The Detectives (2018) s02e03 Episode Script

Nine Shots

I'd never been to Chatham before I was posted there.
Chatham, at the time, was very quiet.
Everybody knew everybody.
You never had to lock your doors.
But as things progressed through the years, it became known as the place for drugs.
That evening, Constable Mark Gransden from the OPP had just pulled off the road to do some notes up.
It was just a matter of coincidence that he was there at that particular time.
- [PANTING.]
- Ma'am! - Help me, please! Help me! - Are you OK? - Help me, I need help! - Are you injured? - No.
Help me! - OK, tell me what happened.
They're dead.
I think they're dead.
- Where? - Oh, my son.
My son, Jasen.
- Where's Jasen? - Tell me where they are.
Come.
This way.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Even though I've been to other homicides, personally I've never seen such a vicious attack.
I just couldn't completely understand who would do this to gentle old people.
I need something to stop the bleeding.
[PETER BAKER.]
: It was just horrible.
- Who did this to you? - Two boys [PETER BAKER.]
: It's a sick feeling.
I will never, ever be the same.
I remember the date very, very well because it was my son's birthday.
October 18th, 1991.
My son was actually playing hockey and I was hoping I'd catch a few minutes of the game.
But it didn't work out that way.
I arrived at the scene.
The ambulance was just down the road.
I knew this was going to be something that was very difficult.
I'm walking up the stairs, I'm just sort of reminding myself to stay calm, stay focussed, keep your eyes open.
[AMBULANCE SIREN.]
You've got a job to do.
- Did you clear the house? - [GRANSDEN.]
: No.
No time.
Is there anyone else in the house? My son's supposed to be home.
OK, I need you to wait right here.
We don't know who's up there.
If your son's here, I'll find him.
[PETER BAKER.]
: I needed to secure this house before we go too much further.
I was concerned that the people that did this are still around.
You get tense.
You're tight.
You know you should relax so you can stay focused.
You feel the hair on the back of your neck curl because you don't know if somebody's there waiting for you.
Jasen Pangburn's bedroom was upstairs.
Jasen should have been in the house; he should have been home from school.
But Jasen Pangburn was not in his bedroom.
He had guns that he kept up there.
The guns were gone.
And so was Jasen.
Could he possibly be the one that did it? She was awake when I got here, you know.
She looked so scared.
Yeah.
Is this her house? Connie Pangburn.
It's her place.
She lives here with her husband, Richard, and her son, Jasen.
Virginia's Richard's mom.
Alfred's his step dad.
EMTs found a pulse on him, too.
OK, OK.
They're in good hands.
Virginia say anything? She said "two boys" did this to her.
- Anything else? - No names.
[PETER BAKER.]
: In the bathroom where Alfred Critchley had fallen backwards, he knocked the plug out of the clock on the wall.
And to me, that gave us the time of when he was attacked, five-twelve p.
m.
[AMBULANCE SIREN.]
You didn't find him in there, did you? He's not inside the house.
Do you have any idea somewhere else where he could be? No.
He was supposed to be in the house packing for the Reserves.
- The Reserves? - They were going on a training trip this week.
Maybe he left early? All right.
Well, let's check that out.
I noticed a gun rack in Jasen's bedroom.
Yeah, those are his rifles.
He uses it for hunting and for the Reserves.
The guns were missing.
What? Well, maybe he brought them to the Regiment? [PETER BAKER.]
: Connie, do you have any idea who Virginia meant when she said "two boys"? OK.
Uh, Connie, is your husband around? He's outside of town.
I just called him.
I'm gonna need you to go down to the station.
I'm going to send an officer to ride with you.
No! I need to say here and find my son! Connie, the best way that you can help is to go to the station, tell us everything you know, anything that can help.
We have a full team here looking for him.
We'll find him.
We won't leave until we do.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Connie was an amazing lady for what she went through, and you could see that she wanted to help.
She told me that Jasen may be down across the road back in the bush where he usually goes to test fire his guns.
I explained to the dog-handler that the first sweep should be around the house, then the back field, then go across the road and check the bush down there.
In the meantime, we'd interviewed the neighbors to see if they'd seen anything.
Any little tidbit of information that would help.
This guy says he saw something.
What'd you see? I've seen a grey-blue pickup truck parked outside a couple of hours ago.
But it's gone now.
