Murder With My Husband - 182. The Kidnapping Behind The Amber Alert

Episode Date: September 18, 2023

On this episode, Payton discusses the kidnapping case of Amber Hagerman, and how a tragedy created the Amber Alert System that has saved countless children. Live Show Tickets and More: https://linktr....ee/murderwithmyhusband  AllThatsInteresting.com - https://allthatsinteresting.com/amber-hagerman TheCrimeWire.com - https://thecrimewire.com/true-crime/9-year-old-Amber-Hagerman-was-murdered-27-years-ago-Are-police-closer-to-catching-her-killer MissingKids.org - https://www.missingkids.org/blog/2021/still-searching-for-ambers-killer Dallas News - https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2021/01/13/this-case-will-get-solved-arlington-police-hope-dna-evidence-in-amber-hagermans-case-will-lead-to-answers/ CBS News - https://www.cbsnews.com/texas/news/remembering-amber-hagerman-27-years-later/ Refinery 29 - https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2017/05/154647/amber-alert-first-child-rescued-heading-to-college#:~:text=Rae%2DLeigh%20Bradbury%20was%20only,was%20rescued%20two%20days%20later. FindLaw.com - https://www.findlaw.com/criminal/criminal-charges/amber-alerts.html#:~:text=Bush%20signed%20into%20law%20the,has%20an%20AMBER%20Alert%20system Daily Mail - https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-11651117/Documentary-reveals-story-nine-year-old-girl-murder-inspired-Amber-Alert-system.html Peacock’s “Amber: The Girl Behind the Alert” - https://www.peacocktv.com/watch/playback/vod/GMO_00000000208139_02_HDSDR/ae3a0a68-260b-3cac-925e-a762722a085f Kiro 7 News - https://www.kiro7.com/news/trending/police-release-new-photos-seek-new-info-unsolved-1996-murder-amber-hagerman/DYCH62JDMVCOZFBRS265GCKCJU/ Child Crime Prevention and Safety Center - https://childsafety.losangelescriminallawyer.pro/non-family-abduction.html#:~:text=Crime%20statistics%20have%20shown%20that,kidnappings%20are%20committed%20by%20strangers. NBC Dallas Fort Worth - https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/national-international/cold-case-that-inspired-amber-alerts-still-unsolved-detectives-still-hope-for-break-in-the-case/2527792/ “Cold Cases: A True Crime Collection” by Cheyna Roth Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everybody, welcome back to our podcast. This is Murder with My Husband. I'm Payton Moreland. You know, I'm Garrett Moreland. And he's the husband. I'm husband. Well, if you didn't, listen to our midweek feed drop. And boy, do we have news for you. This is very true. Major, major news. Garrett and I are doing our first in person murder with my husband live show. Honestly, it might be the only one we ever do. Really? I mean, I'm so freaking nervous. I'm excited.
Starting point is 00:00:34 I'm all the things. I just want it to be great. We've put a lot of preparation and planning into it. So it is October 26th in Brea, California. Please if you're nearby, please, please, please come. I assume there's tickets still available unless for some reason when we announced it on Friday, I remember about tickets, but I mean,
Starting point is 00:00:56 do people wanna see if that bad? I just feel like. It feels weird, it feels weird that, I don't know. It doesn't feel real. I guess we'll see how I feel once we get there and I get on the stage. I'm going to be like, holy crap. I'm more interested to see if I'm as nerd like if I'm more nervous than I used to be to dance on stage. That's only performing I've ever done.
Starting point is 00:01:18 It's just going to be weird because we are used. We've been talking to the camera in these microphones for the last three years. Yeah. So it seems weird that we're gonna do one in person. I don't know. Ah! Pretty nuts. Okay, but anyways, yeah, in-person live show that's like major news, it's October 26th.
Starting point is 00:01:39 It's our very spooky Halloween live show, spectacular, we are so excited. Okay, Gary, I think, spectacular. We are so excited. Okay, Gary, I think that leads us into your 10 seconds. Well, I won my fantasy. I won week one in both leagues that I'm in currently. Easy week, easy win, you know, same old, same old. So we'll see what happens in week two this week. If anyone else has a fantasy team,
Starting point is 00:02:03 I'll put my team up against yours. Last time I was talking about how I wanted to do an Ironman. I've gone really far. I haven't run a single mile or a bike or a swam. A lot of progress going on there, but I think we'll get there eventually. What do you think? I'm going to have to go with no, but I'll support you if you do. I'm going to do it. I just, you know, it's hard to just go running hard to just, I don't have a bike, so I guess we're gonna be there. But I'd rather like play sports than run. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Last but not least, I'm working really hard on trying to train Daisy. Like I want her to be just tip top shape. I
Starting point is 00:02:47 Want her just everything I say she just listens. You know exactly what's going on I wanted to be like a canine German Shepherd, but she's not even close to the size and Yeah, but I just want you know, I just want a trainer not like a tack. mean, that'd be kind of cool if this little dog could attack people, but just like, I already have, we have sit down, you know, stay. Here's, I don't know, recall. She's pretty good at that. I would say her recall is probably 70%.
