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Nancy Grace

Tiger Woods Makes Public Apology; Cops Release Croslin-Cummings Drug Sting Tapes

Aired February 19, 2010 - 20:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


NANCY GRACE, HOST: Breaking news tonight. Satsuma, Florida, a 5- year-old girl tucked into bed, five hours later, she`s gone. Daddy comes home from the night shift to find not a trace of little Haleigh. Last person to see her alive, new stepmother 18-year-old Misty Croslin, who takes to the airwaves, claiming she`s innocent. But even in one brief interview, she can`t keep her stories straight, including a 180 on a lie detector she flunked. Little Haleigh`s own father, Ronald Cummings, and baby-sitter-turned-stepmother Misty Croslin both handcuffed, arrested, booked. Charges? Drug trafficking.

Bombshell tonight. Tonight, we obtain secret undercover surveillance video taken in the police car by pinpoint secret camera. It`s all caught on video -- the sting, repeat drug sales to undercover cops, the conversations, the sales, the takedown. And tonight, we obtain even more secretly recorded jailhouse tapes, hours of Misty Croslin yakking to Mommy, Daddy, Grandma, brother all on video.

But now we see a new and angry Croslin, self-absorbed, demanding to be bailed out, insisting she`ll only talk about Haleigh once she`s out, Croslin concerned only about herself, whining and complaining over and over about lock-up, the food, you name it, even insisting her family forget about the brother in lock-up to just focus on her. Croslin back in court on two more drug charges. Tonight, Misty Croslin`s house of cards caving in as her own mother also arrested. But what we and the cops want are answers. Where is 5-year-old Haleigh?

But first, breaking news tonight. Golf superstar Tiger Woods breaks his silence for the first time since his scandal erupts. After leaving rehab for alleged sex addiction, Woods makes a formal apology to a closed group of well wishers, woods insisting no questions be asked.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

TIGER WOODS, PROFESSIONAL GOLFER: Good morning, and thank you for joining me. Many of you in this room are my friends. Many of you in this room know me. Many of you have cheered for me or you`ve worked with me or you`ve supported me.

Now every one of you has good reason to be critical of me. I want to say to each of you simply and directly, I am deeply sorry for my irresponsible and selfish behavior I engaged in.

I know people want to find out how I could be so selfish and so foolish. People want to know how I could have done these things to my wife, Elin, and to my children. And while I have always tried to be a private person, there are some things I want to say.

Elin and I have started the process of discussing the damage caused by my behavior. As Elin pointed out to me, my real apology to her will not come in the form of words, it will come from my behavior over time. We have a lot to discuss. However, what we say to each other will remain between the two of us.

I am also aware of the pain my behavior has caused to those of you in this room. I have let you down and I have let down my fans. For many of you, especially my friends, my behavior has been a personal disappointment. To those of you who work for me, I have let you down personally and professionally. My behavior has caused considerable worry to my business partners.

To everyone involved in my foundation, including my staff, board of directors, sponsors, and most importantly, the young students we reach, our work is more important than ever. Thirteen years ago, my dad and I envisioned helping young people achieve their dreams through education. This work remains unchanged and will continue to grow. From the Learning Center students in Southern California to the Earl Woods scholars in Washington, D.C., millions of kids have changed their lives, and I am dedicated to making sure that continues.

But still, I know I have bitterly disappointed all of you. I have made you question who I am and how I could have done the things I did. I am embarrassed that I have put you in this position.

For all that I have done, I am so sorry. I have a lot to atone for, but there is one issue I really want to discuss. Some people have speculated that Elin somehow hurt or attacked me on Thanksgiving night. It angers me that people would fabricate a story like that. Elin never hit me that night or any other night. There has never been an episode of domestic violence in our marriage, ever. Elin has shown enormous grace and poise throughout this ordeal. Elin deserves praise, not blame.

The issue involved here was my repeated irresponsible behavior. I was unfaithful. I had affairs. I cheated. What I did is not acceptable, and I am the only person to blame. I stopped living by the core values that I was taught to believe in. I knew my actions were wrong, but I convinced myself that normal rules didn`t apply. I never thought about who I was hurting. Instead, I thought only about myself.

I ran straight through the boundaries that a married couple should live by. I thought I could get away with whatever I wanted to. I felt that I had worked hard my entire life and deserved to enjoy all the temptations around me. I felt I was entitled. Thanks to money and fame, I didn`t have to go far to find them.

