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. it messes with you mentally. days passed, then weeks, then months. time just ran together. i didn t know always what day of 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 vibrator was a gag gift never used. 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 his to sort through that. 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
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. isaacs told jurors the state s case was built on 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
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 america 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 says, i m coming to get you. 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
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? deputies are about to discover something odd. they picked up a lot of cards and like valentine cards, christmas cards, letters. valentines? uh-huh. when the devil and bobbi parker continues.