tv Dateline Extra MSNBC September 1, 2018 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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direction? here's keith morrison. >> 7:00 a.m. november 15th, 2007. dawn in salt lake city, utah. he pulled into the restaurant parking lot, turned off his engine. sky beginning to brighten, sun not quite up. and then there they were. the voices. the terror. the nightmare beginning. >> immediately ducked down in my car after the first shot was fired. i laid there thinking, okay, this is how it's going to end for me. >> you're going to be dead. >> yep. >> 911, what is your emergency? >> somebody just shot a man, laying dead in front of the village inn. >> it stands in stark contrast to the rest of salt lake city. this old chocolate factory. this grand stage for our story. it was converted to loft apartments in the boom years before the bust, and the style of living and location drew a distinct crowd, outliers of a
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sort, iconoclasts in this famously mormon city. >> i loved this building. >> bianca pearman-brooks, for example, born into privilege in england, raised in ireland and africa, she came here in august 2006 to visit a friend. >> i came on holiday and i met christopher and we just hit it off. >> christopher wright, a real estate developer, lived in the same lost building as bianca's friends. there was a party in the building. bianca was invited. in one night you knew. >> yeah. yeah. >> to anyone watching, it was an on perfect match. friends and loft neighbors, david and lisa. >> she's so lovely. quirky. she brought that out in chris. >> he was a personable guy before. he was ecstatic after. >> though it was true, blind, passionate love, that drove bianca to give up everything she had known her whole life in england and moved here to utah
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to be with chris. six months after their laid eyes on each other, they were married. >> made me feel very safe. >> her protector. >> a man who cried through romantic movies, like "the notebook," cries like a baby from the start to end of that movie. and other romantic comedies, he's like, really? are you serious? >> it didn't take long for bianca to become firmly entrenched in loft living. >> so the lofts were full of incredibly crazy people. >> academics, airline pilots, physicians, documentary filmmaker, olympic speed skater, mortgage broker, socialites. >> john fife, an advertising copywriter was one of the first to buy the building. >> this building was a fantastic collection of interesting people. >> none more so than perhaps the building's most gregarious and outsized personality, david novak.
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>> he was so nice and entertaining and funny and charming. this building is full of people who just really liked him. i count myself completely as one of them. >> it's impossible not to be charmed by david. i adore the man. >> we were, i would say, basically best friends here in utah. >> david's huge personality fit his oversized professional victims, restauranteur, owner of a consulting firm whose sole specialty was preparing wealthy clients for of all things, prison. >> he was hired to put their affairs in order before they went to business, help educate the people what was going to happen, try to get the best sentencing possible for him. >> that business, as david confessed to his law friends, grew out of personal experience. he, himself, was a felon. served a year in federal prison for mail fraud. >> but he was a type of guy that could take bad luck and turn it
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into a fortune. >> so, most everyone in the building seemed to be living large in those good old pre-meltdown days and into the mix was introduced a new ingredient, a businessman with real money. it was novak, said bianca, who did the introductions. >> christopher had an officer about two, three blocks from here and there was a starbucks he always went to and he went over there and novak was there with ken and he introduced them. >> ken dolezar lived in a wealthy enclave south of salt lake city, a very nice guy by all accounts with a big extended family and money to invest. truckloads of money. he'd already loaned novak $1.85 million to make a movie about his prison consulting business and soon ken and chris began working on a real estate deal. >> they spoke sometimes when they had contacts back and forth by really, i'm a girl. >> and you weren't interesting. >> no, so dull.