Do you know the people who live here? No.
I'm just staying at the motel next door.
I came over to see what all the commotion is about.
We're looking for this guy.
Have you seen him? [GRANDSEN.]
: Detective! The dog handler, he saw something.
- Where? - Across the street.
OK.
This officer will take your statement.
Thank you.
[PETER BAKER.]
: It was about an hour and a half later that the dog-handler located Jasen Pangburn's remains covered up in the bush.
Somebody had dropped a rock on his head.
And all you could see was the side of his face, Jasen Pangburn's face.
Copy that.
The Critchleys, Alfred died in the surgery.
Virginia never made it to the hospital.
[DEEP SIGH.]
[PETER BAKER.]
: It's a worst-case scenario.
Now you know you've got three family members that have been murdered.
It was upsetting.
The fact that somebody's been killed is always a difficult notification.
To have them all from the same family, one a son, one a mother and father.
As a parent myself, um, it made it even more difficult.
Have you found Jasen? I'm afraid we have.
I'm very sorry.
No.
No.
We found a body near the house.
It matches his description.
[CRIES.]
[PETER BAKER.]
: That was a long day.
A very long day.
That one I will never, ever forget.
Who did this? [PETER BAKER.]
: We found Jasen Pangburn's remains covered up in the bush.
The scene was so horrific, but one of the things that amazed me about both Richard and Connie was that there was no anger.
There was no anger.
All they wanted to know, "Will you catch these people that did it?" They just wanted them caught, because they wanted to find out why.
Reporters are asking if it's a murder-suicide.
Troubled teen, kills his grandparents then kills himself.
Lots of speculation.
We don't know what happened or how Jasen died, but when we do, we're not going to tell the press anything.
Don't give them any more gossip.
Got it.
[NEWS REPORTER.]
: Seventy-five-year-old Alfred Critchley and his seventy-three-year-old wife, Virginia were found stabbed in their son's home on the outskirts of Chatham.
The body of their nineteen-year-old grandson was later discovered in a neary ravine by a police tracking do.
Police are not saying what kind of weapon was used in the slayings, but post-mortems are being conductd and the results are expected to be released tomorrow.
[PETER BAKER.]
: I attended all post-mortems that were done on Virginia, Alfred Critchley, as well as on Jasen Pangburn.
The attack on Alfred was fairly straightforward.
[DR.
OXLEY.]
: Alfred was stabbed three times.
Virginia, on the other hand, twenty-three stab wounds.
Jugular was severed; she died of blood loss.
She must have fought hard.
Lot of defensive wounds.
Yeah, three shallow stab wounds.
Barely punctured the skin.
The rest of them were deep.
[PETER BAKER.]
: With Virginia's post-mortem, the, uh horrific attack that was put on this elderly lady was something that was very difficult.
The coroner counted twenty-three or twenty-four stab wounds in Virginia's body.
It was a completely vicious attack on that poor lady.
There's more.
We pulled that twenty-two-calibre bullet from Jasen's heart.
Jasen was shot? Why stab the grandparents? Maybe it was personal.
[PETER BAKER.]
: It was definitely a surprise that Jasen was shot.
The viciousness on the adults was completely different from the quick kill of Jasen Pangburn.
So if they had a gun and they shot Jasen Pangburn, why did they kill the grandparents with knives? That part just didn't make sense.
Pangburn wasn't stabbed; he was shot.
Why shoot Pangburn and stab the grandparents? Well, maybe they used the guns from his locker.
Defender shotgun, AK, Lee-Enfield rifle.
All legally acquired.
None of these guns fired the bullet we pulled out of Jasen's body.
The killers must have brought their own weapon.
So, let me get this straight: the two boys rob the house, stab the grandparents, even though they had a gun, stole Pangburn's weapons, and then took him out to the woods to kill him? Why do it that way? Well, maybe it was the other way around.
Maybe they shot Pangburn, stabbed the grandparents, then stole the gun.
That still doesn't explain why they stabbed the grandparents when they had a gun.
OK.
Let's focus on what we do know.
Now, the Critchleys were stabbed at five-twelve p.
m.
Now, a witness saw a blue-grey truck parked out front.
Now, Virginia said two boys did it.
Did anyone else see two boys? A neighbour down the street saw three boys hanging out by the area where the body was found.
Jasen and the two killers.
