Search Captions & Ask AI

Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4

March 13, 2024 /

This episode of Dateline, titled "The Killer on Camera 4," features discussions on the murder of firefighter John Hickey, the investigation led by Detective Val Vaughn, and the complex relationships surrounding the case.

Hosts Josh Mankiewicz and Dennis Murphy talk about the victim, John Hickey, who was a dedicated firefighter. They reflect on his bravery and the tragic circumstances of his death, which was not in the line of duty but rather a homicide in his own home.

The episode highlights the involvement of Jennifer McKay, Hickey's girlfriend, and Jennifer Green, his ex-wife, as they navigate the investigation and their connections to the suspect, Daniel Green. The hosts discuss the emotional toll on the families involved and the challenges faced during the investigation.

Detective Val Vaughn's role is emphasized as she uncovers crucial evidence, including surveillance footage that plays a key part in identifying the killer. The episode also touches on the impact of technology in solving cold cases.

Listeners are encouraged to engage with the hosts as they answer social media questions, providing further insights into the case and the individuals involved.

TLDR

This episode covers the murder of firefighter John Hickey and the investigation involving Detective Val Vaughn and complex relationships surrounding the case.

Episode

24:27
00:00:00
Hi, everybody. I'm Josh Mankiewicz, and we are talking Dateline, and our guest today
00:00:08
is Dennis Murphy. Hi, Dennis. Hey, Josh. How are you? All good here? I'm great. This episode is called The Killer on Camera 4. If you have not listened to this
00:00:17
broadcast yet, it is the episode right below this one on the list of podcasts that you
00:00:22
just chose from. So go there, listen to it, or watch it on TV or stream it on Peacock,
00:00:28
and then come back here. Now, today we're going to talk about the episode, and Dennis also has an extra clip from the interview with Jennifer Green
00:00:36
that he's going to play for us. Later, Dennis is going to answer some of your questions
00:00:41
from social media about the broadcast. So let's talk Dateline. Let's talk a little bit about the victim.
00:00:47
This was something that came up a couple of times in your interview, and I thought it was very sort of poignant,
00:00:54
which is this is a guy who woke up every day of his life, certainly every day of his professional life, and thought, I could die today.
00:01:03
And even if he didn't think it, he knew it somewhere in the back of his mind because that job involves risking your life on pretty much a daily basis.
00:01:11
But dying that way is one thing. That's easy to accept. This is something else. I remember talking with his commander in the firehouse there, and he said, John Hickey, who's the victim, is the kind of guy that will go through the door, which means the place is on fire, and he'll go through the door and do what he has to do to help whatever's going on in there.
00:01:30
And I thought, what a great phrase, a guy who goes through the door, and that's who John Hickey was.
00:01:34
What was that like talking to the other firefighters in the station there? I mean, it's just an amazing crew.
00:01:39
When you talk to them, they say you can't understand it unless you've lived this life, unless you've done it.
00:01:43
And I must say, I do understand that. That did come through in this episode, I thought.
00:01:50
Also, how connected they are still to him after all this time. You know, they still feel like he's part of them.
00:01:58
And so pointed, Josh, this was a volunteer fire department. As I understand it, there's kind of a mentorship.
00:02:03
You work your way up through various volunteer fire departments. And when you get your spurs, if the command likes you, then you get a shot at being the real city of Baltimore firefighter.
00:02:12
Here this guy had been accepted to the academy. His grandfather was a firefighter, and he's just days away from going to the academy, and this awful thing happens, and the guy comes in his window and kills him.
00:02:23
You know, it was so hard for his family to accept that he died as the result of homicide and not in a fire, which I think they might have been prepared for.
00:02:34
The Brotherhood, the bagpipes, they all sort of hear it in their head that sometime their number might come up.
00:02:38
And they talk about it and they said that nobody wants it to happen, but that's an honorable way to go out.
00:02:43
But to be asleep and have somebody crawl in your window and shoot you in the head, that's totally not called for.
00:02:49
But I thought it was very, very sad, Josh, that he becomes sort of an unwitting member of a triangle.
00:02:56
It's not really a lover's triangle because he doesn't know he's in one. This poor guy, he has a girlfriend and she's got problems that come back to haunt him.
00:03:04
So, you know, I'm watching the story and one of my first thoughts is, why isn't she talking to us?
00:03:09