I was wrong. I was foolish. I don`t get to play by different rules. The same boundaries that apply to everyone apply to me. I brought this shame on myself. I hurt my wife, my kids, my mother, my wife`s family, my friends, my foundation and kids all around the world who admired me.

I`ve had a lot of time to think about what I`ve done. My failures have made me look at myself in a way I never wanted to before. It`s now up to me to make amends, and that starts by never repeating the mistakes I`ve made. It`s up to me to start living a life of integrity.

I once heard, and I believe it`s true, it`s not what you achieve in life that matters, it`s what you overcome. Achievements on the golf course are only part of setting an example. Character and decency are what really count. Parents used to point to me as a role model for their kids. I owe all those families a special apology. I want to say to them that I am truly sorry.

It`s hard to admit that I need help, but I do. For 45 days, from the end of December to early February, I was in in-patient therapy, receiving guidance for the issues I`m facing. I have a long way to go, but I`ve taken my first steps in the right direction.

As I proceed, I understand people have questions. I understand the press wants to ask me for the details of the times I was unfaithful. I understand people want to know whether Elin and I will remain together. Please know that as far as I`m concerned, every one of these questions and answers is a matter between Elin and me. These are issues between a husband and a wife.

Some people have made up things that never happened. They said I used performance-enhancing drugs. This is completely and utterly false. Some have written things about my family. Despite the damage I have done, I still believe it is right to shield my family from the public spotlight. They did not do these things, I did.

I have always tried to maintain a private space for my wife and children. They have been kept separate from my sponsors, my commercial endorsements. When my children were born, we only released photographs so that the paparazzi could not chase them. However, my behavior doesn`t make it right for the media to follow my 2-and-a-half-year-old daughter to school and report the school`s location. They staked out my wife and they pursued my mom. Whatever my wrongdoings, for the sake of my family, please leave my wife and kids alone.

I recognize I have brought this on myself, and I know above all, I am the one who needs to change. I owe it to my family to become a better person. I owe it to those closest to me to become a better man. That`s where my focus will be.

I have a lot of work to do and I intend to dedicate myself to doing it. Part of following this path for me is Buddhism, which my mother taught me at a young age. People probably don`t realize it, but I was raised a Buddhist and I actively practiced my faith from childhood until I drifted away from it in recent years. Buddhism teaches that a craving for things outside ourselves causes an unhappy and pointless search for security. It teaches me to stop following every impulse and to learn restraint. Obviously, I lost track of what I was taught.

As I move forward, I will continue to receive help because I`ve learned that`s how people really do change. Starting tomorrow, I will leave for more treatment and more therapy.

I would like to thank my friends at Accenture and the players in the field this week for understanding why I`m making these remarks today. In therapy, I`ve learned the importance of looking at my spiritual life and keeping in balance with my professional life. I need to regain my balance and be centered so I can save the things that are most important to me, my marriage and my children.

That also means relying on others for help. I`ve learned to seek support from my peers in therapy, and I hope someday to return that support to others who are seeking help. I do plan to return to golf one day. I just don`t know when that day will be. I don`t rule out that it will be this year. When I do return, I need to make my behavior more respectful of the game.

In recent weeks, I have received many thousands of e-mails, letters and phone calls from people expressing good wishes. To everyone who has reached out to me and my family, thank you. Your encouragement means the world to Elin and me. I want to thank the PGA Tour, Commissioner Finchem and the players for their patience and understanding while I work on my private life. I look forward to seeing my fellow players on the course.

Finally, there are many people in this room and there are many people at home who believed in me. Today, I want to ask for your help. I ask you to find room in your heart to one day believe in me again.

Thank you.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MISTY CROSLIN, HALEIGH`S BABY-SITTER: I`m scared. I don`t want to be set up or nothing. I`m, like, I cannot get into trouble for nothing.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Not me, especially not with how many pills I have in here right now.

MISTY CROSLIN: Yes. Hey, none of them have our names on them.

(LAUGHTER)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hey, man. (EXPLETIVE DELETED). He`s not answering the phone.

MISTY CROSLIN: (INAUDIBLE) are you sure he`s not trying to set you up? I`m, like, Hell, no. I`m, like, dude...

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I`m trying not to go to jail.

MISTY CROSLIN: I said, If he was going to set up up, he`s going to set up up with (DELETED) Roxys, OK? (DELETED) (INAUDIBLE) or whatever, you know what I mean? I was, like, I trust the dude, OK? Not Ronald but, like, my family -- Are you sure he`s not going to set you up?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MISTY CROSLIN: What does Leonard think?

