The Comic Book Murder
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Speaker 6 Shot in the head? It didn't seem like it could happen to such a good person.
Speaker 7 We were shocked.
Speaker 8 Murder in a comic book store.
Speaker 9 Now inside the comics corner.
Speaker 8 Strange crime scene. Strange suspect.
Speaker 11 He said it it looked like a woman in a fake beard.
Speaker 13 I believe that the person with the fake beard and mustache is the killer.
Speaker 8 But soon the case grew cold. Maybe it wasn't the bearded lady.
Speaker 14 How much frustration is building within the family?
Speaker 15 What can you do?
Speaker 8 Then a new clue.
Speaker 16 A witness who spoke to the killer the night of the murder.
Speaker 17 He sounded like he was busy. He was in a hurry about the phone.
Speaker 18 Well, that's the one piece that was missing.
Speaker 8 But would it be enough?
Speaker 20 It's true we didn't have forensic evidence supporting our case.
Speaker 18 I always operate under the theory, you don't shoot, you don't score.
Speaker 8 Was this shot a shot in the dark?
Speaker 22 My brother turns to me and he says, is your heart beating fast? And I said, yeah, it is.
Speaker 3 This is it.
Speaker 23 I looked at him. I said, hey, let's go down to the comic book store and help Bard with the party.
Speaker 23
We pulled off at the party. The police stopped us.
I knew immediately all the crime scene tapers there and they said, you can't go through. We're investigating a homicide.
Speaker 23 We're investigating the comic book store.
Speaker 3 The comic book store was a mom-and-pop shop in a strip mall outside Detroit. Out front by the register, bins of the fantasy big guys, Spidey, Hulk, X-Men.
Speaker 3
But in the storage space in back was an ugly reality. One of the shop owners, the woman, was on the floor with the life draining out of her.
Customers had found her.
Speaker 6 And most of the time we were there on Friday nights.
Speaker 3 It was July of 1990, a Friday the 13th, when Tom and Lenora Ward stopped by the comic book shop before going out to dinner. They liked buying from the woman there, Barb.
Speaker 6
She knew our names. Immediately when we would walk in, she would light up with a smile.
Many times she would actually come around the counter to greet us.
Speaker 3
But not on this summer evening. It was just after six o'clock.
Tom and Lenora had picked out a comic, but there was no one behind the counter to take their money.
Speaker 3 Not Barb or her husband Michael, the co-owner.
Speaker 24 It wasn't uncommon that someone wouldn't be at the cash register.
Speaker 25 But this was a longer than normal time, so we thought we would stick around just to make sure, you know, because we liked her.
Speaker 3 Some teenage customers were also in the shop browsing, and they too were itchy to pay and go. They were the first ones to peek into the back room and see Barb sprawl.
Speaker 6 Cried out, there's somebody back here.
Speaker 6 And at that time, Tom and I rushed to the back storage area and found Barb on the floor.
Speaker 24 We thought she perhaps had fallen backwards and hit her head.
Speaker 6 I noticed that she was blue around her mouth. Her pupils were dilated and big.
Speaker 6 And I could not find a pulse.
Speaker 3 Lenora, the customer, happened to be a nurse and took charge. She noticed only a small amount of blood and concluded that Barb had suffered a heart attack or a seizure.
Speaker 3 She told her husband to call 911 while she began administering CPR.
Speaker 6 I had never done CPR on someone that I knew and loved. It was, please, God, let this be okay.
Speaker 6 She's a mother.
Speaker 3 As the ambulance rushed Barb to the hospital, Lenora Ward felt she'd done her professional best, but she wasn't at all sure her prayers would be answered.
Speaker 6 I knew that she was medically and in dire straits.
Speaker 3 The woman rushed into the emergency room that evening was 32-year-old Barbara George. She was a little heavy, but physically fit, an enthusiastic softball and volleyball player.
Speaker 3 Doctors and nurses began working feverishly to get a pulse, thumping the woman's chest in rapid bursts. One ER nurse was Chris Kehoe.
Speaker 28 If you can give 100 compressions per minute to that patient, the better the chance of reviving the heart.
Speaker 3
But after 15 minutes, it was all over. A doctor pronounced Barb George, the mother of two, dead.
It fell to Nurse Kehoe to clean up the body for the family to view. That's when she saw it.
Speaker 28
When we were straightening up her hair, we noticed some blood on the top of her head. I noticed that there was a small hole.
My first thought as a nurse was that it had to be a bullet hole there.
Speaker 3 Imagine that. Barbara George, the nice lady behind the counter, shot to death.
Speaker 7 We were shocked.
Speaker 6 Shot in the head? It didn't seem like it could happen to such a good person.
Speaker 3 Back at the comic book shop, friends and family continued to arrive for what was supposed to be a surprise birthday party that night for Michael George, George, Barb's husband.
Speaker 3 What a pleasant night it should have been, with toasts, the singing of Happy Birthday, and all the superheroes from his beloved Marvel and action comics looking on.
Speaker 3 All those guests now stunned to find the party turned into a crime scene. And Barb, the hostess, dead.
Speaker 3 Two possible clues to solving the mystery. Right after the murder, witnesses reported seeing a speeding car and a man waiting outside the comic book shop.
Speaker 24 He had on kind of a dark outfit for that time of the year, a Greek fisherman's cap.
Speaker 8 That's how I would describe it.
Speaker 3 Their hole-in-the-wall shop, Comics World, had been Barb and Michael George's just go-for-it passion.
Speaker 3 He'd collected thousands of comics over the years, and he liked superheroes' adventures way more than he liked selling insurance.
Speaker 3 So with some help from Barb's parents, they took the jump and opened their little shop in a Clinton Township, Michigan strip mall in the winter of 1988.
Speaker 3 Joe Cavina is Barb's brother. When we met Joe, he earned a living by removing dents and dings from cars.
Speaker 3 But back in 1990, he was the kid brother who looked up to his sister, admired her on the softball field where she was a standout.
Speaker 22 I used to go to her games.
Speaker 21 I can remember going to the tournaments with the family. You know, she was your typical older sister.
Speaker 18 She was always there to help you.
Speaker 3 Barb had been brought up in a traditional Polish Catholic family, and when she found her man, Michael George, marriage became the organizing principle of her life.
Speaker 14 Was she a happy bride?
Speaker 3 Very happy. Yeah.
Speaker 15 She couldn't wait.
Speaker 3 And when children came along, two girls, Barbara George seemed complete.
Speaker 21 Her kids were her pride and joy.
Speaker 22 And I think that was everything to her.
Speaker 3 The night of Friday the 13th, brother Joe and his then-girlfriend, now Mary Shamo, drove over to the comic shop for what was to be a celebration.
Speaker 3 Barb's surprise birthday party in the store for Michael. He was turning 30.
Speaker 3 Michael's mother was going to keep the two kids at her house for the weekend, while Barb and Michael took off after the party for a cozy couple of days at a lodge.
Speaker 14 So that would have been a Friday night, and it was going to be a romantic weekend.
Speaker 3 Right.
Speaker 3 A weekend not meant to be. Because by the time Joe and Mary got to the comic book store just before nine o'clock, there was confusion, cop cars.
Speaker 23 We pulled up and
Speaker 23
Joe rode in the window. The police stopped us and they said, you can't go through.
We're investigating a homicide. Somebody was killed.
Speaker 22 I immediately thought Mike because I thought no one hated my sister.
Speaker 21 Absolutely nobody.
Speaker 3
But the victim wasn't Mike. It was Joe's sister.
And it was up to Detective Sergeant Donald Steckman to make sense of the senseless.
Speaker 3 He'd been the investigator on duty when the hospital called that they'd had a woman come in with a single gunshot to the head.
Speaker 30 So now we had a full-blown homicide.
Speaker 14 You know, it's going to be a long night. Yes.
Speaker 3 As the detective's team scoured the strip mall dumpsters for maybe a tossed weapon, clothing, something, he turned over the few facts he had so far.
Speaker 3
A woman with children gunned down execution style in the back of a little comic book store. Police interviewed merchants and customers at the mall.
Had anyone seen anything out of the ordinary?
Speaker 3 It turned out Tom and Lenora Ward did. The couple who'd given Barb first aid had picked up on something when they first arrived that evening, a speeding car in front of the comic book shop.
Speaker 6 And we both thought to ourselves, and then said it to each other, boy, that car's going too fast.
Speaker 3
Later, they'd wonder if that was the getaway car. But another observation tugged at them.
Who was that guy lurking outside the comic book shop?
Speaker 24 He had on kind of a dark outfit for that time of the year.
Speaker 25 Greek fisherman's cap.
Speaker 24 That's how I would describe it.
Speaker 3 Another man visiting the strip mall would say he saw a different suspicious character. Someone wearing what appeared to be a fake beard, possibly a bearded lady.
Speaker 3 The shop was small, deeper than it was wide. Aisles of bins filled with comic books out front by the register, and a door to the back storage room.
Speaker 3 Barbara George had been found just inside the back room. On the far wall was a locked door that led to the alley in the rear.
Speaker 3 Now inside the comics corner, crime scene techs began videotaping the crime scene.
Speaker 9 So the cash register?
Speaker 3 There was $750 still in the cash register untouched. In a glass case just behind the till, a wall of collectible vintage comics, the good stuff.
Speaker 14 They hadn't been ransacked.
Speaker 3 In the storage area, some bins had been toppled over, but the EMTs might have done that as they rushed in to assist Barb George as she lay on the floor.
Speaker 3 More than $400 would be found found in her pockets. The good jewelry she was wearing wasn't taken.
Speaker 3 Later, the medical examiner determined that the shop owner had been shot from above, the bullet entering almost the very top of the skull, indicating she'd been crouching.
Speaker 3 Another bullet had been fired first, police believed. It missed and went through a swimsuit calendar on the wall and into the empty shop on the other side of the sheetrock.
Speaker 3 If it was a robbery at the comic book store, it was an unusual one. Just after eight o'clock, Detective Steckman was told that the husband of the victim had just arrived.
