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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,005 --> 00:00:08,299 [phone ringing] 2 00:00:09,342 --> 00:00:10,844 [eerie music playing] 3 00:00:10,927 --> 00:00:13,388 [phone continues ringing] 4 00:00:13,471 --> 00:00:15,140 [line crackling] 5 00:00:15,223 --> 00:00:16,433 [man on phone] Hello? 6 00:00:16,516 --> 00:00:18,351 [man 2] Hi, is this Detective… [beep] 7 00:00:18,435 --> 00:00:19,728 -[crackling] -[detective] It is. 8 00:00:20,854 --> 00:00:23,231 Hi, my name's Christian Hansen. I'm a journalist, 9 00:00:23,314 --> 00:00:27,026 and I'm working on a story that I think you could help me with. 10 00:00:27,527 --> 00:00:28,403 [detective] Yeah. 11 00:00:30,238 --> 00:00:33,366 [Christian] I wanted to talk to you about your time as an investigator 12 00:00:33,450 --> 00:00:35,368 on the Octopus Murders. 13 00:00:37,996 --> 00:00:41,291 [detective] Um, it's a tough case to talk about. 14 00:00:41,875 --> 00:00:42,917 Why is that? 15 00:00:43,752 --> 00:00:46,379 [detective] Listen. I don't know who you are. 16 00:00:46,463 --> 00:00:47,297 [Christian] Yeah. 17 00:00:47,380 --> 00:00:50,633 [detective] I don't know what you think you'll do, but you're not gonna do it. 18 00:00:52,135 --> 00:00:55,930 You think… you think Danny committed suicide? 19 00:00:56,014 --> 00:00:58,141 [Christian] That's what I'm trying to find out. 20 00:00:59,017 --> 00:01:00,852 [detective] He didn't commit suicide. 21 00:01:02,937 --> 00:01:07,567 And if you think for a minute that you're gonna go expose somebody, 22 00:01:08,902 --> 00:01:11,446 you're gonna get yourself killed. 23 00:01:14,449 --> 00:01:17,035 [unsettling music playing] 24 00:01:27,921 --> 00:01:29,130 [man] Um, okay. 25 00:01:29,214 --> 00:01:30,632 So… 26 00:01:31,591 --> 00:01:33,551 Uh, what is all this stuff? 27 00:01:35,470 --> 00:01:37,430 This is, um… 28 00:01:37,514 --> 00:01:39,599 This is research files. [chuckles] 29 00:01:40,183 --> 00:01:42,352 -[Zachary] This is my friend Christian. -[chuckles] 30 00:01:43,061 --> 00:01:44,062 [Zachary] Ten years ago, 31 00:01:44,562 --> 00:01:47,190 Christian told me a story about this journalist 32 00:01:47,273 --> 00:01:50,944 who died under mysterious circumstances in the early '90s. 33 00:01:51,694 --> 00:01:53,113 [intriguing music playing] 34 00:01:54,322 --> 00:01:55,573 [reporter] In West Virginia, 35 00:01:55,657 --> 00:01:59,202 authorities are investigating the mysterious death of a journalist. 36 00:01:59,285 --> 00:02:01,371 [reporter 2] Forty-four-year-old Daniel Casolaro 37 00:02:01,454 --> 00:02:04,791 was found dead over the weekend in a motel in Martinsburg, West Virginia. 38 00:02:04,874 --> 00:02:07,836 I mean, people always ask me why. 39 00:02:08,336 --> 00:02:10,588 Why I'm working on this. 40 00:02:11,089 --> 00:02:12,465 [Zachary] What do you tell them? 41 00:02:13,174 --> 00:02:14,509 [Christian sighs] 42 00:02:14,592 --> 00:02:16,719 Investigative reporter Danny Casolaro… 43 00:02:16,803 --> 00:02:21,141 [reporter 3] …found in a bathtub Saturday, both his wrists slit. 44 00:02:21,224 --> 00:02:24,352 Some serious questions have been raised about how he died. 45 00:02:26,104 --> 00:02:27,605 [Christian] If he was murdered, 46 00:02:27,689 --> 00:02:28,898 it was for a reason. 47 00:02:28,982 --> 00:02:34,028 And that would be that his theory was correct. 48 00:02:35,113 --> 00:02:37,949 [reporter 4] Local authorities quickly ruled his death a suicide, 49 00:02:38,032 --> 00:02:41,703 but Casolaro's family and colleagues believe he may have been killed. 50 00:02:41,786 --> 00:02:43,997 [man] There is absolutely no way… 51 00:02:44,497 --> 00:02:48,042 no way in hell that Dan Casolaro would kill himself. 52 00:02:48,126 --> 00:02:50,920 He was very charged up about the story he was working on. 53 00:02:51,004 --> 00:02:52,046 [reporter] He was murdered? 54 00:02:52,130 --> 00:02:55,133 I absolutely believe he was clipped. There's no two ways about it. 55 00:02:55,633 --> 00:02:59,220 He told us over the last few months that the story he'd been working on, 56 00:02:59,304 --> 00:03:00,305 he'd been threatened. 57 00:03:00,388 --> 00:03:02,265 [Zachary] In the year before he died, 58 00:03:02,348 --> 00:03:05,310 Danny had stumbled upon a computer software scandal 59 00:03:05,393 --> 00:03:08,563 that led him to a series of high-profile crimes 60 00:03:09,230 --> 00:03:12,567 which he said would rewrite US history. 61 00:03:12,650 --> 00:03:14,652 [reporter 5] Casolaro had been working for a year 62 00:03:14,736 --> 00:03:16,613 on a book about an international scandal. 63 00:03:16,696 --> 00:03:18,197 [reporter 6] Journalist Danny Casolaro 64 00:03:18,281 --> 00:03:21,159 was onto the political conspiracy of the century. 65 00:03:21,659 --> 00:03:24,746 -[reporter 7] Questions about the CIA… -[reporter 8] High-ranking officials… 66 00:03:24,829 --> 00:03:27,123 [reporter 9] Money and arms, stolen computer software… 67 00:03:27,207 --> 00:03:30,043 [reporter 10] Incredible allegations of spying 68 00:03:30,126 --> 00:03:31,836 on a scale never before imagined. 69 00:03:31,920 --> 00:03:34,964 [reporter 11] He was about to break open a major story. 70 00:03:35,048 --> 00:03:39,177 [reporter 12] Working on a story he called bigger than anything he ever dreamed of. 71 00:03:39,260 --> 00:03:41,179 [Zachary] Danny called this conspiracy… 72 00:03:41,262 --> 00:03:43,973 -[reporter 13] The Octopus… -[reporter 14]The Octopus… 73 00:03:44,057 --> 00:03:46,059 [dramatic music playing] 74 00:03:47,018 --> 00:03:48,394 [Zachary] …The Octopus. 75 00:03:52,774 --> 00:03:55,276 [pensive piano music playing] 76 00:03:58,279 --> 00:04:01,032 [Zachary] Christian became obsessed with the mysteries of The Octopus, 77 00:04:01,115 --> 00:04:05,536 and over the next years, I watched as The Octopus consumed him. 78 00:04:05,620 --> 00:04:07,872 I'm… I'm writing his story. 79 00:04:07,956 --> 00:04:09,707 He just wanted to report on this one thing, 80 00:04:09,791 --> 00:04:11,751 but everything kept leading to everything else 81 00:04:11,834 --> 00:04:13,336 and connecting to everything else. 82 00:04:13,419 --> 00:04:14,629 And because of… 83 00:04:14,712 --> 00:04:18,007 [Zachary] He spent less time at his regular job as a photojournalist. 84 00:04:19,133 --> 00:04:21,386 Instead, he would stay up for days, 85 00:04:21,469 --> 00:04:24,806 sorting through stacks of news articles, court transcripts, 86 00:04:25,598 --> 00:04:27,642 and weird conspiracy literature. 87 00:04:29,644 --> 00:04:32,105 [Christian] In order to figure out what happened to Danny, 88 00:04:32,188 --> 00:04:34,440 I wanted to see what he was seeing. 89 00:04:34,524 --> 00:04:36,317 [line ringing] 90 00:04:36,401 --> 00:04:40,571 And then I realized I should just finish the book that Danny was writing. 91 00:04:42,156 --> 00:04:44,951 A lot of people that worked on it are dead. 92 00:04:46,202 --> 00:04:49,205 I'm not gonna turn and walk away now just because, you know, 93 00:04:49,289 --> 00:04:51,374 I'm scared, you know? 94 00:04:53,126 --> 00:04:55,128 [Zachary] It all sounded a little weird to me. 95 00:04:55,753 --> 00:04:57,588 I mean, was Christian, 96 00:04:58,381 --> 00:05:00,633 my friend Christian, this guy, 97 00:05:01,551 --> 00:05:05,722 really about to expose the most dangerous political conspiracy of the century? 98 00:05:07,348 --> 00:05:09,600 Or had he fallen into some kind of paranoid fantasy? 