tv Dateline NBC NBC October 28, 2012 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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all in the same week and not even cry at the funeral. >> she was living the dream california lifestyle. housewives worst candidate. she could have been on the show. she wrapped him around her finger like so many other men around her finger? she had it all, fancy cars, million home boyfriend. >> shots were in two. >> her lover gunned down. >> stl was no financial gain for her in this. >> what about her secret friend
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the former nfl linebacker. >> you lied to them for one thing. >> i did. >> then a prosecutor took on big waves and cold cases. could he find the key to this one? >> this isn't just a motive. it is a motive on steroids. keith morrison with deadly trust. captions paid for by nbc-universal television a gated community, a glamorous setting where wealthy residents could feel safe but it was not safe for one millionaire, murdered in his waterfront house. police had suspects but the evidence was only circumstantial and the case grew cold. the key to the mystery, or rather two keys were at the front door. here's keith morrison. ♪ >> reporter: there's a place a pot of gold at the end of
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ambition, the american dream. a few of the lucky build their mansions be i the sea, orange county, california where the most unexpected event would be with murder. >> things like this rarely happen in newport beach. let alone an area secure as this area. >> let alone involving people like this, attractive, charismatic, living large like nanete neil. >> she was living the dream california lifestyle. talk about housewives of orange county, she could have been on the show. >> she told friends she turned down an offer to be on the show about over-the-top excess in orange county. though she ended up on a tv show called american thunder about motorcycles showing off her own
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excess, including a bike she bought for 50 grand. >> what's your favorite part of the bike? >> i love the way it looks. >> there there was eric. >> we eat housewives for breakfast. >> exfootball trainer, personal trainer he starred in newport 40 but this is where the show ends and real begins. because of what happened in that house behind the gates a long time ago. it was december 15th, 1994, 9:00 p.m. >> the shots were patterned in sets of two. two shots, two shots a pause and then two shots. >> reporter: detective arrived to find a millionaire entrepreneur dead on his kitchen floor. his name was bill mcglauf lynn,
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nice guy, deeply religious and a true believer in the american dream. a man that made his come true. >> self made guy, right? >> absolutely, yes. >> bill said his daughter jenny was the first in his family to go to college. the first to faund company and first to end up with millions. not someone you think would wind up murdered, but here he was. >> you could tell there was not a physical struggle. there weren't things knocked off of counters or things like that. >> reporter: bill you could tell bill saw it coming, saw his killer. >> one of his movements was to put his hand up and block the shot. he got shot through the underside of a finger. so he saw his attacker. >> now they needed to figure out who was the last person bill saw. >> you are trying to take everything in and remember as much as you can, write down what you feel is important, what's
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going to come up in the investigation. >> what was important? what wasn't? it was hard to know in the first few hours. as you can see in the never before seen video, the police shot the night of the murder, the house was neat as a pin, except a glass on a table and some papers askew and six bullet casings on the kitchen floor and a post-it girl from nanete stuck to the side of the lamp. he would be home late. her son had a soccer game. nanete johnson as she was known before reality shows and a couple of marriages had been bill's girlfriend more than three years, and they seemed happy, despite the almost 30-year age difference, said his daughter kim. >> they seemed to be good companions. >> she was like your age, wasn't she . >> she was my age, uh-huh are. >> nanete helped bill look after
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his disabled son kevin who suffered a se veer head injury after being hit with a drunk driver and hped with business ventures. >> he found that interesting about her that he could have possibly a romantic relationship and also sort of a mentoring relationship, possibly a business partner in he had hopes for this. >> i think he did. >> they lived in bill's house on the newport bay, as did her two little ones part of the time. she brought some children. >> correct. >> did he like that? >> he thought it was important important. he thought it showed he was compassionate. >> on the night nanete was killed she was at her kid's soccer games and then headed to the mall to go christmas shopping. she arrived home to a crime scene and to the detective. >> anyone involved has a possibility of being a murderer. >> both questioned nanete and bill's own grown kids couldn't
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eliminate anybody yet. >> we looked at the girlfriend and the daughters because anyone that stands to gain money in this situation is a potential suspect. >> bill's ex-wife was way off in hawaii. they had been divorced for years. still the detectives talked to her. and then was kevin, bill's disabled son and the only other person in the house at the time of the murder. shortly after 9:00 p.m. when kevin heard the gun fire. he was upstairs still debilitated by the car accident. and labored to make it to his father. >> i can't understand what you are saying. >> too disabled to explain that he needed help. >> somebody's dying? >> someone was dead. >> kevin was a suspect that we needed to find out the validity
