20/20 - The Hunt for Mr. Right
Episode Date: January 17, 2026From Mr. Right to most wanted: Investigators uncover the double life of an international fugitive. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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This story is like a labyrinth.
Once you get in, you cannot get out.
You can stop thinking about it.
You can stop looking for the truth,
looking for answers.
This was like a senseless, a senseless murder.
The American University professor's body was found inside her Bethesda home.
That's actually the house right there.
And whether there's security cameras or surveillance cameras
or other houses that could have helped.
There was nothing.
Walked in there, I saw TVs laying on the sofas and stuff.
I noticed the table was turned over.
Some glass was broken.
This is the view down the stairs.
You can see Sue's shoes there, and then around the corners where we found Sue on the floor.
She had been involved in a really bloody, violent struggle.
Sue Markham was fighting back.
Absolutely.
It's on the news every 10 minutes and you see her smiling face.
The night that she was killed, she appeared like she was socializing with someone.
You're not going to do that with a stranger.
Oh my God, what was she going through?
Why couldn't she tell us about this?
I start looking more and more into this sort of mysterious guy.
Normally when I publish a story, I get it out of my system.
But this one was different.
And one day I got one call that changed everything.
everything. It was like the Hannibal Lecter moment. On a quiet stretch of American
University's campus in Washington DC where ambitions and ideas fill the air,
this global mystery would entangle one beloved accounting professor who
inspired generations. I was Sue Markham's graduate assistant. Sue was vibrant.
You know, everyone thinks of us accountants as boring and and living in our
spreadsheets but she really drew you in she made it she made it fun everyone here
loved her she cared so much about her university community that she actually
started a scholarship for students at AU to help them with their advanced
degrees she was very bubbly wore very outrageous outfits wasn't afraid to do
that seemed like she had I don't know how many different types of glasses and
would wear them and she was very impressive what was she was
like? Oh my, the warmest, kindest, most wonderful giving person I've ever met in my life.
There's just no question about that. I think she was always looking in life for love.
And she wanted to give love and receive love. And I think that created a personality that was very
giving. That's why she was such a good teacher. And she received awards and accolades. Yeah.
As far as I know, it was the American University's Cogot Business School teacher of the year.
What was it like growing up with your little sister? We had finally. We had
together and it was a very close-knit family. She was a free spirit, a very strong
woman, smart, very giving. Your kids had a great fondness for Sue. They're very fond of her.
She doesn't have kids of her own and these became the special people in her life.
Before the classroom became her world, Sue chased a very different dream with the greatest
show on earth.
She joined the circus.
Honest to goodness, Ringling Brothers
and Barnum and Bailey Circus
as their tax manager.
She told me the story that she walked into
the lobby at Ringling, and
there was a great big stuff.
I think it was guerrilla
and thought to herself, oh, I want to work here.
This is the right place for me.
And I think they hired her pretty much
on the spot. The circus
just brought accounting to be a
colorful endeavor.
In 1998, Sue had moved on from her career with the circus,
and now she settled into her new role teaching at American University.
Sue lived in a real nice neighborhood in Bethesda, Maryland.
Pretty modest house, certainly by Bethesda standards, on a busy road.
Sue was a lot of fun, always looking for Mr. Wright.
She had relationships on and off, but nothing major or very serious.
By the age of 52, Sue had built a tight circle of friends and none closer than Larry March,
who she spoke to every single day.
Sue was my best friend since I went to college.
From what Larry's told me, Sue was his alarm clock.
She'd call him every morning, make sure he was awake, and then called him twice more to make sure that, in fact, he was awake and he was getting out.
But something different happens on October 25th of two years.
25th of 2010. Larry doesn't get a call from Sue.
I said, well, it's probably, I didn't get the phone call
because she was gonna go jogging that morning,
and maybe she was late.
So he went in to school he taught also.
In between classes tried to reach Sue and couldn't.
Sue does not let me doubt, as simple as that.
So I'm just gonna go find out.
I think on the way there I called Lisa.
Larry calls me and he said, I've been trying and I can't reach her.
I could tell in his voice that something was terribly wrong.
I drove there and when I got there, I parked my car and I had a key to her house.
So I opened the door, blocked in there.
I saw TVs laying on the sofas.
I noticed the table was turned over and glass was broken or whatever.
He's now worried and then he calls police.
This is from the actual crime scene.
the actual crime scene video.
And when investigators make their way down to the basement,
what or who will they discover?
This is the view down the stairs.
The story takes an out return.
October 25th, 2010, pretty normal day starts for you, right?
It sure was.
But that normal day ends for Larry Haley of the Montgomery County Police Department
as he responds to a crime scene at Sue Markham's home.
We received a call from Sue's friend, Larry March,
who had gone over to check on her after he didn't hear from Sue.
I couldn't figure out what was going on,
but I said, there's got to be something wrong.
But then I thought she would have called me even if something happened.
So I was going to go find out.
I got to her house and I parked my car.
The house is an older, like more established neighborhood, fairly quiet.
This is definitely not the kind of place where you expect to find a dead body.
But that is exactly what Larry March discovers.
It was definitely surreal.
It's like this isn't happening.
But then to just see, is there any hope, right?
There was no hope.
I mean, it was clear.
So I immediately would call it.
911.
What were you told?
I was told that she was deceased inside the residence, and the officers on scene believed
it might be a homicide based on her injuries that they had observed.
Murders are kind of unusual in Bethesda.
So that's part of the reason they get a lot of attention.
Rare that there's going to be a homicide in Bethesda, Maryland.
There were a lot of police cars.
It wasn't just patrol guys.
It was obviously a big deal.
Her body was in the basement.
In the basement at the bottom of the steps.
This is the view down the stairs.
You can see Sue's shoes there, and then around the corners where we found Sue on the floor.
It appeared that she had been pushed or had fallen down the stairs, and then they found a bottle.
It was broken.
It was underneath her.
It was a brutal, brutal murder.
Whoever did this probably chased her down the stairs,
smashed her over the head with a tequila bottle
that was blood around her,
and then, you know, she was suffocated.
There was DNA under one of her fingernails,
and it wasn't her DNA.
So that was a big clue.
That's a suspect's DNA.
Sue Markham was fighting back.
Yes.
Absolutely.
The question now, fighting back against whom?
The American University professor,
was found inside her Bethesda home.
And as the news spreads fast, everyone who knows Sue is stunned.
