What we find is that the touches override fear or aggression. 301 00:24:27,000 --> 00:24:43,000 Those are instinctive responses and when we do these little circular touches all over the body, you can take an animal who is very fearful or an animal who is aggressive and suddenly you change them at a core level, at the level of the brain. 302 00:24:44,000 --> 00:24:47,000 A few hours later, they tried a second session. 303 00:24:48,000 --> 00:24:54,000 Shay again gentled the tiger by letting him lick her fingers while Bobby continued to apply the telling to touch. 304 00:25:06,000 --> 00:25:09,000 A few minutes later, Shay took away the pacifier. 305 00:25:09,000 --> 00:25:18,000 I got very nervous because I knew at that moment he didn't have the same distraction that he had before and so there was a moment of hesitation. 306 00:25:18,000 --> 00:25:23,000 I put my hand by his mouth, wondering what was going to go on but his response was wonderful. 307 00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:27,000 He knew I was there, it was okay and he was enjoying being touched. 308 00:25:28,000 --> 00:25:34,000 As a skeptic, you know, I don't understand part of her philosophy of relaxing and getting to cellular levels. 309 00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:38,000 I mean that doesn't make any sense to me from a medical standpoint. 310 00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:43,000 Dr. Irvin Ingram, a Phoenix veterinarian, has treated Genesis several times. 311 00:25:43,000 --> 00:25:47,000 He approached the T-Touch sessions with reservations. 312 00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:52,000 By the end of the day, Dr. Ingram saw a distinct change in the tiger. 313 00:25:53,000 --> 00:26:00,000 Something certainly made a difference and she's the primary difference, I guess, today but there's no question from this morning to this afternoon. 314 00:26:00,000 --> 00:26:05,000 Much calmer, seems almost aware of what's around him instead of being in his own little world. 315 00:26:05,000 --> 00:26:07,000 But you're still skeptical over the whole. 316 00:26:07,000 --> 00:26:19,000 I don't understand and certainly I need more than one episode to be convinced but it's a miraculous change on this individual case. 317 00:26:20,000 --> 00:26:23,000 I couldn't ask for better results than what we got from Genesis. 318 00:26:23,000 --> 00:26:34,000 It was wonderful, absolutely wonderful to be able to be in there with him and not experience that fear I had before with that touch being the go-between, if you will. 319 00:26:36,000 --> 00:26:38,000 How does the touch work? 320 00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:44,000 I wish I knew, I don't know how the touch works. I don't know why it works. I don't really know how it works. 321 00:26:44,000 --> 00:26:53,000 We only know from experience in six continents with incredible numbers of animals and people that it does work but it's a mystery. 322 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:59,000 According to Linda Tellington-Jones, anyone can learn the T-Touch. 323 00:26:59,000 --> 00:27:04,000 Perhaps in the future, a visit to the doctor won't mean a shot but a gentle touch. 324 00:27:05,000 --> 00:27:08,000 And how are Linda's Tiger patients doing? Much better. 325 00:27:08,000 --> 00:27:13,000 Particularly Genesis, who is now literally acting like a pussycat. 326 00:27:16,000 --> 00:27:23,000 When we return, two doctors, a desperately ill patient and a journey into the shadowy world of Voodoo. 327 00:27:35,000 --> 00:27:50,000 Voodoo. For most of us, the word brings to mind images of death hexes and evil curses, blood, pain, agony. 328 00:27:50,000 --> 00:27:55,000 But believers say that is black magic. Voodoo is something altogether different. 329 00:27:56,000 --> 00:28:06,000 Eva K. Jones is a priestess of Voodoo in New Orleans, Louisiana. She insists that Voodoo is a force for good, not evil. 330 00:28:06,000 --> 00:28:14,000 It is in fact an ancient nature-based religion that traces its origins back thousands of years to West Africa. 331 00:28:15,000 --> 00:28:25,000 A lot of people come to me who somehow seem to be fixed in negative emotions, negative ways of thinking. 332 00:28:25,000 --> 00:28:28,000 Some of them are in fact, hexed. 