Speaker 30 He identified himself and he said, what's going on? We said, well, there's been an incident here, and we're sorry to tell you, but your wife has been injured.
Speaker 3 Injured?
Speaker 30
I told her. Not dead.
We never told him what, never told him what happened to her.
Speaker 14 He doesn't know what has happened to his wife.
Speaker 30 To our knowledge, he had no idea what was going on. I said, well, you need to go over to the hospital because your wife is really seriously injured.
Speaker 3 At the hospital, Michael George was informed that his wife had died of a gunshot wound to the head. A few minutes later, Mary and his brother-in-law Joe came rushing in.
Speaker 3 The girlfriend was undone by the awful news.
Speaker 23
I'm blown away. I'm shocked.
I wasn't even related to her, and I was devastated, and I was crying, and I was upset.
Speaker 3 But there was someone who didn't seem as upset as Mary was, the new widower, Michael George. Why was she so suspicious of the comic book man?
Speaker 3 An untroubled husband and a very troubled marriage.
Speaker 30 We started receiving phone calls. We might want to look at his relationship with his employee named Renee.
Speaker 14 A little cozy, check it out.
Speaker 30 Yes.
Speaker 3 Barbara George had been shot to death in the storage room of the comic book shop she owned with her husband, Michael.
Speaker 3 Six hours after her birth, Michael George had returned from the hospital to show the chief detective Sergeant Steckman around what was now a crime scene.
Speaker 31 The back room where Barb was shot was also where Michael said a robbery must have happened.
Speaker 3 He noticed two important white boxes were gone.
Speaker 30 As soon as he walked in the back room, he looked and said there were two cardboard boxes full of very expensive comic books missing.
Speaker 14
So he's saying I had some expensive stuff to do. Two boxes of comic books.
And it's gone. And they're gone.
Speaker 3 Michael George made a written list of stolen comics from the white boxes and estimated their value at $12,600.
Speaker 3 He'd later file an insurance claim for vintage editions of Spider-Man, Green Lantern, and Iron Man to name just a few.
Speaker 14 So he's talking about robbery, is his likely.
Speaker 30 His whole scenario was it had to be robbery.
Speaker 3 At the comic book shop, Michael George told the detective he had no idea what had happened to his wife.
Speaker 3 He said he'd last seen her a little after four o'clock when she'd relieved him behind the counter.
Speaker 3 He said he took their two kids over to his mom's and remained there, napping on her couch until a little before 8 o'clock when he returned to the comic book store.
Speaker 3 Detective Steckman asked Michael George the questions that a cop would when the wife has just been murdered.
Speaker 30 Let's get to all this up straight. Were there any girlfriends?
Speaker 26 No.
Speaker 30 Were you having any affairs? No. Any problems with your marriage? No, everything was fine.
Speaker 3 At the funeral days later, Mary Shamo, the girlfriend of Barb's brother, couldn't make out what he was feeling because his eyes were concealed behind dark, dark sunglasses.
Speaker 23 Like something that a blind person would wear, something you see Stevie Wonderwear.
Speaker 3 And Mary's sense that Michael was acting strange, even goofy, only increased after a visit to the Trailer Park home where Michael George and Barbara had lived.
Speaker 3 She and Joe, Barb's brother, had gone over to give Michael some support during tough days.
Speaker 23 He comes in and her vacuum's sitting there and he grabs a vacuum and he embraces the vacuum and he's just like
Speaker 23 he showed more emotion with this vacuum than he did the whole time.
Speaker 3 What's he saying to the vacuum?
Speaker 23 And he's just saying, oh, this was Barb's vacuum. And oh my God, she's never going to use this vacuum again.
Speaker 23 And then he would go to like a blender and he's like, she's never going to be in this kitchen again.
Speaker 14 Are you thinking, what's up with this guy?
Speaker 23
And I'm looking at him like he was a screwball. Here you are grieving over a vacuum and all these appliances and there wasn't one tear in his eyes.
There was no swelling going on in his eyes. He just,
Speaker 23 he had nothing going on. It was all an act.
Speaker 3 The police, meanwhile, were chasing down bank records, insurance policies, looking for leads on the speeding car, the man in the Greek fisherman's cap, the so-called bearded lady, and whether this could have been a botched robbery after all.
Speaker 3 They were also getting a crash course on the value of vintage comics. Unhappily for them, the case detectives hadn't found the gun, and hope-for forensics like a bloody print just weren't there.
Speaker 3 But the investigators were getting calls on the QT about Michael George maybe having a girlfriend.
Speaker 14 When did you learn about a shop assistant named Renee, friend of both himself?
Speaker 30 That was two days later. We started receiving phone calls from people advising us that we might want to look at his relationship with his employee named Renee.
Speaker 14 Got a little cozy. Check it out.
Speaker 14 Yes.
Speaker 3 It was Barb George who'd met and befriended Renee, Renee Catullah, at their children's school and brought her to work at the comic book store. Renee had five children and needed the money.
Speaker 3 Her floundering marriage had ended in divorce just three weeks before Barb's murder.
Speaker 3 Not long after they buried Barbara, Mary Shamo remembers dropping in unexpectedly at the comic book shop along with her boyfriend Joe.
Speaker 5 And the pair got a shockeroo.
Speaker 3 They saw Michael and Renee, the shop assistant, canoodling.
Speaker 23 They didn't see us pull up. They were really close and they were giggling together and their arms were crossed over to each other.
Speaker 23 And when you lose somebody in your life, you kind of look around at the world like, what's going on?
Speaker 23 Why does the world keep moving when I've just lost somebody so important? And here this man is, is just, he's as happy as a clam.
Speaker 23 You wouldn't think that he had any any care in the world the way he was carrying on with her.
Speaker 3 Michael and Renee would set up a new home together with the help of a $130,000 life insurance payout on Barb that he'd received as beneficiary.
Speaker 14 Is he becoming what cops call a person of interest?
Speaker 30 Yes. At that point, he was.
Speaker 30 At that point, he had to be.
Speaker 3 He'd talk to the police casually at the store that night, then in a more formal interview at the police station six days later. But there would be no follow-ups.
Speaker 3 According to Detective Steckman, Michael George said he would hire an attorney, lawyer up.
Speaker 14 They'd stop talking.
Speaker 30 Exactly. So
Speaker 14 this is a big unsolved case.
Speaker 3 Yes, yes.
Speaker 14 How much frustration is building within the family?
Speaker 15 What can you do?
Speaker 18 Can't take it.
Speaker 22 I mean, you can take the law into your own hands, but what's going to happen with that?
Speaker 18 Did you ever talk about it?
Speaker 21 I felt it. There were times
Speaker 15 I felt that I should do something.
Speaker 18 But,
Speaker 21 you know, I'm a Catholic.
Speaker 18 I couldn't live with it.
Speaker 3
In the comics, superheroes are ageless. But the comic book shop in the Clinton Township strip mall wasn't.
It closed its doors in 1992.
Speaker 3 Michael George, the shop owner, and his new wife Renee, had moved from town. They'd settled some 375 miles southeast of Detroit in Winburgh PA, population 4,000, an old coal mining town.
Speaker 3 On the main drag there, the Georges had opened their new shop, Comics World.
Speaker 3 With his two kids and Renee's five being raised together in their spacious new home, they found friends in Winburgh among the other parents involved in their kids' sports teams.
Speaker 3 Michael coached Pastor Brad Westover's daughter in basketball. He never missed a game.
Speaker 12 Tremendous family man,
Speaker 12 respected business person in the community.
Speaker 3 Jeff Lively had the electrical supply shop three blocks down from Comics World. His life was for the kids.
Speaker 19 And I'd have to say his life was for Renee. He treated her like gold.
Speaker 3 The Georges endeared themselves to a town where families went back generations by raising money for the Make-A-Wish charity and giving comics to the public library.
Speaker 3 Besides his good works, his friends said he was just plain fun.
Speaker 19 The guy always had a smile on his face, always joking. Everybody enjoyed being around him.
Speaker 3 Michael George had all but severed ties with his murdered wife's family. Uncles and an aunt back in Clinton Township, Michigan rarely saw Barbara's two girls.
Speaker 3 Come the year 2000, was Michael George even aware that the longtime chief of police in his former town had passed away?
Speaker 3 Chief Robert Smith had died without solving the nagging case of the comic book murder.
Speaker 19 Everyone in this town was aware of that crime.
Speaker 19 And probably myself more so because my dad was a chief of police at that time.
Speaker 3 Chief Smith's son, Eric Smith.
Speaker 19 I'd driven by that store a thousand times with my old man. Just about every time we drove by there,
Speaker 19 there was
Speaker 19 something he said.
Speaker 14 It was still gnawing at him.
Speaker 3 There's no question about it. Four years after his father's death, Eric Smith was elected chief prosecutor in Macomb County, Michigan.
Speaker 3 He became responsible for all the criminal cases in Clinton Township and beyond.
Speaker 19 I can't tell you how many people came up to me and said that a family member of theirs had been murdered or had been killed and nothing had been done. And you could see the desperation on their face.
Speaker 19 And they really thought that the system had passed them by. And if I'm going to be the chief law enforcement officer of this county,
Speaker 19 I can't let people out there think that we don't care. So we started a cold case unit very soon after I came in.
Speaker 3 One of Prosecutor Smith's first acts in office was to send out a letter to all the police departments in his county asking police chiefs and detectives to look at their old unsolves with fresh eyes.
Speaker 19 I did it with Michael George in mind. There's no question in my mind that at the time, while I was hoping that we'd get a lot of cases, I was hoping that Clinton Township would pick this case up.
Speaker 14 And maybe resolve one for the old man.
Speaker 4 That's it.
Speaker 19 That's it. That was the case that was unsolved for my old man, for my dad.
Speaker 3 Just as he'd hoped, the Clinton Township PD reopened the dusty comic book murder case. And what a surprise the detectives found there.
Speaker 3 Someone did have a vital piece of information about the night of the murder, but his story had slipped through the cracks. How could police have missed it all those years?
Speaker 3 A A phone call to the comic book shop that seemed to come at a very bad time.