I got a call from my mom.
I hung up the phone, laid my head down on my desk, and cried.
This mysterious murder has truly torn through the fabric of this American university community.
Unbelievable, it's really sad, and I just don't really understand how this could happen to, like, a really good person.
It was hard.
It's on the news every time.
news every 10 minutes and you see her smiling face.
I mean, I don't even know how to react.
I can remember sitting at my desk and just being like, but I just emailed her.
I know I did a lot of crying because it didn't make any sense to me.
This was like a senseless, a senseless murder.
So this is the back of the house.
This is the back of Sue Markham's house.
Obviously, we're interested in the outside of the house for the forced entry.
This is from the actual crime scene video that our forensics person took.
There was a screen that was cut and resting up against the wall below the window.
And then the window was slightly open.
Appearing like someone had broken up.
That was what the appearance was.
The first thing I noticed when I walked in was that there was a TV face down on the couch, obviously out of place.
The TV is right by the door.
Yes.
there's a second TV on the floor behind that couch.
We don't ultimately know why they weren't taken.
So it looked ransack.
Her bedroom and another room had been rummaged through the clothing onto the floor,
that typical things we would see in a burglar.
There's a countertop right below the window.
There's broken glass.
And then there's broken glass on the floor.
So we had the broken glass upstairs,
and perhaps Sue had fled downstairs to get away from whatever was happening.
What are you thinking at this point?
So obviously we think we're looking at a burglary.
Montgomery County police call her attack a burglary gone wrong.
Did you think that too?
I had no reason to think anything else because I had no reason to believe that there was any reason that someone would have intentionally killed her.
Police are making a record of property in Sue Markham's home.
They notice that many things are missing.
her wallet, her cell phone, her laptop.
Certainly gave the appearance that it was a burglary,
maybe that had gone wrong,
and then the person made good their escape in her vehicle.
Sue drove a gold Jeep Cherokee, you know, pretty modest car.
The Jeep was missing.
The Jeep was missing.
It's a very easy to spot car.
It's a gold Jeep Cherokee, the old box style.
So now finding that stolen car becomes your top priority.
It becomes our top priority.
The police are hoping that finding that Jeep will solve the mystery and solve it quickly.
But when they run down her Jeep, little do they know it will only lead to more questions.
People in the area around where Sumarcom lived would not be surprised to hear about someone breaking in.
There had been like, what, 60 to 80 burglaries in the few months prior to this?
It's not uncommon to have, especially in this area, Bethesda, a lot of break-ins.
So that's where the investigation into what happened to Sue is starting.
A robbery that somehow went wrong and turned into a murder.
That's what the police told us, and that's what they were investigating.
But the cops have little to go on.
And were there security cameras or surveillance cameras from other houses that could have helped?
There was nothing.
Their biggest potential lead was Sue Markham's car, that gold Jeep, similar to this one that was missing.
So the evening rush hour is approaching.
There are tens of thousands of cars buzzing around D.C.
The police are looking for just one.
It's very important that they found this Jeep, and so, you know, not just Montgomery County,
but police in the whole area were looking for this Jeep.
Sue's license plate number is put into a system that alerts police everywhere to be on the lookout.
In addition to that, along the roads, there are special cameras, and they can read license plates as those cars whizz by.
This is a tag reader on the side of the road that captures it?
Correct, on the side of the road.
And it's catching every vehicle going through.
Correct.
And sure enough, later that night, there's a hit.
on one of those cameras just over the border in Washington, D.C.
Someone in the Jeep with Sue's license plate just drove by.
As luck would have it, around this time,
a D.C. Metro Police auto theft officer is on duty,
and he just happens to come upon the Jeep.
And he notices the driver is a young man,
and the driver is alone.
I seen a police cruiser got right behind me.
He flicked his lights.
Hit a siren.
His name is DeAndrew Hamlin, 18 years old at the time.
And he says he's already nervous when he notices a second police car arrived.
And now that the police, his backup had poured up.
And when I seen that, I took off.
It was on from there.
It's on, all right.
And a full-on chase breaks out right through the streets of D.C.
I was passing lights, hitting corners crazy, trying to lose the police.
pretty much.
How far did you wind up chasing the car thief?
It was roughly two miles, pretty high speeds across the district.
I didn't pull the vehicle road because I didn't want to get locked up.
I didn't want to get apprehended.
But he didn't want what happens next either as he speeds right into this major intersection.
What happened when the car arrives here?
When he tried to make the turn, he struck the curb, took out a light pole, and actually came to rest in the intersection.
I hopped out and was trying to run.
So now it's chase number two, this time on foot.
The police running after Hamlin.
Running.
So you give chase?
The DC officers gave chase.
They caught him a very short distance away.
I stopped, threw my hands up because I knew the other officers was behind me.
When police catch up with the suspect, they thought that he was a burglar.
And they thought that he might have been the killer.
DeAndrew Hamlin is now a suspect in this murder case.
Of course.
I would say he's the number one suspect at that point.
Now keep in mind, police already arrested a DC teen connected to this case.
We heard from the detectives in Montgomery County, Maryland,
that they had apprehended him,
and they thought they had the guy who robbed her house,
stolen her Jeep, and killed her.
So they charged him with being inside a stolen vehicle.
That was enough for them to arrest him.
and that was enough for them to question him.
Although Hamlin has not been charged in the murder,
police still have questions.
We are still of interest into finding out
specific details as to how he came into contact
with that vehicle and where he got it from.
When we confronted him about Ms. Markham's murder
and the fact that the vehicle had been taking
in that murder, he denied any knowledge of that.
I believe the detective was asking me that I know
a woman named Sue Malcolm, and I was saying, I don't, and who is she? I don't know her.
But the police, they don't believe Hamlin's denials.
When you're in the vehicle of someone the day that they're murdered, that's, could be very incriminating.
Not only that, Hamlin has a record, though nothing even close to a homicide.
I have been arrested before. My prior arrest were from simple assaults,
And I believe I had one UUV, which is unlawful use of a motor vehicle.
Hamlin is about to tell the cops his version of how in the world it could possibly be driving that cheap
and have nothing to do with Sue Markham's murder.
Whatever led him to this moment, he's facing some trouble.
But when they started asking my fingerprints, took a picture and stuff like that, I knew something was up.
That you get in a chase with the police, you wrecked, and you get up and you continue the chase by running.
Looked really guilty.