And I'm thinking, did she do this? Right. But as time goes on, it seems like, well, she didn't do it.
00:03:14
This is Jennifer McKay. We had two Jennifers. Jennifer Green is the ex-wife and Jen McKay is the girlfriend at the time this guy is killed.
00:03:21
And she's got the complication with an earlier boyfriend that sets everything in motion.
00:03:26
And keep this in mind, Josh. She and the guy who's killed had only been going out for maybe six, seven, eight weeks.
00:03:31
That's all there was to it. uh there wasn't much history between them a few dates thanksgiving dinner you do get some sense
00:03:38
of like how what a world of misery she must have been in uh knowing that this guy that she had known
00:03:45
forever but killed this guy she'd only known briefly but did love which i think she probably
00:03:49
did and they bring her into the you know the interrogation room at the cop shop and sit her
00:03:54
down and then they start playing out like a deck of cards you know this photo do you recognize this
00:03:58
guy and it's her former lover she's the one whose photo identification gets thrown out by a judge
00:04:04
saying did you guys put you put your your thumb on the scale here you're trying to convince her
00:04:09
that this photo you're showing in an interview is in fact daniel green and she begins by saying well
00:04:14
he looks a little bit skinnier a little taller the nose isn't quite right she's trying to talk
00:04:19
herself out of it and they it takes a while for them to come up with what they call a positive
00:04:24
ID in that, which even though it's a positive ID, people could differ on that. It got all the way to the Maryland Supreme Court, and then they said, okay, it gets reversed
00:04:34
and she can identify in court. And then their case is back on. Did Jennifer McKay ever explain what it is that she saw in Daniel Green?
00:04:43
I mean, I get it. She'd known him forever. But I mean, maybe as a kid, he was adorable and charming and your best friend in the sandbox.
00:04:51
but as an adult, he seems like a kind of a controlling jerk in this sandbox. Well, she didn't say what his cologne was, which is a concept I kind of use,
00:05:01
what it was that was the glue between them. But I think it was just being associated forever, you know, long-term friendship.
00:05:09
When she's confronted by Daniel Green's wife, all of a sudden she understands what's happening.
00:05:13
She's been played terribly. How did you like the fact that he was squatting in a house and pretending to be a divorced guy?
00:05:19
Daniel Green is showing her fake divorce papers. He's got her picture scattered around, and he's trying to convince her that he is, in fact, a single guy again until a wife comes over and confronts her.
00:05:29
And he got busted, interestingly, by the school driver for Jen Green's kids. He worked that neighborhood, and he said, you know that house?
00:05:37
It's been uninhabited for a while. Well, there's somebody in there. What must it be like when Jen Green sort of hears from her kid what Dan's been up to?
00:05:48
Oh, yeah. How was your evening? Yeah, man, that was something. So yeah he his cell phone puts him in the neighborhood of of Jen McKay house the brakes get cut And he made a rookie murderer mistake
00:06:05
which is turning off his cell phone during the time that the murder was committed.
00:06:09
If you live on your phone, that is like wearing a sandwich board that says, look at me.
00:06:15
You know, I can't get past the crime itself. Crawling into this guy's house through the window, you're in a darkened house,
00:06:21
you don't know the layout really, and you're kind of feeling your way along. And then here's the guy on his couch.
00:06:28
And this guy comes in and kills him in his sleep. You know, astonishing. Do police believe that Dan Green killed the dog?
00:06:34
That's what his buddies at the firehouse. So maybe that's part of the plan. I mean, maybe just killing the guy's dog
00:06:39
is like the beginning of this stalking murder thing. But maybe actually he's thinking,
00:06:44
I'll be able to get into the house without anybody noticing if I kill the dog first.
00:06:48
Which is... It makes sense. Could you prove it? I don't know that you can prove it,
00:06:51
but it makes sense. Pretty hair-raising. detective valvon is the detective that you want handling the case of of your loved one
00:07:08
she josh is one of america's all-star detectives now retired but she was just great i mean she's a
00:07:14
wonderful person but boy you know we did a little bit where we sat in a police interview room where
00:07:18
They bring all the suspects in. And there I was opposite Detective Vaughn. She is a forceful person.
00:07:24
I would not want to be on her radar with her right in my grill. She's a great detective.
00:07:28
But she's also exactly the kind of detective that people are, I would imagine, likely to open up to.
00:07:35
She has this very empathetic story, Detective Vaughn, about her grandfather coming out on the stoop one night and getting caught in a firefight on the street.
00:07:44
