A mom's desperate search to find her daughter. Tears and fury in an Ohio courtroom. And the latest in the Karen Read case.

27m
Listen to this week's episode of the Dateline: True Crime Weekly podcast with Andrea Canning. Did a Tennessee mom's search for her missing daughter imperil the prosecution of the man now accused of killing her? In an emotional courtroom, multiple members of an Ohio family are sentenced for their roles in the Pike County massacre. Karen Read's expert witness testifies about dog bites. Plus, what to expect when you're expected -- for jury duty.

Find out more about the cases covered each week here: www.datelinetruecrimeweekly.com

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Runtime: 27m

Transcript

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Speaker 4 Good morning. Hey, I think everyone is here.

Speaker 5 You're listening in to Dateline's morning meeting in 30 Rockefeller Center.

Speaker 6 Happy New Year. Happy New Year, everybody.

Speaker 5 Our editorial team is catching up on breaking crime news around the country.

Speaker 6 He actually felt afraid that people were after him.

Speaker 4 The judge ended the day in suspense.

Speaker 6 They do end up finding her body, and those charges are up to murder.

Speaker 5 Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly. I'm Andrea Canning.
It's January 9th, and here's what's on our docket.

Speaker 5 In Ohio, there were tears and rage at a sentencing last week as multiple family members admitted their parts in what's been called the Pike County massacre.

Speaker 7 Part of what I've done,

Speaker 8 but I am glad I got caught.

Speaker 5 In Dateline Roundup, Karen Reed's defense team was back in court this week talking about dogs.

Speaker 5 And we've got details on new charges filed against the man at the heart of what's been called the real-life gone girl case.

Speaker 8 It's the same MO, and it's a very unusual, scary, terrifying MO.

Speaker 5 Plus, a new year could mean an unexpected summons to jury duty. A jury consultant gives us her tips on what to expect.

Speaker 9 Jurors can feel a lot of sympathy and even empathy for the defendant while also finding him or her guilty.

Speaker 5 But before all that, we're heading to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where a highly publicized murder trial is about to get underway.

Speaker 5 And the mother of the victim has faced questions about what she did to try to find her daughter and whether she went too far.

Speaker 5 In the early morning hours of November 23, 2022, 22-year-old Jasmine Pace sent her mother an unsettling text message. There were no words, just a pin drop sharing her location.

Speaker 5 Jasmine never came home after that. Sensing something was wrong, Jasmine's mother Katrina and her family went into investigation mode.

Speaker 5 They went to the location of the pin drop, a condo complex where the family forced open the door to an apartment.

Speaker 5 Katrina took several items she found there, including Jasmine's phone, license, and credit cards, and was left with a bad feeling.

Speaker 11 What was your reaction when you found those?

Speaker 12 I knew I was a good.

Speaker 5 A few days later, Jasmine's body was found stuffed in a suitcase. She'd been stabbed 60 times.
Police had already zeroed in on a suspect, Jasmine's boyfriend, Jason Chen.

Speaker 5 He was charged with murder and abuse of a corpse. He has pleaded not guilty.

Speaker 5 But in the more than two-year run-up to Chen's trial, the unauthorized investigation by Jasmine's desperate mother has come under heavy fire from the defense.

Speaker 8 It's normal for you to break into other people's apartments.

Speaker 5 How might it all impact the trial set to begin next week? Here to bring us up to speed is Grayson Gordon, a news reporter from our NBC affiliate WRCB Local3 News. Grayson, welcome to the podcast.

Speaker 4 Thank you for having me.

Speaker 5 This is such a sad story. To start, can you just tell us, tell us about Jasmine Pace and who was she? What was she like?

Speaker 12 What have you learned about her?

Speaker 4 We know that she was very loved by her family. Whenever you're listening to testimony from her mother, Katrina, you can hear how close they were and how much they talked.

Speaker 4 And having that communication with her and her family, how close she was with her mother was really the way that her mother was able to know that she was not okay.

Speaker 4 as quickly as her mother was able to figure that out.

Speaker 5 And what do we know about Jason Chen and how they met?

Speaker 4 So we we know that they met on a dating app a few months before she went missing. They were both college students.

Speaker 5 So her mom sort of turns investigator, right? Because, you know, it's unlike Jasmine to not check in with her mom.