Looked really guilty.
I did not expect it's driving around someone else's vehicle that I didn't have permission to drive,
return into a world misery.
It's not looking good for DeAndrew Hamlet.
But as investigators look more closely at the crime scene and begin to probe into Sue Markham's private life,
they start to wonder, could this murder have been something much more personal?
She was sitting there appear like she was socializing with someone.
You're not going to do that with a stranger.
She wouldn't have shouted tequila with a burglar.
I would think not.
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streaming on Disney Plus and Hulu. Show me the way. Less than 24 hours after Montgomery
County police discover Sue Mark murdered in her own home, detectives thought they had nabbed her killer.
DeAndrew Hamlin was arrested after he crashed Markham's stolen Jeep.
That's the only evidence they had me in the truck.
They was assuming that I got it from her house.
But that wasn't the case.
The car was found right here, huh?
Right here.
What?
What was DeAndrew Hamlin's story?
So he says he was at home at his house and his brother was walking on the street here.
I had received a phone call.
I had received a phone call that evening for my brother.
He had to find a vehicle that was located right here in this area.
Hoping, started, nodded at my brother, took off.
I was pretty much just one in the joy ride.
And I was going to make the car mine.
How did the brother know the car was here?
He just had walked by.
He was just walking by and the windows were down.
Keys were in the ignition.
It was almost like somebody wanted someone to steal the car.
DeAndrew Hamlin did not match any of the DNA on the scene.
We executed search warrants.
and we did not find a single item related to Sue Markham's case.
Even though Hamlin pleads guilty to unauthorized use of a vehicle,
police eliminate him as a suspect in Sue Markham's murder.
Police are back to square one.
They have all this unknown male DNA all over the crime scene,
but they don't know who it belongs to.
Right here is where the screen was that was left on the ground.
and then the window up into the side of the house.
The screen was cut, it was bent, but from the inside to the out
and not the outside to the end, which was pretty unusual.
What do you see inside?
So inside, there's a countertop right below the window.
There's a tower with some fruit and some dishes
and some other things that are there that were completely undisturbed.
It would have been extremely difficult to come through that window
without completely knocking all those things all over the place.
Did the scene look staged at this point?
There were some items there that were troubling.
There was a glass vase that had flowers and some water in it.
That vase was found resting on its side on the stairs.
They had concerns that it might have been placed there
because if that had fallen off of a table,
it would have been shattered into a million pieces.
And tequila glasses on the kitchen counter?
Yes, so there were two tequila glasses side by side.
The glasses themselves were wrapped in a brown decorative leather wrap.
They had some residual liquid in them.
The night that she was killed, she was sitting there appear like she was socializing with someone.
You're not going to do that with a stranger.
She wouldn't have a shout of tequila with a burglar.
I would think not.
The detectives tried to recreate Sue's life.
Who knew this person?
Who was close to this person?
On the day of the murder, and I came across a life insurance policy in her office.
to a beneficiary that was not a family member.
And what was that name?
It was Jorge Ruita Landeros.
Who is Jorge Landeros?
He was somebody that Sue Markham had befriended
several years prior to her death.
DuPont Circle in Washington is a very vibrant place
that people go, hang out.
You know, it's a place where you might go
to meet new kinds of people.
And, you know, so Sue goes there in 2005
and she starts taking Spanish lessons.
The guy teaching the Spanish lessons is Jorge Landeros.
They found out that they had a shared interest, a shared passion for books, for philosophy, for yoga, and they started to become friends.
Jorge Rueda Landeros was born in Juarez in 1969.
He spent his early years in Mexico, and then he moved with his family to the United States.
He became a dual citizen.
He was a die-hard yoga teacher.
In 2005, Landeros moves to the Washington, D.C. area,
and it's there that he starts teaching yoga and Spanish classes.
And that's how he soon meets Sue Markham.
They became close.
They traveled together.
They would be meditating like before sunrise, and yoga became a big part of their life.
Sue always had the morning classes.
She actually brought Jorge and two of them did yoga together.
In class.
To wake the, yeah, to start a class to wake them up.
He actually came to one of her classes and led the meditation.
I can remember them both sitting on the desks kind of in crisscross applesauce.
She was becoming more interested in him as a person.
And she developed a crush on him.
He was suave, he was sophisticated, he was romantic.
This little romance here.
She fell for him.
She did fall for him.
She thought she had met the man of her dreams with Landeros.
There's only one problem.
The feeling may not have been mutual.
She did tell me that it had become physical,
but then she told me that it stopped.
It was because he did not want to do that anymore.
She had told me at one point that she loved him
and she knew he was never going to be able to return that love.
She knew it was one-sided.
Sue's friends were not fond.
friends were not fond of Mr. Landeras. He was kind of a mystery to them.
I just said that this guy is, there's something here that's just not right.
I met him and I told Sue I don't think this is the right person for you.
She said, oh Don, you don't understand him. He's wonderful. He's smart. He's a genius.
Corre, no doubt about it, is a smart guy. And one of his fields, he was a stockbroker.
And, you know, obviously, Sue, as an accountant, that was a shared passion of that. And it wasn't
just a subject they had in common.
They started investing money together.
Eventually, Jorge tells Sue that he wants to go back
to Juarez his hometown.
And I think there was a sense of relief to Sue's friends.
They were surprised that we were even asking about him
because it was their understanding
that Ead really wasn't in her life very much.
When one of them says to me, who is Jorge Landeros?
My first reaction was, well, he's in Mexico.
He doesn't live here anymore.
But as detectives follow this money trail,
they discover some shocking emails,
and they detail financial arrangements
that Sue hadn't even mentioned to her closest friends.
What will police discover as they untangle the secrets
between Sue Markham and Jorge Landeros?
Detective start looking more and more into this mysterious guy, Jorge Landeros.
And they discover something interesting,
an entangled personal and financial relationship between Landeros and Sue Marca.
We had been going through Sue's office just looking for clues
and came across a life insurance policy in the amount of $500,000
where Mr. Landeras was the sole beneficiary.
This life insurance policy was reciprocal, but it was definitely still eyebrow raising because most concerning to Sue's friends is that she never mentioned it to anyone.
In terms of the life insurance policy, completely blew my mind.
For her to leave anything to him, it doesn't make any sense to me.
I'm like, what the hell, Sue?
But the life insurance policy wasn't the only financial tie.