Did the neighbour see anything else, notice what time it was? Was Jasen stressed? Was he being coerced? No, just kids hanging out.
I want to speak to that neighbour.
That neighbor saw these three boys crossing the road and then going across into the field.
Did you notice anything suspicious about them? No, they looked like friends.
Was Jasen Pangburn with them? All I noticed was one of them was wearing a Penguins sweater.
Mostly Wings and Leafs fans around here.
And what time was this when you saw them? I'd say late afternoon, around four-fifteen, maybe four-twenty.
[PETER BAKER.]
: At four-twenty, three young men went across the road.
One of them was wearing a Pittsburgh Penguin hockey sweater.
That indicated to us that Jasen Pangburn was killed first out in the bush.
Then they came back and the clock is knocked off of the bathroom at five-twelve.
The key thing, breaking the investigation wide open, was locating that Pittsburgh Penguin hockey sweater.
[PETER BAKER.]
: You have two crime scenes.
You've got one at the house and you've got one down in the bush.
In the house, they're stabbed.
Jasen Pangburn was shot.
Jasen was probably killed first and then they came back and killed the grandparents.
The people in Chatham were very unnerved by what happened.
[NEWS REPORTER.]
: The tragedy that's unfolding in this east-side Chatham home spans three generations.
The house is just on the outskirts of Chatham, so the Ontario Provincial Polie are handling the investigation.
It's especially upsetting to neighbors because there's never been a triple homicide in this area in anyone's recent memory.
It scares the hell out of me, you know, for my mom and dad's safety and for all the rest of the neighbors.
We'll keep our doors locked all the time now and we'll look around for any strangers walking around or anything, so There's a lot of media coverage.
There's a lot of talk about this.
There's concern that the police haven't solved this yet.
There's stories in the newspaper about keeping your doors locked and don't let your children outside.
We tried to assure citizens of Chatham that this matter's gonna be solved.
[BAKER.]
: We think what happened in Chatham was an isolated incident.
We don't believe it's a public safety issue.
People are saying that it was a cult murder like the Manson family.
There is no evidence to support cult involvement and we don't think there's an active serial killer in the area.
And I'd advise anyone spreading rumours to stop.
It creates fear and it hurts the victim's families.
Do you have any idea who did this? We have a few leads that we're looking into.
But we need your help.
We're looking for a young man who was wearing a Pittsburgh Penguins jersey that night.
If you have any information, any information at all, please contact the police station or Crime Stoppers.
[PETER BAKER.]
: They seemed quite relieved that they got that information because it was something they could say, "OK, yes, they're looking for something.
They're looking for the Pittsburgh Penguins hockey sweater.
" The big thing for us was understanding why it happened.
People don't just kill for no reason.
[BAKER.]
: Do you have any idea who might have wanted to harm them? God, no.
Alfred was a good man, a veteran.
He was wonderful to my mother.
And what about Jasen? Jasen was a great kid.
He didn't get into trouble.
He wasn't into drugs or hanging with the wrong crowd.
Would you know if he was? He would tell us, Detective.
Of course.
Virginia mentioned two boys.
Do you have any idea who they might be? Any of Jasen's friends Pittsburgh Penguins fans? One last thing.
Does a blue-grey pickup truck mean anything to you? A few weeks ago, there was a young man who came by in a blue-grey pickup truck.
He came for Jasen.
Do you remember his name? I don't remember.
He told me, but I, I can't remember.
Do you remember anything else about him? Just that he spoke like a soldier.
He asked for Private Pangburn.
[PETER BAKER.]
: The guy that came was wearing military-type clothing.
She didn't know who the guy was but Jasen told his mother, he said, "I don't like that guy.
He scares me.
" [OFFICER GIVES ORDERS.]
Excuse me.
I need to speak with your commanding officer.
All right.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Never been a member of the reserves, but I knew the layout of the armories.
They stress discipline and respect in their training.
Seems like a great group here.
You all get along? Being part of the regiment means learning to get along.
Ah, it's good.
You knew uh, Jason Pangburn, right? Everyone knew Private Pangburn.
We're planning a wake in his honour.
Oh, that must have been quite a shock.
Sorry, son.
A wake's a good idea.
[PETER BAKER.]
: When members of the armories found out what we were looking into, they were more than cooperative because they had just lost a member.
A member was just brutally murdered.
