1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,000 The End 2 00:00:04,000 --> 00:00:08,000 Tonight on Unsolved Mysteries 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:14,000 It was unthinkable just days after the cold-blooded attacks of 9-11, 4 00:00:14,000 --> 00:00:18,000 America faced another ominous threat, bioterrorism. 5 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:21,000 The instrument of death this time, anthrax, 6 00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:27,000 a toxic bacterium that can kill in a matter of days and did five times. 7 00:00:27,000 --> 00:00:29,000 The killer is still on the loose, 8 00:00:29,000 --> 00:00:34,000 and the FBI needs your help to solve this baffling case. 9 00:00:34,000 --> 00:00:37,000 A Texas teenager is kidnapped. 10 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:41,000 His father has seven hours to collect the ransom and deliver it to his abductors. 11 00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:46,000 The fate of young Kyle McElroy hangs in the balance. 12 00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:51,000 For more than 20 years, Monica Labou has been searching for her birth parents. 13 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:54,000 Her investigation has brought her to a painful conclusion. 14 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:58,000 At a very young age, she may have been kidnapped. 15 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:01,000 Perhaps you can help Monica learn the truth. 16 00:01:01,000 --> 00:01:06,000 At Texas A&M University, a suspected serial rapist is caught 17 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:10,000 when his first victim has a second startling face-to-face encounter with him. 18 00:01:10,000 --> 00:01:13,000 After being released on bail, 19 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:16,000 Don Richard Davis Jr. dropped out of sight. 20 00:01:16,000 --> 00:01:20,000 He'll bring you an update on his surprising arrest and trial. 21 00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:24,000 A woman whose family was ripped apart by murder 22 00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:26,000 searches for her long-lost siblings. 23 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:28,000 Thanks to our audience, 24 00:01:28,000 --> 00:01:33,000 she is finally reunited with a relative she believed she would never see again. 25 00:01:34,000 --> 00:01:37,000 Join me for these intriguing stories and more. 26 00:01:37,000 --> 00:01:42,000 Perhaps you may be the one chosen by fate to solve a mystery. 27 00:02:20,000 --> 00:02:24,000 The End 28 00:02:29,000 --> 00:02:32,000 Tuesday, October 16, 2001. 29 00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:40,000 Norma Wallace reported for work at the Postal Office in Trenton, New Jersey. 30 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:42,000 Hey, Aziz. 31 00:02:42,000 --> 00:02:46,000 She wasn't feeling well and thought it was a mild case of the flu. 32 00:02:46,000 --> 00:02:50,000 But as the day wore on, Norma became increasingly ill. 33 00:02:50,000 --> 00:02:53,000 She could barely breathe. 34 00:02:54,000 --> 00:02:57,000 Some 200 miles away in Washington, D.C., 35 00:02:57,000 --> 00:03:03,000 another postal worker, Leroy Richmond, was suffering nearly identical symptoms. 36 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:06,000 He too became gravely ill. 37 00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:12,000 In a matter of days, both Norma and Leroy were hospitalized. 38 00:03:12,000 --> 00:03:15,000 Their conditions growing worse by the hour. 39 00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:18,000 They seemed to be slowly suffocating to death. 40 00:03:18,000 --> 00:03:21,000 The doctors couldn't figure out why. 41 00:03:21,000 --> 00:03:23,000 But after administering a battery of tests, 42 00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:26,000 they finally came up with a diagnosis. 43 00:03:27,000 --> 00:03:29,000 Anthrax. 44 00:03:31,000 --> 00:03:35,000 What these veteran postal workers were told by doctors was terrifying. 45 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:37,000 Like millions of other Americans, 46 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:43,000 Leroy Richmond and Norma Wallace were aware of an anthrax-related death in Florida just days earlier. 47 00:03:43,000 --> 00:03:49,000 Now they were suffering from the most virulent form of the disease, fatal 95% of the time. 48 00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:54,000 Suddenly in the wake of September 11th, the nation faced a second wave of terrorism. 49 00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:58,000 Who would commit such heinous crimes and why? 50 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:08,000 Someone somewhere in the world had access to the deadly substance anthrax, 51 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:12,000 the knowledge to work with it, and an environment appropriate for its handling. 52 00:04:13,000 --> 00:04:17,000 Was it an individual or the work of a group? 53 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:20,000 Where were they located and what were their motives? 54 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:25,000 These questions plagued investigators and continue to do so today. 55 00:04:25,000 --> 00:04:29,000 For a nation still reeling from the 9-1-1 terrorist attacks, 56 00:04:29,000 --> 00:04:32,000 it seemed nearly impossible to fathom. 57 00:04:34,000 --> 00:04:42,000 The anthrax time bomb started taking 11 days before striking Norma and Leroy on October 5th, 2001. 58 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:51,000 63-year-old Robert Stevens, a photo editor at The Sun newspaper, died in Boca Raton, Florida. 59 00:04:51,000 --> 00:04:57,000 The cause? Exposure to anthrax spores, which experts believe came from an open letter. 60 00:04:58,000 --> 00:05:02,000 But the letter had been thrown away, its origin unknown. 61 00:05:02,000 --> 00:05:07,000 Suddenly federal investigators were thrust into the world of bioterrorism. 62 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:09,000 They were baffled. 