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In the seventh and final episode, Judge Lynn Leibovitz explains her reasons for acquitting Joe Price, Dylan Ward and Victor Zaborsky in the murder of Robert Wone in a 38-page decision. Leibovitz going into extensive detail on what she thought of the Intruder Theory, the knife found at the scene and the prosecutions claim there was a long delay in reporting the murder. In the end, she called it a "math problem.” Defense attorney Bernie Grimm discusses the defense team’s reaction to the verdict while prosecutor Glenn Kirschner explains why the case has left him haunted. Robert's widow Kathy, who declined to be interviewed, instead lets her feelings be known through a statement saying, "my overwhelming feelings toward them is not anger or hate, but of immeasurable sadness.”
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In Episode 6 we cover the opening statements, the first few weeks of the trial and each side’s take on the knife found at the scene. Was it the murder weapon or a plant? Three experts - including famed forensic scientist Henry Lee - weigh-in. Defense attorney Bernie Grimm and prosecutor Glenn Kirschner discuss their strategies, and, for the first time, we explore the break-in at the Swann Street house in the weeks after the murder. Could there really be a nexus between the men arrested for the burglary and the murder of Robert Wone?
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Prosecutor Glenn Kirschner explains why the US Attorney’s Office chose to arrest Dylan Ward first in the murder of Robert Wone and wait days before arresting Joe Price and Victor Zaborsky. Kirschner also explains the “big ticket” mistake made by evidence technicians looking for blood inside the Swann Street house while Defense Attorney Bernie Grimm goes in-depth explaining another possible explanation for the murder. It’s a theory that never made it into court.
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In Episode 4 of Missing Pieces: Mystery on Swann Street, Prosecutor Glenn Kirschner takes us deep inside the case.
"We had the most curious crime scene I have seen in my 30 years as a prosecutor," Kirschner told FOX 5’s Paul Wagner.
In his first extensive comments in the case in nine years, Kirschner explains why he thinks the scene was cleaned up before paramedics and police arrived.
The man who took Joe Price, Dylan Ward and Victor Zaborsky to trial said, "We had a really sophisticated cover-up of what went on in that house and who killed Robert Wone."
Missing Pieces, a FOX 5 DC True Crime/Mystery podcast, shines a light on the cases that have left us with more questions than answers. -
The night of the murder inside 1509 Swann Street detectives debated whether an intruder could get out of the house without making a sound on the wooden stairs. The three men who lived there told police they heard no one running from the house. Detectives also wondered why Robert Wone, a married man, was spending the night in the home of three gay men. Did he have a secret life?
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DC police do not believe the stories they are getting from Joseph Price, Victor Zaborsky and Dylan Ward about what happened inside 1509 Swann St. the night Robert Wone was killed. The three told detectives an intruder entered the house, took a knife from the kitchen and stabbed Wone in a second-floor guest bedroom. But detectives suspect the men, who called themselves a family, got their stories straight before calling 911. The three are questioned for hours at homicide and are released without charges.
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On Aug. 2, 2006, a 32-year-old married attorney is found stabbed to death inside the home of a friend in Washington, D.C. The three gay men who lived there said an intruder did it. But police found no evidence of an intruder and suspected the scene had been cleaned up. Even more chilling, an autopsy found Robert Wone had been sexually assaulted, had no defensive wounds to his hands and may have been drugged before his death. Joseph Price, Victor Zaborsky and Dylan Ward were all charged with obstruction of justice, conspiracy to obstruct justice and tampering with evidence but were acquitted at trial. Thirteen years later the mystery endures. Who murdered Wone and why?
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Several months passed since we finished Episode 5. We’ve tackled many questions in the disappearance of Terrence Woods, but still hadn't found the one person who was actually there when the young filmmaker vanished. Until now. Finally, we are able to hear the first-hand account of what actually happened on October 5, 2018. And an interview with Terrence's close friend in London may make you question all of your assumptions about this case so far.
