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tv   Dateline NBC  NBC  November 14, 2016 1:30am-2:30am EST

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that morning before i went to the "tonight's show, " she said if you want to run, i understand. here what i say you should say if you want to run and here is what you should say if you did not want to run. >> and you had not made up your mind? >> i went to show." and by the time i came home, she was freaking out. it was beyond my comprehension. i was only thinking about it on the one dimension, the other dimension that i did not think about was she as a child dragged along of all the political campaigns whether she wanted or not. she hated it. later on as time went on, i
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better and i understood why there was pain, but at that point i felt like quite the opposite. it is all or nothing. i felt so convinced that i need and have to be the governor and this is exactly how it all played out. i will not ever exchange it with anything else. it is the most cen rewarding and pleasurable thing to do out of all other things of being a movie star and bodybuilder. i was able to serve almost 40 million people in california, that was like unbelievable. >> look at how agile. >> wow. hey, evan. so, you're stuck at a work thing.
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wednesdays are the new thursdays! or the mandatory after party. how early is too early to leave? you're not going anywhere. i'm not going anywhere. it's your tv, take it with you.
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know that i respect the decision that you had. you did such a great job and i don't know if i can fill your shoes. i will give you my everything and he said, arnold, this is such a great idea, you are fantastic. i know you are a great guy. i know all the characters. >> he was complimentary and then we went to work and we did coincided with the debut of the arnold's sports in asia. the weekend featured 5,000 athlete in 28 different sports from nearly 50 countries and continues schwarzenegger's mission to spread fitness and awareness throughout the world. >> what most impress you of the growth of the arnold's classics
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>> well, you know, you have a vision and promoting body building. out of that, the vision got bigger. i should not just promote body building but health. if those fitness festivals have to get bigger and bigger and i always say, too big is not big enough. ? >> this is really so exciting for me and to be here in hong kong and to finally to be here in asia. >> what do you think of the first one in hong kong so far? >> different exhibits they are doing because it makes them feel good and what they are doing
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oh, come on! you got it. bravo, bravo, very nice! nice. a lot of time i am w jumping rope or polls dancing. >> somebody talk to me a little bit here. >> look at this. nice. can you believe that? >> how quickly these guys are? look at how agile? >> i would love to be able to do 10% of this. >> wow, you can do it. >> faster. yeah. oh you are going 30 miles per hour. you are going up to 40 miles per hour. unbelievable.
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you say "i will be back." >> i will be back. very nice, thank you very much.
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alex: coming next, rescuing injured and endangered sea
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bora bora. and learning about animals of the coral reef. this is "animal rescue." [captioning made possible by telco productions, inc.] thanks for joining us, i'm alex paen. as you know, we travel around the world featuring all types of great animal rescues and showcasing those dedicated individuals helping animals in trouble.
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[man blowing conch shell] alex: on the beautiful island of bora bora in the south pacific, you'll find a unique turtle rescue sanctuary at the le meridien bora bora resort. the bora bora turtle center was founded in the year 2000, and some 500 turtles have been treated and released so far. julie: welcome to feeding. alex: marine biologist julie maury educates visitors to the center and its efforts to save green turtles. julie: this is annalee who's shooting the crew in the water, and the one who's giving food is samana. here we have, uh, actually 23 turtles, but it can change on any day. cops can call me and i go and get some. and we have lots of other marine life, like a sea cucumber, uh, we let
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so here we have only green sea turtles. but in the lagoon, you can find the hawksbill turtle that is smaller and darker than the green one. and in the deep ocean you can find the leatherback. the leatherback is the biggest sea turtle in the world, and the green one is the second-biggest. all the turtle we have here, they come from the wild. they are with us because they were either sick, injured, or or taken illegally by people on the island. so our job is to make them wellan will be healthy enough, we gonna release them. so how do we know that they are healthy enough is that they're fat, they try to bite everything, so human, fish, other turtles, and they swim very fast. that's how we know they're ready to be released. young girl: if you didn't rescue them, what would happen to them? julie: so, for example, the 7 we have here, if we didn't rescue them, they will be eaten by dogs. so it was some kids who found them on the beach,
