20/20 - Since You've Been Gone (Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: July 19, 2025After a teen vanishes, her family searches for answers but police see a suspect closer to home. Originally broadcast 9/15/23 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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2020 starts right now.
Hello.
Tell me about that day, May 17th, 2001.
On the surface, it looks like a runaway case.
This was a 17-year-old girl who ran away,
who wanted to live her own life.
What teenager planning to run away
would ever leave their cell phone behind?
But obviously, there was more to this story.
She just broke down crying.
I just remember her saying she was scared.
The last place Alyssa Turney was seen was here at Paradise
Valley High School.
My dad, obviously, being a cop, he
knows what happens to teenage girls who go out alone.
You know, he was really, really scared.
He seemed very driven by the situation.
I have to do this. I have to do this.
I'm searching for this. I'm to do this. I'm searching for this
I'm calling this person. I'm calling that person after a few years that you begin to think she's not around
She's dead. Yes. I began to fear the worst
2020 has talked to Michael Cherney about his missing stepdaughter over the course of decades now
My last memory of someone you love
decades now. My last memory of someone you love.
Stomping down the hallway.
And then you get a confession out of nowhere.
I'm gonna make you famous.
I am a serial killer.
Stop!
You're not welcome here. The last time I set foot on this dusty desert road between Phoenix and Los Angeles was 2009.
I was reporting on a vibrant teenage girl
named Alyssa Turney.
She had disappeared in 2001.
And to this day, some wonder if this unforgiving
and lonely landscape might hold secrets of her fate.
17-year-old Alyssa Marie Turney was
disappearance and presumed death of
17 year old Alyssa. Turny hasn't been
seen in more than seven years. Just a
bombshell arrest tonight. Almost 20
years after Phoenix teen Alyssa Turney
vanished. My report on her case went on
to have a life of its own. This is the
story of Alyssa turning. Alyssa Turner.
Showing up in countless stories about Alyssa
on the internet and podcasts.
And recently, it was even at the center of a trial
aimed at answering once and for all
what really happened to Alyssa.
But before we tell you about that,
let's go back to the place where it all started.
May 17th, 2001 was Alyssa's last day of her junior year in high school.
For a teenager, the last day of school is the best day ever.
And in this case, it's a half day.
Everyone is just saying goodbye and
getting ready for the summer. At some point Alyssa pokes her head into her
then boyfriend John Laxman's classroom and she says my stepdad is picking me up
early today from school. She says bye I'll see you later and then she gets in
the car with her stepfather, Mike Turney.
The home videos, family photos, and recorded video from the Turney home that you're about to see were obtained by ABC News from police in 2009. They show Alyssa as a seemingly typical kid.
My name is Chris Reidenauer and I worked with Alyssa at Jack in the Box for a couple months and we were also friends.
What were your impressions of Alyssa?
She's kind of a free spirit.
She is very genuine, very honest, really, really cool.
Alyssa was working as a cashier.
She was a very reliable employee, never missed a shift.
She was well liked by everybody there.
Hello! Never missed a shift. She was well liked by everybody there. Two of Alyssa's closest friends sat down with ABC back in 2009. Alyssa was very carefree and he
never knew what was going to happen with her. She was very spontaneous. She would always think of
something new to do and it was never a boring moment. Never a boring moment with Alyssa.
Careful don't jump on top of anybody Alyssa. For a little perspective it's 2001.
People are emailing each other using AOL. You've got mail. People have flip phones.
The number one video, the real Slim Shady. TRL is huge. Alyssa was spirited and fun and she loved to party. She had a lot of
friends. She had a boyfriend. Life for her was as typical as it could get for a
17 year old. Alyssa was incredibly social and just wanted to hang out with
other people. She loved to draw. She liked to write. She liked to write? Yeah, she
liked to like just write out little notes and things like that. So we have a little paragraph that she wrote. Would you read it to us?
Sure.
I have many streaks of shade of color of hair, from blonde to dark brown.
I like to go to the mall at Metro Center.
In the mall, my favorite store is Hot Topic, of course.
I love to hang out with my best friends Katie and Stacey.
I like boys. I listen to heavy metal bands like Deftones, Korn,
Marilyn Manson, Limp Bizkit.
School is okay.
I love kids.
I want to have a lot of them.
I like to go paintballing.
I like my pants.
I like candles.
I have a lot of friends.
I have very few enemies.
Sound like her.
Definitely, yeah.
By all accounts, she was a very happy and radiant kid. She had a very bubbly
personality, but was also really playful and mischievous. Tell me about that day, May 17,
2001. An important day for you? Oh yeah, I was graduating. She expressed interest in wanting to
come to the graduation, and that was the last I heard from her. Michael Turney raised Alyssa after her mother passed away.
When I spoke to him, he said he picked up Alyssa early from school and they had lunch.
Their conversation turned into an argument, but he says it was just typical parent-child friction.
That morning, she was in good spirits.
Oh, she was. We were arguing that she only had one more year to go.
Very proud that we accomplished it. We got lunch and came back.
We were arguing over maybe scrutinizing her too much.
She didn't like that.
What did you talk about at lunch?
Oh, what we were going to do that summer, some of the problems that we were concerned with.
She wanted to be able to stay out later at night and go run with her friends wherever she wanted to
and not be accountable to where she was at.
And I told her that's just not going to happen with us.
As long as you're under my roof, we're going to have to check in with daddy
because daddy's a nervous wreck if you don't.
How did she respond?
She said for the last year or so that she was ready to leave home.
She wanted to go live somewhere else.
And I didn't think she was ready. I didn't want her to. I wanted her to stay.
So she stormed away from you, went to her bedroom? Yeah, basically that was it.
That was the last you saw of her?
Yeah, walking down the hallway mad like there were hair flying behind her.
Michael says he runs errands.
Later he picks up Alyssa's younger sister, Sarah.
She told ABC what she found when she got home that night.
My dad picked me up and said,
Your sister's not answering her cell phone.
Will you try to call her?
And so we were just in the car calling, calling, calling.
Got home, she wasn't there.
My dad was running through the house,
seeing if she was there.
And then I found the note on top of the dresser.
A handwritten note left for both of them.
And in this note, Alyssa says,
Dad and Sarah, when you dropped me off at school today,
I decided that I really am going to California.
Sarah, you said you didn't want me around.
Look, you got it.
I'm gone.
That's why I saved my money.
Dad, I took $300 from you.
Alyssa.
Then we read the note, I just, my heart just completely stopped. It must have been terrifying for you.
Yeah. So I started, you know, calling everybody I could call and telling them,
look, we got a problem and you need everybody together now, we got to find Alyssa.
It didn't really appear like any of her belongings were missing. Her favorite
clothes were still there, her jewelry, her makeup, her hairbrush, and most
importantly, her cell phone.
What teenager planning to run away would ever leave their cell phone behind?
Did you call the police?
Eventually I did later on that night because she could have just gone somewhere and we
could find her real quick.
If she ran away, why wouldn't she take her cell phone?
That was the questions that we had.
She didn't take her cell phone? That was the questions that we had. She didn't take her cell phone.
She took limited amount of clothing.
It was as though she left in a hurry.
It was scary.
I didn't know where she was.
She's always like, I don't want to live here.
I never thought she would do it.
There's no way, no way that she would not have contacted any of her friends.
There was some concern.
