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Speaker 1: H a wall street line, shackle change, Oh do someome

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gird it's calling my name. There is no mercy and

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it's been a tentery juice as the huge stream game

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Rainbow three, Come here by.

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Speaker 2: Me or die.

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Speaker 3: Inside these walls, inside the wild.

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Speaker 4: And when the.

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Speaker 3: Girls as I'm.

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Speaker 5: Hey everyone, and welcome back to Bloody Angola. I'm Jim Chapman,

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and today i am bringing you another Fifty Shades of

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Evil series episode. And today I'm taking you straight to

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the Big Apple, New York City, and I'm going to

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tell you the story of alex Enriquez, who, after being

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found guilty in the murder of three victims and suspected

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of many more from nineteen nine eight to nineteen ninety,

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he to this day denies his infamous reputation as a

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serial killer. And while the case lacked hard evidence, the

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circumstantial evidence was overwhelming enough to secure convictions. So let's

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get into it, and this one is going to start

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out in nineteen sixty one in South Bronx, New York.

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Now a quick bit of education on New York City

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where the Bronx is located. New York City is a

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city in New York State. Obviously, and in that city

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there are smaller communities and these are referred to as burroughs.

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You may have heard the phrase the five boroughs of

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New York City. You have Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx

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in Staten Island, and Alex, whose birth name was Alejandro Enriquez,

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was from the South Bronx in what's known as the

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Hunts Point section. And in nineteen sixty one, when he

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was born this borough of New York City, it was

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going through a lot of change, especially demographically. More affluent

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people in New York City started moving out and into

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more suburban areas of the city like Manhattan, and the

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South Bronx at that time would see a massive increase

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in their Black and Puerto Rican population.

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Speaker 6: Now, Alex would.

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Speaker 5: Grow up and much later in life, as most psychopaths do,

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when he would discuss his upbringing, he would paint it

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as this big success. He would even say later on

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that he went to the best schools in the area

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and that he was this hugely successful business owner, when

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in reality he was a high school dropout and by

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adulthood he would be known as a liar, a deceiver,

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a fraudster. And this is primarily accusations levied by a

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large amount of girlfriends who would come forward later on

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in life and claim he would build himself up to

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be someone he simply was not had a very high

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opinion of itself, let's just say that. So in the

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early nineteen eighties, he meets a woman by the name

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of Andrea Roserio and that would become a very long

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term relationship for Alex. Now, eventually, in nineteen eighty nine,

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they would get married. However, prior to his arrest in

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nineteen ninety, it was discovered that the marriage it wasn't

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even legal because he was married to another woman at

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the time that he finally married Andrea. So this would

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start a long road for Andrea in which she would

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discover that Alex really, since they met, he had an

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entire life that she knew nothing about, and a whole

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other side to himself.

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Speaker 6: So we're going to back up again.

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Speaker 5: And go back to the early eighties, and at this point,

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Alex is in his very early twenties and he buys

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a town car that looked very similar at the time

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to the police cars that detectives undercover cops in New

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York would use, and he would tell teenagers primarily in

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the neighborhood that he was an undercover NYPD detective.

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Speaker 6: Now, he would allow them to play in the vehicle,

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hang out the vehicle.

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Speaker 5: He would talk to these teenagers all day long. And

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we'll get into a lot of why that was later

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on in his psychological profile, But y'all, at the end

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of the day, he bought that car because he wanted

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to start a taxi service.

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Speaker 6: He was essentially a taxi driver, but this would enable.

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Speaker 5: Him to gain access to these teens as well in

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a grooming sort of way. He would keep toys in there,

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He will keep candy in there, things that would attract

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young people, and he would also buy a lot of

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these neighborhood teenagers in that area toys and things of

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that nature. Classic grooming techniques, to be sure, but at

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this point in the early eighties, no one knew really

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what grooming was. So he would come off as this

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nice guy just spending time with the youth of the neighborhood,

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right Other parents and adults would actually think, oh, what

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a cool guy to take time out to talk to kids,

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not knowing who this guy was in real life. Honestly,

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in Alex's case, he hid it really well. He didn't

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look like a pedophile. These days, we know that pedophiles

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don't have a look, But in those days, he was

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considered a young, attractive guy and on the outside you

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would have thought, because of all the he did, that he.

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Speaker 6: Had this big, successful business.

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Speaker 5: And eventually he would even purchase a fake badge and

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start defrauding the women he would date. He would even

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tell them that he was a secret detective right for

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the NYPD. He would steal their credit card information, et cetera.

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He was just a total fraud, this guy that claimed

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to be someone he was not, to the point that

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he started believing it himself. So it was not long

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into the eighties, as a matter of fact, nineteen eighty three,

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when he is charged with molesting one of his side

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girlfriend's five year old daughters five years old.

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Speaker 6: Now, there's very limited public.

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Speaker 5: Information available due to the fact that this victim was

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just five years old, and all we really know in

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that case is that he was charged with it, No

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conviction ever occurred, and we don't really know why there's

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nothing out there on it. Now things get quiet for

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alex Or seemingly so, and I'm going to take you all.

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Speaker 6: The way to July third.

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Speaker 5: Of nineteen ninety eight and a young fourteen year old

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girl by the name of Shimira Bellow goes missing in

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the South Bronx. She's discovered the next day at a

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park in the South Bronx near a police firing range.

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She was found to have been beaten and she also

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had a lot of trauma involved, especially around the head area. Now,

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in these days, DNA was pretty much nonexistent. Police they

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really didn't.

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Speaker 6: Have anything to go off of.

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Speaker 5: One day, this young lady fourteen years old goes missing,

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the next day her body's found. There were no ring

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cameras back then. This was still had twenty years before

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they were even invented. They didn't have plate readers back then,

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hardly anybody. You had to be a business with a

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lot of money to even have surveillance cameras. So due

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to all of this and the fact that sadly that

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park was a common place where they would find bodies

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over the years, they just kind of chalked this up

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to an isolated incident. They would work it, but they

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didn't think this was going to become what it eventually

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would become. So while they collected DNA and they preserved

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it in the event they could use it later. They

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did actually find a hair sample on the body of

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Smira Bello. At the time, it really didn't provide any

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evidentiary value, although later on it would.

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Speaker 6: So let's go to June fourteenth of nineteen ninety A twenty.

