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tv   Dateline  MSNBC  August 24, 2019 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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and made plans. >> wonderful. >> like families do. >> that is all for this edition of "dateline extra." i'm craig melvin. thank you for watching. >> this was an insane world i >> what if you were ripped away from your family? >> you live in fear. it changes you. >> kidnapped by a killer. >> i came out of that just really messed up. >> held for years as a prisoner. and what if prosecutors never believed you? >> bobby parker was not the woman she was portraying.
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this wife and mom taken hostage. was she really a hostage at all? >> the relationship was not one of kidnapper and victim. it was one of husband and wife. >> his prisoner or his lover? >> i really do love you. it sounds like a heart felt love letter. >> now she breaks her silence to tell her own story. will you believe her? >> i was fighting for my life. welcome to "dateline." more than ten years as her family waited, wondered and hoped. she had been kidnapped she said
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>> on april 4th, 2005 a texas county sheriff near the louisiana border heard there might be a fugitive in his area. >> i received a telephone call. >> the call led them 65 miles to a run down mobile home on a chicken farm, the home of a couple calling themselves richard and samantha. >> if you wanted to hide is this a good place to do it? >> if a person keeps a low profile a person can stay out of circulation.
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>> the law descended on their home. >> i knew you were coming. i didn't know when. >> agents found mrs. diehl on another farm. >> what shape was she in? >> she seemed to fine. >> the man and woman were placed under arrest. richard and samantha were not husband and wife at all but instead the oddest of odd couples. his real name was randolph. a couple who had mob connections. >> the whole idea is do your best to get out. >> the woman was bobby parker, a school teacher. the wife of the deputy warden from the prison where dial had escaped. bobby's friend.
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>> she was an amazing person. she had her life with her family. she volunteered everywhere. >> what brought these two together and kept them together for more than a decade was a sensational mystery in 2005. >> for 11 years the woman's husband never gave up hope. >> a woman missing for more than a decade suddenly discovered alive and well. >> everyone was talking. was it a prison break and kidnapping? was bobby parker a hostage? >> there was no doubt in my mind that she had been kidnapping or were they partners in crime? >> i said are you all right. she said i am fine. i'm happy. >> the case would ultimately
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if you had to pick a woman to star in a sensational true crime story you probably wouldn't pick bobby parker. >> i grew up on a farm in north central kansas. i had a good childhood. >> bobby went to college just above the border in oklahoma where she caught the eye of randy parker. >> she had a way about her, the way she talked and laughed. there was something really special about her. >> he had a balance in his life. he was good for me. he gave me confidence. he added to my life. it just worked. >> they married in 1982 and within four years had two little girls. bobby was a teacher and randy worked in corrections. at one point they both worked at the same prison. randy in administration and bobby teaching inmates with special needs. >> it began the day we walked in together. >> bobby was named teacher of the year and randy moved up the ranks quickly. in 1992 he was named deputy warden in a tiny town. they lived right on prison
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grounds just outside the walls. >> what was life like? >> it slowed down for me and my family a little bit but it was good. >> if there wasn't much happening in grant inside the prison it was the opposite. there was a new warden determined to shake things up. his name was jack. >> i didn't sit behind my desk a lot. i was out in the yard with the guys. i let inmates call me jack. >> one inmate is randolph. >> he was an unforgettable character, intelligent, manipulative, a quick study meaning that i wasn't going to have trouble with him so we hit it off. >> dial was one of the most infamous inmates in oklahoma, a murderer who confessed to killing a karate instructor for money. >> he told me to get off of his property and i fired once. >> one of his features were on
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the set of "dallas". the warden decided to start an art program where inmates would make pottery to sell. dial would run it. >> in order to do this he was going to have to be allowed -- >> outside the wall. >> in order to do that he had to have his security clearance lowered to minimum security status. >> right. >> what did you know about him? >> i knew that he was a murderer. he made that clear to everybody. he was said to be very charming. >> i'm not sure who put that out. >> you didn't find him charming? >> no. >> bobby offered to help sell the inmates' pottery. >> he started in the garage and
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i told him i would prefer it out front. >> why did you not want to learn it in the garage? >> i wasn't comfortable. >> with him. >> it is never good to be one-on-one with an inmate. it never is is. >> she once drove dial into town by herself to meet shop keepers. >> did it strike you as odd that you were being given permission to take a convicted murder off of prison grounds? >> yes. >> not long after that bobby parker's life turned upset down. >> i remember being woozy, not feeling good, thinking i was going to be sick. and then shortly laterer he was in front of me. >> the convicted murderer was in her home. >> i remember thinking what are you doing in here. but then it happened so quickly. he was there. pulled me up and then my legs went out from under me.