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>> fall came to salt lake city. leaves yellowed and fell. the economic crisis cut toward them like a big black cloud. as the businessmen continues their interconnected hustle and flow. but the roiling storm bearing down on them was loaded not with economic ruin but something else entirely. >> i couldn't believe it. and no one -- everyone was out, all of our friends, and we sat there, we couldn't move. it was like -- it was just unbelievable. coming up -- what was so unbelievable? a crime that would rock the loft to its foundation. >> right hand came up, reached inside of his pocket. out came a gun and pointed at the other man right in the face and pulled the trigger. >> when "suspicion" continues. let's do this
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welcome back. >> reporter: 7:00 a.m., november 15th, 2007. dawn in salt lake city, utah. he pulled into the restaurant parking lot, turned off his engine. the sky beginning to brighten, sun not quite up. >> 911. what is your emergency? >> somebody just shot a man lying dead in front of the village inn. >> reporter: it stands in stark contrast to much of the rest of salt lake city, this old chocolate factory, this grand stage for our story. it was converted to loft apartments in those boom years before the bust. and the style of living and location drew a distinct crowd. outliers of a sort, iconoclasts to the mormon city. >> i loved this building. the victim was shot five times. the fifth shot was done while the shooter was standing over top of him and shot him in the face. >> reporter: yeah. oh. >> the shooter was making sure he was dead before he left. >> reporter: cold, methodical, like a professional hit. yet amazingly, somebody was sitting in a car maybe six feet away, watched the whole thing. ordinary guy minding his own business.
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now eyewitness to a brutal slaying. the man's name was lee carlson. >> the hand came up, reached inside of his pocket, out came a gun. and pointed at the other man right in the face and pulled the trigger. >> reporter: here at the police station lee told how he ducked out of sight after that first shot. but not before he got a glimpse of the shooter. >> as far as i can remember he had a longer nose. and i can't tell eye color but his eyes seemed to be more bulgy. >> you just saw a glimpse. i know year asking a lot. >> reporter: but what stood out most ways his hair, long, tied in a ponytail. looked out of place like a wig. before the shooting, said lee, he heard the man's voice, sounded eastern european, maybe slavic. police believe both men came here in the victim's car, which the shooter then used to flee the scene. as for the victim, you heard the
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name by now -- ken dolezsar, the extremely wealthy local investor. >> my daughter called me just bawling. she told me ken's been shot, and he's dead. wow. >> reporter: matt beaudry considered ken dolezsar to be one of his closest friends. they coached a hockey team together. he was deeply concerned for the boys on the team. >> i watched him pull out his wallet and slip money into the kids' pockets because he heard they needed tuition money, couldn't buy their books. >> reporter: now his friend, their friend, was dead. >> some of those kids just broke down and bawled. >> reporter: at the loft building in downtown salt lake, the news rocketed from floor to floor. after all a couple of residents including bianca's husband were doing business with dolezsar. >> it felt like rubber necking in a car crash. wow, somebody you knew could be murdered. >> reporter: who could want a man as nice and generous as ken dolezsar dead?
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but then it's almost a truism of police work where money goes trouble often follows. the more money, the bigger the trouble. and in this case, an extra dollop. the man's fortune wasn't really his, strictly speaking. he married into the bulk of it. the fortune came from a company his wife founded with her former husband. the divorce had been nasty. family loyalties bitterly divided. and some family members weren't the least bit happy that ken was making investment decisions. detective carriger contacted ken's brother and broke the news. >> dropped down to his knees, and he said it's that [ bleep ] derrick. >> reporter: a moment of unguarded grief and rage and thus a possible suspect. derrick mower, ken's adult step-son. >> it was apparent there were difficulties between those two. >> reporter: but trouble in the family didn't stop with derrick. >> there seemed to be a riff. >> reporter: but not between dee
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and ken. theirs seemed to be a genuine love story. but now a grieving dee told detectives she was as baffled about the murder as they were. >> she was not able to provide us any information as to who he was meeting that day or anything about his day. >> reporter: and despite all that friction, the infighting over money and control, dee's family produced not a single viable suspect, not even ken's step-son. >> derrick had an alibi at the time of the murder. >> reporter: but those initial interviews weren't entirely in vain. a clue emerged from ken's assistant. the night before the murder she said ken got a call on his cell. >> she knew that he had set up a meeting to meet with whoever he was talking to at 7:00 a.m. on the 15th. >> reporter: the day and time at which ken dolezsar was shot to death. was the caller also the killer? if so, they now had his voice because earlier that caller left
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this phone message. >> hey, ken, this is robert. i talked to dave. he said when you get to -- >> reporter: detectives traced the cell and went to the store where someone bought it. >> this phone was purchased with cash with no identifying information provided to the carrier. >> reporter: but the family did have a suggestion for the detectives, something they actually agreed on. he should look carefully at a man named david novak. yes, that david novak. remember novak's consulting business for prison-pound executives? guess what? >> dee mower was incarcerated in federal prison. >> reporter: tax fraud. ken's wealthy wife dee was novak's client. that's why ken dolezsar knew ken novak. and something made ken's relatives suspicious. so detectives drove over to the loft where they spoke with mr. novak.
