[music]
She was very beautiful, she had the biggest brownest eyes and her heart was so good.
This was the first newspaper article. This was the crucifix from her casket.
You know, handmade cedar chest in her Houston, Texas Hall. This was her little gauky state.
“While a colon keeps her memories of her daughter Mitzi under lock and key.”
I'm just an extremely protective of the contents. Well, you can see how the papers are. The first time I've gone through them in ten years. On most days, even opening the chest is just too painful. When Mitzi was murdered, I just died.
Today, Paula has to look for one favorite photograph. I'm going to wear her picture right here on my chest. That's your wear to one remarkable meeting. The last pictures he saw of her was her laying on the floor with 28 stab wounds. That's the reason we're here.
He just a few days, Paula Curland will finally meet the man who murdered her daughter, face to face.
I can't bring Mitzi back, but I can make her memory a lot more pleasant than it is now. Will this do that? That's what I'm working for.
“What could he possibly say to you that would make you feel any better?”
I don't think that he can say anything that would make me feel better. But I can say some things that will make me feel better. Things she's been waiting to say. Ever since that terrible night in 1986, the night of Mitzi's 21st birthday. Mitzi came home late to the house she shared in Austin, Texas with her roommate, Kelly Farquar.
These girls were asleep in their beds, minding their own business. Mitzi had been out celebrating her birthday. Carla Connelly was an Austin prosecutor. She says the horror began when an intruder broke in. He jumped the fence of Mitzi and Kelly's home, went into the house through a back door.
When the girl started screaming, the intruder started stabbing. First Kelly. He slid her throat, ear to ear, almost a capitating her. He killed Kelly, then Mitzi. Mitzi was huddled in the corner of a closet with her body covered in stab wounds.
Mitzi was stabbed 28 times. She died a horrible death of frightening death.
“Can you imagine that you're last thought in this world being of somebody stabbing you?”
With the girl's dead, the killer might have gotten away. But that night, there was someone else in the house. Okay, you can throw them back when we get to the water. These days, Ron Ross lives with his wife and two kids, just a few miles from the murder scene. But back in 1986, Ron was Mitzi's new boyfriend.
She was a beautiful woman, she always had a smile on her face.
She had been celebrating her birthday and had fallen asleep at her house. And she came back screaming my name into the room and it was pitch black. And I reached up to turn on the light. Ron bolted out of bed and fought for his life. My wife was hand-to-hand face to face the whole time.
Ron was stabbed 19 times before the killer turned and ran. Ron made it outside and collapsed, a neighbor called the police. The crime here was brutal and frightening. There was no motive and no suspect. The police, though, did have one significant lead.
As he fought for his life, Ron Ross had managed to turn the murderers' own knife against him, cutting it in the arm. Now, whoever he was, wherever he was, the cops knew the killer would be hurt and looking for help. He drips blood onto the carpet, out the walkway, and all the way out the backyard, onto the fence, and onto the leaves.
Police followed that blood trail. Canvas the neighborhood and found two witnesses who said a friend of theirs had just come by, asking for bandages. I got a call from Ron. He's father.
They all said, "Baby, that got the bastard." And I said, "You're kidding." He said, "Nope." And he said, "His name is John Wayne Nobles." Johnathan Wayne Nobles, a 25-year-old ex-con with a history of petty crime and mental illness.
He'd been abusing drugs since he was 10 years old. Detective Dusty Hescue made the arrest.
Not he doubted my mind, he had to kill somebody else if we had an accounting.
He was there when Nobles gave this chilling confession. Where's he screaming? I believe so. Did you start to stab her?
“Did you feel the naff going into her body?”
He just never showed any remorse.
I mean, it was kind of like he smiled all the way through the whole time. In his confession, Nobles never said why he committed the crimes. Later, he blamed the drugs. He had a terrible, terrible past. Mental illness.
Not any of us had a wonderful, perfect past. And his abusive childhood. Then we didn't kill someone he did. Nobles offered the same reasons as his trial a year later, but the jury didn't buy it. The trial lasted more than a month.
And when it was over, it took the jury of eight women and four men less than three hours to reach its decision.
“The verdict guilty, the sentence, death.”
Then, before he was led away to death row, Jonathan Nobles did something nobody expected. He spoke to Paula Curlin. His exact words to me were, "I'm really very sorry. And if I could give my life right now to bring hers back, I would." And I said, "That just isn't enough."
More than a decade later, it still isn't enough. But now, Paula says, "There is one thing that might finally bring her a piece of mind." I sat in a courtroom with him for 13 months before he went to death row. And I've been trying to see him ever since.