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>> the next thing she says she remembers is waking up and it doesn't make a lot of sense. she was somehow driving somewhere in texas. she says dial was crouched on the floor pointing a knife at her. >> i had blood on my arm and my leg. >> by that evening bobby's husband and the prison began to realize bobby was missing along with convicted killer. >> what did you imagine had happened? >> everything from her being kidnapped to her being killed. everything that was bad. >> had bobby parker been kidnapped? when we come back inside her decade long drama. >> it messes with you mentally. feel the clarity of non-drowsy children's claritin allergy relief. the #1 pediatrician recommended non-drowsy brand. because to a kid a grassy hill is irresistible.
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nothing made sense in the environment that i lived in, in the world that i lived in. it was insanity. >> august 30, 1994, bobbi parker, wife of the deputy warden at a prison in oklahoma, said she found herself in texas with a convicted killer. randolph dial, serving a life sentence, had broken out of
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prison and escaped in the parker van. and he took bobbi with him. she says she's not sure how it happened. that he may have drugged her. and he had a knife. >> i just respect remember -- i just remember at some point there was blood on me. blood on my arm, on my leg. and dial wanted to get those covered. he took me to a store, bought a few items, and i was able to make a phone call. >> later, some would find it odd bobbi called her mother, not her husband at the prison. she says she was happy to be calling anyone. >> making a phone call to me of a good thing because i was hoping it could be traced. >> back in granite, bobbi's husband randy was coming to terms with the fact that his wife was missing and so was a convicted murderer. >> it's just mind-numbing, just to get through the day.
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you know, make sure the girls are doing okay. >> the parker girls were 8 and 11. >> i just told them the truth. she's missing. she's gone. they were devastated. >> the community was devastated. yellow ribbons, prayer vigils, and a huge manhunt ensued. dial was on the most wanted list. bobbi said she was in a texas motel at the mercy of randolph dial. >> he bound my wrist. he bound my ankles. and he beat me with a -- his belt. it was a very severe beating. very severe. what i remember him saying is, this is nothing compared to what the people i know can and will do to you. >> what did he say he would do if you tried to get away? >> he would find me or my family and he would harm them, kill them. >> by this time they ditched her
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van. she says dial, who claimed to have mob connections, managed to get hold of some cash and a gun. >> he put it to my head, and he said, "this is what happens if you don't cooperate." and i just -- i nodded. i wanted to get home. >> instead, they boarded a bus for houston where she says dial locked her in an abandoned apartment, tied her up, and forced alcohol and drugs on her. >> he has complete control over everything, everything. >> he's feeding you? >> uh-huh. >> bathing you? >> yeah. cleaning me. >> having his way with you sexually when he wants? >> by instrumentation, yes. >> meaning? >> by objects. rape by instrumentation. it is a violent act. it degrades you. it embarrasses you. humiliates you. it messes with you mentally. >> days passed, then weeks, then months. >> time just ran together. i didn't know always what day of
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the week it was. it didn't matter. >> eight months after bobbi's disappearance, in april, 1995, the federal building in oklahoma city was bombed. the fbi focused its resources on that case. the hunt for randolph dial and bobbi parker long since cold was quietly back burnered. >> every time i'd hear of a body being found, you know, i'd hold my breath and wait. but i just wouldn't accept she was dead. >> by now, bobbi and dial were working on a small farm in east texas. dial calling himself richard deal and introducing bobbi as his wife samantha. >> to survive i became samantha. >> who was samantha deal?