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Speaker 5: One year old by the name of Lisa and Rodriguez

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goes missing. Now in late June, police find her body

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and it is badly decomposed. It was dumped along a

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highway in the and it's like a parkway really, it's

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the I don't want to say the entrance to a park,

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but it's a highway that exists within a park. And

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she was so decomposed that even determining a cause of

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death proved pretty difficult. But police and pathologists they would

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later determine she was suffocated strangled, which was the cause

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of her death. Again, no Leeds really just seemingly disappeared. Now,

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like the first body, you do have suffocation as a

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manner of death. And in both cases there were no

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efforts to conceal the bodies, but police didn't really piece

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that together at the time. They just didn't have enough

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to go on. And these cases were far enough away

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from each other nearly a year that they didn't really

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link these two cases by any means, just seemed like

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another body. So let's go to October tenth of nineteen

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ninety and I'm going to tell you about a ten

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year old by the name of Jessica Gooseman.

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Speaker 6: She goes missing. Now, that day, she had left.

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Speaker 5: Her home to go buy bread for her mother from

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the local supermarket, and she never returned. Now, she was

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the youngest daughter of a very close knit family in

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the South Bronx area, and by seven pm that day,

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her parents in a state of absolute panic. As you

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can imagine, they call police, they report her missing, and

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they let police know the circumstances that surrounded it. Now,

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this girl being just ten years old, it becomes big

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news very quickly, and as you can imagine, everyone joins

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in the search for this young girl. The entire Bronx

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Police department, police from all over volunteers, neighborhood people, even

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national news.

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Speaker 6: Reporters were reporting on.

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Speaker 5: All over the country. Then, sadly, just seven days later,

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three days prior to her eleventh birthday, the body of

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Jessica Gooseman was found when a park employee along the

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Bronx River Parkway spots her body amongst a clump of bushes.

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She was found stuffed in a black garbage bag, and

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she was wearing the exact same clothing that she did

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when she vanished. Once again, the cause of death was

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determined to be asphyxiation. So it's at this point in

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time when police they really start connecting the dots. They

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discover that in all three cases I just told you about,

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the victim profiles matched. All three victims were young, Hispanic females,

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The bodies were all dumped in isolated parks along highways,

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and strangulation was the manner of death with all three

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of these victims. So with this, the police determined quickly

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they likely have a serial killer on their hands, and

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they form.

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Speaker 6: A large task force forty people.

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Speaker 7: Now.

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Speaker 6: Especially in this case, Alex was around a lot.

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Speaker 5: He would actually help in two of these three searches,

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and during him assisting to find these victims, he would

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ask police quite often during the search about the investigations,

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not in a curious way, though almost in a prying way,

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like he was trying to gather information, and police would

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pick up on this, especially in the ten year old's disappearance,

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so much so that police start looking into the background

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of Alex Henriquez and they would discs and they were

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shocked when they discovered that Alex actually personally knew all

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three of these victims, with Jessica actually having been a

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close friend of his daughters. Now in addition to that,

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as they dug into his background, they learned he had

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went on a date once with twenty one year old

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Lisa and Rodriguez. Not only that, they also learned that

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the fourteen year old Shamira Bello had been one of

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the young teens who would play in his cab, but

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he also had once told his nephew he wanted to

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have sex with her. And they would continue to dig

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further and police would discover other incidents involving Alex, including

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that nineteen eighty three charge for molestation.

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Speaker 6: That I told you about.

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Speaker 5: And in addition to that, there was also an incident

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involving his girlfriend, Andrea's three year old son where he

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scalded the toddler with hot water. He actually pleaded guilty

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to that in court, and it wasn't an accident. He

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intentionally scalded a three year old child with hot water.

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He pleaded guilty to an assault charge in that incident

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when the boy's father reports him to police. But it

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was a charge related to a robbery in nineteen eighty

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seven that gave police what they needed to actually arrest

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Alex for something. Police discovered that Alex had an active

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warrant for his arrest for having committed an armed robbery

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at what was known as the World Yacht Club in Manhattan,

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which is where his first wife worked and actually you

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could say his current rife, because remember I told you

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about him being married to Andrea, but it wasn't really

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legal because he already had a wife that he never divorced. Well,

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that was the first wife speak of here. So on

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the strength of that old warrant, police arrested Alex Emriquez.

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Now at the same time he had just pleaded guilty

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in that scalding incident with a three year old I

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told you about, and the arrest at least put him

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behind bars while police continued to investigate these murders and

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really build.

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Speaker 6: This case up.

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Speaker 5: Now, Alex knew that police were on to him about

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these three murders, so he commits what I would say

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is really the most damning evidence against him in the

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murders by this time, and he came up with a

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scheme and he's going to enlist the help of his

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nephew for this scheme. So he asked his nephew to

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call police from like a payphone and claimed that it.

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Speaker 6: Was the killer calling and that he was still on

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the loose.

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Speaker 5: He even gave his nephew a script written out in

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jail and told his nephew, Hey, disguise your voice so

246
00:17:05,640 --> 00:17:06,839
they don't know who you are.

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Speaker 6: And get this really the most damning part to me.

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Speaker 5: Alex gives his nephew some of the details of the

249
00:17:14,440 --> 00:17:20,000
murders that police never released to the public, things like

250
00:17:20,240 --> 00:17:26,160
a rip in Jessica Gooseman's training brawl, and the exact

251
00:17:26,359 --> 00:17:30,359
color and pattern of her panties. Now these are things

252
00:17:30,480 --> 00:17:34,599
that only the killer would know. Police had never released

253
00:17:34,680 --> 00:17:40,440
this to anyone. His nephew smartly records one of these

254
00:17:40,599 --> 00:17:46,400
conversations with his uncle, and subsequently he turns that recording

255
00:17:46,839 --> 00:17:51,000
over to police. This is in January of nineteen ninety one. Well,

256
00:17:51,519 --> 00:17:54,680
when police are that they knew we got our guy here,

257
00:17:55,000 --> 00:17:57,839
but they don't quit investigating. They want to build a case, right,

258
00:17:58,039 --> 00:18:02,799
So By April of nineteen ninety police do officially name

259
00:18:03,079 --> 00:18:07,319
Alex Mriquez as the prime suspect, and in July of

260
00:18:07,480 --> 00:18:12,200
nineteen ninety one, they get an indictment.