That's right, amazing as it sounds ever since the trial.
Paula Curlin has wanted to go to death row. He sent it to prison, but so are we. Look her daughter's killer in the eye. We've been imprisoned for 12 years, and it's time for us to be free. And tell him exactly what he's done to her.
It's going to help me close a chapter and hopefully get on with my life. But, year after year, Nobles refused to meet with Paula until now, 12 years since the murders, less than two weeks before his execution. Jonathan Nobles is finally ready to talk. The second World War is the largest event in human history.
A 20-part series with Tom Hanks, no part of the globe was untouched, no life unchanged. The experience, the ultimate account of World War II, every single person had a story. These are the stories that make us who we are. Listen to World War II with Tom Hanks on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. In loving memory, meets the end now.
On the 12th anniversary of her daughter's murder. We should be celebrating your 33rd birthday instead of mourning the anniversary of your death. Paula Curlin is placing a memorial notice in the newspaper. None of us could ever express how much we still love and miss you. Just like she does every year.
But this year will be different for us. And this year will be different. Soon, Paula will finally meet Jonathan Wayne Nobles, the man who murdered her daughter. And two weeks after that, he'll be executed.
“Why put yourself through this if he's going to die anyway?”
Because there are some things that I want him to take with him. That only I can give him. She's been trying to do that for more than a decade.
But Paula's request to meet Nobles in prison were always denied.
It's been 12 years in its time. Until she discovered a little known state program with a very long name, victim offender Mediation Dialogue. Our purpose. The people who run it shot these videos of the program at work. It's a hard journey.
Victims who want to get on with their lives. God knows that felt anger like I've never felt in my life. Meeting the criminals who devastated their lives. It's really important to me that I know about the last of the last things he said.
Why would anyone want to do this?
Well, each meeting happens only if both sides agree to it.
“And then only after months of preparation with a trained mediator.”
David Durflur, a victim's services. Like psychologists, David Durflur. This is not fun and games. I mean, this is real life. It's the opportunity to see people at their very worst and at their very best.
Durflur started the program.
He's the one who finally convinced Nobles to meet with Paula.
Hey, Jonathan. Today, Jonathan Nobles, now 37, might not look or sound much like a killer. I have to be a accountant when myself saying Jonathan, your guilty. Look, Jonathan, you did this. Jonathan, you were wrong. Jonathan, it was a monster's act. Like many convicted murderers, he says he's found religion in prison.
And now, before he dies, he says he wants to do a little good by bringing Paula some peace. That's one of those moral and spiritual obligations. He's been working with David Durflur for months. You know, go to the heart, not facing that pain as far worse than anything else. Durflur is helping Nobles figure out what to say when he has to look Paula in the eye.
I made a mistake. I can't go back and change the past. A mistake. I mean, I make a mistake by leaving something at home. I mean, that mistake by allowing myself to get so far out of control.
It murder became possible.
“If the prisoner isn't remorseful, isn't there a chance that this process could actually do more harm to the victims?”
Absolutely, but the fact is that one of the requirements for them to participate in this process is to admit guilt and take responsibility. But when the time comes, Will Nobles really take responsibility. Will he show remorse, or will he try to destroy Paula Curland again? He was manipulative then, and I think he's manipulative today. Carla Connelly, the prosecutor who put him behind bars, has her doubts about his sincerity.
Perhaps the man is being sincere, perhaps I'm just being cynical, but I question his motives. And she's not the only one. I don't want to get to know him in any way. I don't see why anybody would. I wouldn't even give him the satisfaction letting not think of anything.
Your family doesn't necessarily think this is a good idea. I think I'm crazy. Thought she was crazy. I told her I thought she was crazy. She told me I was stupid and crazy.
Carlos' own family has never understood why she ever wanted to meet Nobles.
He's not honest. Killers can't be honest. Her sister Brenda. He didn't just kill Mitsey, he killed everybody that we loved, you know? Her son, Joe, I've never seen him in person. Why not hell when I want to see him in person?
Can you understand that probably most people wouldn't want to sit in the same room with someone who killed their child? Not everyone feels the need to do what I'm doing. But I think everyone should at least be open to it. By all accounts, this man is a manipulative guy. Exactly.
Can use words and say things and try and convince people of things that may or may not be true. That's all you prepared for this guy. He can say anything you want us to say. It's not going to change what I feel.
“At least that's what she thought until...”