You were thinking, what if something could have happened?
Cops probably get calls like that frequently.
And sometimes it's just that.
The kid got PO'd at the parent and they took off.
But obviously, there was more to this story. Just about 11 p.m. at night, Michael Turney called to let the police department know that
his 17-year-old daughter had run away from home. When there's a call from a parent
saying, just talking about California and I've got a note, this is a run-of-the-mill
textbook example of a teenage kid who's run away. 99 times out of 100 that kid
turns up within a couple of days. We deal with runaways all the time.
In missing persons you get thousands of them every year.
So there's like 10,000 runaways in Phoenix every year?
Yeah, thousands and thousands.
Easily.
If I had been that detective and I saw a 17-year-old who ran away on the last day of school,
I'm assuming she's going to parties.
I'm not going to be alarmed by that.
When you present it as a 17-year-old runaway, that's how it's going to parties. I'm not gonna be alarmed by that. When you present it as a 17-year-old runaway,
that's how it's going to be handled.
The last place Alyssa Turney was seen was here
at Paradise Valley High School, just a few steps away,
the fast food joint where Alyssa held a steady job.
She didn't turn up the next day for her shift
or to pick up her paycheck.
Concerning, absolutely.
But people closest to Alyssa told us life
in the Turny home wasn't always paradise.
Alyssa Turny was born on April 3rd, 1984.
Her mom was Barbara Farner.
Her father was Steven Strom. She Her father was Stephen Strum. She was this
wonderful little kid. A lot of fun too. Very energetic. Sissy, that's what I called her.
She had the cutest little smile and she was a happy baby. She really was a happy baby.
When Alyssa was three years old, Barbara met Michael Turney and she divorced
Stephen Strum and Mike and Barbara got married. It was a blended family. At times
they have been described as kind of a Brady Bunch. It's mine, yours, and ours.
Michael had three children from previous relationships and Barbara has two
children, Alyssa and her brother.
And then they have a daughter, Sarah.
We, as a group, coalesce pretty quickly.
We didn't treat anybody differently.
My siblings are my siblings.
I don't have a step, I don't have a half.
And then, to everyone's shock,
Barbara is diagnosed with cancer
and passes away pretty quickly thereafter.
Alyssa was nine years old and you know that was obviously devastating.
Alyssa was aware. She was very upset and she needed a lot of consoling.
You played a special role for the girls. I like to call it the substitute role. I put
off college to go up and be with them.
I took care of the girls in the day when my dad was at work.
What did you know about Alyssa's life
as she entered her teen years?
As she got older, she seemed to be relaxing,
coming more into a space of her own.
She definitely had a very unpleasant relationship
with my father and a very tense one.
Stop! You're not welcome here.
Michael Turney is a former sheriff's deputy.
He looks at the world from a different perspective,
and he says he wants to protect his children.
So he is very controlling of the home environment,
where they go, who they see.
Lyssa!
You were a strict aunt.
Very strict.
She was just very naive to many things.
She didn't comprehend the repercussions of what she did.
It made it more of a task for the parent to protect Lyssa and keeping her in school.
I thought I had strict parents, but my gosh, he's very protective of her.
Like, he would hardly let her go out
and do, like, normal things.
There would be times when she would vent
about things that he was doing.
He was very, very strict.
I do remember her talking about, you know,
I can't wait to turn 18 and get out of here
and stuff like that.
But I think every teenager, you know, kind of complains about that at some point.
In these recorded phone calls from 2001 later released by police, you can hear
Alyssa talking to her boyfriend, I thought your dad would kill you.
Well, yeah, he would.
He'd kill me once I was 18 if I didn't.
Why?
Because he likes to control my life.
There are records that indicate that Alyssa
had been thinking about going to California for some time.
In fact, for her driver's ed essay,
she calculated how long and
how far it would be to drive to California. California was on Alyssa's mind.
Hello. Hello.
Hello.
Goodbye.
Alissa still had nine months to go until her eighteenth birthday, but friends and family
wondered if maybe she had had enough of dad's rules.
Do you have this letter saying that she just sort of had enough?
Talking to both Michael and little sister Sarah and saying, you know, I'm going to California.
Taking some money and sayonara, we're out of here.
That's a fascinating piece of the puzzle.
Her brother James says he noticed a shift in her
in the weeks before she disappeared.
She said, James, can we go for a walk?
We walked down the street and we walked far enough
to where there was a light post.
And once we got to the light post she just broke down crying. I just remember her saying she was
scared and that she wanted to come and live with me. She was having a lot of trouble getting along
with her stepdad. We know that Alyssa had been talking to her maternal aunt in California, maybe going to live with her.
I have no clue why I called you.
Why you be freaking out all of a sudden?
It's my dad.
What do you expect?
What do you expect?
He's always like that.
Mike called me and said he could not control Alyssa anymore.
And I could take her if she could come and stay
with me for the summer. I told him,. And I could take her, if she could come and stay with me for the summer.
I told him, sure, I'll take her.
You know what, Alyssa?
Yeah?
If you ever want to come out with me, I'm right here.
OK.
Uh-huh.
I love you.
I love you.
He called me right after she ran away.
And, you know, I wanted to believe she ran away.
You know, they were having problems.
But Alyssa's aunt never hears from her.
And as more time passes, Alyssa's closest friends
and family say they believe something is terribly wrong.
So the hours turn into days, no sign of her.
No.
What are you thinking?
Mostly panic.
He seemed just completely absorbed by the situation.
Very driven.
I gotta do this, I have to do this, I'm searching for this, I'm calling this person, I'm calling that person.
He was at times frantic in his behavior.
Staying hidden for a prolonged period of time is very difficult.
Very few people are able to do that.
This is a very typical American teenager.
She had a wide variety of people
that she interacted with on a regular basis,
and all of that was cut off abruptly.
And finally, there's a phone call.
Could this be Muse of Alyssa?
But this call makes things so much more mysterious.
No one has heard from Alyssa.
There's been no sighting of her.
And Michael Turney is really worried.
And then a week after her disappearance, really early in the morning, Michael gets a phone call.
Michael Turney picks up that phone
and hears what he's been desperately waiting days for,
Alyssa's voice.
What did she say?
Well, the conversation was sort of scrambled. I said, you know, is this you, Alyssa's voice. What did she say? Well the conversation was sort of scrambled.
I said, you know, is this you, Alyssa? And she said a few cuss words and stuff
about leave me alone and the phone went dead. They had this really short
conversation after which she hung up and he says that he was kind of panicked and
he jumped into his truck and started driving around the neighborhood thinking
that maybe she placed the phone call
from one of the pay phones in the area.
He calls the police and he tells the police,
I just got a call from Alyssa.
And he says that they don't offer or agree to do anything.
He asked them to please try and trace this call and the police don't offer or agree to do anything. He asked them to please try and trace this call, and the police don't.
It looks like a runaway case, and that's how Phoenix Police treated it.
This was a 17-year-old girl who ran away, who wanted to live her own life.
What's the Phoenix Police Department doing?
Nothing.
Nothing?
No.
Then he contacts the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
We've been around since 1984 with the focus on helping find missing children and prevent child victimization.
And since nobody has any idea of where Alyssa is, people began to fear the worst. There are many endangerments out there
that we are concerned with.
Things like child sex trafficking, gang violence,
drugs and alcohol abuse.
