Taken

41m
In this Dateline classic, a 7-day mystery grips the city of Detroit after a young talented drummer with dreams of rock-and-roll stardom suddenly goes missing. Dennis Murphy reports. Originally aired on NBC on September 17, 2010.

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Runtime: 41m

Transcript

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Speaker 4 He was a sweet-hearted drummer who lived for rock and roll. But the music stopped the day he suddenly vanished.

Speaker 5 I can't believe I'm searching for dumpsters for a boyfriend.

Speaker 6 I didn't know what to do.

Speaker 4 A curious disappearance that no one could explain. Then, across town, another scare.

Speaker 7 I felt a gun to the back of my head.

Speaker 4 A teenager in danger.

Speaker 7 He grabbed me and said, you have to come with me or I'm going to kill you.

Speaker 4 Two young lives strangely linked. Could police put the puzzle together? It's a race against the clock, a family's most desperate hour.

Speaker 8 I said, I will do whatever I can to help you find your son.

Speaker 4 Can they unravel this mystery in time?

Speaker 9 Don't you understand? Every minute counts right now?

Speaker 4 Taken.

Speaker 3 Matt Lantry from the Detroit suburbs was just a regular guy. The kid who delivered the pizza you ordered, traveled his world on a skateboard, and cracked up his friends with jackass style stunts.

Speaker 10 With Matt, it was never a dull moment. He was always thinking of something crazy to do.

Speaker 3 But if you wanted to know what made Matt Landry get out of bed in the morning, it was the music.

Speaker 3 To his new girlfriend Francesca, Matt was first and foremost a rocking dude. a ferocious drummer with a basement band of longtime buckets.

Speaker 11 So what kind of stuff did they play?

Speaker 5 Stuff that's 200 beats per minute and up.

Speaker 12 And set the volume at 11.

Speaker 3 Plus.

Speaker 10 I love playing with the guy. He was just awesome.

Speaker 14 He hit harder than any drummer I've ever played with.

Speaker 10 We tried to slow him down a little bit, but he just kept pushing to go faster and faster.

Speaker 3 Born to rock, but nonetheless basically a quiet, unassuming guy. At 21, the youngest of five children, and still living at home in Chesterfield, Michigan with his parents, Doreen and Bob.

Speaker 16 Creating music is what he was happiest with.

Speaker 9 We were going to go to the Detroit Symphony and it surprised me that he wanted to go.

Speaker 3 The drummer with the heavy metal band?

Speaker 9 He's a drummer with the heavy metal band wanted to go to the Detroit Symphony with me.

Speaker 17 But this story isn't about the making of the music. Matt Landry's would-be rise from basement drummer to arena superstar.

Speaker 17 This is about an unusual crime spree in the Detroit suburbs and how that connected to a nightmarish week in August 2009 when Matt Landry disappeared.

Speaker 3 Saturday afternoon, like most, Matt had been behind the drum kid in a practice session with the guys.

Speaker 14 And we were playing in my basement where we always practiced.

Speaker 3 They'd had to date only one paying gig in their career, a neighborhood block party. folding chairs and heavy metal.
Yeah, we don't belong here.

Speaker 10 Not at all.

Speaker 3 The reviews were mixed, but like most basement bands, they had dreams.

Speaker 14 And we were just trying to write enough to get an album done.

Speaker 3 What was very fresh in Matt's life was his first serious girlfriend, Francesca Bomarito, a waitress and like Matt, a lover of all things rock.

Speaker 9 The doors, the Rolling Stones, things like that.

Speaker 12 Geezer rock?

Speaker 18 No, classic rock.

Speaker 3 Music. And movies.
They devoured DVDs watching them over at Fran's house. Matt was the shy one.
His girlfriend had to take the amorous initiative.

Speaker 5 I just kept inviting him over, and he kept coming, and one day he was like,

Speaker 5 I might have to stay here. I'm like, that's okay.

Speaker 20 Doreen, did you know that he had found a serious girlfriend?

Speaker 20 Yeah.

Speaker 9 You know your kids.

Speaker 9 And

Speaker 9 when he would talk about Fran,

Speaker 9 his face would just light up.

Speaker 3 So that Saturday, Matt delivered pizzas in his mom's borrowed car because the alarm on his green Honda was going off without notice, blaring.

Speaker 3 After his shift, he killed time till Francesca got off work at the restaurant. They'd agreed to hook up after.

Speaker 5 He's like, you really want me to come over?

Speaker 9 And I was like, yes, please.

Speaker 3 After midnight, very early Sunday morning, Matt's mom was having a restless night. It was thundering and lightning out.

Speaker 9 And I saw Matt walk outside and

Speaker 9 kind of circled around his car.

Speaker 3 And I thought, oh, no, Matt, careful.

Speaker 9 Because, you know, his alarm was going to go off and it was almost three in the morning.

Speaker 16 It was 2.55 a.m.

Speaker 9 So he very slowly went to lift up his hood of his car and the alarm went off. And he jumped in his car and just went down the street to get out of the neighborhood until it went off.

Speaker 5 He came over and he had a bottle of wine and,

Speaker 9 you know, we had a really good night.