261
00:18:12,079 --> 00:18:13,880
Speaker 6: On all three murders.

262
00:18:14,319 --> 00:18:18,480
Speaker 5: Now, evidence they had at this point included fibers matching

263
00:18:18,640 --> 00:18:21,720
all three victims that they found in a car vacuum

264
00:18:22,279 --> 00:18:25,680
at Alex's home in DNA. It had went through some

265
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advancements between the time he was arrested in the time

266
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that they actually charged him with these murders by this

267
00:18:32,519 --> 00:18:35,440
point in time, and remember that hair that I told

268
00:18:35,480 --> 00:18:39,599
you that they found on Shemira Below's body, Well, they

269
00:18:39,680 --> 00:18:43,279
were able at this point to match it to Alex

270
00:18:43,759 --> 00:18:49,200
Mriquez through DNA. Also very damning, police were able to

271
00:18:49,440 --> 00:18:55,359
determine the sweatpants that Lisa and Rodriguez was wearing when

272
00:18:55,440 --> 00:18:59,920
her body was found. Those were actually sweatpants that belonged

273
00:18:59,920 --> 00:19:05,680
to Alex Enriquez's wife. Just a ton of what you

274
00:19:05,720 --> 00:19:10,119
would call really reliable, circumstantial evidence there. So, of course,

275
00:19:10,640 --> 00:19:16,079
Alex denies everything when police ask him about this, and honestly,

276
00:19:16,200 --> 00:19:18,839
the case was harder to prove than you might think.

277
00:19:19,039 --> 00:19:23,039
Beyond a reasonable doubt. It's very circumstantial. There were no

278
00:19:23,240 --> 00:19:28,000
eye witnesses, there were no weapons, no real smoking gun

279
00:19:28,359 --> 00:19:31,519
that they could link to Alex, but they had a

280
00:19:31,720 --> 00:19:37,160
ton of circumstantial evidence. And in nineteen ninety two he

281
00:19:37,440 --> 00:19:41,599
gets tried in all three cases at the same time,

282
00:19:41,720 --> 00:19:45,480
and these were high profile national news type shit. Right

283
00:19:46,279 --> 00:19:51,079
on August twenty eighth of nineteen ninety two, he is

284
00:19:51,240 --> 00:19:55,400
found guilty and sentenced to twenty five years in prison

285
00:19:55,960 --> 00:19:59,319
for each crime, for a total of seventy five years.

286
00:19:59,720 --> 00:20:02,799
Now at this point he's in his mid twenties, so

287
00:20:02,880 --> 00:20:05,759
he's gonna die in person. He's basically cannot get released,

288
00:20:05,839 --> 00:20:09,720
no parole eligibility until he's one hundred. And at this hearing,

289
00:20:10,119 --> 00:20:14,559
families of the victims they get to finally speak and

290
00:20:14,640 --> 00:20:18,960
they issue their victim impact statements to the court. And

291
00:20:19,160 --> 00:20:23,319
here is what those sound like, because I think that

292
00:20:23,440 --> 00:20:25,039
those are very important for you to hear.

293
00:20:26,279 --> 00:20:30,799
Speaker 8: Right with the court's permission to ask mister Rodriguez to

294
00:20:30,960 --> 00:20:31,960
address the to words, my.

295
00:20:32,000 --> 00:20:33,799
Speaker 9: Wife and I would like to personally thank you for

296
00:20:33,880 --> 00:20:36,000
serving as judging the case of our daughter, Lisa and

297
00:20:36,079 --> 00:20:39,720
Quadrigaz since the beginning we first heard, when we first

298
00:20:39,759 --> 00:20:41,720
heard of you, we learned that you were fans during

299
00:20:41,839 --> 00:20:45,319
judge and depicted that sam very sad image in your

300
00:20:45,359 --> 00:20:49,920
clubnom we haul you into highest estem, Honorva Sullivan. There

301
00:20:49,960 --> 00:20:52,559
are no words that can describe what the murder of

302
00:20:52,599 --> 00:20:55,599
our only child, Lisa has done to our lives. Our

303
00:20:55,680 --> 00:20:58,279
daughter has been gone for much for over two years now,

304
00:20:58,920 --> 00:21:01,359
and at times he's still wake up and think that

305
00:21:01,440 --> 00:21:04,559
it's only a bad dream, but we wa wake up

306
00:21:04,599 --> 00:21:08,640
to reality and we know different. We go to sleep

307
00:21:08,720 --> 00:21:12,200
and wake up asking ourselves, why why did this person

308
00:21:12,279 --> 00:21:15,440
kill now Lisa? What did she ever do to him

309
00:21:15,480 --> 00:21:18,160
to deserve this unius act of violence on a person?

310
00:21:19,319 --> 00:21:22,359
She was such a vibrant and vivacious young lady of

311
00:21:22,480 --> 00:21:28,839
twenty one years. To understand the pain, hurt, and suffering

312
00:21:28,920 --> 00:21:31,200
that has engrossed our lives for the past two years,

313
00:21:31,880 --> 00:21:34,400
you need to know of the relationship we have with

314
00:21:34,480 --> 00:21:38,559
our daughter, and there's only one word that can describe it, beautiful.

315
00:21:39,839 --> 00:21:41,880
With me and Lisa was not only my daughter, she

316
00:21:42,119 --> 00:21:45,000
was my confidante and most of all, she was my friend.

317
00:21:47,519 --> 00:21:52,079
We shared a lot together. I love and missed my

318
00:21:52,240 --> 00:21:57,559
daughter very much. The week of June eleventh through June

319
00:21:57,640 --> 00:22:00,680
thirtieth of nineteen ninety were the most horror firing weeks

320
00:22:00,720 --> 00:22:06,960
about lives, and they were always hauntlesssoever. On Sunday, June seventeenth,

321
00:22:07,119 --> 00:22:10,519
Father's Day, I fear that something wrong had befallen my daughter.