Investigators then discover some communications between Sue and Jorge that raised some red flags.
We became aware of a series of emails between Sue Markham and Jorge Landeros,
where they're clearly talking about an investment plan and that whatever had occurred with that plan
that was causing her just a tremendous amount of stress and anxiety.
He was going to basically act as a day trader.
He was going to make investments for her.
And the idea is that they were both going to financially benefit,
and she had given him over $300,000.
They had a joint brokerage account,
and Jorge was doing his thing and trading his stocks.
Most of the money in there was Sue's money.
She was nervous, not just about whether he was picking the right investments,
but he was spending money out of this account.
The money was leaving this account,
and that obviously was of great concern for her.
She gave him complete control.
She'd be sending him emails asking what was going on.
And if he didn't want to, he just ignored the email.
Mr. Landeros had gone back to Mexico, and so he was ghosting her.
He was not responding to emails, not in a timely manner,
and that only further fed her anxiety.
One of those heartbreaking emails, Sue writes,
the vision of you sitting at the end of my kitchen table telling me that you have no remorse for spending the money
keeps appearing in my head like PTSD she was increasingly desperate for money she had remorgeted her houses
she had borrowed money from her father she took money out of her retirement fund she couldn't pay her bills
things were falling apart financially when she was murdered there was nothing left in the accounts
Mortgage after mortgage, hundreds of thousands of dollars gone.
Money she thought was being invested.
He just withdrew, withdrew, withdrew,
until it was down to nothing.
What did this do to Sumarcom?
I just have to think that because she didn't discuss this
with any of her closest friends, that it was just killing her.
And I just think the embarrassment was just, like, eating her up.
So you're beginning to put this picture together of what's going on.
You're looking at the life.
life insurance. His name is all over the financials and he had taken a lot of money from her.
So when police uncovered this Landeros taking Markham's money, that gave them a motive. So he
became the prime suspect at that point. Detectives had unknown male DNA found under her fingernails,
on the tequila bottle, and on the shot glasses.
The detectives in Maryland wanted some probable cause to have the Mexican authorities get this guy and
get him extradited back to the U.S.
But it wasn't just as simple as, you know, we think maybe he did it.
They needed, you know, something specific.
They needed his DNA.
Investigators learned that Jorge Landeros has been routinely crossing right here,
the international bridge between Juarez, Mexico and El Paso, Texas.
It's the perfect opportunity for detectives to make a play to get his DNA.
In January of 2011, you get a call from Montgomery County,
Maryland. Yes, sir. They were working a murder case. They had a person of interest. So they asked if we can,
see if we can obtain his DNA. We flagged his name on their computer system, so the next time that he
would cross, they would hold him for us. And after you do that, how long is it before he comes across?
It was about two months. And my partner and I came to the bridge to meet with him. We told
that he was a person of interest in the murder back in Montgomery County. It was very nonchalant, very
calm, very easy going, cooperative.
Didn't have a care in the world.
He asked for his DNA and he agrees.
And after he takes the swab, he's free to go?
He's free to go.
And he decided to walk home.
Before he returns to Mexico,
investigators are able to obtain a voluntary DNA sample
from Landeros, but it would take mugs for the results to come back.
The question is, would they be able to connect him
to Markham's murder?
The whole story is a mystery.
Halderos is gone.
He was a chameleon.
It is an act of just like pure evil.
Are you thinking we might never see him again?
Months after Landeros' encounter with authorities on this bridge between Juarez, Mexico and El Paso,
the DNA results are in.
The DNA profile from the buckle swab we got at the border crossing matched the DNA's
The fingernails, the bottle back to Landeros.
And so for homicide detectives, he became the prime suspect at that point.
Montgomery County Police have issued an arrest warrant for Mr. Landeros for one count of first-degree murder.
With all signs pointing to Landeros, a warrant is issued for his arrest.
But by then, he had already crossed back into Mexico.
We know that during the months that followed the murder, Jorge was living in Juarez.
I think he chose Juarez because it was both his hometown and his home ground.
Even though police know where he is, local police tell us they cannot cross the border to pick him up.
We are working in conjunction with Interpol.
The problem is there is a process that needs to be followed.
If you want to follow due process, you cannot just go to Juarez.
to Juarez, arrest a man, and take him to Maryland.
Those things take time.
Did you feel that there may not be any justice?
It was a little frustrating?
Maybe a lot frustrating?
So investigators try something bold.
They open up a direct line of communication with the fugitive himself.
The Montgomery County detectives had a murder suspect in another country,
in locations unknown, but they could correspond with him.
They were corresponding with him via email?
He started writing to the authorities and even correcting them their emails.
Correcting them?
Yeah, he was looking for grammar mistakes.
Always the teacher.
Jorge Landeros used the occasion to taught his pursuers in emails,
inviting investigators to meet him for lunch at a cafe in Juarez.
He even offered to pick up the check.
Landeros just relishes this cat and mouse game that he's got going with police.
He tells an El Paso detective, we can talk shop all you want.
Markham's neighbors are shocked at his cavalier attitude.
He seems to be kind of a charismatic guy, very, very sure of himself.
Was he arrogant?
Yes.
Very much so.
What did he say?
He was saying, I welcome you to come to the cafe in Juarez to discuss further.
about Ms. Markham, then he said, bring your Kevlar.
Bring your Kevlar.
Correct.
Bullet proof best. I took his name.
I thought that he was doing a fine job of taunting law enforcement.
Kind of getting a kick out of this.
So he ups at a notch.
He stops talking to the police,
and now he turns his attention to the press.
My phone rings, and it's Jorge, you know,
and this guy is calling me from Mexico.
And, you know, right away, he did start talking specifically about the case and what evidence he thought the police had on him.
He's like, well, yeah, they got my DNA. So what? I've been there a lot. My DNA is all over the place.
You know, so he's sort of like, next, you know, what else do they have?
Certainly, I kept saying he didn't do it. I quoted him as saying, you know, this looks bad for me.
So that's why I'm not going to leave Mexico.
He was very aware that the moment he set food in the U.S., he would be in trouble.
While Jorge Landeros is in Mexico, he's giving interviews to reporters proclaiming his innocence.
What did you think when he said that?
Didn't believe him.
Yeah.
His statements had no credibility, as far as I was concerned.
After Sue's murder, Landeros is living in Juarez.
and he self-publishes an online book of musings,
fittingly titled The Fugitive Poems.