63 00:05:10,000 --> 00:05:14,000 We don't have a crime scene in the traditional sense. 64 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:21,000 We don't have witnesses and we really don't have anyone that we can call and inform at this point. 65 00:05:23,000 --> 00:05:26,000 The same week, more media targets. 66 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:29,000 NBC News and The New York Post in Manhattan. 67 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:36,000 It is clear that the terrorists responsible for these attacks 68 00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:41,000 intended to use this anthrax as a weapon. 69 00:05:43,000 --> 00:05:48,000 But this time a clue postmarks on the envelopes, Trenton, New Jersey. 70 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:54,000 A swarm of FBI agents checked every mailbox in town for traces of anthrax. 71 00:05:54,000 --> 00:05:56,000 They found none. 72 00:05:58,000 --> 00:06:00,000 Only more questions. 73 00:06:00,000 --> 00:06:01,000 Why Trenton? 74 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:03,000 Was the anthrax package there? 75 00:06:03,000 --> 00:06:05,000 Did the terrorists live in the area? 76 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:09,000 Or were the letters mailed from the city only as a ruse? 77 00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:16,000 Whoever had the diabolical will and ability to put anthrax in the mail 78 00:06:16,000 --> 00:06:21,000 could easily have the intelligence to plot unimaginable false trails. 79 00:06:24,000 --> 00:06:26,000 October 9th, 2001. 80 00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:32,000 Two more anthrax-laced letters again postmarked Trenton. 81 00:06:34,000 --> 00:06:37,000 This time politicians the targets. 82 00:06:37,000 --> 00:06:41,000 Senators Tom Dashel and Patrick Leakey at their offices in D.C. 83 00:06:43,000 --> 00:06:48,000 A form of anthrax so pure and concentrated it was termed weapons grade. 84 00:06:50,000 --> 00:06:52,000 This is dangerous, dangerous stuff. 85 00:06:52,000 --> 00:06:56,000 It was estimated that two trillion spores went into each of those envelopes 86 00:06:56,000 --> 00:06:58,000 which would have been two grams. 87 00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:02,000 One envelope may have had a hundred million lethal doses. 88 00:07:08,000 --> 00:07:09,000 Unthinkable. 89 00:07:09,000 --> 00:07:13,000 Under the right conditions just two grams of anthrax could potentially wipe out 90 00:07:13,000 --> 00:07:15,000 one third of the U.S. population. 91 00:07:17,000 --> 00:07:20,000 Investigators came to a significant conclusion. 92 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:29,000 Notes contained within the anthrax-laden envelopes were so similar in handwriting 93 00:07:29,000 --> 00:07:32,000 they had to come from the same source. 94 00:07:32,000 --> 00:07:37,000 But the content of the notes could be viewed as a clue or another ruse. 95 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:45,000 It references to 9-11, death to Israel, and Allah is great, point to Arab terrorists, 96 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:50,000 or to someone who wanted investigators to think Arab extremists were involved. 97 00:07:53,000 --> 00:07:57,000 We are looking at three broad areas. 98 00:07:57,000 --> 00:08:01,000 The first being international terrorists, domestic terrorism. 99 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:04,000 We're looking at some of the individuals within the United States. 100 00:08:04,000 --> 00:08:08,000 And then we're looking at the lone wolf as well. 101 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:11,000 October 20th, 2001. 102 00:08:15,000 --> 00:08:20,000 Hundreds of federal investigators worked night and day to solve a crime like none they had ever encountered. 103 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:27,000 Meanwhile postal worker Normal Wallace fought for her life. 104 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:32,000 Her temperature had soared above 100. She was in shock. 105 00:08:32,000 --> 00:08:37,000 The anthrax spores were secreting a lethal exotoxin, causing blood vessels to break 106 00:08:37,000 --> 00:08:40,000 and the bacteria to pulse through her bloodstream. 107 00:08:43,000 --> 00:08:47,000 I felt like I was dying. 108 00:08:47,000 --> 00:08:51,000 I felt like I couldn't breathe. 109 00:08:51,000 --> 00:08:57,000 Once the spores enter your lungs, they actually attack the tissues and the lymph nodes 110 00:08:57,000 --> 00:09:03,000 and causes the anthrax to actually take possession of your body. 111 00:09:03,000 --> 00:09:04,000 Yes. 112 00:09:04,000 --> 00:09:05,000 Normal, you've got to read this. 113 00:09:05,000 --> 00:09:11,000 Normal knew her condition was serious, but the news of just how serious was alarming. 114 00:09:11,000 --> 00:09:14,000 I'm just reading about the survival rate. 115 00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:21,000 When my brother brought me the information back, it said that inhalation anthrax was the deadliest form of anthrax. 116 00:09:21,000 --> 00:09:24,000 95% of the people die. 117 00:09:24,000 --> 00:09:30,000 So I said, I'm ready. Whatever God decides for me, I'm ready for it. 118 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:37,000 The prognosis for Leroy Richmond was also grim. 119 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:42,000 Suffering excruciating pain, Leroy laid helpless as his lungs filled with fluids. 120 00:09:42,000 --> 00:09:48,000 Worse, doctors knew their most powerful drugs were rarely effective in fighting this silent killer. 121 00:09:50,000 --> 00:09:54,000 I think I was about as near in death then as I ever was going to get. 122 00:09:54,000 --> 00:10:00,000 My breathing had become so shallow that I was actually panting like a dog would breathe. 123 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:06,000 And I heard a couple guys say, man, he's not going to last for a couple hours and that would be it for him. 124 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:14,000 But how would two mail sorters at two different post offices become infected in the first place? 