In a hostile environment like Arizona,
somebody wandering off into the desert
and surviving for any extended period of time,
really at any time of year, is not very likely.
Michael Turney is determined to obtain a record
of that phone call and actually sues the phone company.
He sues Quest and eventually they release the raw data.
Records reveal the 29 second call came from a pay phone in Riverside, California.
Remember, Alyssa's aunt, who lives just an hour from that pay phone, had offered to take
her in.
Was Alyssa trying to make her way there?
Michael Turney goes to California, goes to the location of that phone booth, and
he starts handing out these flyers with Alyssa's picture on it, trying to get
information, but he doesn't find anyone who recalls seeing her at any point. So
it's like another dead end.
All I thought was, you know, she went to California
for the summer, went with some friends,
whatever, she'll be back.
You know, that's exactly what I thought.
I hope that she made it to California.
I hope that she made it to California
in good circumstances and is happy and,
but in my heart, I don't think she did.
At some point, once we knew she was 18, that if Alyssa were able to,
that she would have made some kind of contact with someone in our family.
And we held on to that. We held on to that for that whole year,
hoping that that's just what was going to happen.
The days turned to months, months turned into years. Her friends graduate, some of
them move out of state. Some people start to think that maybe she really did get away.
My dad obviously, being a cop, he knows what happens to teenage girls who go out alone or whatever.
So that's all that was going through his head.
You know, he was really, really scared.
You were basically handling the disappearance of your daughter alone.
Oh yeah, I am.
With my background, I did most of the investigation.
It was too expensive.
You know, I went through close to $20,000 looking for Alyssa
and wore out several vehicles.
Michael wants national attention on Alyssa's situation.
Instead of a milk carton, Michael Turney
convinces a NASCAR driver to put a photo of Alyssa's face
on the hood of a race car. We all thought it was good attention,
like, that, um, Dad's doing what he said he was gonna do.
He's reaching all out as far as he possibly can.
After a few years, did you begin to think she's not around?
She's dead.
Yes, I began to fear the worst.
Even while allowing his worst fears to creep in, Michael Cherney says he was still holding
out hope that Alyssa could be alive.
And so was the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
A photograph is one of the most powerful tools that we have to engage with the public.
Below the age of 18, we do an age progression about once every two years,
and then over the age of 18, we do an age progression about once every five years.
That just gives us another opportunity every couple of years to reengage with the media
and remind the media, more importantly, that a child's still missing.
In 2006, in the USA Today newspaper, there was a portion that was dedicated to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
And there was a time when Alyssa's picture was run with a blurb of information basically about when she disappeared.
Someone out there knows something.
Then a stunning admission from thousands of miles away
gets the attention of Phoenix police.
An inmate in Florida who was a convicted murderer
writes a letter.
And things start to develop in a different direction
than we expected.
It's been years now that Alyssa Turney is missing. Then in 2006, there is a convicted killer who says he knows what happened to Alyssa
Turney.
In 2003, Thomas Hymer was found guilty of killing his travel companion in Florida.
That case was pretty easy to solve, and he gets a life sentence.
In 2006, Thomas Heimer starts reaching out to law enforcement agencies and saying, I'm
going to make you famous.
I am a serial killer.
He goes on to claim to have killed 20 or so different women throughout the United States,
and one of them is Alyssa Turney. He had a nickname. Yes, he gave himself the nickname of
Psycho. So the FBI interviewed Thomas Hymer. Why would you not try and talk to this person
who claims he's a serial killer?
Maybe we can solve other cases here.
He had the age progression clipping from USA Today.
That's how he identified Alyssa Turney.
Thomas Hymer tells detectives that he was
traveling across the country and that when he stopped
in Phoenix at a biker bar, he met Alyssa Turney.
He said at the time she was a junkie. The two of them start a
sexual relationship. He says at one point they're in a motel room, they're having violent sex,
and that he kills her during the act. Chops up her body and then he disposes the parts
in a recycling plant. There was some evidence that maybe Thomas Hymer
was being genuine.
Some of the things that he said
weren't things that were nationally known,
like her shoes, some jewelry, stuff like that.
The FBI handed over that information
to the Phoenix Police Department.
Two detectives were assigned
from the missing persons Persons Division,
Detective Stuart Summershoe and Detective William Anderson.
So seven years after Alyssa went missing,
this case goes from a presumed runaway
to a possible homicide investigation.
You decided to go to Florida to interview Heimer.
Yes. Once we had this confession, I and a polygopher flew down to Florida to interview Heimer. Yes.
Once we had his confession, I and a polygrapher
flew down to Florida where he was in prison,
interviewed him.
We first did a polygraph on him.
How many times have you been arrested?
Both.
Maybe 10 times.
Eight times, 10 times.
No problem.
What charges?
Everything, obviously, pay largeen and Grand Theft,
criminal mischief, trespassing, murder, torture.
Are you the person who killed Alyssa?
Yes.
Thomas Hymer takes a polygraph exam.
It shows deception.
I'm not going to tell you that.
I'm going to tell you my actual list.
So then I came into the room.
He had a picture of Alyssa's age progression.
He didn't have a picture of her actual picture.
So I showed him some actual pictures of her,
started confronting him.
That's when he changed his story.
You're outlawed, don't you?
So based on that other picture, what do you think?
What, on that one there?
Yeah.
I wouldn't have picked her out.
I wouldn't have said the first.
Almost immediately, his story falls apart
concerning Alyssa Terny.
Detectives would also come to learn
that one of the other women Hymer confessed to killing
was J.C. Dugard.
She's been found held captive, living
in deplorable conditions.
J.C. was famously found alive in 2009
after being held captive for 18 years.
So Thomas Hymer's credibility fell apart
regarding Alyssa Turing and continued to fall apart
regarding the other women he confessed to.
In this weird way, this false confession
about what happened to Alyssa Turing
actually changes the direction of this case.
Detectives Somershoe and Anderson realize
this was never investigated,
and they have a lot of questions that they want answers to.
You start seeing all these red flags
about the unlikelihood of Alyssa running away.
When kids run away, they typically run away
to a friend's house, a distant relative's house.
They have a place that they're going to.
They don't just wander into the street.
She had saved $1,800, which was a good sum of money
for a teenager in 2001, and she didn't use any of it.
When people run away, they don't even know
to say where they're going,
because they don't want to be found.
Detective William Anderson and Detective Stuart Sommershoe
start doing things police had never done done interviewing family, interviewing friends.
How did she like school? Did she enjoy school or was it just something she had to do?
I think there was just something that you had to do. I think her dad was like really
strict on her about her grades so she had to.
I think with her dad she was like she was afraid of him,
but it wasn't like she wanted to get away.
She was used to it.
And he would scare her sometimes,
and she would get really upset.
And they talked to her boyfriend, John Lackman.
He's a very friendly, happy person around me and my friends
or with her close friends.
Obviously, things were different at home.
She wasn't very close with her.
I believe it was her stepdad, Mike Turney.
I don't think she liked him at all.
As you start to dig deeper, what do you
find out about Mike Turney?
Finally, we are coming in.
We have a team of detectives who are working on this case.
You'd think a parent would be very happy about that.
His reaction was anger.
He showed up at the door.
Three detectives standing there and telling me,
he said, well, we're here to canvas the neighborhood
to hand out flyers on Alyssa.
I said, well, that's not going to do a whole lot of good
now, gentlemen.