They are a first-hand testimony of his whereabouts
and what was going through his mind.
Its content is very dark.
They are about life and death.
The American Dream was a recurrent topic in his poetry.
And I think the death of Sumercom
symbolizes the end of his American dream.
I don't think I've heard of a fugitive
who's publishing poetry while on the run from the law.
A little audacious maybe, narcissistic, it's all about him.
So the FBI puts Landeros on their most wanted list.
His face is everywhere, his name is everywhere.
When they first got the warrant for him
and they thought he was in Juarez, there was a thought that, you know,
We're going to finally catch him because we're not that far behind.
But just as authorities are closing in, Lunderos slips away again.
He leaves Juarez, and this time for good.
At one point, investigators are pretty close to making an arrest,
and then he goes off the map again.
Yeah.
Jorge Landeros is gone.
Gone.
There was just like a long lull of time when there was nothing.
Like, we didn't have anything.
According to what I understand of his published work,
he spent time on the beach in the Pacific,
in the west coast of Mexico.
What was that like for the family?
Frustrating, wanting justice for her,
wanting to be sure that he didn't hurt anybody else ever.
Despite her family's desperate search for answers,
11 long years go by.
But then, finally, in 2021,
there's a major break in this case.
in this case. Investigators began hearing rumors of a mysterious man named Leon Ferrara,
who may have had a connection to Jorge Landeros. So they tracked him here to the city of Guadalajara.
It's a name they have never heard of before. What does this new man, Ferrara, know about
Landeros's life on the run? And could he lead investigators to Sue Markham's alleged killer?
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This story is like a labyrinth.
Once you get in, you cannot get out.
You can stop thinking about it.
You can stop looking for the truth, looking for answers.
Nearly a decade after Sue Markham's murder,
her alleged killer, Jorge Landeros,
is living his new life on the run somewhere south of this border.
He had been living essentially out in the open
under his real name in Juarez, Mexico,
so he realizes he's got to go undercover.
continued the investigation for long periods of time.
We're working with officials in the State Department,
the Mexican government officials to try to locate him.
We would welcome him to turn himself in to the Mexican authorities
or walked across the border and turn himself in.
It was very frustrating waiting all those years.
And I think at some point in time, I think you begin to,
will he ever come back?
Had you given up hope?
I didn't expect
that he would ever be apprehended,
but I always hoped he would be.
I just knew that it was going to happen.
I'm a firm believer that, you know,
God will take care of people, and it was going to happen.
Nobody knows where he's at.
Nobody knows what he's doing.
We have no information.
Jorge Hervada Landeros died in a way.
There were people in this community that I knew.
I could not see without them saying, hey, what's going on with Sue's case?
Are we going to get this guy?
Are we going to get him back from Mexico to stand trial?
This went on for years.
Mexican authorities tell 2020 that 10 years into the hunt,
a new investigator takes over and starts combing through Landeros's social media accounts,
searching for any digital trace of the fugitive.
Buried deep in those accounts, the investigator spots a name that's Stan.
It's a man in Guadalajara calling himself Leon Ferrar
and this guy appears unusually close to Landeros.
Guadalajara is Mexico's second biggest city.
It's very well known for its culture, its history.
It's a great place to start a new life
because there's not going to be anyone asking any questions.
Leon Ferrar was a yoga teacher here in Guadalajara.
Leon was everything you would imagine a yoga teacher would be.
A teacher, a confident, and a friend of his students.
Someone who was really involved in their lives.
I was a student for many years.
A yoga student.
I was looking for a good teacher.
For me, it was a good teacher.
He was very relaxed.
He likes to take a long walks.
He was very loving with this dog.
Dogs.
Danu and Dukhi.
He loved the dogs.
He featured the dogs
in his social media pages.
All the time.
Most days you can find Leon
here in Parque de los Venados
leading yoga classes
for devoted students
like Ariadna
Emily.
You had a shared passion
for yoga, the two of you.
Yes, I
like it so much
Leon.
He was my
first yoga teacher. I mean I
my musta was very patient. He was a good teacher. Yes. Leon even published books on
spirituality with the University of Guadalajara Press. Leon had a thirst for
knowledge and an appetite for pizza, says Alfredo Ortiz, who kept him fed in
exchange for language lessons for his daughter Valeria. For me it was
surprising how many languages he know.
Which ones did he know?
He gave me lessons of French, Dutch, Portuguese, Italian, and English.
Wow.
But I think he know more.
He was a good friend.
Leon was a trusted fixture in the community.
But what nobody realized was that this austere sage,
this yoga teacher, was actually an accused killer.
accused killer Jorge Rueda Landeros.
You know, he really had created a kind of a new life for himself.
People had no idea, they do as a wanted fugitive,
they had no idea of the story back in Bethesda, Maryland.
Landeros was something of a charmer.
He had the ability to ingratiate himself to people
who had no idea that this guy was someone
that had done a brutal murder in another country.
What did you learn about Landers?
What did you learn about Landeros's life in Mexico after the murder?
We learned that ultimately it was in Guadalajara, Mexico, that he was teaching yoga there.
He had changed his name to Leon Ferrara.
There he was, you know, out on social media, posting tutorials.
And, you know, he'd aged a little, but it looked like Jorge.
And I think everyone was sort of surprised.
He didn't really hide very well.
Because he was hiding in plain sight.
Did he talk about his past, where he came from?
Yeah, he told me that he studied in Harvard.
Harvard University?
Yeah, and that he traveled all around the world,
and he stayed in India, where he learned how to meditate,
and then he worked at Wall Street in finances.
Leon would tell a lot of stories about his past.
One day he would say he was a spy, one day he would say he was a former broker, one day he
would say he was the son of diplomats.
But the truth thing is that nobody knew who he was.
The man was somewhat of a mystery.
We never knew where does he come from.
He never show some identifications.
He never carried money and never carry a credit card.
He was very different than the rest of us.
2020 has followed Jorge Landeros' trail here to Guadalajara to see firsthand how he lived
in hiding.
I'm about to enter Jorge Landeros's hideout here in Mexico.
He read it this room inside this house.
One man who saw that life up
close, his landlord, Francisco Fragozo.
Dianne, what was he like, Leon?
He was a very serious, very reserved.
We've got very little contact in the time that he
took him.
From the looks of it, the man known as Leon
led a pretty quiet and simple life in this one-room apartment
which he shared with his two dogs.
