The Streets of Laredo episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 19, 2023 · 40 MIN

The Streets of Laredo

from Dateline NBC · host NBC News

An unexpected suspect comes to light as investigators work to solve a string of deadly shootings targeting women in the border city of Laredo, Texas. Josh Mankiewicz reports. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

An unexpected suspect comes to light as investigators work to solve a string of deadly shootings targeting women in the border city of Laredo, Texas. Josh Mankiewicz reports.

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I'm Craig Malthus here, cheers. I've always been a glass-half boy kind of guy, and now I'm talking to people who look at the world that we too. So really about to go through some security defining moments to try out some challenges. There's no ways of finding pain!

Again, sorry, hope you'll join each one of your goals. You might just come away with your own glass-half boy. Search me on that level with Greg Malthus. What's your day?

Don't do so, what do you get about that? What do you think, T.R. Somebody, you're lucky to make it up alive. Streaming on Peacock.

He's been going through every way, taking him out, smoking the chips. Couldn't bother him to hurt him. But the co-creator of Ozark. Looks like a family with his own drugs.

The execution's got killing us, and he's only done with him ever before. The cartel kills a family. I'm going to kill him. All of them.

M.I.A. Street to Mesa on the OPcock. The resistors, she said, I need to take something, I'm not going to be earning it for long. Someone's going to kill me.

We want most of them. I have an idea. Our female was found deceased in a rancher area. It looks much better than executing.

She has kids, she has a family. The second victim is from the radio. Comes from a bigger family. I think I will block her in the screen.

We're all scared. We're not always going on. We might have a serial killer in our hands. We're trying to grab your shoes.

You're trying to grab your shoes. She doesn't have something to kill her. She realizes, oh my god, he killed this, he killed Claudine. And I've seen it as household.

These are the streets of the radio Texas. And these are also the streets of the radio. They're named after famous mystery writers, men and women who created frightening and treating stories full of twists. Stories are often deal with the wealthy, the powerful, the privilege, and the damage they can do.

We cover a lot of that on Dateline 2. This story is different. It's a visit to the Underbelly, a four-block stretch of a radio called San Bernardino Avenue. It is the wrong side of the tracks, known for prostitution, drug-yas, and everything that comes with that.

In the late summer of 2018, these blocks were even more dangerous. That's what someone was hunting a women of San Bernardo like prey. On these sidewalks, you find people who rarely have their stories called. It began on September 3rd, when a woman's body was found on a secluded road 25 miles from downtown.

Now, despite its frontier reputation, the border down of Laredo is consistently ranked among the safest cities in the country. You see, Joel Aeneze, his web county district attorney. Usually, when a body turns out it's not a murder, it's somebody who was crossing the border who died from a heat. That's exactly true.

This wasn't bad. What county sheriff's captain, Federico Calderon, was called to the scene. A young woman shot in the head. From a distance to the touch you might have been done there, but in all close inspection, it looked like she had the next queue and that's what.

There were showcaseings. The ammo came from a 40-caliber hand-down and the brain fell around, a leading ammunition supplier that also sounds to a lot of law enforcement agencies. The metal examiner made the ID offer prints. The victim was 29-year-old Melissa Ramirez.

She has kids. She has a family that lives in the room, which is a municipality of San Bernardino. Law enforcement and Melissa has a drug user and sex worker to her family. She was something else entirely.

Everything was handled in the center of the business app. It was very fun to be around here. Gracie Ramirez was Melissa's sister-in-law. We were sisters.

We were super close to each other. Melissa's mom likes to remember her daughter as she was. Dr. Garland, she got good grades.

We kind of struggled with her. I never had problems with her. That was before her early teens. Before a bipolar diagnosis that went untreated, Gracie says Melissa never allowed her family, but she turned to drugs and then sex worker.

She really kept her life's willing to, didn't she? She was very proud of her life. Still, when Melissa would lead for days at a time, her family knew it couldn't be for anything good. So she would come to me if I went back to say it with me, I would feed her, I would give her everything she needed, but she just understood that she needed help.

But she wouldn't say where. Well, she would never tell me where. Water, her brother, she would tell anybody. Now Melissa had met a brutal end.

A female was found deceased and known. What comes to news about the underserved and undercover? People in the radio usually turn to Priscilla Vial. We're like, we're wet.

Just eat it. We're wet. That's it. Everybody.