322
00:22:11,319 --> 00:22:13,359
She did not call or come to be with me

323
00:22:13,920 --> 00:22:18,279
like she always did on that special day. I cried

324
00:22:18,319 --> 00:22:22,440
myself to sleep. Excuse me, that night and many others,

325
00:22:22,680 --> 00:22:26,160
I cried myself to sleep. The volume sighed of me

326
00:22:26,279 --> 00:22:29,920
is so deep at times I can't buried. That is

327
00:22:30,000 --> 00:22:33,519
why I hate this person so much. He not only

328
00:22:33,640 --> 00:22:39,319
killed my daughter, he killed me too. Since the day

329
00:22:39,359 --> 00:22:42,400
of my daughter's disappearance, I had seen my wife deteriorate

330
00:22:42,480 --> 00:22:46,039
before my eyes. She has gone from a happy, inacted

331
00:22:46,119 --> 00:22:49,839
person to a highly depressed one. On Easter Sunday of

332
00:22:49,920 --> 00:22:52,799
this year, my wife visited our daughter's grave site for

333
00:22:52,880 --> 00:22:55,920
the first time since she buried up. The next day,

334
00:22:56,039 --> 00:22:57,480
she tried to commit suicide.

335
00:22:58,440 --> 00:22:59,799
Speaker 7: She only wanted to be with her.

336
00:23:00,599 --> 00:23:04,880
Speaker 9: As she would later put it, Honorable Sullivan, our lives

337
00:23:04,920 --> 00:23:08,880
will never ever be the same. We will never experience

338
00:23:08,960 --> 00:23:12,319
the happiness of seeing at Lisa and married. No, we

339
00:23:12,359 --> 00:23:16,480
will ever experience the joy of being grandparents. These are

340
00:23:16,559 --> 00:23:20,160
the two most important dreams that will never be, but

341
00:23:20,279 --> 00:23:25,880
we will always keep our memories of Lisa alive. Honorable Sullivan,

342
00:23:26,200 --> 00:23:28,119
I know you would do what is right according to

343
00:23:28,200 --> 00:23:30,640
what the Lord loves, and we can only pray that

344
00:23:30,799 --> 00:23:34,400
God will guide you in your decision. Help us keep

345
00:23:34,480 --> 00:23:38,240
Alex Henricus incarcerated so that he may never be allowed

346
00:23:38,279 --> 00:23:43,160
to walk the streets from New York to home another child. Again, respectfully, yours,

347
00:23:44,240 --> 00:23:46,160
my wife and I I.

348
00:23:46,200 --> 00:23:51,359
Speaker 8: Would ask that lad GROW's Gusman, the mother of Jessica Kazman,

349
00:23:51,960 --> 00:23:55,200
be allowed to speak to the court and my son's

350
00:23:55,400 --> 00:23:58,559
my husband to give us the opportunity to stand here

351
00:23:58,920 --> 00:24:02,480
and express our feeling. It's it's very hard to express

352
00:24:02,559 --> 00:24:05,640
our feelings that we've had for almost two years now

353
00:24:06,799 --> 00:24:09,319
and the pain that this has brought us. I have

354
00:24:10,480 --> 00:24:14,480
four sons, kind of an adopted one that we have adopted,

355
00:24:16,440 --> 00:24:20,400
and Jessica was my only daughter, my youngest one.

356
00:24:20,480 --> 00:24:26,799
Speaker 2: One. So for me to say what it has done

357
00:24:26,880 --> 00:24:27,319
to us.

358
00:24:29,480 --> 00:24:34,759
Speaker 8: Is like if mister Henrique has actually also murdered us.

359
00:24:36,599 --> 00:24:39,400
There's a part of me inside that would that died

360
00:24:39,960 --> 00:24:42,319
the day I found out that I would never see

361
00:24:42,359 --> 00:24:42,759
her again.

362
00:24:45,920 --> 00:24:48,400
Speaker 2: I don't think that part of me would ever live again.

363
00:24:49,279 --> 00:24:51,759
Speaker 8: And I think that same part is that within all

364
00:24:51,839 --> 00:24:55,279
my family, Jessica was a very happy little girl.

365
00:24:56,359 --> 00:25:01,480
Speaker 2: We raised her to trust people, to be good two

366
00:25:02,119 --> 00:25:03,920
what was wrong and what was right?

367
00:25:04,279 --> 00:25:04,599
Speaker 5: Uh huh.

368
00:25:05,200 --> 00:25:08,200
Speaker 8: Being a parent that had a work and my husband,

369
00:25:08,359 --> 00:25:11,440
I had a teacher from a very young age what

370
00:25:11,720 --> 00:25:12,920
was right and what was wrong.

371
00:25:14,680 --> 00:25:17,640
Speaker 2: I've taught them are to my boys, and I am

372
00:25:17,759 --> 00:25:20,319
very proud of my boys, just like I was as

373
00:25:20,440 --> 00:25:21,359
proud of her.

374
00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:27,079
Speaker 6: She knew, she knew.

375
00:25:28,720 --> 00:25:32,440
Speaker 2: What was right, she knew what was wrong. She was

376
00:25:32,519 --> 00:25:35,440
like friendly and maybe that was.

377
00:25:36,920 --> 00:25:41,480
Speaker 8: Something that maybe was wrong because that friendship was what

378
00:25:41,720 --> 00:25:42,039
killed her.

379
00:25:44,720 --> 00:25:50,039
Speaker 2: Jessica, to me, was everything. She was the dream come true.

380
00:25:50,400 --> 00:25:56,480
Speaker 8: After having four sons, she had turned she was just

381
00:25:56,559 --> 00:26:01,400
about to turn eleven, and I was thinking of she

382
00:26:01,680 --> 00:26:03,680
was gonna be now a friend to me. You know,

383
00:26:03,759 --> 00:26:06,759
I was gonna actually start being a mom, and now

384
00:26:06,839 --> 00:26:08,480
I was gonna be also a friend to her. She

385
00:26:08,640 --> 00:26:12,000
had started to put on my t shirts and show

386
00:26:12,079 --> 00:26:14,279
me different dances and.

387
00:26:14,839 --> 00:26:17,720
Speaker 2: Different things in school.

388
00:26:18,039 --> 00:26:18,200
Speaker 7: Mm.

389
00:26:18,720 --> 00:26:23,200
Speaker 2: So this was like a very special time for me.

390
00:26:23,480 --> 00:26:23,960
We heart.

391
00:26:25,119 --> 00:26:28,559
Speaker 8: She would've turned thirteen this year in another few weeks,

392
00:26:29,519 --> 00:26:31,839
and that would have been the greatest time of my

393
00:26:31,960 --> 00:26:39,160
life to see her turn thirteen. She was a joy

394
00:26:39,240 --> 00:26:42,880
to be with with everybody. Everybody that saw her and

395
00:26:43,000 --> 00:26:43,960
spend time with her.

