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Forensic Files II

but when you look at all the forensics in the case and everything leads you back to one person and that's kaitlyn conley, there's no doubt that she was guilty and responsible. ♪ narrator: up next, after nearly two decades of marriage, a divorcee is starting fresh. she was dating a whole bunch of different guys. she was doing some online dating. narrator: but dangerous secrets lurk in cyberspace. the whole internet world is risky. you just never know who's out there. narrator: romance leads to horrific violence. i'd never seen anything like this. narrator: and science exposes a killer convinced he's outwitted both detectives and forensic analysts. ♪

Case , Kaitlyn-conley , Person , Everything , Forensics , No-doubt , One , Narrator , Marriage , Divorcee , Guys , Bunch

Forensic Files II

i definitely did. she was my whole life. narrator: a few things appeared clear immediately. this staging of the body would have taken time -- so much time that chanin's killer would likely be familiar with the house and knew he wouldn't be disturbed. even more telling, there was no forced entry. the evidence, at least at this stage, indicated chanin knew her killer. ♪

Narrator , Body , Life , Staging , Things , Chanin-starbuck , House , Killer , Telling , Entry , Wouldn-t-be-disturbed , Evidence

Forensic Files II

the victim had been beaten beyond recognition. she had on a blue jean skirt and it was twisted to the side. her bra was pulled open and her shirt was down. she's all cut up. so she did struggle. it appears she ran out of her flip-flops because they're in two different places, and her panties are near one of the flip flops. narrator: problems presented themselves straight away. the area was so isolated there were no streetlights, which meant no witnesses. there was no murder weapon at the scene. the victim had no identification. but the killer did leave some clues behind. we had numerous pieces of evidence from the scene, including a candy wrapper. there were bloodstained rocks that were swabbed at the scene, and the swabs were submitted. narrator: the autopsy revealed the victim died of blunt force trauma to the head, and the motive appeared to be sex. i think that she got picked up by this suspect. i think however it transpired,

Victim , Flip-flops , Cut-up , Shirt , Bra , Recognition , Side , Skirt , Struggle , Blue-jean , Narrator , Area

Forensic Files II

before we even ended up at that home. so he had a good little jumpstart on us. narrator: and he apparently made it back over the border. for those seeking justice for sierra, this was a disaster. mancuso: we were continually working with the fbi and the u.s. marshals to try to find this guy and bring him back to get him here, at least to get a dna sample and question him about what he did that night and what was going on that night. narrator: but they didn't know who he was or where he was and had only a vague idea of what he looked like. the case stalled for nearly six long years. yeah, that frustrated me a lot. narrator: investigators shared the family's frustrations. they had the killer's dna, but with no other clues, it was all but useless. mancuso: i think any time any murder occurs and you're trying to solve it and you can't, it's very frustrating. i always felt like we were going to solve it because we had dna.

Narrator , Sierra , Mancuso , Guy , America , Jumpstart , Little , Border , Disaster , Justice , Marshals , Home

Forensic Files II

released this computer-generated likeness to the media. created solely from unidentified dna, they were hoping this could predict what sierra's killer actually looked like. there were concerns, but we still wanted to blast it out to the community, hoping that somebody would call in. and we were fortunate enough to have several tips. narrator: one of those tips was highly unusual. a woman said she got a strange call from her now ex-husband right after the parabon image was broadcast on tv. mcgee: he called her that day and said, "remember that i was with you that night." and she was like, "what night?" and he said, "the night that sierra was killed." and she said she went back to that night in her head and remembered that he left to get cigarettes and should have only been gone for about 10 minutes. the convenience store was right around the corner, and was gone for many hours. his name was blake russell, a 31-year-old with a history of petty crimes. his ex-wife told detectives

Dna , Sierra , Killer , Likeness , Media , Concerns , Narrator , Woman , Community , One , Call , Image

Forensic Files II

it was possible blake could be their man. mcgee: she said each time they would have sex, it was like rape, like that's the only way he knew how to do it. sierra would have done it for money, but i don't think he wanted to pay her. narrator: investigators were stunned. blake russell bore a remarkable resemblance to the dna image created by parabon. i just couldn't believe how much he actually looked like this sketch. to this day, it still surprises me that it all worked as seamlessly as it did. i couldn't believe from a dna sample they could come up with this picture. it was a happy day here at the sheriff's office, i can assure you. narrator: but just because blake russell looked like the parabon image didn't prove he was sierra's killer. in fact, this technology was so new, so untested, it wasn't even legally sufficient to get a search warrant. we felt like he was our best suspect, and it was just gonna be a problem trying to get his dna.

Narrator , Way , Sierra , Investigators , Mcgee , Sex , Man , Money , Time , It , Rape , Blake-russell

Forensic Files II

that was a full profile, what we call a major-minor. the profile on the candy wrapper was a great quality profile. narrator: investigators knew that killers who resort to the kind of overkill seen in sierra's murder have usually killed before or have at least committed violent crimes, so they were confident they'd find a dna match to their killer in codis, the national dna database. well, i think we're going to solve it immediately. i think, "okay, if we put this in codis and we get a hit, then case solved." narrator: but it was not to be. despite the high quality of the killer's dna profile, there were no matches. i was very aware there was not a hit in codis. that was very frustrating for us, and i know it's frustrating for the detectives, as well. ♪ narrator: now investigators backtracked sierra's final hours, and true to her freewheeling lifestyle,

Narrator , Investigators , Candy-wrapper , Profile , Overkill , Kind , Killers , Quality-profile , Minor , Dna , Murder , Under-sierra

Forensic Files II

Forensic Files II
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Narrator , Dna , Murder , Sierra-bouzigard , Rape-kit , Killer , Under-sierra , Dna-sample , Coroner , Thanks , Sexual-assault , Dna-behind

Forensic Files II

she truly helped them solve this crime. ♪ narrator: up next, a sexual encounter goes horribly wrong. she fought back. she gave us the evidence we needed. narrator: the victim pays with her life. she didn't deserve to die, not that young, not that way. narrator: investigators think they have solid information on her killer, but a brand-new piece of forensic technology upends the investigation. this was completely different from what they had expected. ♪ ♪ ♪

Narrator , Crime , Encounter , Evidence , Way , Investigators , Victim , Life , Information , Killer , Piece , Forensic-technology-upends-the-investigation

Forensic Files II

that the human genome combined with massive computer power could actually tell investigators what someone looked like just from their dna. detectives believed sierra bouzigard's killer was an undocumented mexican worker. but there was no clear description of the suspect. monica quaal raced to tell her fellow investigators that this new technology could provide that description. i really think that she's crazy. she was like, "you just have to have faith in me." i was like, "i have faith in you, but this just kind of seems like magic." and she's like, "no, it's gonna work." and so she convinced me and then we convinced the sheriff. narrator: parabon got the unidentified dna sample from sierra's case and put it through a process they call snapshot. snapshot is a way to take that dna and ask it questions. okay, if we don't know exactly who this person is, do we know his ancestry? can we say something about eye color, hair color, skin color, freckling, face shape?

Dna , Killer , Investigators , Someone , Detectives , Sierra-bouzigard , Human-genome , Computer-power , Monica-quaal , Technology , Suspect , Worker