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of his statements, whether he had gunshot residue on his hands. whether he was even able to shoot a gun given his physical disability. >> but a suspect? >> they checked his hands for gun powder residue negative. >> you have to look at everybody unfortunately. sometimes it hurts feelings but you have to get down to the facts, too. >> but facts can be tricky things and in this case far more elusive than anyone might have imagined. when we come back, some clues were elusive but some were out in the front, like the two that dramatically narrowed down the circle of suspects. >> those are huge. it eliminates
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front with each child on either ebd end an they were both bawling at the top of their lungs. then i remember my brother speaking, too, at the funeral and telling everybody what an amazing man and what a great dad he was for him. >> bill's girlfriend nanete moved out of the house where he was killed to another house he owned on the beach kim and her sister moved to the family home with their brother. they clung to each other for dear life. >> we cried on each other's shoulders and did a lot of counseling and therapy and grieving. >> what made it worse was they didn't know who did it or why, anymore did the news port beach police. >> when a thing like this happens and it's really an execution-style killing. this was obviously somebody who attempted to kill your dad, you must have immediately had wondered who.
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>> you wonder if it is a random act, some stranger and it was a mistake or an accident or you develop a list of people that might have a reason to have shot him. >> to police it didn't look random. nothing was taken. the killer struck with precision accuracy and got away. there was something that intrigued the detective, a clue they found in his closet. >> we did a search of the house with permission of kevin and nanete and were told there was a weapon in the closet. when you come across a lot of weapons it is surprising. >> he had dozens of guns in his house, but not antiques, pistols, resolvolvers, m-16 rif. dangerous stuff in the wrong hands. >> we didn't know if someone was
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upset over the sale of a gun or something. >> nanete told us about that too. >> he had been dealing with shady characters. >> that was one theory but there was another person. >> the only person frustrated with him was his business partner he was in a lawsuit with. >> all of them told the detective about the business partner. >> because he and mr. mclaughlin were in a treated multiveer lawsuit over the invenge of the device. >> bill made his millions from a revolutionary medical invention. a machine that separates plasma from blood. it's still in use today worldwide. just the sort of thing bill wanted, to do something useful, helpful and make lots of money, too. >> he enjoyed learning new things, discovering new things and especially if it helped,
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benefitted people, if he could make money off of an idea. >> hal had worked with bill on an early phase of the machine. after he left the company the money kept rolling in. he thought his contribution deserved more than what he got so he sued his former friend and partner bill mclaughlin. here's the thing, it was two weeks before the murder the courts decided for bill any day he was to get the 9 million he and fischel had been fighting over for years. so was it a revenge killing? it sounded plausible except there was something the killer left behind, something that he didn't have access to. not dna or fingerprints, something more mundane than that. >> when we got here, the door on the right was open and there was a key stuck in the lock right here. in addition to that, there was a
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key on a mat laying right next to the door here. >> two keys, two clues. one was a brand new copy of the front door key. the other was a key to the community pedestrian gate, not a copy. >> those are huge because it eliminates everybody in the world from being a suspect down to only those people that have access to those two with keys. >> the circle of suspects was getting smaller. coming up, police focus on one particular suspect who did have access to those keys and to something else -- >> he bought a nine millimeters in the ♪
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two keys were stuck in the door and another dropped op a mat outside. the person who killed bill obtained the keys somehow. which meant whoever it was in his inner circle or had access to it. now police began to look closely for relationships like maybe secret ones. >> was he involved in a relationship? >> nanette is a good friend of
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mine. >> that's how they found eric naposki who they learned was living in a studio apartment in a southern california melrose place sort of complexes, just not quite as nice. he had played football but his promising career as a linebacker had fizzled. too many injuries. too many hours on the bench. by the early '90s he was trying to figure out what to do next. >> i was in seattle with the seahawks when i retired and left and i drove down the coast and it was a great place to sgland would be nirvana for a place like the you. >> good looking eck football player like him it was easy to get work and women in southern california. like nanette. he met her while working one day at this gym. >> what did you think when you saw her. >> i thought she was a snob, little stuck up. she had the sunglasses on, the expensive watch and she was a little snobby. >> well, at least she was a
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first but -- >> so what made you friends. >> proximity. she was a fun girl. we worked out together. i'd say we probably worked out together more than anything else together. >> he was impressed by her intelligence and what she told her about himself. that she had a business degree for example. >> she graduated early from high school and early from college. >> reporter: in february 1994, ten months before bill mclaughlin was killed nanette's affair with eric was in full bloom. which given the fact that eric wasn't exactly flush turned out to be fine because -- >> she had no lust for money as she talked about things and as she drove her new cars and footed the bill for everything we did together. >> so what did eric know about bill and bill's relationship with nanette? the cops asked. >> i never met bill. >> do you know who he is?