125 00:10:14,000 --> 00:10:18,000 High-tech mail sorting equipment. 126 00:10:18,000 --> 00:10:27,000 Investigators concluded that the sheer speed of 30,000 envelopes per hour flying through a sorter could send millions of anthrax spores into the air. 127 00:10:27,000 --> 00:10:33,000 Routine machine maintenance using air blowers only made the possibilities worse. 128 00:10:34,000 --> 00:10:39,000 I looked up and saw this dust and this this sudden stuff coming out of the machine. 129 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:46,000 And I just looked up and said, oh my God, and I said like that and probably in that instance I may have inhaled the spores. 130 00:10:47,000 --> 00:10:54,000 Errequitously, Norma and Leroy survived their harrowing ordeals. However, their lives will never be the same. 131 00:10:56,000 --> 00:11:02,000 I can't do all the things that I would normally do and the diagnosis from the doctor is not the same. 132 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:09,000 The diagnosis from the doctors is, look, Mr. Richmond, the toxin-lubinio in your system for at least a year and a half to two years. 133 00:11:10,000 --> 00:11:16,000 The hardest part is not knowing what's going to happen next year or ten years from now. 134 00:11:16,000 --> 00:11:23,000 You know, whether my memory is going to come back or whether I'm just going to, you know, fade into oblivion. 135 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:29,000 Despite their uncertainty, Norma Wallace and Leroy Richmond at least have a future. 136 00:11:29,000 --> 00:11:34,000 Four other anthrax victims weren't so lucky, bringing the death toll to five. 137 00:11:36,000 --> 00:11:41,000 October 21st and 22nd, 2001, Washington, D.C. 138 00:11:41,000 --> 00:11:45,000 Leroy's coworkers, Thomas Morris and Joseph Cersine. 139 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:52,000 October 31st, New York City. Hospitals were closed. 140 00:11:52,000 --> 00:11:59,000 City Hospital worker Kathy Nguyen. Three weeks later, Otley Lundgren in Derby, Connecticut. 141 00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:05,000 The deaths of Kathy and Otley were especially puzzling. 142 00:12:05,000 --> 00:12:14,000 A thought has concluded they had somehow come in contact with anthrax-tainted male that may have been contaminated in the sorting process, but no one could say for certain. 143 00:12:15,000 --> 00:12:19,000 It was said that the lethal dose for human was eight to ten thousand spores. 144 00:12:19,000 --> 00:12:27,000 It would suggest by the deaths of the lady in Connecticut, New York City, that probably many fewer spores led to their death. 145 00:12:28,000 --> 00:12:32,000 November 30th, 2001. A breakthrough. 146 00:12:32,000 --> 00:12:38,000 Experts determined the anthrax spores in each of the letters came from the same strain of the bacterium. 147 00:12:39,000 --> 00:12:46,000 The so-called AEM strain was confined to only six research labs in the U.S. 148 00:12:46,000 --> 00:12:56,000 That led FBI profilers to conclude the anthrax attacks were probably not the work of international terrorists, but rather someone right here at home. 149 00:12:56,000 --> 00:13:01,000 Someone who may have had access to one of these facilities. 150 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:09,000 Loading these letters with anthrax required specific expertise. 151 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:17,000 In other words, it couldn't be done in your basement or your garage unless you had some specific equipment. 152 00:13:19,000 --> 00:13:23,000 May 2002. Still no prime suspect. 153 00:13:24,000 --> 00:13:37,000 However, scientific analysis of the genetic fingerprints of the anthrax spores revealed they may have come from one of two research sites, both under the control of the U.S. Army. 154 00:13:37,000 --> 00:13:45,000 The Medical Research Institute at Fort Detvrick, Maryland and the Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. 155 00:13:46,000 --> 00:13:57,000 Today federal investigators are in the midst of a controversial program to administer voluntary polygraph tests to large numbers of employees at these two sites. 156 00:13:57,000 --> 00:14:03,000 The goal? To smoke out individuals who might have information about the anthrax attacks. 157 00:14:06,000 --> 00:14:13,000 Meanwhile, with no assurance the elusive killer has ties to any of these facilities. The manhunt continues at home and abroad. 158 00:14:16,000 --> 00:14:24,000 That person has to be a serious coward and unable to deal with reality to have done something like that. 159 00:14:24,000 --> 00:14:30,000 And it's not just that it could have happened here, but it could have happened anywhere. 160 00:14:30,000 --> 00:14:36,000 We are in the middle of an exhaustive national international investigation. 161 00:14:36,000 --> 00:14:45,000 We've interviewed over 5,000 people already. We've issued well in excess of 1,300 subpoenas. 162 00:14:45,000 --> 00:14:50,000 And every little piece of the puzzle helps. 163 00:15:06,000 --> 00:15:09,000 We'll see you next time. 164 00:15:20,000 --> 00:15:23,000 Day shift is over, time for the real workers. 165 00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:30,000 Eighteen-year-old Kyle McElroy is among the most promising young citizens of the small town of Troup, Texas. 166 00:15:30,000 --> 00:15:34,920 He works for his father, Kevin, who owns a plastics factory. 167 00:15:34,920 --> 00:15:38,160 At the end of each day, Kevin turns a reins of the business 168 00:15:38,160 --> 00:15:39,920 over to Kyle. 169 00:15:39,920 --> 00:15:41,760 Despite his youth, he has proven himself 170 00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:44,760 to be an adept supervisor of the night shift. 171 00:15:44,760 --> 00:15:47,000 He's going to give me 12 cotter pens, hold me in place 172 00:15:47,000 --> 00:15:48,000 until the morning. 173 00:15:48,000 --> 00:15:51,000 Together, father and son have made the McElroy Plastics 174 00:15:51,000 --> 00:15:53,000 Company a booming success. 175 00:15:54,000 --> 00:15:57,000 Friday, March 10th, 9 20 a.m. 176 00:15:57,000 --> 00:15:59,000 McElroy Plastics. 