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>> he was soft spoken. >> reporter: and a bright man. >> he came across as very intelligent, yes. >> reporter: answered all the questions but didn't seem to be of much help. then as detective carriger was preparing to leave, he tried one more question. that prepaid cell phone, the one someone used to invite ken to the fatal meeting, the store had surveillance video of a man buying that very phone. ken's family set they didn't recognize him, but would novak? carriger showed him the photo. >> we asked who is that? he says he's my neighbor. he lives two floors below. >> reporter: and just like that, a big piece of the puzzle plopped into place. but fair warning -- as you'll see, puzzle pieces and some residents of this downtown loft might not be quite what they seem. coming up --
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it was almost a month after the murder of ken dolezsar. his friends still coming to terms with it. as friends and family grappled with his loss, investigators started following the trail of clues, one that would lead right back to the converted old chocolate factory. once again, keith morrison. >> it was almost a month after the murder of ken dolezar. his friends still coming to terms with it. >> i think what if? all the fun we could have had if he hadn't been taken. >> until now, the investigation seemed to be going nowhere and then as detective carriger was about to leave, he showed him the photo from the store. >> he said that's chris wright,
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my neighbor, he lives two floors below. >> his good friend and husband of the irreplaceable bianca. >> this is definitely somebody we want to talk to. >> carriger arrived unannounced and almost before he could ask a question, he said, chris launched into a story about ken dolezar, claimed the man was so paranoid he wanted the man to buy a prepaid cell phone so he could communicate in complete privacy. to carriger the story seemed too reversed. >> covering, trying to account for things we knew. >> i see. odd. then as the interview went on, he said chris' voice began to sound familiar. the voicemail that police believed helped lure ken to his death. >> hey, ken, this is robert. >> to me, that was chris' voice on that phone. >> the detectives pulled out a search warrant. bianca was home when the police
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arrived. >> it's surreal. you have, like roving gangs of toddlers who are ripping everything apart. they turned our sofas upsidedown and took apart the lining. they took apart my toaster. they take everything apart. >> a ballistics report told police the murder weapon was a .9 millimeter handgun. chris was an avid collector of guns and among them, police found an empty case for a springfield armory .9 millimeter handgun and what do you know, the gun that went with it was missing. chris wright was arrested and charged with the murder of ken dolezar. >> a massive sense of disbelief. he was being completely taken out of the view and for no reason. >> the loving husband who cried his way through romantic comedies, a cold-blooded assassin? impossible. it quite literally wasn't possible, said bianca, for chris to have killed ken dolezar that morning. he had an ally. >> he was in the loft. i was there.
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>> he was home in bed with her. >> he was a foot from me. there is -- there's no room for doubt. >> this surely had to be a colossal misunderstanding. bianca sought support from her neighbors including david novak, he only friend with intimate knowledge of the legal system. >> he -- >> he comforted you. >> he was, yeah. he asked me how everything was going and what was happening with christopher and whether our attorneys were doing the job they were supposed to. >> she told him everything, she said, and he assured her the mistake would soon be rectified. she believed him. >> i don't want to be married to a murderer. i would not fool myself. there was a second's doubt in my mind he did not do this. >> but some of their friends in the loft weren't so sure. >> i started to feel sorry for her thinking, oh my gosh, you poor naive girl. you know, you're going to be crushed by this. >> at the sandy, utah, justice center, the case that police
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turned over to josh player then the district attorney seemed very clear. >> the evidence was exceptionally strong in this case. it all kept pointing in the direction of mr. wright. >> there was the surveillance photo, the voice message which was placed from a spot near the loft according to cell tower tracking and the eyewitness. he'd been shown a photo lineup with chris in it and now he remembered some details a little differently than he had that first traumatic day. like chris' blue eyes in the photo he said jarred something in his mind. >> i was 80% to 90% certain that this was the man i saw. >> then he found a picture of chris on the web and tried photo shopping in a few details like a wig. >> i looked at that and said, yeah, that looks almost exactly like what i saw. >> reinforcing a memory. but was the memory accurate? as for the rest of the case, the investigation wasn't over yet. the story just begun. the first puzzle pieces placed
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welcome back to "dateline extra." i'm craig melvin. in the search for ken dolezar's killer, they believed it pointed to chris wright, arrested and charged for murder. soon, damning new evidence would emerge linking him directly to the crime scene. for his wife, bianca, the pieces of this elaborate puzzle simply did not fit. was it possible chris was being framed? if so, why? here, again, is keith morrison. >> strange times around the loft building in downtown salt lake. so shocking that one of their own, chris wright, had been arrested and charged with killing wealthy businessman ken dolezar. >> all of the evidence we obtained led up to chris wright being the triggerman. >> in the suv ken drove to his fatal morning meeting, for example, the killer used that vehicle to flee the scene and when the cops found it and scoured the interior, they got a hint.