To her more than 200,000 followers, Priscilla is known as La Gordilaca. La Gordilaca. The big crazy one. Thank you.

Everybody's on the bike right there, man. She deals mostly in crime, but unlike traditional news outlets, we're reporting is done off the cuff, the Facebook live streams, as events are unfolded. And so if something going down in the radio, La Gordilaca usually knows about it. They call me and say, hey, there's a chase here by central radio.

You can go do it. I'm not going to go. That role in this and immediately seems to keep La Gordilaca clicking on her. Now, La Gordilaca was asking the same questions as Melissa's family.

Who wants Melissa's bed? I have a video. She didn't. But maybe Melissa did.

Investigators heard that about three weeks before her murder. Melissa had some kind of premonition. We write a kitchen table. She said, I need to take something.

We just stop over briefly. And she said, I'm not going to be here in her for long. Someone's going to kill me. She didn't know who that was.

She didn't know who it was. She just had someone sitting up on you. The guy like this. She says somebody's going to kill her.

Yes. And press a girl on these who was on this from the start. She says forensics back up the story. Melissa so chillingly for a doll.

She did have a gunshot wound to around her wrist area, one by her jaw and one to her head. The pills like she's put her hand up. That's exactly right. That's exactly right.

Melissa's premonition came true. So, Melissa had more than just a sense that they were headed in the right direction. And at this moment, Lisa and other agencies are surrounding her home in La Zwesta subdivision. And early lead, and at the big one, you go through her house.

Andy's right. Yes. Anything? What happens where we cover from this house?

Investigators in La Radio Texas were working the murder of Melissa Ramirez, found dead on the side of a desolate road. The murders of sex workers give you problematic for investigators. Victims often don't keep regular hours making their movements difficult to track. They may not know their customers' real hands.

And often, their families and friends don't want to speak with police. Over the years, a number of law enforcement agencies face criticism that they just didn't work hard enough to solve the murders of sex workers. And if the La Radio killer was counting on that, then he may not mistake. Because investigators pursued this case aggressively.

Shearas Captain Federico Calderon knew he'd need help. So he called him the Texas Rangers, the Department of Public Safety and the US Border Patrol. And early on came a lead, a big one. The residents who discovered Melissa's body told her the dark color of pick-up truck parked nearby.

As they approached the truck to see who was inside, it sped off. And when they saw the truck leave, they noticed that there was a body. Next to where the truck was parked. One of the group was close enough to jot down a plate number.

But computers are still here. Investigators were able to track down the trucks under that same evening. And it wasn't at all who they were expecting. And that person of interest is one of yours.

That's right. At this time, the sharp department and Texas Rangers are investigating a murder. Investigators in La Radio Texas were not talking publicly about Melissa Ramirez's killing. Like where you look at, wasn't talking about anything else.

And at this moment, the police and other agencies are surrounding a home in Las Guestas subdivision. She was live on Facebook, as the radio PD snaked out the house of a man who struck it and seen next to Melissa's body. He had to go with a little surreal for those officers. Because the truck's owner, 32-year-old Renee Arce, was himself a low-rate police officer.

Even so, as soon as he stepped out his front door, he was cuffed and brought in for questioning. And now, police officer has either tamed or has not been detained yet. But it's been said he is responsible for the murder of this female. Law enforcement didn't notice that last part was actually true.

It's one of the things the ask officers are saying about. The police officer was not in the hospital. They said, we have to put it up on the device. And then we have your truck at the scene.

The party's been trying to put it down. The truck. Arce said he wasn't in the area that day, but had nothing to do with any murder. He was just checking out real estate.

I was looking for a truck. The investigators kept at him. Did you take a photo of him with a photo? Yeah, I take my picture.

The nightmare of the victim. So not the caliber of women that killed Melissa. Of course, plenty of officers owned more than one gun. It can't be lost on you, but that low-rate police officer will have access to 40 cameras at our ammunition.

That's a reasonable conclusion. Arce insisted it wasn't him. He goes through his house. And his truck.

Yes. Anything? Weapons were recovered from his house. Yes, except none matched a murder weapon or the ammo.

Still, it was arranged. He's parked right next to the body and he doesn't see it. That's what he said. And with no probable cause, they let him go.

Soon, investigators were following a new lead. Melissa's mom mentioned a suspicious man who'd been with her daughter the week before. Yoko, she came with a man. I didn't know him.

