20/20 - Life On The Line
Episode Date: October 11, 2025Authorities race against time to find a kidnapped mom by tracing chilling 911 calls, including one from the victim herself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Please, my husband and I just want to see my kids again.
Was there any sign of forced entry or a struggle?
No, no.
None.
Nothing.
So it looked like a woman just sounded vanished.
Yep, with leaving her two precious babies behind.
All he kept saying to me, I'll never forget this.
Chief, something's terribly wrong.
My daughter is gone.
Her cars at her house, her phones at her house,
her purse is at her house, her kids are at her house,
and she's not.
Ready, daddy?
I'm ready.
Oh, my goodness.
What can we do?
What can we do?
What can we help?
Where can we go?
There's no way she would go off and leave them kids at home like this.
I know 100% there's something wrong.
I could see through my blinds, a green Camaro going up
and down the road.
She's with her abductor and managing to make a 911 call.
Hands coming up and just hitting that window.
Wow.
A child in the car and it was banging on the window and crying and screaming, like, get me out
of here, scream.
Do you have any idea that a 21-year-old mom is missing?
No.
And you're witnessing a kidnapping.
No, I just want to see my family and let me go.
I've been telling this story.
I've been telling this story all over the country.
I've probably told it hundreds,
if not thousands of times, over the years.
It started just like every other day.
That turned out to be literally the worst day of my life.
No, I know, I don't know where my mommy is.
Northport emergency?
I just got home from work, and my wife, I can't find her.
She's never done this before?
No, no, no, no, no.
a Northport man came home and found his two young children, both under the age of three,
home alone, and his wife, missing.
Denise Lee's husband reported her missing, and the massive search was underway.
21-year-old mother of two has been missing since late afternoon.
Denise Amber Lee disappeared from her home around 3.30 in the afternoon on January 17.
Authorities are still calling it an active investigation.
It's incredibly painful to dive into the story over and over again, but it's something
than I have to continue to do, you know,
make a positive difference,
have an impact on somebody's life.
Hey, good morning, everyone.
My name is Nathan Lee.
quiet and you know ninja like as possible you know getting ready for work and leaving because
Denise as soon as she would wake up she'd be awake I was working a bunch of different jobs and
just trying to make sure that she could stay home with the boys started my shift 7 a.m.
11 a.m. and the brief conversation I'll remember like it was yesterday a nice cold front came
through Florida in January so it got down to like the low 70s and so I'm like open up the house
turn off the AC so we can save money and she's like okay I'll do that
I was going to invite him over to eat.
Maybe once a week we would try to do that.
And I remember trying to call there, just say, hey, we guys want to come over and never got an answer.
My shift ended at 3 o'clock.
I had a 25-minute drive home, and I called her a total of seven times, and she didn't answer.
Was that unusual?
That was weird.
I started getting a little nervous that something wasn't right.
I pulled in the driveway, but the windows were shut.
I opened the door and the first thing I noticed was how hot it was in the house.
I walked in the front door, put my phony keys down on the chair and notice her cell phone
sitting on the top of the couch.
The AC was off and so I turned that on and I noticed her purse and keys sitting on the counter.
But no sign of Denise.
No sign of Denise.
Everything looked normal.
And that's when I heard Noah starting to wake up from a nap, but it was coming out of Adams' bedroom.
And so I walked in there and they were both in the same crib.
Is that typical?
That was not, that was not normal.
Pick up Noah and he's immediately asking me, where's mom, where's mom, where's mom?
I literally walked in every room in the house and she wasn't anywhere.
I didn't know what else to do and I call 911.
Northport Police Emergency.
We all know those critical three digits to dial in an emergency.
911. And when Denise Lee, a young mom of two, suddenly vanishes from her West Florida home,
there are a series of those calls captured in real time. And each can be the difference
between life and death. Northport Emergency? Yes. I'm at Latour Avenue. I just got home
to work and my wife, I can't find her. My kids were in the house and I don't know where she is.
I've looked every single place and I don't know. How old your kids are?
My oldest is two and my youngest is six months.
I know what, I know.
I don't know where mommy is.
Her vehicle is in a driveway?
Yes.
Do she have any medical conditions?
No.
Her purse is here.
I don't...
Her cell phone is here.
I don't...
I don't know.
I don't know.
Okay.
What is her name?
Beneath.
Yes.
Wee.
We.
We.
There's little video clips of her at the park.
her at the park with the pushing Noah in the swing,
her giggling lap, that was her.
You know, that was Denise all the time of the kids.
I got you.
You ready, daddy?
I'm ready, you ready?
She was a stay-at-home mom.
She was like all about her boys and her family.
Noah, you ready?
Whoa!
What was she like as a mom juggling two little boys?
Selfless is the number one word.
She put them first for everything, patience.
I don't think I ever heard her.
raise her voice at them.
One, no smile.
I remember sitting back and just going, wow,
you know, she's an amazing human.
Denise was pretty young, 21-year-old young mom.
Tell me about her life at that point.
Oh, she loved being a mom.
You know, her family meant everything to her.
She was so proud of her kids and, you know, Nathan.
They were her life.
She looks so happy.
That's her with Noah and Adam.
They look like they're about the same size there.
They do look about the same size.
They're 18 months apart.
They look like the happy family right here.
Mm-hmm.
Take me back to the time when you met those teen years.
She was a senior in high school.
I was a sophomore technically in college.
She was super crazy smart and was taking college courses already.
She was a brainiac, and it was very smart.
Denise's dad, Rick Goff, had been a long-time detective with the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office at the time.
Rick Goff is a legend at the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office.
He's been here a long time.
I felt like I just had an instant friendship with Rick, kind of guys cut from the same cloth.
Cops, cops.
Is that Rick?
Yes.
Oh, my goodness.
Yep.
What was it about her that attracted you?
She was beautiful, funny, goofy.
As we started dating and got to know each other better,
the thing that I loved about her the most was how she looked at me.
Nathan remembers that Denise was just 17 when she first spoke to him,
and the two went out on a date.
I wanted to take her somewhere special,
because if she was the one, I wanted it to be memorable,
and I kind of already knew.
Like, it was weird. I kind of already knew.
You already knew that age?
I think so.
So you started dating pretty soon.
As soon as February, Valentine's Day.
How did you mark the occasion?
Yeah, it was pretty awkward.
You know, Valentine's Day was not even a month after our first date.
And so we went to the mall and we came up with this plan to not go over $40.
That was our cap.
She found a ring.
Not even sure what if it was silver or what it was, it had a heart on it with a little stone
in the middle.
That turned out to be the most special thing, her prized possession.
Soon you're talking marriage?
We weren't talking marriage until we found.
I found out that somebody was going to be coming into this world.
I remember finding out like she was pregnant,
and I was kind of shocked because she was, like, really young.
She was really happy that day.
I don't think she stopped smiling the whole day.
We had Noah about five months later,
and then Adam was born another 18 months later.
That's a quick family.
Yeah, we didn't waste any time.
We had no money, but we didn't care.
And we were madly in love.
And then January 17, 2008, everything changes.
Have you checked the residence?
Yes, every closet, every room, bathroom, everywhere.
It was like she evaporated.
