bridget jensen: and what did she tell you?et jensen: ok. so to hear these conversations-- and it wasn't just with one girl. it was with three. the defense attorneys were saying, well, yeah, that's just-- just hearsay, that, you know, maybe it happened. maybe it didn't happen. of course. and that's what great defense attorneys do say. you have to minimize something that is that damaging. narrator: even though she didn't have any physical evidence tying ashley to the murder, ashley was the last person to see taylor alive. and the prosecutor did have one powerful exhibit, ashley's police interviews and the lies she told police. the jury heard ashley confronted with cell-phone records that put her at the very place where taylor's body was found. and remember the concrete and potting soil covering taylor's body? the jury saw a video of ashley at a home depot the day after taylor disappeared, buying-- man 1: two bags of potting soil and the bags of cement. narrator: but one thing was missing, the why. why would ashley kill taylor, a