396
00:26:45,440 --> 00:26:45,880
Speaker 2: Loved her.

397
00:26:46,119 --> 00:26:50,880
Speaker 8: She's very polite, she was everything to us. I don't

398
00:26:50,960 --> 00:26:56,680
have any other daughter, and since this has happened, my

399
00:26:56,880 --> 00:27:03,680
husband has had lots of problems expressing his feelings.

400
00:27:03,319 --> 00:27:04,680
Speaker 2: Which is why I am talking.

401
00:27:05,920 --> 00:27:11,319
Speaker 8: My boys have their also problems with the fact of

402
00:27:11,559 --> 00:27:15,680
knowing that somebody could murdered their little sister. This would

403
00:27:15,680 --> 00:27:18,160
be something that they wouldn't live with. And I hope

404
00:27:19,039 --> 00:27:21,640
that now that they have seen justice done in this

405
00:27:21,799 --> 00:27:27,200
court room, that they know that you have to follow

406
00:27:27,279 --> 00:27:31,200
the law. That it is warm to do with warm

407
00:27:32,000 --> 00:27:35,559
be against the law. And I thank the court for

408
00:27:35,720 --> 00:27:39,160
giving me that back to me. I didn't know how

409
00:27:39,200 --> 00:27:43,200
I was gonna finish raising them if they saw anything

410
00:27:43,279 --> 00:27:46,240
else in this court room. I was very scared for them.

411
00:27:46,960 --> 00:27:51,359
I was afraid I would end up losing more than

412
00:27:51,480 --> 00:27:55,839
just a daughter in this courtroom. But you have granted

413
00:27:55,880 --> 00:28:00,599
me that, and I hope you grant us the fact

414
00:28:00,640 --> 00:28:04,759
that he will pay for her dad and we will

415
00:28:04,839 --> 00:28:09,279
never see him again. That he will never heard any

416
00:28:09,359 --> 00:28:12,640
other child again. It's the only thing we have left

417
00:28:13,160 --> 00:28:18,119
besides some memory and her pictures and our dreams that

418
00:28:18,240 --> 00:28:22,200
we will always have. They might not come true, but

419
00:28:22,319 --> 00:28:24,359
our dreams will always be there about her.

420
00:28:26,440 --> 00:28:26,759
Speaker 2: Thank you.

421
00:28:27,680 --> 00:28:32,160
Speaker 5: I mean, just horrific what these people must have went

422
00:28:32,279 --> 00:28:36,279
through and are probably still going through. So not only

423
00:28:36,440 --> 00:28:39,880
did they get a chance to speak, but just prior

424
00:28:40,000 --> 00:28:44,200
to the sentencing, Alex also spoke directly to the judge

425
00:28:44,240 --> 00:28:50,400
and of course categorically denied any involvement on anything, but

426
00:28:50,559 --> 00:28:51,799
the family was.

427
00:28:51,839 --> 00:28:54,960
Speaker 6: Not having it even in the open court. Listen to this.

428
00:28:55,319 --> 00:28:59,000
Speaker 10: First thing I'd like to say, is diminiscent of these killings.

429
00:29:00,000 --> 00:29:02,799
I commit any of these murders that were selling guilty

430
00:29:02,880 --> 00:29:05,720
of it. I feel that nothing here has been proven.

431
00:29:06,559 --> 00:29:08,960
There's been a lot of lies, a lot of deceptions.

432
00:29:10,880 --> 00:29:14,240
If anybody's guilty of a crime in this courtroom, there's

433
00:29:14,279 --> 00:29:16,920
this man Andrew told to who sits here for lying

434
00:29:17,359 --> 00:29:21,319
and deceiving the people of the Bronx, the lying to

435
00:29:21,480 --> 00:29:24,720
the poor families who stood there crying while they.

436
00:29:24,640 --> 00:29:29,480
Speaker 4: Read letters of what they believe I did because of

437
00:29:29,680 --> 00:29:34,799
he said, He's paid people to lie.

438
00:29:35,039 --> 00:29:37,960
Speaker 10: They've come here lied against me, people that were close

439
00:29:38,000 --> 00:29:40,039
to me that I could never understand why they lied.

440
00:29:40,519 --> 00:29:44,880
To this day, I can't imagine why until I found

441
00:29:44,920 --> 00:29:54,640
out the reason why. Oh for the families, I'd like

442
00:29:54,720 --> 00:29:59,279
to say to Shami Bello's mother, didn't take your daughter's life.

443
00:30:00,839 --> 00:30:02,880
She was a wonderful person and all I wanted my

444
00:30:03,000 --> 00:30:05,319
nephew was to be with her. And my nephew knows

445
00:30:05,359 --> 00:30:09,680
it very well. Never did I hurt him Maribello, and

446
00:30:09,799 --> 00:30:15,480
I did not take her life. Mr and Missus Rodriguez,

447
00:30:15,640 --> 00:30:16,279
and she got.

448
00:30:16,240 --> 00:30:21,240
Speaker 9: Class famous stations it over him.

449
00:30:20,519 --> 00:30:21,160
Speaker 10: Jams.

450
00:30:24,519 --> 00:30:25,799
Speaker 7: Mir and Missus Rodriguez.

451
00:30:27,359 --> 00:30:30,599
Speaker 2: But then when we get better and all that, yeao, okay,

452
00:30:30,960 --> 00:30:31,640
shout out out.

453
00:30:34,480 --> 00:30:39,200
Speaker 6: That arts, what.

454
00:30:39,400 --> 00:30:40,039
Speaker 7: Would do.

455
00:30:42,480 --> 00:30:42,519
Speaker 8: That?

456
00:30:43,000 --> 00:30:43,599
Speaker 7: Who does.

457
00:30:50,680 --> 00:30:55,839
Speaker 10: Mr Rodriguez and Missus Rodriguez. I like to say that

458
00:30:55,920 --> 00:31:00,319
I knew Lisa and I dated Lisa. She was a

459
00:31:00,359 --> 00:31:03,559
wonderful person. For gen Anthony, I hope you find the

460
00:31:03,599 --> 00:31:05,599
guts to come forward some day and speak the truth,

461
00:31:07,440 --> 00:31:09,880
to tell the court what mister Tultien the police did

462
00:31:09,920 --> 00:31:12,839
to him, lie to him, tell him I was accusing

463
00:31:12,920 --> 00:31:16,039
him of the murders and putting fear into him that

464
00:31:16,160 --> 00:31:17,079
if he wouldn't talk to.

