underneath. the guy just pulls all that out, it does dna matching. you know, when i say the show dexter. you see in that show dexter, this is all modeled after dexter. you know that. eerily, you kind of look like the guy. i look at that picture, i saw the one on your website and you even look the same. the big thing there though is, he kills people that need killing. the guys who get off in court, on technicalities. he kills people that need killing. the difference here was, you killed a guy who really was no harm to society at all. but from twitchell, no response at all. the next day clark and another detective took him out of jail and drove him around edmonton. hoping he d give up some information. what was his demeanor? like defiant. we took him four drive saying
being added for first degree murder. welcome to a brand-new hour of america s newsroom, i m dana perino. sad news indeed. bill: good morning to you. i m bill hemmer. police not releasing an official cause of death. a kindergarten teacher, eliza fletcher went for her morning jog as she does very early. 4:00 a.m. when she was attacked last friday near the university of memphis. detectives saying surveillance video shows the suspect aggressively running toward her, grabbing her off the street and forcing her into his s.u.v. leaving her phone and water battle behind and shoes with d.n.a. matching the suspect. his cell phone signal places him near the scene. dana: we ll cover it. criminal defense attorney and former district attorney and d.c. detective join us coming up. charles, we spoke to you an hour ago and now we have this confirmation. good morning, dana.
thousands of storm drains. the diary got to a point where he talked about dropping the body in the sewer. and then ended. by this time, clark certainly believed the diary was true. all of it. but without a body, in a case as bizarre as this one. how could any jury be sure that the important parts of this skconfessions were just some fantasy from the dark side? so clark confronted twitchell with the evidence against him. hoping he could confess. today i make the incensing comment, it reminds me of dexter too. keller, queen s creep. you re referring to your garage is the kill room. the table is a kill table. it s there where you carved him up. i m gonna show you. but all the blood seeps underneath. the guy just pulls all that out, it does dna matching. you know, when i say the show dexter. you see in that show dexter,
and cnn senior analyst and former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe. so professor kobilinsky, what are the next steps in trying to identify whatever remains have been found? we know investigators removed evidence from the laundrie home last month to assist in dna matching. what happens now? well, that is the very first step in this process. first of all, dental records can be looked at. x-rays of bone fractures if he had any, that would be looked at. fingerprints would be helpful if there were fingerprints still on the body. decomposition can do quite a number on different body parts. but obviously dna is the way to go. and the fbi is now using something called rapid dna. they can literally get a result in a matter of a few hours, so it s a great technology. it s usually not used in this kind of a case. but it can be. so, i suspect they will have an identification very quickly. of course, we really need to know cause of death, manner of death, and time of death.
told no comment, anderson. randi kaye, appreciate it. randi, stay with us. i want to bring in forensics scientist laurence kobilinsky, john j. college of justice. and former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe. so, professor kobilinsky, what are the next steps in trying to identify whatever remains have been found? we know investigators removed evidence from the laundrie home last month to assist in dna matching. what happens now? well, that is the very first step in this process. first of all, dental records can be looked at. x-rays of bone fractures if he had any, that would be looked at. fingerprints would be helpful if there were fingerprints still on the body. decomposition can do quite a number on different body parts but obviously dna is the way to go. and the fbi is now using something called rapid dna. they can literally get a result in a matter of a few hours, so it s a great technology. it s usually not used in this