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i never saw remorse. not one time. the only time i saw remorse was when he came to court and he pled guilty, and a judge sentenced him to life. he didn t care about diane. diane maxwell s father lived long enough to see her killer brought to justice. this database has been such a boost to law enforcement, to be able to help solve these crimes that otherwise would go unsolved. and now with the dna database, and that s doing the same thing, i mean, it s just been a tremendous boost to those of us in law enforcement who work these kind of cases. investigators believe the conviction was the result of hard work, cooperation, and perhaps something else. i really think it s divine intervention, because i mean, look at it yourself. look at the odds that we had going into this thing. we didn t have a million to 1 chance we d clear this thing. and i don t know, maybe because of the unselfish life that ....
Was robbery. when he saw diane get out of her car, he abducted her at knifepoint and took her to the wooden shack. he admitted robbing her, but denied sexually assaulting her, although the evidence clearly showed that he did. then he stabbed her to death and stole her car. he abandoned the mustang across town and left his fingerprint and a palm print. although it took almost 35 years to find him, his fingerprints on file had not degraded. if it had not been for the afis system he would have never been identified. on january 15th, 2004, james davis pled guilty to murder with malice and was sentenced to life in prison. i never saw remorse. ....
In prison. i never saw remorse. not one time. the only time i saw remorse is when he came to court and he pled guilty and a judge sentenced him to life. he didn t care about diane. diane maxwell s father lived long enough to see her killer brought to justice. this database has been such a boost to law enforcement, to be able to help solve these crimes that otherwise would go unsolved. and now with the dna database, and that s doing the same thing, i mean, it s just been a tremendous boost to those of news law enforcement who work these kind of cases. investigators believe the conviction was the result of hard work, cooperation, and perhaps something else. i really think it s divine intervention. cause, i mean, look at it yourself. look at the odds that we had going into this thing. we didn t have a million to 1 chance we d clear this thing. ....
And they re all important to me. but it s not very often that you re personally touched by them. davis said his primary motive was robbery. when he saw diane get out of her car, he abducted her at knifepoint and took her to the wooden shack. he admitted robbing her, but denied sexually assaulting her, although the evidence clearly showed that he did. then he stabbed her to death and stole her car. he abandoned the mustang across town and left his fingerprint and a palm print. although it took almost 35 years to find him, his fingerprints on file had not degraded. if it had not been for the afis system he would have never been identified. on january 15th, 2004, james davis pled guilty to murder with malice and was sentenced to life in prison. i never saw remorse. not one time. the only time i saw remorse is when he came to court and he pled guilty and a judge sentenced him to life. he didn t care about diane. ....