99 00:05:14,939 --> 00:05:19,694 So I went along with him as he tried to finish what Danny Casolaro started… 100 00:05:23,197 --> 00:05:25,533 and uncover the secrets of The Octopus. 101 00:05:28,119 --> 00:05:30,496 [woman] It's a dangerous game, and I want no part of it. 102 00:05:30,580 --> 00:05:33,249 -Stop contacting and trying to contact-- -[Christian] Understood. 103 00:05:33,833 --> 00:05:36,169 [man 1] You wanna be the next Danny Casolaro? 104 00:05:37,337 --> 00:05:40,423 [man 2] This is not your thing. You don't know this world. 105 00:05:40,506 --> 00:05:41,424 [line ringing] 106 00:05:41,507 --> 00:05:43,176 -[Zachary] Hey, Christian. -[Christian] Yo. 107 00:05:43,259 --> 00:05:44,344 [Zachary] What's the deal? 108 00:05:44,427 --> 00:05:47,013 [Christian] He said that I could come out to his property. 109 00:05:47,597 --> 00:05:50,641 The only thing that you're not gonna like is that I can't bring my phone, 110 00:05:50,725 --> 00:05:54,395 and I have to be blindfolded on the way out there. 111 00:06:04,447 --> 00:06:06,449 [intriguing music playing] 112 00:06:18,169 --> 00:06:23,049 [man] Well, it was a hot Saturday afternoon in Martinsburg. 113 00:06:23,549 --> 00:06:24,842 Mid to late summer. 114 00:06:25,468 --> 00:06:28,721 You know, typical summer day. 115 00:06:30,473 --> 00:06:32,975 Walking around, doing the usual things. 116 00:06:36,521 --> 00:06:39,065 Front desk called me on the walkie-talkie. 117 00:06:39,565 --> 00:06:41,025 They said, "We need you in 517." 118 00:06:42,235 --> 00:06:45,363 I said, "What do I need to bring? A toilet plunger or what?" 119 00:06:45,988 --> 00:06:47,490 They said, "Your courage." 120 00:06:52,829 --> 00:06:54,789 And that's when I walked in and… 121 00:06:56,916 --> 00:06:57,917 saw what I saw. 122 00:06:59,669 --> 00:07:01,546 It was just messy. 123 00:07:02,046 --> 00:07:06,676 For lack of better explanation, it was… messy. 124 00:07:07,260 --> 00:07:09,095 [Zachary] What was the mess? 125 00:07:09,595 --> 00:07:12,473 The bloody handprints all over the wall, 126 00:07:12,557 --> 00:07:16,144 and smeared on the wallpaper, and all over the countertop, and… 127 00:07:16,727 --> 00:07:18,771 Just blood everywhere. 128 00:07:19,605 --> 00:07:23,401 The housekeepers told me they didn't know if there was someone in that tub or not. 129 00:07:23,901 --> 00:07:27,655 I was just ever so slowly peeking around the edge 130 00:07:27,738 --> 00:07:30,825 just to see if there was a body in here. 131 00:07:30,908 --> 00:07:33,703 And I could see the tub was full of blood. 132 00:07:33,786 --> 00:07:37,498 And I was like, "Man, I don't wanna look around that corner." You know? 133 00:07:37,582 --> 00:07:40,918 There was just something spooky about it. 134 00:07:41,002 --> 00:07:45,882 So… I decided to peek through here, the hinge crack. 135 00:07:47,008 --> 00:07:51,179 And at that point, I said, "Th… there's someone in there." 136 00:07:54,390 --> 00:07:56,058 "I'm betting they're not alive." 137 00:07:57,560 --> 00:08:01,856 Something very wrong had taken place in here. 138 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:04,567 [chilling music playing] 139 00:08:15,620 --> 00:08:20,458 [Zachary] When did you first hear Danny talk about The Octopus? 140 00:08:20,958 --> 00:08:23,794 Oh, that I heard later, 141 00:08:23,878 --> 00:08:26,672 probably within six months before he died. 142 00:08:26,756 --> 00:08:29,217 But let's start a year before that. 143 00:08:30,259 --> 00:08:33,054 Danny was working with this company called Computer Age. 144 00:08:33,137 --> 00:08:34,972 ['80s pop music playing] 145 00:08:35,556 --> 00:08:37,141 [Tony] It was a newsletter 146 00:08:37,725 --> 00:08:40,811 with inside stories that are taking place 147 00:08:40,895 --> 00:08:42,480 in the computer business. 148 00:08:44,982 --> 00:08:47,985 Remember, computers were new then. 149 00:08:50,905 --> 00:08:52,907 It was a difficult thing to put out, 150 00:08:52,990 --> 00:08:56,619 and he did it with just a handful of people, he and two others. 151 00:09:00,831 --> 00:09:02,333 My name is Terry Miller. 152 00:09:02,416 --> 00:09:06,462 I was a consultant in computer contracts for 27 years 153 00:09:06,545 --> 00:09:08,422 in the Washington, D.C. area. 154 00:09:09,340 --> 00:09:11,592 I became well-known 155 00:09:11,676 --> 00:09:16,555 by writing a trade publication called Computer Age. 156 00:09:17,139 --> 00:09:19,100 And that's how I met Danny. 157 00:09:21,894 --> 00:09:24,438 I felt like it was my fault 158 00:09:24,522 --> 00:09:26,941 'cause I had sicced him on the INSLAW case. 159 00:09:27,024 --> 00:09:30,903 And I still feel… anguish that I did that, 160 00:09:31,612 --> 00:09:33,239 but it can't be helped now. 161 00:09:35,449 --> 00:09:36,909 [reporter] Tonight from CBS News, 162 00:09:36,993 --> 00:09:39,745 a complex and confusing still-developing case… 163 00:09:39,829 --> 00:09:42,832 It's the story of what happened to INSLAW. 164 00:09:42,915 --> 00:09:46,460 …that involves improper conduct by high-level Justice Department officials. 165 00:09:48,504 --> 00:09:51,632 I told him, here's a very suspicious case 166 00:09:51,716 --> 00:09:54,010 involving the Department of Justice. 167 00:09:54,093 --> 00:09:58,848 And he just found an astounding amount of stuff that nobody knew beforehand. 168 00:09:59,724 --> 00:10:05,313 It all started with the software and evolved to a much bigger story. 169 00:10:08,065 --> 00:10:10,693 [man] When I first started at the Department of Justice, 170 00:10:10,776 --> 00:10:12,445 there was no computer on my desk. 171 00:10:14,655 --> 00:10:17,074 The office was stuck in the last century. 172 00:10:17,658 --> 00:10:20,620 I can't tell you how many times 173 00:10:21,120 --> 00:10:23,289 a prosecutor would walk down the hall 174 00:10:23,372 --> 00:10:24,540 and, by accident, 175 00:10:24,624 --> 00:10:27,668 find out that there was another case pending against the same defendant, 176 00:10:27,752 --> 00:10:29,086 just by talking to a colleague. 177 00:10:29,920 --> 00:10:31,839 It was a pretty serious mess. 178 00:10:33,215 --> 00:10:35,343 So I decided, uh, 179 00:10:36,052 --> 00:10:38,012 naively, frankly, 180 00:10:38,095 --> 00:10:40,473 that what I really needed was a computer system. 181 00:10:42,683 --> 00:10:45,561 And so we hired one of the best. 182 00:10:45,645 --> 00:10:47,521 [reporter 2] These are the offices of INSLAW, 183 00:10:47,605 --> 00:10:49,398 a Washington, D.C. computer firm 184 00:10:49,482 --> 00:10:51,817 led by INSLAW founder Bill Hamilton, 185 00:10:51,901 --> 00:10:54,570 that makes software for law enforcement agencies. 186 00:10:55,571 --> 00:10:59,241 [Charles] Bill has what I like to think of as an uncommon mind. 187 00:11:00,451 --> 00:11:03,663 He can absorb an enormous amount of information. 188 00:11:03,746 --> 00:11:06,916 I mean, he became as expert in what was going on in the court 189 00:11:06,999 --> 00:11:08,417 as I was. 190 00:11:08,501 --> 00:11:13,047 Along with Bill Hamilton and his group, most importantly Joyce Deroy, 191 00:11:13,130 --> 00:11:17,259 we began to work on what they called a relational database. 192 00:11:17,843 --> 00:11:21,931 Working on that project was thrilling and exciting 193 00:11:22,014 --> 00:11:24,809 because nobody had really done this before. 194 00:11:24,892 --> 00:11:26,894 We worked day and night. 195 00:11:27,395 --> 00:11:31,565 Everybody did whatever needed to be done. It was a shoestring operation. 196 00:11:32,608 --> 00:11:35,820 Bill got pretty much obsessed with this whole project. 