coming up! when i open that door. that odor was so overwhelmingly. it hit me in the face. i looked down. what had happened to nancy? the awful discovery that launch this aspen mystery. oh my god! no! [crying] that house has this story to tell. are we going to be able to figure out what that story is? when dateline continues! c butter. .this is not your grandpa s crabfest. .unless grandpa s got flavor. dayumm! crabfest is here for a limited time. welcome to fun dining. trelegy for copd. birds flyin high, you know how i feel. breeze driftin on by. .you know how i feel. you don t have to take. [coughing] .copd sitting down. it s a new dawn,. .it s a new day, it s time to make a stand. and i m feelin good. start a new day with trelegy.
it was not getting help for nancy pfister, it was, oh, you should be looking at these two people, immediately. so that was interesting. keith morrison: so it was. and just as interesting, what kathy told 911 about seeing nancy pfister s body. the fact that immediately the deceased is identified as nancy pfister would have been impossible to do. keith morrison: impossible, said investigator lisa miller, because nancy s body was completely covered, head to toe, when kathy saw it in the closet. we re looking at photos of the crime scene. and we knew there s no way she saw what she said she saw. keith morrison: there was more. kathy, of course, had keys to nancy s house, including a key to the closet, was the last person to admit seeing nancy alive, and when she left, pinned up that do not disturb sign on nancy s door, supposedly because her friend needed
but nancy wasn t there. kathy checked her bedroom. stuff that was there that i had unpacked. it was clear, cleaned up. and when i turned, went to the closet. it was locked. was it usually locked? no. not with nancy home. kathy knew that when nancy rented her house, she kept her personal belongings locked in a closet in the master bedroom. but she and kathy had unlocked it when she got home. at that point i was just, not feeling well. something was not right. kathy, who often house sat for nancy had a spare key. but it was back at her house. so she went home, got lucky, returned. open the closet door. when i open that door. that order was so overwhelming. it hit me in the face. and i looked down and, i could see the shape. a shape hidden under a pile of blankets and covers. but with one glimpse, kathy just knew, she said. it was nancy.
ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy, something was wrong with the equation, didn t add up. here in aspen in the house on buttermilk mountain, equation. it did not add up. here in aspen, on the house on the mountain. the crime scene around nancy s body spoke. it told a story. and they said that at least two able-bodied people committed the murder. how else were they have the mattress have been flipped? and nancy s body get dragged across the room and into the closet. and get packaged in bags, and wrapped up in blankets? and yet there suspects, nancy s former tenants? were not able bodied spring chickens. anything but athletic. and besides, there was zero physical evidence to tie either one of them to the crime. i think we were faced with the reality that this was
people. in aspen. we had a brutal murder in a small town. that house has the story to tell. are we going to be able to figure out what that story is? it s the playground of snow, and gold. and she was at its heart. beautiful, privileged. magnetic. whether it was a taxi driver or her movie star friends. she had a very genuine connection with people. but what happened one night in her secluded chalet sent shivers through this glamorous ski town. oh my god. no. i was going into shock. hyperventilating. murder in her sleep. it was a crime of rage. where would investigators start? an ex-boyfriend? there were some stories about a jilted lover. her new tenants? they were a couple that had been pushed over the edge. her old friend? [inaudible]