She was under enough that she told Gracie about the encounter. She said if he had this weird look on his eyes whenever he was seen at his eye. I didn't even look. That to me sounds like somebody who at least is a sort of potential process.

Oh, absolutely. He was on our list. He was in a other location on the road to that driving truck. Now you looked at two specific guys.

The police officer who parked almost right on top of Melissa's body and the guy who the customer was, you don't get a good hit of either one of those guys. We're in nowhere close with him. We were the day of the actual murder. And we resorted to what cops do best.

And that's being those he and Taki people. That meant scouring the corners of Sam Bernardo. One of the names you hear when you're building a profile of Melissa was is Claudia. Correct.

They worked in the same area. They were acquainted and knew each other. Both prostitutes, both undress. Correct.

And investigators thought that Claudine might know who it was that Melissa so feared. Except she was nowhere to be found. They put up a word among other law enforcement agencies, but Claudine didn't turn up. Possible that she heard you guys were looking for and was you running down?

That is a possibility for sure. Ten days after Melissa's murder, they finally found Claudine Moira. She wasn't talking. She was in shock.

She was in shock. It was about two miles from where Melissa's body was found. Also by the side of the road. You're by the same 40 caliber federal ammunition.

Claudine was taken to O'Smo. She did not survive. It's not like it's the same guy. We had a story about the same guy.

We had a story about the same guy. We had a story about the same guy. We had a story about the same 40 caliber federal ammunition. Claudine was taken to O'Smo.

She did not survive. It's not like it's the same guy. We had a strong inclination after processing that crime scene. They were probably dealing with the same person.

Someone's killing prostitutes. Someone's killing prostitutes with a 40 caliber hand. I'm fronting like one and a word winning journalist. And I've gotten new podcasts.

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Make decisions. A poor decision is always within a decision. Listen to me, episodes every other Monday. Follow leaders at fronting like one wherever you get your podcasts.

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He was in a marine. She didn't care about convention. They made a life together. Then one night, the marine died.

And they had the death investigation took a while unexpected. And utterly bizarre, purr. I'm Josh Makes with emphasis, trace of suspicion, and only podcast from day by night. Listen to all episodes of trace of suspicion now wherever you get your podcasts.

It was a hot end of the summer of 2018. And Loretta was simmering. Within 10 days, two went and found executed. And investigators thought it was the work of lung killer.

They focused on two potential suspects. Neither planned that. People were worried people were scared. Now this was real.

And you could feel that the tension. That was a story of everything to get it delivered rather going to the door. We were all scared. We were not even going on.

Longform some had been looking for Claudia Loera. Now she was gone too. It wasn't until Thursday that I heard of another female being found. Claudia and sister Collette heard about the second murder from NBC affiliate KGNS News.

She was alive when Stephanie arrived, but later died of the hospital. And I kept thinking, man, poor lady. She must have suffered a lie. I go, poor family.

She had no way of knowing it was Claudia. And when she found out, it hit her heart. I think my whole block hurt me scream. And just to think, you know, here I am, I'm feeling sorry for this person the day before.

Say, you know, how sad for the family. She must have suffered a next day, you know, where that family. She rushed to tell Claudia's daughter C.R. at work, but didn't have to say a word.

And I could just say the look of that case. I went remembered how close she and Claudia were growing up in the radio. She would help me sneak in my frogs into the house. I loved it.

It was a part of it. She would have suffered trauma, beginning in her youth. What happened to her growing up? That's a hard story for you to tell.

She was assaulted by somebody who lived behind her. And I don't think anything was ever done about it. She was whole. I believe under the age of 14.

She was damaged by that. Yeah. Very damaged. C.R.

says her mom had always been there for her children. But then got together with an old boyfriend. The family felt was bad news. She started using heroin.

She was like 15. And things, you know, she just changed. She would only wear like long sleeves. It didn't make sense.

It wasn't long before Claudia lost custody of her children. I would be long if I didn't say there weren't times that I asked her. You know, like, when is my love going to be enough? I was wearing a shirt.

It was. It wasn't enough. She was just having a dick to a drug. And it took over.

But my love was enough. And she always wanted me to know that. You know, just separate the drug from her. It's understood.

But I couldn't. After that, Claudia turned the sex work. The feeder had her family never stopped blowing her. But it took me to tell her.

