this is not over, and not by a long shot. reporter: abc s stephanie ramos out with emts in teaneck, new jersey, working around the clock. this crew just picked up a person who has tested positive for covid-19. they told me that that person is having trouble breathing right now. they re taking them to the hospital. but they say that they respond to calls like this every couple minutes throughout the day. reporter: each case is different. in iowa city, irena yoder brought her 18-year-old son dimitri to the e.r. i wouldn t let anything happen to my son. so we are fighting right now for him. reporter: twice they went, and twice he wasn t admitted. his mother says doctors sent him home, not wanting him to possibly infect other patients. he is very, very sick right now. reporter: she says he later tested positive. but slowly he got better. i m glad to be recovering finally. which is good news. tom llamas, outside that brooklyn hospital right now. we all heard new york s g
CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper March 23, 2020 20:44:30
archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
urged the jurors to ignore the prosecution s circumstantial theories and emotional appeals. what we have to do to follow, to follow through on what s right and not what comes out of here, but what comes out of here. reporter: after a trial that lasted two months, the jury spent several days deliberating. for former prosecutor john molinelli, it was a tense time. did you worry as the jury was deliberating? they had some questions, they wanted to hear some things again. did you worry that they couldn t visualize him perhaps in teaneck? i would never admit this while i was the prosecutor, but i can admit it now, yes, i was worried. reporter: on the fourth day of deliberations, the jury sent a message to the judge. they d reached a decision. has the jury agreed upon a verdict? yes, your honor. is it unanimous? yes, your honor. your verdict is? guilty.
it could have been a stranger from the street. reporter: a few months later, 74-year-old joan davis, a well known community activist seen here at a teaneck city council meeting was found strangled and stabbed to death in her burning home. we had always believed that the person who murdered joan davis was someone that she let into the house. reporter: and now, rob cantor had been found dead in his burning home also in teaneck. very early on we were looking at you know, could rob cantor s killer be the same killer in teaneck with ms. davis and in palisades park with ms. alliotts. reporter: the answer was unclear, at first. but detectives did have leads in the cantor case. a neighbor had reported seeing a stranger near the cantor home shortly before the fire. did you hear about the stranger that was in the area? yes. can you tell us about that? yeah. we weren t able to track who the person was and we tried through canvassing to trace, but we
public, one private. and one secret. but in 2011 two new york area families had all three exposed when their lives collided in a lurid tale of sex and jealousy fire and murder. it s terrifying because then you think, well, hey. it could happen to me. it could happen to any one of us. forever, those people forever their souls will be marred and torn by these events. it s hard to know exactly what happened that day at that door. reporter: that day was march 6th, 2011 a raw and rainy sunday in tea neck, new jersey. henry rodzen was the first to spot trouble. reporter: what was happening that night? i had a flat tire earlier in the day, and i had to come back to fix it. it was raining, it was windy. it was just very miserable.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.