incarcerated. and that is what i want. the whole world had moved on. forgotten, apparently. but then, a year later, 2009, punta gorda got a new sheriff. and he thought some of the unsolved cases in town needed a new look. and he called upon the retired detective, mike gandy. and these two, who have been detectives up north before they to retired and move to punta gorda. mike vogel and kurt mehl. i moved to florida and came down here to hurt, hunt, fish and play golf, and go boating, and go to the beach. and just relax. and that lasted a couple months. got very board. so, three board ex detectives put on badges again to form the sheriff s very first official called case unit. they decided early on they would work on tara s case. prosecutor feinberg was finally
i moved to florida and came down here to hunt and fish and play golf and go boating and go to the beach and just relax. that lasted a couple of months and i got very bored. three bored ex-detectives put on badges to form the sheriffs first official cold case unit and decided early on they would work on tara s case. prosecutor feinberg was finally optimistic. sort of. i felt this was a case that could be solved if it had a new set of eyes. somebody that could put the case together and connect all of the dots. what requests did you make of them? we wanted to know more about every piece of evidence. we had to rule out every piece of dna in that house. it was closing doors and excluding other people. we are going to learn from the files
hard to believe. prosecutor feinberg concluded he simply didn t have enough to make a charge stick. the dna evidence in this case that was collected from the residence either came back to the family or was not relevant to this case. there was no indication that the perpetrators had left blood or a body fluid at the home. and so. cases typically go cold when you run out of leads and when you run out of information, and you run out of ideas. tara s mother sharon, again, and again, demanded to know what, if anything, was going on. prosecutor feinberg had no choice, he said, he couldn t tell her. the frustration was clear. you could see it on her face. you could hear it in her voice. the family was devastated and they wanted answers. and i can understand that. you can t, as a prosecutor, and you can t as a detective give all of those answers.
and moved to punta gorda. mike vogel and kirk mayo. i moved to florida and came down here to hunt and fish and play golf and go boating and go to the beach, and just relax. and that lasted a couple of months, got very bored. and so three bored ex-detectives put on badges to form the sheriff s very first official cold case unit and decided early on they would work on tara s case. prosecutor feinberg was finally optimistic, sort of. i always felt that this was a case that could be solved. if it had a new set of eyes, it had somebody that could put the case together, connect all of the dots. what requests did you make of them? we wanted to know more about every piece of evidence, we had to rule out every piece of dna in that house, so it was closing
year later, 2009, punta gorda got a new sheriff and he thought some of the unsolved cases in town needed a new look and called upon the retired detective mike. these two who had been detectives up north before they too retired and moved to punta gorda. mike and kirk. i moved to florida and came down here to hunt and fish and play golf and go boating and go to the beach and just relax. and that lasted a couple months. got very bored. and so three bored exdetectives put on badges again to form the sheriff s first official cold case unit and decided early on, they would work on tara s case. prosecutor feinberg was finally optimistic. sort of. i always felt that this was a case that could be solved. if it had a new set of eyes, it