333 00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:35,000 But are hexes and incantations real? Can Voodoo affect someone on the physical level? 334 00:28:35,000 --> 00:28:38,000 Or is it all in the minds of those who believe? 335 00:28:39,000 --> 00:28:45,000 There is truly a psychological component to Voodoo. 336 00:28:45,000 --> 00:28:58,000 And by that I mean certainly if you want to be healed and if you believe that you will be healed, your state of mind has a direct effect on your healing. 337 00:28:59,000 --> 00:29:06,000 Faith works miracles. That idea is common to all religions. 338 00:29:06,000 --> 00:29:16,000 And now science is beginning to accept that the power of belief can indeed cure, whether it's the healing waters of lures of the arcane rituals of Voodoo. 339 00:29:16,000 --> 00:29:21,000 In the story you're about to see, two doctors create their own Voodoo ceremony. 340 00:29:21,000 --> 00:29:25,000 It's a daring last-ditch attempt to save a dying man. 341 00:29:25,000 --> 00:29:32,000 It may defy all you know about medical treatment, but those involves swear every detail is true. 342 00:29:34,000 --> 00:29:39,000 In 1967, Dr. Larry Dossi was a young intern at a hospital in Texas. 343 00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:45,000 One afternoon he was assigned a new patient, a man we will call Harold. 344 00:29:45,000 --> 00:29:49,000 Harold was as weak and demaciated as a prisoner of war. 345 00:29:49,000 --> 00:29:53,000 Not really. Sometimes when I call. 346 00:29:53,000 --> 00:29:58,000 We're going to run some tests. We're going to do some blood tests and some x-rays, that sort of thing. 347 00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:01,000 We're going to find out what your problem is, okay? 348 00:30:01,000 --> 00:30:08,000 I embarked on an elaborate evaluation, a medical workup to uncover the cause of the problem. 349 00:30:08,000 --> 00:30:14,000 And this man's chart just began to get thicker and thicker with normal tests. 350 00:30:15,000 --> 00:30:19,000 Mr. Bennett, I don't understand it. I've run every test I know how. 351 00:30:19,000 --> 00:30:24,000 I've performed every exam I know how, and they all come up normal. How do you feel? 352 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:26,000 Not good at all, no. 353 00:30:26,000 --> 00:30:30,000 You don't look good. I just don't know what to do. 354 00:30:30,000 --> 00:30:35,000 A baffle Dr. Dossi called in another intern, Dr. William Hensley, for a second opinion. 355 00:30:35,000 --> 00:30:43,000 I've been really worried about you. And I wanted to come see you to find out possibly if anything that you know of unusual has happened to you, 356 00:30:43,000 --> 00:30:47,000 such as an insect bite or anything of that sort. 357 00:30:49,000 --> 00:30:52,000 Not to do you believe in who do. 358 00:30:52,000 --> 00:31:00,000 Dr. Hensley was stunned by the question. It took him back some 20 years to his grandmother's sprawling South Texas ranch. 359 00:31:00,000 --> 00:31:05,000 A woman named Mary reputed to be a voodoo queen lived out back. 360 00:31:06,000 --> 00:31:14,000 As a small child, Dr. Hensley witnessed Mary's power firsthand when a young woman was assaulted by one of the ranch workers. 361 00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:23,000 When the constable came to arrest him, my grandmother refused to let that happen and had him sent back to the back of the place. 362 00:31:23,000 --> 00:31:31,000 And Mary, who was the head person in the back, said that she had put a death hex on him. 363 00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:36,000 And sure enough, that night there was all kinds of clattering going on and a fire at the back of the place. 364 00:31:36,000 --> 00:31:39,000 And this went on every night for several nights. 365 00:31:39,000 --> 00:31:43,000 And then one day Mary came to the back door and said, 366 00:31:43,000 --> 00:31:47,000 Juan's dead. And they came and picked him up. 367 00:31:47,000 --> 00:31:51,000 And my uncle, who was a physician, said there wasn't a mark on him. 368 00:31:52,000 --> 00:31:56,000 A while back I went to see a reader. I went having some problems. 369 00:31:56,000 --> 00:32:02,000 Harold confided to Dr. Hensley that he had refused to pay a fortune teller who had given him a reading. 