Murder Mystery Read
Description
Vocal Characteristics
Language
EnglishVoice Age
Middle Aged (35-54)Accents
North American (General)Transcript
Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
It's a case with so much drama. It actually became a TV movie. But now something's happened that wasn't in the script. After more than 10 years, there's a new questions and new ending to a crime many thought they knew. To all appearances. She's just another 30 something mother of teenage Children not starring figure in what has become a tale of love, lust and murder known around the world. And this woman, gone for years and thought by many to be gone forever, has now returned to the streets. She left a decade ago, and there in lies the story. If he wrote this book, it wouldn't sell because people would say, Don't read it. It's not believable, but it is believable because it happened. Actually, someone did write a book about this case, and then there was a lifetime movie Fatal Desire. It was called That woman, the central character. What was the desire? Why was it fatal? It's a story we've been following for a decade, and recent twists and turns have brought us back here to the junkyard outside Flint, Michigan, where it all began, and the woman at the center, Sherry Miller. The story starts in November 99. Sherry was at home on the phone with her husband, who was still at work a few miles away at the yard. He had told me he had a customer, she said. That's why we hung up when we did. Jury thought Bruce would soon finish with the customer, pick up dinner and head home, but that customer would be his last. Police found Bruce Miller's body in the office of the salvage yard. Miller was shot in the head behind the desk with rested Rex, seemingly the only witness to the crime. It looked to all appearances like a robbery, because that cash Miller was carrying nearly $2000 was gone. Jerry was a widow. Now. Someone had to make the notification. Her step. Dad showed up in a police car with the police officer. He just shook his head. That's all it took, she said. He come in the house shaking his head, and he'd been crying. So she knew. She knew that he was gone