177 00:16:01,000 --> 00:16:02,000 Who is this? 178 00:16:05,000 --> 00:16:06,000 Sarah, who? 179 00:16:06,000 --> 00:16:11,000 Marnie come in and told me that asked me if I knew about Sarah. 180 00:16:11,000 --> 00:16:14,000 And I said, well, what company did she work for? 181 00:16:14,000 --> 00:16:17,000 She said she wouldn't tell me nothing. 182 00:16:17,000 --> 00:16:18,000 This is McElroy. 183 00:16:18,000 --> 00:16:20,000 I'm a big fan of her. 184 00:16:20,000 --> 00:16:22,000 She wouldn't tell me nothing. 185 00:16:22,000 --> 00:16:23,000 This is McElroy. 186 00:16:23,000 --> 00:16:24,000 How can I help you? 187 00:16:24,000 --> 00:16:27,000 Kevin, we have your son. 188 00:16:27,000 --> 00:16:28,000 Take the 110 south. 189 00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:30,000 You'll find his truck there. 190 00:16:30,000 --> 00:16:33,000 Look in the truck for further instructions. 191 00:16:33,000 --> 00:16:35,000 Do not call the police. 192 00:16:35,000 --> 00:16:38,000 We are watching you. 193 00:16:38,000 --> 00:16:40,000 I'm not really in the mood for this right now. 194 00:16:40,000 --> 00:16:44,000 I'm thinking, you know, it might be a joke. 195 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:46,000 That's not funny. 196 00:16:46,000 --> 00:16:49,000 And I'm really not believing this boy I'm hearing. 197 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:51,000 Put him on the phone. 198 00:16:51,000 --> 00:16:58,000 So she put Kyle on the phone just for maybe five seconds or so. 199 00:16:58,000 --> 00:17:01,000 Daddy, do what they say. 200 00:17:01,000 --> 00:17:05,000 They mean it or they're going to kill me. 201 00:17:05,000 --> 00:17:09,000 The last time Kyle had been seen was at the end of his work shift 202 00:17:09,000 --> 00:17:11,000 the previous night. 203 00:17:11,000 --> 00:17:16,000 Kevin was now certain the mysterious Sarah was dead serious. 204 00:17:17,000 --> 00:17:21,000 Kevin McElroy had only moments to decide what course of action to take. 205 00:17:21,000 --> 00:17:26,000 Despite the kidnappers warning, he contacted the Troop Texas police department. 206 00:17:26,000 --> 00:17:31,000 The officers were determined to keep their involvement a secret from Kyle's abductors. 207 00:17:31,000 --> 00:17:35,000 Following Sarah's orders, Kevin set out to retrieve the written instruction 208 00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:40,000 from Kyle's abandoned truck. 209 00:17:40,000 --> 00:17:45,000 As a precaution, Kevin allowed a Troop Texas police officer to follow him discreetly. 210 00:17:45,000 --> 00:17:49,000 The officer posing as a rancher would stop further along the road 211 00:17:49,000 --> 00:17:53,000 and observe Kevin from a distance. 212 00:17:53,000 --> 00:17:57,000 Both men knew they had to expect the unexpected. 213 00:18:02,000 --> 00:18:06,000 The truck was locked and Kevin had no keys. 214 00:18:06,000 --> 00:18:12,000 The first thing I was thinking is, are we dealing with a bunch of terrorists 215 00:18:12,000 --> 00:18:18,000 or what if while I'm trying to get in the picket, it blows up? 216 00:18:23,000 --> 00:18:27,000 The ransom note was just where Sarah said it would be. 217 00:18:32,000 --> 00:18:39,000 The letter said that they were asking for $200,000 and $100 bills 218 00:18:39,000 --> 00:18:44,000 and that I had seven hours to come up with the money and then go back to my office 219 00:18:44,000 --> 00:18:49,000 and that's when they would call me and tell me where to drop that off at. 220 00:18:52,000 --> 00:18:55,000 With six and a half hours remaining until the kidnappers' deadline, 221 00:18:55,000 --> 00:19:00,000 Kevin arrived at a prearranged staging area to meet with the authorities. 222 00:19:00,000 --> 00:19:03,000 The FBI was now in charge of the case. 223 00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:06,000 Garrett, you're down. 224 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:09,000 They want a couple hundred thousand dollars. 225 00:19:09,000 --> 00:19:16,000 There was nothing in that note to tell us where Cal was, where to deliver the money 226 00:19:16,000 --> 00:19:20,000 or what means Cal will be released. 227 00:19:20,000 --> 00:19:24,000 So we knew the abductors had to contact Mr. McElroy again. 228 00:19:24,000 --> 00:19:26,000 Ride with him. 229 00:19:26,000 --> 00:19:28,000 So I sent two agents with him. 230 00:19:28,000 --> 00:19:32,000 For their plan to work, FBI agents had to be present at Kevin's factory 231 00:19:32,000 --> 00:19:35,000 when the kidnappers phoned again. 232 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:40,000 But they had to do so under conditions of absolute secrecy. 233 00:19:40,000 --> 00:19:47,000 All of Kevin's employees were sent home under the pretense of a major mechanical breakdown at the plant. 234 00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:56,000 4 p.m. The way was now clear for the FBI to move in. 235 00:19:56,000 --> 00:20:02,000 By this time Kevin had collected only half of the demanded $200,000. 236 00:20:05,000 --> 00:20:07,000 Terry to Gary, we're inside. 237 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:10,000 The next move belonged to the kidnappers. 238 00:20:13,000 --> 00:20:15,000 6 p.m. 239 00:20:15,000 --> 00:20:16,000 Hello? 240 00:20:16,000 --> 00:20:17,000 You have the money. 241 00:20:17,000 --> 00:20:18,000 We got most of it. 242 00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:20,000 What do you mean most of the money? 243 00:20:20,000 --> 00:20:23,000 I can't get the whole $200, it's a Friday, the banks don't have it. 244 00:20:23,000 --> 00:20:26,000 The FBI worked furiously to trace the call. 245 00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:31,000 The FBI had asked me to stall her. 246 00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:34,000 I said, you're going to get your money. 247 00:20:34,000 --> 00:20:38,000 I said, but I want to talk to Kyle and I want to make sure he's all right. 248 00:20:38,000 --> 00:20:40,000 She said, he's fine. 249 00:20:40,000 --> 00:20:43,000 She said, you're not going to get to talk to him. 250 00:20:43,000 --> 00:20:45,000 Listen to me, pay attention. 251 00:20:45,000 --> 00:20:47,000 Take the money you have. 252 00:20:47,000 --> 00:20:52,000 Sarah instructed Kevin to drive to a pay phone outside a local restaurant. 