in case something goes bad. the word is out on the street that the owners of the so-called audio shop actually buy stolen goods. now it s time for the customers. come on in sweetie. meet sheryl miller also known as chevy, a 43-year-old mother of three. today she s selling a 2002 ford mustang. is it in good shape? oh yeah it s awesome. she says a friend of hers reported the car stolen in order to collect the insurance. yeah, turned it in for insurance or whatever. they just want it to disappear? exactly. another day chevy is back and says she and some of her friends have guns. it s a 12-gauge. they re all rifles? a .308? yeah a .308. but she says her forte is forgery making fake checks. i do fake checks big money checks. okay. i ve been doing what i do for about 12 years.
it s a studebaker just found in a south dakota creek and may drive investigators to new clues as to how these two teenage girls went missing in 1971. pam jackson, on the left, and sheryl miller disappeared as they were out driving to a party. then flash forward to 2007. this man here, a convicted rapist, was charged with their murder. now the car could either clear him or help prove his guilt. a fisherman spotted this car monday, and it matches the car those two teenage girls were driving. it s a little surreal, honestly. just to even believe that it s all happening right outside our door. they possibly could have been there all this time. it s a little unbelievable. wow. joining me on the phone john holt, crime reporter. john, so this studebaker,
their faith has helped carry them through, that these girls were never far from their thoughts. the mystery has just sort of eaten at them. but hopefully this brings them a little closer to closure, even though not everyone is going to be around to see the end of the mystery. what have they thought happened through all these years? well, there have been a lot of different theories thrown around. there was a point decades ago where people thought they had seen these girls, you know, where they thought they might be alive. then, of course, in 2004, suspicions emerged about david liken, who, as it turns out, the case was dropped against him. i mean, there was a period where they were certain that it was him. at least one of miller s family members said, you know, even
wolf, thank you. hello to all of you. i m brooke baldwin. thank you so much for being with me today. our big story, let s call it the super bowl of foreign diplomacy. a meeting of world leaders in new york. but a speech by president obama with a message of peace has the world abuzz and leaves one very big question hanging. that is this. is the deep freeze between iran and the u.s. thawing? in the near term, america s diplomatic efforts will focus on two particular issues. iran s pursuit of nuclear weapons and the arab-israeli conflict. while these issues are not the cause of all the region s problems, they have been a major source of instability for far too long and resolving them can help serve as a foundation for a broader peace. the united states and iran has been isolated from one another since the islamic revolution of 1979. this mistrust has deep roots. iranians have long complained of a history of u.s. interference in their affairs and of america s role in overthro
0 employees in our health access program, which works on getting malaria drugs and building health systems around africa. she actually worked in tanzania. i saw her just a couple weeks ago when i was there, but she was nine months pregnant, just a couple weeks away from delivery. so she and her baby s father were walking in that mall in nairobi because she wanted to have the baby in kenya. she thought that would be best. they were both killed. deepest, deepest condolences. our hearts go out to all the victims of this horrific, horrific attack in nairobi. that s it for me. thanks very much for watching. i m wolf blitzer at the united nations. i ll be back 5:00 p.m. eastern in the situation room. newsroom continues right now with brooke baldwin. wolf, thank you. hello to all of you. i m brooke baldwin. thank you so much for being with me today. our big story, let s call it the super bowl of foreign diplomacy. a meeting of world leaders in new york. but a speech by president obama