Don t think of them. The pain becomes a part of you. Get everybody out here to my house now. He came home and found her, his entire family gone. I said what are you talking about, what are you saying? it was surreal. As fellow cops suspected him. I did not do this. I did not do this. She was upset. She felt like history is repeating itself. Or police just plain wrong? it s like a twilight zone. Lies become truth and the truth becomes lies. May be the real killer was still out there. You have lied to the police about this case. So devastating. We know that was probably the key to solving this. 13 years of hell. Such an awful crime. The wife, the little boy and girl, shot at pointblank range. I was dumbfounded with shock. How to comprehend it? i said what, wait, what are you talking about, what are you saying? the husband had an alibi. He could have done anything, but he didn t. 13 years, three trials, appeals, reversals and changing stories. The big picture here for a lot of people as i
have to believe that you could say, oh, shoes, i ve got to put these on top of the vehicle. charles, it doesn t make any sense. doesn t make any sense. no, no, no. see, here s the thing, i m wiping the shoes off, and i see one little leg or something hanging out the passenger side. i go to investigate to see if there s anyone else in the back of the vehicle. and when i leaned in to look, i put the shoes on top. i don t even remember doing it. doesn t remember doing it and he says doesn t know why. i wasn t thinking about why i did that, but i was cognizant and really thinking about the dna or possible fingerprints from having tripped and touched those shoes. but you know, that palm print, charles, is just where you would brace yourself to lean across to shoot at that little boy. that s according to defense expert witnesses. you gotta understand, the prosecution has that same evidence, they don t see it that way. but what i m saying is, if you re so concerned about tidying u
boney was hauled back into the interrogation room, and the questioning became more confrontational. you ve got some explaining to do here, charles. your palm print is on that bronco. you re there. now this is the time, this is the place. this is your last stage that you re going to have to tell us what the hell happened there. this is it. this can t be happening. charles! after hours of denial, boney changed his story. yes, he did know david camm. they met playing pickup basketball. then in another round of questioning, the story changed and changed again. finally, boney put himself at the crime scene. the reason why i was there was to bring him the gun. that night? that night. boney said david camm asked him to get an untraceable gun. he said that he was a guy caught in the wrong place at the wrong time. as events started to unfold in the investigation, it became apparent that this case was intertwined between two people. now the prosecutor had a new theory.
sweatshirt had been identified as charles boney s. and just two days later, the cops brought boney in and started grilling him on how it ended up on the garage floor. that sweatshirt is in the middle of a crime scene of a triple homicide. somehow that sweatshirt got there, your sweatshirt. you explain to me how it got there. i have no idea. boney admitted the sweatshirt had once been his, but said he d dumped it in a salvation army dropbox about a month before the murders. it shows up at a crime scene. not laundered, not washed. if it would have went though the salvation army drop box, that would have been a clean sweatshirt. your dna, chances are, probably wouldn t have been on there, but it is. i see where you re coming from. as for david camm do you know david camm? no. you ever met david camm? no. do you remember the murder of david camm s family? on television, yes. do you know where david camm lives? only on television. i don t even know what his add
this guy? he s a criminal. and the guy who just got out of person doesn t smell a rat? he doesn t think, maybe i m being set up? it makes absolutely no sense. the defense took on boney s story in cross-examination. we had some of the same questions when we spoke to him. how many versions did it take to get to the story you just told, charles? what, three, four, five times, maybe? yes. i finally realized that the more i keep lying, i m just digging myself deeper and deeper. i m not going to get out of it. and when i did finally start tellin the truths about things, i didn t feel comfortable revealing too much too soon because i didn t want to be a part of the case to begin with, so, once again, i resorted to telling a lot of stories. but the big picture here, charles, for a lot of people, is that it sounds like a crock, that a felon, just out of the slammer would hook up with a recently retired state police officer and do this gun exchange.