465
00:31:19,599 --> 00:31:19,799
Speaker 2: Lie.

466
00:31:20,000 --> 00:31:21,359
Speaker 3: That's fine, right, you know a lie.

467
00:31:21,400 --> 00:31:24,400
Speaker 7: I always dies. I knew the fucking asshole.

468
00:31:25,880 --> 00:31:29,000
Speaker 8: Anybody lies with you, my laddie, everybody with you.

469
00:31:29,680 --> 00:31:32,000
Speaker 2: Everybody everybody lied with you.

470
00:31:32,240 --> 00:31:52,119
Speaker 7: Right, run go ahead. Something that has not been said

471
00:31:52,279 --> 00:31:53,920
was the day in the chambers.

472
00:31:54,039 --> 00:31:57,319
Speaker 10: When we were speaking to the doctor, when we aksed

473
00:31:57,319 --> 00:32:01,680
the doctor what his opinion was, and he said, and

474
00:32:01,759 --> 00:32:05,200
I believe it's on the records that he said his

475
00:32:05,359 --> 00:32:08,880
opinion is a doctor, no person under the influence of

476
00:32:08,920 --> 00:32:12,559
any drug or on a methodon should be deliberating from

477
00:32:12,599 --> 00:32:13,119
any jury.

478
00:32:14,000 --> 00:32:15,960
Speaker 11: Well, it's not quite what he said, but what he

479
00:32:16,160 --> 00:32:20,839
did say is recorded fully and is also incorporated again

480
00:32:21,039 --> 00:32:24,400
in your lawyer's motion to the court today. You're not

481
00:32:24,559 --> 00:32:29,200
quoting him, uh accardly. He didn't say that at all,

482
00:32:29,519 --> 00:32:31,319
all right, but what he did say is a matter

483
00:32:31,400 --> 00:32:31,799
of record.

484
00:32:31,880 --> 00:32:32,240
Speaker 8: Go ahead.

485
00:32:32,279 --> 00:32:38,519
Speaker 7: What else? Continue feel that a lot of things have

486
00:32:38,599 --> 00:32:39,640
been hidden in his trial.

487
00:32:40,480 --> 00:32:43,319
Speaker 10: And all I've asked you said from the beginning, you

488
00:32:43,359 --> 00:32:46,960
would give me a fair trial, and I feel I

489
00:32:47,000 --> 00:32:48,079
haven't been given a fair trial.

490
00:32:48,119 --> 00:32:49,319
Speaker 7: You said you would go by the law.

491
00:32:52,039 --> 00:32:54,799
Speaker 10: Another thing that's been hitten is during number eleven approach

492
00:32:54,920 --> 00:32:59,119
my family three times, something that was told to my lawyer,

493
00:32:59,160 --> 00:33:02,519
and my lawyer's only stay away from him, and he

494
00:33:02,599 --> 00:33:04,160
asks to make a deal with my family.

495
00:33:09,720 --> 00:33:12,359
Speaker 7: Donor how innicent of these murders.

496
00:33:13,240 --> 00:33:16,160
Speaker 10: I have no anger for the families for what they're

497
00:33:16,200 --> 00:33:18,680
saying or what they think of me, because they have

498
00:33:18,799 --> 00:33:22,680
been misled and they have been deceived by mister TOLTI.

499
00:33:23,960 --> 00:33:28,079
Speaker 7: How minicent of these crimes. Thank you, Roed.

500
00:33:30,400 --> 00:33:36,559
Speaker 11: The advisory panel and myself absolutely unanimous in what we

501
00:33:36,759 --> 00:33:39,799
felt would be a fair sentence. I've never had that

502
00:33:39,960 --> 00:33:45,480
experience before. But we're all in accord with respect to

503
00:33:45,720 --> 00:33:49,279
the sentence that the law requires be meted out in

504
00:33:49,400 --> 00:33:53,480
this particular situation. And all sentences will be for your

505
00:33:53,519 --> 00:33:57,680
three convictions on the Bronx indictment four nine, seven, eight

506
00:33:57,960 --> 00:34:02,720
of ninety one, each four murder in the second degree

507
00:34:03,200 --> 00:34:07,200
under the first count of that indictment relating to the

508
00:34:07,319 --> 00:34:14,000
death of Shimiro Bellow. The Court imposes an indeterminate sentence,

509
00:34:14,119 --> 00:34:17,280
the maximum of which shall be for the term of

510
00:34:17,360 --> 00:34:22,199
your natural life. The Court composes a minimum term of

511
00:34:22,719 --> 00:34:28,760
twenty five years said term to run consecutive lee to

512
00:34:28,880 --> 00:34:33,000
the sentences you are now doing under New York County

513
00:34:33,119 --> 00:34:38,119
Indictment one four five ninety eight of ninety and Bronx

514
00:34:38,239 --> 00:34:43,119
County Indictment seven ninety three of eighty nine, and the

515
00:34:43,239 --> 00:34:47,400
said defended is committed to the State Department of Correctional

516
00:34:47,679 --> 00:34:52,320
Services until released in accordance with the law. For your

517
00:34:52,400 --> 00:34:56,559
conviction under the second count relating to the death of

518
00:34:57,079 --> 00:35:03,960
Gleisa Rodriguez, the Court what imposes an indeterminate term, the

519
00:35:04,159 --> 00:35:07,559
maximum of which shall be for the term of your

520
00:35:08,000 --> 00:35:12,800
natural life, and the Court imposes a minimum term of

521
00:35:13,119 --> 00:35:19,159
twenty five years said term to run consecutively to the

522
00:35:19,519 --> 00:35:23,320
sentence imposed today on the count one of the same indictment,

523
00:35:23,960 --> 00:35:28,079
and the said defended is committed to the State Department

524
00:35:28,159 --> 00:35:32,199
of Correctional Services until released in accordance with the law.

525
00:35:33,320 --> 00:35:36,599
Or your conviction under Count three of the same indictment

526
00:35:36,719 --> 00:35:41,599
relating to the death of Jessica Guzman, the Court imposes

527
00:35:41,639 --> 00:35:46,360
an indeterminate sentence, the maximum of which shall be for

528
00:35:46,480 --> 00:35:49,199
the term of your natural life, and.