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be eaten by dogs, except 55 of them. of the 55, we've released 3 of them, and we still have 7. the others, we couldn't save them. so usually if we didn't have turtles here, they would be dead. older girl: how do the dogs eat them? do they go underwater, or do they eat them on the land? julie: no, the dogs, they're usually on the move, too, because people have dogs to kept their home. but here they don't really feed them. so they try to find all the food they can. so the turtle nest is an easy food. they have to dig the hole, take the eggs, or when the babies hatch, it's easy for them to eat them. so here the green turtles, they only come to bora to nest. we have only one nesting beach. there is no hotel, no planes during the night, and just a few people who live there. so the female will go on the beach during the night, she will dig a 70-centimeter hole, and she will lay around 100 to 150 eggs. she will do that for 3 months. and at the end of the
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1,000 eggs. and of these 1,000 eggs, there is only one who's gonna become adult. do you know why there is only one who's gonna become adult? they gonna be eaten. so here we have 6 animals who's gonna eat them. which ones? you have the birds, pigs, dogs, cats is gonna eat them. the ones who make it into the lagoon, guess what-- all the big fish are waiting for them. and the one who survives through all this, they will go into the deep ocean to hide. floating sea grass, a floating piece of food. they will stay there 10 years, and after 10 years they will come back in a lagoon. the problem for the sea turtle in general is not only in french polynesia, but is all around the world. the main problem for sea turtle is the waste. everything plastic is dangerous for the turtle. so if people could try not to have so much plastic, or when they do have plastic, put in the trash, this will make a difference.
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adult at the age of 20 years old and they start to reproduce and lay eggs at the age of 25. but at the age of 20 years old, the green turtle is the only sea turtle who will do something. so what can they do when they become adults? they will change their diet. they will become vegetarian. the green turtle is the only sea turtle who will eat sea grass when she becomes adults. so, we feed them with fish, and usually it's red tuna that we so we give them only what they need to survive a day, and after that, if they are hungry, they have to hunt the fish we have here. like this, and natural instinct to hunt is still intact. do you know how much they can weight? so it's 550 pounds. ok, now is the easiest question of all the speech. which color of sea grass they love to eat?
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green sea grass, you have something inside their body that would change color. what can it be? their fat will turn green. that's why we call them green sea turtles. and here the problem is we don't have any sea grass. so when they come and reproduce here, they will be on forced diet for 3 months, and at the end of the 3 months, they will migrate into new caledonia ready to feed. they will stay there 3 years because they need 3 years to do all their fat again. that's whth every 3 years to nest. so all the turtle we have here, they're under 3 years old. and we don't know if it's a male, female. we have to wait 10 years old before knowing it. so that's why when i'm gonna release them, i'm gonna give them female names because i'm the boss. because if everyone is touching them, they will be used to humans. and when we gonna release them, it's gonna be a big problem because here the turtle is still hunted for the
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them and you have oily stuff on you, sunscreen, [indistinct], you gonna damage their shell. and a damaged shell from the sunscreen or the [indistinct], it's impossible to fix it. so, please, i beg you, don't touch them. between zero to 20 years old, you can estimate their age with the size of the shell. after 20 years old, when they come and nest, you know that they are at least 25, but after that, we don't know. here is the quarantine zone. so, actually we have 13 babies. so this, the first, we have here they are 20 weeks. and here you 18 weeks babies in the rest of the tank. it's because they are too small to be with the other turtles, so we keep them here. like this there is no danger for them. so no fish will hurt them, moray eel won't hurt them, and also all--the other turtles won't hurt them because when they are big, they used to pick on the small. so like this
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them. so always put two fingers around the neck and one here like this, she won't be scared, and she won't hurt you with her claws. you see here she has very strong claws that can hurt you. older girl: how old is it? julie: this one is 20 weeks. older girl: does the color change at all? julie: yes, i'm gonna show you. here. so, when they're born, their shell are black like this. the birds can't see them. like this, the fish can't see them. this project is really helpful for the sea turtles because if nobody protects the turtles, there won't be any more creature in all polynesia because still people eat them. if we're still here, it's gonna be ok. if we close, it won't be ok. so i'm a positive person, so i think it's gonna be ok. alex: next, we go inside the ecological center and learn
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our amazing story continues
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alex: we now continue with our