He didn't have much in material goods.
The only thing he left behind?
This table.
and some clothes.
One day as mysteriously as he appears in Guadalajara,
he disappears.
I just started texting messages for him on WhatsApp,
and he didn't answer at that point.
Then some friends start looking for him.
It would be normal to be afraid for his safety.
Yes.
What do you think happened to him at that point?
I thought he was cut by some kind of gun.
Okay.
Gang? Gang?
Or kidnapped?
Because he was missing.
That happens, Guadalajara?
Yeah, most of the time.
Leon's friends fear the worst that he's been abducted on the streets of Guadalajara.
But what they don't know is that a decades-long mystery is about to unravel.
In Mexico, disappearances have become part of a chilling rhythm.
More than 13,000 people reported missing in 2024, 11.
for the new 24 alone.
So when Leon Ferrara suddenly vanishes,
his friends fear he's become the next name
on that growing list.
How did you know he was missing when he disappeared?
We had classed, like I think it was Thursday,
this friend in common that were trying to reach him,
she called me and she told me they didn't know where he was.
Back in the beginning of 2022,
Mexican authorities know
that Jorge was living in Guadalajara.
This task force hunts outlaws
for the Mexico's Attorney General
traveled down to Guadalajara
and start taking surveillance on him,
and they start following him everywhere he goes.
They called me to say there's a tip on your guy
and it seems like pretty kind of legit.
They took a picture of him.
He hadn't changed a bit in his appearance.
It was clearly him.
It is here that Jorge Landeros's nearly 12-year-long flight from justice finally comes to an end.
Shortly after 4 p.m., he leaves his apartment to walk his two dogs when suddenly on the street he's approached by Mexican agents and taken into custody.
They asked him, are you Jorge Rutherlanderos? And he said, yes. Well, you're under arrest for murder.
He hadn't heard that name in years.
Yeah.
He begs the agents to bring back his dogs to his apartment
and the police leave the dogs with his landlord
and take him to jail.
So for Jorge Rueda Landeros, also known as Leon,
this was literally the end of the road.
It was.
Fearing for Leon's safety, one of his students came here
to the office of missing persons,
where authorities revealed he was neither kidnapped nor killed,
but rather alive and well.
In fact, he was behind bars booked for murder.
What did the police tell your friend?
That he had a red notice from the Interpol
and his name wasn't Leon.
It was Jorge.
Jorge Rodelanderus.
Could you have imagined that your friend and teacher
would be on the FBI's
most wanted list.
No.
No, not at all.
We thought that, that it was crazy.
It was shocking to me because I think that this wasn't true, the charges,
because of the kind of person that he was.
That you knew?
That I knew, yes.
My phone started bringing it dinner.
I pull it out to silence it and I see Larry Haley's name on the caller ID,
and he tells me they arrested him and he was being helped.
held in jail. After 12 years on the run, a murder suspect was arrested in connection with the
2010 murder of American University professor Sue Markham. I'm just going about my business.
All of a sudden, he pops back up because he's been arrested in Mexico. He's finally caught
after years of you guys chasing him. What was that moment like? So I think for me it was pretty
surreal. I don't know that I thought that he would ever be caught. I thought he would just remain
wanted kind of forever. When the police were finally able to get their hands on Landeros, they called a press conference.
There was DNA of the defendant found on the body of the victim. A case may vanish from the public's
consciousness. It may not be headline news anymore. But this really is a good example of some
detectives who never gave up. And the work that law enforcement did
A lot of love seems to have gone into this case for so many years.
Yeah, a lot of people were very invested in solving this case definitively
and bringing my sister's murderer to justice.
And it seemed the more they learned about Sue as a person, the more invested they became.
They wanted it for her, not just another case.
That's pretty special.
After he's captured, Landeros is moved here to Reclosorio Sur, one of Mexico's most notorious prisons.
All he can do is sit and wait.
Meanwhile, U.S. authorities are pushing to get him back home to face charges he's avoided for more than a decade.
Inside those concrete walls, Landeros turns to writing, page after page, letter after letter.
He's clinging to one thing that he can still control, the narrative, his version of the story.
Writing was like a therapy for him when he was in jail.
He wrote and wrote and wrote.
He had these scribbles on notebooks.
2020 has obtained Lundedos's diary, which he wrote in jail while awaiting extradition.
And in it, he details alleged wrongdoing by the American authorities, calling himself a
prisoner frozen in time.
For me, one of the most unsettling parts of this diary is not what's in it, but what's missing.
Not once does he mention Sue Markham.
Almost like by rewriting his own narrative, she's erased completely.
Normally when I publish a story, I get it out of my system, but this one was different.
You can stop talking about it, you can stop thinking about it,
and one day I just got one call from him.
And that changed everything.
For you, you're Sadu Leon, no?
Yes.
You say that you're innocent.
It was like a Hannibal Lecter moment.
After 12 years on the run,
this is where Jorge Landeros ends up.
Not a beach in paradise,
but a concrete cell in prison.
Landeros did not give up fighting
to keep his freedom under his new name in Mexico.
He's appealing in letters to family and friends and politicians.
He even writes a message to Mexico's president
like he's the most important guy in prison.
He called us?
Telephone.
Yes.
What did he tell you?
Well, I talked with him and he said me that he was okay.
It is true that he was Jorge.
After interviewing his students, one of them tells me, you know what?
He wants to talk.
He's in jail, in Mexico City, and he wants to give you an interview.
I was really nervous because I didn't know what to expect.
Landeros doesn't deny having a relationship, but according to Elias Kamhagi,
Landeros swears he wasn't anywhere near Bethesda when Sue Markham was killed.
Once Landeros realized he was a moving target, he says he made the decision to leave behind the old life in Juarez and start fresh somewhere where nobody had a clue about his story.
Then he comes to Guadalajara. Why this city?
He told the investigators that he likes the weather, but I think the reason is that it's a big city.
Easy to hide in plain sight here.
Yeah, very easy.
In Guadalajara, Jorge Landeros disappears and in his place, a new man is born.
Leon Ferraro.
For you, you're Sadu Leon, no?
He told me that Leon was everything that he was, everything that he would.
wanted to be. Leon was an exaggerated version of Jorge.
He compared himself to Hans Solo, for example,
this hero being prosecuted by the evil empire.
And when that all-important question comes,
did he kill Sue Markham?