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No one can explain why Terrence Woods could not be found if he really ran down a steep, heavily wooded cliff with treacherous terrain. Through Terrence’s texts and posts, we’ve been able to confirm he was hired to work on the Discovery Channel series, “Lost Mines.” But why was the episode filmed in Idaho omitted? We get answers from the production company and track down a man who encountered the crew as they went into the woods searching for Terrence.
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Terrence Woods disappeared on October 5, 2018. That very same weekend, two other people went missing in Idaho County and there are still others who have been gone for more than a year now. One grieving father tells FOX 5 the search for his son in that rugged backcountry was “right out of hell.” We chase some leads and hit some walls. And then, a small break – the sheriff finally agrees to an interview, revealing a surprising theory about what may have happened after Terrence went into the woods.
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Terrence’s mother and father travel to Idaho – but a meeting with the production crew members and the sheriff doesn’t go as planned. They are shocked to hear people denying what was in the initial police report and decide to hire a private investigator. Close friends of Terrence talk to FOX 5 about what they’ve tried to learn – and we discover a key piece of information: A photo that was taken when the crew went… into the woods.
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Our FOX 5 team begins to trace the puzzle pieces of Terrence Woods’ disappearance. Cryptic writings in his journal are discovered and deciphered. A meeting with Terrence’s mother reveals even more clues - but nothing, at this point, can explain why her son went into the woods.
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We meet a young filmmaker who has dreams of making it big. Those dreams take him around the world, to London, and back home to Maryland. In October 2018, Terrence Woods accepts a freelance gig as part of a crew filming a hunt for lost gold. Then, his father gets a chilling phone call. His son has disappeared... into the woods.
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Lies. Fights. Being used and abused by others - growing up was not easy for Hannah and Sam, especially with their mother’s murder still unsolved. But they have faith and each other. Police tell FOX 5 what they need to bring Alison Thresher home and her children speak about how they are able to move forward in her memory.
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Did all of Sam and Hannah’s hopes to find their mother just die? A shocking turn of events after it seemed they just might have some resolution. And another mystery unfolds with a bizarre phone call from a man who claims to have information from inside a Maryland prison.
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Nine years after Alison Thresher disappeared, her daughter Hannah has a frightening memory that is suddenly starting to make sense. Hannah contacts police – then faces her family. And what about that close friend of her father? Cold case detectives reveal what he told them about where Alison might be.
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Time has passed, and Alison Thresher's family is realizing she’s probably never coming back. We now know Alison was engaged in several emotional struggles just before she died. Hannah gets pulled into a shocking defense of a man accused of abuse and FOX 5's Melanie Alnwick discovers an eerie coincidence.
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In a FOX 5 exclusive interview, we hear from Juror No. 9 in the Mansion Murders trial following the guilty conviction of Daron Wint for the brutal slaying of the Savopoulos family. In Episode 15, FOX 5’s Melanie Alnwick and Paul Wagner sit down with Juror No. 9 to get a behind-the-scenes look at the decision to convict Wint.
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Alison Thresher disappeared on May 24, 2000\. For many months, it was a missing person’s case – despite evidence that Alison would have never taken off on her own. New detectives on the case are convinced that Alison was murdered inside her apartment and that the suspect tried to set up the crime scene to make it look like a suicide. FOX 5’s Melanie Alnwick takes us through the mistakes made in the initial investigation and evidence, which have never been released to the public before now.
WARNING: This podcast series contains graphic language that some may find offensive. -
We now know that Alison Thresher was trying to protect someone in the months before she vanished and many people were keeping secrets. Hannah Thresher, perhaps, was holding in the biggest secret of all. In an exclusive interview with FOX 5’s Melanie Alnwick, she reveals a painful past – which leads to more questions about who wanted Alison Thresher gone. WARNING: This podcast series contains graphic language that some may find offensive.
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