She wouldn't have left in kids for nothing.
We knew she didn't leave on her own free will.
Northport is a great little town.
It's a beautiful city.
The neighborhood that Denise and her husband lived in
was just a typical small family Florida neighborhood.
You would feel safe living in that community.
How did they wind up moving to Northport?
They were looking for a house to rent,
and they saw that one and liked it.
And it was a brand new house.
Never been living in a cheap.
They were pretty cheap.
Back then, the recession was hitting,
and there was a ton of empty houses for rent.
And we found a three bedroom, two bath,
for like $500 a month.
And it was in a beautiful area,
all pine trees, wooded area.
trees, wooded area, very secluded, which we thought was a good thing.
Being in our own house was really special. It's like, okay, we're a real family.
But we loved it. We loved the house.
But on January 17, 2008, that house is at the center of a missing persons investigation.
Have you checked the residence?
The entire residence?
Yes, the entire house, yes.
Every closet, every room, bathroom, everywhere.
Are the children okay?
Yes. Well, my youngest one's crying.
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, my goodness.
All right, Nathan, I have an officer en route for you.
If she does return home, by the time we get their calls back, let us know, okay?
Okay.
All right, thank you.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
My name is Chris Morales, and I am the Deputy Chief of Police for the Northport Police Department.
But at that time, you were...
At the time, I was a detective with the agency in the Major Crimes Unit.
You get this call that Denise Lee is missing.
I got a notification from my sergeant and said,
hey, I need you two to go out to Latour Avenue reference
to a missing female.
10 4th, thin billed, approximately 5'2,
dirty blonde hair, blue eyes, 110 pounds.
Photos were disseminated out throughout the department
to members on their computers and who to be out
in the lookout for at that time.
Do you just wait for the police?
Do you call anybody else?
Yeah, so as soon as I got off the phone with 911,
I called Denise's dad.
Who happens to be a detective?
Rick always, when he answers the phone, he just starts talking.
And the first thing Rick asked me, I'll never forget it.
I can't imagine what this must have felt like from his standpoint.
He asked me, do you guys want to come over for dinner tonight?
And I'm like, Rick, we can't.
I don't know where Denise is.
And he's like, what do you mean by that?
Did you immediately become concerned?
Yes.
Why?
Because he said she wasn't around and the two boys were there home alone when he got home.
Absolutely.
And then he went in the cops.
mode. Is there any signs of force entry? Is there blood anywhere? You know, and I'm like,
Rick, no. It's like she evaporated. And I felt better after talking to him because I knew
if anybody was going to find where Denise was, it was him. And then I take off straight to
Northport to their house and had to get a hold of my wife. I didn't know what to think. I
had no idea what could have happened. So very quickly, Denise's mom arrives to take Noah and Adam home.
They had taped off the house, the crime scene was there.
I brought them home with me.
Adam was only six months old.
She was still nursing him.
I had a friend go to the store, get formula,
because I knew it was going to be time for him to eat.
He was hungry.
They were my focus.
Now, when you first go out there,
I would imagine you've got to rule out the husband.
Any investigator knows that when you have something of suspicion,
when it comes to a domestic, a husband and wife,
that you're going to be on hypervigion.
vigilant of wanting to focus on that person, right?
Cars from the Northport Police Station are soon on the scene, and Nathan says one of the officers
starts to hone in on him.
And I understand it, you watch a lot of these types of shows, and it's always the husband.
But luckily, Denise's dad arrived, and that changed everything.
They respected his authority.
This was his daughter, and this investigation ramps up very quickly.
First thing, I go, well, maybe she went with somebody else.
You know, her and Nathan haven't tried, I go absolutely not.
Nathan was her life.
There's no way she would go off and leave them kids at home like this.
I know 100% me. There's something wrong.
There are multiple law enforcement agencies involved.
Who's taking the lead?
Northport's taking the lead on it. They'll send their jurisdiction.
But Detective Morales was the case agent.
Was there any sign of forced entry or a strike?
No, no.
None.
Nothing.
Nothing.
So it looked like a woman just sounded vanished.
Yep, with leaving her two precious babies behind.
Her phone was there, her keys were there, her purse was there, so all indications there was something wrong.
I remember Rick Goff was sitting across the street, leaned up against his car, with his arms crossed, in his head kind of in a way downward of dismay.
He was distraught.
He was, yeah.
You're her father, but you're also in a way.
law enforcement so what goes on for you at this moment me I was hey you know you
always hear postpartum depression maybe after a pregnancy and it's been six
months so you kind of well maybe she's just lost in the woods out here because the
whole house is surrounded by woods and stuff so I went to Chief Cam and I
call him at the time and he was the undersheriff and I'd say hey can we get her
helicopter up here Northport doesn't have a helicopter can we get extra people
instantly I felt the panic in his voice
And all he kept saying to me, I'll never forget this.
Chief, something's wrong.
Chief, something's terribly wrong.
He goes, my daughter is gone.
Her car's at her house, her phones at her house, her purse is at her house, her kids are at her house, and she's not.
He said, Chief, she would never do that.
She would never leave her kids, Chief.
I said, I'm on the way, I'm bringing the cavalry.
We'll be, we'll help you.
We're going to find it.
So you had law enforcement just coming in everywhere.
Law enforcement was hearing it about a sergeant's daughter's missing.
They were just, they were coming going, what can we do, what can we do, what can we help, where can we
I called the dispatchers and I said to anybody who's free, any detective, any officer, any motorcycle,
it doesn't matter what, send him to Northport, you got to go to find Rick's daughter.
We were trying to figure out where is Denise.
So we started going door to door, talking to neighbors.
Around 2.30, the neighbor, a young female, had saw a green Camaro.
She said she saw a man in a green Camaro.
She made eye contact with him.
I could see through my blinds a green Camaro going up and down.
Camaro going up and down the road and I walked outside just as he was turning around and
pulled into her driveway real quick and sat in the car Jennifer Eckhart who lived next door
saw him parking Denise Lee's driveway after he had kind of been prowling up and down the street
several times and he sat there for let's say a good 15 minutes and so I went back inside and
then about ten minutes later he left who's inside this
green Camaro that seemed to be lurking outside.
Two cents is going to be a darker green Camaro.
Hours go by, and with the search on for this mysterious green car,
a heart-stopping 911 call comes in.
9-1-1-1-1-12.
Please let me go.
I just want to see my family again.
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Denise A. Lee, Northport 118.
That's 107.8 units in San Francisco area.
Within minutes of Nathan Lee making that 911 call to report that his wife Denise is missing,
Northport police are at his doorstep.
And after canvassing the neighborhood, they soon come up with their first lead.
We got the information from the neighbor of a green Camaro that was seen in her driveway around 2.30.
That was about an hour prior to Nathan getting home.
So we were on the questions with Nathan about, do you have friends that have a Camaro, family members, someone at your work?
I do, actually.
I know a guy I work with a guy drove a green Camaro, but it turned out it wasn't him.
The superintendent is going to be a darker green Camaro,
and it's going to be probably an early 2000, late 90s model.
All we had to go on at that point was look for any green
Camaro you see and stop it, because that's all we have.
We knew that someone had to have taken her.
