The Illinois State Police (ISP) is warning the public of a phone scam.Over the past two days, ISP has received several phone calls from individuals reporting a
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mike's daughter. >> what bothered me the most was they stayed in mike's house. >> raising the child. >> raising that child and that role of -- >> takes over his life. >> it so creepy. >> percheron a cooperated long- running suspicions that she worked -- she kept a detailed notebook about mike's disappearance and brian anthony's are filling more and more pages in it. she alerted an investigator about her suspicions and shared a 27 page summary of her notes. >> she was a good source of information and she was a bulldog in this. >> like this id. she noted. remember the insurance policies mike bought? they were worth $1.75 million and it was brian who access old mike a large part of them. those waders that surfaced were used by denise's lawyer as evidence to declare mike did in
seven months so she could collect her money. >> it's better than icing on the cake if one of your goals is to get the woman, you also get the money. >> that was all i needed to know. >> but the authorities needed more than gossip. an investigator for the prosecutors office worked the case for 10 long years. are suspicions getting grounded in the relationship between denise and brian are the money trail? >> it was all of it. you start looking at the odd fact the body never floated. the waders popping up. the money. >> the investigators kept their eyes on the married couple, brian anthony's invited their time. if either one was harboring a secret involving foul play, eventually might have a corrosive effect on the relationship. >> they are not going to turn on each other while they are married, but you wait for things to flare up. >> seven years into their marriage, they did flare up. brian moved out.
-there's that issue of the falling foam during the launch of space shuttle columbia. -very early on nasa told us that they knew about a foam -- a debris event. but we didn't even know enough about the shuttle to understand that there was foam on the tanks. the press wants to know what happened and it's like, "yep, so do we." -it's a mammoth job for those taking part in a mammoth task. -covering many hundreds of square miles. -it's the largest recovery effort that has ever been attempted in this country. -as an investigator, i wanted as ironclad a case as we could possibly have for the sequence of events leading to the cause of the crash of space shuttle columbia. but if we were going to do that, we needed to collect all the debris and reconstruct the shuttle. -1,200 sites have been identified.
we just tried to think of him as gone. this case is one of those cases that just really sticks with you. nobody wanted to give up on this case. narrator: luckily, the lead investigator, jim scharf, was a man who knew more than most people about working a cold case. i've mentioned to people before that if anything happens to me, i want him to investigate what -- you know, try to find the perpetrator. narrator: in 2018, the alleged golden state killer was finally behind bars, thanks, said prosecutors, to a new forensic tool called genetic genealogy. we knew we could and should solve it using the most innovative dna technology available at this time. narrator: the question now was whether that science could reveal who killed jay and tanya. ♪
>> i observed kitchen cabinets open, and some kitchen drawers on the floor. in my experience as a police officer and investigator, when a burglary occurs, the kitchen is not a common place that a burglar would look for items. a burglary, also, items are scattered about. drawers drum -- dumped on the floor. i felt it was not ordinary and i expressed that to my partner. >> while he found that out for a burglary, it was nathan's behavior that struck him more. >> describe his demeanor. >> as i am speaking to him, he never showed emotion or asked questions as to what was going on. >> prosecutors said nathan showed no emotion during his police interview. even when a detective told him denise was dead. >> you can't tell me things about her.
four people had been gunned down just miles apart and private investigator was convinced dwight jones was the killer. rick's insight into dwight's mental state developed over time in the aftermath of that terrifying night connie jones managed to escape her husband's rage. here again, is josh with unraveled. >> dr. connie jones spent 22 years married to a mentally ill and abusive husband. she was about to learn her personal ordeal might have led to a crisis for a whole city. >> i'll take you out -- >> back in 2009, after that frightening standoff with police at their home in scotsdale, arizona, dwight jones was arrested on multiple charges, but ultimately pleaded guilty to a single count of misdemeanor disorderly conduct. he was prohibited from owning a firearm during his probation,