Landeros doesn't hesitate,
and he pushes back and he pushes back hard.
You say that you're innocent?
The person I know,
no, is innocent to me.
Not Leon, not murder.
No, I don't think he's guilty.
Do you think the man you knew, this friend,
this teacher of yours, is guilty of murder?
I want him to be innocent, of course,
but it's not for us to give the verdict.
So for the police and prosecutors who worked on this case
for years and years, they wanted to get him back
into that courtroom to face justice.
Exactly.
You did that yourself.
I kept the investigative box sitting behind me.
It was right at my feet.
These are DeAndra Hamlin's fingerprints.
Oh, okay.
We don't find him inside the house.
No, he's not inside the house.
He's nowhere.
It ended up being really helpful because then when the defense would bring...
I held it here in my office for years waiting for him to come back.
Years after disappearing across the border, Jorge Landeros is extradited back to the United States
to stand trial inside this Maryland courthouse.
And he's facing murder charges that could keep him behind bars for the rest of his life.
Calling criminal case state of Maryland versus Jorge Landeros.
All the lawyers, the judge, the bail of the clerks, everybody was a woman.
And that was impressive.
Sue would have loved it.
She was very much a feminist and believed in the strength of women.
It seemed fitting in some way.
Members of the jury, this is a criminal case in which the state of Maryland has charged Jorge Landeros with
the crime of first-degree murder.
I covered this trial every single day,
and sitting in the courtroom just a few feet from Jorge Landeros,
I saw a different man that what we had seen in photographs and mugshots.
When the jury entered, he stood tall and puffed out his chest,
trying to show everyone he was a man of confidence.
Anything strike you about what you saw in his face?
I saw defiance when I saw.
did look at him.
And when Sue Marcombe met Jorge Landeros, she was enchanted by him.
When Jorge Landeros met Sue Markham, he found his mark.
The prosecutors were very clear, and they wanted him to be the manipulator who took advantage of
Sue.
He took advantage of her kindness and her generosity.
And when she had nothing left to give him, Jorge Landeros killed her.
As the state presents its case, Sue's very good friend Larry March takes the stand,
and he recalls that horrific moment that he found her body at the bottom of the basement stairs.
It was obvious to me that she wasn't alive.
Testify was hard because I felt like I didn't get a chance to really say what I wanted to say,
that a very special person was taken away from here, that this was a terrible.
thing that happened.
Prosecutors methodically walk the jury through Sue's home, a crime scene that they say
Landeros tried to stage to make it look like a burglary gone wrong.
That heavy glass would have to have been purposefully moved from the table.
Droars yanked open, a window screen broken, glass smashed.
electronics stacked by the door, her Jeep missing.
Every detail, prosecutors say, was part of that illusion.
The jury heard every facet of the investigation.
Where the crime took place.
This is the stairs leading down to the basement.
How investigators say it happened.
Cause of death, blunt force trauma, and asphyxiation.
And why, at least in part, they believe Sue Markham,
was murdered.
Life insurance policy was
Mr. Madero's as the bill to share.
He walked into this forum
an innocent man because that's what he is.
Fifteen years is a long time
to wait for justice.
But now is that time.
In a murder trial of family members
moment on the stand
can cut through the courtroom.
For Alan Markham,
it begins with a single photograph,
a reminder of the sister
whose spirit he's now fighting to defend.
My name is Alan Markham.
Sue Ann Markham was my sister.
That's a tire swing that was in the backyard of our home in Palo Alto, California.
It shows the way she lived her life.
I'd never taken the witness stand before,
and kind of the weight of everything suddenly hit me.
I think you can see the grin on her face.
she was just having a great time.
She loved life.
My purpose being there was to try to paint my sister's picture for the jury,
to bring her back to life for them.
Inside this courtroom, the joy that was Sue Markham's life now gives way to the brutality of her death.
Prosecutors don't ease their way gently into this case.
They hit the jurors with the grim reality.
of how she died.
He snapped her on the head
with a tequila bottle.
The defendant knew
he could not be to Mark him alone.
And so he strangled her.
And the man prosecutors say
is responsible, Jorge Rueda Landeros.
A one-time lover, a supposed
good friend, a Spanish teacher,
a yoga teacher, and they
argue a predator.
She was much more agitated than usual.
She's going crazy, and her whole demeanor has destroyed now.
She's angry all the time, and she's having a really hard time with, you know, just dealing with what's going on in her life.
She seemed to be under a lot of stress.
I see tears in her eyes.
And prosecutors say that stress wasn't random.
It had a source, Jorge Landeros.
jurors hear that Sue Markham gave Jorge Landeros hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Some invested, prosecutors say, but much of it later withdrawn and moved into his personal bank account.
It was very clear from the evidence that he just withdrew, withdrew, withdrew, withdrew until it was down to nothing.
By the time she was murdered, there was nothing left in the accounts.
What was the end balance?
November of 2010, the ending balance was $1,185.17.
Prosecutors say emails tell the real story.
A woman is drowning in debt, yet she's still begging the man responsible not to abandon her.
For example, in April of 2009, Sue writes,
I don't know how I allowed myself to get into the mess I am in.
I just went out of the whole situation.
But shortly afterward, in June, she writes,
I am committed to doing what I can do
so that we can both be successful and happy.
The jury had to see this, according to the state,
because it shows her state of mind at the time.
I think it was all risk and no reward for her,
but all reward for him.
Prosecutors tell the jury that the moment finally came
when Landeros had no more use for Sue Markham.
The money had run out, and so did his patience.
Maybe they fought because the defendant wanted more money out of Sue,
money that she didn't have and that she could not give, even if she wanted to.
Maybe the defendant was there to get that $500,000 from the life insurance policy
that he was the beneficiary of.
There's no question about it.
Jorge took her for all of her money.
And I think that he came back to see what else he could get,
which was $500,000.
Jorge Landeras used her for his own game.
And when she had nothing left to give him, he killed her.
But Landeras' defense attorney, Megan Brennan,
tells jurors a different story, saying,
this wasn't murder, but rather a burglary gone wrong.
And Jorge Landeros, an innocent man, caught in the storm.
The police decided, aha, you know what was the easiest suspect?
The easiest suspect is an individual who has they closed their personal relationship with the deceased.
They really went after the police investigation.
The crime scene people, the detectors, they do make judgments, like, well, we got enough fingerprints,
or we got enough DNA, and so that was right for attacking.