But if you want to go ahead and canvass it, thank you.
I appreciate the assistance.
But, you know, what are you searching for?
The detectives learned that in addition to being a strict parent, there appears to be
a much darker side of Michael Terny's relationship with his daughter, Alyssa.
She did make comments a few times of being scared of him and made comments that she felt
like he was going to kill her. Did she literally say that? Literally said, she felt like he was going to kill her.
Did she literally say that?
Literally said, I feel like he's going to kill me.
What did you think happened to her?
I think her stupid stepdad did something
ridiculously terrible to her.
The friends, when we ask, is there
anything negative in her life, they continually point out
her relationship with her stepfather.
One video that Mike turns over that's dated very close to when she disappeared.
Why would you have these cameras inside your home?
That seems incredibly odd.
From the detective's point of view,
they're like, hold on a second.
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I'm Ryan Coogler.
When Katrina hit in 2005,
the images on the news were impossible to ignore.
But what we didn't see were the stories behind those images.
Hello!
We got you, baby.
The people.
Coogler.
The decisions.
They were coming back for you.
The systems that failed.
This ain't no game.
We set out to tell our stories through the voices of the people who lived through the disaster.
This is their account of what really happened and why it matters today.
Hurricane Katrina Race Against Time premieres Sunday at 8 on National Geographic
and streaming on Disney+, Hulu. So you saw cameras inside the house?
Yeah.
Do you remember where they were at?
In interviews with Alyssa Turney's friends, detectives discover something they find unusual
about the Turney home. Michael Turney, it turns out, had several cameras installed that appeared to record
just about everything that went on there.
There was one in the carport, and there was one on the outside of the house, and then
there's the vent to go down the hall.
There was one in there. You have to remember in 2001 when Alyssa disappears, this is not the age of ring
doorbell cameras, of having a puppy cam in your house. This is a time that no one
really has surveillance or security footage at their home.
The way he had control over watching everything she would do and that type of things like
What he said was a security camera, but she knew he was watching her like that
Why did you record so much the videos are recorded because I love my family
Those are home videos that I've recorded since I can remember but weren't these surveillance cameras in the house Yeah, there's very few of those those aren't home videos that I've recorded since I can remember. But weren't these surveillance cameras in the house?
Yeah, there's very few of those.
Those aren't home videos.
No, those aren't home videos.
Those are for my protection of my house.
So for security?
Yeah, most of it's for security.
Why? Because I want to spy on everybody?
Yeah.
Your father said these cameras were for security, for safety.
Looking back now, do you think that was the case? I don't think the one inside the house was for safety. Looking back now, do you think that was the case?
I don't think the one inside the house was for safety.
That doesn't seem to...
I don't know how many people breaking into a home
would just sit down on a couch or hang out in that area.
When you look at the videotapes,
especially from the past in our home movies,
the focus on one individual as the years got later
was disturbing.
And the focus was Alyssa.
Was Alyssa.
And while detectives continue their investigation, Michael Turney decides to send them two videos that he tells them they absolutely need to see.
The video that Michael Turney gives to the Phoenix Police Department, one of them is an argument between Alyssa and John Lackman.
The other is of Alyssa kind of fooling around
with a guy at the Cherney family home.
So the two tapes that he presents us
portrays her as being promiscuous
and having a violent boyfriend.
It's not a violent interaction.
It doesn't show me that this boy, John Lackman,
is a danger to the child.
So from Michael Cherney's perspective,
he feels like he's assisting in the investigation
by handing over some of these tapes.
But from the detective's point of view,
they're like, hold on a second.
If you have this videotape, do you have any videotapes
of the day that Alyssa went missing?
And Michael Terny says to police, no, I don't have it.
But why didn't you hang on to the surveillance video from the day Alyssa disappeared?
There was nothing on the tape.
They were told that.
I saved it and said, you want me to give you this tape?
A detective told me, no, man, this is just a runaway.
I don't need all that stuff.
Having it would have been hugely important
in a missing persons case, what she was wearing,
what time she left.
All those things are important.
The fact that it was missing was in the minds
of detectives even more important.
Police say they learned that Michael Turney
also records many, if not most, of all the outgoing and incoming phone calls.
Since pretty much the 1970s, he had a wiretapping device.
It's unclear why, but he also used that as a way to control his daughter.
He listened in on phone calls.
In these audio recordings which police have released, they reveal these conversations
between Alyssa and her boyfriend.
Hey, you're proud?
That's good that she's clear factory.
Yeah?
Hi. Hi. Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
She was talking about running away, so monitor phone calls, which is not really providing
her privacy.
She was very upset over that, but I didn't know what else to do.
I'm a single parent.
Her mother's dead.
So now police are asking, is it possible that you have a recording of that phone call that you say
Alyssa made to you early that morning?
No.
It was, when Alyssa called it was like four or five o'clock in the morning.
And you know, if I don't reset the tape, then I have to do it that morning and reset it,
turn the tape over.
It would have been great to have that tape.
Seven years had already passed when detectives finally sat down with Alyssa's friends for the very first time.
And they learned about some disturbing incidents she told them occurred with her stepfather.
The most ominous story that's come out, it involved Alyssa going for a drive with her stepfather. He's teaching her how to drive. That story was told by Alyssa to her boyfriend, John Lackman.
What did she say happened? I think the story was pulled over somewhere and you
know an unoccupied area, something like a desert area. Tried fooling around with
her and she got aggressive, fighting about it and
I guess he ended it and they went home. And then some of the stories are even darker still.
Alyssa disclosing, waking up with somebody trying to gag her, identifying her stepfather as trying
to do that. She described waking up to him gagging and suffocating her,
strangling her.
When she came to and realized what was going on,
that he stopped.
And then he threatened for her basically not to tell anybody
because nobody would believe her over him.
A lot of those stories, it seemed like they're now
saying this for the first time.
If they knew about that information in 2001, why wouldn't they come forward?
Some of Alyssa's friends say that she came to them in tears.
That she said that one day she woke up and you were on top of her, gagging her.
And then that you tried to do something in the car to her.
Are those things true? Absolutely not. Did
you ever do anything sexual with your stepdaughter? No. Why would I do that? They have no proof
whatsoever of anything other than rumors, innuendos and lies. If they have no proof,
that doesn't mean you didn't do it. Well, it's, again, there's only two people that can confirm
whether I did it or didn't.
One is me, and the other is Alyssa.
Alyssa's not here, and I'm sitting here.
And all I can say till hell freezes over,
I didn't do a damn thing to my daughter.
The detectives from the Phoenix Police Department
say they also find it very curious that
Michael Cherney refuses to sit down for a police interview.
You're the last one to see her. You should be coming down for an interview to talk to us
and you aren't doing that. Why aren't you? You know, we want to find out what happened to your stepdaughter.
Why not talk to the police?
I've never refused to talk to the Phoenix Police Department.
I told them to stop calling me every day, okay, with petty stuff.
It had nothing to do with Alyssa other than just to try and to keep me agitated.
He said multiple times that he'd be more than happy to sit down with them,
but he wasn't going to do it at the police station. He would have done it at his house.
He wanted a recording of it. Detective Somershoe and Anderson, they begin to accumulate enough
evidence to establish
probable cause that she's dead and Michael Terny was the last person to see her.
You decide to search his house.
Why was that important?
