tv Nancy Grace HLN August 26, 2009 8:04pm-9:00pm EDT
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committed an unthinkable act. murdering pastor carol daniels. >> it is news that has devastated a family, hearing their loved one, a pastor, has been killed inside her own church. even harder for family is learning investigators not only have no suspects, but few leads. >> the d.a. called it the most horrific crime scene he's ever witnessed in nearly 20 years as a crime scene. >> the 61-year-old would travel an hour and ten minutes every sunday from oklahoma city to anadarko, a minister to a small congregation. carol's mom says she wants whoever took her daughter away to be caught. to not only face a judge, but the lord. >> i can't rationalize it. i don't understand why this would happen. and i want him to have an opportunity to save the lord and save their soul. good evening. i'm nancy grace.
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i want to thank you for being with us. a reality tv star wanted for the murder of swimsuit model jasmine fiore found dead in a hotel room. as the search intensifies for the mystery blond, jenkins' alleged accomplice, police confirm fiore's missing blacktop mercedes abandoned in a west hollywood parking lot. is the car a key to the murder scene? >> my son is innocent and i think he panicked and i'm -- i'm just -- i'm dead. i'm dead inside. i'm devastated. what can i tell you? i love him. he's my only child. >> today, cops want to know whether jenkins' family is somehow involved. they say a car spotted at that motel matched the description of his dad's silver pt cruiser. >> a vehicle very similar to that one is now 700 miles to the west of us in vancouver, british columbia, parked in the building where ryan's half-sister, alina,
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now lives. >> she parked over there by the dumpster, usually people come up and park by the room, right? i thought, that's odd, she goes and parks by the dumpster, like she doesn't want anything to do with this guy. 20 minutes later, she was long gone. >> a citizen located the vehicle in the parking lot and thought it matched the description given by the media and she called the sheriff's department, who went out there and they verified it was, in fact, our vehicle. we have secured the vehicle. we are towing it to a crime lab facility to process it. >> could have been just as easily that it was just a transport vehicle and then she was removed from the car for that heinous activity. >> straight out to carolyn jarvis, global national reporter with cnn affiliate global news. she's standing by in downtown vancouver. carolyn jarvis, what's the latest? >> well, we found this pt cruiser today, nancy, and it raises all sorts of suspicions about who this mistery blond was who was with ryan jenkins last thursday when he arrived at the
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motel in hope. the pt cruiser found at the underground garage here in downtown vancouver has alberta plates, that fits the descriptions that witnesses say, to the pt cruiser that was used in hope, and it's backed, suspiciously, right up against the wall of this to say, we do want anybody to see this license plate. in alberta, you don't have to have license plates on the front. there's only one identifier, right on the back. court documents show that ryan's father, dan, had a pt cruiser listed to his name and the number on the buzzer indicates that a jenkins does live there, we believe it's his half sister, alina. was there a link? was she tied to this? could she be charged as an accessory after the fact? did she know that her brother was a fugitive, if in fact, she was a part of this. >> we are taking your calls live. out to jon baird with knx 1070. thank you for being with us. i want to talk about the black
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top mercedes, and why police believe, now that they found it abandoned in a parking lot, in a very unusual spot, a place you would not normally look, why they think that might be a link to a potential murder scene. >> well, they think it's possible the body could have been inside the trunk. we're talking about jasmine fiore's body. police have told me, they know that jasmine and ryan were in the white mercedes when they went to that hotel in san diego on that thursday night. and the next day, ryan left the hotel, on his own. jasmine was never seen again. that car had disappeared. police were looking for it for two weeks until it finally turned up today. a citizen spotted it in this tiny parking lot in west hollywood. and we're talking about a very busy area with this specialty grocery store, a starbucks across the street. and here it was, wedged in this tiny parking lot next door to the grocery store lot and someone saw it and said, you know what, that looks like the car. >> it's my understanding that it was in a trader joe's parking lot, a kind of a boutique grocery of sorts, across the street from a starbucks, that