My thought was him. The boyfriend. The boyfriend. Because, who else?

And the boyfriend had an airtight out of mine. And the guy that was deaf on person of interest after looking through Claudia's phone. Shortly before her death, she'd been communicating with a guy who went by the nickname, Chon. The other she's.

He did. You know, little bit of everything. And when was the dress? Park by his house.

And waited. He's not there. He's not there. But as a local habit, he shows up.

And as one of the seeds that people waiting for him outside of his house, he takes off their hydrants and hydrants. And you're in a pursuit. They chase him against a week. All of a sudden, we feel like maybe we got our guy.

And then, Chon himself had that to police and came in for an interview. He said he was with Claudia. And he says that at some point in that lady meeting her night, he believes that she goes her way. He goes his way.

That's exactly what the murder would say. That's what exactly. We definitely thought we were heading the right direction. They thought, finally, they were getting close.

That investigators got a call that would make them realize it wasn't shown. It wasn't Officer R.A. and it wasn't the trucker. And Ringers tell me, hey, one of our troopers ran into a female who she's frantic.

She said something to kill her with a handgun. I like that two other victims. This one works in Bernardo. Except this one survived.

How did she be in face-to-face with the killer? We were trying to grab him. You guys are trying to get him, you were trying to get him to do things. He was like, we're fucking on him.

September 14th, 2018, tonight saturday, Claudia Luer is killing. A Texas DPS trooper was pumping gases to his crews which is before 9pm, and a friend of a woman heard him. She wasn't wearing a blouse, and she brotheles and told him she'd just been attacked by the man she was with. That's when the trooper turned on his body cam audio.

He ended up, that guy, he had a right cracker. The woman was 26 year old Ericgenja. She told him she and the man had arrived at the gas station just a few minutes earlier. And then after they parked, he put a gun to her head.

At King running, he took up his gun and he wanted to get him back inside and started yelling, helped me help me. Erica used her wits to escape. She said as the man grabbed her blouse. She threw the passenger door over, slithered out of her top, and ran to safety.

She was trying to grab you. She was trying to grab me. Here are your faces. Erica admitted she worked on the streets of San Bernardo, where the man had picked her up earlier that evening.

She described it as a regular customer. She told him, he's talking. She's wearing boots and then they're looking over the river. She can use a gift to surprise you somewhere.

You have no idea what it is. She told him something changed in the air. When the subject of the murders of Melissa and Claudia came up in conversation. It was a little talky-right, and anyway, I'm in study computer picking people up to investigate.

Right? The girls, at the moment, are you looking at the busing? At the point of God. At the mention of the murders, the trooper decided to contact investigators.

On the off-chance, he was connected. She was talking about those girls and having some others. They asked him to bring Erica to the substation. Where Captain Calderon and the Texas Ranger were waiting.

Where the Texas rainstorm pounding on Galvan's roof, Erica waited out. I was standing there and he passed by. He passed and he turned around. Get in, baby.

She said earlier that night, David had taken her to his house, where she'd been a couple of times before. She's able to describe the walkway the driveway, the inside of the house, you know, the neighborhood's in. Erica repeated what she told the trooper. When the conversation turned to the murders, David's demeanor, suddenly changed.

He seemed nervous, agitated. Is it unsteered, Elizabeth? Because, um, I don't know what happened to the person. Because we're going to act this way.

Um, something about the ending. Erica began to suspect David was the killer. While inside his house, he was no clear way out. She started getting a bad feeling like she was going to die, so she wanted to leave.

She wanted out of that house. He talked to her and going with him to that gas station to get some food. Luckily, the DBS trooper happened to be there. So maybe that's your guy.

If you're looking like one of the best leaves, we've had up and up. Erica remembered something else, David had said. Every time he had been in the military, he was a person. After her interview with the dentist, a slew of investigators bundled themselves and Erica in the three cars and told her to show them David's house.

She directed them to a home in a nice neighborhood on the north side of Laredo. The house with a walkway just actually described it. The entrance to the house actually described it. To investigators, it all seemed to line up.

There was no white dodge in sight. They decided to wait. Who was it that address? We found out that it's owned by a Juan David or piece and wife.

What is that on the record? And who's one of the authorities? Well, we think he's some sort of oil field worker or something. There are two vehicles registered to that particular house.