Speaker 17 He sounded like he was busy. He wasn't hurting about the phone.
Speaker 3 The comic book murder files came out of the archives, and the lead detective blowing off the dust was Lieutenant Craig Keith.
Speaker 3 He'd been on the the Clinton Township Force long enough to remember the killing at the Strip Mall, and he took it personally that someone out there had gotten away with murder.
Speaker 3 The lieutenant had identified with the victim.
Speaker 18 I was approximately the same age and had children the same age, and maybe that was something that just stuck with me.
Speaker 14 This is a tough one to pick off the stack.
Speaker 18 Yes, I knew that going in, but I always operate under the theory, you don't shoot, you don't score.
Speaker 18 And I thought I owed it A to myself because it was something I had told myself, but then I owed it to Barb, too.
Speaker 3
The detective needed help. Good old-fashioned shoe leather cops to make the calls knock on doors.
So he recruited veteran detectives Jimmy Hall and Lenny Rico.
Speaker 3
The three of them went into the old boxes reading and rereading yellowing police reports. But there's a reason crimes go into the Cole case file and stay unsolved.
A lack of evidence.
Speaker 3 The three wondered if they had one of those here.
Speaker 18 Is this even doable?
Speaker 18 And finally, when we came to the conclusion that it's doable, we need to notify the family. That's when we finally contacted them.
Speaker 3 The Cole case detectives were painfully aware of giving Barb George's family false hopes after 17 years.
Speaker 3 But in early 2007, the detectives laid out what they'd found, warts and all, for Barbara's brother Joe and other family members.
Speaker 18 And we were honest with them. We don't know how successful we're going to be here.
Speaker 3 Still, after that meeting with the detectives, Barb's family and friends allowed themselves to be optimistic.
Speaker 21 I told my sister when we walked out of that police station, I said, something will come out of this.
Speaker 3 Joe and Mary, his girlfriend back then, had broken up after Barbara's murder, but they remained close over the years.
Speaker 23
My dad was in the hospital at the time. He was dying of cancer, and I told my dad what was going on.
And my dad was just, and again, he could barely even talk. And he lit right up.
And he said, good,
Speaker 23 good. God's going to get him.
Speaker 3 The detectives started their investigation as though it were July 13th, 1990. The 911 call had just come in.
Speaker 3 All three of them knew this wasn't going to be an episode of CSI, Forensic Science, Saving the Day.
Speaker 14 No weapon, no blood smears, no hair fibers, nothing.
Speaker 16 In terms of what people are used to seeing nowadays,
Speaker 16
with DNA and things like that, we didn't have it. We just had to do detective work.
Which means get out there and interview people.
Speaker 3 They say without preconceived theories, they chase down the old leads again. The speeding car, the man in the Greek fisherman's cap, the bearded lady.
Speaker 3 And re-examine the old motive. Was it possible that Barbara had been shot to death over a pricey, collectible comic book?
Speaker 18 Thank you, sir.
Speaker 3 The cold case detectives interviewed over 100 people.
Speaker 3 And of all those fresh 2007 interviews, the one they did with this man turned out to be the game changer.
Speaker 3 His name is Mike Renaud, a girls' softball coach now confined to a wheelchair after a swimming pool accident in 2003.
Speaker 3 Back in 1990, Renaud was a college senior and a Spider-Man fanatic. On July 13th, the night of the murder, the detectives learned, Renaud had placed a call to the Comics World store.
Speaker 3 He thought it had been about 5.30 or so, about 30 minutes before the murder. The avid collector wanted to know why one of his comic books had zoomed in value.
Speaker 3 A voice he knew very well answered the phone. It was Michael George, the shop owner.
Speaker 17
He sounded like he was busy. He was in hurry.
He got off the phone.
Speaker 14 Did he say, you know, I'm busy, there are people in the shop, I gotta go?
Speaker 17 No, no, just it was just a short.
Speaker 14 Just something you could hear in his voice or the way he...
Speaker 30 We would BS a little bit.
Speaker 37 And he just, there was no time for BS.
Speaker 3 The cold case cops had struck gold. Mike Renaud's story was the missing puzzle piece the detectives had been looking for for years.
Speaker 3 If Renaud's account is true, it does nothing less than demolish Michael George's alibi that he was napping at his mother's house when Barb was murdered around 6 o'clock.
Speaker 3 Renaud's phone call story meant that George was lying, and Renaud was certain that he talked to the comic store owner at his shop and that that brief conversation must have taken place just a few minutes before Barb was killed.
Speaker 3 The embarrassing thing about this nugget of a clue was that Mike Renaud had told the very same story to the police back in 1990, the day after the murder.
Speaker 3 What looked like a casebreaker in 2007 had simply slipped through the cracks back when. They'd had it in the case file all along.
Speaker 3
In clear handwriting, there it was, a record of Renaud's July 14th phone call to the police. Mr.
Renaud stated that he called Comic World around 5.30 and talked with the owner, Michael George.
Speaker 18 Well, that's the one piece that was missing.
Speaker 3 Even so, it was a piece that still had flaws as evidence. There were no existing phone logs to corroborate Renaud's story or to pin down the exact time he said he placed the call.
Speaker 3 To this day, former detective Donald Steckman doesn't know how that note from Renaud went astray, but he says he was unaware of the comic book collector's story of talking to the husband in the shop minutes before the murder.
Speaker 30 How did you not see it?
Speaker 3 Well,
Speaker 30 I never saw it. If we'd have seen it,
Speaker 30 we would not be sitting here today.
Speaker 14 You would have gone for an arrest and indictment. No one had to go to the game.
Speaker 38 No doubt about it. In 1991.
Speaker 16 No doubt about it.
Speaker 3 And now the investigative leads pointed just one way, toward the husband.
Speaker 18 It just kept coming back to Mike, and it was like a funnel effect. We started off looking at a lot of things and a lot of people, and it just narrowed down just like a funnel.
Speaker 3 It was time for the Cole Case detectives to take a road trip to Pennsylvania. A trip across miles and time.
Speaker 3 They were going to make a surprise visit to Michael George at Comics World. Was the one-time husband finally collectible?
Speaker 3 After 17 years, a conversation, a suspected killer, never expected.
Speaker 39 If you're going to show up tomorrow with me now, I'll go away because this is what I'm doing.
Speaker 3 Two of the Cole case detectives, Rico and Hall, punched up a MapQuest address for Comics World in Winburgh, Pennsylvania and motored southeast. It was 2007, 17 years after the murder.
Speaker 3 And like Commandos synchronizing their watches, the detectives had decided to execute simultaneous surprise interviews on Michael George's turf.
Speaker 16 We had teams of detectives go to all three locations at exactly the same time.
Speaker 3 Michael at the store, his wife Renee at the house, and Michael's mother at her home back in Hazel Park, Michigan.
Speaker 14 Unannounced. Unannounced.
Speaker 3 When they found Comics World, the two detectives detectives waited for some customers to leave, checked their watches, then sauntered in.
Speaker 16
We were probably about a minute behind the other detectives. So when we walked in, Mike George was on the phone, and we assume he was talking to Renee, his wife.
And he says, no, there's nobody here.
Speaker 16
And he had his back to us as we walked through the door. He turned around and he goes, they're here.
And he got off the phone. And he just looked pretty sick at that point.
Speaker 3 Detective Hall switched on the tape recorder he'd concealed in his jacket.
Speaker 40 Introduce ourselves.
Speaker 19 Mike was pretty much unemotional.
Speaker 40 He said, hey, come on in, have a seat, started talking to him.
Speaker 3 This is some of that conversation. We have reopening case.
Speaker 3 We have a few questions for you while I talk about it.
Speaker 3 What did the police tell you?
Speaker 3 They had leads.
Speaker 3 They never...
Speaker 3 told me what the leads were.
Speaker 16 He didn't say much at the beginning.
Speaker 14 Does he say this is great news? I've wondered for 17 years what's happened.
Speaker 5 I've been waiting for you guys to.
Speaker 38 No, he doesn't.
Speaker 3 Does he come in and tell me you've solved it?
Speaker 11 No.
Speaker 16
Does not give the typical response like, you found somebody, or, well, that's good. Like you say, what do you have? Nothing.
He just started stammering.
Speaker 3 17 years on, Michael George claimed a flickering memory for events. I remember the fool.
Speaker 3 I don't remember anything.
Speaker 3 I remember the fool against somebody's heart.
Speaker 14 Is he getting sweaty, twitchy, anything?
Speaker 3 Oh, he was very nervous.
Speaker 21 He was very pale.
Speaker 40
Very nervous. Didn't make eye contact.
Most of the interview, his head was looking down towards the table.
Speaker 3 In 1990, in his late-night conversation with the lead detective at the store after the murder, Michael George had speculated that Barb was killed in a botched robbery, someone after valuable vintage comic books.
Speaker 3
What was taken? Maybe after this, we got two very old books. Okay, we'll get what kind of books were they? They were golden age books.
All case was built with both absolute losers.
Speaker 16 He couldn't remember exactly how many comics were taken or the amount.
Speaker 3 Although he was sketchy on those details, he had no trouble coming up with a totally new answer when the cops asked him to speculate on why Barbara, of all people, had been murdered.
Speaker 3 Listen as Michael's theory switches from robbery to revenge.
Speaker 41 I think Barb was at the wrong place at the main time. I think somebody wanted to get back at me.
Speaker 25 I don't know know who it was, but I should have been there so they could get back.
Speaker 24 So she could have bringed these two girls instead of you.
Speaker 14 This was in Vendetta, and that, what, Barbara took the bullet that was meant for him? Exactly.
Speaker 40 And that was something entirely different from what he told the police back in 1990.
Speaker 14 Is that as interesting as anything else you heard that day?
Speaker 3 Absolutely.
Speaker 40 Well, very interesting. He came up with a new motive.
Speaker 3 Meanwhile, the prosecutor back in Michigan, the son of the one-time police chief, was deeply curious about how the swoop-down interview was going.
Speaker 14 Were you surprised to hear that he talked to them, that he hadn't lawyered up, or said, I'm getting on the phone to my attorney right now?