370 00:32:02,000 --> 00:32:05,000 She apparently cursed Harold with a death hex. 371 00:32:05,000 --> 00:32:08,000 I started feeling bad, feeling real bad. 372 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:10,000 You really believe this? 373 00:32:10,000 --> 00:32:13,000 I believe she put a dying hex on me, Dr. 374 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:20,000 There really was a possibility that someone with that strong a belief system could actually be frightened to death. 375 00:32:20,000 --> 00:32:22,000 Larry, I just met with Harold. 376 00:32:22,000 --> 00:32:23,000 Yeah? 377 00:32:23,000 --> 00:32:25,000 You're not going to believe what he told me. 378 00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:26,000 What? 379 00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:29,000 Let's go talk over here. 380 00:32:29,000 --> 00:32:38,000 You know, I considered myself a fairly thorough physician, but yet I was blind to the possibility that anything like a hexing or a cursing had taken place. 381 00:32:38,000 --> 00:32:42,000 So this just didn't have a place in the way I thought the world worked. 382 00:32:44,000 --> 00:32:48,000 But Dr. Hensley's worldview was different. In fact, radically different. 383 00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:50,000 What kind of procedure? 384 00:32:50,000 --> 00:32:54,000 We could take a fingernail of his or some hair and burn it. 385 00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:57,000 Well, I don't know. That sounds pretty far out. 386 00:32:57,000 --> 00:32:58,000 The thing is, if we let... 387 00:32:58,000 --> 00:33:01,000 Dr. Hensley felt there was only one way to cure Harold. 388 00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:07,000 He wanted to use the voodoo techniques he had learned as a child to drive out the evil spirits. 389 00:33:08,000 --> 00:33:13,000 I was confronted with something, for me, that was very, very strange. 390 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:19,000 I realized, though, that we'd better do something because this man was dying. 391 00:33:21,000 --> 00:33:30,000 We were fearful, and we were convinced at the time that we could be severely reprimanded if not fired. 392 00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:36,000 Therefore, we did this at the slow time of the week, which was late Saturday night. 393 00:33:36,000 --> 00:33:42,000 So no one would witness this ceremony, this de-hexing ritual. 394 00:33:42,000 --> 00:33:44,000 I knew that there had to be a fire. 395 00:33:44,000 --> 00:33:47,000 I knew that we had to have a body part. 396 00:33:48,000 --> 00:33:56,000 And I knew that we had to convince him that we were superior and could overcome the accident that put on him. 397 00:33:58,000 --> 00:34:02,000 Whether by accident or fate, it was a full moon night. 398 00:34:03,000 --> 00:34:05,000 The doctors needed fire. 399 00:34:06,000 --> 00:34:11,000 They lit a drug called mandelamine. It burned with an eerie flame. 400 00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:15,000 This magic is more powerful than any that has come before it. 401 00:34:15,000 --> 00:34:17,000 They needed a lock of hair. 402 00:34:20,000 --> 00:34:22,000 And finally, the incantation. 403 00:34:23,000 --> 00:34:25,000 As your hair burns, the hex is removed. 404 00:34:30,000 --> 00:34:35,000 How, if you bring word of this to anyone, the hex will return twofold. 405 00:34:46,000 --> 00:34:49,000 Hello. How are you doing? 406 00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:50,000 Good morning. 407 00:34:50,000 --> 00:34:52,000 I've got something for you. Oh, and let me get this. 408 00:34:53,000 --> 00:34:57,000 The next morning, to everyone's amazement, Harold was alert and full of life. 409 00:34:57,000 --> 00:34:59,000 Can I have some ham and eggs, too? 410 00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:01,000 Sure, that's what you want. 411 00:35:01,000 --> 00:35:02,000 OK, I'll go get it. 412 00:35:02,000 --> 00:35:03,000 Thank you. 413 00:35:06,000 --> 00:35:07,000 Harold. 414 00:35:08,000 --> 00:35:09,000 Hi, Doctor. 415 00:35:09,000 --> 00:35:10,000 Hi, how are you feeling today? 416 00:35:10,000 --> 00:35:12,000 Much, much, much better. 