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we're visiting french polynesia, just about an 8-hour flight from the u.s. west coast, to get an up-close look to learn about the delicate ecology of the coral reef, on the island of bora bora at the le meridien resort. julie: welcome to the ecological center. here we have a touching pool, so i'm gonna make you touch. the purpose of the ecological center is to have kids here. and not only tourists, but to have the local population come here. r that's why we have the school kids who come here free, and we explain them why it's important to protect all marine life, not only turtles, but why it's important to protect everything. do you know what this is? older girl: sea urchin. julie: yes. it's a sea urchin. we call it a collector sea urchin, because he collects everything he can find to hide himself. so he eats everything
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lots of animals that are endangered, so like this we can explain why it's endangered and why we have to keep them. this is a black sea cucumber. so the black sea cucumber, it's one of the most important animal of the ecosystem. so if you want to kiss him, it's this way, because this is the anus. don't get it wrong. [laughter] so why it's one of the most important? because he will eat the sand, clean the sand, eject the clean sand. drink the water, clean the water, and eject clean water. older girl: do other animals eat it? julie: uh, yes. big fish and human. [indistinct question] julie: yes, a lot of asian people love to eat them. but it's very dangerous to eat them because they have lots of pollution in them since they are filterers. so it's better not to eat them. girl: are they endangered? julie: some of the sea cucumber, yes, they are endangered. the black one, not yet. but we have a species, for
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the pineapple sea cucumber, we don't find it anymore here. because people eat them. here we have another species of sea cucumber. we call it the leopard sea cucumber. yes, when a fish try to eat them, he will release those sticky filaments, and the fish will get stuck. but here in french polynesia, before, they didn't have shoes, so what they did is they took till they become hard, put it under their feet, so like this, wait, become very hard, and after they could walk on the reef without getting hurt. or to take the lobster without getting hurt. do you know what this is? young girl: um, it kind of looks like a rock. julie: no. i won't show the under, otherwise it's too easy. >> ohh. girl: oh, it's a starfish. young girl: it's a starfish.
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in french we call them shark pillow because there is a sweet legend here that the shark used to sleep on them. like this. that's why their skin look like the skin of the shark. so they are very heavy because they're full of water. they love to eat the giant clams. so here where you have the shape of the star, it will open just a little like this. you will have some small tentacle that come out. he will in the middle it will open. one of his 5 stomach will come out, go inside the clam, eat the clam, and then go inside back to digest. so here i'm gonna show you a linckia. it's a very rare starfish. it's a blue one. it's around 10 years old, and it can live 40 years. so i swear
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julie: it's alive. [laughs] [indistinct chatter] older girl: where do they live? julie: so you can find them on the reef, but here this shape of starfish is very rare here. so you can find some blue that is extremely rare, but you can find also yellow, red, and orange that are more common. but the blue one, it's extremely rare. that's why i don't make people touch it because it's very fragile. this is the oyster that produce the black pearl. there is no pearl inside, because this one, it's a wild one, and in the wild you have one chance in 10,000 to find a pearl. but you have some other species, like in the philippines, that can do white pearls. and another species can do pink pearls. but they are not only black. they are black with some color inside.
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you see the animals inside? young girl: when do they open? julie: they open to filter the water to get their food. here she is closing because she is out of the water. but when i'm gonna put her back, she will open back to filter the water. as a marine biologist, to be here is the best place, and i really do like my job. i won't change place for any other job. bored. but i'm not yet bored, so i will stay here i think a lot, a lot of time. alex: visit our website, animalrescuetv.com, to learn more about other rescue groups. don't go
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alex: and now this "animal rescue" safety tip. singer: ? keep your pets happy, healthy, and fit with this animal rescue safety tip ? alex: even pets that seem healthy and frisky can have hidden medical issues that, left undetected, could lead to serious problems. that's why a an essential tool used by veterinarians to detect, treat, and prevent potentially dangerous illnesses. standard blood tests should be part of your pet's annual physical examination, especially for older or sickly animals. talk with your vet if you have any questions. singer: ? that's your animal rescue safety tip ? "animal rescue" returns
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every single day, more than 8,000 men and women are working together to create a stronger, smarter, more resilient system... so the 3 1/2 million people we serve have the energy they need. ? we serve new england, and energy brings us together. ?
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closed captioning sponsored in part by a used car, truck, suv. that's smart. truecar can help. it's great for finding a new car, but you already knew that. it's also great for finding the perfect used car. you'll see what a fair price is, and you can connect with a truecar certified dealer. so, no matter what you're looking for... there it is. this is how buying a used car should be.