529
00:35:49,320 --> 00:35:51,480
Speaker 6: The court imposal.

530
00:35:56,119 --> 00:36:01,159
Speaker 11: The Court imposes a minimum term of twenty five years,

531
00:36:02,079 --> 00:36:07,719
said term to run consecutively to those sensus already imposed

532
00:36:07,800 --> 00:36:11,719
under the counts one and two, And the said defendant

533
00:36:12,000 --> 00:36:16,239
is committed to the State Department of Correctional Services until

534
00:36:16,360 --> 00:36:20,360
released in accordance with the law getting the rightful appeal.

535
00:36:23,760 --> 00:36:24,039
Speaker 7: So that.

536
00:36:26,000 --> 00:36:29,280
Speaker 11: Is seventy five to life in this case, consecutive to

537
00:36:29,440 --> 00:36:31,199
the five to ten you're already doing.

538
00:36:35,880 --> 00:36:39,480
Speaker 5: Hardy has man, you want to talk about a narcissist.

539
00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:44,079
Even after all that, this asshole can't admit that he's

540
00:36:44,159 --> 00:36:49,039
the one that did it. Just shocking to me. Coincidences.

541
00:36:49,119 --> 00:36:51,559
There are no coincidences in life. You're not going to

542
00:36:51,599 --> 00:36:53,880
be tied to three people that were killed in the

543
00:36:54,000 --> 00:36:57,559
exact same way, head their freaking hairs on them and

544
00:36:57,800 --> 00:37:02,280
also have their you know, fibers from their clothing in

545
00:37:02,400 --> 00:37:04,039
your car vacuum gleaner.

546
00:37:04,159 --> 00:37:06,760
Speaker 6: Come on, man, So it's off.

547
00:37:06,679 --> 00:37:09,159
Speaker 5: To prison for him and really for the rest of

548
00:37:09,199 --> 00:37:14,280
his life. In a very renowned FBI profiler by the

549
00:37:14,360 --> 00:37:20,320
name of James Fitzgerald, one of the absolute historic FBI profilers,

550
00:37:20,679 --> 00:37:25,840
he does a psychological profile on alex Emriquez and I

551
00:37:26,039 --> 00:37:28,199
found it to be very interesting.

552
00:37:28,719 --> 00:37:31,679
Speaker 6: Here's what he said, You tell me what you think.

553
00:37:32,280 --> 00:37:36,559
Speaker 5: So the first thing he discussed was his core personality traits,

554
00:37:36,679 --> 00:37:41,719
and Fitzgerald described m Riquez as a self centered psychopathic

555
00:37:41,920 --> 00:37:47,840
individual with a constant narcissistic need for power, control, and attention.

556
00:37:48,519 --> 00:37:52,639
He lies as a mean of self preservations. He has

557
00:37:52,719 --> 00:37:58,280
a very positive perception of hisself and uses his superficial.

558
00:37:57,719 --> 00:38:00,440
Speaker 6: Charm to fulfill his own ends.

559
00:38:00,599 --> 00:38:05,440
Speaker 5: He is a psychopath first before anything else. Psychopaths prioritize

560
00:38:05,480 --> 00:38:08,400
control above all. They don't want to be controlled. They

561
00:38:08,480 --> 00:38:11,639
want to control others, and they'll do anything within their

562
00:38:11,800 --> 00:38:17,000
power through lies or manipulation, and even through violence to

563
00:38:17,320 --> 00:38:22,559
keep that control. He talks about the narcissism, specifically inflated

564
00:38:22,639 --> 00:38:28,119
self views, surrounding himself with people considered inferior, primarily children

565
00:38:28,239 --> 00:38:33,480
and teenagers, specifically to feel powerful and superior. So he's

566
00:38:33,559 --> 00:38:36,400
basically saying there he couldn't feel that way around adults,

567
00:38:36,800 --> 00:38:40,320
so he would surround himself with teenagers and children because

568
00:38:40,880 --> 00:38:45,639
he was maybe smarter than some of them. Superficial charm

569
00:38:45,800 --> 00:38:49,320
and manipulation, he said. He presents as a successful, clean

570
00:38:49,440 --> 00:38:53,519
cut driver who brought kids toys, let them play in

571
00:38:53,599 --> 00:38:57,559
his cars, bragged about his dating success, and inserted himself

572
00:38:57,599 --> 00:39:02,239
into community searches and visual for his own victims, and

573
00:39:02,360 --> 00:39:05,199
that was to manipulate find out if the police werewing

574
00:39:05,320 --> 00:39:09,000
to him, etc. Then he talked about the line pathological line,

575
00:39:09,199 --> 00:39:14,079
not random, but strategic for self preservation. While in custody,

576
00:39:14,159 --> 00:39:17,400
he scripted his nephew to call the media pretending to

577
00:39:17,480 --> 00:39:21,039
be the killer, feeding non public details, and I told

578
00:39:21,119 --> 00:39:25,119
you about that. Then he gets into the sexual deviance

579
00:39:25,360 --> 00:39:30,199
and victim selection of that profile. Fitzgerald concluded and Riquez

580
00:39:30,400 --> 00:39:36,239
was probably incapable of having normal sexual interactions with adult women,

581
00:39:36,599 --> 00:39:40,679
which explains his targeting of younger females who he could

582
00:39:40,760 --> 00:39:46,480
dominate and manipulate. All convicted victims were personally known to

583
00:39:46,599 --> 00:39:51,119
him through neighborhood or family ties. Suspected victims followed the

584
00:39:51,199 --> 00:39:56,239
same pattern. His crimes combined sexual assault, rape with extreme violence,

585
00:39:56,400 --> 00:40:00,679
embody disposal, and garbage bags near highways or park These

586
00:40:00,719 --> 00:40:05,360
are signature elements of power control motivated sexual statists. He

587
00:40:05,519 --> 00:40:08,400
carried a thirty eight pistol and a fake badge, drove

588
00:40:08,440 --> 00:40:11,920
a large police style Lincoln. Soon ann imposed as an

589
00:40:12,079 --> 00:40:17,639
NYPD detective, common in offenders who crave authority. He also

590
00:40:17,719 --> 00:40:22,239
said he was an organized offender, careful victim selection, planning

591
00:40:22,360 --> 00:40:26,840
and body disposal. He participated in community searches and prayer

592
00:40:27,039 --> 00:40:32,719
visuals while secretly probing police methods, even asking about bloodhounds,

593
00:40:32,760 --> 00:40:37,760
and even attempting to mislead investigators thrill of insertion, classic

594
00:40:37,920 --> 00:40:42,800
psychopathic insercial behavior. Being close to the investigation without being

595
00:40:42,920 --> 00:40:47,920
caught gave him additional power and attention and lack of remorse.

