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Cold Case Files Dead West S01 E02

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00:00My brother, Daniel, loved the outdoors, especially in Montana.
00:11Daniel had been murdered.
00:13Who killed my brother, and for what reason?
00:17My uncle was shot point-blank.
00:20In Rapaljeh, Montana, they couldn't believe it.
00:24He was reading the Bible at the time that his killer came.
00:30I was looking for any type of lead.
00:34We were very frustrated.
00:35We had a dead spot.
00:39I was going to do anything humanly possible to find a killer.
00:46We were not going to let it go.
00:47I was scared to death of him.
00:48Just feared that he would kill my family and everyone that I've ever even known.
00:49I had faith justice would be found.
01:00They will find him.
01:01They will find the man who did this.
01:02I had faith justice would be found.
01:03They will find him.
01:04They will find the man who did this.
01:19Montana is a real unique country.
01:47It's filled with mountains and prairies.
01:52Stillwater County is very rural.
01:57Big Sky Country is unique.
01:59Clear, blue, open skies.
02:04At night, you can see a lot of stars for miles and miles.
02:07You don't have a lot of city lights that blur out those stars.
02:12Most of the towns have just a few hundred people in them.
02:16A lot of those are ranchers that live out in secluded areas on those ranches.
02:21A lot of people will come out to the Montana area because there's not a lot of restrictions
02:26and rules.
02:28So there's a lot of freedom out in these areas.
02:31Along with that comes a lot of responsibility for being self-reliant and being able to protect
02:37yourself and fend for yourself.
02:51The sun is setting on the mountains that surround Montana's Stillwater County.
02:58The sheriff's office in Columbus, Montana, gets a report of an emergency at a hog farm
03:05near the small town of Rapplejay.
03:08An employee named Sherry Westbrook calls it in from her house not far away.
03:16On May 13, 2002, at about 7 in the evening, I received a radio call from dispatch concerning
03:23a man that was down and deceased at a hog farm to the west of Rapplejay.
03:31Rapplejay just sits out in the middle of an open prairie.
03:36There's nothing else.
03:38I drove to the scene as quickly as I could.
03:42I didn't know what I was going into.
03:45I didn't know if it was going to be a crime scene.
03:54My arrival on scene was at about 7.20 in the evening.
03:59It was still light outside, although it was beginning to become twilight.
04:05There was a man down on a porch.
04:09I got out of my patrol car, scanned the area.
04:14As I got close to him, it was apparent to me that he was dead.
04:19There was a large blood trail flowing from his head, and I could see blood settling in
04:24his lower extremities.
04:27I didn't think that he had been down and deceased for a terribly long time.
04:33One of his feet was hooked into the screen door, and the front door to the house was
04:39open.
04:41I noticed that there were what appeared to be three spent .38 caliber shell casings on
04:48the ground near his head.
04:50I believed this incident to have been a homicide.
04:56It's real rare that you'll have a violent crime like a homicide in Rapplejay, but almost
05:03everybody has a firearm.
05:09As I entered the home, I was extremely concerned because I didn't know what I was going to
05:12find.
05:14I had my duty weapon out.
05:17I cleared the house quickly, scanning through the home.
05:23On the stove was a pan of hot dogs and beans cooking.
05:27My initial impression was that there was too much food in that pan for one person to eat.
05:34That indicated to me that possibly he was going to have some company.
05:38I came out of the residence and quickly checked several hog buildings.
05:44There was nobody in the area.
05:47Dawn and Cort Herzog arrived, and they owned the ranch in that residence.
05:53I learned that the man that was down and dead, his name was Daniel Levine.
05:59He was a hog farm employee, and he lived in that residence that he was laying in front of.
06:06Dan Levine grew up in farm country in Massachusetts and worked on farms when he was young.
06:20Daniel loved the outdoors, especially in Montana because of the big open spaces.
06:27It brought him peace and joy.
06:33Even in Massachusetts growing up, there's a 12-year age gap between Daniel and I.
06:41Dad died when I was 10, so Daniel would have been 22.
06:46Even though he was that much older than me and not home all the time, Daniel and I were
06:52extremely close.
06:55I used to watch him in the kitchen in our old house where I grew up.
06:59He'd be in that kitchen, dancing to Elvis, trying to dance, just like, try to sound like
07:03him, but he didn't.
07:04You know, but he could move like him.
07:08Music was Daniel's love.
07:10He loved music.
