theories as to motive. what always bothered me about this case, when you look at the gunpowder residue, there was none on bambi. he said that one bit of hard evidence detectives thought they had against bambi, what they thought was blood on her boot, turned out to be nothing. detectives said, we ve got her dna on this boot. it s going to belong to one of the two people. they couldn t even say it was dna. as for the polygraph test, detectives said bambi failed to pass, according to irvin, those results were suspicious. the last question they asked her, have you told me everything you know about this case? if i ask a detective that same question, he couldn t pass it either. it s too broad a question. bambi sat in jail for six months. they were hoping she would flip and tell them the story? that s exactly what they were hoping. finally, the judge said, enough is enough. prosecutor humphries had to let bambi go.
i can t understand what you re saying. reporter: too disabled to explain he needed help. somebody s dying? reporter: someone was dead. kevin was a suspect that we needed to find out the validity of his statements, whether he had gunshot residue on his hands, whether he was even able to shoot a gun, given his physical disabilities. reporter: but a suspect? they checked his hands for gun powder residue. negative. you have to look at everybody, unfortunately. sometimes hurt feelings, but you have to get down to the facts, too. reporter: but facts can be tricky things. and in this case far more elusive than anyone might have imagined. when we come back, some clues were elusive, but some were right out in the front, like the two that dramatically narrowed down the circle of suspects. those are huge. you eliminate everyone down to except those who have access to those two keys.
cop with his own gun according to three independent forensic investigation and had his fingerprints in the trigger guard and the gun powder residue on his finger was consistent and it s sad to me because i feel it s an opportunistic michael moore wanna-be and fan the flames further in my city. a city that s endured so terribly much and on opportunists like this guy needs to stop. shannon: do you think that s what it boils down to we re talking about an investigation led by eric holder and we have the grand jury findings and prosecutors all saying the version of events spun in favor of michael brown the dna and witness witnesses onsite don t match up. do you think this guy s trying to get attention? anybody putting out a film
here s terry lying away from the path. we could see a drag mark in the grass where a cat or cats had drug terry away from the bloodstain. there was a head wound, a head gunshot wound. his hands were filled with gun powder residue. those factors combined leads us to believe that this is a suicide. in the three years prior to the incident, terry s life had spiralled out of control. the u.s. bureau of alcohol, tobacco, and firearms conducted an investigation into terry s
that were in the house and put them on the table. and he would ask me what do i do with these? anne says in the months before he died, john sounded despondent, e-mailing her i wish i were fing dead. i deserve to fing die. but before the trial, he thought anne s tale of suicide was impossible. the only wound mr. bender has low kated in the right os sippal region. . also, investigators never found any gun powder residue on john s hands. only on anne s hands. though her lawyer says it wasn t a significant amount. what did you tell police that night? what i remembered. did you ever tell them i didn t shoot him? i didn t kill him?