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>> she was lonely, hurt. and trying to make it day by day, minute to minute. >> when you would approach another human being, did you want to just shout out, i'm being held against my will, get me out of here? >> i became fearful if i did something that was not approved. the revenge of dial was great. >> dial seemed ever more confident. in 1997 after three years on the lam, he started a pottery company called terra cotta gardens. >> dial advertised it on the radio, did an interview on the radio. >> unbelievably, the attention led to an invitation for the fugitive killer to speak at a women's luncheon at a local country club. >> near and dear to my heart -- >> where were you while he was out front entertaining the ladies who lunch? >> i was back at the trailer
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tied up. >> from there, dial and bobbi went to work on an industrial chicken farm owned by debra grace. she never doubted they were married, but she could see dial was abusive. >> he was like, i can beat her. she's my wife, i can beat her. i said, no, not on my farm, you can't. i tried to get her to come to the house. she kept saying no, he wouldn't like that. kbl. >> in 2000 they moved again to another bigger chicken farm. bobbi's daughters were teenagers now. she'd missed five anniversaries with randy. >> there were times that the loneliness was so great that my body would physically ache. >> and she says dial never ceased his campaign of terror,
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killing two of her dogs to punish her. one right before her eyes. >> he shot the dog. then he blamed me for it. it was maybe just a dog, but to me it was family. >> only once, says bobbi, did she openly defy him. dial, artist-turned-killer-turned fugitive was the subject of a true crime book. one night he decided to phone the author, an ex-cop named charles sasser. >> he said for the past nine years we're making an honest living, living a happy country living. >> he thought it included bobbi parker. he wanted proof that she was alive. >> he said, of course she's alive. do you want to talk to her? >> i was in bed sleeping. he told me he would put me on the phone. i said, i'm tired, i'm really tired. and reached back here for his gun. i said -- i put my hand up, i said -- he told me, just stick to the questions that he asks you. >> but even with dial right next to her, bobbi says she dared to go off script. after all, sasser was a former detective.
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this might be her chance. >> i said, have you seen my children? i knew i'd probably be beat for it, but sometimes it's worth it. i thought he would say would you like me to make a phone call to them, and he didn't. >> still, she says the conversation filled her with hope. >> i thought the fbi will be here, surely charles sasser will call them and they'll be here. >> sasser did call the fbi, but he didn't know where bobbi and dial were. no one came. bobbi says she was broken, resigned to her fate, and the years dragged on until one day in spring, 2005, when her life took another wild turn. coming up, a rescue is in the works, or was it a rescue at all? deputy ares are about to -- deputies are about to discover something odd. >> picked up valentine cards. >> valentines? >> uh-huh.
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mr. dial had had a violent past. best opportunities of success is to hit hard and fast. >> it was april 4, 2005. bobbi parker and randolph dial had been missing for ten years, seven months, and five days. bobbi was just finishing up work
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at a chicken farm near her home. she had no idea the place was surrounded by cops. >> i was greeted with three law enforcement officers in assault gear. >> what's the first thing you told them? >> my name. i actually said my name for the first time in so long. it was a -- a good feeling, but it was the oddest feeling because i had not used bobbi parker for so long. >> an anonymous tipster had called authorities after seeing the long cold case on "american's most wanted." and just like that, bobbi parker was free. >> it was a wonderful feeling. it was -- this is over. this is over. >> randy parker still working for the oklahoma department of corrections was home that night when he got a frantic call from his boss. >> as soon as i pick up the phone, he said, "i'm going to get you."