197 00:11:35,903 --> 00:11:40,658 It was his vision and his understanding of what software could do. 198 00:11:42,743 --> 00:11:44,829 And it was just groundbreaking. 199 00:11:47,748 --> 00:11:48,749 [Charles] PROMIS. 200 00:11:49,667 --> 00:11:51,669 ['80s synthesizer music playing] 201 00:11:54,964 --> 00:11:56,590 [presenter] New from INSLAW. 202 00:11:57,341 --> 00:12:01,303 PROMIS, a powerful new criminal case tracking system. 203 00:12:02,304 --> 00:12:06,308 Built to automate the tracking of cases, defendants, and charges 204 00:12:06,392 --> 00:12:08,227 in a prosecutor's office. 205 00:12:09,395 --> 00:12:12,398 This is the future of justice. 206 00:12:18,154 --> 00:12:21,115 [classical string music playing] 207 00:12:23,242 --> 00:12:29,290 [Charles] PROMIS was a remarkably big, effective, powerful piece of software 208 00:12:29,373 --> 00:12:34,253 in an era where there were not many big, powerful pieces of software. 209 00:12:36,130 --> 00:12:41,427 This software could find relationships of all different kinds between cases. 210 00:12:42,136 --> 00:12:44,805 It really was revolutionary. 211 00:12:45,848 --> 00:12:49,894 PROMIS impacted not just how we operated at the Justice Department, 212 00:12:49,977 --> 00:12:52,813 but it impacted how the police department operated, 213 00:12:52,897 --> 00:12:55,024 how the courts operated. 214 00:12:56,984 --> 00:12:58,986 Basically, anybody you want to trace, 215 00:12:59,069 --> 00:13:01,322 you can trace with the PROMIS system. 216 00:13:02,156 --> 00:13:05,159 We're talking about tracking on a nationwide basis. 217 00:13:05,743 --> 00:13:08,621 [rousing choral music playing] 218 00:13:21,967 --> 00:13:26,222 This was obviously a very important project for the Justice Department. 219 00:13:26,931 --> 00:13:29,725 PROMIS was gonna be the key administrative tool 220 00:13:29,809 --> 00:13:31,185 of all these offices. 221 00:13:33,521 --> 00:13:35,606 [Joyce] And then it disintegrated, 222 00:13:35,689 --> 00:13:38,484 uh… dramatically. 223 00:13:40,486 --> 00:13:43,030 [tense music playing] 224 00:13:44,740 --> 00:13:46,825 -[phone beeps] -[woman] INSLAW, good afternoon. 225 00:13:46,909 --> 00:13:50,120 [Charles] Everything I had heard was that the project was going fine, 226 00:13:50,204 --> 00:13:52,498 and all of a sudden, it wasn't going fine. 227 00:13:52,581 --> 00:13:54,667 Hamilton wasn't being paid. 228 00:13:55,209 --> 00:13:57,044 [man] At the beginning of the second year 229 00:13:57,127 --> 00:13:58,838 of the three-year contract, 230 00:13:58,921 --> 00:14:03,008 the Justice Department began to withhold payments from INSLAW. 231 00:14:03,092 --> 00:14:06,679 They withheld a couple of million dollars from INSLAW. 232 00:14:07,429 --> 00:14:10,307 Drove INSLAW into chapter 11 bankruptcy. 233 00:14:11,725 --> 00:14:15,062 The Department of Justice, they knew that this was a company 234 00:14:15,145 --> 00:14:18,232 that couldn't withstand having these payments withheld, 235 00:14:18,941 --> 00:14:23,320 payments that were required to keep Bill and his company alive. 236 00:14:25,030 --> 00:14:27,199 [Joyce] Bill was very upset. 237 00:14:28,409 --> 00:14:31,495 Consumed with nothing except this whole situation 238 00:14:31,579 --> 00:14:33,831 and concerned about losing the company. 239 00:14:36,876 --> 00:14:40,087 That was about the same time that the guy called and threatened Bill. 240 00:14:41,213 --> 00:14:44,884 [reporter 3] Hamilton alleges he received a phone call in April 1983 241 00:14:44,967 --> 00:14:48,304 from the chairman of a company with connections to the Justice Department. 242 00:14:48,387 --> 00:14:50,431 The company, Virginia-based Hadron. 243 00:14:51,056 --> 00:14:54,935 The chairman said to me, "We wanna buy your company." 244 00:14:55,019 --> 00:14:57,646 When Bill said he wasn't interested, this guy said to him, 245 00:14:57,730 --> 00:15:00,065 as a mobster might say to somebody… 246 00:15:00,149 --> 00:15:02,526 He said, "We have ways of making you sell." 247 00:15:03,027 --> 00:15:05,112 "We have ways of making you sell." 248 00:15:05,863 --> 00:15:09,366 Well, that's one of the hints that something is wrong here. 249 00:15:13,996 --> 00:15:15,998 [Zachary] Do you remember where you were at 250 00:15:16,081 --> 00:15:18,459 when you decided to reach out to Bill Hamilton? 251 00:15:19,168 --> 00:15:20,044 Yeah. 252 00:15:20,127 --> 00:15:22,671 I was researching the INSLAW case for about a year. 253 00:15:23,672 --> 00:15:26,967 I basically got to a point where there was nothing left to read. 254 00:15:28,385 --> 00:15:31,347 The next step was to call Bill Hamilton. 255 00:15:32,514 --> 00:15:38,437 But I was pretty hesitant to, like, actually begin engaging with this thing. 256 00:15:41,023 --> 00:15:43,150 [line ringing] 257 00:15:43,233 --> 00:15:44,234 [on phone] Bill Hamilton. 258 00:15:44,318 --> 00:15:45,694 [Christian] And then I called Bill, 259 00:15:45,778 --> 00:15:49,657 and, you know, I was expecting to talk about the past, 260 00:15:49,740 --> 00:15:53,994 but he's talking about all of this stuff that had never been published. 261 00:15:54,828 --> 00:15:57,957 He started sending me thousands of emails. 262 00:15:58,040 --> 00:16:00,167 He's giving me leads. 263 00:16:00,250 --> 00:16:04,088 He's giving me documents to corroborate these things. 264 00:16:04,171 --> 00:16:06,924 Before I could wrap my mind around the first thing he sent me, 265 00:16:07,007 --> 00:16:09,760 he'd send me something else, and something else, and something else. 266 00:16:09,843 --> 00:16:11,762 It was an unbelievable time in my life. 267 00:16:11,845 --> 00:16:17,142 I was fully dedicated to this story, and I had this source who was too. 268 00:16:17,226 --> 00:16:19,144 [intriguing music playing] 269 00:16:19,728 --> 00:16:21,814 [Christian] Pretty early on in my talks with Bill, 270 00:16:21,897 --> 00:16:26,360 he points out that there's an archive at a university in Missouri 271 00:16:26,443 --> 00:16:31,949 where all or many of Danny's notes are stashed. 272 00:16:32,032 --> 00:16:33,909 -[camera clicking] -So I went there 273 00:16:33,992 --> 00:16:36,245 and copied all of it. 274 00:16:37,037 --> 00:16:38,288 It took five days. 275 00:16:38,372 --> 00:16:39,998 [camera clicking] 276 00:16:40,082 --> 00:16:42,001 [Christian] Okay, so these are… 277 00:16:42,793 --> 00:16:46,630 these are some of Danny's handwritten notes. 278 00:16:46,714 --> 00:16:48,298 It's a mess of scribbles, 279 00:16:48,382 --> 00:16:53,012 but I've learned to really be able to read his handwriting. 280 00:16:54,012 --> 00:16:58,434 Phone numbers, arrows, names, corporations. 281 00:16:58,517 --> 00:17:04,148 The archive was thousands of pages of, um, research materials. 282 00:17:04,231 --> 00:17:09,194 I realized it was basically a blueprint of the book that he was writing. 283 00:17:09,278 --> 00:17:14,491 And it was about a series of interrelated international crimes, 284 00:17:15,409 --> 00:17:17,911 starting with the INSLAW case. 285 00:17:17,995 --> 00:17:20,080 [suspenseful music playing] 286 00:17:23,250 --> 00:17:27,504 [Charles] Well, Bill is, of course, a person of the highest integrity, 287 00:17:28,005 --> 00:17:33,719 and so he has been able to find supporters who are also people of integrity. 288 00:17:34,678 --> 00:17:36,430 People like Elliot Richardson, 289 00:17:36,513 --> 00:17:38,599 whom I worked for at the Justice Department, 290 00:17:38,682 --> 00:17:42,061 became very interested in helping Bill solve this. 291 00:17:42,936 --> 00:17:44,772 [interviewer] How high up could it possibly go? 292 00:17:44,855 --> 00:17:46,231 Let me put it this way. 293 00:17:46,315 --> 00:17:49,651 If what the various informants say is true, 294 00:17:49,735 --> 00:17:52,112 it's much dirtier than Watergate. 