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chris' dna. >> we had a dna result from the inside door handle of the suv. >> it was a tiny sample, not a perfect one, but it seemed to put chris in ken dolezar's car, driver's side, which certainly helped the case. but it wasn't quite airtight. not yet. the murder weapon had not been found. yet, they found an empty gun case in chris and bianca's apartment, but nothing to connect the case to the murder. and just about then -- >> the sergeant for the district attorney's office just happened to call me and ask, hey, did you ever look in that gun case, was there shell casing or anything in that gun case? >> turns out, the gun's manufacturer includes a test-fired shell casing with each gun it sells. so the detective went to the evidence locker, he said, retrieved the gun case. >> looked inside and there was a casing. >> big moment. >> big moment.
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>> big moment because when ballistics tested that shell casing -- >> it was a match. that shell casing was fired from the same gun as the shell casings recovered at the scene where ken dolezar was killed. >> chris wright's missing gun must have been the murder weapon. now the case looked very strong, indeed. though chris' wife, bianca, certainly didn't think so. >> i know for certain categorically that christopher didn't do it. >> in fact, the police and prosecutor had it all wrong, she insisted, and it wasn't just that chris had an alibi for the morning of the murder, no, she said it was the whole case. it was all wrong. chris' dna in the car, for example, of course it was there, she said, chris admitted he'd been in the car but weeks before the murder. but get this, the steering wheel, especially, and all of the car, was covered with dna and fingerprints that did not match chris.
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nor did bianca buy lee carlson's story. >> he said the guy had an eastern european accent. christopher is american born and bred. he also said he'd only seen a glimpse of his face. >> only saw a glimpse. >> in fact, said bianca, the eyewitness account more properly eliminated chris as a suspect. ken and his killer arrived in the crime scene together in the same car. think about it, said bianca. >> i looked at him, did he wear a wig? >> would chris wear a wig to a meeting someone who already knew him, met him, particularly someone as cautious as man? >> you have a deeply paranoid man, ken dolezar, who's doing business with christopher and has met him. you don't think if christopher got into the car or wigged up that he would think that was slightly strange? >> and if the eyewitness was right, the killer shot with his right hand.
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>> christopher is staggeringly left handed. >> staggeringly left handed. then there was the business of eye color. now long after the event, the eyewitness was saying the killer had brilliant blue eyes. but right after the murder -- >> can't tell eye color, but his eyes seemed to be more bulgy. >> he got more and more refined in each interview with the police. >> brilliant blue eyes. >> yes. of course, you can see brilliant nordic blue eyes from the side. >> what about chris' suspiciously missing handgun? the one linked to the crime? bianca says she is certain chris did not use it to kill ken dolezar that morning. impossible, she said, because he no longer had it. >> that gun, i lost, back in the summer. >> i lost? >> yeah. >> you just lost the gun? >> i have a horrible habit of losing stuff.
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>> before chris ever met ken dolezar, she took some visiting british friends on a shooting excursion to the great salt lake. they finished at sunset. >> and i put down this little gun, the springfield, on the ground, right next to the bag. and i went to, like, help somebody with something else. >> then she got distracted, she said, packed up the rest of the gear, went home, and neither she nor chris ever saw that gun again. bianca's proof the gun was missing? this video made just over a day later by her british visitors who wanted to document their uniquely american experience. in their video, there was no sign of a springfield armory .9 millimeter. >> i lost stuff and it was a bone of contention between chris and i. >> while the prosecution scoffed at bianca's lost gun story, her loft friends did not. >> it you know sweet bianca, she accidentally threw her wedding ring away.