One of them is a Dodge 2500, white pickup truck, which fits the bill for an oil field type truck. That truck had disabled veteran plates, so guessing David had served in the military. So far, everything Erica had told us was ringing true. It feels like you're getting close.

If you were onto something, finally, they put a bolt on out for Ortiz's truck. Then, another twist. We got a call up of another volume that's found out of age 35. The killer of Laredo wasn't done yet.

Law enforcement was on the lookout for a white dodge ram belonging to Juan David or Deese. The man they desperately wanted to question about the murders of Laredo Ramirez and Claudio Laredo. Soon the truck was spotted near San Bernardo, the moment captured on security video. The troopers have heard right by the seat of the people parked at a gas station.

When he emerged, they confronted him. Stop right there. Stop, stop, stop, stop. Is this your truck?

Is this your truck? Okay, turn around. He started telling the troopers, hey, you're freaking me out. Okay, okay, okay, I'll make a way to you.

Then he runs from the troopers. They chase Ortiz for a few blocks. Then lost him. You got a call.

He's out here. He's out here. He couldn't have gone far on foot, so the SWAT team was called in. Officers suited up and set up a perimeter.

Then proceeded to comb the entire city block. Hang on, three! Come out! Stand for me!

There was no sign of it. He was a scene custom made for while Gordy Loca. She was live-sringing this latest news to the community most affected by it. Just really don't know what's going on yet.

But it's very serious. They're all armed. They're all with their bloody progress. It's probably those reasons that just happened.

I can't be speculated like I said at the confirmed. As the search was underway. There's another one. We can call up another body.

It's about about 535. The deputy makes it up to the body and he calls me in today. And he'll have another one. It was the body of Gisela Kentu.

She was also a sex worker. Also shot to death on a web-county road and near her. Federal 40 caliber casings. And then came a phone call from a Border Patrol.

He had changed everything. Investigators thought they understood about the man they'd been pursuing. He's not always over. No, no, don't forget.

He's a Border Patrol agent. He's a Border Patrol agent. He's a Border Patrol agent. I can tell you that.

We're not expecting that. He's connected to the docks when her key's posted some messages on Facebook just moments before while he was on the run. Telling his wife and kids he loved them. Along with, Doc Ortiz checks out farewell.

Like he's expecting not to survive. Like he's expecting not to survive. The search narrowed to a hotel parking garage. You two guys, let's stop being the way to start moving.

We'll take the stage with some slowly. So that's when we spend two sections in the near. We're making a way up to the parking lot. Investigators know he can dial his lead this one team up that parking garage ramp.

With a Ralapd DPS troopers, calendar on and silliness. All followed close behind. As they made their way through the fourth and last floor, all that remained to be cleared were a long pickup truck and some cement pillars. I was able to go to the last four pillars or a truck.

Gonzalez and others at the top of the stack over the pillars. He directed the rest of the team toward the truck. Get down! And there he was hiding that truck bed.

He doesn't move up his way. He doesn't move up his way. He doesn't move up his way. He was around 230 in the morning by the time they placed one David Ortiz under arrest.

They got the guy in confirmed suspect they think that's the key. And then he was inside an interrogation room. What's his demeanor? Tired?

Arrogance? The chains? I would say Arrogant is the right way. Now you have to nail on the header.

He's basically laughing that he was able to come on the troopers. They don't have to be afraid of the energy. They don't need to worry about the the other thing is just to help you to avoid that. Ah, cool.

Ortiz repeatedly denied knowing any of the victims. I don't know if you're going to go. I don't know if you're going to go. He handed it to me.

I don't know if any of them should be showing us. I don't know if you're going to go. I can say that on the call. Investigators recall finding Arrogant in his truck.

He was a drug addict. Now I'm just on your car. Over more than eight hours, they took his clothes and a man with a badge changed into prisoner orange and they press him. He's a good boy.

He's a good boy. He's a good boy. He's a good boy. He's a good boy.

He's a good boy. He's a good boy. The A.I.M.E. was watching on video.

I'll never forget the time was at 11.24 in the morning. He looks at Captain Carradon and says, can you take him off? He's a good boy. He thinks he's a good boy.

He thinks he's a good boy. He's a good boy. He's not going to hurt you. And I'm sitting there watching like you're watching the Super Bowl.

You know what I'm like? Take him off. Take him off. Do it.