07:11He was always making me sing, sing this for me, sing that for me.
07:20My Uncle Dan was a, he was a kick in the pants and just loved family, loved his kids.
07:29He was very just fun-loving.
07:30He was quite the ladies' man.
07:34The women liked him a lot.
07:36I remember quite a few women that he thought, oh, could be the one, could be another one.
07:42Wasn't.
07:43He used to tell me all the time, all I want is a kid, I want a family.
07:51He was looking for a different start, but he was still, I think, battling some demons
07:58that kind of held him up a little bit.
08:02And he was a little bit of a drinker.
08:06He was still this fun-loving, crazy guy, you know, but it was a problem.
08:17My brother Daniel followed us out here to Montana.
08:22I would say that Daniel was feeling pretty lost.
08:27My uncle had met some people in his life through church that could help him, and eventually
08:35he stopped drinking.
08:39He made the choice to be baptized, and he chose to be baptized naturally.
08:44It always has to be dramatic and different.
08:47He wanted to be baptized in the Yellowstone River, and it was a really great moment.
08:53My uncle Dan trying to turn around in his life and make changes in his life, and then
09:02those opportunities were just taken.
09:08Just completely taken.
09:10He was murdered.
09:14After I had cleared the house and the hog pens that were near the home, I radioed in
09:28for help from other officers.
09:32Sherry Westbrook, who was the person who had made the original 911 call, returned to the
09:38crime scene.
09:41With her was a man named Richard Edwards.
09:45I spoke to Sherry, but she was extremely hyperventilating, and she was literally freaking out.
09:55I spoke with Richard, and I told him that I would get up with him the next day for interviews
10:02of both he and Sherry.
10:08When I arrived at the location, that was quite a shock.
10:12A horrific crime just occurred.
10:15There's a time crunch to determine who was responsible for this, apprehend them, stop
10:22them before they kill someone else.
10:26This was a homicide, and we had an unknown killer in the area.
10:32It was time to go to work to identify that killer.
10:36Who would kill my brother?
10:49Dan Levine looked pretty much like he had been shot on his front porch.
10:54It was the first homicide I had ever responded to.
10:57I badly wanted to find the killer.
11:06You want to contact any family members that may be in the area.
11:12It's never easy.
11:16I was at work in Billings.
11:19Woody proceeded to tell me, your brother Daniel was shot.
11:25We don't know who did it.
11:27Sorry for your loss and everything.
11:32And I was like, this just doesn't sound right.
11:36What are you talking about?
11:38Not Daniel.
11:41One thing about Daniel, most of Stillwater County would have never even known him,
11:46known his name, had this not happened.
11:48But by his tragic death, we all came to know him.
11:55The next morning, Sergeant Clonch goes out to interview Sherry,
11:59the 911 caller, and her boyfriend Richard at the Herzog Hog Farm.
12:05They're employees who live in a company house.
12:09Richard and Sherry seemed to be forthcoming.
12:13Sherry said that she had worked with Dan Levine for several months
12:17helping the Sows give birth to the piglets.
12:21This will be a recorded interview I obtained from Richard Edwards
12:25on May 14th at his residence, approximately 9 a.m.,
12:30and that's west of the crime scene.
12:51Yes.
13:04I observed Richard to be real low-key.
13:08I took him at his word because he appeared to be fairly open with me.
13:13Sherry seemed to be a lot calmer the next day
13:18than when I had spoken to her on the prior night.
13:48With Sherry all head up the night she made the call,
14:14Sergeant Clonch wonders if there might be something deeper
14:19between her and Dan Levine.
14:22That gave me the thought of a possible affair-type situation
14:26between the two of them, so I needed to explore that immediately.
14:45Not that I could tell.
14:46Not that you could tell?
14:47No.
14:48Okay.
14:49I took her at her word.
14:56Daniel Levine's autopsy is conducted in the nearby city of Billings, Montana.
15:03The forensic examiner's report came back and stated that Levine had been killed
15:08by a single gunshot wound to the head.
15:11The shot had been fired from between 18 to 24 inches away from Levine's head.
15:22That would indicate that Levine had known the person who had shot him.
15:32A week after his murder, the local church holds a memorial for Daniel Levine.
15:38This picture was used for his memorial.
15:41We blew it up to a very large size, but he looked good in pink.
15:47He looked good with his hair turning gray.
15:53The day of his funeral, his memorial, we sang for him.