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>> i knew of him. i knew of him. his partnership with nanette. stuff like that. >> eric told is nanette said he invented things, medical equipment, blood separators and bill she told eric guide her through the process. >> that was her mentor and business partner and she could make her own schedule. she could workout all morning, grab lunch, do whatever he had to do, pick up the kids, go to practice and be the team mom. >> pretty nice job. she spent time at her house on the beach. what did you think? >> it was a beautiful house. right on the beach, right in newport, upstairs, downstairs fully furnished. she had a picture of herself in the upstairs bedroom. blown up. >> glamour picture. >> glamour shot, yeah. >> it never occurred that bill
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and nanette did more than business together. >> it was a business relationship and if you looked at nanette and took in to account her age and looked at bill and took in to account his age why would you think. >> orange county t california. >> i'm i guess i'm a rookie. >> sometimes two is company is three is a motive. if eric found out bill was more than nanette's business partner was it a motive for murder. so investigators got to the point, what was he doing that night. >> i was with nanette at the soccer game. she dropped me off and i took off and i went to work later on. around 9:30. >> curious thing about eric's job, he was a bouncer at a nightclub about a football field and a half away from the mclaughlin house. not that far for a linebacker. so the cops asked a few more
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questions. >> did you have any armed work. >> no. but that didn't mean he didn't own any guns. >> you don't own any firearms at all? >> i bought one -- i haven't seen it in so long. i bought one in dallas. >> we first asked if he owned any weapons. he says he dunn own any and then he says, that's right, i did buy one in texas, little 380 but i sent it to my dad in new york and then we talk a little longer and he said i bought another 380. >> did you ever register the guns in. >> i basically just signed. signed registration. >> the light must have gone off in his head that we would check
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registration and few minutes after that he said he bought a nine millimeters earlier in the year, a beretta 92-f. >> that was interesting, a nine millimeters is what killed bill mclaughlin and no one knew that at the time kept except the cops and killer. there are a lot of nine millimeters but why did he seem dodgy about it? >> where is yours? >> i. >> innocent people don't need lawyers do we. >> you said some things that didn't help you out for sure. you lied to them for one thing. >> i did. >> of course, lying doesn't make you a killer, but jealousy maybe. did eric naposki know he was in a love triangle did he want bill out of the way? and if so did nanette quite
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the afternoon of the day he was murdered bill mclaughlin drove from a house in las vegas to mccarren airport. he climbed in the plane and flew it up above his trouble. this is where he was free and happy. pure joy up here. just around sunset, he landed at john wayne airport in orange county, called nanette to tell her he was back and drove home to newport to the place he was about to die. but for their efforts, investigators could not find one bit of evidence in the final movements of his, nothing that would link him to the man that was fast becoming their prime suspect, eric naposki. back at the house, bill's daughters took it upon themselves to sort through their dad's financials. maybe there would be a clue there. >> you had to figure it out yourself?