I put my guys at every intersection I could possibly think of,
because my fear was whoever was if they got onto the interstate,
they could be in Miami and a couple, we'd lose them.
Nearly four hours after Denise's neighbors spotted that green Camaro, a new 911 call comes in to Sarasota County dispatch, and it immediately grabs their attention.
911.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I just want to go.
Hello?
What's wrong?
Why would you go?
I'm sorry.
I just want to do my family.
Please let me go.
Please let me go.
I just want to see my family again.
Incredibly, the woman on the line is Denise Lee herself.
When that call came in, we absolutely knew that she was abducted.
What's your name, ma'am?
Please, my name is Denise.
I'm made your beautiful husband.
And I just want to see my kids again.
Please, I just want to see what she will again while we go.
She's with her abductor.
She's with her abductor.
And managing to make a 911 call.
Denise had found the phone and was able to hide the phone and call 911.
That's pretty incredible.
It is absolutely incredible and very heroic.
She was very good at giving indicators to 911.
She didn't want to let him know that she was talking to somebody.
Do you know this guy that's with you?
No.
You don't know him from anywhere?
No, please.
Oh, God, help me.
What is the address the train?
Where are we going?
I got it all around now.
I'm going around where?
Because it's rock.
Can you see that's exactly where?
Four street, three, go from your house.
I clear you up everywhere.
Northport L9, Sarasota just had Denise A. Lee on the phone.
on the phone advice that she was taken by an unknown subject.
Chief Camera came to me, said there was a 911 call.
And they said, listen, there was a girl on the phone.
They think it's Denise.
I said, Rick, I have to have you listen to this recording.
And I played it for him.
I'm sorry, please, let me go!
I'm sorry, please let me go.
Hello?
Please, let me go, go, please.
He just, he cried and he said, that's her.
That was horrible for me and horrible for Rick.
She was trying to save her life, get back to her kids.
It's just tough, it's tough to deal with.
When you eventually heard that call, that couldn't have been easy for you.
Yeah, that was tough.
That was tough.
What's your home address?
Do you know?
I don't know.
Can you just take me to my house?
Can you just take me home?
Can you take me back to my house on the tour, which is the address where she had?
She's laying on top of the phone, the backseat, best we can figure, and answering dispatches questions.
questions and then trying to relay it secretly talking to him.
Can they turn off the radio or turn it down?
I can't hear you.
It's so loud.
Where are we?
I know when she picked up that phone, she's thinking, okay, I'm going to be saved
because 911 is going to know where I am and my dad and I know is looking for me and they're going to find me.
I don't know where your phone is.
I'm sorry.
At some point on that call, you can hear the kidnapper realizing his phone is missing and demanding it back.
I don't have your phone.
Please, God.
I don't have it.
I'm sorry.
You might have the phone laid down and I hear a thing I'm saying, too.
The fact that she was able to get all the information she needed, I mean, it was unbelievable.
She was doing everything in her power to be found.
Yes, absolutely.
Are you going to hurt me?
Are you going to let me out now?
Oh, please.
Don't, don't.
I lost them.
Chris, I lost her.
I lost her, the guy grabbed the phone from her.
Unfortunately, you can hear him pull off to the side of the road,
and then you hear the phone disconnect.
The clock is ticking.
Are you hopeful?
When a 911 call came, absolutely hopeful.
I was thankful that she was alive.
I thought it was only a matter of time before they found her.
I was thinking, okay, this is going to be her chance.
21-year-old Denise Lee has just called 911 pleading for her life after being kidnapped
from her home and authorities are trying to pinpoint her location I assume she called 911 they
know where she is that's what everybody thinks turns out that's not how it works can police
pinpoint where she is at that point with the 911 call they were trying to triangulate
to call meaning from one cell tower to this cell tower to this one and trying to
dial in an approximate area where it was at.
By the time we started to go up on the phone itself
with our federal partners who assist us, the phone was dead.
She was still able to keep the line open
and for them to get critical information
about this person who had taken her.
We have a phone number that ties back
to whatever called into 911.
We were able to take that number
and through phone providers we were able to identify
who the subscriber was of that number,
which came back to Michael King.
Had you ever heard of this man before?
No, I've never heard of Michael King before.
Did his name ring a bell to you at all?
No, it did not.
Just completely a random guy?
Yes.
Usually there's a connection or a relationship or a motive.
Some tie-in between the parties involved in cases like this.
For the life of us, we couldn't figure this one out.
We ran Michael King through databases and came back with Michael King,
Michael King, which had owned an actual green Camaro.
And so you knew right away that this is our guy.
This is your guy.
This is our guy.
With police now desperately trying to locate Michael King,
another alarming 911 call comes in to Sarasota County.
Place emergency operator Bonnell.
Right after Denise had made this 911 call, approximately nine minutes later,
we received a phone call from a Sabrina Muxlow.
I'm a Sabrina Muxlow.
What's the problem?
I just got a call from my dad, and his cousin came over his house with a girl in the car.
On the line is a teenage girl who tells a frightening story that she's just heard from her
own father.
She was tied up, and the girl came out of the, like, got out of the car, and my dad's
cousin went and put her back in the car.
When she got out, okay, where's your dad's house?
It's in the north floor.
Do you know the address of it?
He wants to be anonymous.
His cousin left.
Okay.
What's the cousin driving?
A green Camaro.
And what does he look like?
He's white, medium size.
It's kind of chubby.
What's the cousin's name?
Oh, it's Mikey King.
Michael King?
Yeah.
Okay.
Sabrina's dad is Harold Muxlow, a cousin of Michael King.
Michael King.
Harold, instead of calling 911, he calls his daughter.
Are you sure you can't give me your dad's address?
He doesn't want nothing to do with it.
He's afraid to call because it's his cousin.
I guess my mom says this guy's crazy.
Okay, so all you can tell me his name is Michael King.
He was just at your dad's house and he had a woman tied up
and she tried to get out of the car and he put her back in the car, correct?
Yeah, she was yelling.
She was yelling out to Muxleckhall call police, call the cops.
Just the idea that she was so actively, you know, some people would have been subdued in the back.
Doing everything she could.
He heard a woman's voice.
He asked King what's going on, King brushed him off, and he let King drive away, unimpeded.
Okay, we've been looking for this female.
See that?
Yes.
We've got the helicopter up.
You are just so wonderful to call us and give us this information.
and okay.
Yeah.
You learn that his cousin, Harold Muxlow, he didn't call the police even though she was screaming
for him to call police.
I was very angry at him, you know, and he called his 17-year-old daughter to stick up for him.
Thank God she called 911 too and gave us the description of the car and stuff like that herself
because he was too much of a coward to doing himself.
He had a 17-year-old daughter too and he didn't want to help my daughter.
my daughter.
911.
What's the location of your emergency?
Um, it's, uh, I'm not sure exactly what the emergency is exactly.
Harold, probably feeling guilty, goes to a local pay phone up the street and then later calls
us to tell us something we already know.
I think there's somebody that's taken without the, uh, that don't want to be where
they need to be.
Uh-huh.
And we're in a 95 Green Camaro from Northport.
Northport.
Okay.
How do you know this?
I know.
Do you know who the guy is?
No.
Okay.