On cross-examination, Detective Haley concedes that not all of the evidence at the crime scene was tested.
You did not have those items tested.
We did not.
You made the decision not to collect the presumed blood on the walls in Sue Markham's home?
Again, probably a collective decision.
And you made the decision to not test the presumed hair on Ms. Markham's face.
Correct.
And Sergeant Haley does make a rare admission.
He wishes he had tested more, and the defense seizes on every missed opportunity.
I would have preferred to collect it at the time.
I didn't think it would yield anything to suspect.
On cross-examination, the defense highlights a detail the jury hasn't heard before.
Sue's Fitbit, a wearable fitness tracker, that
was noted as being recovered in evidence, but then somehow went missing.
Its data, says the defense, could shed light on Sue Markham's final moments.
I think that the Fitbit was something we were always looking for.
In court, the defense claimed the case was botched, that there was no thorough investigation.
For 15 years, how do you respond to that?
Detective Haley testified for 11 hours in this trial.
And I think Detective Haley's testimony destroyed the defense argument that this case was botched.
But the defense isn't done yet.
Their sharpest strike is still to come, a challenge to the crucial fingerprints that they say could turn this case on its head.
None of the fingerprints match Jorge Landeros.
And when it's his time to speak, Will Jorge Landeros, finally,
break his silence.
Mr. Landaris, you know that you have a constitutional right to testify.
You understand that?
I thought that he would be very convincing.
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With every single witness and each piece of evidence, jurors hear the prosecution's case that Jorge
Landeros lied, schemed, and ultimately murdered Sue Markham.
The defense insists that Landeros was a lot of.
never in Bethesda the night Sue Markham was murdered, and they say fingerprint evidence found in her
house and car point to a different killer. Remember, the man who was found with Sue Markham's car,
D. Andrew Hamlin, was ultimately cleared in her murder.
The man of the finger prints match for Hayland Nairos. I was never requested to compare
the prints of Mr. Landers to this case before I retired. And the defense reminds the jury
that not only were Landeros's fingerprints
not found at the crime scene,
there are still unidentified fingerprints
in this case.
To date in this case,
are there still latent prints of value
that were being identified?
As of the time I retired,
there were still prints unidentified.
There were fingerprints.
They were very clear,
and they didn't know who they were.
But just when the defense feels confident,
It's torn apart the state's case bit by bit.
The state comes back swinging
with new DNA analysis from Sue's neck
that they say points right to Landeros.
It made the case stronger against them.
There's absolutely no question.
This was a struggle.
This one fought for her life.
It's his DNA.
Nobody else is.
The defense only calls one witness.
An expert who testifies that there's a possibly innocent explanation for why Landeros's DNA was on that neck swab evidence.
That DNA came from somewhere, and it must have transferred to the surfaces of a neck that were swapped.
Beyond raising questions about the forensic evidence in this case, the defense also goes full force on that allegation that Landeros had taken Sue's money,
saying that it was anything but manipulation and that she, Sue, was in control of her own life.
Not like the state strip Ms. Markhamov's free will. She knew what she wanted and she got what she wanted.
And the defense has another reason for Sue's losses, the financial crash of the times.
In 2008 through 2010, the entire United States was in the throes of the great financial crisis.
Landeros was the only person losing money.
Landeros was never charged with any financial crimes in this case.
And the defense tells the jury that he never collected Sue's life insurance policy,
which named him as a beneficiary.
After 27 witnesses, both sides rest, and with all eyes on him,
Jorge Landeros has made his decision not to testify.
It is still your decision not to testify.
in this case.
Good night.
So it's on to closing arguments, where the defense tells the jury that Landeros is an innocent
man wrongfully accused.
The worst part is that our killers or killers are still out there.
And the prosecution argues that Landeros is a cold-blooded killer driven by greed.
When she ran out of money, which is the old.
Only thing he wanted from her, he killed her.
It's Friday, October 31st, it's Halloween,
and the jury's going back to begin deliberations.
Now remember what's at stake for Landeros.
First degree premeditated murder.
And then there's second degree murder.
He intended to kill, but didn't premeditated.
I had no idea of how the jury was feeling or anything like that.
My gut feeling from the beginning was it was an open and shot case.
After deliberating eight hours, the verdict is in.
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?
Yes.
So I expected a guilty verdict, but there was still the pins and needles of what's actually going to come out of the four person's mouth.
As to count one murder in the first three,
We, the jury find the defendant.
Not guilty.
My whole body froze up.
Everybody just sort of went, whoa, what's next?
There's still second degree.
As to murder in the second degree, we the jury find the defendant.
Guilty.
And then the jury, four person says guilty to second degree murder.
Yeah.
Relief?
Yes.
It's one thing to expect it.
It's another thing to hear it.
every emotion I could imagine all at once, just overwhelming.
Justice now finally served 15 years after the killing of American University professor Sue Ann Markham.
A jury found her murderer, Jorge Landeros, guilty.
I think the jury came up with a perfect verdict.
It is clear from the crime scene that these two individuals were sitting down drinking together before the murder.
In your press conference afterward, you call this the perfect verdict.
I think it was perfect if you knew what the facts were.
This was a very understandable and appropriate verdict.
My reaction is you should have got first degree.
The intent was made while he was there to kill her.
And that intent being made is first degree.
Sue Markham may have met a brutal end in her home at the hands
of a man she once loved and trusted.
But in the halls of American University,
her legacy as a beloved and respected teacher lives on.
An entire university is morning.
Tonight, it came together to comfort the family
of the 52-year-old mentor and friend.
A few weeks after Sue's death,
a memorial service was held at American University
to celebrate her life.
And the next time you see a beautiful blue sky,
Take a moment, look up, and put a big smile on your face and think of our dear, dear friend Sue.
That's hard.
She did a lot, but she could have done so much more.
I would like the world to remember Sue as a fun-loving teacher who puts everyone before herself.
If there was one message you could send to your beloved sister, Sue, what would it be?
I love you.
Barbara, what would you say?
You're missed.
The world's lost a special person.
A special person indeed.
Jorge Landeros is scheduled to be sentenced later this year.
David, he faces a maximum of 30 years in prison.
And American University, where Sue Markham taught,
has now endowed a scholarship fund in her name.
That's our program for tonight.
Thanks for watching.
I'm David Muir.
And I'm Deborah Roberts.
From all of us here at ABC News and 2020, good night.