Starting point is 00:03:17 She's pretty good at, you know, when we say go potty, she goes to the bathroom, but I need to be better at like healing. Like, so heal any off leash work, recall like all the time. Like as soon as I recall her, whether there's another dog or whatever, she comes, the biggest thing is she's scared of other dogs. Very intimidated.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Like very timid intimidated. She doesn't want to play with them. She wants to just walk around them. We've had her around a bunch of dogs in people as a puppy. I don't know if she just, he doesn't like other dogs. So I did ask a trainer and they said, well, do you like everybody? Yeah, but she likes nobody. She likes nobody. She's not aggressive at all. She, in fact, she rolls over on her, it's not on her back. Yeah. So I don't know. We'll figure it out. I'm going to keep doing some research.
Starting point is 00:04:07 If anyone has any tips, feel free to comment them, send them in. Always open to it. Okay. Let's get into it. Our sources for this episode are all. It's interesting.com, the crime wire.com missing kids.org, Dallas news, CBS news, refinery 29, fine law.com daily mail, peac, peacocks amber the girl behind the alert, child crime prevention and safety center, NBC Dallas Fort Worth and cold cases a true crime collection by Shane Aroth. Okay, eight minutes.
Starting point is 00:04:33 Let's be honest, you can't get a whole lot done in eight short minutes, maybe a quick shower, less than half an episode of the office, heat up some old leftovers, but eight minutes was all it took for the Hagerman family's life to change forever. In January 1993, nine-year-old Amber asked if she could go for a ride on the new bike that she'd just gotten for Christmas. Don't go far," her mother told her. Amber only rode up the block, but she never turned back. Because eight minutes later, the only thing left of Amber was that hot pink bike turned over sideways in a nearby
Starting point is 00:05:12 parking lot. It only took eight quick minutes for Amber to disappear. And while Amber never came home, those eight minutes have saved over a thousand children, giving them years that might have otherwise been taken from them. Because Amber Hagerman's disappearance started the Amber alert. No way. And that's the case we're covering today. I didn't know we were going with this and now that makes sense. Our story today takes place in a little city in Texas, midway between Dallas and Fort Worth. It's called Arlington. Today it's home to almost 400,000 people. So by no means is it the small town
Starting point is 00:05:52 feeling many of our stories happen to come with. But being home to the University of Texas at Arlington and the Texas Rangers at Global Life Field, it does have a strong community. People are loyal to Arlington. Many of the homes there have been occupied by the same families for decades, and in the 1990s, it was considered a family-friendly city, not a high crime area, which might be why Donna Whiteson felt comfortable staying in the town of Arlington after she grew up and raising her own two kids there.
Starting point is 00:06:24 Donna discovered she was pregnant with her first child at 18 years old. She'd met her baby's father, 34-year-old Richard Hagerman when she was out walking around the neighborhood one afternoon with friends. Both of them were locals and despite their age gap, Donna fell for Richard. The two eventually tied the knot. On November 25, 1986, they welcomed their first child who they named Amber. Just the heads up, that is the same day Peyton was born. I swear I don't intentionally pick these cases with our birthdays. Yeah, I'm sure, I'm sure. Amber had bright blue eyes and dark brown hair with thick bangs, a style not unlike her mothers. She also had these tiny freckles that peppered
Starting point is 00:07:05 her always smiling cheeks. And as she grew older, Amber became obsessed with things like I Love Lucy, vanilla ice cream, her girl scout troop, and her little brother Ricky who was born four years after her. But over time, the relationship between Donna and Richard Sourd, Donna claimed that Richard was always out partying with friends and that he had begun abusing alcohol and on at least one occasion had physically assaulted her. The yelling in the house had gotten so bad
Starting point is 00:07:34 that neighbors often had to call the police on the couple. In fact, law enforcement had knocked on the door so many times that they eventually insisted if they came back again, they'd be taking the children with them. And that was all Donna had to hear to make a change. Donna took the seven-year-old amber and the three-year-old Ricky and finally left the home that she shared with Richard. For two days, Donna and the kids slept in her car. Terrified that if she went to her parents' home, Richard would find them and convince them to move back. Eventually, Donna took the children with her to a
Starting point is 00:08:08 local women's shelter. She lived there for about six weeks while they helped get Donna and her family back on their feet. Donna found her own apartment and got herself on welfare and soon she, Amber and Ricky, were starting their next chapter of their lives. Of course it wasn't easy for Donna to be raising two kids on her own so every dollar counted. And small things that the kids wanted to do like go to a skating party at school had to be passed up on because Donna couldn't afford the tickets. But Donna always put a positive spin on it, she assured the kids they would never go hungry and come 1995 things were really starting to look up. But Donna always put a positive spin on it. She assured the kids they would never go hungry.