Other than the green 1995 commander, do you know anything else?
No, sure don't.
Okay.
Do you know the last time you saw him?
About 15 minutes ago.
But it's Sabrina's original 911 call that reveals a chilling detail.
Now, where would he be going with this female?
He came over to my dad's house, borrowed a shovel, a gas tank, and found out.
King came to him with some cockamamie story about King's lawnmower being broken down,
and so he asked his cousin Harold Muxlow for a shovel, a gas can, a flashlight.
Once we learned he had stopped at his cousin's house to obtain those items,
we knew time was of the essence that we needed to find her quickly,
because that window of opportunity was dwindling fast.
Breaking news, right now Northport police are searching for a woman, they say, was kidnapped.
With the desperate search for Denise Lee in high gear, 911 is about to get another call.
911, where's the emergency?
Well, I'm on 41 going south.
This one from a woman who's driving and sees something and knows she needs to say something.
It's like a, I want to say like a Camaro type of car, and there's a kid in the backseat, and screaming.
And not a happy scream, like, get me out of here, scream.
Do you want me to turn?
Try to follow them.
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It's a pretty busy road.
US 41, it's a, yeah, it's a very busy, busy road, actually.
Jane Kowalski finds herself driving down this road in Northport, Florida, unaware that a young mom of two, Denise Lee, has been missing for three hours now.
I'm on the phone with my sister, hands-free, talking, and I get up to Cranberry Boulevard, stop for a stoplight, Deli Head Turn Red, and there's screaming going on, and I turn to the left, to look to the car next to me that has been.
had pulled up next to me and the screaming was coming from that car.
What kind of screams? Horrific.
Loud, curdling, just horrific screams.
I looked over and I see the guy, as Claire's day, it's like from here to right there,
but he kept turning and trying to push something down in his back seat and then a hand
comes up and it was a Camaro, right? And so it was like two doors so there's a little window
in the back and the hands coming up and it's just hitting that window.
Give me a sense of how the hand was hitting the window.
Okay.
Wow.
What's your instinct telling you about what's happening?
Something's wrong.
Something's completely wrong.
Something's wrong.
Someone needs help.
So the light turns green, and I hesitate because I want to get that license plate.
In Florida, you only have license plates on the back.
But the light turns green, and he hesitates.
We don't go.
Well, there's tons of cars behind us, and they start honking.
He knows that you see him.
Yeah, he knows because I looked at him, because I sort of gave him the look like,
what the hell?
you know what's going on in your car and i finally go forward thinking that he's going to go forward
but he pulls right behind me so you can't see his license plate now because he's behind
he's behind me and that's also sort of scary because i know that he saw me looking at him
so i hang up with my sister i call 911 911 where's your emergency well i'm on 41 going south
and i was at a stoplight and a man pulled up next to me and there was a child
screaming in the car.
A lot of the people are the end.
It's a blue Camero, like Camaro, like in the 90s or early 2000s or something.
Jane's 911 call goes to a different dispatch.
Charlotte County, the same agency Denise's dad works for.
The way 911 phone systems work is when you dial your phone, it will hit the closest tower
to where you are at that moment in time.
But by the time this woman, when she makes the phone call, she makes the phone call, she's
She's close to the Charlotte line.
The closest tower rings into our dispatch.
About how old is this child?
I did see the child.
I'd say less than 10, definitely not an infant, old enough to bang on the window.
But of course, it's not a child at all.
It's Denise Lee, restrained, fighting to get anybody's attention for help.
This particular car, the back seat was so small that Denise was probably having to lay down.
lay down in the back seat of the car.
And at the wheel is Michael King.
The man authorities have been desperately searching for.
And I turned to look at him, and he's a white male, sort of light-colored hair, sort of plump.
He's behind me now, and I try to slow down so he could pass me and I could read his license
site, and he's going slower than I am, which is not right, because we're holding up
traffic and stuff.
But I think that he saw me look at him, and I'm not trying to be overdramatic here, but
he's going to even slower now.
She's making it very well known that Michael is aware that she sees him and she knows that something's not right there.
So obviously his speeds are reduced significantly.
Okay, he's pulling over to the other lane up.
I'm in this lane over here in the right-hand lane, and he was behind me, and he cuts all the way over to the turn lane.
Over there.
And that's when I'm like, should I follow him, but I'm over here.
All this traffic comes in, and I can't make the turn.
Oh, shit.
And he's going to turn left on Toledo Blade.
He's turning left right now.
Oh.
And I'm in the other lane.
He's turning left on Toledo Blade.
Do you want me to turn?
Try to follow him, or?
Does he want her to follow him?
Okay, can you turn?
He just turned on Toledo Blade.
I don't know if I can catch up.
There's a bunch of traffic, and I can't get over.
Oh, boy.
He was doing everything he can.
to avoid her. It is clear that he changed course of direction because of Jane Kowalski.
A child in the car and it was banging on the window and screaming and crying and screaming
like screaming screaming screaming and not a happy scream like get me out of here scream.
The vehicle had a white male, white male driver, blue or black Camaro, male had white hair
and there was a child screaming in the car and banging on the window.
Okay.
And banging on the window.
Like, do that?
Okay.
I've got everybody hollering at me and just one second.
And I could hear stuff in the background and she kept talking to other people asking questions too.
That whole Com Center is buzzing with two shifts of people trying to help Rick and trying to find Denise.
Okay.
I'm going to just pull over now.
Let me get over.
Yeah, that would be great.
I don't know if there's an amber alert out or something like that, but...
Bear with me.
And you asked her if there was an amber alert issued.
I did it.
At one point, I was like, is there an umbrella out?
Yeah.
Again, I thought it was a child who had been abducted, and I didn't know what was going on.
Do you have any idea that a 21-year-old mom is missing?
No.
And you're witnessing a kidnapping.
I had no idea I was witnessing a kidnapping.
I didn't know what was going on in the car.
That green Camero turned out to be a traveling woman.
a traveling crime scene in and of itself.
When the Camaro turns left here on Toledo Blade, Jane loses sight of it.
But with such a precise location and deputies nearby, could this be the moment Denise is
finally found?
At that moment at that time when Jane Kowalski had called 911 to Charlotte County's dispatch center,
there were officers, deputies, special agents, all in that area converging into the city.
I activated my lights and my sirens.
Central R units, Northport units, FHP has a vehicle stop.
I yell, driver, don't give me a reason to fire into your vehicle.
I don't know, I don't know where I'm on me is.
You get this call that Denise Lee is missing.
In my 40-year career, the Denise Amberlee case was
the worst weekend of my life.
The authorities say a woman's been kidnapped
and they're caught on the trail.
FHP has the vehicle stopped at 178 southbound.
I yelled driver, exit the vehicle.
Don't give me a reason to fire into your vehicle.
And I immediately said, where is the girl?
What does he say?
He says that he was kidnapped.
He tells you he was kidnapped?
Yes.
This ground right here.
Throw right out of the floor.
These remain still with tested about weekend.
Did you see that girl tied up?
No.
Let's have the rails towards.
There's something you're not telling.
She was dropping clues.
Yeah.
For you to find her.
Yes.
The first thing I gave her for Valentine's Day.