Speaker 4 Absolutely. And,

Speaker 4 you know, you can understand a mother pleading and doing everything in her power to try to find her child. She gathers her family and she realizes that her daughter had sent her a, dropped her a pin.

Speaker 4 That pinned location took them to Jason Chin's apartment.

Speaker 5 So Jason's not there in the apartment and they gain entry.

Speaker 5 And that's when they say they found Jasmine's phone, credit cards, and driver's license. So obviously very scary for the family to not know where their daughter is and to walk in and find that.

Speaker 4 So they do call the police whenever they find this evidence. We watch body camera video so far at these pretrial hearings.

Speaker 4 When the police go in, they spend about three minutes kind of just scanning Chen's apartment. Then they get a search warrant.
And once they get the search warrant, they do find traces of blood.

Speaker 5 And police also say during this search, they found blood spatter on the bathroom wall, cleaning supplies, a large amount of blood that had been cleaned up in the living room.

Speaker 5 This is a very disturbing scene.

Speaker 4 Absolutely.

Speaker 5 Parents taking matters into their own hands. You understand that.
If your child is missing, you will do anything. The defense has made this a big deal.

Speaker 4 This is what the defense has been using, the potential tarnish of a crime scene and the way that the evidence was gathered in order to try to exclude evidence from being used in.

Speaker 12 the trial.

Speaker 4 The defense's worry is that it could have potentially been planted. And that's what those pretrial hearings have been.

Speaker 5 Right. And that all makes sense from a defense perspective.
Katrina, the mom, was actually cross-examined on the stand. What did she have to say about her actions and gaining entry to the apartment?

Speaker 4 It was obviously very emotional. And the defense attorney for Jason Chen, he asked her on the stand, is it normal for you to break into apartments? And Katrina said no.

Speaker 8 And it's not normal for you to conduct a search like this?

Speaker 12 It's not normal for my daughter to be missing.

Speaker 8 How did you know to go to apartment tickets?

Speaker 12 My neighbor heard a loud, distressed woman's voice, and he told me.

Speaker 12 And he heard that three minutes

Speaker 12 before my daughter sent me the pin drop.

Speaker 5 Oh, wow. So with regard to any alleged evidence found by the mom, did the judge rule that that will be admissible in trial?

Speaker 9 Yes.

Speaker 4 All evidence is going to be allowed. We have one more

Speaker 4 pre-trial hearing and one last kind of wrap up with all of the evidence that's going to be allowed in this case.

Speaker 5 And we should just remind our listeners, Jason Chen has pleaded not guilty and we will learn more about his defense when the trial gets underway next week.

Speaker 5 This is interesting because the case has had so much media attention. Jurors are actually being brought in from another county.

Speaker 10 Absolutely. I

Speaker 4 really think the reason this has gotten so much attention is because people remember when Jasmine went missing and we were trying to find this 22-year-old college student who had, you know, beautiful potential in life, who was loved by her family, loved by many.

Speaker 4 And that really has an impact on the community, especially a smaller community like Chattanooga.

Speaker 5 All right. Well, we will keep an eye on this one, Grace.
And thank you so much for joining us on the podcast. Thank you.

Speaker 5 Up next, there was talk of Satan and Jesus in an Ohio courtroom last week as a mother and son were sentenced for their roles in one of the most gruesome crimes in Ohio history.

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Speaker 5 For our next story, we're heading to an Ohio courtroom where emotions and rage bubbled over last week at the dramatic sentencing of three family members for their roles in one of the bloodiest crimes in Ohio history.

Speaker 17 You are the spawn of saddies.

Speaker 5 The horror began on the morning of April 22nd, 2016, when a woman walked into her brother-in-law's home and found him shot to death, along with his cousin. His name, Chris Rodin Sr.

Speaker 5 But they weren't the only members of the Rodin family found dead that day. In total, seven adults and one 16-year-old boy were found gunned down in four different locations.

Speaker 5 victims of what's been dubbed the Pike County Massacre.

Speaker 5 Two years later, police arrested six members of another family, the Wagners, after uncovering what prosecutors say was a ruthless plot to stamp out the Rodents over a custody dispute.

Speaker 5 Here to catch us up on this case that he's been covering for years is Dateline producer Jay Young. Jay, thanks for joining us.