Nobles has been on Texas Death Row for the past 12 years. Nobles says something in a local TV interview that changes everything and could jeopardize the meeting. The Oregon donation, that's about love and respect. It's not about anything for a Jonathan. Nobles says he wants to become the first Death Row in Made in Texas history to donate his organs.
I think it's my responsibility to do what I can to today that which I believe is God's will. But lethal injection leaves organs unusable. Nobles would need surgery in a hospital before his execution. We don't let Death Row inmates out. End of story.
Prison officials won't let it happen. But nobles wants to challenge that in court.
If there's anything of him walking around on the face of this earth, this will never be closed for me.
Paula thinks it's just a stunt to get a stay of execution. Now she's furious. He can sit there and tell me how remorseful he is till hell freezes over. This proves to me that he isn't remorseful. And he's not making us his victims any longer.
So, here's the problem. Before nobles and Paula can actually sit down together, the mediator David Dürfler must give his okay. If he thinks this meeting might just dissolve into a shouting match, he'll call the whole thing off. And right now, he's worried. My baby is gone.
And he sits there and talks about wanting to do good.
I feel an awesome responsibility at the times because ultimately someone has ...
The Oregon donation is not an issue.
“I think that it's a wonderful, beautiful thing, just not death row in me.”
Okay, but that makes it an issue. Dürfler doesn't expect Paula to ever agree with nobles, just to agree to disagree. So, the meeting can happen. This is non-negotiable. He meets with nobles again, and asks him to write a letter,
laying out his case for Oregon donation. Maybe it will convince Paula. I feel very uncomfortable asking for belief or trust from you. But please reserve any judgments as to my motivation until I can stand before you face to face. And you're able to test these things for yourself.
I mean, it's absolutely unfathomable to me that he could have so much gall.
And he says, "I'm sorry for what I've done."
And I just want to bring some brightness in this life. Both Paula is angry, but Dürfler decides she's not too angry. The past cannot be changed. What do you do now? The meeting will go ahead as planned. The mediation will take place back in the visitation area.
This is it, huh? I don't want to go in there and support you in the right way than carry on like an idiot.
“You're the most human or key people in the world.”
But I mean, who knows how it's really going to go? Buttercrusty. Are we ready? Once I get started talking, I'm sure that a lot of things that I've suppressed for a lot of years will come out.
It's bottled in there, and I'm ready to let the pork off. [Music] It's official name is Ellis Unit 1. The price is horrible. I mean, it ain't worse than that.
But here in Texas, it's better known as death row. The end of the line for more than 400 hardened violent criminals. It isn't going to be easy. It's the last place in the world you'd want to visit. I'm nervous.
“Which makes what is about to happen this day.”
But I'll be okay. Even more amazing. Jonathan is going to see what he took. Thanks. He's going to see Missy.
Just say a prayer, okay? He's going to see that she was real. All I can do is buy that God just lifts me and takes me in there and holds me while I'm there. Paula Curland has waited 12 years to come to death row to confront Jonathan Noble's, her daughter's killer.
I'm not going in there for him to say I'm sorry. "I'm sorry, but you're humming, sorry, won't pet it." Paul as family didn't want to be here, so she's brought a few close friends for support. David Durford, the mediator, is a long
to guide the conversation if he has to. - I imagine it's going to be extremely emotional. - Before they begin, you live in the hands of the Lord. - Yes. - And, first word is, don't be afraid. - I'm not. - Paul gets a blessing
from the prison priest. - I don't have the grace that they may be reconcilable with one another. - And then, it's finally time to meet her daughter's killer face to face. - I'm willing to listen to what he has to say. But I don't have to believe in anything he says.
(crying) - It's pretty hard, isn't it?
- It's starting to never have a ton of my life.
- Ready? - Dying is easier than this. - This is Nity. - She was a real person, Jonathan. She was real. And she was nothing to you.
But she was my whole life. She was my baby. And you can't imagine what you've done. You just don't know how much pain you've caused. There's just no way that you could possibly know what pain you've caused
with devastation. - When you say that I cannot understand the pain that I brought. No, I can't.
- I wouldn't even begin to suggest that I could.
- Well, thank you for that. - And that's why I'm here. - Do you realize you stabbed my daughter 28 times?
“- No, ma'am, I didn't. I remember the number.”
- It was 28 times. - When you murdered me, it's a you murdered me. My kids lost their mother. Can you give that back to me? Can you give that back to my kids?
- Oh, ma'am. - I don't know what to do with you, Jonathan. I just don't know what to do with you. It's ripping me apart. It's just absolutely eating me alive.