Everything stopped at that point.
All three of us looked at each other like, what did he just say?
She sees this abduction in progress, and you're witnessing a kidnapping.
Northport Emergency.
I just got home to work and my wife, I can't find her.
Her phone was there, purse, keys.
The boys are home by themselves.
It was like she just, poof, disappeared.
This is the kind of case that people have nightmares about.
A young woman abducted in broad daylight, taken away from her two little babies,
two little babies.
She wouldn't have left them kids for nothing.
I know 100% there's something wrong.
Northport police are searching for a woman,
they say, was kidnapped.
Her name is Denise Lee.
Three hours into the search,
a chilling 911 call.
Please let me know.
Why did you my family again, please?
There was a 911 phone call from Denise,
from the suspect's phone, and she was talking to the dispatcher.
As police traced the phone, another call comes in.
They kept banging on the window and screaming,
and not a happy scream, like, get me out of here, scream.
He just turned up to a little boy, I don't know if I can catch up.
There's a bunch of traffic, and I can't get over.
Oh, boy.
And there's another 911 call.
I just got a call from my dad, and his cousin came over his house.
came over his house with a girl in the car and she was tied up he borrowed a shovel a gas tank and found out what's the cousin driving a green Camaro what's the cousin's name mike king put out of all of the FHP 2 please for a dark green Camaro
who's he saying is driving that Camaro Michael King
So you know now who you're looking for.
100%.
And the key is now to track him down.
Find him and save her.
As the manhunt for Michael King is ramping up,
Denise's younger sister, Amanda, is at the movies 150 miles away,
unaware of her sister's disappearance when she gets a voicemail.
It was like very hysterical.
I heard about what happened to Denise.
I immediately called my parents and I was like,
parents and I was like what is happening like what's going on what's going through your mind
just a lot of emotions like a lot of worry you would never think ever that something like that
would happen to you especially with our dad being in law enforcement you're a detective with
Charlotte County yes you had worked undercover were you processing whether this could have been
related to a case that you had handled absolutely that's that's the first thing came up on
everybody's radar thing and I worked some pretty big people in the day so
When you learned that police have zeroed in on a guy named Michael King,
did his name ring a bell to you at all?
No, it did not.
With Michael King identified as their prime suspect,
police race to his Northport home.
So you're making your way to his home
with the hope that you'll find her there.
This was the biggest lead that we had.
We have the house surrounded with the three units unseen.
Two of us are implying close.
Nobody's coming to the door.
They don't see any car.
There's a TV on, and it sounds like voices in this home.
They got to go in.
If she's in there, go in, now kick the door in.
I want entry made on that house.
And for two marked officers at the front.
Make entry.
This is a uniformed officers make entry.
When you got here, what did you see right away inside?
Very dark and gloomy inside.
They found out that it was pretty much TV music.
And it was probably used to keep volume up high for what was probably
occurring in the house.
There's indication that someone had been there.
Yes.
But no sign of Denise or Michael King.
Correct.
This house was basically empty, except for a TV,
and that is where we believe he took her.
There was obviously signs of someone being held against their will.
They saw a makeshift bed in the master bedroom,
the Winnie the Poo blanket.
Her hair tie was left on the floor.
They saw an elongated mirror that was propped up against the wall.
Would you have duct tape watered up in a bedroom with long strains?
It looked like lined brown hair.
But then they found some duct tape and some blonde hair that stuck to the duct tape and stuff like that.
You had to know that that does not sound good.
Right.
Once we figured out they were no longer there, then we treated it as a crime scene.
But at this point, we're still just worried about finding Denise.
All of that's secondary.
The main thing is, is she still alive?
Where are they?
So you missed this moment, and then what next?
Where are you hoping to find it?
Pretty much what we were doing was shutting down the city.
We need some or shut down so no one can get to the interstate.
We shut down Northport and was holding a roadblock to vehicles going in and out and looking for a green Camaro.
We also need the on ramp shut down to the interstate.
I need one of you guys making sure nobody gets to on the interstate unless they're checked.
What is it like for you as those hours are going by?
going by and no real firm word.
The more worried I got, the less hopeful I was.
The entire search now revolves around finding
that one green Camaro.
Florida Highway Trooper Edward Pope
is scouring I-75.
I end up making a U-turn right on the medium.
Suddenly out of nowhere, a pair of headlights appeared.
And I realized that it was a green Camaro.
Got a green Camaro heading southbound.
I swung around on it.
I'm trying to catch up here.
Immediately, I saw the first three digits of the tag.
I knew at this point I had the right vehicle.
FHP has a vehicle stopped at 178 southbound, 178 southbound.
I yell, driver, don't give me a reason
to fire into your vehicle.
New units responding to the interstate.
Northport, 232, GF traffic.
0-724.
L-81 to any units that are on a perimeter need to stay there.
2.49 central.
Well, what's that tag on our Camaro?
While a green Camaro was a black.
Hold on one thing.
It's around 9 p.m.
5 hours since Denise vanished.
Trooper Edward Pope has spotted Michael King's Green Camaro and is in hot pursuit.
I activated my lights and my sirens.
He was a little hesitant, but he finally pulled over.
Northport units. FHP has the vehicle stopped at 178 southbound, 178 southbound.
It came over the radio.
FHP had the car stopped, and immediately I jumped in my car and headed out to the scene.
You heard about a green Camaro that had been spotted.
Yes.
I was real hopeful on the radio because I heard him stopping the car.
We were hopeful that she was going to be found.
I made several commands for the driver of the vehicle to exit.
So after about the fourth command, I noticed he was trying to move the rearview mirror
in order to try to find my location.
I yelled driver, exit the vehicle.
vehicle don't give me a reason to fire into your vehicle and immediately there was a second
pause the driver's side door swung open I identified who I was and I pulled him out of the vehicle
at gunpoint and I immediately said where is the girl and so I'm like waiting and waiting and
then come across right again that she's not in the car Michael King is 1012 the female is not 1012 with the
Rick called me and said hey they found the guy but she's not in the car what happened
for you at that moment I was like okay like what do you what does that mean he's
like I don't know where person they're still looking I was able to go to the
vehicle and what I could see was a gas can a shovel that appeared that had been
used somewhere he's standing there who
Concerning is he's soaking wet from his waist all the way down with water and mud and muck.
That's not good.
That's not good.
And you take him into custody.
Yep.
What does he say?
He says that he was kidnapped.
He was kidnapped with Denise.
He tells you he was kidnapped?
Yes.
And what do you make of this story?
So obviously it's not believable.
Obviously, you know he's lying.
Today is January 17, 2008, approximately 1124.
President of Detective Morales, President Michael King.
You came to us and you told me that you were a hostage and you were a victim.
At that point, my focus was, okay, we need to find where she is
and we seem like you wanted to assist us.
We need to just find out what happened.
You understand?
But before Detective Morales can really begin questioning King, he needs to read him his rights.
Having these rights in mind, do you wish to talk to us here now?
No, I just want an attorney.
You want an attorney?
Yeah.
He didn't want to speak anything that can incriminate him, so he lawyers up.
So we went ahead and said, okay, tell us how you're a victim.
Tell us how you and Denise were kidnapped.