He's asking for trust here. Yeah. So we'll count it on. Here he comes.

And then here it came. I think you're ready to turn it over. This is 100. You know.

I'll tell you though. Investigators were trying to learn more from Ortiz. And my Gordy logo was live with the list. The man who was detained last night and the parking lot of that hotel is a board patrol agent.

She told her audience the man who had sparked such fear in the city of Laredo for the last two weeks had been caught. We had or we might have a serial killer in our hands. A captive Ortiz was speaking to a captivated audience. They told him that he's not a friend like a friend of a friend.

He said he'd taken his San Bernardo friend to score drugs late Sunday night. Then he got sat when she got high and passed out in his truck. Throw out a truck. He said Melissa began yelling.

She wanted out of his truck. And that was all it took. She said, oh. Go.

And I asked him to simply walk under the youth. He said he was a service weapon. The service weapon issued by the boarder patrol. Along with the federal ammo his employer supplied.

And having made the jump from La Man to murderer. Ortiz said he wanted to do it again. 10 days after he killed Melissa. He picked up plenty of Laredo.

He says she was curious about where Melissa's body had been found. So he started to drive her out there. That was February 3rd. No.

No. No. No. Go ahead, girl.

You're going to get it. You're going to get it. Ortiz said he told her to get out. Then shot her as she turned her back.

Now, Calderon and his team had the pounder this. Remember how investigators trying to solve Melissa's murder had reached out to the rest of law enforcement, including the boarder patrol, looking for Melissa's friend, clothing the wearer. Ortiz said that the boarder patrol was to work in the border intelligence center. Yeah.

You think Ortiz heard that you guys were looking for clothing where I am without him found her and told her? I swear, I, you know, the coincidence is just too big, too strong. I think that he heard the call come in. I think that he was on full alert.

I got a couple of tracks. And I've got to get to Claudine before they do. Ortiz confessed to killing Claudine and Melissa and his elder and assaulting Erica. And he wasn't done.

He tells us, and there's one more you probably don't even know about. He said something to a gravel mound, 15 miles outside of town. A bunch of cops out there, we have the old burst out of the room to get into the patrol cars and drive out there. He's where they found 28-year-old generaler cheese.

Same last name, but no relation to the man who killed her. Generaler cheese for the profile? Is it the profile? Same same work type.

We're in the same area. Also a drug user. The law enforcement caught up to Ortiz at that gas station. He had just returned from killing Janelle.

Thank you, but he's not going to get into the area. So he's trying to hold out his hands right in. Ortiz knew he was being hunted by law enforcement. And so accelerated his killing spree.

And he wouldn't go on, he wouldn't stop. He told us that he was going to keep going until he was caught. In the room, Ortiz offered motives that made him sound virtuous. He described murdering sex workers and called blood as a kind of public service.

I was thinking very excited. I'm going to be a 300-year-old. And I'm excited. I'm like, what the f*** are you doing?

You're a f***ing judge. You're a f***ing judge. You're a f***ing judge. You're a f***ing judge.

You're a f***ing judge. And he just made that up to avoid the shame of being a cop. It was also a customer. Or even afraid that women he'd been with could have exposed him.

You think what Suttertis Off was? They looked the women get too close. Yes. I think what ended up happening, I think there was a power shift here.

And starting with Melissa, I think she crossed over from her world into his world. And gave her all that. Yeah, because she becomes now eight threat to his livelihood, to his family, his children, to his job. The A.I.L.

needs had enough to charge. One David Ortiz with four counts of murder. One count of unlawful restraint. One count of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

And two counts of a lady arrest. Melissa Ramirez is mom Christina recall how hard it was, seeing Ortiz for the first time at one of his hearings. And so angry that I stood up and I shouted at him that he was a murderer. Why did you want to do that?

He just gave this some work. And that literally sent chills down my spine. You know, you have this poor lady screaming at you. And you're just like, this is the mom who lost the daughter and you're laughing.

Or he said his confession was coerced and pleaded not guilty. Four years later, a jury didn't lie at their verdict, but less than five hours. We did your refund at one David Ortiz guilty of the offensive capital murder at 13-day. One David Ortiz was sentenced that very night.

Life in prison with no possibility of parole. It was a long form for a decorated combat medic, a rising star at the border patrol, and a married father of three. Until supervisor had all this power, all his knowledge, masters educated, I mean, the list was on. For the victim's family, the verdict brought some relief.