253 00:20:52,000 --> 00:20:56,000 There he would find a note directing him what to do next. 254 00:20:56,000 --> 00:21:00,000 The call was traced to a rural phone booth. 255 00:21:00,000 --> 00:21:05,000 But by the time the FBI got there, Sarah had vanished. 256 00:21:05,000 --> 00:21:11,000 The only course of action now was to follow her orders and take every precaution possible. 257 00:21:25,000 --> 00:21:29,000 7 p.m. 258 00:21:30,000 --> 00:21:45,000 I didn't see a note or the guy was kind of expecting a little brown envelope like the rats had come in. 259 00:21:45,000 --> 00:21:49,000 And so I went to pick him through all that trash. 260 00:21:49,000 --> 00:21:54,000 I thought, well, maybe there's something in this trash, maybe on a candy wrapper. 261 00:21:54,000 --> 00:22:00,000 So, you know, I went through it and the very bottom of that pile was a note. 262 00:22:00,000 --> 00:22:06,000 The note ordered Kevin to deliver the ransom money to a laundromat a half a mile away. 263 00:22:06,000 --> 00:22:12,000 He would then receive another call at his office and forming him where he could find Kyle. 264 00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:19,000 The FBI rapidly deployed his SWAT team near the back of the laundromat. 265 00:22:19,000 --> 00:22:24,000 We've got a 360 degree view. There's no movement at this time. 266 00:22:28,000 --> 00:22:33,000 When Kevin drove up to the laundromat to drop off the ransom money, there was a lot of tension. 267 00:22:33,000 --> 00:22:36,000 Anytime someone's life is on the line, there's a lot of tension. 268 00:22:36,000 --> 00:22:39,000 You want to get this done and find the victim as soon as possible. 269 00:22:49,000 --> 00:22:58,000 One hour passed. 270 00:22:58,000 --> 00:23:04,000 Two suspects approaching from the north. 271 00:23:04,000 --> 00:23:07,000 Baby caps, blue sweatshirts, blue jeans. 272 00:23:07,000 --> 00:23:09,000 They're looking around. 273 00:23:09,000 --> 00:23:12,000 Gone for the money. Got the money. There go. 274 00:23:12,000 --> 00:23:15,000 FBI, Fuse! Down, down, down, go, go, go! 275 00:23:20,000 --> 00:23:32,000 One of the men arrested was an employee of the McElroy Plastics Company, a friend of Kyle's, Victor Ferratis. 276 00:23:32,000 --> 00:23:39,000 The FBI learned his real name was Daniel Rios. Two alleged accomplices were also arrested. 277 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:43,000 But the woman who called herself Sarah was nowhere to be found. 278 00:23:44,000 --> 00:23:52,000 The following day, the suspects told the FBI Kyle could be found on an abandoned farm outside of town. 279 00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:57,000 Kevin waited anxiously as agents went in search of his son. 280 00:23:57,000 --> 00:24:06,000 It was late in the evening. They asked me if they could speak to me. They had some information for me. 281 00:24:06,000 --> 00:24:11,000 And I could tell by the looks on their face that it wasn't good. 282 00:24:11,000 --> 00:24:17,000 And they said that he was dead. They found him dead. 283 00:24:19,000 --> 00:24:24,000 It's like somebody walking up and hitting, but you can't feel it. 284 00:24:24,000 --> 00:24:29,000 You know, you think about it and it just makes you mad. 285 00:24:30,000 --> 00:24:38,000 The medical examiner determined Kyle had been choked to death before the first ransom call was ever made. 286 00:24:38,000 --> 00:24:43,000 The FBI believes his abductors made a recording of Kyle, then killed him. 287 00:24:43,000 --> 00:24:47,000 Sarah then played the tape for Kevin over the phone. 288 00:24:47,000 --> 00:24:52,000 They say they learned that Sarah was in fact Desiree Dawn Lingo Perkins. 289 00:24:52,000 --> 00:24:58,000 The FBI believes she was a prostitute known to frequent migrant worker camps in the area. 290 00:24:58,000 --> 00:25:07,000 She is now wanted for murder. She is 5'6 and her weight fluctuates between 170 and 200 pounds. 291 00:25:29,000 --> 00:25:34,000 May 1970. 292 00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:41,000 In a small Texas town a fragile child clutched her only friend and waited patiently. 293 00:25:41,000 --> 00:25:47,000 Her family was on the move again. A routine that had become all too familiar. 294 00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:52,000 It was the eighth move to five different states in Monica LeBeau's young life. 295 00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:57,000 Eventually she would move a total of two days. 296 00:25:57,000 --> 00:26:01,000 Eventually she would move a total of 28 times in 15 years. 297 00:26:01,000 --> 00:26:03,000 Okay, can you get her chair? 298 00:26:03,000 --> 00:26:07,000 I would come home from school, you know, and there would be boxes everywhere. 299 00:26:07,000 --> 00:26:11,000 And I knew it was time to go again. 300 00:26:11,000 --> 00:26:15,000 Monica's parents, Pablo and Burma LeBeau, were older. 301 00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:18,000 Her two half sisters grown and never around. 302 00:26:18,000 --> 00:26:23,000 However, the lonely little girl didn't question her family's nomadic lifestyle. 303 00:26:23,000 --> 00:26:28,000 Or why she was always kept home from school on class picture days. 304 00:26:28,000 --> 00:26:33,000 Monica simply learned to fend for herself, but it wasn't easy. 305 00:26:33,000 --> 00:26:39,000 I would get kind of angry because by the time I made friends we were up and gone again. 306 00:26:39,000 --> 00:26:44,000 So that was kind of hard. 307 00:26:44,000 --> 00:26:49,000 Then at age 16, when most teams were thinking about boys in the latest fashion rage, 308 00:26:49,000 --> 00:26:54,000 Monica's life was turned upside down. 309 00:26:54,000 --> 00:27:04,000 My mother got ill and I had to transfer my mother's medical papers to where she was in the hospital. 310 00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:18,000 And I was reading through my mom's folder and I read some words that just probably changed my life forever. 311 00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:26,000 That's when I found out that my mother had a total hysterectomy in 1945. 