LISA CROSLIN, MISTY`S MOTHER: He`s not saying nothing. He just wants to try to help me and Dad get a house.

MISTY CROSLIN: OK, what did he...

LISA CROSLIN: He didn`t say anything at all. He wants to talk to you. That`s all he says, that he can`t -- he won`t do it -- the only way he`ll do it is if your lawyer`ll let him pay him. That way, everything`s confidential between your lawyer and him.

MISTY CROSLIN: But pay -- pay my lawyer to get me out of here.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Where`s this place at?

MISTY CROSLIN: Right here.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: On the left or right?

MISTY CROSLIN: On the left. Right there.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh, this store?

MISTY CROSLIN: And there`s a bathroom, and you go into the bathroom. I`ll be right by the door, so when you come out, I can get him. You got a bag (INAUDIBLE) with?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes, they`re already...

MISTY CROSLIN: Oh, they`re already in the bag?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: They`re already in the bag.

MISTY CROSLIN: All right. So you don`t have to do nothing like that, just go in there and come out.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (EXPLETIVE DELETED) it`s kind of like a big bag, though.

MISTY CROSLIN: I`ve got my purse.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: All right. You going to come back over here?

MISTY CROSLIN: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: OK.

MISTY CROSLIN: Are you going to do it in the store?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Well, I`m -- I`m going to (INAUDIBLE) in your purse because I don`t want to carry this big-ass bag in there. I ain`t got nowhere to hide it.

MISTY CROSLIN: All right.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

GRACE: I want to go straight out to the lawyers. Let`s unleash them all. Eleanor Odom, felony prosecutor, Meg Strickler, defense attorney, and Peter Odom, defense attorney out of Atlanta.

You know, Eleanor, I know that under the law, they are all charged with this because they`re all a party to the crime. Whether they are making the actual drug sale or not, it`s all one kit and kaboodle together. But do you see, as a juror would be looking at it, any difference in the behavior of these secretly recorded videos between Misty Croslin and Ronald Cummings?

ELEANOR ODOM, PROSECUTOR: Well, what we`ve seen so far is Misty`s calling the shots. She`s the one doing the directing, saying, Here, we go in here, we go into the bathroom, you take this bag. So I certainly would say she`s the leader of this gang.

GRACE: What about it, Peter Odom?

PETER ODOM, DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Nancy, where I take issue with you is this. No jury`s ever going to see these tapes because these cases can`t go to trial. Their exposure on sentencing is huge if they take it to trial. The police are going to work a deal with Misty. What they`re doing is just being patient with her. She will crack.

GRACE: OK, complete dancing around the question. I`m going to try Strickler. Do you see a difference in the behavior, the involvement, between Cummings and Misty Croslin?

MEG STRICKLER, DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Absolutely. And what we can do is what Peter just said, though, is you can have different exposure here. But what Misty`s facing is she`s the ringleader. She will face -- in the plea agreement she will get more of a sentence than the other two because she is the ringleader.

GRACE: Well, I can tell you two this, to wake up and smell the coffee, people, because nobody`s getting a deal unless somebody talks about the night Haleigh goes missing.

(CROSSTALK)

GRACE: ... the same old line of B.S.

STRICKLER: You can`t go to trial in this case, though. So they`re going to end up with some sort of deal. They may not get a very good deal, but they`re going to certainly want to plead this out before it goes to trial.

GRACE: You know, Eleanor, that`s not true. You can`t say you can`t go to trial because they will go to trial.

ELEANOR ODOM: Yes, they will. They`ll have to go to trial. And as a prosecutor, I`d be happy to try this case against either of these defense attorneys.

(LAUGHTER)

PETER ODOM: Oh, I`m sure you would, Eleanor!

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

LISA CROSLIN: OK. I like your hair. It looks cool.

MISTY CROSLIN: Yes, I`m going to take it out today.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

GRACE: Breaking news tonight. Golf superstar Tiger Woods breaks his silence for the first time since his scandal erupts. After leaving rehab for alleged sex addiction, Woods makes a formal apology to a closed group of well wishers, Woods insisting no questions be asked.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

TIGER WOODS, PROFESSIONAL GOLFER: Good morning, and thank you for joining me. Many of you in this room are my friends. Many of you in this room know me. Many of you have cheered for me or you`ve worked with me or you`ve supported me.

Now every one of you has good reason to be critical of me. I want to say to each of you simply and directly, I am deeply sorry for my irresponsible and selfish behavior I engaged in.