596
00:40:48,079 --> 00:40:50,920
This is very important. Just like you heard in that

597
00:40:51,119 --> 00:40:52,800
victim impact statement, the remorse.

598
00:40:52,840 --> 00:40:54,039
Speaker 6: He wouldn't even admit doing it.

599
00:40:54,440 --> 00:40:59,760
Speaker 5: So that's a look at the psychological profile from probably

600
00:41:00,000 --> 00:41:03,280
one of the best profiles in history. So in the

601
00:41:03,400 --> 00:41:09,159
case of Alexandriquez, where is he now, Well, he's still incarcerated,

602
00:41:09,320 --> 00:41:12,199
obviously at the Sullivan Correctional Center.

603
00:41:12,320 --> 00:41:14,280
Speaker 6: This is in Fallburg, New York.

604
00:41:14,639 --> 00:41:18,400
Speaker 5: He's sixty five years old and to this day still

605
00:41:18,960 --> 00:41:23,400
denies any involvement in these killings. Now, the only incident

606
00:41:23,639 --> 00:41:28,199
to really occur inside of prison was very early in

607
00:41:28,280 --> 00:41:31,599
his incarceration. It was like two years after he was

608
00:41:31,760 --> 00:41:35,880
arrested in nineteen ninety two, a fellow inmate stabbed him.

609
00:41:36,440 --> 00:41:40,559
But unlike his three other victims, he got to live

610
00:41:41,440 --> 00:41:42,519
through that stabbing.

611
00:41:43,280 --> 00:41:44,840
Speaker 6: Now, in addition, as I.

612
00:41:44,920 --> 00:41:47,880
Speaker 5: Told you from the jump on this episode, he was

613
00:41:48,039 --> 00:41:53,320
suspected in other murders, including the double murder of his

614
00:41:53,800 --> 00:41:56,960
thirteen year old niece and her fifteen year old friend. Now,

615
00:41:57,079 --> 00:42:01,400
their bodies were discovered in black garbage bags his MO

616
00:42:01,719 --> 00:42:04,119
right near a park bridge.

617
00:42:04,360 --> 00:42:05,280
Speaker 6: Also his MO.

618
00:42:05,679 --> 00:42:11,519
Speaker 5: Both teens were strangled, also his MO in nineteen eighty nine,

619
00:42:11,639 --> 00:42:14,400
which was the time when the majority of this was

620
00:42:14,480 --> 00:42:20,119
going on. He was never charged in that case, however. Now,

621
00:42:20,239 --> 00:42:23,239
also in nineteen ninety, a seventeen year old by the

622
00:42:23,320 --> 00:42:27,599
name of Annette Rosario, and that's no relation to his wife,

623
00:42:28,320 --> 00:42:33,000
just coincidentally the same last name. She went missing and

624
00:42:33,239 --> 00:42:37,840
her body was never found, but he was suspected in

625
00:42:37,960 --> 00:42:39,280
that case as well.

626
00:42:40,199 --> 00:42:41,320
Speaker 6: So there you have it.

627
00:42:41,519 --> 00:42:44,880
Speaker 5: Another fifty Shades of Evil went to New York this week,

628
00:42:45,079 --> 00:42:47,039
and I wanted to bring you one that maybe wasn't

629
00:42:47,119 --> 00:42:50,880
as high profile these days, it was certainly high profile

630
00:42:51,119 --> 00:42:53,440
in the late eighties, early nineties.

631
00:42:53,719 --> 00:42:54,599
Speaker 6: Look New York.

632
00:42:54,639 --> 00:42:57,760
Speaker 5: I could have told you probably ten twenty different people

633
00:42:57,880 --> 00:43:01,639
that are infamous from that partiular state. But I wanted

634
00:43:01,639 --> 00:43:04,199
to bring you one that you may not be familiar with.

635
00:43:04,960 --> 00:43:07,840
Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back next

636
00:43:07,920 --> 00:43:11,760
week with another fifty Shades of Evil. Not sure where

637
00:43:11,800 --> 00:43:14,880
I'm gonna go next, but I still got plenty of

638
00:43:15,000 --> 00:43:15,719
states to cover.

639
00:43:15,880 --> 00:43:19,039
Speaker 6: I think we've done about eight so far, so I

640
00:43:19,159 --> 00:43:20,719
look forward to bringing you more of that.

641
00:43:20,920 --> 00:43:23,960
Speaker 5: Thank you so much for listening. For commercial, free early

642
00:43:24,119 --> 00:43:27,320
releases and more, check us out on Patreon if you'd

643
00:43:27,440 --> 00:43:30,440
like to help support the show. That's patreon dot com.

644
00:43:30,719 --> 00:43:35,920
Slash Bloody in Goola podcast and until next time for

645
00:43:36,079 --> 00:43:37,719
Bloody in Gola, I'm.

646
00:43:37,559 --> 00:43:39,840
Speaker 6: Your host, Jim Chapman. Much love.

647
00:43:55,639 --> 00:44:06,199
Speaker 1: On the street line shackle Oh, gluesome Girdie, it's calling

648
00:44:06,400 --> 00:44:12,519
by name. There is no mercy and it's been a

649
00:44:12,719 --> 00:44:24,000
tentery juice as the hillstream game. Wrangle three, I'm in bed.

650
00:44:25,760 --> 00:44:27,519
Speaker 3: By me to die.

651
00:44:29,239 --> 00:44:34,320
Speaker 1: Inside these walls, inside the wild.

652
00:44:35,960 --> 00:44:38,079
Speaker 6: And when the girls.

653
00:44:39,400 --> 00:45:03,000
Speaker 3: I know it's aboody anglebody angle, the

654
00:45:03,400 --> 00:45:07,119
Speaker 7: Painting, the bad