I don't know what to do with you. - It's just too much, too much pain, too many conflicting emotions. - Excuse me, John. - As the sun sets over the barbed wire outside, Paula has to take a break, catch her breath,
and try to make sense of it all. - Ma'am. - What there is so much more to say? - Yeah, honey, I'm okay. I'm okay, it's just, she's just taking a break.
- I'm just taking a breather.
“- They returned to the meat, and find there is one thing”
they can agree on. - I was a beast. - I agree. - You scared a lot of people. - Yes, I do.
- Down the hall, Paula's friends wait and worry. - Ronnie's here. And he's really working very hard at this, too. - One of those friends is Ron Ross, Mitzi's former boyfriend, the victim who survived.
- This is bringing up a lot of very painful things for him. - Ron's been offered the chance to meet with Nobles, too. - I just didn't feel like I could be in the same room, and he can duck myself when a sane man or something. - But Ron doesn't even want to look at him.
Back in the meeting, Paula and Nobles talk for hours with no end in sight about everything. - I don't want you to die. - From the upcoming execution. - Just to die, I don't want that for anyone.
- To Mitzi's memory.
“- It's not very satisfying going to a simulation.”
And saying I love you, Mitzi, to a piece of bronze.
- To the one critical issue that might still mean a stay of execution
for Jonathan Nobles, organ donation. - You know that I started this organ donation issue a long time ago. Can I ask your permission for something? - If I can. - If I do this, can I publicly stay,
that I'm doing this in memory of my victims? - I'm going to have to give that some thought. - Nobles tells Paula the story of his life of a right kid gone terribly bad. Growing up, his high school threw him out.
The Navy kicked him out. And his own mother tossed him out when he was 17. - The last night I used was the night of the murders. - It was all he says because of drugs. - I started the 12-step program when I was in the county jail.
- Then as three hours turned to four and then to five. - I feel I've grown about 15 feet to death. - Something extraordinary begins to happen. - Are you okay? - No.
- Me too. - Paula's anger is slowly giving way to not sympathy exact, but understanding. - I feel compassion for you Jonathan. - I don't know that I deserve it.
- No, you don't, but you have it. - Thank you. - You have anything else you want to say? - Not this moment. - Yeah, me too.
- They take another break. - Let me go tell them I'm okay. I know they're worried. - So Paula can reassure Ron. It's all going okay.
- I'm proud of you. - And I'm proud of you too. I know how hard this is for you. But I think it's going to be okay, Ron. - And then it's time to go back in.
One last time.
David Dorfler, the mediator, speaks first.
- If I can be so so bold to presume to use this time for your closing statements to one another. - You first. - Sorry, it's not enough. I brutally murdered your daughter.
I brutally murdered her friend. - Mm-hmm. - I brought absolute horror into your life. - Mm-hmm. - I don't know what else to say other than I'm sorry,
and sorry seems so cheap. - So so very cheap. I have Paula, try to change my way of thinking, my way of life, my way of living. And that's not enough either.
Nothing will ever be enough, but I am sorry. Honestly, I'm sorry. - It's the second time Jonathan Nobles has apologized to Paula Curland.
The first was at his trial more than a decade ago.
That time she told him it wasn't enough.
This time, it still isn't.
- I wish I could just say, it's okay, but it isn't okay.
“- But Paula says she does now believe Nobles”
is genuinely remorseful, and she is genuinely moved. - The best I can give you is my forgiveness.
I can never forgive what you did,
but the God that I believe in demands that I have to forgive you as a person. - I respect that, thank you. - Thank you for your sake, Jonathan. - Thank you.
- You're welcome, thank you. - And with that, the meeting she fought for for 12 years is over. Now in just two weeks, Nobles is scheduled to die.
- These people are going to take this arm, and they're going to put a needle in it, and they're going to inject me, and I'm dead. - And forgiveness or not, Paula still wants Nobles to pay with his life
for killing her daughter. - I want to be the last person he sees. - Face to face with her daughter's killer. The program that brought Paula Kirlen into a Texas prison to confront Jonathan Wayne Nobles
is unique.
“These days many states arrange for the victims of crime”
to meet with their offenders,
but it's almost always for lesser offenses,
only Texas includes inmates on death row. Now even though she offered him a measure of forgiveness, Paula still wants to witness Jonathan Nobles' execution for the death of her daughter. That part of their story a bit later on,
but first Troy Roberts reports on how such emotionally charged confrontations are looked upon in another state, and on some victims who are in no mood for forgiveness. - You grab the broader end here. - He's trying to start this morning.