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alex: time now to honor this episode's "animal rescue" heroes. chorus: ? because they care because they care and bringing comfort to all creatures everywhere chorus: because they care woman: because they care chorus: because they care many more are living strong because they care woman: oh chorus: to one family we belong because they care
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alex: time now to check our "animal rescue" mail bag. singer: ? animal rescue
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? animal rescue mail bag ? alex: and that's this edition of "animal rescue." thanks for watching. join us next time as we showcase those caring individuals who help the various creatures in the animal kingdom. i'm alex paen. alex: on the next "animal rescue," amazing rescues watch compassionate individuals help animals in trouble. learn about different critters and the dedicated people who care for them. plus, animal safety tips, and information on how to better care for your lovable pet. all this and much, much more, next time
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[captioning made possible by telco productions, inc.] [captioned by thna captioning institute
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alex: follow us on facebook
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on facebook and twitter. ever new england. eversource. were always asking for it. >> reporter: then mark revealed something detectives didn't know. he and gary had plans to meet at mcdonald's on the night of the
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>> how long do you think you waited on him? >> i waited probably a good -- i got there probably 7:45, probably 45 minutes. >> okay. >> reporter: so the friend said he drove across town to stop by gary's house. >> i went back to the house, knocked on the door. nothing. didn't answer. so i thought maybe they were gone or left. because he'll leave. he'll go and say, oh, man, i forgot, my bad. i'm in kansas city. so i had no clue. >> reporter: mark told no big deal. so he went back to his office at ibm to do some work. >> now there were several things about that story that raised some questions. >> reporter: like? >> like, why would you wait 45 minutes for someone and not pick up your phone and give them a call and say, hey -- >> reporter: what's up? >> what's up? did you forget? >> reporter: but what seemed really strange was that mark porter had just admitted to going to the house the night of the murders with a story that
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wasn't all that concerned about his friend missing dinner? >> so he drives a few miles across town to go knock on the door when his office is across the street, when it doesn't appear that gary is showing up. >> reporter: so he puts himself at the house, sort of a benign explanation. >> yes. >> reporter: inside the interview room the detectives decided it was time for a break. >> give me a couple seconds. i'll go back there and see if there's anything else. can i get you anything, coke are water? >> reporter: tin sense of it all, including this bit of information, gary's brother had told police that not long ago mark asked gary for a loan, put the request in writing, not just a little bit till payday but an eye-popping $250,000. >> that's the kind of money if you can get it out of your house as a second mortgage maybe you're lucky. >> right. >> reporter: what did your father make of it? did he consider it even for a heartbeat? >> no, not at all.
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where he thinks i would have this kind of money. >> reporter: strange since not only would mark, gary's former boss, have had a nice pension as a former school superintendent, he was currently earning a six-figure salary at ibm. brother larry had suggested mark might have a gambling problem. >> i knew he had some sort of bad financial issue. >> reporter: when the detective came back to the room, the tone of the interview had changed completely. >> have you ever had to ask gary for money yourse? >> no, only for -- only in trade or buying. >> reporter: suddenly mark porter was in the hot seat. >> so if i was getting information from somebody who told me that maybe you had a large gambling debt. that you were asking gary -- >> i do not have a large gambling debt. >> that you asked gary for maybe some assistance. >> no. >> would that be false? >> that's not true. >> reporter: he denied asking for the loan, said the only time he discussed large sums of money with gary was about a real estate deal. >> because he's always looking