312 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:31,000 There's no way I could have belonged to her. 313 00:27:31,000 --> 00:27:37,000 Imagine finding out your mother had a hysterectomy nearly two decades before you were born. 314 00:27:37,000 --> 00:27:40,000 That she couldn't possibly have been your mother. 315 00:27:40,000 --> 00:27:43,000 And for 16 years you'd been lied to. 316 00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:47,000 If Burma LeBeau wasn't Monica's mother, then who was? 317 00:27:47,000 --> 00:27:54,000 The search for that answer is consume Monica's life, leading her into an incredibly tangled web of lies, half-truths and innuendos. 318 00:27:54,000 --> 00:28:02,000 What makes this story even more disturbing, however, is where it all may lead to an unthinkable crime. 319 00:28:05,000 --> 00:28:11,000 I asked my mother, I said, if you're not my mother, I want to know who is my mother. 320 00:28:12,000 --> 00:28:21,000 And she got mad, but she told me that my mother was a family member. 321 00:28:21,000 --> 00:28:22,000 My sister? 322 00:28:22,000 --> 00:28:23,000 My sister. 323 00:28:23,000 --> 00:28:25,000 She really had a child, she couldn't take care of you. 324 00:28:25,000 --> 00:28:26,000 Why didn't you tell me? 325 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:28,000 I was shocked. 326 00:28:30,000 --> 00:28:35,000 And that was probably the worst shock of my life. 327 00:28:35,000 --> 00:28:38,000 She said it was you, is that true? 328 00:28:38,000 --> 00:28:45,000 It was true that Monica's half-sister was much older, 19 years in fact, but could she really be her mother? 329 00:28:45,000 --> 00:28:54,000 I'd ask her straight out if she was my mother, and she said, no, I'm not your mother. 330 00:28:54,000 --> 00:28:55,000 Don't believe her. 331 00:28:55,000 --> 00:28:59,000 She said, well, mom just doesn't want to face the truth. 332 00:28:59,000 --> 00:29:01,000 And I said, well, what is the truth? 333 00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:03,000 Who is? 334 00:29:03,000 --> 00:29:22,000 And my sister told me that my real mother sold me for a bus ticket to New York, and that she was trash and no good, and I didn't need to know her anyway. 335 00:29:22,000 --> 00:29:26,000 She gave you to your mom. 336 00:29:26,000 --> 00:29:29,000 Had Monica really been sold for the price of a bus ticket? 337 00:29:29,000 --> 00:29:33,000 Or was this simply another bizarre story about her birth mother? 338 00:29:33,000 --> 00:29:37,000 Monica didn't know who to trust or who to believe. 339 00:29:37,000 --> 00:29:41,000 Again, she haunted her parents to tell her the truth. 340 00:29:41,000 --> 00:29:47,000 The more I asked, the more they wouldn't tell me anything. 341 00:29:47,000 --> 00:29:55,000 And I started wondering at that point, maybe something bad happened. 342 00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:59,000 Monica was not convinced her parents had something to hide. 343 00:29:59,000 --> 00:30:07,000 She began snooping around the house in search of any link to her past, and soon went across a sturdy metal box. 344 00:30:07,000 --> 00:30:14,000 Inside was a very document Monica had hoped to find, her birth certificate. 345 00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:17,000 But the details seemed sketchy. 346 00:30:17,000 --> 00:30:22,000 There was no hospital listed, no address, no doctor. 347 00:30:22,000 --> 00:30:29,000 And the document had not been filed until the early 1970s when Monica was seven years old. 348 00:30:29,000 --> 00:30:35,000 She had only one place to turn for help, one of her half sisters. 349 00:30:35,000 --> 00:30:44,000 She said your mom and dad paid a lawyer $2,000 to make this false birth certificate. 350 00:30:44,000 --> 00:30:47,000 Was Monica's whole life a fraud? 351 00:30:47,000 --> 00:30:57,000 It now made sense why, growing up, she never had her own social security number, but used her father's instead. 352 00:30:57,000 --> 00:31:05,000 Chicago was listed as Monica's place of birth, and in 1990, at age 26, she contacted Illinois judge Gene Scott 353 00:31:05,000 --> 00:31:08,000 in hopes of finding an adoption record. 354 00:31:08,000 --> 00:31:12,000 Judge Scott answered her in a letter. 355 00:31:12,000 --> 00:31:25,000 She told me that she could not find anything from the years 62, 63, 64, that she had searched all the records that they had there. 356 00:31:25,000 --> 00:31:28,000 Chicago had turned into another dead end. 357 00:31:28,000 --> 00:31:35,000 Sadly, it all seemed like a bad soap opera, but Monica thrust into the lead role. 358 00:31:35,000 --> 00:31:42,000 For the next decade, Monica was haunted by the strange and conflicting stories surrounding her past. 359 00:31:42,000 --> 00:31:48,000 Still, she managed to get on with her life, marry and have a daughter of her own. 360 00:31:48,000 --> 00:31:53,000 Mom, I need to know who I am, and I think it's important for my daughter to know that too. 361 00:31:53,000 --> 00:32:01,000 During a rare family get-together, Monica decided to try one last time to find out the truth. 362 00:32:01,000 --> 00:32:08,000 My mom, at that point, was just angry, very angry. 363 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:13,000 She started getting mad, and my sister, they just kind of looked at each other. 364 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:15,000 Mother! 365 00:32:15,000 --> 00:32:18,000 According to Monica, her half-sister suddenly became irate. 366 00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:21,000 I never gave birth to this child. 367 00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:27,000 She began ranting about how nearly four decades earlier, her mother had hidden a tiny baby from the police. 368 00:32:27,000 --> 00:32:31,000 Mother, I had to tell lies to the police, and I did that for you and Dad. 369 00:32:31,000 --> 00:32:33,000 Oh, please, line now. 370 00:32:33,000 --> 00:32:34,000 They were looking for you. 371 00:32:34,000 --> 00:32:36,000 Monica was stunned. 372 00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:39,000 In an instant, the past came flooding back. 373 00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:46,000 She remembered as a teenager, overhearing her father talk about stashing a cardboard box in a bar, 374 00:32:46,000 --> 00:32:51,000 something about roadblocks, and the need to tell the truth. 