I was very happy. I was very happy. I had to scream of excitement. And he just looked, I think he didn't care.

No motion. My whole channel. But I thought he was happy. See, ours life also changed in one good way.

Now you were just here, sir. I do. I'm in the right place. And I know my mom would be so proud of me.

I know she's proud of me. I'm Greg L. Cheers. Cheers.

I've always been a glass half-old kind of guy. And now, I'm about to use people who look at the world that way too. So many folks who share their defining moments and try-ups and challenge their stories are fun and organic. So I hope you'll join me each week in those.

You might just come with your own glass half-old. Search for a glass half-old with Greg L. But today, on this video, wherever you get about that.

Dragnet Entertainment Radio The Dragnet radio show was a groundbreaking and influential police procedural drama that ran on NBC from 1949 to 1957. Here are some key things to know about it:Main Features:Focus: The show followed the cases of Sergeant Joe Friday and his partners, primarily in the Los Angeles Police Department. It depicted the real-life work of detectives, including the tedious investigation process, interviews, stakeouts, and occasional danger.Realism: Jack Webb, the show's creator and star, aimed for authenticity. Episodes were often based on real cases, with details changed to protect the innocent. The dialogue was direct and unvarnished, mimicking the way police officers actually spoke.Famous Intro: The show's opening sequence is iconic: the announcer's voice declaring "This is the city... Los Angeles... California..." followed by the signature "dun-dun-DUN" theme music.Impact:Pioneering Police Procedural: Dragnet is considered a pioneer of The Jack Benny Program Old Tiime zhouyingfu The Jack Benny Program, which starred no less than Jack Benny himself, was a comedy series than went on-air for more than 30 years in both radio and television. It premiered on NBC Blue on May 2, 1932, and had its last episode on CBS radio on May 22, 1955, producing a total of 931 episodes. The TV adaptation, which was just a continuation of the radio program, was aired from 1950 to 1965.Apart from lead character Jack Benny, other radio stars included in the show were Eddie Anderson, Don Wilson, Dennis Day, Mary Livingstone, Phil Harris, Mel Blanc, and many more.The show made use of a show-within-format, where each character's role was no other than themselves. It would start with a performance from the orchestra, or sometimes a joke between Benny and Wilson. This was followed by gags between Benny and the rest of the cast, usually about the day's news, or about the characters themselves, most especially something about Benny's life. Joyful Autoimmune Podcast Shanna Nemrow Finding joy while learning to live well with autoimmune disease is tough stuff, but it IS possible! Welcome to the Joyful Autoimmune podcast where Shanna Nemrow, FNTP, NBC-HWC shares mindset, nutrition, and lifestyle inspiration and tips to support you as you find joy while learning to live well with autoimmune disease! Shanna is not only a Functional Nutritional Therapy Practitioner, Nationally Board Certified Health and Wellness Coach, and Registered Yoga Teacher, she is an autoimmune warrior who lives and understands the difficult realities of living with an incurable autoimmune disease. Join Shanna as she reminds you to let go of perfection, seek gratitude, choose joy, and embrace the ups and downs of the journey! This podcast is not about toxic positivity or ignoring the suck. Rather, it's about autoimmune warriors coming together for just a few minutes a few times a week and saying, "hey, I see you, I understand, take my hand, and let's do this together!" We ARE stronger togeth The Red Skelton Show Radio huyuankai The Red Skelton Show is an American television comedy/variety show that, from 1951 to 1971, was an entertainment staple and an institution to a generation of viewers. In the decade prior to hosting the show, Richard "Red" Skelton had a successful career as a radio and motion pictures star.[1] Although his television series is largely associated with CBS, where it appeared for more than sixteen years, it actually began and ended on NBC. During its run, the program received three Emmy Awards, for Skelton as best comedian and the program as best comedy show during its initial season, and an award for comedy writing in 1961. In 1959 Skelton also received a Golden Globe for Best TV Show.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Dateline NBC?

This episode is 40 minutes long.

When was this Dateline NBC episode published?

This episode was published on September 19, 2023.

What is this episode about?

An unexpected suspect comes to light as investigators work to solve a string of deadly shootings targeting women in the border city of Laredo, Texas. Josh Mankiewicz reports. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for...

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