417 00:35:12,000 --> 00:35:14,000 Looks like your appetite's back, huh? 418 00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:16,000 It was genuine. It was a cure. 419 00:35:17,000 --> 00:35:23,000 Overnight, literally overnight, this man turned the corner from death into life. 420 00:35:23,000 --> 00:35:27,000 This was your basic dramatic, miracle kind of cure. 421 00:35:27,000 --> 00:35:29,000 I don't believe that anything medically cured him. 422 00:35:30,000 --> 00:35:32,000 And I don't know what did. 423 00:35:32,000 --> 00:35:40,000 I know that he believed so strongly in both what was happening to him 424 00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:43,000 and what we were doing to change what was happening to him 425 00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:47,000 that we were able to prevail. 426 00:35:48,000 --> 00:35:52,000 There are a lot of people who are lay people, who are excellent mediums, 427 00:35:52,000 --> 00:35:57,000 who are not necessarily in the priesthood, 428 00:35:57,000 --> 00:36:01,000 who know how to deal with spirit, forces and forms. 429 00:36:01,000 --> 00:36:04,000 And Doctor Hensley did have a background in, 430 00:36:04,000 --> 00:36:08,000 because of his childhoodhood, in dealing with magic. 431 00:36:10,000 --> 00:36:12,000 This magic is more powerful than any other. 432 00:36:12,000 --> 00:36:14,000 Does Voodoo truly work? 433 00:36:14,000 --> 00:36:19,000 Or was Harold's illness and his swift recovery brought on entirely by his own imagination? 434 00:36:19,000 --> 00:36:21,000 The hex is removed. 435 00:36:22,000 --> 00:36:24,000 In order to understand why this man lived, 436 00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:28,000 we have to understand that belief is biology. 437 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:30,000 Your belief becomes your biology. 438 00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:32,000 There's not the mind here in the body over here. 439 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:34,000 They're not separate. 440 00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:36,000 So if you wanted to cure this man, 441 00:36:36,000 --> 00:36:38,000 you need not just work on the body, 442 00:36:38,000 --> 00:36:40,000 you could work with the belief system. 443 00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:42,000 This is what all shamans do. 444 00:36:42,000 --> 00:36:45,000 This is what Doctor Hensley did. 445 00:36:51,000 --> 00:36:54,000 No matter what you may believe about Voodoo, 446 00:36:54,000 --> 00:36:58,000 there is no doubt that the mind can be one of medicine's most powerful tools. 447 00:36:58,000 --> 00:37:01,000 Though Harold's doctors never again prescribed Voodoo, 448 00:37:01,000 --> 00:37:05,000 they have always remained open to alternative forms of healing. 449 00:37:08,000 --> 00:37:10,000 Stay tuned. 450 00:37:10,000 --> 00:37:12,000 Perhaps you can help locate a young man 451 00:37:12,000 --> 00:37:16,000 who has no idea that he is inherited more than $50,000. 452 00:37:29,000 --> 00:37:33,000 Over the years, we have found that every missing person's case has its own unique twist. 453 00:37:33,000 --> 00:37:35,000 Tonight, with your help, 454 00:37:35,000 --> 00:37:37,000 we hope to reunite a family and in the process, 455 00:37:37,000 --> 00:37:41,000 find the long-lost heir to a $50,000 estate. 456 00:37:44,000 --> 00:37:50,000 Like any teenager, 19-year-old Tim Moaner of Daytona Beach, Florida had his moods. 457 00:37:50,000 --> 00:37:56,000 But by all accounts, they gave no hint of what would happen on January 24, 1984. 458 00:37:59,000 --> 00:38:01,000 Tim, a student in aeronautical mechanics, 459 00:38:01,000 --> 00:38:05,000 simply drove away from home and out of his family's life. 460 00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:14,000 Tim was a rather quiet, sensitive type of person. 461 00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:18,000 But he was always very polite and well-mannered, 462 00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:22,000 and he was doing well in school, was on the Dean's List, in fact. 463 00:38:22,000 --> 00:38:26,000 And he was a very likable person. 464 00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:30,000 I'm really getting worried. He's always so prompt. 