We're looking specifically to recover that eight-hour tape from the last day she was
living, the audio tape from the day she called, the original runaway note.
We want to have that.
So detectives get a search warrant, determined to find evidence connected to Alyssa's disappearance.
When they went out to investigate,
boy, did they find all kinds of other stuff inside that home.
A sleepless night for 100 neighbors.
It was pretty scary, you know.
He was going to kill a lot of people.
It's a very lethal plan.
It's been years now that Alyssa Tourney is missing. We don't have a body.
There's no crime scene.
You think she might still be alive?
I do hope she's
still alive. Of course I do. But as the years go by, this is turning out to be a
mystery. Not just about a missing teenager, but about her stepfather whom
we talked to then, William John Quinones, and now. Why don't you ask a simple
question? Did you do it Mike Turney? Why don't you ask me that question? Did you do it, Mike Turney?
Why don't you ask me that?
No, I love my daughter.
Mike's betrayal of himself is a good family man, you know.
Yet he's crafting 26 pipe bombs in his house.
Some disturbing things start to surface.
So it was a decades-long investigation.
All this national news media and a brand new courtroom shocker.
That was the jaw drop moment.
Is this happening?
I've still got to look for my daughter.
She's most likely not here.
She's probably some foreign country somewhere. Eight years after 17-year-old Alyssa Turney vanished, I came to Phoenix to speak with
investigators, with family, trying to understand what might have happened.
By that point, a cloud of suspicion hung over one person, her stepfather, Michael Turney.
What kind of person are you dealing with?
It was unique.
We really didn't understand the reactions we were getting from him.
I contacted him by phone, contacted him by email, tried to get him more involved.
The last one is here.
If your daughter went missing, what wouldn't you
do to help find her?
Detectives have enough to establish probable cause
that she's dead.
So they execute a search warrant on Michael Thurney's home.
What were you hoping to find?
We wanted to recover that audio tape from the day she called.
We wanted to recover the VHS tape from the day she called. We wanted to recover the VHS tape
from the day she disappeared.
Remember, Michael Turney had cameras
both outside and inside the house.
And detectives hope the tape from May 17th
might offer a clue about Alyssa's last moments.
The Phoenix Police Department requested that I consult with them in advance of a search warrant.
Michael Turner had an extensive history of perceived injustice,
feeling like he was being put upon or the world was out to get him.
And very importantly, I was concerned that he might harm law enforcement officers.
Alissa Turney's younger sister, Sarah,
was called to a meeting about Alissa
so that she would not be in the home.
I had no idea what we were about to discover.
Detectives arrived at the Turney home,
search warrant in hand, a psych team advising, and
a SWAT team at the ready.
When Michael Turney emerged and made his way to his mailbox, the team approached.
It turns out Turney was armed.
Two guns, seven magazines of ammunition, a knife, and he was also carrying a recording
device.
Inside the home, even more surprises.
MUSIC
Upon entering the house, it was immediately noteworthy
for the disarray.
There were piles everywhere.
There were guns lined up all along the hallway.
MUSIC
A sleepless night for 100 neighbors.
It was pretty, pretty scary.
While you're searching the house, you find...
Improvised explosive devices,
a number of manufactured pipe bombs.
We had to evacuate not just that house,
but that entire block.
We were told that there was
homemade explosives inside the house
and that we had to evacuate.
This must have been stunning to the guy.
Mike Spatrow himself is a good family man.
Yet he's crafting 26 pipe bombs in his house.
The one that was two foot long and had 20 pounds of nails in it,
that is going to kill you, maim you, possibly destabilize your home.
And it's not just the bombs. There was a detailed plot to use these bombs.
During their search in that home,
detectives found this video of a local union
hall filmed by Michael Turney and a 71-page document
with his signature.
They describe it as a kind of manifesto
with what detectives say sounds like a plan to attack the building.
Michael Turney claims that he was a whistleblower and that he had a beef with the Union.
He talks about blowing up a Union hall, killing at least 12 Union members.
There's also a to-do list going step by step of what he's going to do that day.
Our search warrant was executed on December 11th.
On his calendar he had to ex-mark for the union hall meeting that was December 15th.
You guys saved a lot of lives that day, potentially.
In a way, Alyssa prevented that.
Us investigating her disappearance, we saved lives.
She saved lives. She saved lives. I think Phoenix police said it was the largest cache of IEDs
that they had ever encountered.
That'll get a headline.
If they didn't know about this missing girl prior to that,
suddenly Phoenix was on to this story.
What about Alyssa?
How did this turn affect her case?
This actually complicated it, because we
go from speaking to the concerned father
to now he's a suspect in the bombing plot.
So it's a problem.
We now have information that her stepfather
is planning a mass murder.
So does that make him even more of a suspect?
Yeah.
Because if you're planning to kill random strangers,
it's very possible that you have killed your stepdaughter.
Did you look for forensic evidence,
and did you find that?
The home that they had been living in when she disappeared,
yes, we did an in-depth forensic review of that home.
We did luminol.
We're looking for blood.
We're looking for body fluids.
We checked through the backyard, but no violent crime
scene is identified.
The terribly perplexing thing about this drama
is you got this guy that seems to fit all the profile.
Can you put him at the scene of the crime?
This is the collection of evidence taken
from the attorney home.
It's a huge amount of evidence and information
we need to go through and document. We have a duty to go through it all because that one thing that we
ignore we don't pay attention to might be vital to the case. One detail that
caught the eye of detectives was found in this document in Michael Turney's
home. Turney says he believes the Union is responsible for Alyssa's disappearance,
that assassins he believed were hired by the Union
confessed to her murder and to dumping her body
in a place called Desert Center.
Desert Center, it's a stop off the freeway.
It's just a vast desert area.
There's nothing there.
You wouldn't even know where to begin to search for a body there.
It just doesn't make sense.
Somehow the 17-year-old made it to the convenience store,
dropped a few dollars worth of change to make that phone call back to her dad.
And at that very moment, she's abducted by two Union assassins who kill her
and then transport her to Desert Center.
The names he provides were traced back to two people
that actually existed, that had lived,
and that had died well before the timeline that he gave.
Everybody else has been vetted.
Even IBEW members, we've interviewed them,
and they are clean.
We didn't choose Mike Turney.
The investigation pointed toward Mike Turney.
It just seems like the boxes started to get checked off or Mike being a weird cat.
Neighbors say he had a beef with the government and odd surveillance habits.
One time I was coming out of my house and he was filming the whole neighborhood. The community told ABC 15 Michael
Turney was maybe an odd neighbor but I never thought that this is what they would discover.
The right to remain silent. Mike we had detained. Detective Somershoe stepped in,
advised him of his Miranda rights. Understand these rights. Yeah go ahead attorney. And he
refused to talk. Turney is arrested for unlawful possession of unregistered explosive devices.
Four counts, possession of the bombs being the most important,
an attempt to blow up a building used in federal commerce.
They also found two silencers.
So now he's in federal custody.
Michael Tourney wouldn't talk to the FBI, he wouldn't talk to the Phoenix police department,
but there is one person he did
speak with.
I'm John Quinones.
And they find some pretty disturbing things.
They're not amazing.
For years, Michael Turney refused to do an interview with Phoenix police about his missing
stepdaughter, Alyssa.
But in 2009, eight years after her disappearance, he decided he would do an interview, not for
police but for millions of television viewers.