15:59Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me.
16:17How precious did that grace appear, the hour I first believed.
16:42My aunt and my mother, they were very much into their faith.
16:47And they had the church's encouragement and hope that they will find him.
16:53They will find the man who did this.
17:06The sheriff's office questions the owners of the hog farm, the Herzogs.
17:12They reveal an incident that immediately grabs the detective's attention.
17:19Dawn and Court Herzog mentioned a man named Sean to me.
17:23There had been some type of an argument between he and Levine.
17:28Sean had worked at the ranch for about a week and then didn't show up.
17:34Sean arranged to come out and pick up his belongings and his paycheck.
17:39There had been a problem between Sean and Dan Levine over some of those belongings.
17:46Sean had threatened to shoot Levine.
17:49It was clear to me that I was going to have to run Sean down and speak to him at length.
17:54Sean had threatened Daniel Levine. Obviously, that became very critical.
17:59It was imperative that we get him in just as quick as we could.
18:02Essentially, Sean had told Dan that you haven't seen the last of me yet.
18:14A man named Sean that had been an employee at the ranch was a likely suspect in the killing of Levine.
18:22He could be involved in other crimes we were unaware of.
18:26We were having a hard time locating Sean.
18:30He was bouncing around and sleeping at a bunch of different places.
18:35It takes some digging, but the sheriff's office chases down Sean and brings him in.
18:42We were able to locate Sean through his former girlfriend.
18:47He didn't want to be involved in any of the other crimes.
18:50We were able to locate Sean through his former girlfriend.
18:54He didn't really want to cooperate with law enforcement about anything.
18:59Sean was flashing some gang signs and coming on like he was a hard case.
19:20Our point at that point in time was to keep him talking to see if we could find out what he knew about Dan Levine.
19:50And I am a suspect of it.
19:53You know, it's got to be serious.
19:55Okay, did you make any threats or say anything to any of those friends,
19:59you didn't go kick his butt or anything like that?
20:02I had nothing to do with that at all, all my life.
20:06I swear to you, I had nothing to do with that.
20:11Sean provides an alibi for the day Daniel was murdered that police quickly check.
20:18Sean was out of state during the time of the murder, so we were able to show that he was not responsible for it.
20:31With resources stretched thin in a county of 1,800 square miles,
20:37Sheriff Brophy requests support from the Montana Criminal Investigations Division.
20:42Veteran agent Lynn Knutson is assigned to the Stillwater team.
20:47Knutson arrived on the 15th of May, I believe, and I was assigned to partner with him.
20:53I thought that was a very good idea.
20:58Sergeant Clonch and his new partner go out to speak to Sherry, the 911 caller,
21:04and Richard, her boyfriend, a few weeks later.
21:08On arriving there, we learned that Richard and Sherry had quit their jobs and left the area.
21:15We were very concerned and frustrated.
21:18Are we missing something? Why are they leaving?
21:21Is it a legitimate reason or is it something else?
21:27We were going to have to run them down, find their location.
21:32While detectives try to track down the ranch hand couple who suddenly up and vanished,
21:38Daniel's sister returns to his house in the middle of the vast Montana prairie.
21:44It's remained untouched since deputies finished processing the crime scene.
21:51On the stove was the food he was eating.
21:55On the stove was the food he was cooking at the time he was killed.
21:58And then Daniel had to have been reading his bible because it was opened on the kitchen table at the time.
22:06The last thing that sticks in my memory was the fingerprint dust on everything, including his bible.
22:14Just absolutely everywhere in the entire house.
22:17It's the biggest problem with this.
22:19everything, including his Bible, just absolutely everywhere in the entire house.
22:25It just, like, kind of shocked us, you know.
22:29That was like a reality check, seeing that, that this was real.
22:34We didn't really go through a whole lot.
22:36We just packed it up because it was hot in there.
22:38We wanted to get out, and no alcohol in the house, no drugs, no cigarettes.
22:46He had quit it all, all of it.
22:50He had finally found freedom and joy.
23:01After months of searching, and with the couple still missing, the case of the man of faith
23:07found dead on his porch cools like the Montana winds in a sudden snowstorm.
23:17A case of going cold is when we've run out of leads, we've done all of the investigation
23:22that we can, there are no more witnesses to interview, and no more tips are coming in.
23:29But in this case, we had officers that just were not going to give up on it, and we were
23:36going to keep after it until we come up with the facts and the truth of this case.