Police send in a detective who knows King, offering pizza and water, hoping to keep him talking.
I just asked him if I come here and talk to you.
Yeah, I'm not...
I'm a problem.
But yeah, I'm not...
I'm not...
I think I have bad luck.
What I think?
I'm picking up nobody anymore.
What'd you do?
Oh, I just picked up somebody.
They were on the side of the road and I didn't think nothing of it.
And boom, just grabbing it right here and throw right on the floor.
That was it.
And he's like, don't move.
And they put something on my legs and I couldn't even freaking move, man.
You're not hurt or anywhere.
No.
No one can believe those stories and how they just turn him loose and about in middle of nowhere
and just made no sense whatsoever.
running out of options and time police now bring in King's cousin Harold
Muxlow who says he saw a woman with King hours after Denise Lee was abducted he
agrees to talk to King we are hoping that Harold would open up to Michael and
saying hey it's done it's over just tell him where she is
what happened to go I see it we go he took off or whatever he did I don't know
It's crazy. Can't they ask her or anything?
Did they let her go over, do you know?
I don't even think they found her.
Muxlow presses King on a crucial detail.
Earlier that day, his cousin had come to his house
to borrow a shovel, a gas can, and a flashlight.
The same items found in King's car.
Where did he the flashlight for him?
Told him.
He said to get that.
That was it.
Why didn't you go, not her?
I don't know.
I don't know.
You know, what's going on, man?
I don't know.
They should have let her go, too.
Oh, you're laughing with her.
I don't know, really, but...
You mean, it was pretty bad on your side there.
You know, some kind of my daughter, man.
I wouldn't be too happy, but...
I don't know.
I agree with you.
I'd be all over, too, man.
Investigators collect evidence, fibers, fingernail clippings, DNA swabs, then arrest King.
You're under arrest, Michael.
I did not.
All right now.
Right now.
With King clamming up, investigators turned to his cousin.
And I see him in there wrestling with somebody and I heard some girl and say, call the cops.
Did you see the person that was in the back?
No, very well.
But when they give him a polygraph...
Extreme deception indicated.
So let's have the real story.
There's something you're not telling.
John, a lot is changing by the moment here in Sarasota County.
We have heard that a suspect is in custody.
Just a short time ago, the Florida Highway Patrol arrested this man.
36-year-old Michael King.
They've also located that car.
Green Camaro, but they did not find Denise Lee in it.
Take these off the front and they're going on the back.
You're under arrest, Michael.
Good it this way, Mike.
This is all in the beginning now.
With Michael King now in custody, police continue talking to him,
treating him as a potential victim.
At that time, if he wants to say he's kidnapped,
we were going to talk to him in,
hopefully him lead us to where she may be.
Does he take you to a location?
He takes us to a couple locations, yes.
I need air one over in this area here.
He's led us to this.
10-4-L-9, I need you to call him.
We're hopeful, and we tell all the rescuers,
we're still looking for a person, not a body.
I was getting information from all agencies
and giving the updates.
I was 100% confident we'd find her.
I thought she was somewhere, he must have just dropped her off in the woods somewhere,
or, you know, she's wandering on the side of a road, and they would find her.
We did get him back up, start looking for hot spots around that area or the subject, Wednesday, 15.
Meanwhile, we're learning more about the man in custody in connection with Lee's kidnapping.
With the search going on, questions are swirling around Michael King.
To his parents, the accusations are unbelievable.
We've never had a problem with Michael.
And he, you know, it just don't seem like he would do something like this.
It's not in Michael.
This is the first time King's posed for a mugshot in Florida.
The unemployed plumber doesn't have a criminal record here.
Police visit King's ex-girlfriend, who tells them she's equally stunned.
Do you, in your opinion, think that when Michael would ever do something like this?
No.
No.
No.
Do you think he has to take a villain here, so?
No.
King has an 11-year-old son whom he'd been raising on his own.
At the time, that boy was living with relatives in another state.
We learned that Michael King was going through foreclosure at the time and had broken up with his girlfriend.
It seemed like a person that was down on his luck.
And his attitude changed toward the end of the relationship.
Yeah, he got a little depressed.
You know, and I would tell us to him because he left a good paying job.
He's worried about his house.
You know, the payments on it and stuff.
Police turned to King's cousin to try to get some answers.
This was a vehicle parked across the road.
And I see him in there wrestling with somebody,
and I heard some girls say, call the cops.
And he goes, oh, don't worry about it.
And we took him.
Did you see the person that was in the back?
Man out very well.
But the story he's telling now doesn't match what his daughter, Sabrina, says he told her.
I just got a call from my dad, and his cousin came over his house with a girl in the car, and she was tied up.
Faced with this contradictory account, investigators bring Muxlow in for a polygraph exam.
Why do you think you're in this room, Harold?
A little statement that my daughter made, brother.
Please remain still, the test is about to begin.
Did you see that girl tied up?
No.
Did you see that girl get out of that car?
No.
Did you see that girl before you gave Mike that shovel?
No.
We'll hit the score button.
What's that say?
Extreme deception.
Extreme deception indicated.
So let's have the real story, because I don't think I got it.
I don't want to get blamed for it.
We're not blaming you.
But we've got to move forward.
There's people out here to need answers.
They have a daughter that's gone.
Finally, Muxlow admits to what he saw.
I see them rustling by the front door with somebody
on the other side of the car.
Mm-hmm.
And he put her in the car.
put her in the car and I didn't see her tied up.
I had seen him get out of the car.
It upset me.
I couldn't do nothing.
Is that it?
That was it.
Are you sure?
That is what was bothering you on that polygraph.
Yeah.
But I didn't see her tied out.
I think most people put themselves in Harold
McSlow's shoes and say, would I do that or would I do something different?
Very disappointed in what he could have prevented and what he could have stopped.
I wish there was a law that could charge him and put him away.
But unfortunately, in the law, he has no duty to call or stop someone for help.
During a search of Michael King's Camero, police discover a heart-shaped ring.
in the rear passenger seat.
The only question is, does it belong to Denise?
Investigators bring her husband Nathan
here to this interview room
to see if he can identify it.
We have a piece of jewelry here
I want you to look at, okay?
Well, you will be able to tell us
if this is it or not.
We're not, we're not sure, okay?
Okay.
Tell them, you're ready?
Morning.
Is this her ring?
Yes.
The first ring I gave her personal time say.
How confident are you that for me?
100%.
What happens for you at that moment?
Well, I still was trying to keep hope, but really struggle.
with the reality that was starting to set in,
that we weren't gonna find her alive.
Now, authorities are still calling it an active investigation,
so if you have any information about the suspect in custody,
the Northport Police wants to hear from you.
Police press on, and then a new witness
is brought into the interrogation room,
a man who was with Michael King just hours before the abduction.
Why are you nervous, Tommy?
Well, what would you be here?
You know, it scares me that I actually, you know, met with him that day.
We started doing grid searches with him that day.
We started doing grid searches with hundreds of deputies and hundreds of special agents throughout the statement.
from exactly where Michael King was stopped,
all the way down to the road where he had pulled out onto two-wheel blade.
When the search was underway for Denise Lee,
this housing development didn't exist.
This was all woods.