Speaker 3 But maybe an overly festive night. Fran woke up Sunday sick as a dog.
Matt Matt attended to her.

Speaker 5 He gave me a hot bath, brought me tea, and a thermometer.

Speaker 11 He kind of showed you a tender side, huh?

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 3 Then Matt, still playing nursemaid, phoned his mom.

Speaker 9 He goes, is there anything else I should be doing for her? And I said, no, it sounds like you're doing everything, Matt.

Speaker 3 There were plans for a backyard barbecue later that afternoon at his parents. It would be a chance for Fran to get to know Matt's sister's boyfriend.
That is, if she felt up to it.

Speaker 9 He says, okay. He says, she's going to take a little nap.
And then when she wakes up, we'll come over. And I told him, I told him, like, I tell

Speaker 9 all of my kids. I said, I love you, Matt.

Speaker 9 And he said, I love you too, Mom.

Speaker 3 Matt offered to make a fast food run so Fran would have something in her stomach, but she was still hurting and waved him off.

Speaker 5 He said, yeah, do you want something to eat? And I was like, yeah, I'll... Never mind.
I'm not going to eat it anyway.

Speaker 3 As Matt left to run some errands, Fran snoozed, figuring Matt would wake her in time for the barbecue.

Speaker 5 I woke up at 5.47 and I called him. He didn't answer.
I texted him, waiting for him to reply, staring at my phone, and I fell back asleep.

Speaker 3 She called him twice more. She remembers the exact times, 7.31 and 9.01, and got his voicemail.
She was starting to freak.

Speaker 20 Even six hours in, you thought something bad had happened.

Speaker 5 Right, because he always answers or calls me right back. So I started calling the police stations and hospitals.

Speaker 3 Over at the Landry's barbecue, the salmon tasted great, but Matt and Fran were no-shows. Still, no one thought twice about it.

Speaker 9 I knew she was hit running a fever, and you don't really feel like doing much, especially, you know, going over to parents' house.

Speaker 3 Meanwhile, Matt's friends were getting as worried as Francesca. The bandmates were used to texting and calling one another almost hourly, and Matt had gone MIA.

Speaker 20 Well, I guess you were all thinking, what could it be?

Speaker 17 Exactly.

Speaker 3 Chris Emmerich even got in his car and drove down roads Matt would likely have driven that day.

Speaker 23 Thinking maybe he slid into a ditch or something, you know.

Speaker 3 By nine that Sunday night, Chris was concerned enough to call Matt's mother.

Speaker 9 And he says, well, you know, we can't find him anywhere.

Speaker 6 We don't know where he is.

Speaker 21 You're starting to get worried?

Speaker 9 Yes, I was starting to get worried.

Speaker 3 Doreen Landry had worked in the banking business for years and knows how to spot patterns of fraud. So she clicked on her computer to check Matt's debit card activity.

Speaker 3 That's when alarm bells started going off.

Speaker 21 What did you see when you logged on to his account?

Speaker 9 I saw

Speaker 9 three $100 withdrawals,

Speaker 9 cash, from an ATM machine with a $2 fee from a gas station on 7 Mile Road in Detroit.

Speaker 21 What did that all add up to you?

Speaker 9 A few things.

Speaker 9 Number one, what was Matt doing

Speaker 9 at 7 Mile in Detroit?

Speaker 3 7 Mile, the northeast side, was an especially rough piece of Detroit turf. Drug dealing gangs ran the streets there.
A bleak landscape of burned out houses and abandoned cars.

Speaker 9 Why would Matt take out all of his money out of his account?

Speaker 3 Matt was careful with his money. It didn't make sense.

Speaker 9 Why would Matt use an ATM machine with a fee?

Speaker 20 So you don't see Matt doing this withdrawal himself?

Speaker 9 No, I was hoping it was him,

Speaker 9 but just, wow, that just didn't

Speaker 9 fit the picture picture at all.

Speaker 3 Sunday came to an end, and few people in Matt's Circle could sleep that night.

Speaker 3 The next day, in one of those same nearby suburbs, a teenager cashing a paycheck would be pulled headlong into the mystery surrounding Matt Landry.

Speaker 3 She got the scare of her young life.

Speaker 4 When we come back, a life and death drama at the bank.

Speaker 7 As soon as I saw the check on the counter, I felt the guns in the back of my head.

Speaker 4 What could this have to do with Matt? Questions now about two young lives.

Speaker 4 When taken continues.

Speaker 21 When does it become where's Matt? We got to find him.

Speaker 10 I'd say Monday morning.

Speaker 3 Matt Landry, a hyper-caller and texter, had been off the grid for almost a day. Matt running silent scared everyone, especially his girlfriend.

Speaker 20 Francesca, why did you start calling the hospitals and police stations as you did?

Speaker 5 Because nobody's heard from him. I wanted to know, like, maybe if he had gotten in a car accident, maybe he got a flat tire on the side of the road, maybe he was in a ditch.

Speaker 18 I don't know what happened.

Speaker 3 The parents, Bob and Doreen Landry, were getting more anxious by the minute, waiting by the phone that didn't ring. It was Monday when they called their local police in Chesterfield.