Starting point is 00:08:45 And come 1995, things were really starting to look up. Donna filed for divorce from Richard. She was volunteering at the Food Stamp Office while she began attending medical school. Most importantly, Amber and Ricky, her two kids, were happy. Over time, Donna even let Richard back into their lives a little bit. She allowed him to come visit with the kids. And it seemed as though Richard was genuinely trying to clean up his act.
Starting point is 00:09:09 Amber, who had always been a little nervous around her father, finally started to warm up around him. And eventually, things seemed to be going smoothly. Then, in August 1995, Donna was offered a unique opportunity that would bring even more positivity to her life, a chance to help other women like herself. Pam Curry, a reporter with the WFA News in Dallas, was looking to make a documentary. As a mother herself, she wanted to share the success stories of single moms who'd made their way off of welfare and got in a fresh start at life. After contacting a local women's shelter, Pam got Donna's contact information and after
Starting point is 00:09:50 speaking to her, Donna agreed to be the subject of Pam's film. Throughout the fall of 1995, a camera crew captured hundreds of hours of footage of Donna and her two children. Amber blowing out candles on her ninth birthday. Amber and Ricky climbing the trees outside of their home. Donna taking the kids to the playground outside their school. She's this just makes everything even worse. I know. Like more heart breaking. Those tapes had immortalized the Hagerman family, particularly Amber. And in a few short months, that footage would become more
Starting point is 00:10:26 crucial than they ever imagined. On Saturday, January 13, 1996, Donna had taken Amber and Ricky to a park to play for a few hours in the early afternoon. But by 2.30, they were getting antsy. They wanted to go over to Donna's parents' house and play with the new bikes that they'd just in for Christmas. I remember when I got a new bike. I don't remember how that was. Probably 13. Both. It was like the best day ever. Best day ever. Did you ever get a new bike when you were a kid? I'm sure, but I remember getting motor scooters.
Starting point is 00:11:02 They didn't even have those when I was a kid. Oh my gosh, me and my sister got them. We walked out to that Christmas tree, boom. Two bright red motor scooters sitting there. I thought I was like this is it. I've peaked. My life will never get better than this. That's so funny. It was so fun.
Starting point is 00:11:17 They got stolen. No way. Yeah, right off our doorstep. Oh man. You know, that is that. This side. I think it was one of the neighborhood kids. Probably loser. If you're listening to this, I know it was you. You know, that is that. That is that. I think it was one of the neighborhood kids. Probably, loser.
Starting point is 00:11:25 If you're listening to this, I know it was you. You're loser. Because the next day they just happened to have two bright red scooters that their parents had bought them. Are you serious? It's dead serious. You're 100% serious. 100% serious, but we couldn't never prove that they were ours.
Starting point is 00:11:38 Oh, I would have taken them back. These are my scooters. I just think it's weird. Okay, never mind. I won't go there, but I was going to say think it's a little weird that the parents would like to yeah So by 3 p.m. That day they arrived at their grandparents Arlington home The kids offered up their hugs and almost immediately hopped on their new bikes Donna had let them ride around the neighborhood dozens of times before this felt no different aside from the fact
Starting point is 00:12:01 It was an unseasonably warm January day the two kids didn't even need their jackets. It was about 3-10 pm when the 9-year-old Amber in her little pink jeans and camp t-shirt went riding down the block away from the house. Donna yelled after her not to go farther than a block. Amber yelled back, okay mommy we promise while 5-year-old Ricky rode behind his sister trying to keep up. Ricky and Amber had their usual route, but that day when they reached the end of the block, Amber made a left instead of their usual right to complete the loop back home. She told Ricky, today they were going to the Windixi grocery store parking lot. They had a cool ramp there that she'd seen, one that would be fun to ride their bikes down. It was only one more block.
