tv Forensic Files CNN June 26, 2014 11:00pm-11:31pm PDT
11:00 pm
i know there's got to be several young people here who are like 5 years old, right? it's now becoming a possibility that that young man by the time he is 50 could be running for the president of the united states. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com in 1992, there were more than 75 suspicious fires set in seattle, washington during a six-month period of time. all appeared deliberately set. it was the biggest arson case in american history, solved with behavioral profiling, hypnosis and the piece of art. >> on the night of august 9th, 1992, firefighters outside seattle, washington, face a
11:01 pm
disaster. three churches were engulfed in flames at the same time just a few miles from one another. >> when we arrived, the fire was probably at its peak. the flame were shooting above the sank wary which was a very large sanctuary. >> the next morning, parishioners arrived to find their church in ruins. the reverend made an unusual decision. he would conduct services anyway. the park is lot was turned into a make shift church and in the midst of smoking embers, the congregation held their sunday service. >> as i looked in the faces of my parishioners, you could see the sorrow. many were kril. they thought this can't be true. >> arson dogs were brought in to
11:02 pm
look for traces of flammable liquids. they found none. and chemical tests of the rubble couldn't find accelerants either. >> there was very little trace evidence for us to recover at the scenes. >> there was no vandalism at the fire scenes. so the motive appeared to be thrill seeking and all of the fires started the same way on the ground floor at chest level. over the next several weeks, there were eight church fires, six were lutheran churches. eventually the arsons moved on to businesses and homes. in one night alone, there were 12 different arson fires. all of the fires were set at night without the use of accelerants. >> i watched people burn in the middle of the night out of their homes, losing all their possessions. standing literally in their
11:03 pm
night clothes with nothing but their life left with their children sobbing. >> we heard stories about people jumping out of windows or lured out of windows. a lot of stories about just devastating financial impacts. >> one victim was inside her home when the fire started. >> i was just getting out of the tub when i started to hear strange crashing noises outside my house like glass breaking. i opened the bathroom. there was the front door. i just -- the wall to the left was entirely in flames. just up in flames. >> she grabbed her roommate and ran frantically to the front of the house. i opened the front door and on the front porch is up in flames. the 5:00 sets to get out was denied. that was absolutely terrifying. that's when we made a split second decision. am i going to live? i got to move. >> the two made it out the back door and were lucky to be alive. in august to january, barely a night would go by without another family getting burned out of their homes.
11:04 pm
with each fire, the arsonist was getting more daring. >> it was become very embolden. he would actually set a fire literally looking throughout window and the family at me. >> miraculously, despite extensive damage, no one had been killed. no one until the arsonist made his next move. nature valley crunchy granola bars contain 1/3 of your daily whole grains,
11:05 pm
11:07 pm
in the fall of 1992, a serial arsonist had set over 25 fires targeting churches, businesses and homes. all of the fires were set at night in the same way, by someone igniting buildings at chest level without the use of accelerants. >> i called our arsonist a guerrilla fighter because under the cover of night would go out, prowl around, be unseen, hit his target and be gone before his target becomes known to anyone as a fire.
11:08 pm
he was very, very quick. >> residents formed group to protect their neighborhoods. local fire companies mounted all night patrols but still the fires continued. the arsonist appeared to be taunting fire investigators. >> we would draw out the fire department. we would have one fire in one part of town and then a fire station is nearby and he would set another fire on the other side. so he knew where the fire departments were. >> a task force was formed to coordinate the investigation. they commissioned a psychological profile of their suspect. by identifying the traits they have in common, kolgists gain important information about the type of individual who commits these crimes. the profile described the arsonist as white, intelligent
11:09 pm
but underachiever who probably just experienced some major trauma in his life. he would probably be working as a salesman or delivery person. he was familiar with many sections of the area. the arsonist left no clues. but two months into the fire spree when he started fire number 28, he got careless. investigators found two fingerprints near the window where the blaze was set. the prints were run through a computer and checked against hundreds of thousands of prints on file. there was no match. which meant it was likely the arsonist had no prior criminal record. two weeks later fire number 42, he made another mistake.