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very complicated. >> very kochly indicated and we did not trust many people at that point. >> understandably. >> so bill's daughters poured through it all, the little stuff and the big stuff. there had been a failed real estate deal in the desert. two houses to deal with in nevada. soon money could be would be coming in but when he died millionaire bill mclaughlin was low on funds and things were missing, bills and bank statements, check registered that kind of thing. the sisters turn td nanette for help because she handled bill's day-to-day money matters. in fact she was a trustee of the trust that held most of bill's money but everybody grieves in his or her own way and nanette was very hard to reach. >> she just disappeared. >> kr yes. we contacted her over something missing and sometimes he would return our calls and sometimes he wouldn't. >> she wasn't far away, mind you, just at the house on the
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beach. in his will, bill left nanette was left $1 million in life insurance, $150,000 in cash and the use of the beach house for a year but it was hardly enough, frankly to fund the lifestyle to which she had become accustom. >> he paid for everything. a couple of cars and plastic surgery. >> he treated her very well. provided a plush lifestyle for she and her children. >> which made bill's daughters move nanette down the list of suspect s. >> i said in front of her, i believe nanette wouldn't have done it because there was no financial gaim gain in this for her. >> had bill survived they might have lived well, indeed. then bill's daughters noticed something odd about his books. >> i noticed in one of his business accounts a $250,000 check that was written. >> that's a lot of money. >> a heck of a lot of money.
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>> the check dated december 14th, one day before bill was murdered was made out to nanette johnston trust. >> you see the signature. >> yes. >> does it look like your father's signature? >> no. >> and i showed it to the police. >> the detective didn't like the looks of it either. >> this is jenny. >> the detective told the daughters to give nanette a call and record it. >> first of all, a lot of checks -- there are a lot of times that i signed for him on many things. with his permission. >> he gave you permission to sign his name? >> ohhing yeah. i signed his name on many thing. >> he never let us do that. >> although nanette told jenny he was sure that they got involved and found more money missing from the accounts, nearly a half million dollars and also discovered that nanette wasn't exactly the person she had portrayed herself to be.
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detective volt learned she had grown up in phoenix, you can barely recognize her from her high school yearbook picture she so transformed herself and she never studied business or got a college degree, never invented anything but her own back story. mary riffed at 18, two kids by 22, divorced at 23 and determined to leave dusty arizona behind for the coast of california in particular newport beach. so this is a place she wanted to puf in to and said, let's move in together. i love you. >> it wasn't finished being built. >> turns out, before bill, before eric naposki there was tom. he met nanette at a light nightclub and six weeks later found himself moving them both to a new townhouse in the heart of newport beach. she found the place before she met him. >> what was attractive to you
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about her? >> smart, intelligent definitely determined, forging humanitarian aid on her own two feet and wanting to make things happen. >> and she did she happened to like short cuts that tom discovered when he found something she was hiding, an ad. >> in the big bold print it was basically looking for wealthy man. i will take care of you if you take care of me. >> did you confront her. >> absolutely. >> she denied it was her but soon she moved up and out with bill mclaughlin. it was clear nanette was greedy and would not stop at anything for money. and she had been cheating on bill and cheating on bill with eric. he even knew her key to the community pedestrian gate was missing and remember there was
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fwound. could it have been it on this mat at the murder scene. but did that make her a killer? she and lover eric. >> do you remember what you thought at the time? >> i thought the police would be able to have a closed case. >> wishful thinking as it turned out in probably naive. >> in fact it looked like someone or two someones might get away with murder. coming up, if that is what they thought, they reckoned without this man. >> you are always nervous when you try an old case. >> and without this story from a new witness. >> she said, i don't know i don't want to know if you had anything to do with
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blog as much as you like, but if you really want to make an impact, vote. then, what matters to you and the people you care about will really count. you'll want to vote the more you know. the detective thought he had a case. there were the keys, the lies, other lover and stolen money. circumstantial, yes, but he thought both eric naposki and nanette johnston committed murder together. >> i thought we had it solved as far as who the responsible parties were. it was just a matter the d.a.'s office didn't feel comfortable with filing this case. >> two times police brought the case to the d.a.'s office and two times the d.a.'s office said