Starting point is 00:12:48 So what was the big deal? But the five year old Ricky was worried their mother would find out he didn't wanna get in trouble. She had specifically told them to only go block. He begged Amber to turn around to come back home with him. And when she didn't, Ricky turned around by himself and went back on his own. It was 318 PM when Ricky returned to the house. He'd only been gone eight minutes, but Amber wasn't behind him. Their grandfather was working in the garage as Ricky pulled up,
Starting point is 00:13:17 and when he asked where Amber was, Ricky said she'd stayed behind to play with the ramps in the parking lot. Their grandfather scooped Ricky up through him in his truck and drove over to the Windixi. Oh, this makes me sick. Like, are we ever even gotten into it and I'm just sick to my stomach? I know. But by the time he got there, the only thing they found was Amber's pink bike laid out on its side. Around the same time, a 911 call was coming into the local Arlington dispatcher, and it wasn't from Amber's grandfather. The caller lived across the street from the Windixi, and he'd just seen something alarming.
Starting point is 00:13:51 The witness's name was Jimmy Kevill, a 78 year old retired sheriff's deputy. Jimmy told the operator that while he was out doing some yard work that day, he noticed a black pickup truck pulling to the parking lot and grab a little girl off her bike. He said the girl screamed so loud that he could hear it clear as day from across the street on his property. From the distance, he couldn't make out a full description of the man, but he got the basics.
Starting point is 00:14:17 He said the suspect looked to be in his 20 or 30s, either white or Hispanic, less than six feet tall and a medium build. Jimmy also gave them a decent description of the car. A black 1980s or 90s fleet sized pickup truck with no visible damage. Only he didn't see the license plate number. However, when the driver sped away, they went west on East Abrams Street, which meant they were headed towards the downtown area of Arlington. At public mobile, we do things differently.
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Starting point is 00:15:12 Different is calling. The sights and sounds of the future are a mystery to us, accessible only through our imaginations, but for the first time ever, the taste of tomorrow is closer than ever. New from Coca-Cola Creations, Coca-Cola Y3000, the bright, fruity taste of the future, search Coca-Cola Y3000 to learn more. Now, considering the suspect drove through a busier area of town, police wondered if he had a specific destination in mind. One that would have made it hard for him to avoid the downtown area. They figured if the man was from out of town, he likely would have turned east out of the
Starting point is 00:15:56 parking lot to go get on the highway. Unfortunately, there's little evidence to go off of at the scene itself. There's no tire marks left from the vehicle, so no way to identify it further. Nothing left behind by the driver, like a cigarette butt or a piece of clothing that might offer some DNA. There was, however, a laundry mat on the other side of that parking lot, which typically would mean more potential witnesses. Problem was, the laundromat windows faced a different direction away from the lot, and when police questioned those inside, no one admitted to seeing the kidnapping. So for now, Jimmy Kevill remained their one and only witness.
Starting point is 00:16:35 The next thing police did was put a call to dispatch looking for any black pickup trucks in the immediate area, with a driver who might match Jimmy's description. But keep in mind, this is Texas. There's a lot of black pickup trucks on the road. A few of them were pulled over that afternoon, but none brought police any closer to finding Amber Hagerman, which was terrifying. Because when it comes to child kidnappings, time is extremely of the essence. Statistics show that in 74% of child abduction cases that turn into a homicide, the child is killed within the first three hours of being taken.
Starting point is 00:17:15 I actually thought it would be less. I mean, that's quick, but I was thinking like an hour or so. Yeah, it's actually like a devastating statistic. Oh, yeah, it's 70%. Right? 74. Yeah, that's actually like a devastating statistic. Oh, yeah, it's 70% right? 74. Yeah, that's insane. So if Amber's a doctor did plan to take her life,
Starting point is 00:17:30 police had to move quickly to save her, which means getting information out to the public was a critical step on the afternoon of January 13th. And luckily for the Hagerman's, Donna's been doing this documentary. So not only do they have still photos of Amber to show the public, they have video footage of her living her life,
Starting point is 00:17:50 being a little girl, playing with her younger brother. It really humanized her to anyone watching the six o'clock news that evening. And it led to over 200 tips within the first 24 hours of her disappearance. But police also have to eliminate one disturbing possibility that any family members were involved. So keep in mind, only 28% of kidnappings are performed by complete strangers.