Speaker 1 Hi, Andrea.

Speaker 8 Thanks for having me.

Speaker 5 So the scope of this crime spree is really unlike anything a lot of us have ever seen before.

Speaker 8 Well, you have that absolutely right, Andrea.

Speaker 8 We're talking about eight murder victims, four crime scenes it's just it it it boggles the mind jay police zeroed in on the wagner family who are the wagners the wagners are a large family that lives not too far away from the rodens in fact they were friends by all counts of the rodents so what went wrong jake wagner had a relationship with one of the children of the Rodens, Hannah May.

Speaker 8 Mae. And together they had a child, Sophia.
Jake and Hannah Mae quickly became estranged after Sophia was born. Hannah Mae moved out and took Sophia with her.

Speaker 8 Jake wasn't happy about that, nor were the Wagners happy about that.

Speaker 8 In the course of the investigation, investigators learned that the Wagners feared young Sophia was being abused by a member of the Roden family.

Speaker 8 Jake testified that the Wagners decided something needed to be done. They wanted Sophia back.

Speaker 8 They decided that they would not just kill the mother of Sophia, Hannah May, but they were going to kill everyone else in the family. So there were no other survivors to seek retribution.

Speaker 5 Just sounds so unbelievable.

Speaker 8 It's beyond unbelievable.

Speaker 5 So the Wagners alleged that the Rodins were abusing Sophia, but investigators found no evidence of that.

Speaker 8 Yeah, there was really no evidence of it.

Speaker 5 Okay, so it took more than two years for investigators to make arrests in the case.

Speaker 5 Jake Wagner, along with his parents and older brother, were charged with multiple counts, including aggravated murder. Jay, what evidence did the prosecutors say they had against them?

Speaker 8 There were multiple crime scenes, but there was very little physical evidence. But they did find foot impressions in the blood.
I hate to say it.

Speaker 8 They were able to determine that the footprints were from a shoe that was sold at Walmart, and they were able to determine the size.

Speaker 8 And lo and behold, after they conducted a search warrant on the Wagner's property, they discovered a receipt for shoes from a Walmart.

Speaker 8 And they ultimately were also able to seize the Wagner's computers.

Speaker 8 And one of the interesting things they found was a screenshot of a conversation that Hannah May had with someone months before the massacre. She says, the Wagners want to take custody of my child.

Speaker 8 If they want custody, they're going to have to kill me first.

Speaker 5 So we should say that Jake's dad, Billy Wagner, has consistently denied having anything to do with the murders or any plot. He is still in custody awaiting trial.

Speaker 5 And Jake's brother also denied being a part of the plot, but he was convicted at trial in 2022.

Speaker 5 A big twist to this case, Jake and his mom, Angela, did something that surprised everyone. They decided to plead guilty, and they started cooperating with investigators.

Speaker 8 Well, ultimately, what they were able to get from Jake Wagner is he led investigators to the location of the murder weapons on the Wagner property.

Speaker 8 That was incredibly incriminating evidence, obviously.

Speaker 12 Yeah.

Speaker 8 And he outlined in great detail how the massacre unfolded.

Speaker 5 So take us inside the courtroom last week. Who was being sentenced?

Speaker 8 You had Angela Wagner herself and Jake Wagner.

Speaker 5 Before they were sentenced, the victims' families got to talk.

Speaker 8 Yeah, the mother of one of the victims gave an incredibly impassioned victim impact statement.

Speaker 17 You're evil. You are the spawn of Satan's.
My daughter was only 20, 20!

Speaker 17 Greedy Jake Wagner, you.

Speaker 17 I want you to suffer. I want you to die so your mom feels a heartache.
What it's like to bury a child. It's a heartache that never goes away.
I hate you. You ruined my life.

Speaker 17 You've ruined innocent children's lives.

Speaker 8 Jake Wagner did take the opportunity to speak to the Roden family. He looked at them in the eye.

Speaker 7 I'm sorry for what I've done,

Speaker 8 but I am glad I got caught. I 100% believe that it was Jesus who made me get caught to answer my prayer.
The victims' families present in the courtroom didn't want to hear any of it.

Speaker 8 In fact, they walked out as Jake was speaking.

Speaker 5 What were the sentences then?

Speaker 8 Angela was sentenced to 30 years.

Speaker 8 And for many, it was a shock to hear that Jake Wagner, who everyone anticipated would receive a life sentence without the possibility of parole, suddenly was presented with the opportunity to get parole.

Speaker 8 So he'll serve 32 years and then he'll be eligible for parole.

Speaker 5 So this all leaves Billy Wagner, the father. He was supposed to go to trial this week.
What happened?

Speaker 8 Well, the judge has ruled in favor of a change of venue in Billy Wagner's trial. What's happening now is that the prosecution is appealing the judge's decision.

Speaker 5 Okay, so this trial is supposed supposed to be sometime this year.

Speaker 8 It's difficult to say, and you can just imagine how difficult this is for the victim's family. They have to endure this even longer.

Speaker 5 Okay, Jay Young, thank you for breaking down this extremely horrific story and also complicated story.

Speaker 12 Thank you.

Speaker 5 Next, it's time for dateline roundup.

Speaker 5 We've got the latest from the courtroom as Karen Reed's defense team gears up for her second trial and more on the new chapter in what's been called the real-life gone girl case.

Speaker 5 Plus, what do you need to know if you get a jury summons? We've got tips from a jury consultant.

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Speaker 5 Welcome back. Joining me for this week's roundup is Dateline producer Sue Simpson.
Hey, Sue.

Speaker 12 Hey, Andrea. Happy New Year.

Speaker 5 Yeah, Happy New Year. So, Sue, our first story is something very familiar to both of us, the Karen Reed case.

Speaker 5 For anyone who doesn't know, she's the Massachusetts woman accused of killing her police officer boyfriend, John O'Keefe, by backing her car into him after a night of drinking.

Speaker 5 She denies doing that, of course, and a jury deadlocked at her trial. last year that you were at Sue every day.

Speaker 12 I was.

Speaker 18 And that's right. As you know, she's headed back to trial later this year, but there's a lot of housekeeping before the retrial can even start.

Speaker 5 Yeah, so this week there was the second part of a hearing about something pretty crucial to the case.

Speaker 18 Right. Prosecutors want the judge to exclude the testimony of a defense expert who testified at the first trial.
She's a retired emergency room doctor. Her name is Dr.
Marie Russell.

Speaker 18 And she said that the injuries on John O'Keefe's arm were consistent with dog bites. That's critical to the defense case.

Speaker 5 Yeah, important, obviously, because Karen Reed's defense says that John O'Keefe wasn't run over. He was beat up by people at a house where she says she dropped him off.

Speaker 5 The people there at the house, they deny that.

Speaker 5 But at this house, there was a dog.

Speaker 18 She was a German shepherd named Chloe.

Speaker 5 So how did this expert do on the stand?

Speaker 18 Well, prosecutors gave her a hard time saying that her opinions are subjective, not science. And she said, Dr.

Speaker 21 Russell. You know, with all due respect, Mr.
Brennan, I'm not somebody that just came in off the street.

Speaker 21 I have at least 30 years as a physician, and I use that information in helping me form my opinions about wounds. I've seen all types of wounds.

Speaker 5 The judge has not ruled yet.

Speaker 5 But that could be a big deal for both sides, right? Whatever this decision is.

Speaker 18 Yeah, absolutely. Obviously, we'll be covering that.

Speaker 18 But another thing that happened on Tuesday is a judge set a date for a similar hearing about the forensic expert who testified about that hotly disputed Google search.

Speaker 18 It was a huth long to die in the cold, as you'll remember, Andy. Yes.
Well, that hearing is now scheduled for January 31st.

Speaker 5 So much going on in this case.

Speaker 5 All right, for our next story, we're headed to California, the Bay Area, where there's a new development in a wild case from 2015, which we covered at Dateline.

Speaker 5 It also got a lot of attention about a year ago when Netflix put out a doc series on it. That's right.

Speaker 18 Just a quick recap. In 2015, a man named Aaron Quinn told police that his girlfriend, her name is Denise Huskins, he said that she had been kidnapped from their home.

Speaker 5 I remember this story very well. Investigators did not believe him.
They thought he had killed Denise.

Speaker 5 Then two days after she went missing, Denise Huskins walked into her parents' house to say, yes, she had in fact been kidnapped and raped repeatedly.

Speaker 18 And police still didn't believe them. They even gave a press conference saying the whole thing was a hoax.

Speaker 13 Is there any evidence that makes you know conclusively that this was a fake?

Speaker 5 Well, I can tell you that our investigation has concluded that none of the claims has been substantiated.

Speaker 5 And that's when people started saying this sounds a lot like the movie Gone Girl, where the female main character fakes her own kidnapping.

Speaker 18 Yeah, only there was a big, big difference in this case, of course.

Speaker 18 A couple of months after all of this started, a man named Matthew Mueller, he's a disbarred attorney and he's an ex-Marine, he was arrested and he later pleaded guilty to the kidnapping of Denise Huskins and he was sentenced to 40 years.

Speaker 5 So, Sue, what is the development?

Speaker 18 Last week, two new charges were brought against Matthew Mueller. In 2009, two separate women reported home invasions where they were drugged and a man threatened to rape them.

Speaker 18 The Santa Clara District Attorney's Office has announced that advances in DNA technology linked Matthew Mueller to

Speaker 18 these cases. So his arraignment on these new charges is set for next week.

Speaker 5 That is a big development.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 5 Finally, the latest on another story we covered a lot last year.

Speaker 5 This is the double murder of two schoolgirls, Liberty German and Abigail Williams, whose bodies were found near a creek in Delphi, Indiana in 2017.

Speaker 5 In November, a local man, Richard Allen, was convicted of killing them. And just before Christmas, he was sentenced to a lot of years sue.

Speaker 18 A whole lot of years, Andrea. He was sentenced to 130 years in prison.
It was an emotional courtroom. Six of the girl's relatives gave victim impact statements.

Speaker 18 The judge said the girl's murder ranks right up there with the most hideous crimes. And just before she read his sentence, the judge accused Alan of rolling his eyes at her.

Speaker 18 So it was a whole, an incredible day in court.

Speaker 12 Oh, yeah, to be sure.

Speaker 5 Okay. Thank you so much, Sue, for joining us for this week's roundup.

Speaker 18 Thank you, Andrea.

Speaker 5 Well, you might have spent the first few days of 2025 thinking about all the new year has in store, fun trips, events, new experiences, you probably haven't thought about what you might be called to do.

Speaker 5 With a new year comes new cases, new trials, and of course, new juries.

Speaker 5 So whether or not you've received your jury summons yet, we're talking with jury consultant and adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Dr. Natalie Gordon.
Hey, Natalie. Hi, Andrea.

Speaker 5 Thanks for being here.

Speaker 5 So some people, you know, they just don't want to be on juries. It feels like an inconvenience.
I, on the other hand, want to do jury duty. You've, Natalie, talked to jurors after trials.

Speaker 5 I have as well.

Speaker 5 What do they usually say after they're finished with the trial?

Speaker 9 I can't recall ever speaking to a juror who said they did not enjoy the experience, which is why when friends tell me, you know, they got a summons for jury duty. How do I get out of this?

Speaker 9 My response is consistently, trust me, if you get picked, you're going to be really glad that you did this.

Speaker 5 So, let's run through a general overview of what being on a jury looks like. Of course, this varies case to case, courthouse to courthouse.

Speaker 5 What can you expect once the actual selection of a jury begins?

Speaker 9 So, that process is called voor dir. It's a legal term meaning to speak the truth.
And during this process, the judge, the prosecuting attorney, and the defense attorney will ask questions to jurors.

Speaker 9 The first round of questions usually assesses any scheduling conflicts, and then then they'll be asked about any biases they might have that prevent them from being a fair and impartial juror.

Speaker 9 And the lawyers will then have the opportunity to remove jurors from the panel after they've been questioned, which is why this process is often referred to as jury deselection rather than jury selection.

Speaker 5 Earlier in the episode, we discussed the Jasmine Pace case and how the jurors are being brought in from another county because of concerns about pretrial publicity.

Speaker 5 They're also being sequestered in a hotel. So how does this pretrial publicity impact jury decision making?

Speaker 9 So, we know from extensive research that it's very difficult for jurors to set aside information that they have learned about a case from the media.

Speaker 9 And one of the main reasons it's so hard is because they misattribute information that they hear in the media to information learned at trial.