A lively, popular teenager, gone without a trace, But do the clues point much closer to
home? Reporting tonight, John Quinones. Hey Mr. Turney, how are you? I'm John
Quinones. It's a good day, I really appreciate what you're doing. Been
waiting seven, eight years for this opportunity to talk about my daughter.
I've been trying to bring some large-scale or national news to my missing daughter, Alyssa.
You think she might still be alive?
There is a hope in the back of my mind.
It's very bleak, but I do hope that she's still alive.
Of course I do.
He sat down with me.
What struck you about that decision of his?
It's theater.
He enjoys the attention.
So, being on national TV was kind of a thrill for him.
Why else if you were facing bomb charges,
if you're facing serious jail time
and you haven't had your trial yet,
it's not really the smartest thing in the world
to go on national TV and give a two hour interview.
You had a lot of writings.
Tremendous amount of writings.
Police call them almost a manifesto.
In one of your writings, you actually said, and I quote here,
that you had to kill at least a dozen union members.
I don't remember that.
Were you going to take innocent lives?
Nope.
Then why write that?
I don't know. I don't remember even writing that.
The Phoenix Police Department's bomb squad uncovers
improvised explosive devices inside the home of 60-year-old Michael
Turney.
Police say you were going to bomb the local union hall.
You weren't going to do that?
Not in the least bit.
Why?
I'm going to murder a bunch of innocent people?
That sounds insane.
What did you have in your house?
Firecrackers, a few things to make some noise, start a fire.
So when I blew my head off, at least it would make some kind of noise and maybe some national news would pick it up. I wanted the attention brought to Elissa.
Investigators arrested Michael Turney after pipe bombs and numerous guns were found inside
the home. These things weren't in there. They were not in that house. The discovery of these
bombs changed the entire focus of the investigation. They filed charges against Michael Turney
for possession of these bombs.
We're looking at thousands of hours of manpower time
just going through this stuff.
Phoenix police had many people that were working on this
trying to figure out, do we have that final piece of video
that showed them what happened to Alyssa?
As the detectives start interviewing friends of Alyssa's,
some disturbing things start to surface.
Welcome here.
That you were very controlling.
Yes.
And very strict. That you had her sign contracts.
One of the contracts gave extensive detail about what she agreed to do or not to do until she was 18.
It included all kinds of specifics about sexual conduct.
Another document was a statement indicating that she agreed
he had never physically or sexually abused her.
She would have to initial that
and sign it in front of a notary and have it stamped.
They were incredibly disturbing
and way outside the bounds of even a protective
parent-child contract.
Do you feel that went far beyond
what a normal parent would do?
It all depends on who you talk to.
If it would avoid anything happening to my daughter, yes, I don't think it's far beyond.
At the time I looked back at it because she ran away as a result of that.
Yeah, of course I feel bad about it.
My name is Lisa Fontes.
My areas of specialty are child abuse and intimate partner violence.
I have not spoken with anybody in the family, but I have reviewed interviews with Mike Turney,
some of the child transcripts, and I've reviewed some of the police interviews.
The contracts Mike Turney had Alyssa sign and even got one notarized, included things like,
my father isn't sexually abusing me.
Those are completely bizarre.
A contract is an agreement of future conduct.
That's not what this is.
The only reason I can think of for someone to do that
would be so if the child later came forward
and said, yes, X happened, he could say, no,
but you signed this thing saying it didn't happen.
And detectives kept coming back to that note that was found
the day Alyssa disappeared.
For them, something about it just didn't make sense.
The note, it didn't perfectly match the situation.
It's been characterized as a runaway note, and we always push against that because nowhere in a note does she say she's running away.
We know that the handwriting was hers. We don't know when it was written or the circumstances of when an owl was written.
So it could have been written long before and he just held onto it.
I don't know when she wrote it.
There was no date on it.
She could have written it anytime for all I know.
I don't know.
But it was definitely her writing.
I knew it was her handwriting.
I had concerns maybe somebody had forced her to go
or something.
Michael Cherney eventually pled guilty
to unlawful possession of unregistered destructive devices,
those pipe bombs.
The other charges were dismissed as part of his plea deal.
He was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison.
This case received more media attention
than any other case I investigated.
Your show was watched by millions of people.
It was everywhere.
And there was one person who saw that show
and just couldn't let it go.
I watched an ABC News special about Alyssa Turney.
I just started reading everything
I could get my hands on.
It really seemed like the solution to the case
was very much within reach.
This is Missing Alyssa, a podcast documentary series.
And this reporter was ready to do
some investigating of her own.
I called him, my heart was pounding.
Hello?
That was one of the most sinister interviews that I've ever done.
Hi, Mr. Turny?
Yes.
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Heidi Klum returns as host.
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With Christian Siriano.
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And judges Nina Garcia and Law Roach.
I hated your dress.
Hate is such a big word.
It's a short word, it's only four
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This just ain't his story.
It's our story.
A good day.
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And that's what you're going to do.
Washington Black, now streaming on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. Disney Plus.
It's been 15 years since Alyssa Turney went missing. Detectives are still investigating, but they say they've never had enough solid evidence
to charge her stepfather Michael Turney, or anyone else in the case.
But someone new was about to start asking questions.
My name's Otavia McHenry.
I'm an investigative journalist.
I watched an ABC News special about Alyssa Turney.
The house that they occupied at the time that she disappeared.
And that's how I learned about it.
I couldn't understand why it hadn't been solved yet.
I couldn't understand why it hadn't been solved yet.
I thought about it becoming a podcast right away. This is Missing Alyssa, a podcast documentary series about the unsolved case of a missing girl.
She kind of did the same investigative work that police were doing.
She interviewed friends, she
interviewed family of Alyssa, and she went through whatever records were
available.
Octavia was scouring the police reports looking for anything
unusual. She found a 2009 interview that police had conducted with Michael
Turney's nephew, a man named David.
That was one of the things that I read in the reports
that kind of made me jump in my seat.
I'm like, oh, how come this hasn't been covered before?
And I was curious to talk to him immediately.
I feel guilty a lot of ways.
This is Michael's nephew, David.
Because I didn't do the same to help that girl.
He was very forthcoming and told me this story about
when he crashed at his uncle's house for a little bit following a divorce and he says he put in a VHS
tape and that he saw this weird footage of a woman laying down nude from the waist up with a newspaper partially
covering her face and he said he could have sworn that he recognized her, Elisa.
Kate Beistall had Elisa laying down on the couch with just her shorts on but no
bra, no shirt on, her breasts exposed.
Some detective summer shoe interviews on. shorts on, but no bra, no shirt on, her breasts exposed.
Some detective summer shoe interviews on.
I knew it was her, it had to be,
because you could see the profile of her face,
her nose, her mouth, the color of her hair,
and she was just laying on that couch.
By the time Octavia's podcast was released,
Michael Turney was a free man after having served about 10 years for that federal weapons charge.
What do you know about his life post-release?
He was living quietly.
I haven't heard from him.
No follow-up with us as far as the investigation, no inquiries about Alissa.
I mean, a completely low profile.
I knew it was very unlikely that he would speak to me. However, I did end up making that phone call.
And to my surprise, he picked up.
Hello?
Hi, Mr. Turnig?
I asked him about it.