And he drops dead from a gunshot wound. And that's why she goes into law enforcement, because when the police came to her and helped her get through that moment, she remembered that that became her career goal for the rest of her life to become a good cop.
00:07:56
Val Vaughn talked to you about what she's going to do in retirement. Well, I wish we could hire her.
00:08:01
Me too. What do you think? Me too. Consulting homicide detective. Let's put her on the air.
00:08:05
She'd be great. What's the story behind the passport? I don't get that. What's that passport doing there?
00:08:12
Who is that guy? What's the story there? He's got nothing to do with nothing. I think it's on the windowsill in John's bedroom because he once answered a call as an EMT. This guy was really a wreck on the road. He had a bad motorcycle accident. I think this is what the cops speculate. He found the guy's passport lying on the pavement, you know, and he just picked it up and put it away thinking nothing much of it.
00:08:38
And the guy went into deep rehab and comas and wasn't seen again until the cops came in and found that passport in the window.
00:08:45
You know, you could make up stories of the guy. This is the guy who killed him, the intruder.
00:08:50
And he's in a panic. And the passport ends up on a windowsill. I don't think so.
00:08:55
But there it is. That is the kind of thing you investigate. Here's how Val tells it.
00:08:59
She finds out who this guy is and goes to his house and sits down to talk with him.
00:09:04
and uh she realizes right away the physiognomy is all around this video which we haven't talked
00:09:09
about but the whole case comes down to who is the guy going in the window and passport guy did not
00:09:15
fit that bill of goods he was clearly not that person so she starts with that and then he says
00:09:21
in a very convincing way i it's i don't know what's happened to that passport i've been a
00:09:26
physical wreck ever since this motorcycle accident so i i i think he's he is not on
00:09:31
on Detective Vaughn's pad for very long. He's not a person of interest. I don't either, but...
00:09:35
No, of course, the defense attorney is going to beat your brains in about that later on in court.
00:09:40
Why didn't you check out this guy? He clearly is the unknown intruder. You know, cops often say that frequently
00:09:49
cold cases are solved by two things. One is a change in technology and the other is changes in circumstance.
00:09:58
And the interesting thing about this story is that you have both. I mean, let's start with the change in technology.
00:10:05
Not too many years ago, somebody would go down that little narrow space between the houses, find a window that opened,
00:10:13
get in, commit whatever crime they were going to commit, and there wouldn't be any pictures of them anywhere.
00:10:18
But that's not the case anymore. And also there might be a camera, Josh, but how many times have we seen the cops
00:10:25
go back to the convenience store owner and it doesn't work? The battery's dead. They forgot to change the tape.
00:10:30
It's recorded over. The reliability of those things back in the old days, I think now that they're all digital, it's a lot better.
00:10:37
I mean, the odds that they would actually get something were not with them. Sometimes, you know, they would see the camera and like you're like, well, okay, that's the killer.
00:10:46
Man or woman? Can't tell. You know, too horrible an image. Yeah. So I said to Detective Val, when we were talking about the camera, I said, how could a guy be so stupid as to take his picture?
00:11:00
And, of course, committing a crime. And Detective Vaughn said, how did we get so lucky?
00:11:04
You know, she put it in the right context because a lot of times they don't get lucky.
00:11:07
And this time they did. That video is absolutely chilling, isn't it? The guy checking out each window.
00:11:11
So, yeah, not this window. I can't get in here. And then he finds up goes the window.
00:11:15
He heists himself up. And, you know, he's on his way to go commit. And even though he's walking back and forth first, like he knows he's not supposed to be doing this, like he's trying to psych himself up for the big game.
00:11:27
I thought it was interesting that as much as he did look like him with a characteristic beard and such, it was the pictures of him walking for both women who knew the guy, Jennifer McKay and Jennifer Green.
00:11:38
He said, that's the way he walks. You know, it's not just our physiognomy. It's people who know us, know the way we behave, how we put hands in our pocket, how we shuffle about or do whatever.
00:11:48
and both women said that's him you know as much as the as much as the pose for the camera picture
00:11:54
of the face it was look at the way he moves i thought jen green was like super courageous telling you about what had happened to her I mean completely admitted I thought everything that had gone wrong
00:12:06
in her life and in her marriage and how she lied for him and then realized she wasn't going to lie
00:12:11
for him anymore. Story number one, he was in my bed. We were in bed together that night, husband
00:12:16