Speaker 12 Very surprised.
Speaker 19
But I really think he was so shocked by the fact that we're still looking at him. So shocked that he didn't know what to do.
And that's why we didn't call him.
Speaker 19 That's why we didn't give him a heads up.
Speaker 3 As the interview continued, Michael George, as he hadn't in 1990, now owned up to his philandering.
Speaker 10 Describe for me your marriage to her at the time of the death.
Speaker 41
It was rocky because we had all the pressures. I just quit my job to open up that store.
You know, we would have our fights, we would have our arguments.
Speaker 39 Well, you see, it's rocky, and people have fights and arguments like that.
Speaker 24 What was the cause of most of that?
Speaker 3 Anything out of a extramarital affair? Yeah.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
Speaker 41 On your side, or on your side? My side.
Speaker 3 Late in the 90-minute interview, the conversation circled back to that earlier theme, robbery, the supposed theft of valuable comics.
Speaker 3 The detectives asked if anyone knew that he kept the good stuff in the back storage room. That's when things got testy.
Speaker 3 And listen as George's previously passive tone becomes more direct and confrontational.
Speaker 39 And I'm just trying to find out how that individual, the suspect, would have known they were there, that's all. Unless it was an inside job.
Speaker 39 Or unless
Speaker 39 they weren't there was a insurance fraud.
Speaker 3 So you're saying I'm lying.
Speaker 39 No, no, no.
Speaker 39 I'm just saying
Speaker 9 that's a possibility, Mike.
Speaker 39 You have to look at all options. So now you're saying that I lied about the books being gone.
Speaker 42 So now what you're saying is I better get a lawyer.
Speaker 39 We didn't say that. Yeah, you did.
Speaker 39 You just said one of the possibilities is
Speaker 39 insurance. Okay.
Speaker 39 If you're going to show up tomorrow, let me know.
Speaker 30 I'll get a lawyer because this is
Speaker 3
the next day, in fact, he would need a lawyer. A criminal defense lawyer.
The Michigan detectives and the the Pennsylvania State Police arrested him at his workplace, the comic book store.
Speaker 3
As he was led away after a later court appearance, he loudly proclaimed that police had nabbed the wrong man. They know I didn't do it.
I was with my daughters and my mom. They know.
Speaker 43 They know I didn't do this.
Speaker 3 The coal case had turned red hot. Michael George was returning to Michigan and would stand trial for the first-degree murder of his wife.
Speaker 3 A case prosecutors knew would be hard to prove in the age of CSI and show me forensic evidence. That's because there was none.
Speaker 3 So it would come down to a single witness and his recollection of a solitary phone call he said he made on a Friday the 13th, 1990.
Speaker 3 A twist in court few would have predicted.
Speaker 19 Initially, never crossed my mind. After five hours, you start to worry.
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 3 In a Michigan courtroom not far from his old comic book store, Michael George was standing trial, charged with the first-degree murder of his then-wife Barbara. He was the husband from hell.
Speaker 3 In early 2008, the man who intended to put George away was Steve Kaplan, then the trial prosecutor for the county's coal case unit.
Speaker 20 It's true we didn't have forensic evidence supporting our case.
Speaker 3 He knew getting the comic book man with nothing but circumstantial evidence, no weapon, no witness, no DNA, made this case a tough one to win. Something he'd never let on to the jury, of course.
Speaker 20 We will prove to you that it was a murder.
Speaker 44 And if it's a murder, there's only one person in this world who had a reason to kill this wonderful person, and that's Michael George.
Speaker 3 For Kaplan, proving it all boiled down to a case of who do you trust. Would the jury believe Janet George, Michael's mother? She said her son was sleeping on her couch at the time of the murder.
Speaker 3 Or would the jury accept the word of the comic book collector Mike Renaud? He said the defendant was in the store around that time answering his phone call.
Speaker 20 Who answered the phone?
Speaker 27 Michael George.
Speaker 20 How long did you talk to the defendant at that time?
Speaker 17 Less than five minutes.
Speaker 20 What time did you call the defendant?
Speaker 17 Anywhere between 5.15 and 5.45.
Speaker 20 Do you remember how he seemed to you?
Speaker 17 He seemed like he was in a hurry.
Speaker 14 How important is he to your case?
Speaker 20 Without Michael Renaud, we cannot win this case. Because without Michael Renaud, we cannot place the defendant physically in that store close to the time of Barbara's shooting.
Speaker 3
And then came a routine moment that we've all seen in courtroom dramas on TV. The prosecutor, in this case, Steve Kaplan, rose and told the judge.
Here are the people wrestling.
Speaker 3 And the defense response in this Michigan courtroom, just as predictably, was to try to get the case thrown out. Not enough evidence.
Speaker 3 The state hadn't met its burden, argued defense attorney Carl Marlinga, in asking the judge for what's called a directed verdict. When you just don't know,
Speaker 3 you have to pull the plug. You have to say, that's it.
Speaker 3 And then it got really strange.
Speaker 14 And you say, Your Honor, the state has not proved its case. We ask that you dismiss it right now, that it not go to the jury.
Speaker 3 Happens all the time. Right.
Speaker 14 And almost always you're rebuffed.
Speaker 5 That's right. And you're almost always you're rebuffed within about 10 to 15 seconds.
Speaker 14 That didn't happen here.
Speaker 3
No. We can't send.
This time, the judge, James M.
Speaker 3 Bearnatt, listened intently for 20 minutes as Michael George's defense lawyer argued that there was no way the prosecution had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was in the comic book shop with a gun in his hand.
Speaker 12 A trial judge is obligated to make a call to say whether or not there is sufficient evidence to justify this.
Speaker 3 Prosecutor Kaplan knew that by law, the judge has to regard all evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution.
Speaker 3 He took just 30 seconds and parried with a brief citation of case law arguing why the case should go to the jury.
Speaker 45 The evidence presented to this court creates a question of fact for the jury whether Michael George is the murderer, and the motion should be denied.
Speaker 3
And then the judge retired to his chambers to ponder this motion to dismiss. And ponder he did, staying out for hours.
Eric Smith was the county's chief prosecutor. What was going on? Well,
Speaker 19
I can tell you what was going on in the prosecution's end. We were fit to be tied.
We've all tried hundreds of cases, and these motions for directed verdicts are dismissed almost immediately.
Speaker 14 Did you expect it was possible he was going to come out and say, this case is dismissed, jurors are released, we don't have a case here?
Speaker 19
Well, initially, never crossed my mind. After a couple hours, it still hadn't crossed my mind.
After five hours, you start to worry.
Speaker 3 For the defense, Carl Marlinga was feeling better by the hour.
Speaker 5
I remember walking outside with my client and saying, this is obviously good news. I cannot lie to you.
Judges don't take this long to decide these motions.
Speaker 3 After hours of watching the clock go round, the defendant out on a million-dollar bond, praying with his circle of friends and family in the hallway, the judge at last returned to the bench.
Speaker 46 The court has been reviewing this matter for approximately five hours. I think an extraordinary length of time to review any motion for a directed verdict.
Speaker 3 He started. There was a case to be made for the defense's position.
Speaker 46 It could be argued that this evidence is marginal.
Speaker 3 Then he seemed to point out the merits of the prosecution's argument.
Speaker 46 This is in many ways a classic murder case. If the evidence is believed by the jury, then the jury could reach a finding of guilt.
Speaker 3 On the one hand and the other. Where was the judge going?
Speaker 46 So the court at this point cannot substitute its judgment for that of the jury.
Speaker 3 He decided for the prosecution. There was enough evidence to go forward.
Speaker 46 Rejected verdict is denied.
Speaker 3 The defense had lost a five-hour-long high-stakes game, and apparently by the closest of margins.
Speaker 5 That's probably the toughest moment I ever had as a lawyer.
Speaker 14 You thought you might have had it?
Speaker 5 I thought I might have delivered this guy from this horrible, horrible experience of not only having lost his wife, but then being falsely blamed for it after all of these years.
Speaker 5 I thought the ordeal was almost over.
Speaker 3 All right, for the jury, please. The jurors filed back in for the defense case, unaware of how close they'd come to being thanked and sent home without ever hearing any more evidence.
Speaker 3 If the judge had already indicated he had doubts about the case, what would the jury think once the defense played its Trump card? Michael George's alibi witness.
Speaker 3 The verdict.
Speaker 12 Count number one, first-degree murder.
Speaker 11 We find the defendant.
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Speaker 3 Michael George was on trial for gunning down his wife in the back room of their comic book shop.
Speaker 3 Fired up by the knowledge that the judge had almost tossed out the case, the defense set out to counter the prosecution's crucial phone call that seemed to place the defendant at the scene.
Speaker 5 Michael could not have been at the store committing this murder.
Speaker 3 Lead defense attorney Cara Marlinga said it was impossible to be in two places at once.
Speaker 3
And so he called Michael George's mother as his alibi witness to tell the jury that Michael arrived at her house sometime after 5 p.m. on that Friday, the 13th.
He said he was tired.
Speaker 3
I told him to lay down and take a nap for a while. Mrs.
George then testified she took her two granddaughters to the school playground.
Speaker 5 Now, when you got back, did you observe Michael at all?
Speaker 3 Yeah, I went in. Where was he? He's on the couch, sleeping.
Speaker 3 Now it would be up to the jurors to decide whether they believed Michael George's mother or the witness who said Michael George answered his phone call.
Speaker 3 Decision Day, March 17th, 2008.
Speaker 3 Michael George prayed quietly to himself. His freedom, his family, the life he'd enjoyed in Pennsylvania were at risk forever.
Speaker 3 A murder conviction meant mandatory life, no possibility of parole.
Speaker 38 All right for the jury, please.
Speaker 3 The jury of eight women and four men filed in nervously as one juror explained.
Speaker 47 My hands were sweating, and I took a look at Michael George and I saw his family and I was numb and scared at the same time.
Speaker 22 My brother turns to me and says, is your heart beating fast? And I said, yeah, it is. I mean, this is it.
Speaker 3 The foreman read the verdict.