23:42I was going to do anything that I could do humanly possible to find evidence.
23:48I was going to need to locate Richard and Sherry to try and obtain another interview
23:52from them.
23:53I went to the post office in Raffle J. Montana.
23:57The postmistress there was able to give me a forwarding address for Richard and Sherry
24:02for Licking, Missouri.
24:13Committed to solving Dan Levine's murder, the investigators head down to Missouri to
24:18keep the case alive.
24:20We arrived in Missouri on March 31st of 2003.
24:26We drove to their house, and we knocked on the door there, and Sherry, she seemed really
24:34surprised to see us, and Richard seemed to be tense about seeing us there.
24:44Sherry went over her story, and it had pretty much stayed the same.
24:50Also during this interview, we had learned that Richard and Sherry had married.
24:55We had asked for an attorney, and the interview was terminated at that point in time.
24:59We were disappointed.
25:01It was mildly upsetting to travel all that way and not find anything solid that could
25:06further the investigation.
25:09But the sheriff's visit shakes things up.
25:13Just two weeks later, on April 17th, 2003, an unexpected tip comes in from one of Sherry's
25:21in-laws in Missouri.
25:25After our contact with Richard and Sherry in Missouri, we received information that
25:30Sherry's relative, Ricky, had hurt Richard's say that he had killed someone.
25:37Ricky Sims had given a statement to one of the Missouri officers about Richard Edwards
25:43shooting Levine in the head with a .357.
25:47Ricky Sims is one of Richard Edwards' best friends.
25:51He is married to Billy Joe Sims, who is sister to Sherry Edwards.
25:58Richard told him that he dropped his .357 revolver down into the hog pens on the Herzog
26:05Ranch.
26:06The fact that he may have dropped it into the hog manure tank would make a lot of sense.
26:11It's very difficult to access that.
26:14It's lethal if you go in there without breathing apparatuses.
26:18The information from Ricky was plausible based on information that he had that was not released
26:25to the public.
26:26Richard Edwards had asked for an attorney so we couldn't go back to Missouri again and
26:31confront him.
26:33We needed to find physical evidence to support Ricky Sims' statement.
26:40If we could find a murder weapon, that would allow us to make an arrest.
26:45It became critical that we search for that firearm.
26:55Richard Edwards had told Ricky Sims, one of his best friends, that the gun was possibly
27:00in the hog septic pits.
27:03If the weapon was there, we had to find it.
27:05It was a sudden ride.
27:15To have searchers go down in there, hog manure is some of the nastiest smelling stuff that
27:22you could ever, ever go around.
27:27It just, it really, really works on your senses.
27:30It needs the water.
27:31It's not.
27:32There ain't no water in there.
27:34Most of it, Gary, is in the feed.
27:37There's stuff that hogs don't digest and it doesn't dissolve and that's what most of that
27:42is.
27:43I'd never imagined something like this in my wildest dreams.
27:49There was one open air pit that was completely accessible by ladders.
27:54Knudsen and I made large rakes where we could scrape through the pit and search through
28:00the weapon.
28:02The odor was horrific.
28:05Later we learned online that there's toxic gases in the waste from the hogs and that
28:11if one of those bubbles had burst, essentially it probably would have killed one or both
28:15of us right away.
28:18But we were totally committed and we were going to do whatever it took to find that
28:21evidence.
28:26When the open pit produces nothing of evidentiary value, the detectives go into the hog barns
28:33where most of the waste pits are located.
28:37Some of the hog pens would be like a hundred feet long, so there was a lot of area to search
28:42up there and multiple ones.
28:46After two or three days of this, it's extremely painstaking.
28:51This wasn't really cutting it.
28:56The sheriff's office brings in a device called ground penetrating radar to help with the
29:04search.
29:05Ground penetrating radar is a radar wave that shot into the ground and bounces off of specific
29:11objects.
29:14You can search the pits from up above the waste, which would be a lot safer.
29:20One particular item was in a buried septic tank.
29:24I was really excited because it had the shape of a firearm.
29:29To see an object like this discovered, it really looked like a handgun.
29:34We were very determined to get to that, to recover that object and see what we had.
29:41I thought, oh my gosh, we found it.
29:43We had the dive team enter into that vault to retrieve the object.
29:49I and everybody else was pretty excited.
29:53They dug it up and it ended up being a Crescent wrench, which was somewhat disappointing.