295 00:17:52,696 --> 00:17:55,032 [reporter 4] And Elliot Richardson knows all about Watergate. 296 00:17:55,115 --> 00:17:56,408 He resigned as Attorney General, 297 00:17:56,492 --> 00:17:59,328 rather than fire the Watergate special prosecutor. 298 00:17:59,411 --> 00:18:03,832 [reporter 5] Elliot Richardson refused, in a moment of constitutional drama, 299 00:18:03,916 --> 00:18:07,711 to obey a Presidential order to fire the special Watergate prosecutor. 300 00:18:07,795 --> 00:18:09,755 That's a stunning development, 301 00:18:09,838 --> 00:18:14,218 and nothing even remotely like it has happened in all of our history. 302 00:18:14,301 --> 00:18:17,721 He was and continues to be one of the big heroes 303 00:18:18,680 --> 00:18:20,766 of that terrible, dark time. 304 00:18:23,977 --> 00:18:26,188 Elliot Richardson believed, 305 00:18:26,980 --> 00:18:32,611 to his heart, that the Justice Department had mistreated Bill Hamilton. 306 00:18:32,694 --> 00:18:35,864 The whole history of the Department's handling of this case 307 00:18:35,948 --> 00:18:39,910 has certainly been strange, to put it politely. 308 00:18:39,993 --> 00:18:42,120 [reporter 6] The Justice Department says the INSLAW case 309 00:18:42,204 --> 00:18:44,164 is nothing more than a contract dispute, 310 00:18:44,248 --> 00:18:48,377 and INSLAW overcharged and took too long to fulfill its contract. 311 00:18:48,460 --> 00:18:51,421 [Elliot] As I got into it and found the Department of Justice 312 00:18:51,505 --> 00:18:56,051 totally unwilling to address the merits of the situation, 313 00:18:56,135 --> 00:18:58,971 I then advised INSLAW to sue. 314 00:18:59,054 --> 00:19:02,766 [Charles] At this point in time, I'd left the Justice Department, 315 00:19:02,850 --> 00:19:05,018 and I went into private practice, 316 00:19:05,102 --> 00:19:07,896 and Bill was one of my first clients. 317 00:19:09,189 --> 00:19:13,402 And so, along with Elliot Richardson, we took the case and we tried it. 318 00:19:13,485 --> 00:19:16,989 [man] I know that you would not object to that, and I wish now in the process… 319 00:19:17,698 --> 00:19:18,949 [Zachary] And how'd that go? 320 00:19:19,825 --> 00:19:21,285 Well, it went pretty well. 321 00:19:21,368 --> 00:19:25,247 I mean, we had a resounding victory in the bankruptcy court. 322 00:19:26,165 --> 00:19:28,250 [reporter 7] Federal judge George Bason. 323 00:19:28,333 --> 00:19:30,752 He handed down an astonishing ruling 324 00:19:30,836 --> 00:19:34,423 that the Justice Department deliberately drove INSLAW into bankruptcy 325 00:19:34,506 --> 00:19:36,800 and stole its software. 326 00:19:36,884 --> 00:19:39,303 [reporter 6] Bason ordered the Justice Department to pay INSLAW 327 00:19:39,386 --> 00:19:41,555 $6.8 million in damages. 328 00:19:41,638 --> 00:19:45,267 Basically, they stole INSLAW's principal product, 329 00:19:45,350 --> 00:19:46,894 PROMIS, 330 00:19:46,977 --> 00:19:51,356 and they did so by means of trickery, fraud, and deceit. 331 00:19:51,440 --> 00:19:56,528 "Trickery, fraud, and deceit" echo in my mind, from his opinion. 332 00:19:56,612 --> 00:19:59,740 We had won it walking away. 333 00:20:00,449 --> 00:20:02,868 And I thought that was the end of the case. 334 00:20:07,789 --> 00:20:09,791 [reporter 6] Three months later, Judge Bason learned 335 00:20:09,875 --> 00:20:11,877 he would lose his seat on the bench. 336 00:20:11,960 --> 00:20:16,089 They fired him. They moved him off. And they put somebody else in there. 337 00:20:16,173 --> 00:20:19,968 He was the only federal bankruptcy judge removed from the bench that year. 338 00:20:20,052 --> 00:20:23,597 [reporter 6] Bason was not only startled to learn that he wasn't being reappointed 339 00:20:23,680 --> 00:20:26,642 but that Martin Teal Jr., a Justice Department attorney 340 00:20:26,725 --> 00:20:29,436 who had argued the INSLAW case in front of Bason, 341 00:20:29,519 --> 00:20:31,355 would succeed him on the bench. 342 00:20:31,438 --> 00:20:33,690 And then they appoint one of the DOJ attorneys 343 00:20:33,774 --> 00:20:35,901 from the INSLAW case to replace him. 344 00:20:35,984 --> 00:20:38,737 [George] It would appear a federal judge 345 00:20:38,820 --> 00:20:43,742 could lose his job because he made a ruling against the government. 346 00:20:44,326 --> 00:20:47,788 [reporter 6] INSLAW had won two court battles and had emerged from bankruptcy, 347 00:20:47,871 --> 00:20:49,373 but Justice appealed the decision, 348 00:20:49,456 --> 00:20:52,626 and the Federal Appeals Court reversed INSLAW's legal victory. 349 00:20:53,669 --> 00:20:57,047 It said the company pursued its claims in the wrong court. 350 00:20:57,547 --> 00:20:59,549 [Zachary] And what does that do to the case? 351 00:20:59,633 --> 00:21:01,343 Well, the case was dismissed. 352 00:21:01,426 --> 00:21:03,929 They just decided that's the way to get rid of this case, 353 00:21:04,012 --> 00:21:05,514 and that's what they did. 354 00:21:05,597 --> 00:21:07,265 [Zachary] What does that do for INSLAW? 355 00:21:07,349 --> 00:21:11,520 Well, INSLAW… INSLAW… INSLAW is up a creek without a paddle. 356 00:21:11,603 --> 00:21:14,648 It gets nothing from the Justice Department. 357 00:21:18,944 --> 00:21:22,030 [reporter 7] Did this suggest something more sinister? 358 00:21:22,114 --> 00:21:25,075 A cover-up from the highest levels of government? 359 00:21:25,575 --> 00:21:28,704 Well, it certainly suggests the involvement of people 360 00:21:28,787 --> 00:21:30,580 at a high level in government. 361 00:21:31,581 --> 00:21:35,210 [Charles] The length and breadth to which the Department of Justice went 362 00:21:35,293 --> 00:21:38,255 to try to destroy INSLAW, 363 00:21:38,922 --> 00:21:40,882 I never understood. 364 00:21:41,508 --> 00:21:43,927 I mean, it made no sense. 365 00:21:44,636 --> 00:21:48,098 And the question was, why did the Department of Justice do this? 366 00:21:48,181 --> 00:21:50,267 Never answered the question. 367 00:21:51,184 --> 00:21:52,352 [somber music playing] 368 00:21:52,436 --> 00:21:54,062 [birds squawking] 369 00:22:02,529 --> 00:22:07,659 And that's when Danny Casolaro started working on this story, 370 00:22:09,161 --> 00:22:12,247 trying to help us figure out what the answer was. 371 00:22:20,464 --> 00:22:23,592 [machine clicking and whirring] 372 00:22:23,675 --> 00:22:25,802 [Tony] Turning it on. Danny. 373 00:22:25,886 --> 00:22:28,847 Tony, I think you're trying to fool me. That is on. I see a light on. 374 00:22:30,474 --> 00:22:32,684 [Tony] I don't think Danny thought himself as a reporter. 375 00:22:32,768 --> 00:22:34,811 I think he thought himself as a writer 376 00:22:34,895 --> 00:22:38,106 who happened to be reporting so that he could write. 377 00:22:40,275 --> 00:22:42,319 Easter, 1985. 378 00:22:42,819 --> 00:22:43,904 Casolaros. 379 00:22:44,404 --> 00:22:45,447 Hi, happy Easter! 380 00:22:45,530 --> 00:22:49,076 [woman] The Casolaros were this huge, very closely-knit, 381 00:22:49,159 --> 00:22:51,453 big Italian Catholic family. 382 00:22:53,705 --> 00:22:55,749 This was a highly successful family. 383 00:22:55,832 --> 00:22:59,669 Tony was the brilliant younger brother, 384 00:22:59,753 --> 00:23:01,379 -the scientist. -[camera clicking] 385 00:23:01,463 --> 00:23:03,590 And he's this incredible doctor 386 00:23:03,673 --> 00:23:06,968 that does work for all kinds of people all over the world. 