Starting point is 00:18:16 Which makes sense. I mean, any time we hear about an amber alert, I feel like 80% of the time, it's always some family member. Yeah. Like whenever I look back at the amber alert, I feel like 80% of the time it's always some family member. Yeah. Like whenever I look back at the amber alert, try to find more information, it's always some family member, dad, mom, brother, sister, someone who had taken the kids. Well, 50% are done by a family member and the other 22% by an acquaintance of the family. Oh, so someone they know. Yes. So 72%. All right. So it makes sense that law enforcement would want to better understand the dynamic of Donna and Richard.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Yep. Is the dad in the picture? Did he possibly kidnap his daughter? They wanted to make sure he had an alibi during the time of the kidnapping. Even Donna, questions at first whether Richard might have played a role in Amber's disappearance. But after seeing him face-to-face, she thinks there is absolutely no way. He was too distraught. It just didn't make sense. Police, however, needed more than gut to rule him out.
Starting point is 00:19:14 Richard was cooperative with their investigation, which certainly helped his case. Some detectives actually said he bared his soul to them during the interrogation. Plus, video footage caught him in the warehouse where he worked during the time of the kidnapping. So police were able to cohabrate his alibi. To top it all off, Richard even passed a lie detector test, which fully eliminated him as a suspect. But there was someone close to Richard that they felt should be looked into further. A family friend named Mike Thompson.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Richard had been living with Mike in the months since his divorce. And Mike was often included in family outings, so he'd spent time with both kids Amber and Ricky. Now, there were a few things that made Mike suspicious to detectives. First Artors, he'd kind of inserted himself into the case pretty early on, almost making himself out to be a spokesman for the family. Why? They all do that.
Starting point is 00:20:11 Anytime we hear about the killing, I mean, not all of them, but a lot of them, anytime we hear about a killing, connect, being so on and so forth, they always insert themselves in the investigation. It's a way to relive the crime. Yeah, it's got to be some ego, something to get off on, which is super disturbing. He was chatting with reporters commenting on the state of the family's well-being, just that sort of thing. And when police see someone overly inserting themself into a trauma like this, their first
Starting point is 00:20:37 question is, what is this person overcompensating for? But that's not the only questionable thing about Mike. He also happens to own a black pickup truck. Of course he does. One that some sources say does match the description Jimmy Kevill had reported. But again, it's Texas. Seems like you can't throw a stone without hitting a vehicle like this, which means it's not quite enough to lock in on Mike so they look into his alibi.
Starting point is 00:21:03 Now Mike is a delivery truck driver who transports auto parts and every time he makes a stop somewhere there's a log of it. While on January 13th around the same time that Amber was taken, Mike was at a location about 45 minutes away dropping off a shipment. So Mike's alibi also checks out. Plus police have to take into consideration that Amber knows Mike. If you wanted a kidnap her,
Starting point is 00:21:27 he probably could have just lured her into the car. He wouldn't have had to cause a scene make her scream. Yeah, it's true. A simple conversation, or I need to take you home to your parents probably would have done it. He likely wouldn't have scooped Amber off her bike. So the police think the Mike Thompson theory just doesn't add up,
Starting point is 00:21:45 which is why they go to the more difficult scenario that the person who took Amber Hagerman was, in fact, a complete stranger. Now in the days following Amber's disappearance, Arlington got eerily quiet. If there was a kidnapper on the loose looking to target children, that meant everyone's kid could be next. Streets that were just days ago full of kids playing kickball or outselling Girl Scout cookies were now completely empty. Every corner offered a reminder of Amber's disappearance with her photos stapled to a telephone pole.
Starting point is 00:22:20 Meanwhile, the Arlington Police Department assembled a task force of 15 detectives, people who were great with interrogating suspects, who had a strong attention to detail, who refused to let anything slip through their cracks. They also contacted everyone on their list of registered sex offenders in the area. The belief was that whoever pulled this off had likely attempted it at least once before, or a crime similar to it, which is a good theory. What are the chances that the first time someone tries to kidnap someone, they do it successfully. This actually reminds me of our dear Daisy story where she almost got kidnapped and then a couple
Starting point is 00:22:57 weeks later someone actually did kidnap by the guy. But on January 17th, four days after Amber was taken, the case took a massive turn. And not in the direction these detectives were hoping for. It was Wednesday night, and a giant thunderstorm had just rolled through the Dallas-Fort Worth area, bringing back that January winter chill. That evening, a call came in to the local 9-1-1 operator at around 11.30 pm. The woman said her neighbor had come up and knocked on their apartment door. He'd found a body in the creek behind their apartment complex.
Starting point is 00:23:32 He was afraid the body might wash away with the recent rains. They needed the police to come quickly. Now the neighborhood found the body was named Stuart Coacher. He'd been out walking his terrier Yoda after the storm subsided, but he became alarmed when Yoda wouldn't stop barking at something in the creek behind their forest ridge apartment complex. A location that was only about four miles from where Amber had been taken. The body appeared to be of a little girl, but she was faced down and naked, aside from the one sock still on her foot. Oh my gosh, that's so sad.