11:10 pm
urine was found in the snow near the fire. forensic scientists gathered the sample for dna testing. but since the urine was mixed with snow, it was difficult to isolate any cells for analysis. >> we were told there were so few cells in interest that were capable of extraction waits no the feasible. >> months went by. and the fires continued. the task force was no closer to identifying a suspect. >> there was a concern that there were more occupied dwelling that's were being targeted. and i mean a large concern that we were going to start seeing people dying. >> unfortunately, just after midnight on september 22nd, 1992, those fears were realized. a fire broke out at a senior citizen home that housed more
11:11 pm
than 400 people. three women, all residents of the home died. >> the guilt of that, the misplaced guilt of that was so severe that shortly afterwards i really lost all will to live. >> now police were searching for not only arsonist but a killer. eventually the press conference generated the first lead in the case. a woman called police to say a well dressed man bumped into her near one of the fires. >> this individual stood out to her. it was his clothing, mannerisms, odors she detected both alcohol and after shave of cologne. >> she said the man was intoxicated and had mentioned the fires.
11:12 pm
11:13 pm
you need to see this. show 'em the curve. ♪ do you know what this means? the greater the curvature, the bigger the difference. [sci-fi tractor beam sound] ...sucked me right in... it's beautiful. gotta admit one thing... ...can't beat the view. ♪ introducing the world's first curved ultra high definition television from samsung.
11:16 pm
after 60 fires were set, investigators had a lead. a woman had seen a suspicious looking man who had bumped into her. he was intoxicated and talked about the fires. this had happened weeks before and she couldn't remember much about him. investigators decided to try forensic hypnosis. >> trying to find out specific unique event in her memory that can trigger the rest of the memories to flood out. so it's a relaxation technique. we go back in time with her to this point in time. and have her really watch a movie for us and tell us what she sees.
11:17 pm
>> this is one of the first times in u.s. history that forensic hypnosis was used in a high profile case and it was risky. once a witness is hypnotized, most state laws prohibit an individual from test testifying at a trial. as the witness keyed in on the images, she began to remember what she saw. she recalled man. man, tall, thin, hair pushed back off his face. wearing an oxford shirt. he appeared intoxicated. and his car, possibly sedan, was unusually clean and blue. when asked if she could remember the license plate number, she recalled the first letter. >> i see the letter k.
11:18 pm
>> she was xasked if she could recall anything else. she said she saw a 4 and an n. that's all she could remember. there were 500,000 sedan cars in northern washington that had license plates with the letter k. so investigators believed that the physical description of the suspect provided by their witness was the key piece of information. to put this on paper, they brought in an artist john heinz. he interviewed the witness who was once again hypnotized. >> this is the only witness i have ever done a composite drawing of who has been under hypnosis. >> using the information from the interview, he drew what the witness described. the process is an unusual combination of interviewing skill and drawing talent.
11:19 pm
after two hours of meticulous work, an image was formed. perhaps this was the first look at the arsonist. when the drawing was finished, he showed it to the witness. she said that it looked just like the neatly dressed man she had seen five months into the fire spree, the task force released their composite drawing to the press. they also released two others as a control to help guard against false leads. the psychological profile was also given to the press. it wasn't long before the composite drawing paid off. what they get from alaska, they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology.
11:20 pm
shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america. the last four hours have seen... one child fail to get to the air sickness bag in time. another left his shoes on the plane... his shoes! and a third simply doesn't want to be here. ♪ until now... until right booking now. ♪ planet earth's number one accomodation site booking.com booking.yeah!
11:23 pm
when the composite drawings and psychological profile of the arsonist were released to the media, this man, george keller, believed he knew the identity of the arsonist. he immediately went home and looked through his cell phone records and discovered that one of his business phones was used on the dates of the fires from locations near the fires.