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the detectives had not made his case. nanette was arrested in the spring of 1995, but not for murder. they got her for fraud and forgery. she pleaded guilty, spent a year in jail and though eric waited for her, by the time she got out she was ready to move on. she married a real estate mogul, much richer than bill mclaughlin ever was. they had a baby girl. and once again nanette was driving a fancy car and living where rich people live and spending a lot of money on clothes, lunches and hair' dos. then she met someone else, another bill and divorced the real estate mogul and agrowed to receive $17,000 a month in child support. had that been her idea all along? the new bill did not have millions. and when he married nanette he signed a prenup allowing her to keep for herself all of the money she got from husband
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number two. or was that number three, any way the real estate mogul. eric naposki went back east. got married, had kids, got divorced. made the reality show that never got going. he was to play a big, scary bad guy. >> i just have a slightly interpretation of the law. >> what of bill's kids? they tried to live how their father would have wanted them to, the opposite of nanette. >> he really wanted us to help make the world a better place. so he encouraged us to do things in the community, the three of us kids would go to nursing homes and put on a talent show for the elderly. >> how unusual. >> when you understand where my dad came from, low-income family as we would call it today and he always appreciated wa he had and worked hard for it. >> bill's children worked hard, too. supported libraries in the third world, orphanages in africa, gave wheelchairs to the poor in
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latin america, rewarding work. but as time passed they began to think the fairy tale had it all wrong. it seemed to them it was the evil step mother who got to live happily ever after, certainly not them. five years after the murder in '99 they lost their brother kevin in drowning accident. he never recovered from the damage the drunk driver did or the trauma of finding hi murdered family. so both men of the family were gone and hope for justice faded away. >> we thought those two will be arrested next week for killing my dad. when it didn't happen month after month after month and then year after year, we had to actually just release the pain and the anger we felt from it. >> i'm conscious of the fact you had to work on that. >> very conscious of the fact. >> that might have been the end of our story but for him.
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this is matt murphy, surfer and prosecutor with just possibly an excessive confidence in his ability to prosecute the murder of bill mclaughlin all those years ago. >> what you had was an old, old case. pretty circumstantial stuff. a lot of evidence had been lost. it degrades over time. were you nervous about that? >> you are always nervous when you try an old case. >> but not a forgotten one. cold case investigators kept digging. they found a real estate agent who showed nanette and eric expensive houses after the pair said they were about to come in to some money. they found a businessman who heard from nanette bf the murder that she was about to have a lot of money to invest. and they found a neighbor of eric's from that melrose place-type building. a woman who had been too afraid to come forward at the time of the murder. named suzanne kogar.
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>> suzanne was important because she gave the best comprehensive understanding of the way nanette manipulated eric network to committing the murder. >> suzanne said how she and eric would chat by the pool and how one day in the fall of '94 eric was angry that his girlfriend's boss, meaning bill mclaughlin had tried to rain her. >> totally untrue. they are engaged to be married. she had been living at this hoe us as boyfriend and girlfriend for years. and eric naposki didn't know about this. >> he was in a rage about it. >> he was in a rage about it. >> he said if the police come around tell him i'm a nice guy. >> she said i don't know to know if you had anything to do with this. and he said maybe i did, maybe i
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didn't. >> this is one where every little piece of evidence had to be considered in light of all of the other pieces of evidence. >> just the type of challenge matt murphy was after. on may 20th, 2009, more than 14 years after bill mclaughlin was shot dead in his kitchen, nanette was plucked from her life and charged with murder. nanette proclaimed her innocence and her orange county friends stood by her. >> i'm just going to tell you that she's my friend. she's good person. she's been generous and kind and wonderful mother and wonderful neighbor. >> reporter: across the country in connecticut, police picked up eric naposki and accused him of murder, too. eric was also defiant. >> it wasn't eric naposki who shot bill mclaughlin. this is a theft. and matt murphy's wrong.
