tv Nightline ABC October 22, 2016 12:37am-1:07am EDT
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this is "nightline." >> tonight, an almost-perfect murder. a teenage girl gone missing, her suspected killer covering his tracks. >> he bleached his knife. >> until the victim's brother sets a secret trap. >> where is she? you know what happened. if you talk like this- >> fired up, son. >> but think like this -- >> they're a bunch of ignorant bigots. you might an liberal redneck. this left-leaning southerner is rabbling up youtube views and enjoying a view of the other side of the south. ? it was the perfect illusion ? going gaga, it's not a perfect illusion. we spoke to lady gaga about her new album and mother monster
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but first the "nightline 5." stay, stay! >> more stay per roll. >> sit. >> more sit per roll. >> watch me, watch me, roll over, roll over! whoops. >> more who's training who per roll. bounty is two times more absorbent. so one roll of bounty can last longer than bargain brands. so you get more life per roll. the long-lasting quick
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i spent many years as a nuclear missile launch officer. if the president gave the order we had to launch the missiles, that would be it. i prayed that call would never come. [ radio chatter ] self control may be all that keeps these missiles from firing. [ sirens blearing ] i would bomb the [ beep] out of them. i want to be unpredictable. i love war. the thought of donald trump with it should scare everyone. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. good evening. thank you for joining us. it's a gut-wrenching fear for every parent. a child goes missing.
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19-year-old colorado girl prompting a massive police search. but a vigilante investigation leads to a shock discovery. here's abc's jim avila. >> reporter: young and pretty. lost and nowhere to be found. lee porter, a 19-year-old colorado waif who vanished in june 2014. >> she was small but she was feisty. >> reporter: police launch a massive search in the denver suburbs. >> they're still lki desperately searching for lee porter -- >> reporter: now more than two years later, lee still not found. her motor renee jackson follows her own leads with search dogs. >> my mama heart can't accept the fact that i don't know where my daughter is. i can't live with that. >> reporter: lee grew up in a small town but had a big personality. >> she was an amazing young woman. a joker. she loved her brother like
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but then secretly drops out of class and moves in with an older man. 38-year-old jesse mine, a tattoo artist who one of lee's friends says has a taste for tender young women and hard drugs. >> it got bad right away. she said, i did heroin for the first time and i am hooked on it. >> reporter: the trouble in lee's life is about to get worse. jesse breaks up with her, packs his truck, moves east. leaving lee with no place to drops off the grid. >> i knew there was something wrong right away. i couldn't get ahold of her. >> reporter: the family goes to police who immediately turn to boyfriend jesse. his trip to the east coast cut short. he admits to rough times. >> screaming at each other, we'd fight about cheating on each other. >> reporter: jesse tells the cops he last saw lee when they parted ways at this motel parking lot.
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down another lead. lee's cell phone bill. >> this one number kept popping up, christopher wade. i had never heard that name before. >> reporter: christopher wade, a tall and slender 23-year-old. he too is from the same town and went to high school with lee. renee learns he's been lee's self-appointed accountability partner to help her stay off drugs. christopher tells renee lee was with him at his apartment the night she disappeared. but that she left abruptly. this is another man the cops need to talk to. paying him an immediate visit. >> he wanted to help find lee, he was really concerned about her. >> reporter: even pleading for her safe return online and on the local news. >> tried texting her, tried calling her, left her some messages on facebook. and haven't heard anything back from her. >> reporter: with christopher's permission police search his tiny two-bedroom apartment. >> filthy. two-liter jugs of chew spit,
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>> reporter: worst of all christopher's bedroom -- >> disarray. mattress on the floor, no sheets, no pillow case. >> reporter: a blade. >> you can see the bleach spots on it. that's when we asked him to come in for a formal interview. >> you didn't get rid of the sheets? >> no. >> intentionally get rid of the sheets because maybe they had her blood on them? >> no, sir. >> the worst thing you can do is lie to us. >> yeah, i did get rid of them. >> i asked, where's the body at? did you >> i maintain my innocence, but i would like a lawyer. >> reporter: the detectives get a search warrant for christopher's apartment. then police hit pay dirt. when they find buried in the mess on the floor this receipt from 7-eleven. it's for bleach and rubber gloves. thank heaven for 7-eleven. stocked, as they all are, with slim jims, slurpees, and security cameras. >> here you'll see chris coming
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morning. inside the store he's no housekeeper but grabs the bleach. after speaking with the clerk, rubber gloves. now police are watching his every move. and they see christopher meet with someone new. >> we had detectives watching him and watching this whole thing go down. >> reporter: it's lee's brother, maxx, setting a trap, luring christopher with friendly text messages like these. >> i don't think you did anything but other people do. i'll let people know to stop >> reporter: all a ruse to bait christopher into talking. maxx brings a friend and secretly records the conversation on his phone. abc news has obtained the audio. >> chris, look me right in my eyes. dude, where is she? >> i do not know. >> it went back and forth. like 10, 20 times. >> look, okay, you need to tell us right now, dude. i need my sister back. dude, i'm going to kill myself without my sister. chris. >> yeah, i know. >> where is she?