Starting point is 00:24:06 The only thing that had stopped her from washing away was the fact that she was caught in the brush along the side of the creek. So police arrived moments later on the scene and they rolled the body over for a better look. Going off a few identifying birthmarks, they were able to confirm this was in fact the body of nine-year-old Amber Hagerman. She was covered in bruises and appeared to have several cuts around her throat. Now collecting evidence, particularly DNA evidence, was going to be near impossible at this crime scene. By this point,
Starting point is 00:24:37 Amber's body had been rinsed by thousands of gallons of rainwater. Judging by the state of her decomposition, police determined Amber had probably been kept alive for about two days before she was killed. It's a long time. And taking into this area, Amber's family was notified almost right away, but they were in complete disbelief. It's kind of crazy because I know we're going to get into it, but it's pretty mind boggling to me that there wasn't something before Amber
Starting point is 00:25:06 Lert. You know, I mean, I know it feels like there always needs to be something tragic or something crazy needs to happen before this stuff is implemented. But like, how do we not think about it earlier? Yeah, how do we not think to send something out at mass and say, hey, everyone on in the look out? I know, I know, I know. Richard, her dad refused to accept the news
Starting point is 00:25:28 and kept shaking his head saying, no, she's still alive. But Arlington police didn't have time for doubt. They had to face the truth. They were no longer dealing with a missing person's case. This was now a homicide. Investigators returned to the creek several times over the next few days. And here's what they started to believe.
Starting point is 00:25:46 Essentially, they felt the person who killed and disposed of Amber's body knew the apartment complex well, including the fact that there was a creek that ran through the property. Police believed that disposing of her body in this way, especially during the storm, was an intentional move. It was premeditated, which would mean the suspect was probably a local in the area. Aside from that, there were two gates that allowed access to the apartment complex, a main gate and a side gate. Only the side gate had recently been broken and was waiting for repairs, which meant anyone could have come and gone from the complex without much issue. Now, there was also a security camera, one that captured footage along the main entrance.
Starting point is 00:26:31 So police spent hours combing the grainy tapes, analyzing any cars that may have entered through there or gone around the side, and they clock dozens of vehicles. At one point, they even spot a dark pickup truck pulling into the area, but with all the wind and rain that happened, the quality of the footage from the time around Amber's possible drop-off was extremely low. The camera was shaking as the rain made the picture even grainer. So there was no way to identify if the truck they'd seen was the same one that had first abducted Amber. And there was certainly no way to pull or run plates off of the footage. So essentially the tapes lead nowhere.
Starting point is 00:27:10 So over the next several days, they took another approach. Local police joined forces with the FBI to question every maintenance person, gardener, and independent contractor that had passed through the property. They're thinking maybe this person doesn't live here, maybe they worked here. They went door to door and spoke with every single resident in the building, but no one had seen or said anything suspicious to investigators. By the end, they'd produced no new leads. The forest ridge apartment complex became another dead end in the Amber Hagerman case. Where'd you go? Where'd you go after this? It feels like a case that can't be solved. Well, it feels like it should be.
Starting point is 00:27:49 Like there was an eyewitness, we know it was a black truck, we have the description. She stayed alive for two days after being kidnapped. Like that feels solvable. There's no DNA, there's no cameras, no camera footage. It's not 2003 where everyone has phones and everyone can track each other. Like it would be so hard. By January 19th, an autopsy had been performed on Amber and it revealed a little more insight
Starting point is 00:28:17 into those days Amber was missing. The pathologist confirmed that Amber had died of the laceration to her neck but didn't find many other injuries on her body. It didn't appear as if Amber had been restrained, and there were no defensive wounds showing Amber might have fought back against her attacker. Despite her lack of clothing, they also found no signs of sexual assault. I was going to ask that because if that is the case, this makes no sense. Yes, this poses another issue for detectives.