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i will tell you, right now, moin children. she straight wrong. >> did eric kill bill mclaughlin, did he conspire with nanette or was matt murphy in over his head. up to a jury soon. coming up, first they had to face trial where nanette's lawyer had an unusual defense. >> in court, you called your client a slut. >> i'm sorry. >> because you -- does no make
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>> good afternoon. >> good afternoon. >> 17 years after bill mclaughlin's life was brought to a violent epiearly end, eric naposki went on trial here in the orange county courthouse. >> what i want to do is take you folks through an overview of the evidence. >> prosecutor matt murphy told the jury eric naposki volunteered to be nanette johnston's deadly killer. >> he expensed a model 92-f. >> then a few months later it
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was nanette's turn. murphy told the second jury that nanette's groed was insatiable. that she wrongly thought as trustee of bill's trust she controlled the money and her stealing escalated as the murder date ghost got closer. >> she steals $48,200 in the monday of october alone some in the monday of october she has beaten the previous nine months come wined with her thefts. >> so the prosecutor argued she asked herman cain to kill bill before he caught on. sglerk's attorneys told the jury two things, one eric couldn't have done it. 18 minutes before the murder he was on the pay phone with this denny's which isn't in orange beach and the phone bill may have proved it wasn't lost but he couldn't have made it in time to commit the murder but any way, they said, nanette did it. >> the evidence in this case and
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at this trial shows that nanette johnston is the person most likely to have committed this murder. eric naposki was merely the patsy. >> at nanette's trial her attorney said she was innocent and it was eric who committed the murder. >> over the course of the trial, the evidence is going to show that he murdered mr. mclaughlin out of jealousy and greed on his own part. >> mutual fing pointing. though nanette's attorney michael hill had to agree his client wasn't a saint. >> hate her as much as you want for being a thief, a liar, a cheat, a slut, whatever you want to call her. it seems to me in court you called your client client a slut. >> i'm sure i did. >> i can't ignore the case. because you treated people poorly in life doesn't make you a murderer. >> she thought she was going to get a million dollars in a life
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insurance policy. that is a lot of money. >> it is a massive amount of money to people like me. but a million dollars to her is pittance, he is worth 55 million when he died her long term plan was not to be with a dead beat nfl loser. >> that's harsh. >> it's true. >> she was getting a lot of money from him and stealing a little along the way and can cheat at the same time. why would she kill him? >> the problem is, if he lives he either finds out she is cheating or stealing and best case scenario for her on the street with nothing. worse case she goes to jail for embezzlement. this isn't a motive, it is a motive on steroids. >> in the end, murphy got his verdict. >> guilty. guilty of the crime of felony to -- >> after conviction, the oddest thing happened.
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eric called up matt murphy from jail and said he was finally ready to tell the truth. of course, he told us, too. >> first thing i wanted to do is clear up with matt that i didn't do the crime, but i also wanted to share oer information with him that i hadn't showed anybody in 17 years. >> eric had a new story. >> if nanette wanted bill mclaughlin dead, then bill mclaughlin was as good as dead. whether it is to get me or pay someone else to do it. his story now that nanette asked him to kill him but he refused but put her in touch with someone that could do it and they used a beretta that he said he had given it to nanette as a gift and she supplied it to the hitman. >> what did matt murphy think of the new story. >> didn't make sense. here's the problem with eric naposki. first story had nothing to do
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with it. and we arrest him and he says we are innocent. and then trial nanette is not innocent but i'm innocent and i didn't know anything and then it changes to something different again. >> michael hill didn't buy it either. >> have you ever heard of hiring a hitman and then the hitman goes i will take the job but i don't have a gun, could you loan me yours? >> eric sits in jail and contemplates that long-ago love afavor with nanette. >> nanette johnston is the worst type of person. she can lie to you, make love to you, kill you all in the same week. and not even cry at the funeral and she was my girlfriend. that's what i have to -- that's the price i'm paying. >> as for bill's family, they say they are grateful believing nanette and eric are finally where they belong. >> how do you make sense of all
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of this stuff? >> there's no sense of it. there's just very sick, demented, selfish people. when we actually started learning how nanette's mind worked, it was really hard to comprehend. in a verier dark place to unravel. >> so she does what her father taught her. she lives for others as well as herself. she flies like he did and looks to the light. >> when it comes down to it, our dad taught us to pass our goodness forward. make the world a better place and give unto others who are less fortunate. so we do that. my sister and i both do that today. that's part of our mission in life and we go about it with my dad, our dad as an angel on one shoulder and a 0 you are brother on as an angel
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