Speaker 3 An officer came to the house.

Speaker 21 Now, cops get these kind of reports from families very often. And usually what they say is, he's a kid,

Speaker 20 give it some time. He's going to walk in the door.
Is that what I'm telling you, Doran?

Speaker 9 Yeah, he alluded to the fact that, you know, most of the time these kids end up at crack houses and crash there for a few days and then they eventually come home. I remember saying to him,

Speaker 9 I pray to God you're right.

Speaker 9 I pray to God you're right.

Speaker 3 As the Landrys worried inside their house on Monday, A few miles south in Harrison Township, a young woman was walking towards the Flagstar Bank.

Speaker 7 I was cashing my first paycheck from a dog kennel.

Speaker 20 New job, first paycheck.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 3 Sarah Maynard, 19, noticed a young guy in sunglasses on the street definitely checking her out as she approached the bank.

Speaker 3 It creeped her out a little, but she tried to ignore him and went directly to a teller's window.

Speaker 3 The man in the shade stormed in right behind her, as seen in chilling detail on the bank's security cameras.

Speaker 7 I handed them my check, and then as soon as I set the check on the counter I felt the gun to the back of my head.

Speaker 3 Then all calm and collected he began giving the bank teller instructions.

Speaker 20 What'd he say?

Speaker 7 He said give me $50,000 or I'll kill her.

Speaker 20 And you could feel the muzzle of the gun on your head.

Speaker 7 He pressed it against me hard enough where I was bent over the counter and he had his hand on the back of my neck too.

Speaker 3 The teller resisted the bandit's demand for $50,000. She said she didn't have that much.
The man with the gun continued to threaten Sarah.

Speaker 21 So give me $50,000 or she's dead. Yeah.

Speaker 26 How long did this go on?

Speaker 7 Not that long. She ended up opening the drawer and giving him what she did have.

Speaker 3 The robber then let go of Sarah and crossed the bank lobby where he grabbed some more cash as others hid in fear.

Speaker 3 But he wasn't done with the pretty blonde who'd apparently caught his eye.

Speaker 7 He came back over to me and grabbed me and said, you have to come with me or I'm going to kill you.

Speaker 21 What'd you say?

Speaker 25 What'd you do?

Speaker 7 I sat down and said no.

Speaker 11 So you sat right down on the bank floor.

Speaker 3 It was a standoff of sorts. The man had his firepower, Sarah her willpower.
And he's saying, get up, you're going with me?

Speaker 7 Yeah, and he tried to pull me

Speaker 7 and he said, get up or I'm going to kill you.

Speaker 7 And I just sat there and then he ended up running to the door.

Speaker 19 We begin with breaking news out of Macomb County, a manhunt underway right now for a bank robber who hit a flagstar bank in Harrison Township.

Speaker 3 The armed robber had fled. Bank employees and customers knew they had literally dodged a bullet.
Police would say later that Sarah, by refusing to go with him as a hostage, had done everything right.

Speaker 21 They give you a lot of credit that you may have saved your life in that moment.

Speaker 7 I was just scared I didn't want to go with him. Just seemed like the best option.

Speaker 3 But that gunman gave the cops chills. A robber, cool, poised, and seemingly all too ready to do whatever it took to pull off his crime.
Chesterfield PD detective Scott Blackwell.

Speaker 27 Normally a bank robber's come in, pass a note,

Speaker 27 and get the money and move on. This was a violent bank robbery.

Speaker 3 But what did the brazen young robber have to do with Matt Landry?

Speaker 3 That connection would have to wait for the story told by a gas station ATM and the security camera pointed at it.

Speaker 3 Coming up.

Speaker 9 I can't believe I'm doing this right now.

Speaker 5 Searching Searching dumpsters for my boyfriend and I didn't know what to do.

Speaker 12 At last, a break in the case. Big development.

Speaker 9 Yeah, huge development.

Speaker 4 When dateline continues.

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Speaker 3 Bob and Doreen, the parents of Matt, the young man missing for the third day now, could only pray that he'd walk in the door.

Speaker 3 The police told them often kids go off like this and it's something to do with drugs. The parents weren't buying it.

Speaker 9 Didn't fit the pattern for Matt.

Speaker 3 Something innocent would explain Matt's absence.

Speaker 16 I still had hope that

Speaker 16 it was something crazy, was something, you know,

Speaker 17 you know, show up.

Speaker 9 Yeah, something that we'd laugh about.

Speaker 3 But just in case it wasn't that, Matt's mother and girlfriend, after waiting the required 24 hours, went to Matt's hometown police in Chesterfield to get an official missing person case going.

Speaker 9 And Bob stayed here, just in case we wanted to make sure someone was always here at the house.

Speaker 3 At first, Chesterfield PD told the Landrys that it wasn't their case.

Speaker 3 They'd need to go to the cops in another jurisdiction, Roseville, some 13 miles south where Francesca lived and where Matt had last been seen.

Speaker 20 Did you get the feeling you were being brushed off?

Speaker 12 Yes. It was a nuisance case.

Speaker 34 Yes, and he's like awaiting the lobby.

Speaker 3 Was the family frustrated?

Speaker 17 I think they were frustrated.