387 00:23:08,345 --> 00:23:12,265 Danny was the poet, the writer, the charmer, 388 00:23:12,349 --> 00:23:14,643 the… the golden boy. 389 00:23:17,187 --> 00:23:19,064 Danny was my big brother, 390 00:23:19,147 --> 00:23:22,734 and that probably defines the relationship. 391 00:23:23,402 --> 00:23:26,696 Danny's gonna stand on his toes, as he always does in family pictures, 392 00:23:26,780 --> 00:23:27,823 or any picture. 393 00:23:28,490 --> 00:23:31,201 [Tony] Danny was the magnet of the family. 394 00:23:31,284 --> 00:23:33,745 [Danny] Danny, coming to dinner on time. 395 00:23:33,829 --> 00:23:36,748 -[Tony] People loved being around him. -[camera clicking] 396 00:23:37,582 --> 00:23:39,918 By the way, he was my favorite, so it was okay. 397 00:23:40,001 --> 00:23:41,419 [indistinct] 398 00:23:43,171 --> 00:23:45,340 He had never followed a traditional path, 399 00:23:47,092 --> 00:23:49,052 and I admired him for it. 400 00:23:53,515 --> 00:23:55,809 He loved to write fiction. 401 00:23:57,811 --> 00:23:59,563 [Ann] He wrote a couple books. 402 00:24:00,147 --> 00:24:01,481 He wrote poems. 403 00:24:04,693 --> 00:24:07,362 You know, Danny and I didn't date for very long, 404 00:24:07,863 --> 00:24:10,532 but we stayed the closest of friends. 405 00:24:10,615 --> 00:24:16,163 I spent more time with Danny than I did any man in my life ever. 406 00:24:16,246 --> 00:24:17,122 [camera clicking] 407 00:24:17,873 --> 00:24:20,250 He was a great wingman for me. [chuckles] 408 00:24:20,333 --> 00:24:22,252 And I'm not talking about men to date. 409 00:24:22,335 --> 00:24:25,839 I mean, you go out with Danny Casolaro, okay, 410 00:24:25,922 --> 00:24:28,091 you'll know everyone in the bar by the time you leave. 411 00:24:28,175 --> 00:24:29,092 [man] Impressive. 412 00:24:30,135 --> 00:24:33,472 He was disarming in that he was kind and considerate, 413 00:24:34,473 --> 00:24:36,683 and that's how he got people to talk. 414 00:24:37,350 --> 00:24:40,520 And I guess that's what a good reporter-investigator can do. 415 00:24:41,980 --> 00:24:44,900 [Tony] Twenty years from now, Dan, I hope you're still sitting there. 416 00:24:48,445 --> 00:24:49,613 [door opens] 417 00:24:49,696 --> 00:24:53,450 [Christian] Danny had been writing about the computer industry for about ten years. 418 00:24:54,284 --> 00:24:56,786 This was more or less a day job for him. 419 00:24:56,870 --> 00:24:59,497 [ominous music playing] 420 00:24:59,581 --> 00:25:03,668 But when an actually interesting computer story came along, 421 00:25:03,752 --> 00:25:08,423 he was in a really good position because he had such a deep background. 422 00:25:08,506 --> 00:25:10,717 So then he reaches out to Bill Hamilton. 423 00:25:12,719 --> 00:25:13,553 [phone clicks] 424 00:25:13,637 --> 00:25:15,472 [dial tone, dialing] 425 00:25:18,225 --> 00:25:19,935 [line ringing] 426 00:25:20,894 --> 00:25:22,020 [Bill] Bill Hamilton. 427 00:25:23,438 --> 00:25:27,984 [Christian] That started a process of Bill and Danny talking every day. 428 00:25:28,485 --> 00:25:30,070 [Bill] I talked to… [beep] 429 00:25:30,153 --> 00:25:34,157 He said that if the investigation were to mushroom, 430 00:25:34,866 --> 00:25:38,370 a large number of people in Congress could lose their jobs 431 00:25:38,453 --> 00:25:42,123 'cause so many people are in on this thing. 432 00:25:42,624 --> 00:25:46,169 [Christian] One of the things about Bill Hamilton is 433 00:25:46,253 --> 00:25:48,505 he used to work, uh, at the NSA. 434 00:25:49,089 --> 00:25:50,757 [reporter 8] It's not the CIA. 435 00:25:50,840 --> 00:25:53,677 It's the supersecret NSA, the National Security Agency. 436 00:25:53,760 --> 00:25:55,011 Its budget is secret. 437 00:25:55,095 --> 00:25:58,640 The presidential order that established it in 1952 is secret. 438 00:25:58,723 --> 00:26:00,392 No law governs its actions. 439 00:26:00,475 --> 00:26:04,312 [Christian] And one of the things that really kept Danny going along was 440 00:26:04,396 --> 00:26:06,147 Bill would always have new leads 441 00:26:06,231 --> 00:26:10,777 that he'd get from what he'd call his confidential intelligence sources. 442 00:26:11,778 --> 00:26:13,947 [line ringing] 443 00:26:16,449 --> 00:26:18,868 -[Bill] It's Bill Hamilton. -[man] Yeah. 444 00:26:19,369 --> 00:26:21,705 [Bill] Anything else new from your guy? 445 00:26:22,205 --> 00:26:24,874 [man] I told you about spying on each other's citizens… 446 00:26:24,958 --> 00:26:25,959 [Bill] Yes. 447 00:26:26,042 --> 00:26:28,420 [man] We need to find out some more stuff on that 448 00:26:28,503 --> 00:26:32,716 but… be very cautious about how we approach it. 449 00:26:32,799 --> 00:26:33,967 -[Bill] Yep. -[man] Okay. 450 00:26:34,050 --> 00:26:36,428 [intriguing music playing] 451 00:26:36,511 --> 00:26:41,850 Every time you pick up a rock in this case, you find maggots under it. 452 00:26:46,187 --> 00:26:49,190 So as Danny is talking to Bill Hamilton, 453 00:26:49,274 --> 00:26:52,610 -he starts looking into powerful people… -[camera clicking] 454 00:26:52,694 --> 00:26:54,571 …connected to the Reagan administration 455 00:26:54,654 --> 00:26:58,366 and realizes there's something much bigger going on than just a contract dispute 456 00:26:58,450 --> 00:27:00,368 over the PROMIS software. 457 00:27:00,452 --> 00:27:02,662 [Elliot] The information that began to come in 458 00:27:02,746 --> 00:27:08,960 implicated that the real reason for the theft of the INSLAW software 459 00:27:09,044 --> 00:27:13,089 was to benefit the administration's friends. 460 00:27:13,590 --> 00:27:16,551 [reporter 9] The friend in this case, Dr. Earl Brian. 461 00:27:17,135 --> 00:27:21,514 Earl Brian had been in Reagan's cabinet when he was governor of California. 462 00:27:21,598 --> 00:27:25,101 And after that, he stays close with the Reagan administration. 463 00:27:26,144 --> 00:27:30,398 And he owns corporations that do contracting work for government agencies 464 00:27:30,482 --> 00:27:35,779 like the Defense Department, the Justice Department, and the CIA. 465 00:27:36,488 --> 00:27:39,240 [reporter 9] Brian is now an officer of a computer firm 466 00:27:39,324 --> 00:27:41,034 that competed with INSLAW. 467 00:27:41,117 --> 00:27:44,996 Hamilton says Dominic Laiti, the man who runs Brian's company, 468 00:27:45,080 --> 00:27:46,665 offered to buy INSLAW. 469 00:27:46,748 --> 00:27:48,249 [man] Do you recall that conversation? 470 00:27:48,333 --> 00:27:49,167 Of course not. 471 00:27:50,794 --> 00:27:52,962 [Christian] Danny starts finding all these connections 472 00:27:53,046 --> 00:27:55,924 between PROMIS and Earl Brian. 473 00:27:56,007 --> 00:27:59,010 [reporter 10] Earl Brian says he never heard of PROMIS software 474 00:27:59,094 --> 00:28:03,139 before reading news reports of INSLAW's dispute with the Justice Department. 475 00:28:05,100 --> 00:28:06,643 The enduring question is, 476 00:28:06,726 --> 00:28:10,355 the government has the money to pay whatever they owe Bill Hamilton. 477 00:28:10,438 --> 00:28:12,816 Eight million dollars? Just pay for it. 478 00:28:12,899 --> 00:28:15,193 Like, they didn't pay for it. 479 00:28:15,735 --> 00:28:19,072 They're stonewalling, and they're clearly covering something up. 480 00:28:19,656 --> 00:28:22,200 So what is that? What are they covering up? 481 00:28:22,283 --> 00:28:25,578 [reporter 11] Justice Department officials denied there was a conspiracy. 