Yeah, he said that he saw a videotape in which Alissa was naked and also another girl I asked him about it. What about what do you mean? Are you nuts? Oh, come on. This is why I don't want to talk to you because you're full of ****.
This is all bull****.
Although David's claim is disturbing, Phoenix detectives say that in all of their searching of the Turney home, they never found that video.
And recently, Michael sat down with us again.
It never existed.
He was delusional on things.
Did this stuff happen? Did he see a film like that?
If he did, it certainly wasn't one of mine.
For years, Michael Turney's other daughter, Sarah, stood by her father.
But by the time Octavia had tracked her down for her podcast Sarah's feelings had changed.
It was a little bit after the 2020 show I had seen some
footage on there. They given some information through the
show that I had never heard before things like he took her
to school early that day and the molestation I had never
heard those things before it wasn't totally on board with it
at first, but slowly it just made more and more sense to me that it was probably him. And she keeps putting
pressure on the Phoenix police to do something. And the detectives say to
Sarah, look, if you want attention for this case and this investigation, the
best thing you can do is to make the public aware. Let me tell you why I'm even here.
She takes to social media.
She starts putting up videos on TikTok and people start following her.
And so she makes this decision to meet with her father and she decides to
record their conversation secretly.
I hope that I don't have to live through any of my children dying
or anybody else disappearing, okay?
I mean, that's enough from one lifetime.
Sarah shared that audio with the police,
and they say they found one of Michael Turney's responses curious.
Be there at the deathbed, Sarah,
and I'll give you all the understandings you want to hear.
Telling someone that you're going to give them answers on your deathbed
that makes people feel like why? Why won't you answer this question? Why does it have to wait?
Quite simply the answers that you've gotten from day one
until the day I'm on a deathbed and die
are going to be the same.
It's not going to change.
I didn't do these things.
But Sarah Turney kept the public pressure on.
She even started her own podcast.
My name is Sarah Turney, and this is Voices for Justice.
She starts being even more vocal about Alyssa's case.
And she wants charges against her father.
It presses Maricopa County Attorney's Office into, look, this is not a missing kid.
Something happened.
Everybody's waiting for that smoking gun piece of evidence,
something that actually puts Michael Turney
as the responsible party in the murder of Alyssa.
After nearly two decades, will prosecutors
find the evidence they need to charge Michael Turney?
Good afternoon, everyone.
The bombshell arrest tonight, almost 20 years after Phoenix Teen vanished.
Alyssa's life was just beginning.
Today, I am announcing the grand jury indictment for second degree murder of Michael Roy, attorney.
Thursday, Maricopa County attorney Alistair Adell announcing Michael Turney's arrest nearly 20 years later.
Mr. Turney has maintained his innocence since 2000 and his intention is to see that through in court.
Michael Turney pleaded not guilty to the second-degree murder charge.
When prosecutors announced charges, most people were wondering,
what's the smoking gun evidence that finally moved the case forward?
Well, it turns out there wasn't really anything new.
It was a fresh set of eyes looking at the same old evidence
that the detectives had been working on for years.
They have a lot of circumstantial evidence.
Is it the critical mass they need to overlook
the one glaring deficiency?
No crime scene, no body.
The challenge in no body cases is you have to actually establish that the person is dead.
That is an uphill battle.
They say the wheels of justice grind slowly.
22 years after Alyssa went missing, Michael Turney's day in court arrived.
Michael Turney's day in court arrived.
The media, local and national, showed up here too, wondering if after all these years,
there would be an answer to what really happened to Alyssa.
The 75-year-old is on trial
for second-degree murder in this case.
I really wanted to hear what evidence
the state was going to present
because this is a really, really hard case.
The evidence you will hear is that on that May 17, 2001,
shortly before noon, the defendant came to Alyssa's school
and picked her up and took her out early.
She never showed up again.
Julie Janay is joining us live tonight.
You could feel the anticipation in the courtroom.
There are several things that were not coming in in this trial.
The defense wanted to keep certain evidence out.
It was frustrating.
For a over-two-decade investigation,
thousands of pieces of evidence,
and some evidence can't get in.
Some of the things that Alyssa's friends told investigators
that Alyssa told them was hearsay,
and it was inadmissible.
They weren't going to hear about the bombs.
They weren't going to hear about the dire of a madman authored
by Michael Turney.
Sometimes what someone's charged with in the past
could be so prejudicial to the jury
that they would use that against the defendant.
So the judge is looking at that, that that just doesn't come in.
The prosecution believed his interview with ABC News
was actually very compelling,
and they really wanted to introduce that to the jury.
ABC News decided to do a show about Alyssa.
I've taken a couple of clips from this.
This was broadcast nationally.
Did you ever do anything sexual with your stepdaughter?
No. Why would I do that?
They have no proof whatsoever of anything
other than rumors in your windows and lies.
With the sexual abuse allegations,
we felt that it was hearsay.
We felt that there was no corroborating evidence
to support that, just someone saying,
oh, this happened.
So ultimately, the judge agreed with us.
He had some rules for her because she'd be kind of
getting in trouble, doing some stuff
that she shouldn't have done.
She didn't like those rules.
She liked to have fun, she liked to party,
she would drink.
Now, these rules were set because of that.
She wasn't happy.
She did not want to live under these rules.
Michael Turney's defense team painted Alyssa as a rebel,
as someone who did drugs, as a partier,
as someone who would run away and not look back.
Maybe she didn't like the life she had here in Phoenix.
And Michael was doing the best he
could to parent two young girls.
The defense tried to keep out his strange parenting style,
but the judge allowed it to come in.
He had these contracts with her where she had to swear
that she wasn't doing things.
At first glance, they obviously sound really bad.
And we had, you know, years of conversations with Michael
about these contracts, about why he did them.
In his mind, these contracts are
something that could be good.
This was a document with 16 bullet points.
I believe so, yes.
The majority of bullet points referred to drugs and sex?
Yes.
Alyssa's boyfriend back in 2001, John Lackman, also took the stand.
And you guys, did you spend every weekend together?
Yes.
Are you aware of an incident in May or April where she had a boy over at the house and they were making out?
No.
Did she ever admit to you that she was cheating?
She did not.
Did you think she was cheating on you?
No.
I think any time you bring up bad characteristics
about a victim, I think that it can come
across as victim shaming.
But at the end of the day, we're defense attorneys.
We have to do our job.
And prior to her cheating.
While it might have seemed to some
that the defense was attempting to put Alyssa Turney's
reputation on trial, the prosecution was determined to keep the focus squarely on Michael Turney.
They played a disturbing recording that they claim showed him disparaging Alyssa.
Any day today is a bad day.
I'm giving her basic and alternative cops
where she can bond back with me and the family
and stop being such a f***ing f***.
That was a gut punch inside of the courtroom
to hear him talk about his stepdaughter in that manner.
You gotta keep f***ing video cameras on all your children
all the time and every conversation you have
with them has to be taped.
This is the insanity of this f***ing state.
That phone call was something that,
even talking to him, he was embarrassed about.
People say things all the time that they don't mean.
You know, you're frustrated with your child.
No, this was to the extreme. I'll admit that.
But I don't think anybody can look and say,
you know, I've never said something negative
about someone I love.
The prosecution's about to rest.
And then it goes to the defense.
And the big question is, is Michael
Turny going to testify?
Before that question could be answered,
a sudden twist from the judge leaves the courtroom stunned. That was the jaw drop moment.