I know people want to find out how I could be so selfish and so foolish. People want to know how I could have done these things to my wife, Elin, and to my children. And while I have always tried to be a private person, there are some things I want to say.

Elin and I have started the process of discussing the damage caused by my behavior. As Elin pointed out to me, my real apology to her will not come in the form of words, it will come from my behavior over time. We have a lot to discuss. However, what we say to each other will remain between the two of us.

I am also aware of the pain my behavior has caused to those of you in this room. I have let you down and I have let down my fans. For many of you, especially my friends, my behavior has been a personal disappointment. To those of you who work for me, I have let you down personally and professionally. My behavior has caused considerable worry to my business partners.

To everyone involved in my foundation, including my staff, board of directors, sponsors, and most importantly, the young students we reach, our work is more important than ever. Thirteen years ago, my dad and I envisioned helping young people achieve their dreams through education. This work remains unchanged and will continue to grow. From the Learning Center students in Southern California to the Earl Woods scholars in Washington, D.C., millions of kids have changed their lives, and I am dedicated to making sure that continues.

But still, I know I have bitterly disappointed all of you. I have made you question who I am and how I could have done the things I did. I am embarrassed that I have put you in this position.

For all that I have done, I am so sorry. I have a lot to atone for, but there is one issue I really want to discuss. Some people have speculated that Elin somehow hurt or attacked me on Thanksgiving night. It angers me that people would fabricate a story like that. Elin never hit me that night or any other night. There has never been an episode of domestic violence in our marriage, ever. Elin has shown enormous grace and poise throughout this ordeal. Elin deserves praise, not blame.

The issue involved here was my repeated irresponsible behavior. I was unfaithful. I had affairs. I cheated. What I did is not acceptable, and I am the only person to blame. I stopped living by the core values that I was taught to believe in. I knew my actions were wrong, but I convinced myself that normal rules didn`t apply. I never thought about who I was hurting. Instead, I thought only about myself.

I ran straight through the boundaries that a married couple should live by. I thought I could get away with whatever I wanted to. I felt that I had worked hard my entire life and deserved to enjoy all the temptations around me. I felt I was entitled. Thanks to money and fame, I didn`t have to go far to find them.

I was wrong. I was foolish. I don`t get to play by different rules. The same boundaries that apply to everyone apply to me. I brought this shame on myself. I hurt my wife, my kids, my mother, my wife`s family, my friends, my foundation and kids all around the world who admired me.

I`ve had a lot of time to think about what I`ve done. My failures have made me look at myself in a way I never wanted to before. It`s now up to me to make amends, and that starts by never repeating the mistakes I`ve made. It`s up to me to start living a life of integrity.

I once heard, and I believe it`s true, it`s not what you achieve in life that matters, it`s what you overcome. Achievements on the golf course are only part of setting an example. Character and decency are what really count. Parents used to point to me as a role model for their kids. I owe all those families a special apology. I want to say to them that I am truly sorry.

It`s hard to admit that I need help, but I do. For 45 days, from the end of December to early February, I was in in-patient therapy, receiving guidance for the issues I`m facing. I have a long way to go, but I`ve taken my first steps in the right direction.

As I proceed, I understand people have questions. I understand the press wants to ask me for the details of the times I was unfaithful. I understand people want to know whether Elin and I will remain together. Please know that as far as I`m concerned, every one of these questions and answers is a matter between Elin and me. These are issues between a husband and a wife.

Some people have made up things that never happened. They said I used performance-enhancing drugs. This is completely and utterly false. Some have written things about my family. Despite the damage I have done, I still believe it is right to shield my family from the public spotlight. They did not do these things, I did.

I have always tried to maintain a private space for my wife and children. They have been kept separate from my sponsors, my commercial endorsements. When my children were born, we only released photographs so that the paparazzi could not chase them. However, my behavior doesn`t make it right for the media to follow my 2-and-a-half-year-old daughter to school and report the school`s location. They staked out my wife and they pursued my mom. Whatever my wrongdoings, for the sake of my family, please leave my wife and kids alone.

I recognize I have brought this on myself, and I know above all, I am the one who needs to change. I owe it to my family to become a better person. I owe it to those closest to me to become a better man. That`s where my focus will be.

I have a lot of work to do and I intend to dedicate myself to doing it. Part of following this path for me is Buddhism, which my mother taught me at a young age. People probably don`t realize it, but I was raised a Buddhist and I actively practiced my faith from childhood until I drifted away from it in recent years. Buddhism teaches that a craving for things outside ourselves causes an unhappy and pointless search for security. It teaches me to stop following every impulse and to learn restraint. Obviously, I lost track of what I was taught.