482 00:28:27,288 --> 00:28:30,041 [line ringing] 483 00:28:30,125 --> 00:28:31,501 [crackling] 484 00:28:31,584 --> 00:28:33,628 -[man] Hi, Bill. -[Bill] Hi, [beep]. How are you? 485 00:28:33,712 --> 00:28:34,629 [man] Not too bad. 486 00:28:34,713 --> 00:28:36,506 [Bill] I wanted to tell you, um, 487 00:28:37,006 --> 00:28:43,763 Danny got these computer printouts showing wire transfers from London 488 00:28:43,847 --> 00:28:45,765 through the World Bank 489 00:28:46,599 --> 00:28:48,852 to offshore accounts of Earl Brian 490 00:28:49,853 --> 00:28:53,565 and unnamed employees of the Department of Justice. 491 00:28:53,648 --> 00:28:55,191 [man] Oh shit. Okay. 492 00:28:55,275 --> 00:28:56,151 [Bill] Yeah. 493 00:28:57,777 --> 00:28:59,654 [Christian] And at that point, Danny realizes 494 00:28:59,737 --> 00:29:02,782 that the story is huge. 495 00:29:03,700 --> 00:29:06,786 Way bigger than just an article or even a series of articles 496 00:29:06,870 --> 00:29:09,747 and that it could be his next big book project. 497 00:29:15,003 --> 00:29:19,591 [Zachary] Do you remember the last time that you saw Danny? 498 00:29:20,091 --> 00:29:21,885 [Tony] We're gonna find you! 499 00:29:21,968 --> 00:29:22,886 Yeah. 500 00:29:22,969 --> 00:29:24,971 [Tony] We are gonna find you! 501 00:29:25,472 --> 00:29:26,931 [children squealing] 502 00:29:27,807 --> 00:29:29,893 [Tony] We're gonna find all of you! 503 00:29:30,810 --> 00:29:32,854 [Tony] It was July 20th. 504 00:29:33,855 --> 00:29:35,231 Three weeks before he died. 505 00:29:35,732 --> 00:29:37,942 [Tony] Coming in here to make a little movie. 506 00:29:38,026 --> 00:29:39,903 [reflective music playing] 507 00:29:39,986 --> 00:29:41,613 [Tony] And it was to celebrate 508 00:29:41,696 --> 00:29:44,491 my son's third birthday. 509 00:29:44,574 --> 00:29:45,742 [man] Happy birthday! 510 00:29:45,825 --> 00:29:47,702 [indistinct chatter] 511 00:29:47,785 --> 00:29:51,331 [Tony] And… the whole family was here. 512 00:29:51,414 --> 00:29:53,041 All right, Tony, okay… 513 00:29:53,124 --> 00:29:54,250 No, that's all right… 514 00:29:55,168 --> 00:29:57,921 [Tony] And Danny came in. 515 00:29:59,964 --> 00:30:01,549 He was a bit late… 516 00:30:01,633 --> 00:30:02,467 [child] Danny! 517 00:30:02,550 --> 00:30:04,219 …which was pretty standard for him. 518 00:30:04,302 --> 00:30:06,679 [child] Danny, watch this. Oh no! 519 00:30:07,263 --> 00:30:08,890 [Tony] And he actually stayed late. 520 00:30:08,973 --> 00:30:10,350 [child giggling] 521 00:30:11,059 --> 00:30:13,561 ♪ Happy birthday to you… ♪ 522 00:30:13,645 --> 00:30:14,479 [man] Everybody in! 523 00:30:14,562 --> 00:30:18,233 [all] ♪ Happy birthday, dear… ♪ 524 00:30:18,316 --> 00:30:21,444 [indistinct chatter] 525 00:30:22,612 --> 00:30:25,406 -Wait a minute. Make a wish, okay. -[man] Make a wish. 526 00:30:25,490 --> 00:30:28,034 [indistinct chatter] 527 00:30:30,411 --> 00:30:33,414 [Tony] So I remember that 528 00:30:34,415 --> 00:30:35,875 at the end of the night, 529 00:30:37,043 --> 00:30:38,795 Danny and I stood in our kitchen 530 00:30:38,878 --> 00:30:41,923 and talked for a long time about what was going on. 531 00:30:46,553 --> 00:30:51,558 He didn't tell me a lot of the details, except that… 532 00:30:53,184 --> 00:30:58,273 it was a vast, disturbing conspiracy. 533 00:30:59,816 --> 00:31:04,112 And in this whole world that he had been looking into, 534 00:31:05,196 --> 00:31:07,240 some of the same people kept appearing. 535 00:31:11,160 --> 00:31:13,162 I don't know why Martinsburg, 536 00:31:13,246 --> 00:31:18,710 but apparently Danny was supposed to meet with a source in West Virginia. 537 00:31:19,210 --> 00:31:21,588 But I can't tell you whom he was meeting with. 538 00:31:21,671 --> 00:31:23,214 I just don't know the answer. 539 00:31:26,384 --> 00:31:31,180 Danny told me that he was getting some funny phone calls and some threats, 540 00:31:31,264 --> 00:31:33,349 and it was then that he said to me, 541 00:31:34,225 --> 00:31:38,146 "By the way, if an accident happens, it's not an accident." 542 00:31:40,315 --> 00:31:41,816 [Zachary] And were you worried? 543 00:31:42,483 --> 00:31:45,028 [sighs] You know what? I think… 544 00:31:45,570 --> 00:31:48,948 I wasn't worried, no. I mean, "worry" is too strong a word. 545 00:31:49,866 --> 00:31:52,577 I always thought of him as being 546 00:31:52,660 --> 00:31:55,121 somebody who could handle whatever happened. 547 00:31:55,705 --> 00:31:59,459 So I just assumed he would handle it. 548 00:31:59,542 --> 00:32:01,544 [unsettling music playing] 549 00:32:37,914 --> 00:32:40,458 [sirens wailing] 550 00:32:40,541 --> 00:32:42,460 [man over radio] Two-forty, two-forty. 551 00:32:43,461 --> 00:32:45,880 It came in at 12:21. 552 00:32:46,839 --> 00:32:48,132 [man 2] All right, stand by. 553 00:32:48,216 --> 00:32:51,344 I was actually coming back from a call, 554 00:32:51,844 --> 00:32:54,305 uh, near the Martinsburg Mall. 555 00:32:54,389 --> 00:32:57,308 And I remember hearing the call come out 556 00:32:57,392 --> 00:33:01,896 for an unknown situation at the Sheraton. 557 00:33:02,647 --> 00:33:04,232 Law enforcement were on scene. 558 00:33:06,985 --> 00:33:08,027 We went on in, 559 00:33:08,611 --> 00:33:13,866 and there's already four or five police officers there in that room. 560 00:33:16,244 --> 00:33:17,286 [camera clicks] 561 00:33:17,370 --> 00:33:20,081 [Don] And one of the investigators said, 562 00:33:20,164 --> 00:33:23,042 "In the bathroom, there's a body." 563 00:33:24,002 --> 00:33:26,754 "But it's just a simple suicide." 564 00:33:27,922 --> 00:33:31,634 I was also told that he did leave a suicide note 565 00:33:32,593 --> 00:33:34,303 on a legal pad there. 566 00:33:35,972 --> 00:33:37,306 It was a short note. 567 00:33:37,390 --> 00:33:39,559 It mentioned his son in there. 568 00:33:41,894 --> 00:33:45,231 It just said he was sorry for what he had done. 569 00:33:47,275 --> 00:33:48,317 That was it. 570 00:33:49,110 --> 00:33:51,821 With that in mind, I go in. 571 00:33:52,405 --> 00:33:53,865 I see the gentleman 572 00:33:54,949 --> 00:33:58,411 in a bathtub full of bloody water. 573 00:33:59,036 --> 00:34:01,330 -Dark bloody water. -[camera beeps, clicks] 574 00:34:02,498 --> 00:34:07,962 He basically bled out from cut marks on his wrists. 575 00:34:09,464 --> 00:34:12,592 And then in front of the bathtub 576 00:34:13,384 --> 00:34:15,803 was some smeared blood on the wall. 577 00:34:17,096 --> 00:34:19,724 It's not normal. And I thought, "Well…" 578 00:34:20,933 --> 00:34:22,351 "What do you think he did?" 579 00:34:22,435 --> 00:34:25,688 "You think he held his hands up and squirted the wall?" 580 00:34:26,939 --> 00:34:29,942 So we got to looking at the body, 581 00:34:30,026 --> 00:34:32,779 and I remember pulling his arms out of the tub. 582 00:34:35,114 --> 00:34:38,117 Even at that time, there were a lot of red flags. 583 00:34:38,785 --> 00:34:43,372 But at that point, the consensus from the police department was 584 00:34:43,956 --> 00:34:48,127 that this is, you know, just a simple loser or whatever 585 00:34:48,628 --> 00:34:50,797 comin' through the city of Martinsburg 586 00:34:51,881 --> 00:34:54,175 that just killed himself. 587 00:34:55,051 --> 00:34:56,302 And, you know, 588 00:34:57,136 --> 00:34:58,888 I had no idea who he was. 589 00:35:05,770 --> 00:35:08,773 [officer 1 on tape] C-A-S-O-L-A-R-O. 590 00:35:11,734 --> 00:35:14,487 -[officer 2] The suicide case? -[officer 1] Right. 591 00:35:16,572 --> 00:35:17,657 White male. 592 00:35:18,282 --> 00:35:20,952 DOB, 6-16-47. 