and wife. And then you go fast forward a few years later. Oh, he wasn't in my bed. She decided she
00:12:21
didn't want to lie for him anymore. Why did she do it originally? Let's listen to that extra piece
00:12:27
of sound, which is from Jen Green. This is when she's talking about being in the interrogation
00:12:33
room, looking at the security footage of somebody breaking into the apartment. I knew that what I saw in that third photo was not what I wanted to see for myself, for my children,
00:12:46
for his family, I just froze. I just couldn't process anything. What is going to happen to my
00:12:52
life? What are people going to think of us? What, you know, like, I mean, the things that go through
00:12:57
your mind when you're suddenly faced with the reality of my husband killed someone. There's no
00:13:05
book you can write. Like, I couldn't be like, oh, if this ever happens to you, here's what you should
00:13:09
do. Because it's not. It's such a visceral, raw reaction. I just remember, like, I was sick. I
00:13:14
I collapsed. I was just like in a in a haze, you know, and then it finally was like, OK, the kids are home from school.
00:13:22
It's time to snap out of it and then, you know, get back to life as normal after just being downtown and questioned about a murder.
00:13:30
Now, Josh, shift the scene in the police interview with the two detectives on the other side of the table, Vaughn and O'Connor.
00:13:36
They show her the photos and they don't see anything. They're very much about body language and she's not giving them anything.
00:13:42
and she gets up and leaves. Nothing. She had to make a decision. Am I going to show this
00:13:47
what I'm feeling right now? And at the time, she didn't. You know, and maybe she was persuaded by him
00:13:51
in the same way that Jennifer McKay was persuaded. It was like, look, okay, I wasn't with you.
00:13:56
I understand that. But I'm not guilty of this. I'm not a murderer. Maybe that's why.
00:14:01
On that point, Josh, I'm not sure we quite nailed or got it from her why she had that change of heart.
00:14:06
Through the broadcast, you see her getting stronger and stronger, which I just thought was great.
00:14:11
How is she today? I think she's in a good space. She reinvented herself. She came out on the far side of this
00:14:16
thing and she's got a great career and good kids and she's doing okay. I mean, her problem is that
00:14:22
her daughters are going to read all of this stuff online. It's there forever. They're going to Google
00:14:27
the story of their stepfather, one case, or the birth father who killed this guy.
00:14:32
That's why you have in her situation, you really have no choice but to tell your kids everything.
00:14:38
But it doesn't mean you have to go down to tell the cops that you've had a change of heart.
00:14:42
You're then going to testify. The parents said that Jen's change of heart was really all based on the fact that the divorce wasn't final.
00:14:49
And she wanted a bigger piece of his pension payout. And that's why she badmouthed him in court and pointed the finger of suspicion at him that had nothing to do with whether she actually believed that was him in the photo.
00:15:01
His parents, he's grown up the way they wanted. He's got a good job. He's got a good family.
00:15:07
And then suddenly this happens. And he was their hero son, too, Josh. He was the one that went in the door the way John Hickey did into the building, into the burning house and save people.
00:15:18
He was a hero for them. But it breaks your heart to have this picture as you're sitting with the two of them.
00:15:23
And they go, see, see, look at the nose here. It's different. Look at this, this, this white patch on his beard.
00:15:28
That's not that's not Daniel. Couldn't possibly be Daniel. Do they still believe he's not guilty?
00:15:32
Oh, they do. They believe that that photo was what they call bad word, but exculpatory evidence, the stuff that rules out a person for being the likely killer.
00:15:41
Okay, after the break, Dennis is going to answer some of your questions from social media.
00:15:46
Hey, we're back now on Talking Dateline. And in the meantime, we've lost Josh Mankiewicz.
00:16:00
He's gone off on assignment. But I'm very happy to say you're going to meet his stunt double, Isar Harpaz.
00:16:07
Isar is not his stunt double. He's the wonderful producer of this segment on The Baltimore Firefighter.
00:16:12
Isar, thanks for jumping in. Oh, thanks so much, Dennis, for having me. I really appreciate it.
00:16:16
You know how analog I am and not digital. I think of you as having in front of you a mailbag, right?
00:16:23
A viewer mailbag. There is no such thing because these are comments that we've culled from off our social media page.
00:16:28
But we're old school, Dennis. We got it printed out. We're old school. You know how to appeal to me.
00:16:34
So what I'd like you to do is dip into your virtual mailbag there. And let's talk about some of these things that were on people's minds.
00:16:41
Yes, absolutely. Let's start with somebody who's actually very close to the story, who chimed in on Facebook, which is Jen Green's mom, Judith Morkowski.