Speaker 12 Count number one, first-degree murder.
Speaker 11 We find the defendant guilty.
Speaker 3 Guilty of first-degree murder. Michael George slumped and sobbed in his attorney's arms.
Speaker 3 Please be seated.
Speaker 3 Barb's sister and two brothers seemed to share a gasp of relief.
Speaker 21 He took away my oldest sister.
Speaker 15 She didn't get to see me get married.
Speaker 15 She didn't get to see my son being born. She will never get to see him do anything.
Speaker 21 I mean, he took a part of me away.
Speaker 3 Across the room, the convicted man's younger daughter, one of Barb's two children, collapsed into her stepmother, Renee.
Speaker 3 Michael George would go on weeping for a full two minutes.
Speaker 3 But Lieutenant Craig Keith, the cold case detective who rediscovered the crucial evidence, was unmoved by George's tears.
Speaker 18 Mike showed no emotion back in 1990 and now he cries. And my impression of that is Mike is crying for himself.
Speaker 36 It was devastating. It was just devastating.
Speaker 3 Barely able to stand, George was helped to the podium to face the judge, the same judge who had apparently been a heartbeat away from dismissing the case altogether.
Speaker 46 The jury has found you guilty of all charges. At this time, I'm remanding you to the custody of the Comb County Sheriff's Department.
Speaker 3 The comic book man was now a convict.
Speaker 3 22nd,
Speaker 3 8:30.
Speaker 3 Okay.
Speaker 3 His hands were cuffed and deputies led him away.
Speaker 47 I had no doubt that the verdict that we came to was the correct one.
Speaker 3 The jurors had returned to their deliberation room. They said they could hear George sobbing, but that didn't shake their confidence in their verdict.
Speaker 3 They said it had come down to the testimony of the man who said he called about a Spider-Man comic.
Speaker 14 I think I hear you all saying he was tripped up by answering that phone call for Michael Renaud.
Speaker 38 Yes.
Speaker 31 Yes.
Speaker 23 He should not have been there when Mike Renaud called.
Speaker 3 The cold case unit started by prosecutor Eric Smith with this case in mind had won a conviction.
Speaker 19 I really thought he's finally going to face the just punishment he deserves.
Speaker 3 And Smith had notched one up for his dad, the late police chief, or so he believed.
Speaker 19 My next thoughts went right to my old man.
Speaker 16 And I thought, huh.
Speaker 19 I wish he was here to share this with, but I know he's smiling.
Speaker 3 The losing defense lawyer voiced the kinds of comments you'd you'd expect to hear.
Speaker 5 I think that the jury got it wrong. I believe that we have a strong shot with this judge to be able to get either an outright reversal or a new trial.
Speaker 3
But that wasn't brave bluster. In this case, Michael George's defense attorney was being prophetic.
Six months later, the defense tried again, a motion for a new trial before the same judge.
Speaker 3 One of the grounds for the appeal was prosecutorial misconduct.
Speaker 48 This is not a robbery.
Speaker 2 It's not a robbery.
Speaker 9 It's a murder.
Speaker 3 What happened was, in his closing argument, the prosecutor had a display for the jury.
Speaker 20 His timetable is.
Speaker 3 And out of the judge's eyeshot began assembling pieces of a photo like a jigsaw puzzle.
Speaker 3 The punchline, when you put the picture together, voila, jurors, there's your killer.
Speaker 45 It's Michael George.
Speaker 3 Maybe clever or maybe cornball, but either way, the prosecutor may have overstepped his bounds.
Speaker 3 The image of the finished puzzle was a mugshot of Michael George that was never introduced into evidence and, according to defense lawyers, showed him in a bad light.
Speaker 3 Prejudicial error, the defense argued. Strike one.
Speaker 3 Strike two was newly discovered evidence in the police case files, possibly favorable to the defense. Judge Biernat had had enough.
Speaker 49 A judge ruled Michael George should get a new trial in the 1990 comic bookstore murder case.
Speaker 3 Biernat threw out the jury's guilty verdict and was now giving once convicted Michael George another chance to win his freedom.
Speaker 12 It was just elation. It's like, okay,
Speaker 12 the greatest injustice that I had ever been associated with as a lawyer had just been corrected. We are going to get a new trial.
Speaker 3 Defense attorneys Carl Marlinga and Joe Cosmalla always believed in their client's innocence, and now they'd won another chance to prove it.
Speaker 26 Michael was devastated by the verdict.
Speaker 26 And suddenly he's got new life. Suddenly he has faith again in the system.
Speaker 12 I think you had two things working. You had new evidence.
Speaker 12 You had some unfairness in the closing argument on top of this real heartfelt feeling by Judge Bironette that an innocent man had been convicted.
Speaker 3 The county prosecutor, Eric Smith, wasn't buying any of it.
Speaker 14 The judge seems to have directed that there be a new trial because of prosecutorial misconduct.
Speaker 19 He hung his hat on a lot of things, and that was clearly one of them. Since this case began, it appears that he has not been comfortable with this case.
Speaker 19 And what he did was set aside a murder conviction, which is unheard of.
Speaker 3 Smith was beside himself, even though the judge's controversial decision was eventually backed by Michigan's highest courts.
Speaker 19 You wait 18 years for justice.
Speaker 19 And you finally get justice.
Speaker 5 Only to have it
Speaker 19 the carpet pulled out from under you.
Speaker 3 After the 2008 guilty verdict, Barb's brother had gone to her gravesite to share the good news.
Speaker 21 We finally got him.
Speaker 3 You know,
Speaker 3 he didn't get away with it.
Speaker 22 And, you know, you can rest now.
Speaker 3 But now there was the judge's blockbuster decision.
Speaker 21 It tore a hole in our hearts. It's something that, you know, here we thought it was over.
Speaker 3 Barb's family would have to go through its painful ordeal all over again, and with even more uncertainties this time around.
Speaker 3 Though the jury had found Michael George guilty, the judge clearly had serious doubts.
Speaker 3 A new jury could go either way, especially since the defense now had new evidence for possible alternate killers and just dug up dirt on the prosecution's star witness.
Speaker 3 But two completely new prosecutors were revved up for the coming courtroom battle. Steve Fox
Speaker 3 and Bill Cataldo, teaming up to make Michael George face the music one more time.
Speaker 3 The trial of the comic book murder, Volume 2, was now at hand.
Speaker 3 A different jury, different prosecutors.
Speaker 51 Michael George fell prey to the two issues most known to common man, sex and money.
Speaker 3 Will there be a different verdict?
Speaker 3 September 2011.
Speaker 3 In the nearly three years since the last comic book murder trial, Michael George had been locked up in the county jail, where he said inadequate care caused a vitamin B12 deficiency that crippled him.
Speaker 3 He was now confined to a wheelchair as his second trial got underway before a new judge, Mary Shanowski.
Speaker 52 Officially calling the case a people versus George, who's present?
Speaker 3 But if the defendant's disability made him appear feeble and maybe more sympathetic to jurors, the new prosecution team of Bill Cataldo and Steve Fox would work hard to demonize him.
Speaker 51 Michael George fell prey to the two issues most known to common man,
Speaker 12 sex and money.
Speaker 36 So Bill, what was your theory for the jury?
Speaker 53
I think motive is important and it was easy. $130,000 in insurance proceeds and the fact that he really didn't want to be married.
He didn't like his wife. He found her completely unattractive.
Speaker 18 He wanted a new life.
Speaker 3 In his opening argument, prosecutor Steve Fox told jurors that in 1990, Michael George was having a torrid affair with with his shop assistant, Renee Coutullah, now his second wife.
Speaker 31 He wanted to get rid of his overweight wife and move on to something better.
Speaker 3 Before the murder, the husband wasn't bothering to hide his disdain for his wife Barbara, according to this prosecution witness.
Speaker 52 Here's your right hand.
Speaker 3 Teresa Daniloch testified that she and her son went to Comics World the Saturday before the murder. Michael, Barbara, and their two young daughters were in the store when Teresa walked in.
Speaker 7 I had remarked to him how beautiful his little girls were.
Speaker 5 What did he say?
Speaker 7 That if it wasn't for his daughters, that he would not have been with his wife, that he found her unattractive and heavy, and if it was up to him, he would take the girls and move to Florida.
Speaker 27 What was your reaction to that response?
Speaker 7 I couldn't believe he had said something like that to me while she was right there in the store.
Speaker 3 And that same customer was shocked again days later when Michael made what she thought was a pass at her during his own wife's viewing at the funeral home.
Speaker 7
He gave me a very inappropriate hug. It would have been a hug that I would only have given my husband.
Meaning? It's a very intimate hug.
Speaker 3 A little creepy, but the following Saturday, as was their custom, Teresa and her son stopped by Comics World. Michael slipped her a note.
Speaker 27 Would you read that note for the jerry?
Speaker 7
You look very, very, very pretty today. Thanks for coming in.
Sincerely, Michael.
Speaker 3 Publicly scornful of his wife, hitting on other women. And now a longtime friend of Barbara's was testifying that her friends and family were all well aware of capital T trouble in the marriage.
Speaker 3 Kathy Trees got a call from Barb weeks before the murder.
Speaker 54 She was crying, very upset.
Speaker 54 Mike wanted a divorce.
Speaker 44 And did she convey to you whether she would agree to that?
Speaker 54 Oh, she did not want a divorce.
Speaker 3 Prosecutor Fox then asked the witness about seeing the defendant at Barb's funeral.
Speaker 54 I overheard Mike saying to his mother, kind of yelling out, Mom, did you call the insurance company? It just didn't sound good because of the phone conversation I had with Barb and then now her death.
Speaker 3 Michael George, a one-time insurance salesman himself, received $130,000 tax-free from his wife's life insurance policies. Not bad money in 1990.
Speaker 3 A witness who worked with Michael in the insurance business was asked about the money.
Speaker 18 What is documented there?
Speaker 56 This is a claim statement for payment of the proceeds.
Speaker 36 Who signed the claim?
Speaker 56 Michael George, looks like.
Speaker 36 On what day?