593 00:35:21,035 --> 00:35:21,911 [officer 2] Okay. 594 00:35:26,457 --> 00:35:28,876 [Tony] I was at the hospital making rounds 595 00:35:29,919 --> 00:35:32,588 and got a phone call. 596 00:35:32,672 --> 00:35:35,675 "Dr. Casolaro, line five-six." 597 00:35:36,968 --> 00:35:38,386 So I pick up the phone. 598 00:35:38,469 --> 00:35:39,762 It was 599 00:35:40,263 --> 00:35:43,182 the police in Martinsburg, 600 00:35:43,266 --> 00:35:49,355 and they notified me that they had found my brother Danny dead. 601 00:35:50,690 --> 00:35:51,566 [line crackles] 602 00:35:51,649 --> 00:35:54,610 [officer 1] Basically, what it is, is we found this guy 603 00:35:55,319 --> 00:35:58,114 in a tub full of water with his wrists slit. 604 00:35:58,197 --> 00:35:59,198 [officer 2] Okay. 605 00:35:59,282 --> 00:36:00,283 [officer 1] And, uh, 606 00:36:00,908 --> 00:36:03,161 it was definitely suicide. 607 00:36:03,244 --> 00:36:04,287 [officer 2] Copy. 608 00:36:04,370 --> 00:36:05,997 [Tony] Wait, wait, wait. Suicide? 609 00:36:06,789 --> 00:36:11,127 I was, like… a little bit taken aback because he had just said to me, 610 00:36:11,210 --> 00:36:13,754 "If an accident happens, don't believe it." 611 00:36:14,255 --> 00:36:17,758 So now I'm asking questions, and they're like, "No, we think it was…" 612 00:36:17,842 --> 00:36:20,553 I said, "Wait, wait. Suicide? How do you know it's suicide?" 613 00:36:20,636 --> 00:36:24,223 "Well, that's what it… That's what our… the coroner said." 614 00:36:25,725 --> 00:36:30,021 [officer 1] Just to let you know that our coroner has declared this thing a suicide. 615 00:36:30,104 --> 00:36:31,230 [officer 2] Okay. 616 00:36:32,106 --> 00:36:35,318 [officer 1] You know, we have examined the scene, and, uh, 617 00:36:36,068 --> 00:36:38,696 we didn't find any sign of foul play. 618 00:36:40,907 --> 00:36:42,867 I said, "Wait. Has he had an autopsy?" 619 00:36:42,950 --> 00:36:43,868 "No." 620 00:36:43,951 --> 00:36:46,245 "We don't know that that's necessary." 621 00:36:46,329 --> 00:36:49,332 And then I was told that his body had been embalmed. 622 00:36:52,543 --> 00:36:58,299 So it does make doing a comprehensive autopsy more difficult. 623 00:37:00,343 --> 00:37:04,430 [Zachary] What turned out to be the reason that he had been embalmed? 624 00:37:05,306 --> 00:37:06,933 No one ever answered it. 625 00:37:07,516 --> 00:37:10,144 We never found out who said it was okay. 626 00:37:11,395 --> 00:37:14,857 And, you know, it had been done. I couldn't change it. 627 00:37:14,941 --> 00:37:16,525 But it just didn't… 628 00:37:16,609 --> 00:37:17,777 It didn't sit right. 629 00:37:19,487 --> 00:37:22,365 I now, in my mind, am thinking, 630 00:37:22,907 --> 00:37:25,368 "Oh fuck, they killed him." 631 00:37:37,880 --> 00:37:40,800 I remember I was reading the paper at my house 632 00:37:40,883 --> 00:37:44,512 and saw "Investigative reporter 633 00:37:44,595 --> 00:37:46,889 found dead at Martinsburg Motel." 634 00:37:49,475 --> 00:37:52,395 My God, this is the guy we had. 635 00:37:53,521 --> 00:37:57,858 So I went back and discussed it with my lieutenant at the time 636 00:37:57,942 --> 00:38:01,362 and told him what had happened and what I had seen. 637 00:38:03,948 --> 00:38:08,202 Well, tonight, new details on what Martinsburg paramedics saw. 638 00:38:09,036 --> 00:38:14,250 [reporter 12] Don Shirley, an experienced medic in Martinsburg, was on the scene. 639 00:38:15,293 --> 00:38:19,005 Is there anything that appeared suspicious about this to you? 640 00:38:19,088 --> 00:38:20,798 In my six years as a medic, 641 00:38:20,881 --> 00:38:24,927 I've never seen anybody ever cut their wrist that many times. 642 00:38:25,428 --> 00:38:27,513 [reporter 12] His wrists were cut how many times? 643 00:38:28,514 --> 00:38:32,351 Oh, well, the left arm appeared to have had eight cuts, 644 00:38:32,435 --> 00:38:35,479 and the right arm appeared to have had four cuts. 645 00:38:44,405 --> 00:38:48,367 [Don] It just did not appear that he physically could have done that. 646 00:38:52,371 --> 00:38:54,582 These were deep, deep cuts. 647 00:38:54,665 --> 00:38:58,461 Deep enough to the point where the tendons had been severed. 648 00:38:58,961 --> 00:39:00,004 [camera clicking] 649 00:39:00,087 --> 00:39:04,383 When you picked the arm up, the wrist basically flopped. 650 00:39:04,884 --> 00:39:05,801 [camera clicking] 651 00:39:06,802 --> 00:39:10,222 Now, I've always said, you can't ignore facts. 652 00:39:10,723 --> 00:39:13,225 You cut your tendons, you can't hold somethin'. 653 00:39:13,309 --> 00:39:14,602 Those are simple facts. 654 00:39:18,105 --> 00:39:24,111 And I had the gut feeling at that time that this possibly could be a homicide. 655 00:39:26,822 --> 00:39:28,532 [Ann] In the days after he died, 656 00:39:28,616 --> 00:39:31,702 we all wanted to get to the bottom of what happened to him. 657 00:39:33,496 --> 00:39:36,332 Most of us were convinced that he had been hurt by people 658 00:39:36,415 --> 00:39:38,501 for him covering the story. 659 00:39:39,168 --> 00:39:40,836 [woman] Tony, are you okay? 660 00:39:41,337 --> 00:39:42,171 Yeah. 661 00:39:42,254 --> 00:39:45,299 [Ann] It must have been very hard for Tony, you know. 662 00:39:45,383 --> 00:39:46,926 He had just lost his brother. 663 00:39:48,719 --> 00:39:54,850 And, uh, all these reporters just started contacting him. 664 00:39:57,937 --> 00:40:00,689 Well, I didn't know that you could say no 665 00:40:00,773 --> 00:40:03,025 to media who call you and ask you 666 00:40:03,859 --> 00:40:05,569 if they can talk to you. 667 00:40:07,154 --> 00:40:11,784 And I didn't have a script or anybody to say what to say. 668 00:40:13,911 --> 00:40:16,247 So I kind of stood in front of them 669 00:40:16,330 --> 00:40:19,333 and I told them what I knew. 670 00:40:19,834 --> 00:40:22,211 I remember Danny telling us, 671 00:40:22,294 --> 00:40:23,421 "If I'm in an accident…" 672 00:40:23,504 --> 00:40:25,756 "If I have an accident…" "If an accident happens to me…" 673 00:40:25,840 --> 00:40:28,676 "Don't believe it." "Don't believe it." "Don't believe it." 674 00:40:29,510 --> 00:40:32,138 [reporter 13] Dr. Anthony Casolaro told reporters 675 00:40:32,221 --> 00:40:35,641 there are several unanswered questions about his brother's death. 676 00:40:35,724 --> 00:40:39,061 Was reporter Danny Casolaro killed because of what he knew? 677 00:40:39,145 --> 00:40:40,813 There is more information tonight. 678 00:40:40,896 --> 00:40:44,984 Because of the brother, that's when all this started to surface. 679 00:40:45,067 --> 00:40:48,028 New information about Danny Casolaro's research. 680 00:40:48,112 --> 00:40:50,823 He had a big, brown briefcase, 681 00:40:50,906 --> 00:40:55,911 and he began to put all of his INSLAW info in this briefcase. 682 00:40:55,995 --> 00:40:57,288 [camera clicking] 683 00:40:57,371 --> 00:41:02,084 And when his motel room was searched after his death, it was gone. 684 00:41:02,168 --> 00:41:05,588 [reporter 14] Now we have learned that after Danny Casolaro's death, 685 00:41:05,671 --> 00:41:09,258 his briefcase and key documents for his book are missing. 686 00:41:09,341 --> 00:41:11,886 [reporter 15] Missing files and notes Casolaro kept 687 00:41:11,969 --> 00:41:15,848 on the potentially explosive story he was investigating. 688 00:41:15,931 --> 00:41:18,142 [Tony] When he was found in his hotel room on Saturday, 689 00:41:18,225 --> 00:41:22,897 authorities report that they found no papers in his room or in his car. 690 00:41:23,397 --> 00:41:25,733 Put yourselves in our shoes. We didn't know who was involved 691 00:41:25,816 --> 00:41:27,318 and what had happened. All we knew is, 692 00:41:27,401 --> 00:41:30,738 it took two days to find us, and he had already been embalmed, 693 00:41:30,821 --> 00:41:35,159 which made us a little suspect as to the process itself. 