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she can be an absent minded dingbat. >> remember the day the police took apart her loft? >> they took apart my toaster. >> she watched intently as the officer looked in the empty .9 millimeter gun case. >> i was sitting next to her. >> no test fired gun casing, she said. >> i don't mean to sound cynical, but i know it wasn't there. >> only possible conclusion, said bianca, it was her accusation, the sandy police must have planted the shell casing in order to look chris' missing gun to the crime scene. >> one thing that will be hard for people to accept is the idea that this detective would do something as unethical as plant evidence. >> it was not there. i know that. >> the sandy police department categorically denied the accusation. but as those loft friends heard
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more of chris wright's side of the story from bianca, they became convinced, he was innocent. >> there were so many parts of the puzzle that were not adding up. >> unless, they reasoned, unless someone they knew very well wanted chris to take the fall. a dark suspicion wafted through the corridors of that old chocolate factory. perhaps the police, they said, arrested the wrong neighbor. >> he had the perfect patsy in christopher. >> the neighbor started comparing notes and realized someone in their circle was not who he seemed. coming up -- >> we were astounded. i remember saying to him, what? >> when "suspicion" continues. ♪
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welcome back. friends in the salt lake city loft building mulled over the dark suspicions swirling through their hallways. chris wright was in jail awaiting trial, but many residents were now convinced police had the wrong wan. they believed investigators should be looking at another neighbor. one who was about to make a startling move. here, again, is keith morrison. >> among residents of the downtown salt lake loft, an idea took root around the story of the murder of ken dolezar. it was planted just weeks after chris was arrested. loft residents, dave and lisa, were having dinner with their best friends, the novaks. >> he announced, we're moving. and we were astounded. and i remember saying to him, what? you've put all this money into your loft, you've got all this investment here, why are you leaving? he said, it's just time to go.
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>> he'd claimed to be their great friend, sociable, gregarious, larger than life. then said his neighbors, once chris was arrested, he seemed nervous. and now he was gone. and so they wondered, was david novak running from something? the loft friends began re-examining all those stories told them over the years, particularly those about his criminal past. >> started comparing notes and stories and it becomes clear, wow, david told me a different version of that. >> he'd been lying, to put it rather bluntly. >> certainly not full truths. >> the brief prison term for mail fraud novak told them he served, turns out there was more to that story, a lot more. novak confessed to a con that played out like a cinematic thriller. he used a private flying club he owned to run an insurance cam. then as it caught up to him, he attempted to escape by faking his own death. ditched his airplane in puget sound.
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>> he faked his death in order to avoid insurance audit. that was not a crime of passion. that was a crime of calculation. >> or so the loft friends believed, and if that was true, what might he have done here in salt lake? they're suspicion only grew when the friends found out novak left town without mentioning it was he who fingered chris in that surveillance photo. >> did he ever tell you, i identified christopher as the guy who bought the cell phone? >> no. >> of course that prepaid cell phone was the very clue that led police to chris, a phone which chris bought, said bianca. after novak assured him. >> novak had said that this guy routinely used these throwaway phones. >> what's more, said bianca, chris could not have left the voicemail because by the time of the murder, he'd given the phone away. >> he gave it to novak. >> and novak gave it to dolezar. >> yes. yes. as far as we know. novak.