Speaker 56 718 of 90.
Speaker 36 July 18th of 1990? Yes, sir.
Speaker 9 Are you aware that Barbara George had been buried on July 17th of 1990?
Speaker 30 Yes.
Speaker 3 Womanizer, scoundrel. The prosecution dissected Michael George's character and referred to him as the only possible killer.
Speaker 36 Our concentration was to show that he was the only guy, that he was the one that had to have done it because no one else on earth would have.
Speaker 52 Speak loudly, your first name is Kim? Yes.
Speaker 3 Prosecutors called this witness who'd worked at a nail salon in the same strip mall as Comics World.
Speaker 6 I would say that I witnessed about 30 to 35 arguments.
Speaker 3 She testified she heard many heated arguments between Michael and Barbara that summer.
Speaker 3 But the one she overheard that afternoon, Friday the 13th, sounded even uglier.
Speaker 28 It was much louder.
Speaker 28 He was much angrier.
Speaker 28 Seemed much more violent.
Speaker 3 Than the ones in the past? Yes.
Speaker 3 Less than four hours later, Barbara George would be discovered by customers on the floor in the back of Comics World.
Speaker 3 Yet in this public place of a strip mall, customers coming and going, cars, no witness remembered hearing gunshots, though two had been fired. And no one remembered seeing anyone leave the store.
Speaker 3 And no witness saw Michael George at the store from the time he left after 4 o'clock until he drove up at 8 o'clock for what was to be his birthday party. By then, police were all over the scene.
Speaker 30 He told us who he was, identified himself, and wanted to know what happened to the store.
Speaker 3 Lead Detective Donald Steckman, then of Clinton Township PD, testified that Michael said his wife was working at Comics World.
Speaker 30 I advised him there had been an incident at the store and his wife had been injured.
Speaker 19 Did he ask you about her condition? No. Did he ask you about about how it happened?
Speaker 30 No.
Speaker 3 Steckman told the husband that then-Lieutenant Donald Brooke would be driving him to the hospital where he could find out about his wife.
Speaker 3 The former lieutenant testified that Michael started chatting without prompting.
Speaker 12 He made a statement that I thought was noteworthy.
Speaker 53 And what was that statement?
Speaker 14 Something must have fell or dropped on her in the back room.
Speaker 53 Why is that statement interesting to you?
Speaker 22 Because I never told him that Mrs.
Speaker 14 George was in the back room of the store. He knows things he shouldn't know.
Speaker 36 He knows evidence that only the shooter would know, not realizing how unique that information is.
Speaker 3 Later that night, according to police, Michael George told investigators that two white boxes of expensive comics were missing and that poor Barbara must have stumbled into a robbery gone bad.
Speaker 3 A theory police and prosecutors subsequently rejected.
Speaker 23 This is why it's not a robbery.
Speaker 27 Diamond ring was on Barbar's hand and we know that ring was worth at least $2,500.
Speaker 27 There was $720 cash in the registers.
Speaker 3
They were untouched. The expensive comics behind the glass were untouched.
The safe
Speaker 3 untouched. The safe was in the back storage room where Michael claimed the missing boxes of comics had been.
Speaker 36 And what's unique about that is these two white boxes were unmarked. They didn't say expensive comic books here.
Speaker 3 Missing comics were never found. The prosecutors believe they were never stolen either, even though Michael recovered a $12,600 insurance claim for them.
Speaker 36 There's a hundred unmarked white boxes in that room. The only way to know which ones to grab would be as if it's an inside job.
Speaker 3 But the only inside job, according to the prosecutors, was the murder itself.
Speaker 27 The reason it's an inside job
Speaker 53 is because of the accessibility to that door.
Speaker 3 That door was central to the prosecutors' theory of the murder. Michael George, they said, sneaked in the back door and concealed himself until his wife was alone in the store.
Speaker 3 When she came into the back room, their belief was he fired two shots. The first one hitting a swimsuit calendar in the wall, the second striking barb in the top of her head as she was ducking away.
Speaker 36 The murder took place, and
Speaker 36 where he went from there, our theory is out the back door and gone.
Speaker 3 Slipping into the alley sight unseen, but not before doing what only he could do, Bill Cataldo told the jurors.
Speaker 27 As stealthily as he came in,
Speaker 3 he left
Speaker 30 through the back door.
Speaker 10 Lock in. Back.
Speaker 10 Lock.
Speaker 53 Double locked.
Speaker 3 Indeed, the door was locked from the outside when police arrived. Something prosecutors claimed only Michael George could do.
Speaker 36 You have to have those keys.
Speaker 3 No one but the defendant had keys to the back door, prosecutors maintained. And they added, any supposed robber would have fled through the busy front door and certainly would have been spotted.
Speaker 36
There were too many witnesses that started walking in within a minute to two minutes of that gunshot. No one saw anyone leaving with boxes of comic books.
No one saw anyone running out the front door.
Speaker 3 And what about the people who were spotted by witnesses around the comic book shop minutes before and after the murder?
Speaker 3 The guy in the Greek fisherman's cap, the suspicious character who seemed to be wearing a fake beard, the so-called bearded lady.
Speaker 3 Police even made a sketch of the bearded lady, but prosecutors said none of the would-be suspects ever amounted to anything, except in the case of the bearded lady.
Speaker 3 Prosecutors theorized that this person may have been Michael George's accomplice.
Speaker 3 Now, the prosecutors would offer up their star witness, the sole person who could say the husband was indeed in the store as the minutes were counting down to murder, comic collector Mike Renaud.
Speaker 3 But this time, the defense was ready with new evidence to challenge not only Renaud's credibility, but also his memory.
Speaker 5 In 1990, you used marijuana and you drank alcohol on the weekends, did you not?
Speaker 3 Once again, Michael George's guilt or innocence would likely come down to the man who said he made an innocent phone call about a Spider-Man comic book.
Speaker 5 People would call Mike Renaud?
Speaker 3 In the first trial, the jurors had bought Mike Renaud's account of speaking to the shop owner over the phone, apparently just minutes before the murder. The judge, however, had seemed skeptical.
Speaker 3
But now 12 new people would be deciding the case. So prosecution and defense lawyers had to start afresh with the all-important star witness.
The stakes couldn't be higher.
Speaker 14 Michael Renaud.
Speaker 3 Without him, would you have had a case? No.
Speaker 36 He's the only one who puts defendant at the scene. He's He's the only one that alone can destroy the defendant's alibi.
Speaker 53 Without him, we don't even issue a warrant.
Speaker 3 Defense lawyers Marlinga and Cosmala knew their client's freedom depended both on their challenging Renaud's story and reinforcing the defendant's alibi.
Speaker 12 It's a one-witness case from the prosecution side.
Speaker 26 So what we really had to focus on and what we hoped to direct the jury to focus on was specifically that alibi.
Speaker 3
The defendant's 1990 story was that he'd left his Clinton Township shop sometime sometime after 4 p.m. to go to his mother's house.
She lived in Hazel Park about a half hour away.
Speaker 3 It's Michael George's alibi that he was at his mother's house from about 4.30 to 7.30.
Speaker 3 A little after he arrived, his mother said she took her grandchildren to the park and he was sleeping on the couch when they got back sometime after 6 o'clock.
Speaker 3 Barb was murdered a little after 6 o'clock. If Michael George's account is true, he was at his mother's at that time and therefore could not be the killer.
Speaker 3 But according to prosecutors, Michael George wasn't napping on the couch at all.
Speaker 3 They contended he'd returned to Comics World and sneaked into the storage room with a gun when Barb left to order pizza for his birthday party. And about what time was that?
Speaker 48 Between 5 and 5.30.
Speaker 3 That's the time frame with this witness, a friend of Barb's, came to the store. It was locked and she had to wait for Barb to return from the pizza place.
Speaker 36 If she's not in the store at 5.30, she couldn't possibly answer the phone at 5.30, correct?
Speaker 48 Correct.
Speaker 36 So if somebody answered the phone at 5.30, it'd have to be someone other than her.
Speaker 48 Correct.
Speaker 3 Now prosecutors questioned the one witness they said who could identify who answered the phone.
Speaker 36 Again, it's Michael Renaud.
Speaker 37 Yes, sir.
Speaker 3 Mike Renaud. In 1990, a decade before his disabling accident, Renaud was married, had a young daughter, and was holding down two jobs.
Speaker 36 Were you also attending school?
Speaker 37 Yes, I was going to Wayne State.
Speaker 36 And how well did you do at Wayne State?
Speaker 37 I graduated cumulatory.
Speaker 3 The prosecution wanted the jury to regard Renaud as both a serious person and a knowledgeable comic book collector.
Speaker 36 Before July 13th, 1990, how frequently would you go to the store?
Speaker 37 At least once a week.
Speaker 3 The day of the murder, he testified, he actually stopped by Comics World before work. But Renaud's critical story for the jury had to do with a phone call he made later in the day to the shop.
Speaker 3 He had a collector's question about a Spider-Man comic he owned.
Speaker 53 He called because he was excited that some book had jumped from $8
Speaker 53 to $40.
Speaker 36 Did you contact anyone to discuss the reasons for it going up in value?
Speaker 37 Yeah, I called Mike.
Speaker 53
He knew the voice. He knew the time that he would be there.
And that's the whole case.
Speaker 36 Tell me about the demeanor of Michael George in that phone call.
Speaker 17 The answers were very short and
Speaker 17 he seemed to kind of be in a hurry to get off the phone.
Speaker 3 So you might wonder, as so many people did, if Michael George was lying in wait to murder his wife in just moments, why would he be so dumb as to pick up a ringing phone in the store?
Speaker 27 He picks it up for one of two reasons.
Speaker 35 Either as a businessman,
Speaker 12 it's a call and he doesn't want to lose business.
Speaker 27 Or number two,
Speaker 53 it's his accomplice from the outside letting him know what's going on.
Speaker 3 Could an investigator simply pull the phone logs and verify Renaud's story by saying what time the record showed the call coming in? Not in 1990.
Speaker 3 The phone company didn't keep those kinds of logs on local local calls.