Anyone here drive a grey-blue pickup truck? I'm sorry, I'm not sure.
We have some one hundred and eighty young reservists enlisted.
I wish they were all like Private Pangburn.
How do you mean? He was a natural for the military life, the drills, the basic training.
Never had to tell him anything twice.
Anyone here not like Pangburn? Not that I heard of.
How about brushes with the law? Problems with discipline? Some cadets come to us for a fresh start after problems at school or at home, perhaps with the police.
Never anything to do with Private Pangburn.
He was a popular kid, a good soldier, an excellent marksman.
Marksman.
Hear he had quite the gun collection.
Yes.
He'd bring his guns in every now and then.
You think some of the boys might have helped themselves to those guns? I can't see it.
Besides, these are good kids.
[PETER BAKER.]
: The next morning, we got a tip that a reservist in the armories, Stephen Hill, was wearing a Pittsburgh Penguin hockey sweater the day of the murder.
Private Hill? I'm Detective Peter Baker of the Ontario Provincial Police.
I have a few questions for you.
Am I in trouble, sir? You knew Jasen Pangburn, right? Kind of.
A fellow Reservist.
But you went to high school with him? He was a senior.
I'm still in grade ten.
It's not like we were best friends or anything.
You heard what happened to him? Of course.
It's terrible.
You wear a Penguins jersey, don't you, son? I used to, but then I lost it.
Really? When? A couple of weeks ago.
Someone saw you wearing it on Friday.
Who said that? Is it true? No.
Um, I don't know who told you that, but they're wrong.
[PETER BAKER.]
: He was definitely holding something back.
When you talk to him and you say, "Well, you know, do you know somebody has a Penguins Sweater," uh, he'd look off to the side and say, "No.
" "Did you give your sweater to somebody?" "Uh, no.
" So he was very, uh, evasive.
Can I go now? Sorry, - I have an appointment.
- Sure.
- Don't want to be late.
- Yeah.
[PETER BAKER.]
: It was while I was getting ready to go that I got a call on my radio.
This is Baker.
We just got a call for another gun robbery.
Where? Cofell Farm out in Dover Township.
It's another Reservist.
[PETER BAKER.]
: I don't know if I was surprised.
It just seemed kind of strange that within several days we have two thefts of a large quantity of guns.
I was definitely scared.
That's a whole lot of people stealing guns.
[PETER BAKER.]
: I received a report from our uniform officers who had investigated the break-in at the Cofell Farm.
Jason Cofell had reported that somebody had broken into their house and stole all his guns.
I thought to myself "Another break and enter with guns stolen from a member of the armories.
" It was too close to be a coincidence.
I had met Doug and Catherine Cofell quite a few years before this happened.
They were caring people and I knew that Jason Cofell was their oldest son.
So, other than the guns, did you notice anything else missing? Just the weapons, um, a shotgun, a rifle, two Glock handguns, and a twenty-two pistol.
And where do you keep the guns? Uh, here in the home.
- Was the house locked? - Yes.
- You mind if I take a look? - Yeah, sure.
Locks look they look good.
Sturdy.
Is that you, son? Yes, sir.
Well, that suits you.
Military? Thank you, sir.
Reserves.
[PETER BAKER.]
: He had a blue pickup truck.
Connie Pangburn mentioned this military guy coming with this light blue-grey truck and asking for Private Pangburn.
Jason's eyes just sort of changed and he just just sort of glared and they got dark.
And right away in my mind, I'm thinking there's something he's hiding.
When did you notice the guns missing? When I got home from school today.
- Did you drive to school? - Yes, sir.
In that blue-grey pickup truck parked out back? Yeah.
So um, your route home, do you, uh, drive past the marina? Uh, no.
I take um, Main Street usually.
Well, how about Friday? Did you drive past the marina then? Um, the break-in was today, not Friday.
Oh, I know.
It's just that, uh, the marina's right by Jasen Pangburn's house.
You heard about that, right? You knew him? A little, um, from Reserves.
We went to different schools so I was just wondering, if you were around there, you might have seen something that could help us out.
I wasn't around there that day so Someone saw a blue-grey pickup truck around there.
[PETER BAKER.]
: When I asked him that question, he looked off to the side.
I could tell there was something, something bothering him.
That's when he changed the story.
Is that the marina on Grand Avenue East? That's the one.