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>> look. you have every right to be angry with me. >> reporter: christopher admits that he killed the teenager in trouble. claiming he did it in self-defense. >> i turned, grabbed her, stepped forward and twists her around so that her body was in between me and the knife. she -- then i placed my hand at her throat. i didn't start squeezing until after she kept in >> how long did you squeeze her throat? until what happened? >> i thought that -- her muscles would relax when she went unconscious. and that i could gradually move the knife away. and let her go and let her regain consciousness. but -- that didn't happen. >> what are you thinking as this is going on? >> i flipped out. >> think i'm going to let you
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>> reporter: the last sound you heard was maxx pouncing on wade. >> i made sure maxx got at least one got shot in before i grabbed and pulled him off. >> reporter: they call nip 11 making him repeat the story on tape for a second time. >> yes, i'd like to confess to a murder. >> okay. what happened? >> the case is for the disappearance of lee porter. >> it was an amazing scenario, a fa suspect and essentially gets a confession. >> reporter: sitting down with his lawyer and the cops, wade tells them his story of a struggle. >> i asked her to stop struggling. >> reporter: a knife and lee's death. >> i was the only witness, as well as the person that -- not murdered her but was responsible for her death. >> reporter: but what he did afterwards convinces police this was no accident. >> i reclothed her.
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and then i took a duffel bag from my closet -- >> reporter: wade forced the 98-pound lee into the duffle. covered her with trash bags. >> i took her out to the dumpster and i put her inside it. >> reporter: police lock him up. but even with a confession, a body is critical. under colorado law, for a first-degree murder charge. detectives track the trash, find the huge landfill very close to the location where lee's phone last pinged. but they don't find her body. frustrated, the prosecution tries a long shot. offering wade a plea deal. second-degree murder in return for that critical piece of information. >> i called a defense attorney saying, i want to know where that body is. >> reporter: but after the paperwork is signed, wade simply
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interrogation. lee's mother renee says he's getting away with first-degree murder. receiving 48 years in prison instead of life. for two years renee jackson has not given up, looking for her lost lee. >> i look forward to the day that i get to meet my daughter but in the meantime, i'm going to try and find her. >> reporter: for "nightline," i'm jim avila in westminster, colorado. next, he's all southern and no charm. >> [ bleep ] don democrat changing how the world sees the american south. and later, why these little monsters are swarming like paparazzi at a lady gaga appearance. ? paparazzi ?
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the self-proclaimed liberal redneck you're about to meet has always felt a little out of place. growing up a political progressive in small town these two conflicting worlds has made him a viral sensation during this contentious election. here's abc's david wright in our election countdown series "inside the final 30." >> what's up, y'all? liberal redneck, we going to do it again, fired up, son. >> reporter: the accent says hee-haw. the point of view npr, national public radio.
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stuff. >> reporter: trey crowder, the liberal redneck, a youtube phenom phenomenon. donald trump's demographic spouting hillary clinton's message. >> hope he dies in a tragic hairspray accident. >> i didn't think there was such a thing as a liberal redneck. >> i get that all the time, on the internet in person. you're like a unicorn! ? just good ol' boys ? >> reporter: pop culture would have us believe a general lee as they try to outrun the law would end up a lot more like that scene from "deliverance." trey crowder insists those tired cliches don't even begin to describe the south he knows. and that makes his youtube channel more than just a novelty act. >> what does it mean to be a liberal redneck? >> you just embrace the good parts about being from the south, which is just having a
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hell, football, all that stuff. but you're not a hateful, awful, inbred hick person. >> i'm a poor white trash redneck from the admit of nowhere in did that. in tennessee. i am also a well-educated, well-traveled, godless liberal. >> reporter: a rebel yell across the partisan divide. >> the south cooks better chicken, plays better football, and sings sweeter songs. to act like we bring nothing to th liberal hypocritical [ bleep ]. >> reporter: with millions of views he seems to be on to something. >> this election day, 40%-odd of the people in mississippi will vote for frirk, 40%-odd of the people in california will vote for donald trump. please stop acting like we're in a north/south korea situation. >> reporter: listen to part of his rant about black lives matter. >> rednecks unanimously have been against black lives matter, which is funny, rednecks help me out here.