Speaker 3 But Chesterfield Detective Scott Blackwell was struck by Doreen Landry's unshakable belief in her son's integrity.

Speaker 27 I said the right person will end up with this eventually, but it'll be taken care of. You know, we're not going to leave you hanging.

Speaker 3 Detective Blackwell was especially interested to read Doreen's printout of the the suspicious ATM withdrawals from Matt's account.

Speaker 9 He said the first thing he's going to do is let's find out if this was even Matthew who did these withdrawals.

Speaker 3 So the detective, hoping to find an answer on the security cam video, went down to the Sunoco in some of Detroit's most crime-ridden streets and caught a break.

Speaker 8 I went to Sam's Club and just for that to get that system.

Speaker 3 The gas station owner, Oz Rahimi, just three days before Matt went missing, had bought a new security camera system.

Speaker 3 The security cam he was replacing had a blind spot in the back where his atm dispenser was moses opened the carton and set to installing his new video security system it was the weekend his son said forget it let's wait i said no we're not going home until we're gonna hook it up and on the security cam video detective blackwell was seeing something that filled him with dread Someone else is using his card at that point.

Speaker 27 That's correct. And it's obvious foul play.

Speaker 9 The news didn't surprise me. For some reason, I was

Speaker 18 hoping it was Matt.

Speaker 3 Meanwhile, on that Tuesday, back north in the near suburbs, Matt's friends and family fanned out through the county, putting up flyers with Matt's face. They checked AutoZone stores.

Speaker 3 Maybe he'd stop by one of them for his broken car alarm. Francesca was searching too, checking out dumpsters.

Speaker 19 And I'm like, I can't believe I'm doing this right now.

Speaker 5 Searching dumpsters for my boyfriend.

Speaker 9 I didn't know what to do.

Speaker 3 As Francesca moves south into Detroit proper, she saw a crush of police cars flashing lights. She elbowed her way through the gawkers to see what everyone was looking at.
It was Matt's abandoned car.

Speaker 19 And I

Speaker 5 was like, yeah, that's his car.

Speaker 12 Big development.

Speaker 9 Yeah, huge development.

Speaker 3 Francesca managed to put one of the police officers on her cell with Doreen, Matt's mom.

Speaker 12 Did they tell you about anything they'd found in the car at that point?

Speaker 9 He mentioned some maps, but Matt delivered pizzas. It's like

Speaker 9 Matt keeps maps in his car.

Speaker 3 By Tuesday, 21-year-old Matt Landry's disappearance had become a TV news story.

Speaker 26 Family members have been busy during the last few days handing out these flyers, hoping someone will help them find Matt.

Speaker 3 In that same newscast, viewers were getting an update on that Brazen Bank stick-up the day before.

Speaker 6 A local teenager had a look of terror that has gripped Metro Detroit in fear.

Speaker 3 Just watching the news like anyone else was a police detective from Roseville, Lieutenant Ray Blerick.

Speaker 11 This was a vicious incident, huh?

Speaker 8 Very vicious, yes, sir.

Speaker 3 The detective watched the security cam pics of the bandit in sunglasses holding a gun to a young female customer. A bad crime, but still one he never expected to investigate.

Speaker 8 Because it didn't have anything to do with the city of Roseville, where I'm in. It's a couple jurisdictions over.

Speaker 3 But by the next day, the detective would prove himself wrong.

Speaker 3 He would be thick in the bank robbery case as well as the disappearance of Matt Landry, a missing person report he knew virtually nothing about.

Speaker 3 But dots were getting connected, and there was one more to come.

Speaker 4 When we come back, another brazen attack on a bright afternoon.

Speaker 3 We scared to death.

Speaker 13 Could you get someone down here?

Speaker 4 Will it shed light on what might have happened to Matt?

Speaker 9 You need to get a detective in there now.

Speaker 4 When taken continues.

Speaker 8 They just got carjacked.

Speaker 3 Lieutenant Blerick of the Roseville Police was at his desk Tuesday, August 11th, 2009, when the call came in. A carjacking in progress at the Walmart just down the street.
He told me to run and I ran.

Speaker 3 Blerick and his fellow officers responded quickly. But surprisingly, the carjacked car, a red Civic, was still in the Walmart parking lot.
The vehicle's owner was shaken up, but okay.

Speaker 8 He was approached at his driver's store by

Speaker 8 the suspect.

Speaker 20 Guy displaying a gun?

Speaker 8 Displayed a gun, told him

Speaker 8 to get out of the car.

Speaker 3 And why didn't the gunman take off with the car?

Speaker 8 When he got in the car to attempt to drive away, he didn't know how to drive a stick. You're kidding.

Speaker 3 No.

Speaker 3 Nearby, an officer spotted a nervous-eyed man with a bad 70s-era Afro wig.

Speaker 8 He took off running. The foot chase was on.
During the foot chase, the wig fell off.

Speaker 3 A guy who steals a car he doesn't know how to drive and then bolts in a Jimi Hendrix wig might have been comical. But this suspect on the run was also armed.

Speaker 8 He was putting his hand in his pocket, possibly trying to get the gun out.