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you had to go off to the edge and then down to a lower lot, where you could only park five or six cars. >> well, actually, it wasn't part of the -- i just went over there and i was there 15 minutes ago. there's the trader joe's lot right behind the store. and right next to this is this smaller lot. i walked over to the rail and looked down, they had tv crews setting up there, and just a few spaces, maybe five or six, in this small parking lot behind the building. and it's no surprise to me, unless someone really looked there and said, oh, wow -- >> you would never see it. >> exactly, hidden in plain sight. >> joining us from the royal canadian mounted police, what can you tell me about that silver pt cruiser found in the condo parking lot? >> well, i can't tell you anything about it, because as i mentioned before, nancy, unfortunately, that can compromise -- any details can compromise our investigation, and quite frankly, the investigation from our point of view is going well. we've identified all the people that we need to speak, at this
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point, and they are cooperating, so we won't do anything to jeopardize that by discussing the details of the investigation. >> so you say everyone you want to speak with is cooperating? >> at this point. there may be others that evolve from our conversations, but at this point, the ones that we have identified are cooperating. that's correct. >> with me, corporal norm massey from british columbia. we are taking your calls, live. but tonight as we go to break, our prayers to the family left behind by best-selling author, "vanity fair" special correspondent, and friend, dominick dunn. at 83, he lost his battle with cancer just a few hours ago. dunn befriended me many years ago, confiding that he, like me, was a victim of violent crime. his 22-year-old daughter, dominique, was murdered, leading dunn to become a tireless victims' right advocate. for decades, he covered the
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biggest trials in the world, including simpson, the menendez brothers, phil spector. i will never forget the many times he analyzed cases here for me on "headline news" and then back at court tv many years ago. with five best sellers, dunn was a hollywood producer. he hosted court tv's series, he graduated williams college, and very important, he was a world war ii vet that was awarded the bronze star. at his death, he was putting the finishing touches on a final novel, "too much money." he described it to me just weeks ago when we talked. he encouraged me when i didn't believe i could finish my own book. i wrote of him in my first book, noting that his pen was mightier than a sword. truer words were never spoken.
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authorities in canada have identified and a investigating a woman who may have helped jenkins evade authorities. >> calm as calm can be. very calm, no nervousness. nothing. >> when are they going to arrest her? because it is a pretty serious crime, even more so than the united states, to aid and abet a felony after the fact. to help them evade justice. the family can't have justice now because the guy killed
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himself. i don't think anybody zerves de to die, but they deserve some kind of justice. and maybe if she helped him either get here from the united states or hide in that stupid motel, she should be prosecuted. >> you have to prove that she knew that he was fleeing from authorities in the united states and that she just wasn't helping him out and renting him a hotel room. >> she parked over there by the dumpster. like, usually people come and park by the room, right? i thought, that's odd. he seemed like a little hyper, but 20 minutes later, she was long gone. >> who the mystery blond? and, take a look at what happened to this woman, 28-year-old model jasmine fiore. not only was she murdered, we believe, by strangulation, but then she was dismembered. every tooth in her head, pulled out. her fingers removed, cut from her body. did someone help jenkins dismember and dispose of that body while he went on the run? this investigation is far from
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over. we're taking your calls. to barbara in california. hi, barbara. >> caller: hi, nancy. i just wanted to ask you, isn't it out of character for such a narcissistic as ryan jenkins to take his own life? >> you know, that's an interesting point. and i want to go to the specialist psychological ispeci specialist psychologicalist, dr. caryn stark. what if someone said, he'd kill himself. and i said, he would never commit suicide. i was wrong. >> well, nancy, i really believe in most cases, you would be right. but this guy seems to have taken his aggressive impulses and turned it on the himself. so maybe he just got totally out of control and then he realized that there was no place left for him to run and he certainly didn't want to face authorities and he can be extremely aggressive and he is
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narcissistic. he can't live like that. >> or maybe instead of manning up and answering up for what he did, i mean, he knew canada would not extradite him back to the u.s. if the death penalty was being sought. he was -- his intellect was such that he would know that. so it seems to me he took the easy way out, wallowing in his own self-pity. poor, poor, pitiful me. that's my take on it. what about it, karen? >> well, that makes sense, nancy. he is somebody who couldn't live with that image. there is no one that he could live with anybody but what he felt was a perfect guy. he was so manipulative. and i do know that he was aggressive. so i believe he turned it on himself. >> out to the lines. lori, alabama. hi, lori. >> caller: hi. >> hi, dear. what's your question? >> caller: i wanted to know, was she killed first, or did he cut her fingers off and pulled her teeth out before she was dead and tortured her.