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perspective, and definitely food for thought. >> this is the crowder plantation? >> yeah. >> no slave quarters. >> reporter: salina, tennessee, a small town in clay county near the kentucky border that's fallen on hard times. >> this used to be an oshkosh factory. clothing factory. they made overalls and stuff like that. it moved to mexico. and took how many hundreds of jobs with it. and that was on salina's main street are gone too. >> what did this used to be? >> this used to be a barbershop. >> reporter: the few shops still open are consignment stores. people selling off treasures to pay the bills. and there are storefront churches. the townspeople here clearly praying for a savior. >> jobs, jobs, jobs. >> reporter: you see lots of trump signs in salina. during the primaries, donald
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the vote in clay county than any other republican candidate. >> is it your sense that the folks here just want to roll the dice with donald trump? or do they dislike hillary clinton because her fingerprints are on nafta through bill clinton? >> i sincerely think it's both of those. >> reporter: even though bill clinton, from arkansas, is one of their own. >> you know, i'm basically your standard redneck. >> is donald trump a redneck? >> no. >> no. >> is it possible to be a new york redneck? >> no. >> not new york city. >> upstate new york. >> do you see donald trump as a carpet bagger? >> during this election, yeah, i think so. because of the way he's going down there and doing his damnedest to exploit the south and the people in it. >> reporter: it's partly to reclaim the term and the region trey and his friends have gone out on the comedy circuit. corey forester -- >> gay people got married and we're confused and need to be upset about something. >> reporter: drew morgan.
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generation. >> reporter: and trey. >> no actual redneck knows facts. >> reporter: we caught up with them in san francisco where the audience was receptive. >> i forgot everybody in san francisco already knows everything. >> reporter: they're promoting a new book too, "the liberal redneck manifesto: the election creating an entree." >> preaching to the choir. >> yes. >> is it safe to perform in the south? >> we're preaching in the choir in politics but t they still find it odd coming from us. >> reporter: trey admits that's how he feels. an outsider. no matter where he happens to be. >> i've always felt like -- kind of like a man without a country, because growing up here a lot of times i was the weirdo. weirdo smart kid who thinks all these weird things about things. >> walking around salina here today, you get a sense of what's been lost. >> salina's a fairly rough example. but not at all unique.
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and they're bitter about it. you know? and donald trump makes them believe that he does. >> reporter: and if trump should lose? >> that did not work out so well for us last time. people won't be happy if and when she wins but they'll go back to this. i'd like to think it would get better but i don't know if i believe that, no matter which one of them wins. >> reporter: like many americans trey crowder feels he'll be choosing the lesser of two evils. an important choice but he's not getting his hopes up too high. >> run to canada. guys, we got to go, thank you so much. >> reporter: i'm david wright for "nightline" in san francisco. >> maybe we're not all as different as we think we are. when we come back, we go face to poker face with lady gaga and hear about her new album. ? show him what i got no one can
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andrew crossley: new hampshire has a senator who works just as hard as we do. gerardine ferlins: kelly ayotte believes in the potential of new hampshire, and wants to unleash that potential. ron goguen: she's out there fighting for good-paying jobs. andrew crossley: kelly introduced bipartisan training initiatives to make sure we have the skills for the 21st century. sue winter: she's fought against workplace discrimination - claude poisson: she's working for the little guy - i'm the little guy. barb fredette: we need kelly fighting for good new hampshire jobs so our kids can raise their families here. sue martin: kelly is a powerful voice for new hampshire's working families. kelly ayotte: i'm kelly ayotte and i approved this message.
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promoting her new album. ? it was the perfect illusion ? >> reporter: it's no perfect illusion. lady gaga's fifth studio album "joe" released today. >> it's pop, it's funk -- >> reporter: announcing the release live on gma explaining joann is named after her father's sister. >> i wanted to make a record about family, friendship, togetherness -- >> reporter: i album signing like paparazzo. >> ten minutes after she tweeted it, i dropped everything, i have to get her right now. >> i owe everything to this woman. >> she fights for equality for the races, for the sexes. >> reporter: she's a six-time grammy award winner. but lady gaga is no material girl. ? we are living in a material world ? >> reporter: shutting down comparisons to madonna. saying in an interview with
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i write all my own music. i spend hours and hours a day in the studio. i'm a producer. i'm a writer. what i do is different. >> reporter: lady gaga on the edge of glory. ? i'm on the edge of glory ? >> perhaps we all could use a little more music after this dark week in american politics. it was a 19th century german writer jean paul who said, music is the moonlight in the as always, we're online at abcnews.com and our mike: very heavy rain in some areas will quickly move out. all of the changes we will see this weekend. shelley: flash flood warning right now for part of the seacoast. another just expiring in southern parts of the state. manchester now telling people to
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plus, cyber attacks. a new hampshire internet company the victim. the big companies disrupted and the impact tonight >> i sense tremendous momentum all over the country. shelley: republican vice presidential nominee mike pence in the granite state. his attacks on hillary clinton tonight. >> no one covers new hampshire like we do. now, wmur news 9 tonight. we begin this friday night with the weather. parts of the seacoast are now under a flash flood warning. the heavy rain causing flooding on mast road in goffstown earlier. it is a messy friday night out there. good evening. i'm shelley walcott. part of west main and church street in kingston also dealing with flooding. let's head right over to chief
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