30:03Woody and Agent Knudsen were unable to locate anything that resembled a firearm.
30:10We were still focused on Richard, even though we didn't find the murder weapon.
30:15We spent a lot of time working with authorities in Missouri and Texas just to keep the word
30:21out there that we were still focusing on this case and we were not going to let it go.
30:34As the years begin to pile up, Sergeant Clonch stays in contact with Dan Levine's family
30:40who live about an hour away in neighboring Yellowstone County.
30:45I received some letters from Woody over the years.
30:48It wasn't always every year.
30:50It was always around the anniversary and those letters meant a lot to me because it showed
30:57me that he never stopped, never gave up.
31:02Me and my kids, we didn't talk about it a whole lot, but my kids and I, we would go
31:08down to the river where he was baptized and visit with him, I guess you could say.
31:18I always felt that Daniel's killer would probably be found at some point, but it's not something
31:26that I dwelled on because I had faith that the person would be brought to judgment one
31:34way or the other.
31:35But there was that gap in time where it was like we hit a dead spot, no word of anything,
31:44no clue or whatnot.
31:48It was definitely frustrating.
31:50Down the road a few years, on July 10th of 2008, I spoke to a Missouri probation and
31:57parole officer about Richard Edwards, that Richard had transferred his residency to Texas.
32:06And he said, you know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't
32:12know, I don't know, I don't know.
32:14That Richard had transferred his residency to Texas, that kind of surprised me.
32:24Sherry Edwards appeared to still be living in the Licking, Missouri area.
32:29When I found out, I thought it's possible for us to go and re-interview Sherry again.
32:35Many people are victimized by their spouses.
32:41I thought that Sherry was probably totally intimidated by Richard and had been bullied
32:47and browbeaten.
32:50April 21st of 2009, Woody and Agent Knutson made a second trip to Missouri to make contact
32:58with Sherry.
32:59I didn't know how Sherry was going to react.
33:02All you can do in that situation is try.
33:07He went to the door.
33:09Dan opened the door.
33:10I was screaming at him and there was nothing I could do.
33:13I was in a trance.
33:16There it is.
33:17Sherry expressed right there, she said that she was an eyewitness to the killing of Dan
33:22Levine.
33:29We arranged to do another interview with Sherry.
33:33When Knutson and I met with her, she was shaking and you could tell she was scared.
33:40One of the detectives we were working with, he knew the Licking, Missouri area well and
33:44in fact, he knew Sherry.
33:46To sit in on the interview as a witness to support Sherry in an effort to make her feel
33:52a little bit more comfortable.
34:05Can you please state your full name?
34:07Sherry Marie Edwards.
34:10He had a relationship with Richard?
34:12Yes.
34:13Richard has three personalities.
34:15I mean, the first one is really sweet, a really great guy.
34:19The second one is, you know, he's alright.
34:22But the third one is a psycho.
34:24He's psychotic.
34:27Then, Sherry says something that leaves investigators stunned.
34:33Sherry told us that on the day of the murder, Richard Edwards had told her that he had killed
34:40Levine.
34:42He shot the man and then he came home and told me what he had done and then he took
34:46me up there and I see him lying there.
34:49I was scared to death of him.
34:51The fear that he would kill my family and everyone that I've ever even known.
34:55Sherry, Sherry, I want you to know, especially after this, we're considering you a victim
35:01in this matter.
35:02If we do this, then I want you to guarantee me that you get him before he gets back here.
35:07Because it means that if he thinks that you guys are coming after him, he's going to come
35:13after you and kill you.
35:16Eventually, Sherry broke down in tears.
35:21They think you have information you're withholding.
35:24At this point, the only option you have, the only hope you have, is that law enforcement
35:32will put together a case on him that will send him away for a long, long, long time.
35:39With his history, I think that's probably a reality.
35:44Look at me, Sherry.
35:47I want you to be honest with me, okay?
35:49I know you're so ready, you're so, so ready to move on with your life.
35:54We're not going to stop until we get to the truth.
35:57The truth, Sherry.
35:58He went to the door.
36:00Dan opened the door.
36:02Dan was standing in the door with the dog.
36:05And he had a plate of food in his hand.
36:08He said,
36:11Dan, I'm going to shoot you in the head.
36:14And Dan just laughed and said, you know what you gotta do?
36:18And he just shot her in the head.
36:20Dan turned around and walked back to the truck.
36:24And no one else in our building.
36:27Were you with?