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>> dr. michael bell, palm beach county chief medical examiner, joining us from miami. dr. bell, great to see you again. i assume that that is something that would be able to be determined from the autopsy? >> most likely, yes. but i would expect to see bleeding or hemorrhage within the soft tissues surrounding, saying, her gums, surrounding the teeth, and also at the fingertips if she was killed e if that type of mutilation was done while she was still alive. >> i'm sorry, i didn't hear you. could you repeat? >> sure. i would expect to see hemorrhage around the gums and her teeth, and also her fingertips in the soft tissues if this was done while she was still alive as opposed to if it was done after she was dead. >> i seen him, once he had his sunglasses on, baseball cap and he had stubble on his face and
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a citizen located the vehicle in the parking lot and thought it matched the description given by the media and she called the sheriff's department, who went out there and they verified, in fact, it was our vehicle. our detectives are out there as well, canvassing the area for witnesses and surveillance video. we're looking for any evidence to the crime, whether it be blood evidence or any other forensic evidence that we can find. >> straight out to carolyn jarvis, joining us from british columbia. what can you tell me about his frame of mind or mental health? >> your earlier caller talked about committing suicide. painting a picture of this man is going to be so difficult, because he's not hear to answer
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any of the questions that so many people want badly answered. but sources close to the jenkins family tell me that he may have struggled with mental health. that he may, in fact, have tried previously to take his own life and aggression was definitely a problem with him. we've seen that in the court documents, that allege he may have hit jasmine, and also those that he pled guilty to in calgary back in 2005. so whether or not suicidal tendencies were something that were innate to him or not, that is something we'll never know. but that may be the case, nancy. >> back to dr. caryn stark, caryn, isn't it true that when people try to commit suicide and they're stopped, that at some point they're going to try again? >> absolutely, nancy. you can count on it. unless something has drastically changed, they're in therapy, they're working on their problems, their tendency to kill themselves will remain. you have to take it very seriously. >> let's unleash the lawyers. first to mike brooks, former fed with the fbi, headline news law
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enforcement analyst. mike, long time, no see. welcome back, friends. >> thank you, nancy. good to be back. >> mike brooks, i want to talk to you about two things. number one, the car, what it's going to reveal. and number two, do you really think this guy, who seems to be weak, there's really no other way to put it, do you really think that he, on his own, could kill her, dismember her in that fashion -- can you imagine him having the fortitude to remove every tooth out of her head, dismember her hands, and dispose of the body? do you see it? does that mean that there was an accomplice? >> you know, nancy, you can never count out that there was somebody -- that was helping him, that he wasn't acting alone. we've now got the car. that car, nancy, we're talking possible blood, hair, fibers, trace evidence. and the big they think is, it's in west hollywood in that trader joe's parking lot.
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there are so many surveillance video cameras in that area, nancy, i'm sure they're probably going to be able to get the car coming in, possibly see who was in it and be able to put together a time line on when, exactly, that car was parked there and who was in that car, who got out, who got in another car, possibly.
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jenkins traded a calgary real estate job for the life of a u.s. reality tv show contestant. >> he was perfect for the show, not only are you looking for charismatic, full of energy and life reality contestants, but they also had to be a fluent, successful -- >> i decided to appeal to all your senses. >> reporter: jenkins was a reality show contestant on vh1, a show that had 17 wealthy men competing for a woman's love. >> this is going to be the best night of your life.