Speaker 3 But remember, Renaud's story had fallen through the investigative cracks altogether until a cold case cop, Craig Keith, came upon it in 2007.
Speaker 3 And in that rediscovered file was a statement saying that a guy named Renaud had called the police department the day after the murder.
Speaker 3 He wanted the detectives to know that he'd spoken with Michael George in the comic shop at 6 p.m. on the fateful day.
Speaker 36 After you hung up the phone with the department, did you think about it further?
Speaker 3 Yes.
Speaker 5 Okay, why?
Speaker 37 I
Speaker 37 did not want to get Mike in trouble if I was wrong on my time.
Speaker 3 And according to those newly discovered police records, Renaud had called the police back almost immediately to amend the time he'd spoken to Michael George.
Speaker 36 And what did you advise police this time when you called back?
Speaker 37 It was closer to 5.30 instead of 6.
Speaker 36 There were multiple calls to police. We actually saw that as a strength rather than a weakness.
Speaker 3 He's actually trying to help Michael George.
Speaker 36 He's trying to tell the police, don't get him in trouble because of me.
Speaker 36 It's establishing that he's not in this because he has some ill will against the defendant or he's just making it up for 15 minutes of fame.
Speaker 3 That's not how the defense team saw Renaud. They thought he was basking in the limelight of a big murder trial.
Speaker 12 We think he's just kind of like exaggerating his own importance in his mind. He saw a way to become important in a homicide investigation.
Speaker 3 When the defense had its crack at Renaud on cross-examination, it wanted the jury to question his motives, memory, and credibility.
Speaker 12
First of all, this guy, Mike Renaud, makes himself sound like he's a really good buddy of Michael George. He talks to him all the time.
Michael George doesn't remember him at all.
Speaker 3 As the defense told it, Renaud's multiple calls to the police, changing his times, indicated that this witness didn't have a good handle on his recollections and was therefore unreliable.
Speaker 12 He called back several times, being uncertain of the time when he was making the call.
Speaker 3 If the call to Michael George happened at all, and the defense disputes that it did, defense attorney Marlinga believed it must have been placed before the shop owner left for his mother's house.
Speaker 3 That was more than an hour before the murder.
Speaker 14 So you're saying Renaud is not just mistaken in his times, that he is
Speaker 3 he's a little bit motivated. He's a person of mischief.
Speaker 12 We think he wanted to become a hero.
Speaker 3 In fact, since the last trial, Renaud had tried to bolster his story by adding new facts, according to the defense.
Speaker 3 Renaud revealed for the first time that he went to the Clinton Township Police Department days after the murder to make a report in person.
Speaker 3 Marlinga's tough cross-examination brought out that Renaud's memory of that police interview was at best hazy.
Speaker 12 The person that you met with in the face-to-face conversation, do you know the name of that person?
Speaker 30 I do not.
Speaker 5 How about the gender, male or female?
Speaker 37 Was male.
Speaker 3 Old or young?
Speaker 30 I cannot say.
Speaker 12 Was this person in a uniform or in a suit or sport coat or shirt?
Speaker 30 I cannot say.
Speaker 12 Do you remember seeing a badge?
Speaker 30 I cannot say.
Speaker 12 Did you ever see a police report that was generated as a result of that interview? No, sir.
Speaker 3 There is, in fact, no police report of that interview. Was it another example in the defense's theme of inept police work or a figment of Renaud's imagination?
Speaker 12 Either the police department lost a very important police report or the lack of police notes is a fact because the interview never happened. Isn't it true, sir, that you
Speaker 12 invented, that is, you made up this conversation?
Speaker 27 I did not do that.
Speaker 3 But now the defense was moving on, telling the jury there may be a reason why Renaud's memory is so hazy.
Speaker 3 Back in those days, the lawyers asserted, he was often in a haze of pot smoke.
Speaker 12 Can you even remember the times that you were high?
Speaker 10 Jeff, irrelevant, argumentative.
Speaker 14 So, the strategy is to go nuclear on Micronaut?
Speaker 3 I wouldn't say nuclear. No, I mean, what we regard it is just bring out the facts.
Speaker 12 In 1990,
Speaker 5 you used marijuana and you drank alcohol on the weekends, did you not?
Speaker 37 I was in college and that would not surprise me. Okay.
Speaker 12 The homicide that we're talking about occurred on Friday, July 13th. Your two initial calls into the Clinton Township Police occurred on Saturday, July 14th of 1990.
Speaker 12 We are agreed that Friday and Saturday are weekend days, correct?
Speaker 37 Correct.
Speaker 3 When questioned whether he got high on the only weekend that mattered, July 13th and 14th, 1990, Renaud had to admit he just didn't remember.
Speaker 12
You could have used it or you could not have used it. You don't remember.
Correct.
Speaker 3 Again, the defense's goal was to raise reasonable doubt with the jury about Renaud's recall and credibility.
Speaker 12 Marijuana can cause a time distortion, so we're talking to a person who might not have the best handle on time.
Speaker 3 Now that the defense believed it had shredded Renaud's story, it was ready to tell the jury who really murdered Barbara George.
Speaker 3 Another possible suspect in an impossibly strange disguise.
Speaker 11 He said it looked like a woman in a fake beer, a really thin guy with like womanly hips or something.
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Speaker 3 Michael George had been married to his second wife, Renee, for almost 20 years. Through thick and thin, they still seem very much in love.
Speaker 12 This case will show you when.
Speaker 3 But at his 2011 trial, the defense acknowledged right up front that during his first marriage, Michael would never have won an award for husband of the year.
Speaker 12 This is not a matter of suspicion, innuendo, disgust with the person for having affairs. This is a matter of evidence.
Speaker 3 So lead defense attorney Carl Marlinga reminded jurors the defendant was on trial for murder.
Speaker 12 An adulterer is a person who has done evil things, but that does not necessarily make him a murderer.
Speaker 45 The victim's shoe can be seen.
Speaker 3 As for any hard evidence that Michael George killed his wife in cold blood, the defense maintained it just didn't exist. And you have no weapon?
Speaker 12 No witnesses?
Speaker 26 No forensics? Nothing.
Speaker 3 There's nothing to tie your guy to
Speaker 26 the crime. Nada that ties him to the crime.
Speaker 53 The jury, Your Honor, people are happy to say that we rest.
Speaker 3 And then, just as in the first trial, came that moment when the prosecution rested, and the defense filed a motion saying, Your Honor, they haven't proved their case.
Speaker 12 There is no physical evidence which links Michael George to the crime.
Speaker 3 But this time, there was no five-hour retreat to chambers for the the judge to think about it. Her ruling came in seconds.
Speaker 52 Court is finding that the prosecution has presented substantial evidence as the defendant teared up.
Speaker 3 There was enough evidence, the judge declared, to go forward.
Speaker 27 The basic conclusion, gentlemen, is that the motion is denied.
Speaker 3 So, with that setback, not unexpected, the defense began its three-pronged line of attack.
Speaker 3 That the original police work was inactive.
Speaker 3 That there was evidence. Some of it knew that someone else committed the murder.
Speaker 3 And thirdly, that Michael George had a strong alibi.
Speaker 12 We decided that our strongest evidence was the alibi, and that would normally be sufficient to win.
Speaker 12 But knowing that we are dealing with Michael's history and the affairs that could make him an unlikable character, Joe and I realized that we really almost had to prove innocence.
Speaker 3
Michael George told police that he'd left the store with his daughters a little after 4 p.m. that Friday.
They went to his mother, Janet's house, about 30 minutes away.
Speaker 3 He said he was asleep on his mother's couch when, tragically, his wife was shot. Janet George, the mother, had testified in the first trial and backed up her son's asleep on a couch story.
Speaker 3 He's on a couch. But defense attorneys altered their strategy for trial number two.
Speaker 52 And ma'am, do you swear affirm that you're going to read word for word everything that's in that transcript?
Speaker 57 I do.
Speaker 3 Mom didn't testify in person this time around.
Speaker 3 The defense had a stand-in read Janet George's 2008 testimony into the record, an account in which Michael arrived at her house a little after 5 p.m. that day.
Speaker 3 She said he was tired, so he took a nap while she took her granddaughters to a nearby playground.
Speaker 12 Now, when you got back, did you observe Michael at all?
Speaker 57 Yeah.
Speaker 24 Where was he?
Speaker 57 He was on the couch sleeping.
Speaker 3 If the jurors believed the story being recited to them, Michael George couldn't possibly have been at his shop around 5.30 answering the phone.
Speaker 3 That's when the star prosecution witness, Mike Renaud, said he talked to him.
Speaker 26 Janet George, his mother, is the heart of his alibi.
Speaker 3 She's still alive. Why didn't you put her on the stand?
Speaker 12
Tough, tough call. We agonized about it.
The problem with Janet George is that she loves her son, but she's a wild card.
Speaker 5 Her memory is fading.
Speaker 3 But the lawyers were confident about their decision not to call the mother because they had a strong witness to substantiate parts of her story.
Speaker 52 Okay, you have a seat right up here?
Speaker 3 Peggy Marinette was Janet George's next-door neighbor. On that Friday, the 13th, like most days, Peggy said she got home from her job between 5:45 and 6 o'clock.
Speaker 12 As you got close to your house, did you see anybody?
Speaker 58 I actually saw Janet and the two girls in the school playground at the end of our street.
Speaker 9 When you saw them there, what if anything did they do?
Speaker 6 We just waved.
Speaker 3 As you
Speaker 12 pulled into your house, what if anything did you see in front of Janet's house?
Speaker 58 There was a van parked in front of the house.
Speaker 12 Okay, and did you recognize whose van it was?
Speaker 58 I assumed it was one of Michael's vans, yes.
Speaker 3 In the prosecution's theory of the timeline, there was a missing link of logistics. How did Michael get from his mother's place and back to the store in time to kill Barbara?
Speaker 3 The neighbor's sighting of his van outside his mom's could plant the seed of reasonable doubt.
Speaker 26
She has no dog in the fight. She's not a close, close bosom buddy or lifelong personal friend of Janet or Michaels.
