morning, it shows that it must have been somebody she knew. scott s sister dina knew someone, a fraternity boy named chris. dina remembers jennifer complaining that chris would come over and stay for hours even when she begged him to leave. he was one of those guys that wanted to really date her and thought that that was someone that he could really spend the rest of his life with, but she did not feel that way towards him at all. his name was chris woodson, a science major jennifer met at her college campus. scott had met him too, in fact. it was the last night scott saw jennifer at her trailer when chris showed up. it was two nights before she died. i was there for five, maybe ten minutes. and i could see it on him that he was jealous but what do you mean you could see it on him? i mean i could just see he s like, what are you doing here and he s just jealous, doesn t like another guy over at
and setting it on fire. all these years, pat suggested, jennifer s whole family may have been involved in a massive cover-up. the documentary ended with what pat intended as the climactic interview. i m on your side, but there s people out there that have been telling me stuff. reporter: here tom has no idea that a microphone and two cameras are placed in the room. pat is moving in for the kill. for what he hopes will be tom s confession. tom, i know you re at your sister s accident, jen s accident. no, i wasn t. tom i know you were. i have told me things for two years, that put me at your sister s accident. i love my sister.
reporter: but if pat wasn t a exactly trained psychologist, he was and is an experienced policeman. he s been on the force for 18 years. so what about that milky white substance he says the sheriff told him was found in jennifer s body, which was at the heart of pat s suggestion that jennifer s death could have been caused by some inappropriate sexual event involving tom? how does he know? by coincidence, he writes this script where he s bringing ice cream to the murder scene. and lo and behold, the detective has this milky white substance in the vagina. reporter: but aren t you taking two and two and coming up with five? no, i don t think so. reporter: he s fictionally writing about him being there with ice cream. and you think it s a coincidence that he shows up in his script that he places himself at the murder scene minutes before his sister s murder and he s bringing a substance that after fire could be melted down and be a milky white substance? do you think that s a
suspect in his sister s murder, and that his father and brother may be complicit? that tells you what kind of investigator he is to come to that conclusion not having the preponderance of the evidence, not all the evidence. reporter: but what about that failed lie detector test? well, said both boone and the state police, it was all the available evidence that made them decide that the polygraph result was simply an error and that neither tom morgan nor any member of his family had anything to do with jennifer morgan s death. but pat moug was right about one thing. kenny boone did not cooperate with a fellow police officer, the one from livonia, michigan. you know somebody can sit in michigan and armchair quarterback this thing, but i take great offense to it. he didn t work night and day on this case like we did. but i think you ve got a patrolman with a rookie attitude wanting to make a name for himself.
would someone finally come forward? well, yes, in fact, someone did, the south carolina state police. and they said, hey, we ve got a cold case unit, and we want to re-open our sister s case. a cold case unit. i was really excited. finally i had gotten someone s attention. of course, tom had not forgotten this was the same state police agency which once admitted it lost the file on the murder years before. one of the first questions to them was why d you pick this? why d you pick this case now? they made it sound like it was just luck. we lucked upon this. you know, we were the lucky lottery winner that they pulled up our case. so tom packed his year s worth of notes into his car and drove over to state police headquarters in columbia and there for 2 1/2 hours with investigators, he reviewed every detail, everything he knew about the case. they were very good at putting me at ease talking about the fact that we know that you know a lot about this case, we know that you kn