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asked him the question they've asked everyone else. would he offer up a dna sample. >> all i have is like a cheek swab, that i'll ask if you are fine, do that today. >> no, i'm going to wait. >> any particular reason? >> i don't know. i don't know the legalities. i don't want to do something then my attorneys say i shouldn't have done that. >> why would you not give us a dna sample? >> reporter: it's your best friend. >> your best friend. we're doing everything we can to find who brutally murdered your best friend, and you're telling us that you're not sure you're going to give us a dna sample. >> reporter: the refusal wasn't evidence of mark's guilt, so police let him go, but the investigation suddenly shifted away from the workers at the tyrrell home and toward mark porter. some detectives hit the pavement to check out his alibi, while others continued mining over avenues for leads. one cop thought to check a local database of pawn shops to see if any of the missing items from the house had been recently
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that search led them here to r&k coins. tell us how your business ended up being very important in a murder investigation in springfield. >> yes, sir. >> reporter: it was two days after jan and gary were killed when teddy ellington was working behind his desk and a guy with a tub of coins walked in. what were you seeing in him? was he okay? normal demeanor? >> he looked like any average guy to me. nothing actually stood out about him at all. >>ep dimes, quarters, 50 cent pieces. when you added up the face value of that stack of money, what was it worth? >> he had $1,210 in face money. >> reporter: but the meltdown value of the metal itself was worth what? >> i paid him $18,351. >> reporter: $18,351. a lot of money. and not far off the value of the
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his coins, you did the transaction, your security cameras caught it all? >> sure did. >> reporter: so, who was it? coming up -- how a mcdonald's coffee cup was about to blow the case wide open. >> did your dashboard just light up when you hear that? >> can't even describe the emotion of it. >> and finally, a family learns
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detectives finally had a major break in the investigation. silver coins worth around the same amount as the ones taken from the tyrrell home had turned up in a local coin shop. surveillance cameras caught the transaction on video. the man certainly looked
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>> mark porter. >> yes. >> reporter: mark edward porter. this is a real license. this is the real guy. >> that's him. >> reporter: but selling a load of coins didn't prove mark porter was guilty of murder. remember mark also had an interest in the coin business. >> the best explanation for that was just simply that these were coins that mark porter had, it was just a coincidence that they happened to be sold the day after the tyrrells were killed. >> reporter: still for police, the friend, ibm executive, retired school superintendent and by all a of the community, was now a prime suspect in the murders of jan and gary tyrrell. >> i never did like the guy. i never did trust him. i thought he was something of a fake. >> reporter: gary's brother larry always had a bad feeling about mark. and he was convinced if mark was the killer, the motive was money. >> i felt that he was befriending and recruiting and grooming my brother to gain access to his money.
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>> reporter: when jessica heard detectives were looking at mark, she wasn't surprised. >> he didn't show up at the funeral. >> reporter: conspicuous in his absence? or am i making too much of his nonappearance? >> i think it was pretty obvious that there was something going on. >> reporter: and his former secretary said she hated working for mark porter. ended up quitting her job to get away from him. >> i said he's off in some way. i don't know. >> reporter: you used that word? >> i did. >> reporter: but what bothered police was his lack of cooperation. >> he wouldn't give dna. he wouldn't take a polygraph. >> reporter: add to that the suspicious pawn shop transaction and the story about stopping by the tyrrell house on the night of the murders, and a talk with mark's wife about the night of the killings only made them more certain. >> she had talked about making a couple phone calls to mark, and that she couldn't get hold of
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>> reporter: but police still needed physical evidence, a dna sample to match to that latex glove found at the scene. so they hatched a plan to get one. you start tailing mark porter? >> yes. >> reporter: cars outside the house? >> yes, we had undercover officers that were constantly doing surveillance for weeks and weeks and weeks to try and somehow obtain a dna sample from him. >> reporter: but nabbing a sample proved more difficult than expected. in all those weeks, officers >> they watched him eat his lunch. they watched him get a to-go cup. and they were all excited because they thought they were going to be able to get the straw he'd been drinking his drink with only to see him pick the straw up and put it into his to-go cup and leave with the straw. >> reporter: so he knew that you guys had eyes on him? >> it's difficult to know what he knew at that time. >> reporter: then three months after the murders, an undercover officer followed mark into an automobile oil change shop.
