what tickled her? she had a big heart. she would reach out to family and friends. anyone in trouble, they could always count on her. reporter: and the person who counted on her most was her son kevin. i m an only child. i was actually through my whole childhood was raised by my nana. now my mom, she worked full time and was a single parent. reporter: kevin could be a handful, but he was always a bit of a mama s boy, and diane doted on her young son. me and my mom every day when we woke up, every night before i d go to bed, we d say we love each other. i mean, we loved each other immensely. we were best friends. reporter: things moved quickly for diane and bill. kevin thought they seemed just he was a kind person. he did do a lot for my mom. he gave her what she wanted. and they lived a happy life. reporter: bill and diane married in 2002.
then a month and we have zero evidence, nothing really has been found as concrete. and wanted to listen to an fbi researcher who said this. watch. the fact that he has such a home-field advantage with going there frequently and knowing exactly what the landscape is like. she s talking about him hiding in the local parks and nature preserves there, possibly . do you think he has a home-fiel advantage? he s not a navy seal, he s not a survivalist bird he got a tip from a friend of gabby s they said you have to be that h bragged about living on the appalachian trail for three months out of his backpack, but he s a mama s boy. he is getting help. he s getting help, getting help from the parents and i m prayin someday they will be arrested for aid and abetting an escaped felon. may be the lawyer to the wannab johnny cochran who wants to represent impaired he s getting help and that s why he is staying out there. we have over 1,000 tips to my
so they say. what do you say? possibly. probably. reporter: bob was candies middle child, between two sisters, jennifer and cheryl. he was not confrontational. they are a non confrontational. reporter: he liked helping people, maybe that s why bob became a firefighter, a well respected one. he swallowed smoke for 19 years. winding up as a captain in the university park department outside dallas. and from his firehouse, from the rug, even from the fires, bob kept in very close touch with his mom. we had the report, 10 to 15 calls a day. 10 to 15 calls a day? mama s boy. i know, truly. i adored him. so these fellow firefighters, they said, he got it done.
of defense attorney. so, although he s represented some individuals accused a very serious crimes, we weren t aware of any that had serious grievances against him. as law enforcement raced to find her sons killer, judge salas spent those early morning hours at robert wood johnson hospital. the loss of her only child was sinking in. daniel was your everything. he was the center of my universe, our universe, he was everything. was he a mama s boy? [laughs] the biggest moments boy. he and i had a connection that, you know, quite frankly is amazing. her disappear from daniel s death was compounded by a horrifying realization. her job as a federal judge was most likely the reason her son was gone. there is a part of me, immediately after everything happened, that i sort of said to myself, you know, did i make the right decision? but then i think about my son