i screwed up. mhm. i got us t-mobile home internet. now cell phone users have priority over us. and your marriage survived that? you can almost feel the drag when people walk by with their phones. oh i can t hear you. you re froze ladies, please! you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we re workin it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that s why i do what i do. a few hours after the executio that and the paycheck. style killing of doug carlisle in the kitchen of his house in south hill, it was too clear this had to have been professional hit now every availabl investigator, nearly 20 of the chased the scattered clues did you actually need the all? yes, i kept them busy one detective his whole job wa to identify the white van. remember the white van th neighbors saw. was van was unique off. it was after factor extended van that they make for certain pr
i was worried to kill him herself? and then a revelation, the dead man had a dangerous dream. we ended up finding a lot of paperwork, relating to the oil business. i remember telling, us i m going to make millions of dollars. a big money bencher, oozing with outlaws. a violent individual, in prison for robbery. a big man, probably 250 pounds. steroid, rock muscle. significant criminal history. greed as would kill my dad. what caused all of. this a thirst for oil, it lost for blood. i trusted a con artist. i trusted a sociopath. what is going to happen to the quiet little prairie town, when oil comes along? among the green and pleasant landscapes of american privilege, is a fine historic rise of land, called the south hill. here, for 100 years, it is been the home of spokane s washington elites, in their queen and craftsman manage, it s quiet, rectitude, and certainly not the kind of story we are about to tell. the kind of story with ambitious men, dark plo
the paperwork that claimed h was worth millions, a facade doug carlile was flat broke. hadn t even bought lif insurance. do you ever feel angry at all at doug for not providin more for like a insuranc policy or something? no, not at all. because he was a very good provider all the days that h was alive. and i really didn t believe in insurance policies like that i believed in trusting the lor for our finances, and that s what we did. secrets, just another casualty, as the little army o detectives searched th neighborhood for clues, like for example the strange find that turned up in the killer s escape path. that weirdly out of plac welding glove. they swabbed it for dna on the off chance, really, just a sho in the dark, that something in or on that glove might match dna on a felon stored in a dat bank and it did timothy suckow what did you think when you found this out i thought this could be our guy. was he local? he was local. he was working at irs environmental, an
and i really didn t believe in insurance policies like that. i believed in trusting the lord for our finances, and that s what we did. secrets, just another casualty, as the little army of detectives searched the neighborhood for clues, like for example the strange find that turned up in the killer s escape path. that weirdly out of place welding glove. they swabbed it for dna on the off chance, really, just a shot in the dark, that something in or on that glove might match dna on a felon stored in a data bank. and it did. timothy suckow. he was a violent individual, but to prison for robbery. what did you think when you found this out? i thought this could be our guy. was he local? he was local. he was working at irs environmental, an asbestos removal company.
they swabbed it for dna on the off chance that something in or on that glove might match a known person, like a felon, say, whose dna was stored in a storage bank. and it did. timothy suckow. what did you think when you found this out? i thought this could be our guy. was he local? he was local. he was working at irs environmental, an asbestos removal company. they don t drive around in white vans by any chance? i checked that list, and lo and behold, irs environmental was one of the companies that owned the vehicle that matched our vehicle in the video. well, well, well, what were the chances. timothy suckow must have been the man in black in this video, running for dear life toward the equally mysterious white van. they looked him up.