375 00:32:51,000 --> 00:32:55,000 A picture began to emerge that was both ugly and sinister. 376 00:32:56,000 --> 00:33:04,000 The indication that I got from the whole thing is that my mother had probably kidnapped me. 377 00:33:04,000 --> 00:33:12,000 I really started thinking, my God, have they just step and take me, you know, from somebody? 378 00:33:12,000 --> 00:33:17,000 To this day, that question and others remain unanswered. 379 00:33:17,000 --> 00:33:20,000 Was Monica abducted as an infant? 380 00:33:20,000 --> 00:33:27,000 An appalling crime that forced Pablo and Burma LeBode to stay one step ahead of the law? 381 00:33:27,000 --> 00:33:32,000 Was a tiny baby sold by a desperate young girl for the price of a bus ticket? 382 00:33:32,000 --> 00:33:38,000 Or is Monica's half-sister, not her sister at all, but her mother? 383 00:33:38,000 --> 00:33:47,000 I would be willing to go through anything, a DNA test, anything at all, 384 00:33:47,000 --> 00:33:51,000 and be able to find out the truth behind all this. 385 00:33:51,000 --> 00:33:58,000 If Monica's half-sister agreed to be tested, it would answer at least one of these puzzling questions. 386 00:33:58,000 --> 00:34:05,000 However, according to relatives, she recently left her husband of 25 years and simply disappeared. 387 00:34:05,000 --> 00:34:11,000 On another sad note, Monica's own husband passed away in 1998. 388 00:34:11,000 --> 00:34:15,000 He was only 31 years old. 389 00:34:15,000 --> 00:34:23,000 The tragic loss has only deepened Monica's resolve to find her birth mother. 390 00:34:23,000 --> 00:34:31,000 I'm without an identity, and I'm searching, and I'm probably going to keep searching. 391 00:34:31,000 --> 00:34:34,000 I'm not going to give up. 392 00:34:34,000 --> 00:34:42,000 Monica was born with only half a year lobe on her left ear, a clue that may help unravel this mystery. 393 00:34:42,000 --> 00:34:57,000 And if Monica was indeed kidnapped, she believes it happened in the Miami, Florida area in 1963 or 1964. 394 00:34:57,000 --> 00:35:02,000 MUSIC 395 00:35:02,000 --> 00:35:06,000 Previously, we brought you the story of the fear that gripped Texas A&M University 396 00:35:06,000 --> 00:35:10,000 when police thought that a serial rapist was on the loose. 397 00:35:10,000 --> 00:35:19,000 Now that a suspect is behind bars, the residents of a small college town can finally feel more secure. 398 00:35:19,000 --> 00:35:23,000 The rapist hid his intentions behind a shoal of normalcy. 399 00:35:23,000 --> 00:35:26,000 He looked like just another student out for an evening jog, 400 00:35:26,000 --> 00:35:33,000 but as he turned to go back toward his intended victim, his casual demeanor turned violent. 401 00:35:33,000 --> 00:35:46,000 The suspect kept that knife within her sight, and she had every indication at that point that he would use that knife on her. 402 00:35:46,000 --> 00:35:51,000 Thirty minutes later, the rapist disappeared into the shadows. 403 00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:56,000 University police released a composite sketch and character profile of the suspect. 404 00:35:56,000 --> 00:36:03,000 Several months later, a knife-wielding assailant attacked another Texas A&M student. 405 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:08,000 From nowhere, she said, a knife appeared and was placed against her throat. 406 00:36:08,000 --> 00:36:11,000 He threatened her. He told her that if she screamed, he was going to kill her, 407 00:36:11,000 --> 00:36:16,000 and then took her to the location that he had already prepared. 408 00:36:16,000 --> 00:36:20,000 This composite was based on the second victim's description, 409 00:36:20,000 --> 00:36:27,000 a comparison with a first drawing bolstered investigator's suspicions that a serial rapist was stalking the campus. 410 00:36:27,000 --> 00:36:34,000 Authorities papered the campus community with posters, but the rapes went unsolved for 10 months. 411 00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:42,000 The critical break in the case came from the first victim herself, when she happened to stop for groceries at a local market. 412 00:36:42,000 --> 00:36:45,000 Thanks. Howdy. How you doing? 413 00:36:45,000 --> 00:36:47,000 Hey. 414 00:36:48,000 --> 00:36:50,000 This is a knife. 415 00:36:50,000 --> 00:36:55,000 The young woman was convinced that she was face to face with a man who raped her. 416 00:36:55,000 --> 00:36:59,000 Excuse me. You forgot something. 417 00:37:03,000 --> 00:37:08,000 Police would soon learn that the clerk was named Don Richard Davis Jr. 418 00:37:08,000 --> 00:37:13,000 He was scheduled to graduate from Texas A&M in three weeks. 419 00:37:14,000 --> 00:37:20,000 When this photograph of Davis was shown to the second victim, she too identified him as the rapist. 420 00:37:22,000 --> 00:37:27,000 DNA tests confirmed the identification with 90% certainty. 421 00:37:27,000 --> 00:37:33,000 Don Richard Davis Jr. was charged with aggravated sexual assault and released on bail. 422 00:37:33,000 --> 00:37:36,000 Six days later, Davis disappeared. 423 00:37:36,000 --> 00:37:41,000 For the next five years, police had a fugitive case on their hands. 424 00:37:44,000 --> 00:37:52,000 In October of 2000, a routine traffic violation in Cleveland would be the beginning of the end for Davis. 425 00:37:52,000 --> 00:37:58,000 Don Davis got stopped on a traffic stop one day, and when they rolled his fingerprints at that point in time, 426 00:37:58,000 --> 00:38:04,000 that's when it connected up as a hit with Don Davis, and then that information just kind of mushroomed from there. 427 00:38:04,000 --> 00:38:09,000 Davis was brought back to Texas to stand trial in the rapes of the two women. 428 00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:14,000 But before his trial began, he pled guilty to the charges. 429 00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:18,000 A jury heard testimony to determine his sentence. 430 00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:23,000 Don Richard Davis will serve 99 years in prison, pending his appeal. 