As I move forward, I will continue to receive help because I`ve learned that`s how people really do change. Starting tomorrow, I will leave for more treatment and more therapy.

I would like to thank my friends at Accenture and the players in the field this week for understanding why I`m making these remarks today. In therapy, I`ve learned the importance of looking at my spiritual life and keeping in balance with my professional life. I need to regain my balance and be centered so I can save the things that are most important to me, my marriage and my children.

That also means relying on others for help. I`ve learned to seek support from my peers in therapy, and I hope someday to return that support to others who are seeking help. I do plan to return to golf one day. I just don`t know when that day will be. I don`t rule out that it will be this year. When I do return, I need to make my behavior more respectful of the game.

In recent weeks, I have received many thousands of e-mails, letters and phone calls from people expressing good wishes. To everyone who has reached out to me and my family, thank you. Your encouragement means the world to Elin and me. I want to thank the PGA Tour, Commissioner Finchem and the players for their patience and understanding while I work on my private life. I look forward to seeing my fellow players on the course.

Finally, there are many people in this room and there are many people at home who believed in me. Today, I want to ask for your help. I ask you to find room in your heart to one day believe in me again.

Thank you.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Misty Cummings faced a judge Thursday morning less than one hour after her mother was taken away in handcuffs. With her hair in cornrows and her hands and feet in shackles, the 18-year-old entered a not guilty plea to eight counts of drug trafficking.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Haleigh`s father and Misty`s ex-husband, Ronald Cummings, was excused from Thursday`s arraignment. Wednesday, Cummings filed his not guilty plea in a letter from his attorney.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: While Misty Cummings and Hope Sykes were on the second floor being arraigned, Crystal Sheffield, Haleigh`s mother, was on the first floor meeting with the Department of Children and Families.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Sheffield and Haleigh`s grandmothers, Marie Griffis and Teresa Neves, met with DCF officials to discuss the custody of Haleigh`s brother, Ronald, Jr. Sheffield is still working to obtain full custody.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

LISA CROSLIN: You know what else he`s going to do?

MISTY CROSLIN: What?

LISA CROSLIN: He`s going to relocate us to California.

MISTY CROSLIN: Well...

LISA CROSLIN: All of us.

MISTY CROSLIN: Will you please tell him to please do something soon, like tomorrow?

LISA CROSLIN: Yes! Yes, I will. I promise to God.

MISTY CROSLIN: Please.

LISA CROSLIN: Chelsea says that you didn`t want me talking to him, Misty, but he`s not out to hurt you. He`s out to get you out of there.

MISTY CROSLIN: Well, tell him to get me out, and I can -- you know...

LISA CROSLIN: OK. He says he just wants you to talk to him.

MISTY CROSLIN: That`s fine.

LISA CROSLIN: That`s it. That`s what I told him. I`m, like, I`m sure she will. He`s, like, All right.

MISTY CROSLIN: I will. It`s just get me out of here, like, ASAP.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

GRACE: OK, Leonard Padilla, what about it?

LEONARD PADILLA, BOUNTY HUNTER: What about what?

GRACE: Well, is it going to happen? Is it in the hands of the lawyers? Are you...

PADILLA: No, no, no.

GRACE: If it were to go down, would you want to talk to her...

PADILLA: No, the attorney...

GRACE: ... from the jailhouse and then get her out?

PADILLA: Basically, the attorney sent out a letter today. And I haven`t seen it, but several of the people in the media contacted me and read it to me. And it instructs me to stay away from the family, do not talk to any of the family members, do not communicate with any family members.

But the deal still stands. I talk to her in the jail before she gets out, she gives me information that helps us locate Haleigh. That`s where we`re at. I have not heard from the attorney, and we`re not budging off of that.

GRACE: Well, wait a minute. Wait a minute. Let`s go to the lawyers. Eleanor Odom, Peter Odom, Meg Strickler. Meg Strickler, it doesn`t sound like her lawyer communicated that to her because she`s still talking about Leonard Padilla bonding her out -- Call him, call him, call him. And the lawyer`s giving this press statement saying, Don`t call my client.

STRICKLER: It doesn`t sound like everybody`s connected with each other here at all. It sounds like confusion central. And plus, if Padilla goes into the jail and speaks to her, we`re going to be seeing it on your show, just like this. It`s not privileged. The lawyer would have to be there also.

GRACE: So Peter Odom, isn`t that a huge breach of duty to be -- have your client thinking that Padilla could bond her out, and the lawyer`s writing him and giving public statements saying, Don`t call my client?