Yeah, um, I think I might have actually been around there Friday.
I stopped by a store on my way home from school.
Sorry.
It just slipped my mind.
[PETER BAKER.]
: His whole tone changed from the time he came in to the point where we started talking about him going out the highway.
And I thought "we'll follow up on this.
" But I didn't let him know he was a suspect.
Well, if, uh, anything comes to mind, uh, about the guns or anything else, you'll, uh, let me know.
OK? Yeah.
Thanks, Detective.
I appreciate it.
[PETER BAKER.]
: That day, the detachment where I work out of received a call from a locksmith who had just been to a residence in Chatham where he had seen these boys with these guns.
The murders took place on the 18th; he was called at approximately 2:30, 3:00 in the morning on the 19th by a young man who said his name was Mark Hooper.
Mr.
Hooper? I'm Detective Peter Baker of the Ontario Provincial Police.
I have a few questions for you.
What happened the other night? I just went out to get my friends and got locked out.
Your friends? Stephen Hill and Jason Cofell.
Do you know them from school? No, just the Regiment.
We're all in it together.
[PETER BAKER.]
: The locksmith unlocked the door for them.
And he saw Hooper and another guy and this Pittsburgh Penguins hockey guy, and they were carrying something wrapped in a heavy blanket.
What were they bringing inside the house? Guns.
Do you know where they got the guns? Are the guns still inside the house? No.
Cofell took them back.
I don't know what happened after that.
But you knew Jasen Pangburn, right? I had nothing to do with that.
I thought he was just messing around! Mr.
Hooper, you're gonna need to tell me what happened.
Cofell hated Pangburn.
He was always worried he'd rat him out.
Why would he rat him out? Cofell had a thing with guns.
He was collecting them.
I guess some of them might have been stolen.
I'm gonna need you to come down to the station and tell us what happened.
[PETER BAKER.]
: With the information we got from Mike Hooper, we started putting together a case focused on Jason Cofell.
I knew that Jason Cofell had stolen the guns.
We had to act quickly.
We needed to get Jason Cofell off the street.
I wanted to arrest Cofell early in the morning on his way to school.
We don't know if he's got guns.
We don't know what he's got in the vehicle.
We had to get him away from other people, in an open area where he couldn't affect anybody else.
I don't think there's a more dangerous situation for a police officer than a face-to-face with somebody pointing a gun at you.
That wasn't going to happen.
Jason Cofell pulled his truck to the side of the road.
At that point, the other two cars came up so that he couldn't run; he couldn't go anywhere.
It went like clockwork.
[YOUNG.]
: Hands on your head! Get out of the car, now! Hands on the vehicle.
[PETER BAKER.]
: The vital part of the arrest of Jason Cofell was to get him off the street.
That was the main thing.
The secondary was to find the guns.
He was very quiet, didn't say a whole lot.
I had some doubt as to whether he was gonna say anything.
I wasn't going to be getting a confession, so we needed some concrete evidence that would tie Cofell to the three murders.
We needed the guns.
You and Stephen Hill were seen bringing guns into a home.
Doesn't mean I killed him.
But you wanted to kill him.
Where'd you get the guns? Those were my guns.
I bought them from a sketchy-looking guy.
I don't know, gang members, I think.
So you bought stolen guns? How was I supposed to know they were stolen? Where are the guns? I stashed them.
Where? [PETER BAKER.]
: Cofell said the guns were in a ditch in Dover Township.
We went out to that ditch and there were no guns.
There was no indication anything had been in that ditch other than weeds.
[PETER BAKER.]
: We needed some concrete evidence.
The vital part was to find Jasen Pangburn's guns.
They would tie Cofell to the three murders.
I had talked to Doug and Cathy.
Neither wanted to believe that their son would do something like that.
[CATHY.]
: I don't understand.
This says murder three murders.
[DOUG.]
: My son didn't do this.
We're just going to need to take a look around.
That's all.
[PETER BAKER.]
: We searched the back area first.
Hiding things on farmland, very difficult to find.
If they're hidden properly.
When we were conducting the search of the barn, initially I wasn't sure we'd find any guns there.
You're going in, even with two officers, you're tense, but that keeps you focused.
We found all of the guns, the guns he reported stolen, the guns stolen from the Pangburn residence, some AK-47s.
Jackpot! [PETER BAKER.]