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>> reporter: jenkins was also a real estate developer, investor, and all-around party boy, say people who knew him. >> i spent a good amount of time with this guy. i was shocked, surprised. >> reporter: he ended up with more attention than he ever could have imagined. accused of killing and butchering his model wife. >> i had no red flags whatsoever that he could be capable of this behavior. >> reporter: he reportedly met fiore right after the vh1 taping and married her a few weeks later. >> this is a tragedy. my heart goes out to the fiore family. no one could have seen this happen. no one could have foreseen this devastating innocent. >> straight out to a special guest, joining us tonight. the casting director who cast jenkins on "megan wants a millionaire." but first, let's see jenkins in action. >> time with megan alone was enough to let her get in touch with my deeper side and redeem myself for, you know, some of the silly things i said at
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dinner. >> i guess we're waiting on my card. >> oh. i hope it's not declined. >> that would suck. >> for you. >> we might have to do some dishes. >> we?! >> kidding. >> i'll meet you at home. just joking. >> you wouldn't do that to me. you're cute. >> you're cute. >> so is this the best date ever? >> maybe. >> maybe? >> i'll tell you at the end. >> i don't know if megan and i have had enough time together for her to actually loosen up and really get to know me. >> i feel like you're manipulating me. >> i wanted to show her a little bit of vulnerability to, you know, maybe make her a little more comfortable with me. >> this is going to be the best night of your life. out of all these guys, i'm definitely the most james bond out of anyone here. >> ryan saves the day. >> i decided to appeal to all your senses is. and first, i would like to start
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with your mouth. >> my mouth is not a sense, though. >> so this is your mind -- >> that's not a sense, either, but we'll go with it because you're so cute. >> stewart brazell, i hope it wasn't you that picked out that music that was playing in the background. everybody, you saw vh1, "megan wants a millionaire" from 51 minds entertainment. please tell me you didn't pick out that music? >> nancy, i had nothing to do with the music. >> that aside, stuart brazell, casting director, cast jenkins on "megan wants a millionaire." more importantly, please tell me you were not responsible for not running his rap sheet. >> nancy, i am strictly the creative process. my job is to get big characters on the show. i have nothing to do with the vetting process. i interview him, i passed those tapes over, that's where the line stops with me.
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>> now, how did you two meet and what about him? i'm trying to get -- because i'm certainly not getting it, from watching him in action, all that fake giggling and those used up lines. they're so tired, he was putting on that chick. but long story short, what about him? what about him intrigued you to cast him? >> you know, nancy, it was one of the first times that i've actually had a potential contestant approach me. you know, he came right over, full of confidence, you can see on that clip from "megan wants a millionaire." he's cocky, he has those lines. he was dubbed the smooth operator. he had confidence, he was attractive, he had what i thought would make for great tv. >> just the kind of man i would run from -- run from the hills, as if i had seen a monster. cocky, attitude, coming on to you in such a way. why? >> well, luckily, i'm not trying
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to date him. you know, i was thinking, this is someone -- >> on air, how would it play on the airwaves? >> exactly, on air, i thought that he was going to make for good tv. he was going to have interactions on the house, he was always going to have something to say. he constantly refers to women as babies. he was a lady's man. i thought he would come on to megan. i thought he would make for good tv, simple as that. >> let me ask you, how did you two meet originally? >> right. so i was in las vegas, and as i said, i am not representing the show, i'm speaking for myself, i was part of the casting team. me and a colleague take the escalator down at the venetian, we step off the escalator, he was on us three seconds later. babies, how are you? what are we doing? where are we going? very confident, almost -- he was someone i could just tell from his confidence in approaching us that he would make for outrageous behavior on the show. >> let me ask you how you respond to jenkins' father, who
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said that hollywood corrupted his son. now, i know, he's obviously turning a blind eye to the fact that his son beat a woman in canada, another woman, and had been court ordered to counseling for sex addiction. that was before he moved to hollywood. so -- but what about hollywood, and in effect, you and the show, corrupting him. >> right. i mean, first of all, nancy, i would like to say that this shakes me to the core, what has happened to jasmine fiore. my heart goes out to her family. and then hearing jenkins' mom on the phone, the despair. i understand what his father is saying, when you agree to go on a reality tv show, you're opening that door. famous, seductive, people can be sucked in. and i think what we need to look at is, how can we better improve this process? what can be done to better prepare people to come off the reality show. and i think that some post-show counseling could be very beneficial --
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>> you mean, when he came off the show, it was a downer when he didn't make and he was all broken up? >> i think, speaking from my own personal experience, i was a contestant on a reality show, you go from this sort of, you know, 24/7, you're working, you're putting yourself up to be judged, you're competing, you're making friends at the same time, yet competing with people, you're in this altered world, all of a sudden, you're thrown back into your real life, but do you know how to function in that normal, real life again? >> let's unleash the lawyers. susan moss, new york. renee rockwell, defense attorney, atlanta. alan ripka, defense attorney, new york. let's just get down to the brass tacks. yes, i'm worried about reality show contestants and their emotions when they get kicked off the show -- not. but i'm more worried, susan moss, about someone with a history of abusing women not being treated or put behind bars when they should be. what do you make of this mystery woman, susan moss? do you really think he acted alone?