00:16:53
And she said, I could not be more proud of my daughter. She's right. She has endured a lot, but has come through a true warrior.
00:17:00
She has built a successful business in spite of this tragedy and can survive without others.
00:17:05
Thank you for being so kind to her. She is just a wonderful, wonderful person. I'm glad we got to meet her.
00:17:11
Yeah, and so the questions that people have asked is how was it doing those interviews with Jen Green?
00:17:17
We knew it would be a long one because she really had a story to tell, and we sat you guys at the kitchen table, right?
00:17:24
And we were one minute into the story. We had just unpacked our cases for the first time.
00:17:30
So I'm really learning the story as I'm talking to her. Correct, correct. She really touched you, I thought, in a way that I haven't seen you be touched.
00:17:39
She did, no question. she she was in hook line and sinker she said i'm going to tell my story i'm going to give you
00:17:45
everything so you could represent my story and we were very thankful for that there's who else
00:17:49
do we hear from yes so we have um at 60 pink lady on instagram and she said great story i wondered why no one mentioned the unusual jacket the suspect was wearing I would think the wife could confirm if her husband owned it or not
00:18:07
And actually, Jen Green responded to that. She went on Instagram and she said, I did understand.
00:18:13
I said he's wearing his brother's jacket when identifying him. You know, I heard from people say that it wasn't the same jacket they saw. There's two sets of
00:18:21
surveillance pictures. One, this figure is walking out in the streets outside and then pictures taken
00:18:25
inside this darkened alley and people saying, I don't see the same jacket there. Did you hear that
00:18:30
kind of comment? Well, I think the answer, the short answer is that the alley pictures were taken
00:18:36
on a night scope vision camera and the electronics are tweaked in such a way that it enhances the
00:18:41
signal and really fries the color of the image that it's taking. Yes, it looks like he's wearing
00:18:45
a black jacket on the cctv which is in color right and then when the intruder goes into the
00:18:52
back alley where there's night vision camera which records the color temperature right and
00:18:57
it's black and white but it records the color temperature and so it really looked very different
00:19:02
who else do you hear from me sir um at lexi 1423 uh talked about was there any evidence uncovered
00:19:10
regarding the gun in the video? Did Dan own a gun? Was a bullet recovered from John and tested at all?
00:19:17
Any connection to Dan? They did find an empty gun case, didn't they? That's correct. That's correct.
00:19:22
So if I remember correctly, a .45 caliber gun was used to kill John Hickey. And they did find
00:19:31
an empty gun case where a .45 could fit, right? And I think they presented that at trial.
00:19:38
Not enough to get you to beyond reasonable doubt, but it was there. No, clearly, especially the gun.
00:19:44
They didn't find the murder weapon. And an empty gun case, yes, maybe it's an indication, but it's not something the jury will hang their hat on.
00:19:53
And by the way, there's a funny thing. There's a Dateline viewer. Her name is Michelle Ports Gargulio, and she wrote on Facebook, I grew up in the Greens house.
00:20:06
You're kidding. My dad built it in the 70s. My mind is blown. The octagon window gave it away. I googled Daniel
00:20:13
Green and found it to be the exact same address, 40 minutes north of the city. Wow.
00:20:19
Yet another reason to keep up to date on your dateline viewing, Isar. She must have dropped
00:20:23
her teeth when she saw her childhood house there. I know. That's crazy. I hope you got a question
00:20:28
from somebody who took in Detective Val Vaughn, who's one of my dateline heroes now since we've
00:20:34
done this story. I've done this for 28 years. I would put her in my top three. Yeah, I agree.
00:20:40
I'm with you, bud. Detectives that I've interviewed ever. She did away with the police speak. She
00:20:46
talked to us as people, as somebody she's conversing with. And indeed, at Lisa J. Miller,
00:20:53
CO, who also happened to be our guest on last week's After the Verdict with Keith, and she said,
00:20:58
Detective Val Vaughn is phenomenal in this dateline. How fantastic it is, a female detective showing the nation on International Women's Day.
00:21:08
There are detectives out there serving their communities, doing the right things for the right reasons in a professional, compassionate way.
00:21:15
Well observed and well said. Thank you for that. I'm glad that theme got through.
00:21:19
You're going to hear a story, an extraordinary character story here. Okay, so Edmurda Mystery Box is giving me a compliment, so thank you so much.
00:21:31
He said, we are totally digging how involved the Dateline producer was with tonight's episode and live tweeting.
00:21:36
Awesome. There is a place where people can get your thoughts ahead of time. It's at Dateline NBC Prod.