Speaker 3 The gun and a clip were tossed away during a foot chase that ended when police zapped the man with electrical charges from a taser gun like this one.

Speaker 3 When the jolts wore off and the man was back on his feet, Lieutenant Blarick recognized a familiar face, someone he'd seen just recently on TV.

Speaker 8 He was standing right there, right in front of me in the Walmart lot when I said, that's the bank robber.

Speaker 3 The same ice-cold bandit who'd held a gun to 19-year-old Sarah Maynard's head and demanded money.

Speaker 7 Give me $50,000 or I'll kill her.

Speaker 8 He's a violent suspect. He's involved in two things that we know of

Speaker 8 and who knows how many others.

Speaker 3 Could one of those other things be a missing person?

Speaker 3 Just that day, the detective had become aware that Doreen Landry had reported her son missing to the police in Roseville, where Matt's girlfriend lived and he'd last been seen.

Speaker 3 And Lieutenant Blarrick knew something else. Detroit police had just found the young man's car abandoned in a bad neighborhood.

Speaker 3 He wondered, did the Walmart suspect now in his holding cell have an appetite for carjackings? Had he also maybe stolen Matt's car?

Speaker 3 By then, the abandoned car had been towed to the police station in Matt's hometown, Chesterfield. The detective called a counterpart there about his hunch.

Speaker 8 I told him, I said, I think it's all related.

Speaker 8 I said, can you get somebody to go into the car without destroying any evidence and see if there's anything in there that links the bank robbery to Matt Landry?

Speaker 3 And sure enough, there was.

Speaker 17 And it had to do with that map found inside Matt Landry's car.

Speaker 17 When investigators got a closer look at it, they saw an X marks the spot pinpointing the Flagstar Bank, which the guy in the shades had robbed and where he briefly held a 19-year-old hostage.

Speaker 3 Now Lieutenant Blerick began filling in the blanks.

Speaker 17 He figured that the guy who pulled off the bank job was the same guy who carjacked Matt Landry's Honda with Matt in it.

Speaker 3 But he wasn't ready to share his conclusion with Matt's parents yet. He had something to do first.

Speaker 3 At 11.30 Tuesday night, the detective and a partner went down to that bleak section of Detroit where Matt's green Honda had been ditched.

Speaker 8 And we start looking for Matt Landry.

Speaker 20 So the question in your mind, Lieutenant, is, are we going to find the body of Matt Matt Landry or do you expect to find this guy bound inside one of these houses?

Speaker 8 I didn't know what we were going to find, but I was hoping he was still alive. That's why I went out there.

Speaker 3 Two other people were searching that same bad neighborhood that Tuesday night, but they weren't the police.

Speaker 25 This was our first house that we looked at.

Speaker 3 Two friends of Matt's father, Bob Perugi and Chris Manning, had come down to investigate on their own.

Speaker 8 You think your friend's son could be in one of these houses? You know you're going to search until you find him.

Speaker 3 The family friends, amateur detectives armed with only a flashlight, managed to search dozens of homes, many of them burnt out shelves.

Speaker 8 A local guy challenged them. We had to tell him we were, you know, working on a case and he believed we were the police, which was good for us, so who knows what he would have tried, you know.

Speaker 3 The two friends, like the cops before them, also went to the Sunoco station and got the owner to play them the video of the ATM withdrawal made on Matt's car.

Speaker 3 As the friends studied the security cam video, a clerk behind the counter was watching local news. Up popped a recap of the bank robbery story.
It was a hey, that's him kind of moment.

Speaker 3 They swiveled heads from the news clip of the sunglasses wearing bank robber to the figure on their security cam who has just withdrawn the money. Bingo.

Speaker 25 We all put together that it's the same guy. You know, it was the same guy did the bank robbery, same guy that used Matthew's ATM card at the Sanopo station.

Speaker 3 What's more, the guy behind the counter recognized the person in the ATM security cam video, a local guy who went by the name of IHOP.

Speaker 3 The counterman said he had a rep as being a gang member and a violent thief. The friends told the Landrys what they'd learned, that a kid named IHOP seemed to be behind Matt's disappearance.

Speaker 3 And the Landrys also heard on local news that the very same guy was already in police custody for the botched carjacking at the Walmart. Matt's mom called the Roseville PD.

Speaker 9 I said the man you're holding who just robbed the bank, armed robbery, is the same man who used my son's debit card, and my son is missing. You need to get a detective in there now to talk to him.

Speaker 3 That detective would be Lieutenant Ray Blerick, who just pieced it all together himself. Now he needed answers from the man they called IHOP.

Speaker 3 And the veteran cop had a few tricks up his sleeve to get what he wanted.

Speaker 3 Coming up.

Speaker 8 He is definitely one of the coldest people I've ever talked to.

Speaker 4 An intense interrogation and troubling new information. An eyewitness on the day Matt vanished.

Speaker 13 Beat them up now. Tell me, hurry.
Hurry, hurry.

Speaker 4 When Dateline continues.

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Speaker 3 By early Wednesday, Matt Landry's fourth day missing, his parents, Bob and Doreen, had put together some facts that scared them to death.

Speaker 3 The same guy seen on tape using Matt's ATM card looked to be the man who'd robbed the Flagstar bank.