431 00:38:23,000 --> 00:38:36,000 With the conviction of Mr. Davis, justice has been served, and I know for a fact that the two victims that we had are extremely relieved. 432 00:38:37,000 --> 00:38:41,000 They feel better, and I think they're probably sleeping a lot better now, 433 00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:45,000 because Mr. Davis will no longer be out on the streets. 434 00:38:52,000 --> 00:38:57,000 On a previous broadcast, we brought you the story of Laurie DeLorm Magnon. 435 00:38:57,000 --> 00:39:04,000 At the age of three, Laurie was adopted under mysterious circumstances by a family in Kansas City, Missouri. 436 00:39:05,000 --> 00:39:10,000 The reason for her adoption was kept secret by all parties involved. 437 00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:16,000 Laurie had no idea what happened to her birth parents or her brother and three sisters. 438 00:39:16,000 --> 00:39:19,000 As she grew older, Laurie searched for her family, 439 00:39:19,000 --> 00:39:26,000 but only discovered that her mother, Frances Camarena, died on November 27, 1956. 440 00:39:27,000 --> 00:39:36,000 Along with her husband and son, Laurie decided to look at the Kansas City star on the day of her mother's death. 441 00:39:36,000 --> 00:39:44,000 Staring back at her from the front page was a 14-month-old Laurie surrounded by her four siblings. 442 00:39:44,000 --> 00:39:50,000 That's when I first saw the picture of me and my brother and my sisters, first time. 443 00:39:51,000 --> 00:39:56,000 The accompanying article finally revealed the dark, violent secret in Laurie's past. 444 00:39:59,000 --> 00:40:09,000 In the pre-dawn hours of November 26, 1956, Laurie's father, Alexander Camarena, murdered Laurie's mother. 445 00:40:12,000 --> 00:40:18,000 Laurie learned that her father was convicted of second-degree murder and died in 1991, 446 00:40:18,000 --> 00:40:25,000 but her efforts to find her older sisters, Phyllis, Rosemary and Nancy, and her younger brother, Robert, have failed. 447 00:40:26,000 --> 00:40:31,000 My real brother and sisters, we lost both our parents now. 448 00:40:31,000 --> 00:40:33,000 Here you are, Mommy. 449 00:40:33,000 --> 00:40:37,000 And I think they need me like I need them. 450 00:40:37,000 --> 00:40:44,000 Shortly after our broadcast, Ruth Crook, Laurie's birth cousin, contacted our telecenter. 451 00:40:44,000 --> 00:40:50,000 A friend of Ruth's had seen the show and told her that her long-lost cousin was looking for her birth family. 452 00:40:51,000 --> 00:41:01,000 It was a happy shock and very exciting to know that she had been found because everyone always wondered what happened to those two children. 453 00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:04,000 My dream, my dream's coming true. 454 00:41:04,000 --> 00:41:15,000 Three weeks later, Laurie found herself at her adopted sister's house outside of Kansas City, eagerly awaiting the arrival of the relatives she has spent her entire life searching for. 455 00:41:15,000 --> 00:41:16,000 Hi. 456 00:41:16,000 --> 00:41:17,000 Hi. 457 00:41:17,000 --> 00:41:18,000 How are you? 458 00:41:18,000 --> 00:41:19,000 Fine. 459 00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:20,000 It's for you. 460 00:41:20,000 --> 00:41:24,000 First out of the car was Laurie's older sister, Rosemary. 461 00:41:24,000 --> 00:41:27,000 I just was just looking at her. 462 00:41:27,000 --> 00:41:29,000 I just couldn't believe it. 463 00:41:29,000 --> 00:41:34,000 And we were both crying and it just felt good to hold her. 464 00:41:34,000 --> 00:41:36,000 We just held each other. 465 00:41:36,000 --> 00:41:38,000 So happy you're here. 466 00:41:38,000 --> 00:41:43,000 And I was just shaking when I got out of the car. 467 00:41:43,000 --> 00:41:45,000 You know, I was just shaking. 468 00:41:46,000 --> 00:41:49,000 And I was just shaking when I got out of the car. 469 00:41:49,000 --> 00:41:52,000 You know, just nervous and happy. 470 00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:54,000 Very joyful. 471 00:41:58,000 --> 00:42:04,000 Soon, Laurie was surrounded by aunts, uncles and cousins she never even knew she had. 472 00:42:06,000 --> 00:42:14,000 As her birth family and adopted family became acquainted, Laurie's circle of loved ones grew larger than she could have ever imagined. 473 00:42:15,000 --> 00:42:18,000 My brother, Doral, this is Rosemary. 474 00:42:18,000 --> 00:42:19,000 Hi. 475 00:42:19,000 --> 00:42:20,000 Yeah. 476 00:42:20,000 --> 00:42:21,000 I feel surrounded by love. 477 00:42:21,000 --> 00:42:23,000 I feel really great. 478 00:42:23,000 --> 00:42:26,000 I have all these pictures of me when I was a baby. 479 00:42:26,000 --> 00:42:27,000 I haven't ever seen. 480 00:42:27,000 --> 00:42:32,000 And for the first time, Laurie got to see a picture of her mother. 481 00:42:32,000 --> 00:42:35,000 Oh, she's beautiful. 482 00:42:35,000 --> 00:42:38,000 The eldest sister, Phyllis, was unable to attend the reunion. 483 00:42:38,000 --> 00:42:43,000 But she and Laurie met each other shortly after the rest of the family reunited. 484 00:42:43,000 --> 00:42:49,000 Sadly, Laurie's younger brother, Robert, seen as an infant in the news photo, died in 1982. 485 00:42:49,000 --> 00:42:54,000 And after our original broadcast, Laurie finally located the last sibling, Nancy. 486 00:42:54,000 --> 00:43:01,000 Nancy and Laurie have spoken on numerous occasions and hope to have another family reunion in the near future. 487 00:43:01,000 --> 00:43:07,000 Dear God, thank you for bringing together this wonderful family of families. 488 00:43:07,000 --> 00:43:09,000 We especially thank you for bringing it together. 489 00:43:09,000 --> 00:43:16,000 Now that we're all back together, that we have each other now, we'll ride each other, call each other, visit each other. 490 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:18,000 Nothing will keep us apart. 491 00:43:18,000 --> 00:43:20,000 Everybody's just all excited. 492 00:43:20,000 --> 00:43:21,000 It's all excitement. 493 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:22,000 It's all good. 494 00:43:32,000 --> 00:43:35,000 For every mystery, there is someone who knows the truth. 495 00:43:35,000 --> 00:43:37,000 Perhaps it's you.