We picked up suspectly Roy David Brooks. - 14 years after Jimmy Lillin's wife was murdered. - That son of a bitch didn't have to kill her. - Next case is number 41. - Her killer.
- Roy Brooks. - Is being considered for parole. - He should never be there. - Okay. We're ready for all.
- In South Carolina, unlike in Texas, we're a Policurlin lives. There are no mediation hearings.
“- No efforts to bring the criminal and the victim's families together.”
And that's exactly how Jimmy Lillin likes it. - I don't even have to tell him how I feel. If it would make him feel any worse, I would. But I'm not going to go looking for the chance to tell him, you know, God he's got to know.
I mean he's got to know. - Jimmy Lillin runs a commercial dock in McCloneville, a small fishing village on the South Carolina coast. - Roy Brooks came here intending to rob this post office. - Jimmy's wife Evelyn worked at the town's post office.
- He just hung out right here. She came through that door. And when she did, that's when he grabbed him. - Roy Brooks was her last customer of the day. - When I couldn't get an answer on the phone,
and knew something was wrong. And then when I couldn't get an answer when I drove up here, I mean, I was shaken. Inside the post office, Jimmy found his wife's body.
- See that? - She had been beaten. - That's where she was hanging. - Then strangled with a canvas strap. - And I took my pocket knife and cut the strap.
- And she was dead when you found her. - There is a picture here. - It's a great picture. - Channel would have been, too. - Do you have any memories of your mom?
- Uh, vaguely. - vaguely. - Chandler Leland, a college freshman, was just four years old when his mother was murdered. - He was a good up without a mother.
- For, you know. - So, I guess, whatever, that's like, I guess I missed that. - You don't know what to compare it to, there. - He's very bitter toward the fellow who did it. I mean, he hates me, which I hate him too.
Well, I hate, yeah, I do. I hate him. - You don't have to be at this here. - No, no. - Why are you going?
- Um, let me just never cross my mind, huh?
- I'll get you there and back. - Number 16. - The next day in Colombia. - Timothy Garfield. - Jimmy and Chandler, are there.
- Ready to be allowed by him, says. - The parole board. - Yeah, good luck. - Has a full docked of cases to review. - Next case is number 41.
Roy Brooks. - We have opposition. - Jimmy Leland, the victim's husband. - Roy Brooks is hearing as among 60 cases that will be heard today before the state parole board.
He'll speak to the sixth member panel first. Then the Leland family will have their turn. - In South Carolina, in contrast to Texas, official policy. - Roy, you make the role.
- Always keeps perpetrators and victims far apart. - You do not see or hear the inmate, and the inmate does not see or hear you.
- The parole hearings are conducted by closed circuit television.
- I've earned free degrees since I've been locked up in this. - The board doesn't allow a direct facelift. - I would like you to understand it until this happened for 37 years. I lived a pretty exemplary life. - During Brooks' presentation, Jimmy, Chandler,
and their relatives are kept in a waiting room. - You remember when he was on the witness stand,
he never said he was sorry.
- Where the discussion turns to questions of fairness and forgiveness. - We thank you all for coming in. - You've definitely got to come in and have a seat, please. - When the time comes to address the board.
- Back and make a brief statement, please. - Right here. - Jimmy Leeland speaks for the family. - Just for the record, because we'll be back again, I'm sure, but I hope he's comfortable where he is,
because we'd like to see him stay for a long, long time. He took a wonderful person away. - Thank you. - The panel quickly reaches a decision. - Roy Brooks, it's a rejected number one, two and three.
“- Did you have to think long and hard about it?”
- No, but God, he is, and says, "The Son of Us was for life, a Roy Brooks took a line." - I was not bothered to do this, but... - Since they couldn't watch Brooks's testimony, the family wanted to see our video tape of the hearing.
- Hell, he didn't apologize to anything.
- He never said he was sorry.
- Never told. - He never said he was sorry. Did anybody hear him say he was sorry? - He's not remorseful, and that's gut to be the first day. - Remorse.
- I am sorry. - I honestly am sorry. - Well, how do you hurt Jonathan? - In Texas, remorse made forgiveness easier to offer. - Can you find it in your heart for giving up Brooks?
- Not at all. - I really don't see how I can forgive him. I mean, he had to be there. - But in South Carolina, you love going in the creek. - In this case, forgiveness is all but impossible now.
- As long as life lasted, breath in me. - You won't get it. I mean, I got anything to say about it. [music] - Today, I'm going to go witness an execution.