465 00:38:31,000 --> 00:38:36,000 Tim's parents grew increasingly frightened as the hours passed, and Tim failed to come home. 466 00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:45,000 His 14-year-old brother, Frank, had been the last family member to see him. 467 00:38:48,000 --> 00:38:52,000 There was a pretty good age difference between us, but we still hung out a lot. 468 00:38:52,000 --> 00:38:55,000 Because, you know, we got along real good and pretty open relationship. 469 00:38:55,000 --> 00:38:59,000 And I could just tell something was bothering him. 470 00:38:59,000 --> 00:39:03,000 I wasn't really saying it seemed like there was a lot going on in his mind. 471 00:39:06,000 --> 00:39:09,000 Two weeks passed, no word from Tim. 472 00:39:09,000 --> 00:39:15,000 The Moaner's first clue came from a gas station in Lake City, Florida, 150 miles north. 473 00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:18,000 On the day he disappeared, Tim had stopped there 474 00:39:18,000 --> 00:39:21,000 and paid for a tank of gas with his parents' credit card. 475 00:39:21,000 --> 00:39:25,000 Do you remember seeing him possibly? 476 00:39:25,000 --> 00:39:28,000 Oh, yeah, yeah. I remember the car. Great car. 477 00:39:28,000 --> 00:39:30,000 You do? You do? Yeah. Touch start. 478 00:39:30,000 --> 00:39:35,000 The attendant recalled that Tim had been traveling alone, but traveling where? 479 00:39:35,000 --> 00:39:37,000 And did you notice anything wrong? 480 00:39:37,000 --> 00:39:39,000 Tim's family could only guess. 481 00:39:39,000 --> 00:39:43,000 Then they received a letter from an auto impound company in Georgia. 482 00:39:45,000 --> 00:39:48,000 The Moaner's learned that six days after Tim vanished, 483 00:39:48,000 --> 00:39:50,000 his car had been abandoned in a parking lot, 484 00:39:50,000 --> 00:39:53,000 one block from Atlanta's Greyhound Bus Terminal. 485 00:39:56,000 --> 00:40:01,000 When we went to inspect the car, we did find his driver's license and wallet 486 00:40:01,000 --> 00:40:05,000 and some identification in our credit card, 487 00:40:05,000 --> 00:40:10,000 which indicated to me that he changed his identity. 488 00:40:10,000 --> 00:40:14,000 In other words, he wanted to start a new life from there on. 489 00:40:15,000 --> 00:40:19,000 One fact was undeniable. 490 00:40:19,000 --> 00:40:24,000 Someone had carefully removed everything of value from the car. 491 00:40:24,000 --> 00:40:27,000 A new stereo, Tim's expensive tool set, 492 00:40:27,000 --> 00:40:31,000 and a 10-speed bike he had packed in the trunk were all missing. 493 00:40:34,000 --> 00:40:38,000 Had Tim Moaner sold his possessions to buy a one-way bus ticket to a new life? 494 00:40:38,000 --> 00:40:42,000 Or was the explanation perhaps more sinister? 495 00:40:43,000 --> 00:40:48,000 I worried mostly about foul play and was afraid that something happened to him 496 00:40:48,000 --> 00:40:53,000 because we have no proof that he drove his car from Lake City, Florida to Atlanta. 497 00:40:55,000 --> 00:40:59,000 Tim Moaner left behind a tangle of conflicting clues. 498 00:40:59,000 --> 00:41:02,000 On one hand, he didn't take any clothes with him. 499 00:41:02,000 --> 00:41:06,000 Perhaps he had never really intended to stay away. 500 00:41:06,000 --> 00:41:08,000 And yet, just before leaving, 501 00:41:08,000 --> 00:41:12,000 Tim had withdrawn nearly all the money from his savings account. 502 00:41:12,000 --> 00:41:17,000 He did, however, leave a balance of $10, as though to say he might someday return. 503 00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:22,000 I mean, no matter where he is or what he's up to, 504 00:41:22,000 --> 00:41:25,000 it'd be great to see him and just tell him we miss him. 505 00:41:25,000 --> 00:41:29,000 And, you know, kind of curious why he left what have you. 506 00:41:29,000 --> 00:41:32,000 I'm sure, you know, I don't know what the circumstances were, 507 00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:35,000 but, you know, it'd be great to see him. 508 00:41:38,000 --> 00:41:41,000 I'm sure we'll see him again. 509 00:42:04,000 --> 00:42:06,000 Join me two weeks from tonight 510 00:42:06,000 --> 00:42:10,000 for another fascinating edition of Unsolved Mysteries.