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>> they found this pt cruiser by the sister, you know, around the sister of this loser. i mean, this must have been a family affair. the fact that this exact car, it appears, from the description, and the alberta license plate, what else could it be? what else could it lead us to think? that he was getting help by his family and they should be prosecuted. >> renee rockwell, i'm wondering if an accomplice was not used back in l.a. because i find it really hard to believe that he could dismember her, that he had the fortitude to dismember her in that manner, all by himself. >> nancy, just a signature crime himself, looks to me like it's something that he acted alone on. but i'll tell you that the authorities will be interested, if anybody, especially his family, was involved in him escaping justice, even up to canada, and that too could be prosecuted. >> if it is the sister, they're going to cut her some slack.
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alan ripka, i don't see them bringing charges against the sister. >> i don't either. i think if he called the sister in his moment and need and all she did was drive him to this hotel and left, not knowing he was going to commit suicide, they'll have nothing to charge her with and let her go. >> very quickly, we're taking your calls, right to you. but to tonight's safety tips. an eye-opening psa brings awareness to the dangers of texting and driving. texting and driving is so dangerous, it can be fatal, as talking on a cell phone or drinking and drive. police filming up with filmmaker peter watkins to show how a simple text message can end in fatality. the psa, public service announcement, shows a teen texting behind the wheel. seconds later, she slams head first into another car, causing a chain reaction. the only survivors, the teen and a toddler girl, who repeatedly asks about her parents. they're dead in the crash. according to aaa, the risk of
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the trail leads directly to the jenkins family itself. when ryan jenkins ran the border in his power boat last week, he headed to point roberts, where father, dan, has one of his numerous homes. and where police sources now tell us the fugitive from u.s. law was picked up by his stepsister, driving a pt cruiser given to her by her father. the car pulled into the thunderbird hotel in hope on thursday. the woman behind the wheel, leaving quickly after paying cash for ryan's room. on sunday at noon, jenkins was found dead by staff, hanging from a coat rack, an apparent suicide. police believe he died alone. straight out to our chief editorial producer, ellie jostad. ellie, what more can you tell me? >> we're finding out now that police are putting together a
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comprehensive time line of what happened between the time that jenkins checks out of that hotel in san diego on friday morning and the very next morning, when jasmine's body is found. they're looking through phone records, looking through bank records, trying to find out exactly where he was and when. >> and of course, ellie jostad, if there is an accomplice that helped him dismember and dispose of that body, certainly, text messages or cell phone calls may reveal who that person is. everyone, we are switching gears. we want answers. we are live in oklahoma at the brutal murder of a lady pastor inside the church house. the police say the crime scene, the most horrific they have ever seen, with sex attack and thievery not reported as a motive. pastors throughout the region now warn they may be a target. >> reporter: friends say they believe god was saving a special
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place in heaven for reverend carol daniels. each sunday for the past five years, the 61-year-old pastor made the 60-mile drive from oklahoma city to this anadarko church. but her murder this past sunday sent a chill through town. >> who would do this to this woman? >> reporter: authorities have focused their investigation in and around the church, looking for clues as to who may have killed the pastor. >> we are still investigating, still gathering have information, still doing interviews. we're trying to come up with a time line of events that happened sunday. >> reporter: while authorities try to piece together exactly what happened, family and the community are asking why. >> we would sit for a couple hours, every evening some times, and we would talk. and that was what she was all about. was teaching and making sure people would know that god is real and they have an opportunity to serve him. >> no, it's no cathedral, but it is the house of god and she was
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murdered inside of it. straight out to rob hoi joining us from oklahoma city. what can you tell us? >> nancy, thanks for having me on. basically, what we know right now is that reverend daniels was preparing for a sunday morning service inside of the church when she was killed. now the oklahoma state bureau of investigation is being pretty tight lipped on the details of the crime scene, how she was killed. what we do know right now is that she died from multiple sharp force entries, that is straight from the state medical examiner's office. >> rob hoy joining us from ktok. rob, was she in the sanctuary? >> we're not sure where she was in the church. like i said, the osbi is not giving out very many details
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about where she was in the church, about the crime scene itself, or about how she died. >> to mike brooks, former fed with the fbi. mike, have you ever, in all of your years in law enforcement, in all my years in prosecuting, i never prosecuted a murder where someone was killed inside the church house. >> no, i've never seen anything like this, nancy. but there's something that's bothering me. there's something they're saying. they're letting the other pastors in that area know that they could be in danger. so, nancy, that says to me there's something unusual about this crime scene, because, apparently -- >> exactly! >> because if it was an isolated incident, if they thought it was someone she knew, you wouldn't see a $10,000 reward. you wouldn't see them taking the other pastors in that area to take precautions. there's something in that crime scene that's very unusual a they're not telling us about. >> that's an excellent analysis. out to you, nicole brooks. what more can you tell me,