36:28I was in the truck.
36:30Did you walk up to the house?
36:32I was in the truck, I could hear him.
36:34And I was screaming at him.
36:36Sherry.
36:37Sherry.
36:39Look at me, what did you just say?
36:43You're not going to jail.
36:46When I said that I looked at you as a victim as much as Dan, I meant it.
36:52There it is.
36:53Sherry expressed right there.
36:55She said that she was an eyewitness to the killing of Dan Levine.
37:00Sherry's statement was a huge turning point in this case.
37:03She gave us information where she was a first hand witness to this.
37:09A lot of her statement matched the evidence.
37:12It was credible.
37:14This is what broke the case open.
37:16And allowed us to charge Richard Edwards with deliberate homicide.
37:21With Sherry's testimony, the evidence.
37:24We asked for a warrant of arrest for Richard Edwards for homicide.
37:29We were going to bind Richard Edwards and make an arrest.
37:41Sherry told us that she was an eyewitness to the killing of Daniel Levine by Richard Edwards.
37:47We had been able to obtain an arrest warrant for deliberate homicide.
37:51I needed to locate Richard Edwards.
37:59Four days after Sherry's interview, police get a surprising stroke of luck.
38:06On April 27, 2009, he was stopped for speeding in Texas by a rookie Texas highway patrolman.
38:15The patrolman ran Richard Edwards vital statistics through dispatch.
38:20And learned that there was a valid arrest warrant in place for him.
38:24Richard Edwards was arrested at that point in time.
38:27And his reported comment to the patrolman was, I thought this sh** was over with.
38:39I called and notified the family.
38:41Alice Evangelistic was elated.
38:43And she, if I recall correctly, she said, I'm glad you got the son of a b****.
38:50I do remember asking Woody, so where do we go from here?
38:53Will there be a trial of his parents? Because he's claiming he's not guilty.
38:59There was definitely excitement.
39:02And that finally moment.
39:06Sergeant Claunch brings Richard Edwards back to Stillwater County.
39:11To stand trial for the murder of Dan Levine.
39:15I think that the community was glad and relieved that it was someone from the outside that had been arrested.
39:22And not one of us, so to speak.
39:26Richard Edwards was tried in Stillwater County District Court.
39:30Richard Edwards was tried in Stillwater County District Court in 2010.
39:37That was approximately eight years after Daniel Levine had been killed.
39:46So it was a big deal.
39:48There were four defense attorneys, two prosecutors, and a lot of people in the gallery.
39:54Sherry's story was immediately believable.
39:59It was obvious that she was still terrified of this man. Still.
40:05She was just very blunt.
40:06He said he was going to kill me, kill my family, kill my children, and burn my grandmother's house down.
40:14It was a four-day trial.
40:17Jury deliberated, I believe, about six hours before returning guilty verdicts on all three charges.
40:23Richard Edwards was found guilty of deliberate homicide and guilty of tampering with physical evidence.
40:31He was sentenced to 110 years at Montana State Prison.
40:37I felt the sentencing was just.
40:42No clear motive for the killing has ever been established.
40:47But a chilling explanation has come from Sherry Edwards.
40:52Sherry stated that Richard had told her that he wanted to see what it was like to kill a man.
40:58That's, that's foreign to me and I don't understand it.
41:03Richard Edwards just wanted to see what it was like to murder someone else and ended the life of an individual that just wanted to work and be left alone.
41:15During the sentencing hearing, Daniel's sister Alice gets the chance to face his killer.
41:23May 17th, they allowed me to sit in the witness chair and speak to him.
41:29And he was looking at me. He didn't look away.
41:35And I told him that I forgave him.
41:40Forgiving someone doesn't mean you can't be angry with them or that you're going to forget what they did.
41:47My forgiving Richard Edwards is also part of what being a Christian is.
41:55It's part of our faith because in God's word it says, if you cannot forgive your brother, I cannot forgive you.
42:04God requires us to forgive, no matter the transgression.
42:12So my forgiving him may have brought him peace, but it brought me closer to God.
42:21I always feel like he's watching over me.
42:24I still talk to Daniel.
42:27I totally believe I'm going to see my brother again someday.
42:31I'm pretty sure he's up there singing songs and he sounds good this time.
42:37I don't know.
42:39I don't know.
42:41I don't know.
42:43I don't know.
42:45I don't know.
42:47I don't know.
42:48And he sounds good this time.