And it was here that a searcher, along with her canine,
noticed something unusual.
I was a canine handler for Sarasota Canine Search and Rescue.
I was assigned this area with canine Siku.
I was at the command post and Tammy Treadway,
who was the handler of CQ.
It was getting late in the day.
She said she's walking the sidewalk
or a dog just took off into the woods.
I'm watching his body language,
and he's moving in and out of the brush,
so I'm just looking around trying to see
if I see anything that's out of place.
I happen to notice that there was an area that was cleared.
There was grass pulled up and laid in a nice layer across the top of it.
And miraculously, that was it.
That was the sight.
Very sad news at a North Port.
The search for a kidnapped woman has been suspended.
Michael King put a gun to Denise's forehead and pulled the trigger.
The hole that Denise was buried in was not shallow.
It was probably about four feet down.
King's DNA was found on Denise Lee's body.
It can't be easy hearing that she was sexually assaulted, that she was shot in the head.
How did you manage to handle that?
I had to come home and tell her a mate.
They found her and what happened.
He wanted me to hear from him, not anyone else.
So, yeah, that was tough.
I remember him telling us that they found her and she wasn't alive and just, everyone just broke down.
You have always sort of portrayed yourself as a tough cop, but how did you manage this?
I am, by the way, but anyway.
You are?
I was a big baby when that happened. I can tell you, like being kicked in the groin or something, because it's like,
I'm not so tough after that.
She was my firstborn baby girl.
I was a fell apart.
I just thought about the boys knowing at them.
You know, they're, they're going to have to grow up without their mother.
On behalf of my son's knowing Adam.
I'd like to thank everybody so much.
Denise is my soulmate.
I'm going to miss her so much.
I don't know how I'm going to go through the rest of my life without her.
Denise is thankful that all your efforts brought her home.
I'm sure the boys, that's the reason she left with Michael King.
She wanted to save the boys and just make sure they were safe.
They were safe, so she left with him.
Right now, we believe it's an absolute random act of incredible evil.
Investigators can't locate the murder weapon, but they learned that just hours before Denise's kidnapping, Michael King had been at a local gun range with this man, Robert Salvador, someone King had met while working on plumbing jobs.
He had a gun, it was a 9mm.
He said you didn't have any ammunition.
And I said, you don't have to worry about that,
because I had a 9 millimeter, and I said, I have an ammunition.
The shell casings found at the gun range
were a match to the casing found at the scene.
Why are you nervous, tell me.
It scares me that I'm even associated with somebody
that could have done something of that nature.
That I actually, you know, met with him that day.
I shot guns with the guy.
Every time I think about that woman's family, my God.
At the time, Robert Salvador was a person of interest,
but he was able to dispel us with receipts and proof that during a time that Denise was abducted
and was with Michael King, Robert Salvador was nowhere near him.
Her murder left family, friends, even law enforcement, in shock and disbelief.
Tonight, Denise Lee got her final farewell.
I remember the line of cars.
It was amazing.
Gosh, the community carried us through it.
I think there was over 2,000 people at the funeral.
I promise her that those kids will know exactly who their mother was.
In the midst of the grief, Denise's family and the community are feeling
news breaks about a possible missed opportunity to rescue her.
Could a 911 call have saved a kidnapped woman's life?
A woman called 911 to say she heard screaming inside a car at a stoplight.
That woman is Jane Kowalski.
Remember her 911 call went to neighboring Charlotte County,
not Sarasota County where all the previous 911 calls had come in.
Incredibly, it turns out her call was never dispatched to the deputies searching for Denise.
That never got dispatched over the air,
which was just a terrible mistake.
The Carl Staker should have typed into the system
what she's being told by the caller.
She wrote it on a piece of paper and handed it to the dispatcher,
which would not be the way it should have been done.
Jane Kowalski gives them details.
She sees this abduction in progress.
She was giving cross streets, telling police,
I see this happening.
There's a person, child, whoever, streaming in the car.
the car, that should have been the moment she should have been saved.
There's a major screw-up.
When I said, major, I'm going to have saved your life.
Was that hard for you?
That's your department?
Oh, absolutely.
That you say screwed up.
Absolutely.
He just said, Chief, that was our last chance to get her.
In his gut and his heart, his family let him down.
Officials are defending themselves after some claim that a murdered mother could have been saved
if 911 workers had been communicating better.
The assumption is that Charlotte County screwed up and could have saved this girl's life.
And I'm telling you that until the facts come out here, that's the wrong assumption to make.
The sheriff also said that you gave inaccurate information.
You have the color of the car wrong.
You said it was a child screaming.
My answer to that is this.
So what?
You're not going to go after someone.
If I think there's a child that's been adopted, right?
They should have still sent a car.
They would have pulled him over, she would have still been in the car, it would have been a, you know, a completely different turnout.
I don't think it would have changed the outcome one bit, simply because we had people in the area looking for the exact vehicle.
The sheriff at the time, Sheriff Davenport, said it would not have made a difference.
Oh, he's 100% wrong.
I have faith in the people I work with.
I've done by that sheriff's office, 41 years now.
there's no doubt in my mind she would have been rescued she could have been saved
and the system failed her an internal investigation found the dispatchers did
receive information about Jane's call but violated procedure by not immediately
dispatching it and were disciplined one of them suspended for 60 hours another
36 hours both assigned a day of remedial training and
given six months probation.
Was that sufficient, Sue?
No.
And now you have to get through a trial.
King is accused of killing 21-year-old Denise Amber Lee.
This case was one of the worst of the worst,
and that warranted the death penalty.
We had an abundance of evidence,
and a lot of that was from Denise herself.
But at trial, Michael King's attorneys make a jaw-dropping claim,
insisting he's not the man
responsible for Denise's murder.
Didn't you fire the shot that killed Denise Lee?
All three of us looked at each other like, what did he just say?
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The murder trial for the man accused of kidnapping and killing Denise Amber Lee began in Sarasota County today.
King faces either life in prison or the death penalty.
Nearly two years after Denise Lee's death, her family and friends pour into a Sarasota court room.
They've come to see the man accused of killing her, Michael King, face a jury.
What was that like for you seeing Michael King in court?
It was sickening.
I try to keep telling myself that you're sitting here and you're going to get what you deserve.
Prosecutor Lon Aaron begins by reading Denise's harrowing 911 call.
I'm sorry. I just want to go. I just want to see my family.
Those are the last words that Denise Lee said that anybody other than Michael King heard on January 17, 2008.
The prosecution builds its case by calling eyewitnesses to place Michael King with Denise in her final hours.
We wanted to transport the jury to being with Denise and the defendant.
So much so that they could actually live and breathe what Denise was going through.
A hand came up from the back state and was banging on the window very loudly.
Are you able to show the jury?
But even louder than that, I mean it was very loud.
loud. Defense lawyers push back. You can't identify who the person was in the vehicle, can you?
No, you cannot. The jury is taken to one of the crime scenes, the Camaro itself.
We wanted them to understand that that car was almost as important as the role that Michael King played.
It took her from her home to Michael King's home, to Harold Muxlow's home, to the place where her life
eventually ended.
Prosecutors present what they believe to be
indisputable evidence that Denise was in King's car.