: We found the wallet and the personal papers of Alfred Critchley Here's his wallet.
And a twenty-two-caliber handgun.
The twenty-two-calibre was the murder weapon that was used to kill Jasen Pangburn.
We found a book.
What the hell is the Orion Foundation? No idea.
[PETER BAKER.]
: "The Orion Foundation".
Their objective was to try and clean up the streets in Chatham, get rid of the drug dealers, and kill them.
In this book, there was a list of people and they were all assigned a rank.
Jason Cofell was their leader.
Stephen Hill was a follower.
I was pretty sure we'd get a confession from him.
How long were you in The Orion Foundation? About a year, I guess.
How did it all start? Cofell asked if I wanted to go up to his farm and shoot off a couple of rounds.
I said sure.
I got up there; there were a few other guys from school, the Reserves.
He got talking about Chatham, about all the drug dealers, about all the violence, about how maybe we could do better than the cops at cleaning it up.
And did you ever get around to doing any of that, uh, sticking up drug dealers? No.
Was Jasen Pangburn even involved - in The Orion Foundation? - No.
Then why kill him? I didn't know that was going to happen.
I swear! Cofell just asked me if I wanted to go on a mission.
What kind of mission? We drove over to Pangburn's place.
Cofell took out a gun, a nine-shot twenty-two.
He knocked on the door and, uh, the old man answered.
And that was it, he just came out, no questions asked? No.
He wanted us to leave.
But then Cofell showed him the gun.
A nine-shot revolver.
Pretty rare.
He offered to sell it.
We all knew that Pangburn liked shooting guns.
Jasen got excited when he saw the .
22.
He looked at me; he looked at the gun and said he wanted to test fire it.
It was a trap.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Jason Cofell was thinking to himself, "Good, Jasen Pangburn's taking me to a place where I can kill him.
" They went across the road, went down across the field.
They got down into the ravine where Jasen Pangburn does his target practice.
The .
22-caliber gun that Jason Cofell had was a nine-shot gun.
Jasen Pangburn fired the gun three times into a tree.
Your turn.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Stephen Hill also fired the gun three times.
Jason Cofell stood fired two rounds into the tree put his hand and the gun down by his side Hey, Cofell.
You still got a shot left.
Cofell? [PETER BAKER.]
: Jason Cofell fired right into the heart of Jasen Pangburn.
[JASEN.]
: Why'd you shoot me? Because you pissed me off.
[STEPHEN HILL.]
: He made me bury the body with leaves and then he said we had to go back to the house.
Why? The grandparents saw us.
[PETER BAKER.]
: Cofell told Stephen Hill, "We're going to go back and kill the grandparents.
And if you don't do it, I'm gonna kill you and I'm gonna kill your parents.
" So what happened next? He gave me a knife.
He said he would take the old man; I'd take the old lady.
So we went back to the house.
Cofell went to take the old man and I stayed with her.
And I stabbed her, like he said, but I didn't want to kill her! I tried not to go too deep.
When Cofell came back in the room and he saw that she was still alive, he stabbed her over and over and over and he wouldn't stop.
[PETER BAKER.]
: At that point, Mr.
Critchley came out of the bathroom and yelled at them and Jason Cofell ran over and stabbed him three times and he fell back into the bathroom, knocking out the cord on the clock.
Jason Cofell went upstairs, he got the guns, came down, stole Mr.
Critchley's wallet from his pocket, put them in the truck and drove away.
It was probably just a matter of coincidence that Constable Mark Gransden from the OPP was down the street.
He has just pulled off the road to do some notes up.
Jason Cofell told Stephen Hill, "If anybody saw us, we were going to have to go back and kill everybody.
" That was his mom.
She saw us; we're gonna have to take care of it.
Going back.
Shit! [PETER BAKER.]
: And it possibly could have happened that way had there not been a police officer there.
Jason Cofell never showed any emotion or any remorse at all.
Cofell went after Pangburn because he had this hate for him.
He shot Jasen Pangburn in the heart.
I have never seen anything so vicious as this guy's mind.
There were many, many lives that will never, ever be the same.
Jasen Pangburn wasn't a follower.
He was a good, quiet young man.
His grandparents were just enjoying their retirement.
They were nice, caring people.
Unfortunately, uh, the Critchleys were just there in the wrong place at the wrong time.

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