She's a neighbor. Why wouldn't you believe her?
Speaker 12 And when you take the combined testimony of Janet George and Peggy Maritette,
Speaker 12 you have solid evidence that he was at someplace else.
Speaker 3 And that neighbor was a person the defense team had found on its own. The police had never knocked on doors to corroborate Michael's alibi of being at his mother's.
Speaker 3 Evidence in itself, the defense defense argued, of shoddy police work.
Speaker 3 Even the former police lieutenant admitted on cross-examination that aspect of the investigation could have been better.
Speaker 12 If you were the officer in charge of this case, would you have conducted a canvas of his mother's neighborhood to see if people could have placed him there at or about the time of the homicide?
Speaker 12 Yes, sir.
Speaker 3 Inept police work was a defense theme.
Speaker 3 For instance, the police never tested Michael George for gunshot residue the night of the murder.
Speaker 45 And the rear entry door.
Speaker 3 And also failed to dust the prosecution's critical back door for fingerprints.
Speaker 44 If the bad guy reached for the handle to try to get out that way,
Speaker 5 he would have left some prints.
Speaker 12 But we'll never know that because the police didn't dust that.
Speaker 45 And there are some plastic storage bins.
Speaker 3 And police photos inside the comic shop storeroom where Barbara was found seem to show a lot of clutter blocking that back door. How could Michael George have gotten in or out past all of that?
Speaker 9 Does that look like the room when you saw it in the back?
Speaker 3 Shown a photo, the former lead detective didn't know how to read that junk apparently in the way.
Speaker 26 Now, is that actually leaning up against the door?
Speaker 19 I really can't tell the perspective here.
Speaker 30 It's hard to tell.
Speaker 3 The defense felt it had already raised enough reasonable doubt to secure a not guilty verdict.
Speaker 3 And even though they in no way had to, the lawyers wanted to offer the jury other possible murder suspects to consider in a scenario of a robbery gone bad.
Speaker 56 The defense calls Mr. Thomas Quentin Hicks.
Speaker 3 The defense put on a witness who told a story about being with two friends outside a comic book shop in Flint, Michigan, some 50 miles away from Michael George's shop.
Speaker 3 A sinister-looking guy, he said, was peddling what appeared to be hot comics.
Speaker 55 A man approached us in the parking lot and asked us to take a look at some old comics that he wanted to sell.
Speaker 3 This new defense witness said he came forward only after watching the first comic book murder case on Dateline.
Speaker 3 He testified that the then teenagers didn't trust the seller and bought nothing from him.
Speaker 55 The vibe that the gentleman was giving us told us no way.
Speaker 3 The witness said that encounter took place July 14th, 1990, significantly the day after Barbara George's murder.
Speaker 3 But his friends, called by the prosecution, contradicted him and said it actually happened weeks earlier.
Speaker 37 And we were walking towards the building.
Speaker 3 But the defense wasn't out of alternative suspects.
Speaker 3 One of the store customers who'd initially come upon Barbara George, Thomas Ward, recounted seeing a suspicious man lurking about when he got to Comics World a little after 6 p.m.
Speaker 25 It appeared that this individual was looking trying to gaze into the store quite focused in a quite focused fashion.
Speaker 3 Ward said he remembered the man because of his distinctive hat.
Speaker 25 A Greek fisherman's cap, black cap.
Speaker 3 A cap like this.
Speaker 12 I'm going to show you Defense Exhibit 105.
Speaker 2 That was real pretty similar to that, yeah.
Speaker 3 And still another new witness testified that in 1990, she briefly dated a guy who wore a short-brimmed hat like that.
Speaker 3 A guy who carried a gun and was up to no good when it came to the comic book stores they frequented.
Speaker 57 I realized after we left these comic book stores that he was stealing these comic books.
Speaker 3 These were all possible suspects, the defense claimed. But on the top of its list of curiosities was someone who became known as the bearded lady.
Speaker 9 We were coming around.
Speaker 3 Witness Joe Gray, a friend of the Georges, came to the store before 6 o'clock to drop off supplies for Michael's birthday party. Gray was with a friend who'd gotten a gander of something strange.
Speaker 11 And he said it looked like a woman in a fake beard, a really thin guy with like womanly hips or something.
Speaker 3 Gray and his friend were so concerned about this weird bearded lady out front, they even warned Barbara George to be on the lookout. It didn't feel right.
Speaker 11 Why would somebody wearing a fake beard think maybe somebody was coming to the party as a joke or maybe they were trying to rob the place?
Speaker 3 It was Joe Gray's friend who'd helped police make a sketch of the so-called bearded lady.
Speaker 13 I believe that the person with the fake beard and mustache is the killer.
Speaker 8 That's your solution to this.
Speaker 12 That's right.
Speaker 3 It's a fake beard and mustache on a July day with no little theater productions or Halloween parties.
Speaker 12 This is just too suspicious. In these circumstances, that person is the killer.
Speaker 3 What would 12 fresh jurors believe this time? The comic book murder case, volume two, had one final chapter left. left.
Speaker 3
The comic book murder was a grueling case in search of an ending. Barbara George had been shot to death in 1990.
Her husband was arrested in 2007.
Speaker 3
His first trial ended in a guilty verdict that was later overturned. And now, after a six-week retrial in 2011, a second jury was behind closed doors deliberating.
21 years in all.
Speaker 3 And once again, Michael George hadn't testified as was his right.
Speaker 3 His lawyers had put him through a mock cross-examination that sprang leaks. They said his memory was faulty after all that time.
Speaker 12 I put together a pattern of cross-examination questions where he had to say, I don't remember about 20 times in a row. And we have two solid alibi witnesses.
Speaker 12 It's almost malpractice to put him on the stand.
Speaker 3 But the prosecutors believe his reluctance to testify was more about him not being able to stand up to the grilling he would have faced in a real cross-examination.
Speaker 53
My wife was murdered. That's the most important day of my life.
And I forgot what happened that day. It's because maybe I talk myself out of wanting to remember.
Speaker 57 I wanted to hear what he had to say.
Speaker 3 These jurors said the entire panel was disappointed that it didn't hear the story from Michael George's own mouth. mouth.
Speaker 48 I think you can see a lot about a person when they talk about themselves.
Speaker 3 Dateline talked to 10 of the 12 jurors and they told us their first draw vote revealed a split. Seven guilties, five not.
Speaker 14 And you're not guilty is what needed to be persuaded or it was the robbery.
Speaker 49 Persuasion, clarification.
Speaker 48 It was clarification and a couple really had an idea that maybe the robbery did happen.
Speaker 3 The central question for each juror was which story to believe? The comic book book collector who said he talked on the phone to Michael George in the shop just before the murder?
Speaker 3 Or the defendant's mother, his alibi witness, that he was napping on her couch across town at the same hour?
Speaker 34 To me, ultimately, it came down to Michael Renaud's testimony and the phone call that he made that placed Michael George at the scene of the crime.
Speaker 3 So did the defense damage Mike Renaud's credibility by attacking him as a marijuana-smoking, beer-guzzling college kid? Not to this juror.
Speaker 49 I think they were just trying to personally attack him to get us to all believe that, of course, he couldn't remember anything because he was a drug abuser.
Speaker 3 And several jurors questioned the mother's recollection of events.
Speaker 57 I'm not saying she would lie for him, but
Speaker 57 I mean, would you stick up for your kids?
Speaker 3 The jurors talked it through for three days and finally took a vote.
Speaker 52 All right, gentlemen, we have a verdict.
Speaker 3 Their job was done.
Speaker 19 All right, square jury.
Speaker 3
Michael George cried quietly. His wife Renee remained stoic.
On the benches across the court, Barb's brother hoped for justice from a second jury.
Speaker 32 It's 12 people. You don't know what they're thinking.
Speaker 3 The four-person read the verdict.
Speaker 48 First-degree premeditated murder of Barbara George.
Speaker 53 Guilty, first-degree, premeditated murder.
Speaker 3
Guilty. Murder in the first degree.
Guilty. And guilty on the other counts as well.
Felony firearm and insurance fraud.
Speaker 3 Michael George didn't break down this time.
Speaker 3 He closed his eyes and seemed to talk to himself.
Speaker 3 Behind him, his wife Renee buried her head. Barb's brother contained his joy out of respect for his nieces who had lost their mother and now their father.
Speaker 32 It's a little bit bittersweet. I mean, they still have to come to the realization that their father's a murderer.
Speaker 3 The prosecutors quietly congratulated each other on the conviction.
Speaker 36 It was a huge relief to know that finally the family is getting what they deserve. They're getting the justice they deserve.
Speaker 3
Michael George was led out of the courtroom to begin the rest of his life in prison. No possibility of parole.
A terrible injustice, as his staunch defense attorney saw it.
Speaker 12
I've lived with this case for four years, and I just don't see any evidence that he was there committing the crime. And I've prosecuted killers, and I've defended killers.
This man is not a killer.
Speaker 43 I don't know why God has put us through this,
Speaker 43 but I do know he loves us.
Speaker 3 Six weeks after the verdict, Michael George did finally speak out, but as a convicted murderer, at his pro forma sentencing hearing.
Speaker 43 The catastrophe of putting people away that are innocent
Speaker 43
has not started with me and will not end with me. Before this, I've never been accused of any crime, no domestic violence.
I have no police record, no problems with drinking or drugs.
Speaker 43 I can only hope and pray that the lives that are destroyed by people being overzealous in the police community will find mercy in God above.
Speaker 3 Barb's brother Joe expected nothing and said he got it.
Speaker 32 Once again, no apology. He thinks he's better than everybody else, and he thought he was was going to get away with it.
Speaker 3 And as Barb's family saw it, since 1990, he did get away with murder until County Attorney Eric Smith's cold case unit finally made him pay.
Speaker 3 Do you still talk to Barbara? Yes.
Speaker 32 Did you talk to her in the courtroom that day?
Speaker 26 Yes. What did you say?
Speaker 32 That I love her, you know, that we miss her, and that we finally got him. Hopefully, he can rest in peace, and we can move on.
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