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coffee cup that he'd gotten from mcdonald's. he's drinking from the cup. he strikes up a conversation, a casual conversation. >> reporter: the suspect and the undercover cop. >> the suspect and the undercover cop. obviously mark has no clue what's going on. as he's speaking with him, mark's car gets done and he gets up and leaves and leaves behind the coffee cup. >> reporter: police had their sample. and in less than 24 hours, they had the results. >> it's confirmed. the same dna from the coffee cup is the dna from the latex glove. >> reporter: does your dashboard just light up when you hear that? >> can't even describe the emotion of it that we're going to be able to hopefully bring some resolution to the tyrrell family. >> reporter: two weeks later armed with search warrants, detectives arrested mark porter at his office. how do you take that? you got the wrong guy? this can't be? >> absolutely not. he said okay and turned around and put his hands behind his back. that was it, the only words he
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>> reporter: jessica was at work when she got the call. >> two of my very good friends were with me. he said he's been arrested. and i remember falling to the floor, and just being so overwhelmed with relief that he was finally caught. >> reporter: even the former secretary who didn't like him was horrified. >> i couldn't believe it. i mean, oh. i thought, no. >> reporter: investigators went that her husband's own story put him at the scene of the crime. >> you really need to help us out here. >> but when does mark say he was there? >> the time they were killed. >> no. >> yes, ma'am. yes, ma'am. >> okay. still circumstantial. >> reporter: and that's exactly what mark porter's defense attorney seemed ready to argue. mark hired one of the best to plead his case. >> he has a spotless record. five college degrees and has an outstanding past of good
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>> reporter: at a bond hearing, the defense revealed its strategy. they would argue that there was nothing suspicious about mark's dna inside his best friend's house. he was a regular visitor to the house, porter. he would get with gary and they'd put on their gloves and handle the old coins and the objects and that's why the glove is there. jurors, it's benign. do you think that works as an argument in the real world of courtroom drama? >> potentially yes. >> repor b suspicious coin sale? well, there was no way to know for sure the coins had come from gary's house. and as for the assumption that mark porter was a compulsive gambler hopelessly in debt. you had to wonder if he got behind with a bookie or the mob. did he owe money to some heavy people? >> that was a theory that we frequently talked about. there was never any evidence that we found that led to that. >> reporter: so the case of potential death penalty was not
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attorneys who asked to talk about a plea deal, the prosecution was willing to listen. >> what are we willing to risk? to try to get the death penalty. can we achieve what we need to achieve without the risk of going to trial? >> reporter: could have walked. >> there's a chance of a hung jury and you have to do it all again. there's a chance they come back on a lesser crime. >> reporter: both sides agreed. mark porter pleaded guilty to two counts of second degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison. no eligibility for parole until he's 82. sad. i have a lot of relief that mr. porter's finally going to be behind bars for presumably the rest of his life. >> he has to live every day with what he did. every day he has to think about what he did. and all of the lives he destroyed. >> reporter: you're saying he has to live his life in a kind of remorse, but you haven't seen any sign that there's that remorse.
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>> reporter: today jessica is doing her best to move on. in february of 2015, she and jason finally got married. >> we got married on valentine's day. while it was a great day, it was also very sad. my parents weren't there. >> reporter: larry took his brother's place and walked her down the aisle. >> she asked me to give her away, and what should have been my brother's job. >> reporter: kind of bittersweet >> mm-hmm, yeah, that's true. it was an honor to do it, but it didn't feel right. >> reporter: to keep her parents' memory alive, jessica has set up a scholarship in their names. as for that offbeat museum of a home, it's still there with a loving daughter as caretaker. >> i still feel them there. they loved that house. my mom built that house. i grew up there. and so i can't let that go.
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thanks for joining us. this sunday, split screen america. a divided nation reacts with joy to donald trump and with anger. wi demonstrating across the country, as mr. trump goes to washington. >> mr. president, it was a great honor being with you, and i look forward to bng with you many, many more times in the future. >> thank you. >> will trump be able to heal the widening divisions in this country? i will talk to his campaign manager kellyanne conway. e-mail fallout again. hillary clinton blames her loss directly on fbi director james comey, saying his announcement
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not only have democrats lost the presidency, the senate, the house and state legislatures all remain in republican hands. how do democrats rebuild? senator cory booker and congressman keith ellison join me. did donald trump win the election? or did hillary clinton lose it? we will dig into the numbers. joining me are david brooks, katty kay turner. welcome to sunday and the post-election edition of "meet the press." >> from nbc news in washington, this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. good sunday morning and, boy, this is no ordinary sunday. if there's one idea that was voluntarily dated tuesday, it's that we live in a split screen
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finally got its country back and the other half fears they lost their country on election day. half the nation once again feels at home in a country they recognize. the other half worries that they're now homeless in their own home country. that split screen idea is reflects in the vote. with 93% of the vote counted, hillary clinton leads donald trump by more than 600,000 votes, larger than al gore had in the popular vote over george w. bush. she will almost surely percentage points. elections are not won that way. they are won and lost in the electoral college. trump's victory sparked protests over the past few days. one question many people are asking is, how did the polls get it so wrong? hillary clinton has one answer. yesterday she said fbi director james comey's two e-mail announcements 11 days before the election and the other two days before the election proved fatal.

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