What is that a picture of?
That is a ring.
It's clever.
She hit her ring in the back seat because she knew she
wasn't going to be found, probably.
She pulled her out by the roots and stuck them under the back
seats.
She knew about DNA had to have the roots and stuff.
When there's overwhelming evidence, the defense
tries to poke holes in the state's case.
No 9mm handgun was found out on Plantation Boulevard.
That is correct, sir.
Because we didn't have a gun, that was a hole.
That was a big hole.
A big poke rock southboard.
Without a murder weapon, prosecutors turned to ballistics
and the man who went shooting with Michael King just hours
before the murder.
At some point, did you meet the police at the gun range?
Yes.
What did you assist them with at the gun range?
They wanted whatever 9mm shells we could find.
We didn't have the actual gun.
We had the shell casing at the scene of Denise's murder that matched the shell casings
where he was shooting earlier with Rob Salvador.
But on cross-examination, the defense's line of questioning
catches just about everybody in the courtroom off guard.
At the gun range, before you parted ways with Michael King,
you arranged to meet him later that day, didn't you?
No, sir.
And didn't you meet him out during the evening hours of January 17th, 2008?
No, sir.
And Mr. Salvador, didn't you fire the shot that killed and took the life of Denise Lee?
Absolutely not.
All three of us looked at each other like, what did he just say?
Judge, I have great concerns at this point over the behavior that just took place in this courtroom.
We objected and we went up to the bench to talk to the judge, and the judge
agreed with us because you can't just say things like that if you have no evidence.
And I'm asking you to disregard such, ladies and gentlemen, because there is no basis, in fact,
from the evidence.
The defense rests without calling a single witness. Their argument, the prosecution has failed
to prove that Michael King was the one who pulled the trigger.
What you have received is an invitation to guess. Your reply to his invitation must be no.
Thank you.
All right.
Thank you, ladies, Jim.
You may retire to consider your verdict.
Thank you.
It is such a serious decision that you're making,
and I'm sure everyone wanted to make sure that they could live with it.
You have to live with this.
Just over two hours after they begin deliberations,
the jury is back with a verdict.
We, the jury find as follows us to count one of the indictment.
The defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree as charged.
What was that like when you heard guilty?
Uh, amazing.
I knew, okay, you know, Denise won.
You know, Denise won.
She's an absolute hero.
She took this murder off the street and made sure we had plenty of evidence.
And there's no doubt in anybody's mind that he's a killer.
The jury that took just two hours to convict Michael King of first-degree murder took nearly three.
nearly three to recommend he be sentenced to death he was just straight faced no
emotion nothing I I don't think he's capable of feeling emotion but even with
King headed to death row Denise's family feels they still had some unfinished
business you didn't take this all quietly I wanted people that made mistakes
to be held accountable.
In 2009, Nathan files a wrongful death lawsuit against the Charlotte County Sheriff's
Office, alleging negligence in the handling of Jane Kowalski's 911 call cost Denise her life.
It is the sheriff's responsibility to provide the best public safety that they possibly
can to their citizens, and Denise wasn't given the best public safety of their citizens.
The two sides reach a settlement.
Sheriff's Office admits no fault but agrees to pay $1.2 million to the family.
I just thought the boys needed something. They had to grow up without a mother.
Today, those two little boys, Denise fought so hard to get home to, are all grown up and speaking
out publicly for the very first time.
It's been 16 years since a jury recommended Michael King be put to death.
Today, he remains on death row.
His appeals exhausted.
Denise isn't here, so why should he be?
The pain and the suffering, the horror he put her through, he should not.
He should not be here.
But that's not how the system works.
It's not a quick process.
Are you prepared for execution?
Can't wait.
Be the first one on the bus going there and first in line.
Is there anything you want to say to him?
I would just like to know why.
You know, why her?
In the years following Denise's death,
her younger sister Amanda decides to join
the very system, many say, failed Denise.
And then you.
You became a 911 dispatcher yourself.
Why?
You're on the phone with people on the worst days of their lives,
going through tragedies.
And I think it helped give me the passion
to be there for those people and help them.
Is it a tribute in some way to your sister?
Yeah.
I wanted to help make a difference in people's lives.
All right, good morning, everyone.
Denise's husband, Nathan, is carrying his late wife's legacy
in his own way, telling her story
to 911 employees all over the country as a powerful reminder of their life-saving work.
I started the foundation back in June of 2008 after this happened to my beautiful wife, Denise.
And since then, I've made it my life's mission to travel all over the country to help you.
I want to see Denise continue to matter.
Don't forget why you do this, okay?
And joining Nathan in this mission is Jane Kowalski, that woman who did everything she could,
to try to help a stranger.
You eventually met Nathan.
Yes.
What did you say to him?
What did you want him to know?
Well, I mean, just how sorry I am that my call did not
get help to Denise.
I mean, it's just a total letdown.
While Nathan has moved forward, having a daughter,
and finding love again, he recently
got back a piece of his past, that heart-shaped ring.
Now that all of King's appeals are done and everything
over we don't need this evidence anymore and I was very happy to be able to
release that to him there it is this is the ring yeah yeah it's special I'm
really glad I got this back and you know it was really excited to show it to the
boys and that was the first thing they said was like wow she had really small
fingers those boys Noah and Adam now 19 and 18 every milestone there is you
know something missing and it was our mom
Our first day of school, our last day of school, first football game, baseball game.
Our mom was always missing.
That was always felt like the rock in my chest.
I always write her name in the clay before every at bat, just to, like, know that she's there with me.
Some people have called your mom a hero, that she protected you too.
I always say she sacrificed herself to make sure we were safe.
We came first.
Your dad spoke with us 2008 after everything had happened.
Here's what he said.
I want to make sure that my kids know that their mom was the most amazing person in the world
and have her in them and so they're destined to be good kids.
What is that like?
I can see you get emotional just seeing that.
What do you feel?
Proud.
I feel proud of them.
All the time I have people tell me that I was raised.
that I was raised right and it's all credit to him.
Why'd you want to speak out finally?
I'm doing it for her and for my dad because we're a part of her
and I feel like people hearing from us can kind of
see how important she was, how amazing she was.
Kind of big of a hole that is left because she's not here.
Denise's family channeling their grief into purpose, helping to pass the Denise Amber Lee Act,
which sets new standards in Florida to improve 911 response systems.
As for Michael King, he remains on Florida's death row, and as of now, no execution date has been said.
That is our program for tonight. Thanks for watching. I'm David Muir.
And I'm Debra Roberts from all of us here at 2020 and ABC News. Good night.
Eight years ago, I blew my football career.
He dropped it at the one-yard line.
Chad Powers has arrived on Hulu.
If I can't play as Russ, I'll play as someone else.
My name's.
Chad.
And last name?
Lee, Ted.
From executive producers, Eli and Peyton Manning.
Remember, you're wearing a prosthetic mask?
This is acting.
And starring Glenn Powell.
He thinks you're a rubber chutello.
Not rubber.
My man.
Made a flesh.
The Hulu original series, Chad Powers, is now streaming on Hulu and Hulu on Disney Plus for bundle subscribers.
Terms Apply.
New episodes Tuesdays.
