the guy that had become your nemesis here. will it raise my suspicions even more that he was triton trying to hide from law enforcement. illustrated, goodwyn needed help. he called a detective in the da s office, clint snider, who had worked high profile cases like notorious wichita boutique a serial killer. it is in the maze-ing story when iran told it to me. all these mysterious deaths. and of course, in this business you don t believe in coincidences. so, i felt like that ron was on to something. and ron enlisted another big gun to help i.d. castro. fbi supervisory special agent john sullivan. we checked our fbi databases and private databases. i had the offices school and get photographs, political rest records. we checked every lou castro that we could find in the u.s.. and then matched the lou castro that we had living in wichita. how unusual is that? that the fbi cannot, through all its resources, come up with a name and i.d. on the guy. it s extremely unusual.
people showed up to vote in the last republican caucus. if you could mobilize a sector of that population, it could potentially have a political impact. in the broader sense, veterans day is coming up in a week and a half or so. that gives mr. trump something to talk about the issue to the run-up not just veterans day but the next republican debate on november 10th. also hillary clinton has found herself in a little bit of trouble on veterans issues recently. she said that the problem with the v.a. wasn t widespread and that campaign had to row back a little bit. that gives mr. trump i think an avenue into launching an attack on hillary clinton as well with this plan. let s talk about this plan and put up on the screen an excerpt from it. all veterans eligible for v.a. health care can bring their veterans i.d. cards to any doctor or care facility that accepts medicare to get the care they need immediately. how does mr. trump propose to
could begin arriving home as soon as today. so many of those families have really worked hard themselves. you can understand the difficult process it is to submit their own dna, to help i.d. these body. but it does seem to be a very fluid and very quick process at this point when you think about the fact this just went down yesterday. nick rober nic robertson is live at the airport. tell us about who you ve talked to and any stories that stand out to you. reporter: well, the memorial here continues to grow every few minutes. there s a flood of people arriving here. sometimes one person and a gentleman arriving here now. i see some children and more people coming in. this is the way that it s been. just look at all of these people arriving. it s a day of national mourning. this tiny pile of flowers have
go to the facebook page at the center for missing and exploited children set up titled help id me. again, help id me. anderson, you can go to the facebook page, log on by state if you re living in california or texas. you can see who is missing in texas and who they found in california. you can see some of this imaging, some of these faces, see if there is anyone you recognize from talking to so many people there, anderson, they say they can look at cases going back to the 1950s based on the new technology they have and they are not going to give up until all of these children are identified. i mean, for the people that work there, this has to be haunting to see these kids images kind of calling out to them every single day. and when we got into a little bit of that with one of the forensic imaging specialists that we spoke to. he says when he goes at home at night, he says i dream about these children. i cannot impress how dedicated these people are that work there and say what dr
police asked if the caller could come in to help i.d. the body. that morning, homicide detective leo allen was at the morgue working on another case. i got notified by the morgue personnel that a man was there who thought he could identify the young man that was found on saturday. and that s how we got started. the man who came to the morgue was paul lewis, widely known by his nickname stoney, apparently because of his affinity for being high. stoney identified the victim as his upstairs neighbor, tony klann. tony klann was 19. only a year earlier he had left home. his father told me that he had written a note in which he said i emancipate myself. this was a young man searching for his identity. stoney lewis had last seen tony on friday night drinking at a bar called coconut joe s. tony was with three co-workers,