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he said, "bobbi's been found." all i could think about was getting to texas as soon as we could. >> randy anxiously drove six hours through the dark to east texas while bobbi spent a tearful night in a hotel with then-deputy sheriff donna clayton. >> it was just a mixture of so many different emotions, you know. the fear, the anticipation. but yet, being afraid to get excited, you know, about seeing her husband and family because, you know, what if they didn't want her anymore. >> and finally, the moment arrived. after more than a decade, husband and wife were reunited in a hotel lobby. >> i just walked up to her and put my arms around her. told her she was going to be okay now. >> it was very natural to see him, to talk to him, to hug him. >> did you see any doubt in his
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eyes? >> none. none. >> you took her back no questions asked? >> there was no taking her back, it was to go get her and bring her home where she belonged. >> taking her back. you don't like those words -- >> not, not -- not for me, no, i don't like those words. >> tell me -- >> it sounds like i'm doing her a favor when the fact is is she's my wife. she's been missing. she's been found finally. and i'm going to go get her and bring her home. >> the following day, bobbi and randy returned to oklahoma. she saw her daughters, little girls when she'd last seen them, now young women, almost 19 and 22. randy says they lowered the shades to keep the world out, to try to heal. did you ask her anything about what she had been through? >> no. no. i told her that we would start today and move forward. >> but he could see that bobbi was different.
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>> she would say, i'm going to get a coke, can i have one? i'm going to go to the bathroom, is that okay? >> she was still acting like a prisoner? >> yes, she was. >> it certainly seemed like a triumph of survival and love, except for something the sheriff remembered. >> the only thing that i heard her say to mr. dial was, i'm not cooperating, i'm not cooperating. >> not cooperating with the authorities? why would bobbi say that after being kidnapped, raped, and tortured by randolph dial for years? tell dial i'm not cooperating, but what did that mean? >> if it came out in the paper that i was cooperating, i felt like my family would still be in harm. >> so maybe bobbi was still afraid of dial. or maybe she had other reason for saying she was not cooperating with law enforcement. along with her odd statement, deputies were finding odd things in that trailer. >> they picked up a lot of cards and -- like valentine cards,
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christmas cards, letters -- >> valentines? >> uh-huh. >> which just fueled the suspicions a lot of people had harbored all along. you don't buy the victim narrative on any level? >> not for a minute. >> when we come back, a whole new ordeal was about to begin. was the victim now a suspect? >> oh, my gosh. this cannot be happening. with the new pronamel repair toothpaste we can help actively repair enamel in its weakened state. it's innovative. my go-to toothpaste is going to be pronamel repair.
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randolph dial, the convicted killer who busted out of prison, was back behind bars. his hostage, bobbi parker, was reunited with her family after more than ten years as dial's captive. it seemed like a happy ending to an incredible story.
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but from the day bobbi disappeared, some people had doubts about what really happened to her. one of them was her husband's former boss, warden jack cowley. did you suspect bobbi parker had a hand in it right away? >> i was drawn to that conclusion. >> it was cowley, remember, who picked dial to run the pottery program out of the parkers' garage. then one day he now says he was driving by the parker home -- >> and i saw dial and bobbi out on the front porch drinking coffee or tea or something. >> they looked a little bit too cozy? >> right. >> then there were the phone calls from bobbi just after the prison break.
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she called her mother, and she made two more calls soon after that to a friend and her sister-in-law. but none to her husband. what did you think about that? >> i -- first of all, i thought it was relief. i thought it was good that she was able to make a phone call. i didn't think that she would be calling home because i just didn't figure dial would let her. >> maybe randy wasn't suspicious, but plenty of others were including charles sasser, the former detective who'd written a book on randolph dial. >> dial started off tending the warden's garden. he tended the warden's ceramics shop, and then apparently ended up tending the warden's wife. >> sasser recalled that night in 2001, seven years after the escape, when dial called him and offered to put bobbi on the telephone. >> i said, are you all right? and she says, yes, i'm fine. i'm happy. >> did she sound like she was saying she's happy because a
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kidnapper was next to her? >> she did not sound stressed at all. >> according to an oklahoma district attorney, john wampler, that conversation fit a pattern. >> there were just multiple opportunities that she had to make some effort to contact the authorities or to tell somebody that she needed help. how could you be gone from your children for 11 years and never contact them? never make an attempt to get away? >> and now as deputies searched the trailer where dial and bobbi had lived, they were finding evidence suggesting that maybe it took so long to find bobbi because she didn't want to be found. >> there were cards, valentine's day cards and thing like that that she had given randolph dial. >> they also developed a roll of film which showed photos of bobbi smiling. hardly the picture of an abused woman being held against her will. and they found this letter to dial in bobbi's handwriting. >> she talked about her love for randolph dial, how much they had enjoyed being together.