Starting point is 00:28:48 Why? Because Amber's clothing would have made for great evidence. Yeah. It could have included traces of the suspects DNA or fibers that might have transferred from their clothing to hers. It was also difficult to collect DNA from under Amber's fingernails, given the amount of water she'd been in. So with still only one witness, and hardly any evidence to go off of,
Starting point is 00:29:09 finding Amber's killer wasn't going to be easy, but the police weren't ready to give up. On January 20th, the family held a funeral for Amber, and the turnout was unbelievable. Thousands of people showed up to pay their respects to the nine-year-old girl. But outside the funeral home, police were keeping a close eye on those coming and going. They wanted to see if there was anyone acting suspicious, perhaps someone lurking around
Starting point is 00:29:34 the scene, unsure of whether to go in, but after analyzing thousands over the course of the 6-hour viewing, police found no one who seemed out of character or worth looking into further. Yet, over the next few weeks, tips continued to flood into the hotlines. Everything from a siding of a black pickup truck to full names of potential suspects. That's when one woman called to say she had actually seen the abduction happen. She described the vehicle much like Jimmy Kevill had on the day he reported the disappearance. She insisted she had seen Amber sitting in the front seat of the car as a drove off
Starting point is 00:30:17 banging on the window. She even included a partial license plate number for the police to work off of, which was a first for the case. Kind of confused. Not blaming her anything, but she say why she didn't say this a long time ago. Maybe at first she just thought it was a kid acting up in a car and then once she learned of the case, maybe it just took her this long to learn. Oh, it's felt like everyone knew about it. Probably, but you just didn't know. Yeah, that's why we have Amber alert. So the task force immediately followed up on the lead and thanks
Starting point is 00:30:50 to the help of Ford, they also had a list of vehicles that were sold in the area that fit the description of the black truck, as well as partial license plates and who the vehicle had been sold to. Well, the woman's partial plate had a match. The Texas identified a potential suspect who happened to be an Arlington local and even lived in the direction the truck went right after the abduction. So detectives head to the home. They knock on the door and the man inside is extremely cooperative.
Starting point is 00:31:17 He let the police inside his house without a warrant, allowed them to search his property, but there was nothing inside that indicated this person had anything to do with Amber's kid not being her death. So, police have to go back to this woman who called in the tip. And after offering a few inconsistent details, she totally caves. She says she made the whole thing up. Why? That you weren't inspecting that. I was not and I'm kind of pissed off.
Starting point is 00:31:42 Why? Why would someone do that? Claims she felt so bad for the family that she just wanted to give them something. Some semblance of hope, something to hold on to even for a day. Get out of here. Nobody, please nobody do that. Unfortunately, all she did was waste the time and resources of the local task force and add more disappointment for the family. As more time passed, Donna began to lose faith that the police were ever going to locate her daughter's killer. As a result, Donna channeled her time and energy
Starting point is 00:32:10 into making sure this sort of thing wouldn't happen to anyone else's child. She began organizing city council and school board meetings, standing in front of hundreds of people, hoping to put in more prevention measures. But just 20 miles away, over in Fort Worth, Texas, was another mother. Someone who'd been so moved by Amber's story that she was developing an idea. One that would change the entire nation and her name was Diane Simone. And the day Amber went missing, she was watching the
Starting point is 00:32:38 six o'clock news, as well as the footage the documentary crew had taken of Amber Hagerman in the months before her death. And Diane couldn't turn away from the scenes of Amber blowing out her birthday candles or climbing that tree with her brother Ricky. Amber had come to life on Diane's screen. And Diane figured there must be something we can all do as a community to bring missing kids home. Seconds after watching the news, Diane called the local radio station to ask if they had any formal system for alerting the public about a missing child and offering a description of who might have taken them. When they admitted they didn't, Diane put her own plan in motion. She figured if they could alert the public about severe weather warnings,
Starting point is 00:33:23 then why not just do something similar for child abductions? So she called her initiative Ambers Plan. And by the end of 1996, Diane had gotten seven local radio stations to participate in her new alert system. They teamed up with local police departments who provided them with information about the suspect and the vehicle they were driving. Then the radio stations issued their message police departments who provided them with information about the suspect and the vehicle they were driving.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Then the radio stations issued their message along with an unmissable sound. Today, you're probably more familiar with them coming through your cell phone, along with the system's updated title, Amber Alert. And then you get those crazy vibrations as well. The first two cases where the Amber Alert was issued didn't produce the results the public was hoping for. But in November 1998, that all changed. That fall, a woman named Patricia Sokolowski was living in Arlington, Texas with her eight-week-old daughter Ray Lee. Patricia's friend, a woman named Sandra Fallis, had offered to start babysitting Ray Lee so Sandra could return to work.
Starting point is 00:34:27 One morning, Patricia dropped her daughter off at Sandra's home with her diaper bag, and Sandra said she'd bring Ray Lee back as soon as Patricia got home that evening, only Sandra didn't keep her promise. When it started to get late, and Patricia couldn't reach Sandra, she began calling local hospitals. The word kidnapping had not yet crossed her mind. But when there was still no sign of Sandra or her two-month-old daughter, Patricia called the police.