Speaker 9 And I saw him holding a gun to that girl's head,

Speaker 9 knowing he was the one who used my son's ATM card.

Speaker 9 I knew it wasn't good.

Speaker 3 And the suspected bank robber, street name IHOP, was also carrying a gun when he attempted a carjacking at the Walmart, according to the police. IHOP was now in a holding cell at the Roseville PD.

Speaker 3 And the Landrys, getting desperate, time not on their side, began pressuring the police there to get immediate answers from him as to Matt's whereabouts, even though Matt's disappearance wasn't officially their case.

Speaker 5 Give me back my father.

Speaker 9 Just bring him back.

Speaker 3 Sister Gina turned up the heat on the internet.

Speaker 34 I actually put on Facebook, anyone who can go up to the Roseville Police Station, and all these people showed up at the Roseville Police Station at like midnight just to kind of show power and numbers to get them to question them.

Speaker 3 Bob and Doreen went over to Roseville to talk to the detectives in person.

Speaker 9 You need to get somebody in there right now. Don't you understand?

Speaker 9 Every minute counts.

Speaker 3 Lieutenant Blarick didn't need the prodding.

Speaker 3 He and a partner were itching to question the suspect after they'd returned from Detroit, where they'd spent a long night searching for Matt with no results.

Speaker 8 We're just checking abandoned houses, checking alleys, checking burned-up garages.

Speaker 6 And you're seeing nothing?

Speaker 8 No evidence of Matt Landry at all, sir.

Speaker 3 At 3.45 in the morning, a bone-tired Blerick and his partner devised an interview strategy, hoping IHOP would cough something up.

Speaker 8 I was just going to sit there in the chair. I wasn't going to say anything to him.

Speaker 3 In the interrogation room, the other officer peppered the suspect with questions, but IHOP was dodging them. So Blerick pulled an investigator's trick to rattle him.

Speaker 8 I had a picture of Matt Landry inside of my notebook.

Speaker 8 So when it got to the point where it was obvious that this wasn't going anywhere, I took out that picture and I held it up and I said, we found him.

Speaker 21 Reaction from him?

Speaker 8 He saw a ghost. Huh? He saw a ghost.

Speaker 3 But not shaken enough to spill whatever he might know about Matt Landry.

Speaker 20 What are you seeing, Lieutenant, when you're right there with the guy? You see anything in his eyes?

Speaker 8 Just a cold, callous, heartless

Speaker 8 He is definitely near the top of the list, if not on top, of one of the coldest people that I've ever talked to.

Speaker 3 The Landrys headed home from the Roseville PD, satisfied at last that the police were now seeing their son's disappearance as they were.

Speaker 3 Gina, their daughter, meanwhile, was learning more troubling information about her brother, something she'd picked up on the internet.

Speaker 34 I got a phone call from one of my best friends, and she said, Gina, check your Facebook when you get home. And, you know, there's an important message on there.

Speaker 3 The heads up was from a woman Gina had known in high school.

Speaker 34 Her parents had witnessed on Sunday a violent carjacking, and it was a green Honda.

Speaker 13 91 East Point Police, in the back of Quisnos, I'm not sure, but it looks like a robbery.

Speaker 13 They got a guy cornered over here.

Speaker 17 The previous Sunday afternoon, the police in yet another small city near Detroit, East Point, got a 911 call.

Speaker 17 The distressed witness was reporting an apparent carjacking and abduction in the parking lot lot here behind the Quiznos subshop.

Speaker 17 But when the police officers arrived, the car in question was gone, and they weren't sure exactly what it was they had to write up.

Speaker 17 The incident at the Quiznos went largely unnoticed until Matt's sister got tipped to it by a friend online.

Speaker 21 So now you have a lot of very bad information at your disposal, huh?

Speaker 34 Well, I just felt sick when I showed my mom the Facebook message and it said carjacking at the Quiznos.

Speaker 9 As soon as she said Quiznos,

Speaker 9 I said that was the last place Matt used his debit card, other than the ATM.

Speaker 17 He should have got him by the neck now. I think he's putting him in the trunk.
They're beating him up now.

Speaker 13 I mean, hurry, hurry, hurry.

Speaker 3 What the 911 caller had seen, in fact, was the abduction of Matt Landry.

Speaker 21 So there was the missing piece of the puzzle.

Speaker 3 And as Francesca put it together, it all started because her concerned boyfriend had decided on his own that she, feeling crummy, needed a TLC sandwich to get back on her feet.

Speaker 5 Well, he had mentioned to the girl Quiznos, my girlfriend's sick. I don't know what to get her.
Can you help me?

Speaker 9 And that's why he got two subs.

Speaker 3 Two subs that started a three-day crime spree in the Detroit suburbs.

Speaker 3 From the Quiznos in East Point on Sunday afternoon, spreading 10 miles to the Flagstar Bank in Harrison Township at high noon on Monday, and ending eight miles away at the Walmart in Roseville midday on Tuesday.

Speaker 3 Bad news, bad patterns. But Matt's family and friends were still clinging to a sliver of hope.