11:24 pm
and his business credit card receipts showed that one of his cards was used to purchase gasoline in areas near the fires on the same dates. george keller faced a gut wrenching choice. the person using these company credit cards was his son, paul, who bore a striking resemblance to the hypnotically enhanced composite drawing. >> i said there is a considerable resemblance between these pictures and my son paul. then i went through the profile and because i was looking for a significant personality trait or something that might disqualify paul. as i went through all the items of the profile, if i couldn't eliminate any. >> paul keller was 27 years old and employed in the family advertising business. he was the oldest of three children in a deeply religious
11:25 pm
lutheran family which possibly explained why a lutheran churches were targeted. paul keller's sales roots took him across the areas where the fires had been set. >> he was emotionally rattled, very upset. but as time went on, we also understood for him or from him and from his wife that paul's presence in their family had been unsettling from almost the time paul was born. >> his father told police that paul had an obsession with fire. he said his son had applied for a fire fighting job but had been rejected and that he had set a fire when he was 9 years old. he fit other aspects of the profile. he was intelligent but had done poorly in school. had problems with alcohol and most striking had suffered an emotional crisis just before the
11:26 pm
arson spree began. >> that time he was going through a divorce. he was filing for bankruptcy. his wife was falling apart. he was drinking heavily. >> and the first three numbers of his license plate were exactly what the hypnotized witness remembered. the task force put paul keller under surveillance for ten days they followed him hoping they could catch him in the act. >> the task force people were trying to keep paul under surveillance which was real challenging. and they would lose him periodically. and everybody would panic. >> eventually they decided to take him into custody. >> hi. paul keller? >> yes. >> you're under arrest. we have a warrant for your arrest.
11:27 pm
>> excuse me? >> when keller arrived at task force headquarters, his father was waiting for him. >> george keller is a man. he embraced him and put his mouth close to his ear and hugged him tightly and said it's all over, son. >> i said it's all over. and i said the life as you knew it before this morning is over. >> at first paul keller said he was innocent. >> i never did anything wrong. >> 15 minutes into the interview, the task force agents complimented him saying he was the best arsonist they had ever seen. >> you are absolutely fascinating.
11:28 pm
>> and with that, keller confessed to setting 75 fires, including the fatal fire at the retirement home. paul keller's fingerprints matched the ones found on the window at one of the arson fires. his method of operation was surprisingly simple. he just walk up to each site and started the fire with a cigarette lighter. >> you can see where it was left. probably the same thing. >> i pulled around. the door was wide open. there i was in that state of mind and i lit a chair and it just went. that is the only one that i ever stayed to watch of all. it went real fast. very fast. >> they also went through mult aim larmz very fast. >> very fast. >> keller also said he was sexually molested by a volunteer fireman when he was 12 years old.
11:29 pm
paul keller was convicted of arson and murder and was sentenced to 99 years in prison. he won't be eligible for parole until he is 113 years old. >> again, a word to the victims. all our life we will have sorrow. through your pain and your loss, we shall never forget and pray for your healing, restoration and peace. may god and his help and in his grace help all of us. >> paul keller's arson spree was the biggest in u.s. history. it's very hard to rationally explain why i did that because there is no rational reason. i was not angry. i was not -- but i was very empty. and perhaps i thought that others needed to be as empty as i was.
11:30 pm
but it was not a valid thing to do. >> and investigators say he may not have been caught if not for the forensic hypnosis and the composite drawing. up next, a woman is murdered in broad daylight. >> this is the monster jumping out of the bushes and grabbing you and killing you. >> cell phone records and search dogs provided some leads. >> they were able to track a scent trail to a residential area that was close to the canal trail. >> but if not for some crafty police work and the chance encounter, the entire investigation could have gone up in smoke. >> we have an individual that's still out, walking about, who can do this again. >> i don't know how much scarier it can get.
99 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on