Everyone is looking confused.
Did this happen?
Is this really happening?
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Here in Phoenix, we are expecting the state
to rest their case.
I wake up July 17th.
It's a regular trial day.
The biggest thing I'm looking for is whether or not
the defendant is going to testify in his own defense.
We figure that's going to be run of the mill.
We knew the prosecution was going to rest,
and we had heard that Michael Turney might take the stand.
I had a feeling something big was going to happen.
How would the state like to proceed?
At this time, your honor, the state rests.
At that point in time, the defendant would normally
have the opportunity to present his defense.
Ms. Hicks.
Your honor, defense has a Rule 20 motion.
Would the court like us to address that first?
The defense can ask the judge to enter a judgment
of acquittal under what we call Rule 20.
In Arizona, it's a Rule 20 motion.
The court has to make a finding that no reasonable juror, based on this evidence, could find that Michael Turney murdered Alyssa.
The defense is saying that the state hasn't proven their case.
They're saying that there's not even enough evidence for a jury to even go back into the deliberation room.
This is a standard procedure that happens after the state rests its case. Nine times out of ten, this is denied.
I mean, we argue those motions on every trial that we do, but obviously the stakes are a lot higher in this one.
Starting with the first point, the state has not presented any substantial evidence that Alyssa is deceased and that Mike caused her death.
The state's case rests entirely on speculation, character evidence, and
rumors. There has not been a shred of physical evidence in this case. No body,
no crime scene, no evidence to suggest that a murder took place. We don't have
to prove how he killed her. We don't have to prove how he killed her.
We don't have to prove whether he strangled her,
whether he beat her, whether he struck her.
All we have to prove is that he killed her.
And there is circumstantial evidence that he did.
And then you sit there, and I could feel a building.
The court is deciding whether a reasonable inference can be made that the defendant caused
or engaged in conduct that resulted in Alyssa's death.
The court is unable to make that finding.
There is a difference between being like confident in your arguments and you know that this is
the right thing and it actually happening.
The court has considered the evidence and finds that substantial evidence does not exist
to warrant a conviction. It's ordered granting
defendant's motion for a Rule 20 judgment of acquittal.
I will order the defendant released.
He actually threw the case out and acquitted Michael Turney.
That was the jaw drop moment.
We thought there was a possibility of a not guilty. out and acquitted Michael Turney. That was the jaw drop moment.
We thought there was a possibility of a not guilty.
Had no idea that the judge was going to be the judge and the jury in this case. It is exceedingly unusual that a judge makes a finding like this.
All of a sudden the case is over.
All of a sudden, the case is over.
Michael cried when we told him that he was acquitted and that he was going home.
I think the first thing he said is he couldn't hear,
and so I had to go around the other side
and tell him in the other ear.
And then he said that.
He was like, what just happened?
Like, you're going home.
The judge acquitted you.
I was shocked.
I really was. I just sat back in total disbelief
and I went on and on and I'm looking around thinking to myself, is this real? This can't
be real. It's going to end here, now. What was going through your mind?
Abject failure. Again, it's disappointment. I've always known that a no-body homicide is so
significantly difficult to prove that I may not
convince all those jurors.
The lack of a body.
Yes.
I could have had a hung jury.
I could have gotten a not guilty.
But for it to be cut off before ever going to a jury,
I didn't see that coming.
So I mean, that was especially painful.
It was a gut punch.
You know, our goals in this case were to find Alyssa
and to get justice for her.
We've failed in both those goals.
I turned to the attorney family.
Sarah's attorney is there.
Everyone is looking confused.
Did this happen?
Is this just done? What was the moment like for you? It was an
incredibly long period. It felt like everything slowed down. Most of the time
I spent my time comforting others around me. It was the first time where other
people near me were reaching out to me to comfort me
because I was shaking and I don't shake. It's unfortunate and emotional for me. If an individual
said well he was acquitted so that means he didn't kill Alyssa right? No, that means there
wasn't enough evidence to convict him. Michael did not do this. I believe what happened was that she ran away and something
that happened to her.
And we believe that the judge did the right thing that
legally that was the correct decision.
It exonerate me from the what my children were thinking the
negative stuff that they were fed.
That damage is done on never can be read it might some day
recover itself, but that's only going to happen if we find the
list.
A quitted in the death of his stepdaughter, a list attorney
and this morning he walked out of jail a free man.
We're a bit surprised at how Michael turny exited the jail
this is a man who was walking out to for the first time in
3 years how does it feel to be released today.
It doesn't feel good because I lost my family.
And Michael Turney tells us he's now
ready to return to his mission.
I've still got to look for my daughter.
She's probably some foreign country somewhere.
We should be looking at that.
Michael Cherney acquitted a judge throughout that murder case, allowing Cherney to go free. ABC 15's Ashley Holden has been following this trial from the beginning.
Every day that I went to court, I was very aware that we were talking about Alyssa Turney, her life, and her family's life.
Even after this trial was done, as we pack up the cameras, they still deal with it every single day
and they're waking up without answers. Two days after Michael Turney was acquitted,
his children released an emotional and pointed family statement through Sarah's podcast.
To Alyssa, I love you and I'm sorry.
You moved mountains to protect me for the reality of our lives.
Sarah did an incredible job. I think without her it would never have gotten to the trial stage.
In his part of the recorded statement, Alyssa's brother, James, left no room for doubt
about whether he believes justice was served.
We would like to specifically thank
Detective Summershue and Detective Anderson
for doing an amazing job.
They did all they could have done.
Unfortunately, that is where our praise for the system ends.
You get there, and you were conflicted about coming here.
You felt that the way your sister was treated in court was like victim blaming.
Yes, definitely.
Reducted.
To see your sister talked about in such a way is just unreal.
Was watching somebody get punched and not being able to stop it over and over again.
And the result was that there was no justice, in your mind, in your opinion.
There's no justice in this case.
How do you keep going?
How do you hold on to hope for answers?
And that is what the family has said that they'll do.
I've still got to look for my daughter.
She's most likely not here.
She's probably some foreign country somewhere.
If she's caught up in this human trafficking sex trade,
we should be looking at that.
Not running around persecuting the fathers
that they know damn well they have no evidence on.
That's insane.
Alyssa's gone?
No proof that I had murdered her.
Never was.
The saddest part of this entire case is that to this day, we don't know anything more about
what happened to Alyssa Turney.
Despite charges, trials, podcasts, interviews, we still do not know what happened to Alyssa.
It's one of those cases that will, until the day I die,
I'll probably think about, you know, second guess myself, whether it was there something else I
could have done, some other place I could have looked. It haunts me. It stays with you. Yeah,
it stays with you. Since 2001, we've been looking for Alyssa. We're not done yet,
and we're not going to stop trying to find her.
How do you want Alyssa to be remembered?
I want her to be remembered as having an incredible smile,
her being able to have a blast out of almost anything.
She was famous for sticking her tongue out at you
in a way of saying, hey, I'm here.
A brother remembering his sister tonight, and we should note that because Michael
Turney was acquitted by the judge, double jeopardy actually protects him
from ever being charged with second degree murder in this case. And David,
the Phoenix police say that the investigation officially remains open.
That's our program for tonight. Thank you for watching. I'm David Muir.
And I'm Deborah Roberts.
From all of us here at 2020 and ABC News, good night. You
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