Speaker 9 Okay, he's still alive somewhere. He's still alive somewhere.
Maybe he's just tied up. Maybe he's just tied up.
Maybe he's just, they're holding him at a crack house or something.

Speaker 9 Maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe.

Speaker 21 He had a dream.

Speaker 5 I had a dream before he went missing that he was kidnapped and I found him in a basement tied up to one of those old-time heaters.

Speaker 3 Five days in, a joint police task force had been formed to search those basements and burned out homes on Detroit's northeast side near where the car had been found.

Speaker 3 The same suburban police departments who initially couldn't agree on whose case it was now came together for one purpose, to find Matt Landry.

Speaker 3 From Chesterfield, where Matt lived, Roseville, where he was last seen with Francesca and where the Walmart carjacking went down, and East Point, where Matt had been abducted at the Quiznos.

Speaker 21 They're working with the gang's unit in Detroit, P.D.

Speaker 3 Yes.

Speaker 21 And they have been going frustrating block by block, finding not much of anything. Right.
And then there's Thursday.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 9 Then there's Thursday.

Speaker 3 Thursday the task force was out in strength. 15 officers banging on doors, issuing search warrants, pressuring gang members who may have known the suspect called IHOP.

Speaker 8 I have a son. I have kids too.
I had made a promise to Doreen that I said, even though it's not Rosalie's jurisdiction, I said, I will do whatever I can to help you find your son.

Speaker 3 Helping, walking mean streets.

Speaker 27 More homes are abandoned than are occupied.

Speaker 8 And it's a rough neighborhood.

Speaker 3 That Thursday morning, Lieutenant Blarry had teamed up with Jim Nobelsdorf, a fellow Roseville detective at the time.

Speaker 8 We were just coming to dead ends and we walked out of one of the houses and

Speaker 8 there was a penny

Speaker 8 laying in the street

Speaker 13 and

Speaker 8 had the heads up and

Speaker 8 I picked it up.

Speaker 12 I said, this is it.

Speaker 8 This is it.

Speaker 20 Your luck has turned. Yeah, my luck turned.

Speaker 8 A short time after that, we ended up going for a ride. We ended up here.

Speaker 3 It was the first house they checked after Blerick had found the lucky penny just minutes before.

Speaker 8 And how we got here or why we got here, I can't explain that one, but we got here.

Speaker 3 It was now 10.30 in the morning.

Speaker 8 I see what looks like a little footpath where somebody had gone through there at some point in the summer. I make my way up what used to be the porch and I look in.

Speaker 8 The house is all burned out.

Speaker 8 As I peeked around the corner, I saw some flip-flops here. I stepped in further and saw the body itself.

Speaker 3 In the August swelter, the body had decomposed beyond recognition. They knew they had a white male with an apparent gunshot wound to the head.

Speaker 3 The victim had been wearing jeans and telltale flip-flops.

Speaker 27 It's not the outcome we wanted.

Speaker 8 But at least he was found.

Speaker 3 The hometown detective Scott Blackwell rushed over from nearby streets to confirm the finding.

Speaker 27 When I saw this body, I knew it was him.

Speaker 3 Detective Blackwell's immediate concern was to let the Landrys know in the most humane way possible before the media was onto it. He called his chief of police.

Speaker 9 I remember the chief of police coming to the front door.

Speaker 9 I knew when he walked in.

Speaker 16 I could tell by the look on his face what he was going to tell me.

Speaker 3 I didn't want to hear it.

Speaker 9 After I got done crying,

Speaker 3 I wanted to take a shower like it was going to wash it all away.

Speaker 3 My matted.

Speaker 4 Coming up, could one man be behind this?

Speaker 10 I'm 6'6 ⁇ , 280 pounds. Matt could take me out.
Matt was that strong.

Speaker 4 Maybe one man wasn't. And an anguished cry for change.

Speaker 18 I'm pleading to the mayor of Detroit.

Speaker 4 When taken continues.

Speaker 5 We stayed up late. It felt so right.
I'll never forget that wonderful night.

Speaker 3 In her journal, Francesca enshrined her last hours with Matt Landry in a song, a reworking of Last Kiss, an oldie mashup by Pearl Jam.

Speaker 5 Well, now he's gone, even though he's in my heart, I lost my love, my life that night.

Speaker 3 So when do you guys miss him?

Speaker 8 Every second, every day. Yeah.

Speaker 14 And like, I miss him anytime I touch an instrument or anytime I listen to our favorite bands.

Speaker 9 They identified him on Friday.

Speaker 3 Matt's decomposed decomposed body, discovered in a hellhole of a house, was positively ID by the medical examiner through dental records.

Speaker 3 The ME-determined cause of death was a single gunshot to the back of the head. Already under arrest and now charged with a fresh crime, killing Matt, was a man known on the streets as IHOP.

Speaker 3 He'd given police the phony name Giles, but his fingerprints revealed him to be 17-year-old Ehab Maslamani.

Speaker 3 His attorney, Joseph Kazmalla, said Maslamani came to Michigan to live with relatives who, according to juvenile court records, neglected him.

Speaker 3 He then entered the state's child welfare system and it didn't go well, fleeing foster homes for a life on Detroit's gang-ridden northeast side.