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it certainly spoke volumes about the relationship that they had at that point. >> it wasn't just the letter, it was the circumstances that led to it. bobbi wrote it after dial was hospitalized for a heart attack in 2004. that's right. dial had a heart attack and was rushed to the hospital, and bobbi stayed by his side. >> there was just tons of evidence to show that their relationship was more than someone living in fear every day of her life. it was a loving relationship. it was one of husband and wife. i mean, that's basically how they were living down there. >> or so it seemed to investigators who searched their mobile home. >> the trailer house had two bedrooms. but only one of the bedrooms was obviously being used. there were condoms and a vibrater found in one of her drawers. >> and d.a.warpler said he found evidence this was not the first time bobbi had been involved with an inmate. one prisoner said he'd had an affair with bobbi at the same prison where she was named teacher of the year. >> in her previous roles at the other institutions, she probably was closer to many of the prisoners than she should have been.
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>> remember how bobbi said she couldn't recall how she and dial left the prison that day? well, an inmate came forward to say he did remember, and bobbi was driving. >> he didn't notice that she was drugged or acting funny. didn't see anything in dial's hand, no knives or anything like that. he saw bobbi driving. he saw her look over at him and >> some funny look in her eye? >> yeah. you know, a startled look. she looked at him for several seconds, you know, and then drove off. >> why was she in the van at all, the d.a. wondered. dial, he said, didn't need her. >> he had the freedom to roam the prison grounds without anyone checking on him. all he had to do was walk away. >> if dial didn't need bobbi, maybe, d.a. wampler said, it was the reverse. your feeling was that bobbi parker was not the woman she was portraying herself? >> absolutely not. >> in april, 2008, on the third
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anniversary of bobbi parker's liberation from a texas chicken farm, the district attorney filed felony charges again her for assisting randolph dial's escape from prison. what was your reaction? >> oh, my gosh. this cannot be happening. coming up -- from abducted to accused, bobbi parker speaks at last on the stop dancing around the pain that keeps you up again, and again. advil pm silences pain, and you sleep the whole night. advil pm
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in 2008, three years after
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being reunited with her family, bobbi parker went from helpless hostage to alleged accomplice. she was charged with helping convicted murderer randolph dial break out of prison. >> i didn't know they were still investigating. so the day they brought charges, it was a shock. >> she faced up to ten years in prison. there was talk of a plea deal, but bobbi was adamant. >> i said no plea because i would have to plead guilty to something that i didn't do. >> the case didn't go to trial for another three years. in 2011, the state argued bobbi had plenty of chances over the years to leave dial but didn't because she didn't want it. >> i think bobbi parker perhaps had not a perfect marriage, maybe she was lonely. maybe she was susceptible to a nice looking, very smooth-talking con man like randolph dial.
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>> at the trial, the state called former detective and author charles sasser who told jurors his take on his 2001 phone call with dial and bobbi. >> she was with him willingly, and they were living this happy country life. you know, almost like idyllic that they're together and happy together. >> that former inmate from years earlier testified about his affair with bobbi. the other inmate in granite said he'd seen bobbi driving during the escape. and randy's former boss, warden jack cowley, testified about his observations that bobbi and dial seemed too cozy. you took the stand for the prosecution. >> uh-huh. >> why? >> because i -- because i thought she's guilty. >> bobbi's attorney, garvin isaacs, put on an impassioned defense. >> i took this case because bobbi parker's an innocent woman who's wrongfully accused of a crime she didn't commit.
