store but not that night. they said we can t go through somebody was killed. she was a young wife and mother minding the store for her husband, was it robbery? revenge? or something else? we might want to look at his relationship with his employee. years past without an arrest, but for one prosecutor this cold case was personal. that was the case that was unsolved. the clues that lovers tranquil, cash and updated lady. he said it looked like a woman in figure, a really thin guy. mystery with so many head snapping turns. it took two trials. you 18 years for justice, only to have the carpet pulled off from under you. to uncover the truth. we have a verdict. what was it the truth? and adultery is a person who has an evil thing, that does not make a murderer. i looked at him and said let s go to the comic book store and help with the party. we pulled up at the party the police stop this, i knew immediately all the crime scene tape was there and they sa
he sounded like he was busy. he was in a hurry to get off the phone. did he say, you know, âiâm busy. there are people in the shop. i got to go. no, no. it was just a short just something you could hear in his voice or the way he we would b. s. a little bit. and there was no time for b. s. the cold case cops had struck gold. mike renaud s story was the missing puzzle piece that detectives had been looking for years. renaud s account, if true, did nothing less than demolish michael georgeâs alibi that he d been napping at his mother s at the time his wife was murdered around six pm. renaud s phone call story meant george was lying. renaud swore that he d talked to the store owner at the comic book shop and their brief conversation must have taken place just minutes before barb was killed. the embarrassing thing about this nugget of a clue was that mike renaud had told the very same story to the police back in 1990, the day after the murder. what looked like a case-b