Starting point is 00:34:51 That's when they put out an amber alert, the third ever amber alert for the missing Ray Lee, along with a description of Sandra and her vehicle. Eight weeks old, what in the world? Ironically, the vehicle was also a Ford Ranger splash, just like the one that had taken Amber the vehicle was also a Ford Ranger splash, just like the one that had taken Amber Hagerman, only a different color. 30 minutes after the Amber alert hit the airwaves, a call came into the local police station. A man driving down
Starting point is 00:35:15 the freeway had spotted the vehicle he had just heard, driving with a baby in the front seat. Minutes later, the closest squad car pulled Sandra over and saved Ray Lee from her kidnapper. She was returned home to her mother that night because of the Amber alert. Today, Amber's brother Ricky says whenever he hears that Amber alert go off, he knows it's his sister hard at work looking after those kids. On April 30, 2003, President Bush made the Amber alert a massive part of the American Legislator. He created a law called the Protect Act that formalized the government's role in the amber
Starting point is 00:35:52 alert system and gave 20 million in funds to the system. By 2005, every U.S. state had signed on to adopt the Amber alert. According to the Amber Alert website, as of January 2023, 1,127 children have been brought home safely. Whoa, that is a ton. Because of the system. In a 2016 interview, Amber's mother Donna couldn't help but wonder what might have happened to Amber had that system been in place
Starting point is 00:36:22 before her daughter disappeared. And that's what I was saying. It sucks that something like this has to happen in order to implement all these systems because what would have happened? We never know. And that's that's hard to think of. So in 2021, there was a brand new development in Amber Hagerman's case. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:41 Investigators told the press they had DNA that might be long to Amber's killer. While they didn't share where the DNA came from or what it might be a sample of, it seems they'd been hanging onto it since they first collected the body. Even better, there was new forensic technology that they believed could help them get a conclusive result on it. It has to be like the whole ancestry thing, like related family members. Their reason for never testing the DNA before was they claimed there was so little of it that they wanted to make sure the technology was fully there before they tested it because
Starting point is 00:37:14 they would only get one chance. The Arlington assistant police chief told the press they were hoping to send that DNA out for testing by February 2021. However, as of this recording, they haven't shared any results of that DNA with the public. Okay. In fact, it's unclear if they ever followed through. Like, did they ever even test it or if they're still waiting for technology to improve? Interesting. Still, there's several Arlington police officers who believe Ambers case is worth keeping open that her killer might still be out there. And there's still an opportunity for the family to see justice.
Starting point is 00:37:47 To this day, the department is still taking tips and following up on leads about Amber's disappearance, hoping someone might finally be able to come forward whether that's turning themselves in or even just as a witness. As far as the Arlington Police are concerned, Amber Hagerman's case has never run cold. So if you or anyone you know has information on Amber's disappearance or a murder, you can call the Arlington, Texas police at 817-575-8823. You can also call their anonymous tip line undercrime stoppers at 817-469-8477. And that is the case of Amber Hagerman and how her disappearance started the Amber alert.
Starting point is 00:38:26 I find it hard to believe in maybe this is rude but I find it hard to believe that no one saw anything. Kind of like you were saying there's all these people she was alive for two days. I'm not saying someone's covering for whoever did this but maybe like it just seems I don't know you know what I'm saying though. I just think people didn't know what to look for. If they had immediately gone out within an hour, that there's a black truck with a missing girl in this area who could have seen the truck. Kids, why kids?
Starting point is 00:38:58 Why we gotta hurt kids? I just like- Like the worst thing you can do. I just can't imagine, I mean, we all get amber alerts. Yes. I can't imagine being her family members and getting another amber alert on your phone and knowing that there's another family going through what you went through, but also knowing that because of your daughter and her legacy, you might now have a chance to save someone else. I know I wonder. I wonder how hard that is to every time you get an
Starting point is 00:39:28 amberler, I'm sure you think of your daughter. Hopefully it's an obviously it's in a positive light. But it's also just something that I've that's never even crossed my mind before, which is probably just another devastating thing that families have to go through of kids who've been kidnapped or murdered. I didn't even think about like how Amber Alert came to be. I mean I guess it makes sense. I just named Amber Alert. Obviously it's going to be named after somebody. I just thought that they named it Amber Alert. Yeah. And legislation just came up with it and we're like, this is a good idea.
Starting point is 00:40:03 I know, of course, I mean. And know of course. I mean and it was a civilian Yeah, it was a civilian go who was like if you can warn us about tornadoes. Why can't you warn us about kids being kidnapped? Yeah, I know It's actually brilliant. All right you guys that is our case for this week. Remember about our live show and we are so excited And we'll see you next week with another episode. I love it. I hate it. Goodbye.

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