Speaker 15 My job here is to make sure that he gets the best and fairest trial he can get.

Speaker 8 I'm going to state your name for the record.

Speaker 8 Ihab Maslamani.

Speaker 3 Maslomani faced a slew of charges, including murder, kidnapping and carjacking in the Landry case, bank robbery in the Flagstar stick-up, and carjacking in the Walmart incident.

Speaker 3 He pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Speaker 13 You're hitting them now. You hit him in the face,

Speaker 13 please. They're beating them up now.

Speaker 3 But there were two assailants who attacked Matt at the Quiznos, according to that 911 caller. Matt had been double-teamed.

Speaker 3 An explanation, his friends say, for why this powerfully fit drummer was taken against his will.

Speaker 10 I'm 6'6, 280 pounds.

Speaker 27 Matt could take me out.

Speaker 10 Matt was that strong.

Speaker 3 After Matt's body was found, the task force continued combing northeast Detroit for Quiznos suspect number two.

Speaker 3 Sources squeezed on the street told the cops they should be looking for 16-year-old Robert Fat Daddy Taylor.

Speaker 8 We flooded that area and we shut down a drug trade in that area.

Speaker 12 You guys were bad for business.

Speaker 8 Oh, we destroyed the business for one week. And we made a statement to them.
Therefore, I believe they made a statement to Fat Daddy that you better get out of our neighborhood.

Speaker 8 So he ultimately turned himself in.

Speaker 3 Taylor was also charged with murder and kidnapping in the Quisnos abduction. He pleaded not guilty.

Speaker 3 The defense theorized that Matt already knew Maslamani when they bumped into each other at the Quisnos. Some kind of horseplay ensued, and then they all drove off together voluntarily.

Speaker 20 Any reason to think that he would have known who those guys were?

Speaker 8 No, sir. We believe that it was totally random.
Totally random.

Speaker 27 Wrong place at the wrong time. Could have been any one of us.

Speaker 3 And these detectives had advice for anyone ambushed like that in broad daylight or even at night.

Speaker 27 At no time should you allow someone to take you from point A to point B.

Speaker 3 Don't go.

Speaker 11 Don't go.

Speaker 8 You fight, you fight to the death, period. Because once you're on their turf, it's over.

Speaker 3 Young woman at the bank dropped right to the floor.

Speaker 20 She says, I'm not going with you.

Speaker 8 That's what saved her life.

Speaker 9 The grass is growing.

Speaker 18 My flowers are blooming, but I am just dead inside.

Speaker 18 Just dead inside.

Speaker 3 In the days after she lost her son, a grief-stricken Doreen Landry went public with a cause important to her, condemning the burned-out and abandoned houses in northeast Detroit that area gangs called home.

Speaker 18 I'm pleading to the mayor of Detroit. That area needs to be cleaned up.
It's nothing but a garbage pit.

Speaker 9 There's thousands of houses in Detroit that are abandoned that they live in.

Speaker 12 Just raise them, knock them down.

Speaker 9 Just flatten them.

Speaker 3 In fact, in 2010, the Detroit mayor started a program to do just that. The house where Matt's body was found has been demolished.

Speaker 3 In the fall of 2010, Mos Lamani and Taylor were tried and found guilty of all charges. Moss Lamani on 18 counts, including first-degree murder, kidnapping, and bank robbery.

Speaker 3 Taylor for first-degree murder, kidnapping, and four other counts. Both were sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.
Doreen Landry got to speak directly to Maslamani.

Speaker 9 You have disrespected our court system.

Speaker 9 You've spit on the floor of the court. You've smiled at my family.
You smiled through the cameras. And what I wanted to say to you was, who's smiling now?

Speaker 9 But I can't.

Speaker 9 Nobody has won here.

Speaker 27 Nobody.

Speaker 9 Not my family.

Speaker 19 Not you.

Speaker 9 I just pray that you will never have the opportunity to devastate another family like this again.

Speaker 3 Doreen has been haunted by the whys and what-ifs.

Speaker 19 It took one second, literally one second, to end Matthew's life.

Speaker 9 And that one second

Speaker 9 has literally turned our family upside down.

Speaker 3 Matt's funeral service, as that day's program explained, was intended to remember the joy, the laughter, the smiles. And no one would forget on that sad day that Matt was also a rocker.

Speaker 9 Matthew was a drummer, but he had an acoustic guitar. He would always start Stairway to Heaven.

Speaker 9 And it seemed like through time he'd get through a little bit more. You know, he'd learn a little bit more of it.
I'd love to listen to him doing that.

Speaker 9 And we asked the priest, Father, I know this is unusual, I said, but

Speaker 9 if you have anyone

Speaker 19 that could play Stairway to Heaven, that would be beautiful.

Speaker 5 He says, let me see what I can do.

Speaker 3 And so he came up with a group of musicians to honor Matt with a song he loved about a symbolic stairway that he climbed way too soon.

Speaker 9 And it was so beautiful. And it was just

Speaker 9 perfect.

Speaker 18 Matthew loved it. He would have loved it.

Speaker 4 That's all for now. I'm Lester Holt.
Thanks for joining us.

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