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so we don't know anything. >> and now a theory about motive drifted from loft to loft. hadn't novak borrowed almost $2 million from ken? the friends said they watched him spend lavishly on high living and never saw evidence of that movie the loan was supposed to pay for. really, was their old friend capable of orchestrating murder and pinning it on chris? >> there's one person that bragged about knowing russian mafia. >> how hard would it be to find somebody that looked like chris, and he introduced chris from the very beginning with that in mind of setting chris up. >> i know it sounds like a just really dumb movie, but if you had ever met novak, the man has a byzantine mind. >> she recalls all the supportive chats she had with novak after chris' arrest. >> turns out he was probably fishing for information. >> it reminded friend, john fife, of a conversation with
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novak one night after they dined together. john posed a question, he said, mostly in jest, of course, just hypothetical. >> i said, david, have you ever contemplated committing the perfect murder? and he said, yes, the key element to that is making sure that someone is caught and charged with the crime. once they have somebody, they'll stop looking and that's how you can really get away. >> and now, novak had taken off. and even though their questions didn't amount to hard evidence, of course, chris' defense attorneys wondered as they prepared for the trial why the politician had so readily dismissed novak as a suspect. dismissed him and a few other quite puzzling discoveries like, for example, the one about ken's widow, dee. remember, she was in prison at the time of his murder. when she first talked to police, she told them she had no idea her husband had a meeting the morning of his murder.
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no clue who he was meeting with. turns out, she was not telling the truth. >> hello? >> you have a call from an inmate. >> hello? >> hi, honey. >> it's standard procedure for prisons to record inmates' phone calls. this is ken talking to his wife, dee, night before his murder. >> i'm actually meeting with my friend tomorrow at 7:00 a.m., go figure that out. >> i love it. >> yeah, exactly. so tomorrow morning, 7:00 a.m., so tomorrow night i should know more. >> police confronted dee in prison. recorded the interview. in it, she claimed the stress of losing her husband caused her to forget about that phone call. and then she dropped a bombshell. she said she knew who the friend was ken was supposed to meet and it wasn't chris wright. she never heard of him before. >> david novak. that's who i believe he was meeting. >> chris' defenders wanted to
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know why the police didn't seem to follow up on that or probe more deeply into all that tension of dee mower's family. odd. all of it. the feeling, to them, that something was missing. that the case against chris simply didn't hold together. so as chris' trial finally got under way, bianca felt her husband was as good as home. >> i was just, like, brilliant, you know, we now, you know, they go away, they do their thing, they come back and i get my husband back. coming up -- chris wright makes his case to "dateline." taking on that voicemail message central to the case. was it his voice? >> the people who are going to watch your show are going to listen to that recording, and i usual them to make their own decision. >> when "suspicion" continues. alright guys let's go! let's do this directions to the greek theater (beep) ♪can i get a connection? ♪can i get can i get a connection?♪
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welcome back. ken was dead. chris wright office trial for his murder and david novak office the move, despite the evidence pointing to chris, his wife and friends from the loft building believe that novak was the real killer. had chris been framed for the crime as he claimed? we reached onut to the defend and novak for answers. one of them wanted to share his story with us. here with the conclusion of the story is keith morris. >> chris wright's murder trial began in april, 2010. more than ten years since kent was shot dead in the sandy inn in utah. the defense made a claim that chris wright was the victim of the conspiracy, a conspiracy hatched here in the loft by a former neighbor david novak to protect the real killer by setting up chris to take the
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fall. a conspiracy the prosecution brushed off as nonsense. >> you would have to believe for it not to be chris wright that it was somebody that looked and sounded like chris wright. used the gun bought by chris wright and had chris wright's d.n.a. and had a connection to ken. >> all of that claimed novak was capable of setting that up. >> he had it nailed from start to finish. >> like a chess move. >> but that did not explain the good samaritan eyewitness. >> i am certain and clear of what i saw. i might not have told it right off of the bat what i saw, what i know and what i saw and i know who i saw. >> except there is one person
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that said he is most certainly sure that lee carson is mistaken. chris wright himself. >> i will answer any question that you want to ask. chris was jailed after his arrest and he wanted to make his case to deadline in the flesh but authorities would not allow it. >> you said you didn't do it. >> absolutely did not do it. >> he offered the allegations of his own. >> we are asked to believe that the police were incompetent and definitely crooked. that david novak is crooked and the only person that is innocent is you. >> it is not my fingerprints. i had an alibi, no motive and there is clearly a person pointing the finger at me that got $2 million. >> this is too cloak and dagger.