I'm going to go watch a man die. [music] The closer it comes, the more entamed one's mortality, you become, you know, and it's just not a good thing. - I'm going to be very sad, I am very sad.
- It's been 12 years since her daughter, Mitzi, was brutally murdered. - Our father was murdered. - And two weeks since she confronted the man who killed her and told him he was forgiven.
- He's probably having his last lunch about now. - Now in just a few hours. - It's what five hours now. - Jonathan Nobles will receive the ultimate punishment. - Five hours and ten minutes.
- Carlin. - Composure. - We'll be there to watch.
“- The only way that I'm not going to die”
is if Governor George goes to you and your community is my sentence. - And even Nobles knows, a last minute part isn't likely. - These people are going to take this arm and they're going to put a needle in it. And they're going to inject me and I'm dead. - Yesterday, the court made a final decision on Nobles' request
to donate his organs. - Denied. - I feel sadness. I'm going to grave for Jonathan. - It's a far cry from the way she felt just two weeks ago.
- He's going to die.
- Here's what she had to say back then.
- And I feel no sympathy for him. - But since they're meeting, everything has changed. - It's just terribly confusing right now. - Well, almost everything. - But it doesn't change my views on the death penalty.
- Paul still wants Nobles to pay for the murder of her daughter. - I can't even thank him. - He's getting closer and closer and closer. - Nobles was convicted of stabbing two Austin women to death. - Outside the prison, Texas Rangers block off the street
to keep death penalty protesters at a distance. - Don't if a Nobles has been fasting all day.
“- At a few minutes to six, would you see everything?”
- Yeah. - Paul and the other witnesses are led into the prison. - We look at his face, we look at the surroundings, we hold someone's hand, do you have any idea what you're going to do? - Probably all of the above.
- Outside guards, walk nobles from his cell to the execution chamber. - He's been basically in control of my life for 12 years, and today I'll be getting my life back. - It's now one minute until six o'clock. The hour, Paul a colon has been waiting for with mixed emotions
for all these many years. If everything goes according to schedule, at six o'clock, Jonathan Wayne Nobles will be given the three injections that when administered together, make up the lethal injection. The first one will put him to sleep.
The second will stop his breathing. The third one will stop his heart. - It was a very difficult thing to witness. - By 625, it's all over. Afterwards, Nobles' body is taken to a church down the street.
For a memorial service led by a bishop, who met with his own death row.
- And the name of the father and of the son and of the Holy Spirit.
- When you went into the room, he was already on the gurney. - Yes. - Strap him. - Yeah. - Lord accept this sacrifice.
We offered for our brother, Jonathan. - He talked to you directly. - Mm-hmm. - He said, "Paul, I love you, and I'm sorry." - And then, just before he died, Nobles began singing,
singing silent night.
- He just sang until he stopped singing.
- And he stopped singing. - What was going through your mind when you watched him, singing and then stopped and then died? - Well, it just kind of took my breath away. It was, um...
- Bottom line. Did the punishment fit the crime? - Yes. - Yes. - This was the way it had to be done.
- This is the way it had to be done.
- And now, for Paul, it's time to start working on the toughest part of all, getting on with her life. - I feel like I just feel like something has just left my body. - But first, - David came up to me and he said,
Jonathan has left something for you.
“- I think that she would have been very pleased with the way everything went,”
and I think she would have been proud of me. - For Paul Akurlin, the last few weeks have been an emotional roller coaster, from grief to anger and now remarkably to peace. - Jonathan isn't going to be a weight and a focal point in my life anymore. - With Noble's dad, he can no longer haunt her.
- David came up to me and he said, Jonathan has left something for you. - Or can he? - I was really kind of shocked. - Just one day after his execution,
Jonathan Noble gives Paul a one more shock. - He's left her a gift, a medal he wore around his neck.
“- I think it was a good thing to leave behind.”
- But is this a genuine sign of remorse, or is Noble's manipulating Paula from beyond the grave? - To give it to someone, is to give it with love. - The medal goes in the Cedar Chest, with Missy's Momentos, the photos and the memories.
- A good end to a terrible tragedy. - It's what Paul says she wants to do. - And I'll be able to let it go. I'll be able to let Missy rest, which is going to be nice for my family.
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the controversial closed society in New Zealand. - Those eight charges of sexually offending children. - Things have occurred. They do not define who we are.
“- Can you just accept the fact that I love my life?”
- I need to destroy the devotion, obedience, or betrayal. Now screaming on paramount plus.