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>> isaacs told jurors the state's case was built faulty speculation, outright fabrication, and the suspicious testimony of convicted felons. for instance, that inmate who claimed he'd seen bobbi drive dial off the prison grounds, the defense showed he changed his story multiple times. and the inmate who claimed he'd had an affair with bobbi, the defense proved he was mentally ill, his story, a complete fantasy. >> this most outrageous case that i've ever been involved in. it's a great miscarriage of justice. >> the defense couldn't call randolph dial to the stand. dial had died behind bars before bobbi was even charged. instead, her attorney told the jury dial had said or written about 100 times that he kidnapped bobbi parker. >> bobbi did not go with you willingly? >> oh, no. no. no. >> okay -- >> no. i was the hostage-taker. and i -- i'll probably live to regret it. >> then the defense tried to put someone else on trial -- warden
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jack cowley. >> jack cowley's an incompetent warden. >> defense attorney isaacs showed the jury a psychological report written by dial three years before the escape. it described dial as dangerous with an extreme talent for manipulation. the report warned against letting dial do his art around women as he would inevitably begin to scheme. >> the head of security told jack cowley you need to read the psychological report, and cowley said to him, you mind your business, i'm running this show. >> the parkers say they never saw the report before cowley put dial's pottery studio in their garage. you didn't have any qualms about randolph dial -- >> not one qualm whatsoever. >> in the years after the escape, cowley got two tips about where bobbi and dial were but never told the fbi. >> the way my philosophy was,
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he's not doing anything wrong in terms of committing other crimes. so they're -- they're living their lives. >> and you were okay with that? >> i was -- i was content with it. >> even though he's a convicted murderer and you're a warden and you get a call that he's out on the streets. bobbi would say he could have helped me. he could have -- >> oh -- >> told this to someone. >> and -- >> maybe i could have been found two years in instead of ten years in. >> maybe that's true. maybe it is my fault. i mean, is that where we're going? >> that may have been where bobbi's lawyer wanted to go, but the warden was not on trial. bobbi was. and she chose not to testify. >> bobbi was not ready. it's too traumatic. she's better now, she's better every day. >> so when we interviewed bobbi parker, we asked questions the jurors and countless others
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who'd wondered if she was a victim or accomplice wanted to hear. did you fall in love with randolph dial? >> no. no. >> did you help him plan and escape to get out of prison? >> no. >> did you live with him as his lover? >> no. coming up, bobbi parker explains it all. >> i mean, the man is having a heart attack in a hospital. and even then you don't leave. the way you triumph over adversity. and live your lives. that's why we redesigned humira. we wanted to make the experience better for you. now there's less pain immediately following injection. we've reduced the size of the needle and removed the citrate buffers. and it has the same effectiveness you know and trust.
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bobbi parker, the deputy warden's wife. she said she'd been kidnapped, held hostage for more than ten years by an escaped convict. now she was on trial for helping him break out of prison.
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bobbi did not take the stand but did take our questions. why didn't you just take off? you could have gotten off and -- >> i -- >> you could have gotten help. you felt there was no law enforcement agent who would be able to help you? >> no, i didn't feel that way. >> i knew the consequences of what would happen to me and my family. i knew it. you're certain -- >> i had no doubt. that's what people don't understand. i couldn't get past the fear within me, the voice within me. >> couldn't you dash off a letter? just letting your family know you were alive? >> uh-huh. but i didn't have permission. i had to have permission to do everything. >> at one point he had a heart attack. yes. >> i mean, you understand how that looks, right? the man is having a heart attack in a hospital, and even then you don't leave. >> he was still alive. i just couldn't take that chance. i just couldn't do it.