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>> simply got up one day and decided to go shoot some poor person in a disguise. >> reporter: chris wanted to talk about that voice mail, the one that helped lure ken to his death, the voice mail detective carriger was sure was left by chris, though no voice analyst ever studied it. >> people who are going to watch your show are going to listen to my voice and they're going to listen to that recording, and i urge them to make their own decision. >> reporter: yeah, let's listen to it right now, all right? >> absolutely. go right ahead. >> reporter: ken, this is robert. talking to dave and he said we'll get to it pretty soon here. >> >> reporter: that is you, huh? >> that is absolutely not me. >> reporter: the jury got the case in 2010. a jury that certainly heard about but never saw the mysterious david novak. so did they buy the prosecutor's evidence or bianca's explanations, her alibi for chris? >> i was concerned because i'd been told that sometimes it can be a crap shoot was the phrase that was used.
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>> reporter: the jury deliberated for 11 hours, and the verdict -- guilty. >> i can't even begin to explain. it's like the bottom falls out of your world. and he wouldn't let me hug him. you know. sorry. just give me a sec. >> reporter: that's all right. take your time. >> crying is not acceptable. >> reporter: and why is that? >> because i'm english. >> reporter: but for ken's friends, at least matt beaudry, the verdict was vindication. >> he looks like a smug killer. and a jury of his peers listened to all the evidence and with that weighty choice decided that he was.
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i'm satisfied with that. >> reporter: chris wright is serving a sentence of 15 to life. he is preparing an appeal, hoping for a new trial. and david novak? he's not been charged with or accused by the police of anything. though whether or not authorities want to talk to him is less clear. you know where he is? >> i don't know where he is, no. >> reporter: are your people trying to track him down? >> well part of the rules i'm constrained by is i don't speak with ongoing investigations or the existence of ongoing investigations. >> reporter: but if law enforcement is mum about david novak, ken dolezsar's widow is not. out of prison since 2008, dee mower has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against novak. a suit that alleges a third theory that novak paid chris wright $25,000 to kill ken dolezsar. novak has yet to answer the suit, has not shown up for a single hearing.
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these attorneys claim they can't find him. they've asked for a default judgment. back in the loft, his friends imagine the worst about their former friend and neighbor, the missing david novak. what would you advise him to do if you could talk to him? >> talk to you guys, tell the story. >> if you have nothing to hide. >> refute me. tell me why what i'm saying is not correct. we used to be friends. i'm more than willing to hear what you have to say, david. >> reporter: so where is he? turned out david novak wasn't so hard to find after all. in fact, here he is near his last known post-loft address, an upscale neighborhood in a certain northwestern city. didn't look like a man on the run. just a guy getting a coffee with his wife at starbucks, of
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course. he just isn't answering calls or e-mails from his former loft friends. and he didn't want to talk to "dateline," telling us over the phone he was not involved in ken's murder, has been cleared by the police and anyone who says otherwise is a liar and liable to be sued. bring it on, he said. so is chris wright a liar? bianca an unwitting or perhaps willing accomplice? some people are surprised that you stayed because you could go. >> i wouldn't leave a dog in christopher's situation. i mean, you don't leave someone you never left when you loved them, you don't leave them. i will work until my dying day to make sure he is -- that his name is cleared. yeah. >> reporter: wait for him as long as you have to? >> yep. no problem.
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>> reporter: and out in suburban sandy, utah, the case still resonates around the shiny new courthouse. where ada josh player struggled with his emotions a bit as he told us he's sure he did not send an innocent man to prison but rather achieved justice for everyone. >> i was glad for the family of the victim. >> reporter: you take this stuff to heart, don't you? >> i do. i do. >> reporter: and while they stand on opposite sides of that chasm between innocence and guilt, there's no dispute about the man whose life was lost. ken dolezsar was a man who loved a woman, just as chris loved bianca, who loved hockey, loved helping kids and tried to do right by all that money, which is mostly still around, though he is not. that's all for this edition
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of "dateline." we, the jury, find the defendant guilty. >> you actually think they read the wrong verdict. >> you feel so alone and hopeless. >> it's like a shot in the chest. >> despair to hope. darkness to light. a fight for freedom. >> what happened to this teenager could happen to any one of our children. everyone should stand up and take notice. >> at 18, he was arrested for murder. adamant he was innocent. >> there was no physical evidence to tie him to the crime. >> i had nothing to do with this. i swear to god. >> what could have possibly led to this? >> you stabbed her, didn't you? >> why would he confess to something he didn't do?
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