00:21:43
And every week, the lead producer or the associate producer signs on and kind of gives behind the scenes stuff, talks about different aspects.
00:21:54
And when you tweet during the show, you just realize how much we are a part of people's lives.
00:22:00
And it's something that is a privilege. You're talking about avid Dateline watchers.
00:22:07
You want to hear at Josh Warren 3. he tweeted my wife's water just broke but her mom is coming to pick her up i am not missing this
00:22:16
episode you know what kind of advice can you give yeah oh wow if i were priorities i would just i
00:22:25
would just record that episode well good i hope i hope everybody in their household as well and
00:22:31
they are very close watchers our audience aren't they um there's another one um on dateline nbc
00:22:38
Twitter, we asked, do you still have a friend you've known since early childhood? And a lot of
00:22:44
viewers responded with pictures and photos of their friends. What about you, Dennis?
00:22:49
I got a guy that lives 10 blocks away from me here down in South Florida. We've each
00:22:53
been in different paths our lives and we ended up in the same town and we have New Year's together
00:22:57
every year. Wow. Amazing. It's funny because my early childhood friend, like the one that I'm
00:23:04
really close to just was over this weekend. And this is somebody I'm connected to since the age
00:23:10
of eight. And we talk with each other every week. And he's a great guy. And I'm very privileged and
00:23:16
appreciative to have him in my life. We can't choose family, but we can choose our friends.
00:23:21
That's right. And I choose you, my buddy. Oh, my God. What an honor. Thank you. We go way back
00:23:26
then. I know. We did stories together 25 years ago. I know. When you were still kind of going
00:23:32
out into hurricanes and like, you know, letting your, you know, like going against the wind when Dateline used to do like these hurricanes.
00:23:39
Do you remember that? I do remember that made a clip reel at some point. 50 years of NBC news or something.
00:23:44
I may have been the one to do that. Yes, yes. Well, that puts a button on talking Dateline for this week.
00:23:49
Izar, I'm so happy you were able to join us. Dennis, that was so much fun. Josh, wherever you are, good luck with your assignment.
00:23:56
And thank you all for listening. And I just want to make a pitch here. If you want to
00:24:00
Talk to Dateline. If you have anything to tell us, you want to talk about the stories, Dateline in general,
00:24:04
you can reach us on social at Dateline NBC. And we're here every Friday. I'm Dennis Murphy.
00:24:10
Thanks for joining me. I'll see you along the way.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most heartbreaking
  • 75
    Most shocking
  • 75
    Biggest twist
  • 70
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • The Killer on Camera 4
    A deep dive into the tragic story of firefighter John Hickey's murder and its aftermath.
    “This poor guy, he has a girlfriend and she's got problems that come back to haunt him.”
    @ 02m 59s
    March 13, 2024
  • Detective Val Vaughn's Impact
    Detective Vaughn's personal story drives her passion for law enforcement and solving cases.
    “She is a forceful person. I would not want to be on her radar.”
    @ 07m 24s
    March 13, 2024
  • The Emotional Toll on Families
    The heartbreaking effects of crime on victims' families, especially the girlfriend's struggle.
    “What is going to happen to my life?”
    @ 12m 57s
    March 13, 2024
  • Michelle's Childhood Connection
    Michelle Ports Gargulio discovers her childhood home featured on Dateline, leaving her amazed.
    “My mind is blown.”
    @ 20m 06s
    March 13, 2024
  • Celebrating Female Detectives
    Detective Val Vaughn is recognized for her compassionate approach on International Women's Day.
    “Detective Val Vaughn is phenomenal in this dateline.”
    @ 20m 58s
    March 13, 2024
  • Friendship Reflections
    A heartfelt discussion about the importance of lifelong friendships.
    “We can't choose family, but we can choose our friends.”
    @ 23m 16s
    March 13, 2024

Episode Quotes

  • What a great phrase, a guy who goes through the door.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4
  • I just couldn't process anything.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4
  • It's such a visceral, raw reaction.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4
  • My mind is blown.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4
  • Detective Val Vaughn is phenomenal in this dateline.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4
  • We can't choose family, but we can choose our friends.
    Talking Dateline: The Killer on Camera 4

Key Moments

  • The Killer on Camera 400:12
  • John Hickey's Bravery01:30
  • Detective Vaughn's Story07:35
  • Emotional Aftermath13:14
  • Unraveling the Mystery19:10
  • Childhood Discovery20:06
  • Detective Praise20:58
  • Friendship Talk23:16

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown