20/20 - Death in the Dorms Season 2: Episode 2: Haley Anderson
Episode Date: December 31, 2024During the investigation of the 2018 death of Binghamton student Haley Anderson, all leads point to a single person, but the journey to bring him to justice ends up sparking an international inquest. ... Originally Aired: 02/22/24 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Get groceries delivered across the GTA from real Canadian Superstore with PC Express.
Shop online for super prices and super savings.
Try it today and get up to $75 in PC Optimum Points.
Visit superstore.ca to get started.
Hi, 2020 listeners.
We're about to hear the second episode of Death in the Dorms, Season 2, a new true crime
series from ABC News Studios. This week, we'll hear
about Haley Anderson, a nursing student from Binghamton
University, whose untimely death sparked outrage in her
community, igniting an international search for her
killer. Let's listen.
When the story broke, I was still very in the twilight zone of,
how could this happen to our friend?
Police found Anderson, who was from Westbury, dead inside an off-campus home on Friday.
Someone that's so full of promise, and who's going to college and waiting for their degree,
that's just a very tragic thing to happen to someone.
I say she's Forever 22.
That's hard.
That's sad to me because Forever 22 is too young.
Mic check, check, check.
She was friendly with a huge heart.
Her roommates discovered she was murdered.
A mind from the universe, an international manhunt is underway.
That I was made for you.
And you were made for me. You tried your best, I know you did To get over it
Now it's time to rest
You can't run from this forever
May 9th, 1995, Haley Anderson was born and I did something in the top 10% of the world. I delivered on my due date.
So of course, Haley would come into the world when she was due because she was always very
tenacious.
Haley grew up in Salisbury, New York, very tight-knit community, right in the middle of Long Island.
And she was very curious and such a rambunctious little child.
And she had a great sense of humor.
Haley and I became close in second grade when we actually shared a class together.
We met in second grade. Her and our friend Sydney both came up to me
and asked me if I wanted to play.
And I said yes.
And we have been best friends ever since.
Sydney, Haley, and I spent a lot of time together.
Every Friday, we would go and get pizza. We would make some YouTube videos.
Alright, put the car in drive and we'll go.
Okay!
That was a major part of our childhood.
Does everybody buckled in?
Growing up we were both creative people,
but Haley would go do field hockey and track,
and she was athletic, she was intelligent.
She was on every single honor roll that you could possibly want to be on.
Haley was extremely self-sufficient.
She grew up in a way where, I mean, her mom was a great example for that.
Karen did a lot of things on her own.
Karen basically raised her by herself.
I filed for divorce from Hailey's dad
when Hailey was 14 years old.
And that was hard.
This was a very difficult time for Hailey,
but we were always very close, so we persevered.
She always wanted everyone around and everyone to be happy and she didn't want anyone to leave her again,
which anyone going through as a child of divorce feels that way.
In high school when people were normally rebelling and going out and parties and sneaking
out of the house, Hailey was the complete opposite of that.
She was a straight-A student.
She was a tutor. When she was setting out looking at colleges, we went to Binghamton University and she walked
in on the campus and she fell in love with it.
It was really quite large, it was pretty, and it was summertime there because it's
a little different in the winter when it snows every day, but she fell in love with Binghamton and that was her choice to go there.
Binghamton University is a really good school.
It's known for its academics.
It's even termed public IV by our university.
Binghamton is a very well-renowned SUNY and it's won But I don't look back
SUNY stands for State University of New York
and so it comprises all the universities and colleges that are public schools.
It's very recognizable within the state of New York to then go get a job. As a kid who grew up in Long Island,
it's very common for you and a lot of your friends
to go to SUNY schools.
At that time, Binghamton was, I mean, and still is,
has such a high regard as a SUNY school.
And so when she made the decision to go there,
I was very excited for her. Binghamton University, it's not really in the city. You have to take a bus or a
car to go there and so the campus is very chill, relaxed, very comparable to
many public schools in the US. The city on the other hand is very, I would say
rundown. So IBM started in Binghamton and it produced a ton of manufacturing jobs
and Binghamton was booming at one time in its history
and then IBM left and now it's sort of disheveled.
But it's definitely a college town.
There's bars there that are strictly made for students.
It's not a big sports school. I mean I think we're division one
but the school store has like a joke shirt
that says Binghamton football.
Like hasn't lost a game since, I don't know,
its inception because we don't have a football team.
So.
I think Hailey was starting to become her own
when she went away to college.
I'm on my way up chasing the high tides.
I'm trying to get by.
I need the good and saying the goodbyes.
So bounce away, I'll take on the world now.
She didn't really have too much of an idea of what she wanted to do right away.
And it's when she found nursing
then it really clicked for her.
She applied to the nursing school at
Binghamton University for her junior year
and she got accepted into the program
in the Decker School of Nursing.
She was excited to be a nurse.
You could tell she really had a liking to it.
She thrived in that program and she loved it.
And then she even applied for an externship at Northwell.
And she got it.
And she was home all summer working really hard,
putting on her scrubs.
It was almost magical to me because I've never had anybody
in my family being in the medical career.
So I thought this is gonna to be perfect for her.
She had always wanted to travel,
and she thought, you know, maybe if I become a nurse,
maybe I could do travel nursing.
She hadn't decided on that,
but it just opened up this world of things
that she didn't even know was possible.
...
As much college is for the academic aspect, it's just as important for your social aspect
to figure out who you are as an individual away from your friends and family.
And Hailey took advantage of that, which everyone going to college should, and she wanted to
see what she liked, see what she didn't like,
and take the time to figure that out
before making any concrete decisions.
A couple of years into her college career,
she told us she had met a guy named Kevin.
He was very sweet, he was very cute.
They hit it off.
It seemed like they had a really good relationship at first.
Kevin lived in Long Island as well,
so I think when I met Kevin the first time,
he came over to our house.
They had a lot of fun together,
and they would make each other laugh,
and they just had so many things in common.
It was just a very easy relationship.
He supported Haley in a way that, you know, me and my sisters supported Haley in a way that you know me and my sisters
supported Haley. He let her be Haley. But when it started getting closer to her
graduation time she started thinking about if she wanted to be in a serious
relationship. So there were a couple times with Kevin that they talked about putting it on hold for a while.
But I know that they always stayed in contact.
So even in their off period, they were still texting.
They would hang out periodically.
Despite her liking to Kevin, she still had that, you know,
itch to just meet new people. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, She was just eating around.
Haley had met Orlando in her nursing program, sophomore year.
I went out on Super Bowl weekend, it was like the third and fourth of February, and that's when I met him for the first time of 2018.
I know he was born in Miami, but he had dual citizenship with the United States and Nicaragua.
Orlando's sister was nearby, I think in Queens.
His mother and his father were living in Nicaragua.
His father was a doctor, so he wanted to kind of
follow in his footsteps and become a nurse
in the medical field.
His father had passed away.
Haley befriended him, as she did many of the people
in the nursing program.
Their relationship started purely friendship.
I know that through time,
it became more of a romantic relationship,
but it was never a, you know,
a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship.
Kevin and Orlando were in the same fraternity at Binghamton. I knew they were friendly.
They were both from Spanish-speaking backgrounds, so they had that in common.
So I think as the relationship with Kevin and Hailey ended and then Hailey was on and
off again with Orlando, Kevin, while it probably made him upset,
allowed Hailey to do what she wanted to.
It was very casual.
She did make it clear to Orlando
that she did not want anything serious.
Hailey was just ready to start her independent life
free from anything that was going to keep her attached to one area.
She wanted to have a career and really embrace the career and embrace the perks that come from having that salary and ability to travel.
salary and ability to travel.
She had a job lined up at Northwell, as long as she passed her nursing boards.
So that would have been the next step.
She would have graduated and studied for nursing boards,
taken those in June and hopefully gotten her career.
Haley called me to talk about her tax return.
She was all excited because she was going to get $400 back.
And I said, I love you, and she said, I love you,
and I said, talk to you soon.
And we hung up.
And that was Tuesday.
And then on Thursday, she was supposed to go to her roommate's
poetry reading.
But she didn't show up.
Haley's roommates were calling her and calling her, but she wasn't answering.
That's when they started to get concerned.
And I didn't even know they couldn't get in touch with Haley.
Friday morning, that's when they checked the Find My Friends app on the iPhone.
And they saw that it was at 23 Oak Street, which is where Orlando's apartment was.
So that's when her roommate went over to the apartment.
And no one answered the door. They climbed through the window.
That's when they from Haley's roommates.
Officers respond to the scene, they enter the home.
That's where they find Haley lying in bed, unresponsive.
And obviously, just given the nature of Haley's age alone, it's suspicious.
22-year-olds generally just don't die without some related medical condition.
And here, by all accounts, is just from the visible eyes is a healthy person who's found
deceased lying in bed.
It was safe to say that the death was suspicious in nature.
I was advised of the situation.
I responded to the scene as well as my staff.
We were advised by my lieutenant at the time that they had a death investigation pending.
Unusual circumstances, so to speak.
They said that they were drafting a search warrant for the residents.
So my partner, Jess Griffin, and I went to the scene.
Obviously we can't go inside the residence
until the search warrant is completed and signed.
So we were waiting for that to happen.
The area around 23 Oak Street,
it's residential, multi-family homes,
along with single-family homes,
known for Benton University students.
Where Haley and her friends lived,
it was around the corner. The
apartment where Haley was located was not Haley's apartment. It was rented by
several other Binghamton University students. Orlando, Trisaro being one of
them. Through talking to Haley's roommates, it was learned that Orlando, I don't know
if you could say that they were boyfriend
and girlfriend, but they had an on-again,
off-again relationship.
And where Halley was located was Orlando Tercero's bedroom.
We have to know why Halley has been found deceased
in his bed
and why he is not around.
Once the search warrant was signed,
then we started moving our way inside.
As we moved into the dining room, we noticed that the bookshelf was a skew. Screwed into the entryway, it's like a wood frame structure, were three eyelets, three
metal eye hooks, and through those was a necktie.
And not too far into the kitchen a little bit,
there was a chair that was a skew as well.
My detectives see that as evidence of a suicide attempt,
failed suicide attempt.
We also noticed some gauze packaging
on the kitchen counter.
In the garbage can also were more gauze paper towels
with obvious blood staining.
So that was another indication that someone hurt themselves
and tried to clean themselves up a little bit.
We did go into the bedroom where Haley was located.
She was found in the bed.
Almost in a sitting position, I guess you could say.
No wounds, but we did see some bruising around her neck.
And as you got in closer, you could actually see
a particular hemorrhage in her face.
So we assumed it was manual strangulation.
They did find a note, handwritten note. It was in Spanish.
The note translated, I'm really sorry about this.
I never felt I could be capable of doing this, father.
I'll see you soon.
I'm sorry this is stupid.
I am sorry.
At that point, I am fairly confident that we have
a homicide investigation.
Orlando's our person of interest.
We have to find him.
We have to talk to him.
And members of the Binghamton police
were in contact with Haley's family to let them know.
I had just come home from school and I pulled up to my house and there was a big black car.
And there were two men sitting in the car with suits on.
And I pulled into my driver and I got into my house
and I just kept looking out the window because I was like,
that's so odd.
It kind of scared me.
I was like, oh God, who's in trouble, you know?
I kept looking out the window and they weren't coming
and they weren't coming so I started feeding my dogs
and then all of a sudden, I see them take
a big swig of water and get out of the car,
two of them together, shut the door,
and they start walking up my driveway.
My heart was pounding so fast,
and they knocked on my door and I walked out,
and I said, can I help you?
They're like, yeah, we need to talk to you.
I go, can we talk here?
They go, no, we need to talk inside.
And they sat me down at the dining room table
and they just said homicide.
And then I heard them say 23 Oak Street and then Haley.
And then from then on, it's really, it's just a blur.
The police officers, they didn't tell me how it happened.
And I just remember, they didn't want to leave until I had someone come to my house.
So I called my one friend and I just said, I said, Patty, Haley's dead.
Because I just wanted them to leave my house because I just needed to grieve or process
without it being with strangers. Even though they were the nicest gentlemen, I mean, I
wouldn't want to have to do that job. Oh God, I'm sorry. I remember my mom getting a phone call from Karen.
She made a scream that I can't describe.
She goes, it's Karen.
You know, Haley's dead.
And I said, what are you talking about? And I remember I fell to my knees.
My sister, Joanie, called me.
I screamed so loud.
I went numb, I couldn't walk.
My roommates had to carry me up to my bed.
And I just, I think I couldn't feel anything.
Nothing made sense.
I was getting ready to go out on a double date
with Christina, actually.
And one of our other friends had texted me,
hey, have you heard the news?
Police found Anderson, who was from Westbury,
dead inside an off-campus home on Friday.
She was just such a bubbly person, opened up to anyone.
She was friendly with a huge heart.
I called Sydney and I said, is this real?
And she did confirm,
yes, it's real.
Why do you think about the trajectory of your life, you don't expect something this tragic
happen to your best friend.
We were both in disbelief and the first guy that popped into our head was Orlando. We did not have to hear about any suspects from the police.
We did not have to wait for her family to confirm who it was.
We immediately knew that it was him because of what he had previously done to Haaley.
Throughout this process, the investigation, we had a lot of people that wanted to cooperate and offer information. So there was a lot of interviews that were conducted of associates of Haley and Orlando.
The information that came forward was that Orlando
was obsessed with Haley and jealous
if she was with other people.
We picked up information of Hailey's car
tires getting slashed.
One morning, Hailey had sent me a Snapchat
of her tires being slashed.
Who the
slashed every single one of my tires last night?
And Haley's car was outside of her apartment.
The only person that Haley could think of that had the motive to slash her tires was
Orlando.
Orlando was jealous of Hailey.
Dating Kevin, dating other people, dating in general.
It was a night that she had been with Kevin.
And I guess that just made Orlando very angry.
And it led him to slash her tires.
Oh, it's you I'm coming for. It did become a messy situation.
Kevin and Haley would try to rekindle their relationship and she would kind of stop talking
to Orlando for a period of time.
You can tell that problems were starting to arise though. You can tell there was a jealousy factor
coming from Orlando.
And you could tell things were getting messy
between Kevin and Hailey.
But the biggest difference was that Orlando wanted
to control every one of Hailey's moves.
I'll be coming for you.
I'll be coming for you. I'll be coming for you.
He wanted her all to himself.
He was very possessive.
At that time, he decided to just slash her tires.
And the next day, we told her to file a police report.
And she did file the police report so it would be documented.
She did give them his name, but she was hesitant to press charges.
Haley didn't want to ruin Orlando's chance of being a nurse.
Because of the cost of each tire added altogether, the price would be to a point that it would be considered a felony. To my understanding, if you commit a felony, I don't think you're allowed to continue in the nursing school at Decker.
That's not something I've looked into
to see if that's a fact.
But I think it was something
that Haley was very concerned about.
That's the conversation that transpired
between Haley and myself.
And that was my understanding of why she was hesitant
to press charges.
Orlando did admit to slashing her tires and gave Haley money to pay for the
tires to be replaced. And then they kind of just moved on from that. I was very concerned
for her, but in Hiley's point of view,
it was already handled, you know, it's fine,
and that was that.
She hasn't said anything else has happened,
nothing else has transpired,
and it seemed like he took some responsibility
for his actions.
So I kind of thought, well, everything must be okay.
Hailey handled it, he paid for the tires,
and everything's back to normal.
But Hailey never really told me to what extent
he was stalking her.
I don't know if because she didn't want me to react
in the same way I did with the tire slashing,
or she just thought she could handle it
because she knows Orlando and didn't expect anything,
you know, like that tragic to occur.
I was told from her and some of her friends
that Orlando was becoming obsessive over her.
He would be mad if she was hanging out with her friends
doing something without him.
He wanted to know where she was,
what exactly she was doing,
how long she was gonna be there.
There was sometimes he would show up
on her doorstep uninvited.
And when asked to leave multiple times,
he wouldn't and he would just stay out there.
And he had the way with his words
where he could make a sob story out of his life.
And the type of person Halle was felt for those type of people
because she just had such a kind heart.
So regardless of these things he was doing, she felt for him.
When you have someone psychologically taking advantage of you, it kind of blurs your vision.
So I think for us it was such an easy thing to say,
stop talking to him, but it's someone she saw every day in clinicals,
it's someone she had a history with, so
it was a lot easier said than done for her.
She trusted him.
So that's probably the biggest thing. She trusted him. So that's probably the biggest thing. She trusted him.
At this point, crime scene detectives, they complete their processing of the scene.
An autopsy is scheduled through a forensic pathologist
the following day.
Haley's death is ruled a homicide by manual strangulation.
strangulation. A detective came down and that's when they told us how it happened.
It just made the emotions, you know, so much stronger because it's like now not only do
we know that she was murdered, but she was murdered in such a brutal way.
So that was really hard to accept and understand.
Then they separated us all and they were asking us all questions.
The police officers were asking us questions, the detectives were asking us questions.
On Sunday I went up to meet the DA and his office. It was a very, very difficult experience for our entire office, as well as the Anderson
family.
I mean, this is really one of our own.
We welcome students into this community, the Binghamton University family, and when something
like this happens, it's just devastating.
She was literally like the greatest person ever.
She never like didn't have a smile on her face.
This is not an easy loss at all.
It was very upsetting to the university students
because this is someone that,
whether they knew her or not,
this is somebody that is their age.
They don't think about that
they're gonna die, so when somebody their age dies it's almost like a reality
check and it's very disconcerting to them and it was a you know the campus
reacted.
The university offered counseling for students and made services available to them.
They closed classes in the nursing school just to let the kids, you know, process what's going on to a colleague, a schoolmate.
My focus was, my staff's focus was, we gotta find Orlando.
We have information Orlando's sister had originally
contacted Binghamton University Police the morning of March 9th
to say that she had received an alarming text message from her
brother Orlando.
And this is before Halley had been found deceased.
In that message, he had made statements that he was a failure,
that he left his car at JFK Airport.
And Bigumton University police contacted us.
and Binghamton University Police contacted us.
I reached out to some law enforcement partners at that point, specifically the local FBI agent,
to say, can you check to see if he has boarded a plane?
And I was notified that Orlando had boarded a flight to Nicaragua.
And I was notified that Orlando had boarded a flight to Nicaragua.
And Orlando was no longer in the United States. We've had suspects flee on us before, okay, whether it be to New York City or Florida.
In my 24 years, this is the first time that I've ever dealt with a case where we've
had a suspect flee the country.
We had learned that he had family down in Nicaragua as well as here.
He was a U.S. citizen
and had dual citizenship with Nicaragua.
Flight is, in my mind, in my experience,
is a pretty clear sign of guilt.
When I found out Orlando had fled the country,
I was extremely angry.
The thing that makes me the most angry
about the whole situation is that he just left her there.
In that room, in that bed. And it's like, you do something so horrible but it's like maybe you have this small fiber inside of you to like feel for somebody. But he didn't. He left my best friend laying on that bed. And he didn't care.
He has no remorse.
And he's a coward.
Orlando fled the United States,
but we had to still move forward.
At that point, I was confident he's the guy that we want,
but now my staff had to collect the evidence to prove that he's the guy that we wanted.
We retrieved video from the residents at 23 Oak Street,
and basically we're going to track every move that we can,
whether through video, credit cards,
whatever we can do to kind of follow Orlando's movements.
Upon reviewing the video from 23 Oak Street,
Orlando was seen leaving his residence at 23 Oak Street
around 2.30 in the morning.
On the 8th, he returns at around 3.30 in the morning with Halley.
They're seen on video walking in together.
The one thing that's important to note that after that 3.30 time stamp on the 8th, Halley's
never seen again.
She's seen walking in, but she's never seen leaving the residence.
Orlando, on the other hand, is seen numerous times coming and going from the home.
At around, say, 8.30 at night on the 8th, he's clearly packing his car with luggage.
It goes.
That night, Haley is due to meet her friends at a poetry reading, and she never arrives
to meet them.
Again, putting those pieces of the puzzle together, it's reaffirming kind of what we
knew, but what greater power is there than the video evidence of two people walking in
and only one person walks out.
We actually sent guys down to JFK Airport. The Port Authority police brought us over to the terminal.
They were able to pick him up actually walking in to the terminal on security cameras.
And immediately you saw the headbandage around his head.
Pretty telltale because that kind of just confirmed
what we thought from the scene
about a possible attempted suicide.
They were able to track him throughout the airport
from the time he got there to the time he boarded the plane.
The death of Haley, that garnered national attention.
The death of Haley, that garnered national attention.
We got calls from media from all over the country. National manhunt launched for the former boyfriend of a nursing student found dead in upstate New York.
Orlando's a dual citizen. He leaves the United States for Nicaragua.
Reporters who spoke to one student who said she was shocked when she heard the news.
It's really terrifying to see something like that happen so close to home.
It was a high-profile case.
So the Nicaraguan authorities, they located Orlando in Nicaragua and they
arrested him.
22-year-old Orlando Tercero was arrested in Nicaragua.
He apparently was in a hospital there and I believe somebody there recognized him and
called the cops and he was arrested right outside of the hospital grounds.
When we found out he was caught,
it was initially a sense of relief,
but then that also meant nothing because she was still gone.
While we felt safer knowing he was caught, that just led to more question, what's next?
We had no idea what was going to happen.
From there, it then becomes how to handle what turned out to be an international incident.
There was a warrant issued for him to be brought back.
The charge is murder in the second degree and the people are ready for trial.
Our understanding was that he would actually stand trial in Broome County.
I was very happy that they had found him.
He was arrested and then it was just a waiting game.
Feels good to get a feeling that hopefully justice will be served. You know, right now it's kind of hard to look at the bright side of things.
Once we had learned that he had been taken into custody down in Nicaragua,
our office was very busy trying to meet with the State Department,
contact Washington, D.C., in a way to get him extradited back to Broome County, New York,
to stand trial.
Great efforts were made by our local government,
federal government, to try and get this individual back.
I got a call from the D.A.
He said that they're not extraditing Orlando.
And right away I said, well, what does that mean?
I knew that Orlando had dual citizenship, so I wasn't sure whether or not he would be extradited to the United States to have a trial.
This was a very unique situation, something that I had never come across in my 25 years
as a prosecutor.
My understanding regarding the extradition treaties that are in place are that if he
is a citizen of both countries that they have the option to have him tried in Nicaragua
or be brought back to the United States to face trial. There came a point in time when the authorities in Nicaragua made it clear to our local government
and our federal government that he was going to be tried down there, based on the fact
that he was a citizen of Nicaragua.
He would be prosecuted in Nicaragua for the crime of femicide.
Femicide is basically homicide, but with a specific intention to harm a female.
Femicide occurs in every country, but it's not recognized as femicide in most countries.
We don't have that law in New York State. We have murder in the second degree. That's what he was charged with in this case under New York law.
Once we found out he would be going to trial down there, I was glad to hear that he was
being charged with femicide and not homicide because what he did was the brutal murder
of a woman based off of their prior relationship.
So I thought that was a very appropriate charge
that should be brought upon him.
We did everything that we could to help Hailey's family
through the process, but we were learning the process
ourselves at the same time trying to explain it to them. But we were going to do everything that we could to make sure that Haley's family got justice.
As it started moving along, everything started to come together.
They both complied that they would have the trial on Skype, or whatever they called it,
video camera, in between the two court systems.
We actually had our grand jury room outfitted as a courtroom with all the technology in
order to connect with Nicaragua.
Sometimes there were mechanical glitches or technical difficulties to hook up with them by satellite.
We were dispatched to a female cell not breathing.
When I arrived.
And they had an interpreter, so when we didn't understand it, she would explain everything to us.
Laying out of the bed. Estaba acostada en la cama.
On her back.
De boca arriba.
Members of my staff were called upon to testify and present testimony and or physical evidence
that was recovered during the investigation.
Find My Friend app was showing that Hallie Anderson's cell phone was inside the apartment.
We had to bring in witnesses from all over the country.
They were actually questioned by the prosecutors.
We did not question them.
They were just put on the video and were interviewed by the prosecutors down in Nicaragua. and he was being held accountable. I know Tercero a couple times, but did not want anything serious with him.
That he was obsessed with her.
And that at one time he had flashed her vehicles fired.
At the time I thought it was because
I was seeing Hailey again.
Seeing Orlando throughout the trial
was one of the craziest things
because he sat there looking bored the entire time.
He did not speak, which I know in trials usually the person being accused doesn't really go
on the stand, but it was extremely frustrating because you're almost like, oh, you know,
maybe you're going to watch Orlando on this trial and maybe you're going to see some kind
of reaction or he's going to admit to what he's done, and there was absolutely nothing. Orlando Tercero, in a cold-blooded manner,
choked a life out of a young woman who was, we believe, probably sleeping.
It doesn't get any more sick and depraved than that.
The judge was female.
They had a female prosecutor who was such an advocate for Haley.
Very impressed with her.
I was very proud of everything that she was doing.
She really did a great job.
His defense was honestly horrible.
They tried to, you know, pull that insanity thing or that he
was under the influence of alcohol.
I mean, it was all horrible.
We wrapped everything up and then I think 30 minutes to an
hour later, they delivered the verdict.
In the United States, you have a jury trial where
you have to convince 12 people beyond a reasonable doubt
of the defendant's guilt.
Nicaragua used the judge having the authority to make the decision
as to whether someone
is guilty or not guilty.
So we didn't know anything about this judge.
We didn't know what the judge was going to do.
It was a very stressful time for everyone involved. In November of 2019, Orlando was convicted of femicide.
We knew that the sentence could be up to 30 years in prison, and we were somewhat relieved
at that point knowing that Hailey's family
would get justice.
He got the full 30 years, and that was the fullest extent of their law.
We're very pleased with the judge's decision, and we believe it was the right decision.
It provided a sense of relief that at least that portion of justice was served.
It gives us a little bit of a peace of mind that we were able to get the closure that
we needed or at least that I needed.
I'm glad he got what he deserved to the fullest extent of the law, but death is forever and
he's not going to be there forever.
There's an outstanding warrant for him and he's ready to be tried in New York State.
The maximum sentence in New York State for murder in the second degree is 25 years to
life.
Now, would we bring him back to be tried a second time?
Decisions would have to be made down the line.
His defense attorney in New York State, as well as down in Nicaragua,
would argue that double jeopardy attaches.
Our position is that it doesn't attach.
It's a separate country, and he could be tried here.
But the decision obviously won't be made by me
if he continues his 30-year sentence,
but the family would be contacted,
and we would want their input
onto whether you would bring this guy back
to the United States.
-♪ Wake up alone with the fire in the hole...
-♪
The lingering effects that Haley Anderson's murder had
at Binghamton were really discussions between students.
I talked to my friends about it.
They talked to me about it.
We all sort of were thinking and continue to think,
that's really sad because it just doesn't,
it doesn't make sense for that to have happened.
I didn't know her, but someone that's so full of promise
and who's going to college and waiting for their degree,
that is a very tragic thing to happen to someone.
In the sky, turned to color,
it went to midnight.
After Haley's death, we had attended her graduation,
and they had a picture for her on the chair
for the nursing program.
So that was nice, and they said her name,
and it was nice to be able to honor her in that way.
Since Hailey's trial, I've been on a mission to bring awareness to femicide, trying to enact femicide as a law in the United States.
Many countries in South America have adopted the law.
In Africa, more and more people are starting to adopt the law
because it is becoming so much more prevalent.
And even here in the United States.
Femicide has become much more prevalent.
I started volunteering on a domestic violence hotline
called RAINN,
which is the nation's largest anti-sexual domestic violence organization.
And I hope that I've saved at least one person from a situation like Hallie's.
I want people to be aware of signs of controlling or abusive people in their life and I want you to know that there's help and there's ways to reach out to people and if you have
a friend that is in a situation like my friend was, please tell someone.
And I hope that if this saves literally one person's life, then it was worth it for me
to be here and relive this.
There was so much more of life for Haley to live
and so much more of us to have in Haley in our lives,
the experience of Haley to live and so much more of us to have in Haley in our lives the experience of Haley
She's never coming home
And that is the saddest part Haley's death is forever
I need a tissue
I need a tissue.
This is just her memorial. All of these bricks are for parents who have lost a child.
People come here to celebrate their child's life that were lost too early.
I have a, this is a lotus with its cremation jewelry and inside.
I have her because she always wanted to travel, so wherever I go, she goes with me.
I couldn't have asked for a better 22 years.
So I'm thankful for that. Happy Angels come home to eat and sleep.
Oh, who can save us?
Happy Angels come home to eat and sleep.
Join us next week for a gripping episode about a linebacker from the University of Miami
and his childhood friend whose visit to campus ended in an unpredictable tragedy.
Death in the Dorms was produced by ABC News Studios with the Intellectual Property Corporation
and Yes Like a River for Hulu Originals.
You can find the whole series streaming on Hulu.
And be sure to tune in to ABC on Friday nights at 9 for all new broadcast episodes of 2020.
Thanks for listening.