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>> one of the things that they found where you were living was a letter that you wrote after his heart attack. "we've had a great ride. let us enjoy life, celebrate living for it is so short. god placed me in your path for a reason." >> uh-huh. >> sounds like a heartfelt love letter. >> i was fighting for my life. >> you can understand how people would look at this -- >> i understand that completely. >> "i really do love you." >> this was an insane world i was living in. nothing made sense in the environment that i lived in, in the world that i lived in. nothing. but i did what i had to do. >> bobbi says emphatically despite how officers thought it looked in that trailer, she and dial were never a couple. they never slept in the same bed. the vibrator was a gag gift never used.
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and the condoms, she says, part of the rapes. did you ever stop to consider that maybe all of his threats were empty threats? >> i think my intuition was pretty right. i think he was a very dangerous man. i think he would retaliate. >> all you knew was what he was telling you. >> yes. and i had to sort through that mpt he spoke in half truths. >> the jurors did not hear bobbi speak of these things. after weeks of testimony and 13 hours of deliberation, they did arrive at a verdict. as the jury filed back into the courtroom, bobbi says she was hopeful. >> there was actually no credible evidence. >> but that hope quickly evaporated. the jurors found her guilty. were you shocked? >> yes. yes. i think everybody in the courtroom was shocked. >> you had 38 defense witnesses, and the jurors didn't believe them. >> no. they didn't believe any of them
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i guess. >> the district attorney thought justice was done. >> it was just a sense of relief that, you know, that we had prevailed on it. >> there were those who thought you should have had the warden on trial, as well. >> yeah. i don't doubt that. personally, i think he is to blame to some extent for allowing an environment within the prison as far as security is concerned that would allow something like this to happen. i don't think he's, you know, personally responsible for it. i mean, bobbi parker's the one that made the decision to go with him. >> the warden says his policies were not the problem, that it was bobbi who ran off with an inmate. >> am i going to sit here and say that bobbi parker's a victim? no. never in a million years. and maybe that's just because i want to justify my decision. who knows why? i don't think so. i think i'm a pretty good judge of character.
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no. bobbi parker's not a victim. and we have a jury that agrees with me. >> immediately after the verdict, bobbi was sentenced to one year in prison. the judge sent her directly to jail, declaring her a flight risk. >> family members said, please don't take her. and i said to them, i know this sounds odd -- i'll be just fine. i've lived in captivity for so long. i'll be fine. >> bobbi has now served her time and is trying to clear her name. despite the guilty verdict, randy believes his wife is innocent and is angered by those who don't. >> it's easy to sit back in a normal, safe environment when nobody's threatening you, when you're not being hurt, when you're not having any problems at all, and to be tough. but face the situation to where
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you fear for your life or you believe, whether it's true or not. it doesn't matter. to her it was real. and i believe that to her it was real. >> what do you personally make of the fact that this woman, who you absolutely believe, fell in love with a prisoner, helped him bust out of jail, lived with him in a loving relationship for ten years on the lam, was reunited immediately with her husband, and they have never been apart since? >> i can't explain it. i mean, to me it makes no sense. >> i loved my husband then. i love my husband now. we had a good marriage. still have a good marriage. >> you think your marriage will survive this? >> well, yeah. have no doubt that it will. it survived 10 1/2 years of separation. it survived a trial, prison. i don't know what else there
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could be. >> that's all for now. . i'm craig melvin. and i'm natalie morales. and this is "dateline." i'm craig melvin. >> and i'm natalie morales. >> and this is "dateline." i am being followed. there are threats on my life. i know we're in danger. i know we are. it's a riveting mystery that started in a place of glamour. >> it became a destination for the rat packs, frank sinatra. >> and ended in a case of murder. the wealthy heir to this legendary hotel dead. >> he was my father. he is the only father i ever knew. >> now police said she was next. someone in the shadows gunning for her. >> my suspicions are growing and growing by the minute. >> so, who was behind all this? pl

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