PETER ODOM: Well, it would be, Nancy. But remember, we`re getting all this second and third hand from very unreliable sources. And we haven`t talked to the lawyer yet.

GRACE: Well, you know, if you`re referring to Padilla, I would not consider him to be unreliable since what he`s saying...

PETER ODOM: Well, he`s getting it secondhand, too.

GRACE: ... is being corroborated by Croslin behind bars.

To Bill Majeski, former NYPD, now with Majeski Associates, joining us out of New York. Bill, thank you for being with us. Bill, where do cops go now?

BILL MAJESKI, FORMER NYPD DETECTIVE: I think that the police are working on a theory currently and they`re making approaches to her. They have the specific facts about what had happened to Haleigh, and they`re using those to try to corral her into making some kind of...

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

GRACE: What a week in America`s courtrooms. Take a look at the stories, and more important, the people who touched our lives.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

WOODS: For all that I have done, I am so sorry. I was unfaithful. I had affairs. I cheated. What I did is not acceptable and I am the only person to blame.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

911 OPERATOR: Hello?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Is she still alive?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I don`t know.

(CROSSTALK)

911 OPERATOR: Hello?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Alyssa, I love you! I love you! (INAUDIBLE)

(END AUDIO CLIP)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Alyssa Blanton married her husband, Brent, just six months ago, bought a new house and had a successful job working for AT&T in Orlando. It was here where the Cocoa woman was gunned down by a stalker she`d met two years earlier while working as a Hooter`s waitress.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We have a restraining order against this guy! Oh, my God!

(END AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We are satisfied there is probable cause to believe that Jesse John Crow killed his wife, Ryann.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The investigation into the disappearance of newlywed Ryann Crow continues, even though Ryann`s husband, Jesse Crow, has been arrested on murder.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The arrest of Jesse John Crow does not end this investigation.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The woman that Jesse Crow was with, Ms. Summer Donovan, is a person of interest in this case.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Misty Cummings faced a judge Thursday morning less than one hour after her mother was taken away in handcuffs.

RONALD CUMMINGS, HALEIGH`S FATHER: I`ll get it for you. No problem. (EXPLETIVE DELETED) two weeks, I can make the money to pay for them and eat them myself.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Right.

MISTY CROSLIN: Uh-oh!

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This (EXPLETIVE DELETED)! Hey, do me a favor...

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Get on the ground! Get on down! Get on down!

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: All right, tell me your name, please.

CASEY ANTHONY, CAYLEE`S MOTHER: Casey Marie Anthony.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Caylee was almost 3 when she died.

CINDY ANTHONY, CASEY`S MOTHER: There`s no evidence that Casey has ever done any harm to her child.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: ... with duct tape, over her nose and her mouth.

CINDY ANTHONY: We`re talking about a 3-year-old little girl!

MISTY CROSLIN: As the killer looked into her face, maybe her killer even saw her eyes as the tape was applied.

CASEY ANTHONY: I take complete and full responsibility for my actions.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: First one piece...

CINDY ANTHONY: I don`t know what your involvement is, sweet heart.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: ... then two, then three...

GEORGE ANTHONY, CASEY`S FATHER: There was an overpowering smell, I`ll admit that.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: ... so that no breath was possible.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The duct tape was placed there to, in fact, stop breathing.

CASEY ANTHONY: They`ve already said they`re going to pin this on me.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The face that Caylee Anthony saw in the final moments of her life was her mother`s face. Could Caylee have understood what was happening to her?

CASEY ANTHONY: As a parent, you know certain things about your child.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Did she try to resist?

CASEY ANTHONY: Can someone let me -- come on!

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Could her killer see the fear in her eyes as the tape was applied?

CASEY ANTHONY: I just want her to come home. I just want my baby back.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Anyone who contends that no juror could find that these conclusions call for a sentence of death is only fooling themself.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

GRACE: Let`s stop and remember Army Sergeant Schuyler Patch, 25, Lasso (ph), Oklahoma, awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Amy Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medial, also served Afghanistan, loved Chicago Cubs, outdoors, time with family and friends, remembered for big hugs, beautiful eyes and a smile that lit up a room, leaves behind parents John (ph) and Colleen (ph), brothers Zeff (ph) and Garrett (ph), sister Amber (ph). Schuyler Patch, American hero.

Everyone, I`ll see you tomorrow night, 8:00 o`clock sharp Eastern. And until then, good night, friend.

END