Speaker 9 And Another thing I want to mention is that while juror sequestration, for example, might serve to shield jurors from media coverage during trial and during deliberations potentially.

Speaker 9 They're still exposed to media coverage before trial even begins. So it can't fully counteract the effects of pretrial publicity on their decision making.

Speaker 5 So if you are impaneled on a jury and the trial formally begins, you know, you obviously see the evidence, you hear witness testimony, and then you go off to deliberate.

Speaker 5 What can you expect in that deliberation room?

Speaker 9 So what I have seen in moth trial research, juries will sometimes start by taking a vote to see how the room is divided.

Speaker 9 In other instances, they might just dive right into the evidence and start discussing their thoughts on the case more broadly.

Speaker 9 And sometimes jurors will request to see copies of exhibits or transcripts of witness testimony that's been presented during trial, but that's ultimately at the judge's discretion.

Speaker 5 Yeah, it's, I mean, a jury room, there's nothing like it because you have such a cross-section of people, different opinions, different ethnicities, different ages.

Speaker 5 You know, it's, it's like, that's what it's supposed to be, right? A cross-section of America.

Speaker 9 That's right. And you actually want that variability among jurors and their backgrounds because you can have more thorough discussions when you have those different perspectives.

Speaker 9 But on the flip side of that, the more extreme those views can be, the more likely it can be that the jury struggles to reach a unanimous agreement.

Speaker 5 If the jury is able to reach a unanimous verdict, you know, it's read aloud in court, your jury duty is over.

Speaker 5 Have you ever spoken to jurors who have mixed feelings about the verdict that was reached?

Speaker 9 Yeah, what jurors are asked to do, especially in criminal cases, it can be quite heavy. They appreciate the consequences of their decision.

Speaker 9 So even if they agree that the defendant was guilty of the charges, they're not necessarily happy about it.

Speaker 9 Jurors can feel a lot of sympathy and even empathy for the defendant while also finding him or her guilty. And that dissonance can be very challenging to navigate.

Speaker 9 But jurors rely on each other for support during the decision-making process and end up becoming quite friendly with each other as a result.

Speaker 9 And they express a lot of pride for having served and respect for the process and respect for each other.

Speaker 5 Well, Natalie, wow, thank you so much. Maybe this is my year.
We'll see. I'm still waiting for my summons.

Speaker 9 I hope that you are so lucky. It's a great experience.
Yeah.

Speaker 12 Yeah.

Speaker 5 Thank you for breaking it down.

Speaker 9 I'm happy to have helped. Thank you, Andrea.

Speaker 5 That's it for this episode of Dateline True Crime Weekly. Coming up on Dateline, we've got the TV episode that inspired Josh's hit podcast series, Deadly Mirage.

Speaker 5 It's a story about betrayal and murder in the California desert and a young couple who seemed to have it all until the husband ended up dead and investigators uncovered a web of dark secrets.

Speaker 4 This case had sex, religion.

Speaker 5 It literally had

Speaker 5 everything.

Speaker 5 Watch Josh's story, Deadly Mirage, airing Friday on NBC at 9-8 Central or stream it on Peacock.

Speaker 5 And for Dateline Premium subscribers out there, check out our latest episode of After the Verdict, when Keith Morrison catches up with Susan Altman, a woman who pushed investigators to take a closer look at the mysterious death of her sister, resulting in the conviction of her sister's husband.

Speaker 5 Susan talks about her work trying to raise awareness around domestic violence. And to get ad-free listening for all of our podcasts, subscribe to Dateline Premium.
Thanks for listening.

Speaker 5 Dateline True Crime Weekly is produced by Frannie Kelly and Katie Ferguson. Our associate producers are Carson Cummins and Caroline Casey.
Our senior producer is Liz Brown Kuriloff.

Speaker 5 Production and fact-checking help by Sara Kadir. Veronica Mazeka is our digital producer.
Rick Kwan is our sound designer. Original music by Jesse McGinty.
Bryson Barnes is head of audio production.

Speaker 5 Paul Ryan is executive producer. And Liz Cole is senior executive producer of Dateline.

Speaker 4 All right. Well, thanks, Celia.

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Speaker 9 See you soon.

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Speaker 10 Terms apply.