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nicole? >> good evening, nancy. i love your new book. thank you so much. we know that district attorney brett burns met with the local pastors today and this meeting was to discussion safety precautions, as mike brooks mentioned. this coming after the murder of the pastor daniels there. we know a lot about her. we know that she was a very generous person, soft spoken, a mother of five. no known enemies. we also know, this is a small town, of only about 6,000 people. they only have a couple of homicides a year. so, basically, everyone knows everybody. they know their neighbors. they're very accustomed to the neighborhood. so what went wrong, we don't know. we do know it was very horrific. we do know that she was a precious woman whose life has been taken. >> with me right now, a very special guest. the son of the reverend carol daniels, alvin daniels is joining us from oklahoma city, oklahoma. mr. daniels, thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me on. >> when was the last time you
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spoke to your mother? >> i spoke to her probably about friday, i believe. >> and she was actually in the church, preparing for sunday services when this happened? >> i'm assuming she was. i'm not for sure, but that's what she would have normally been doing. >> had your mother ever spoken to you about feeling threatened or any perceived danger in the area? >> no. she was very cautious for the most part and she would usually leave the door open in case people came in to worship. >> you know, alvin, my mother is our church organist and i can't tell you how many times she goes over, by herself to practice on the organ for the following sunday and i just can't tell you how much our hearts go out to you. not only about the murder, but that someone would do this, as she was preparing to spread the
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word of god. alvin daniels, what are police telling you? do they have any leads? >> at this point, they're not telling us much. just that -- we just found out through this in the that there were sharp trauma to her and we are just learning that at this point. >> could you tell me about her? could you tell me about pastor carol daniels? what kind of mother was she? >> she was the greatest mother. she was always joking with us and always taking care of us, even giving her last dollar even if she didn't have it. a very loving mother. i couldn't ask for a better mother. you
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daniels, truly believed in her message. she has been found murdered in a little church where she preached. straight out to jessica brown, the pio with oklahoma bureau of investigation. jessica brown, thank you for being with us. what more can you tell us about the search for her killer? >> i can tell you that osbi is conducting interviews, we're collecting evidence. we've put out a $10,000 reward for information and that has helped us even garner more information, more phone calls to osbi. we're getting quite a few names of people in the area who live
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near anadarko who have been to prison, who have been convicted of similar situations and of course, we're looking into all of those people. we gathered a timeline. we know she was last seen at 10:00 monday morning and she was found deceased inside that church about noon. >> susan ross, renee rockwell, allen ripka, i assume that this may persuade a jury to give the death penalty, renee rockwell if and when this goes on trial? >> absolutely. anything that's so horrific and so horrible and we can't discount the fact that although this is a stabbing and it seems to be a very personal offense, this could be just some crazy person that she was counseling. >> susan moss? >> what type of creature brutally murders a preacher? let me tell you something, you may not believe in hell, but this person's going to hell. >> allen ripka? >> we need ton the facts before whether or not the state -- >> of course, thank you. >> everyone, let's stop and remember army private, peter
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cross. awarded the medal, an army service ribbon, dreamed of being a missionary. dedicated to submission trips. he loved handing out candy, pen, paper to local kids, leaves behind parents michael and kerry, three brothers, three sisters. peter cross, american hero. thanks for our guests and especially you for being with us and good night from friends of the show ana and alabama friend of the show, four generations of the strayberry is hanner family. gail, tania, toby, angie, charles, kailey and mia. aren't they beautiful? everyone, i'll see you tomorrow night at 8:00 sharp eastern and until then, good night, friend.
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i'm jim moret, chief correspondent for "inside edition" filling in for jane tonight on issues. the latest on the michael jackson death probe, are cops buying dr. murray's innocent claim and what we're learning about when the king of pop may have died and what was the drug that may have put m.j. over the edge? then did ryan jefrngens have an accomplice? cops say they're looking for the reality tv star's half sister. did she play a role in his ex-wife jasmine fiore's brutal death and do the cops now have a way to prove it? all that and more coming up next on "issues." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com
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