694 00:41:35,659 --> 00:41:38,287 [reporter 16] I mean, any time a reporter dies 695 00:41:38,370 --> 00:41:43,083 in the pursuit of a dangerous story, it threatens all reporters. 696 00:41:43,167 --> 00:41:45,920 I think it's incumbent upon the Press Corps in Washington, D.C. 697 00:41:46,003 --> 00:41:48,756 and across the country to find out what happened to this reporter. 698 00:41:49,340 --> 00:41:52,635 I mean, with the shows on TV, the news agencies and all, 699 00:41:52,718 --> 00:41:55,262 CNN and Headline News, 700 00:41:55,346 --> 00:41:58,766 Fox, Channel Seven, and Channel Nine, 701 00:41:58,849 --> 00:42:01,185 all the agencies in Washington, D.C. 702 00:42:01,810 --> 00:42:03,854 Then things started to heat up. 703 00:42:03,938 --> 00:42:06,774 Was a reporter killed for investigating the government? 704 00:42:06,857 --> 00:42:08,984 There is strong evidence pointing to murder. 705 00:42:09,068 --> 00:42:11,904 Danny told me, in the last week of his life, 706 00:42:11,987 --> 00:42:14,198 that he had gotten most of the evidence he needed, 707 00:42:14,281 --> 00:42:16,784 and he had one more meeting in West Virginia. 708 00:42:16,867 --> 00:42:19,745 [reporter 17] Former Attorney General and INSLAW Lawyer Elliot Richardson 709 00:42:19,828 --> 00:42:23,290 says the possibilities come right out of a spy thriller. 710 00:42:23,374 --> 00:42:29,004 I couldn't escape the immediate conclusion that this could not have been suicide. 711 00:42:29,088 --> 00:42:32,007 What Casolaro was going after was the INSLAW case. 712 00:42:32,091 --> 00:42:34,009 -Now, what INSLAW is about-- -[man] Here we go. 713 00:42:34,093 --> 00:42:35,678 I think the guy committed suicide. 714 00:42:35,761 --> 00:42:38,722 I don't know how you murder a guy by… What do you do? Hold his arm-- 715 00:42:38,806 --> 00:42:40,391 I think it's worth looking into. 716 00:42:40,474 --> 00:42:43,269 The fact that he slashed one wrist eight times? 717 00:42:43,352 --> 00:42:44,645 Impossible. 718 00:42:44,728 --> 00:42:46,730 [reporter 18] You think his death is suspicious? 719 00:42:47,398 --> 00:42:52,528 Yes, I don't think it's very persuasive that it was a suicide. 720 00:42:52,611 --> 00:42:54,697 He was killed for his work. 721 00:42:58,867 --> 00:43:01,954 [Zachary] Do you remember when you first met Bill Hamilton? 722 00:43:03,914 --> 00:43:05,958 I think we… There was an interview, 723 00:43:06,041 --> 00:43:09,712 and I believe he and I were both at some interview on some show. 724 00:43:11,797 --> 00:43:17,136 [reporter 16] We've been talking about the mysterious death of Danny Casolaro. 725 00:43:18,470 --> 00:43:22,474 A friend of mine and a brother of Dr. Tony Casolaro. 726 00:43:23,475 --> 00:43:26,854 Joining us now is William Hamilton, owner of INSLAW. 727 00:43:27,605 --> 00:43:29,982 He suspects the US Department of Justice 728 00:43:30,065 --> 00:43:32,943 conspired to send his company into bankruptcy 729 00:43:33,027 --> 00:43:34,903 and steal his computer software. 730 00:43:34,987 --> 00:43:36,405 That's right. 731 00:43:36,488 --> 00:43:38,699 Makes me want to know why it was stolen 732 00:43:38,782 --> 00:43:41,076 and who got paid off and why they got paid off. 733 00:43:41,869 --> 00:43:44,371 Danny Casolaro was trying to find out. 734 00:43:45,664 --> 00:43:49,168 [Charles] You know, it was a great tragedy for Bill. 735 00:43:50,169 --> 00:43:53,756 I never dealt with Danny Casolaro directly, but Bill did. 736 00:43:54,548 --> 00:43:58,302 And I remember Bill being very sad about it. 737 00:43:59,011 --> 00:44:01,305 -[Anderson] You got to know him well. -[Bill] Yes. 738 00:44:01,388 --> 00:44:04,141 I talked to him almost every day for a year. 739 00:44:05,225 --> 00:44:08,771 And in the final three months of his life, 740 00:44:08,854 --> 00:44:12,232 he began to finally have some major breakthroughs. 741 00:44:13,233 --> 00:44:14,860 Getting people to talk. 742 00:44:16,320 --> 00:44:21,450 My understanding is that Danny had some sort of lead out in West Virginia, 743 00:44:21,533 --> 00:44:24,787 and he told Bill that he thought this was really gonna be important. 744 00:44:26,789 --> 00:44:29,917 And the next thing we knew, he was dead. 745 00:44:30,000 --> 00:44:32,211 Tony, what do you think really happened? 746 00:44:32,795 --> 00:44:35,923 Well, Danny had said the people he was dealing with 747 00:44:36,423 --> 00:44:40,344 were absolutely capable of doing anything they could 748 00:44:40,427 --> 00:44:42,721 to ensure that he not pursue this. 749 00:44:44,973 --> 00:44:46,308 [Bill] I think that's right, Jack, 750 00:44:46,392 --> 00:44:49,603 and some of the people in the intelligence community 751 00:44:49,687 --> 00:44:52,356 that I talk to on a regular basis 752 00:44:52,439 --> 00:44:56,068 told Danny that some of the specific inquiries he was making 753 00:44:56,568 --> 00:44:58,153 could cause him to get murdered. 754 00:44:58,737 --> 00:45:03,283 Bill, who in this case would be that ugly, that mean, that vicious? 755 00:45:04,910 --> 00:45:06,578 Take us into that world. 756 00:45:07,913 --> 00:45:09,915 [dark music playing] 757 00:45:14,253 --> 00:45:16,588 [Bill] I found stuff, I think. 758 00:45:18,257 --> 00:45:23,011 About a week ago, we got a call from this computer software guy 759 00:45:23,095 --> 00:45:26,306 out west in Washington state, from a public telephone. 760 00:45:26,390 --> 00:45:27,349 [man] Yeah. 761 00:45:27,433 --> 00:45:28,267 [Bill] And, um, 762 00:45:29,351 --> 00:45:31,437 he knows a lot about PROMIS. 763 00:45:33,647 --> 00:45:34,773 [man] Do I know the name? 764 00:45:35,357 --> 00:45:36,275 [Bill] Yeah. 765 00:45:36,358 --> 00:45:38,193 Michael Riconosciuto. 766 00:45:39,862 --> 00:45:43,866 He said, at one point, "I have the PROMIS source code." 767 00:45:44,533 --> 00:45:46,034 -[man] Michael, right? -[Bill] Yeah. 768 00:45:48,954 --> 00:45:51,415 [man] Michael's an extremely intelligent person. 769 00:45:51,498 --> 00:45:52,624 [Bill] Yeah. 770 00:45:54,752 --> 00:45:57,004 [man] He's one of the best in the business. 771 00:45:58,338 --> 00:46:01,383 I mean, you speak to him about software or whatever… 772 00:46:02,593 --> 00:46:06,722 He can move around in a very impressive way. 773 00:46:08,265 --> 00:46:11,852 [Bill] This former NSA guy says, "I don't know how you heard that name, 774 00:46:12,352 --> 00:46:14,980 but you can get killed just knowing that name." 775 00:46:15,814 --> 00:46:17,524 [man] That's very possible. 776 00:46:18,025 --> 00:46:19,359 [Bill] Oh Jesus. 777 00:46:19,443 --> 00:46:21,487 [dark music playing] 778 00:46:25,449 --> 00:46:27,701 Uh, Christian, this is Michael Riconosciuto. 779 00:46:27,785 --> 00:46:29,077 I'm returning your call. 780 00:46:29,578 --> 00:46:31,955 Uh… um… 781 00:46:32,039 --> 00:46:33,916 Try me back. Thank you. 782 00:46:34,500 --> 00:46:36,835 ♪ Illusions number time ♪ 783 00:46:57,397 --> 00:46:59,858 ♪ A drunk man's on the lead ♪ 784 00:47:02,986 --> 00:47:05,405 ♪ Skies and all bleed ♪ 785 00:47:08,784 --> 00:47:11,537 ♪ And no one can hear ♪ 786 00:47:14,373 --> 00:47:16,959 ♪ The cry from the ground ♪ 787 00:47:19,962 --> 00:47:22,631 ♪ It's something to dig ♪ 788 00:47:33,058 --> 00:47:35,060 [song fades] thing to dig ♪ 61385

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