20/20 - True Crime Vault: Taken in the Night
Episode Date: May 26, 2026A 12-year-old is kidnapped during a sleepover with her friends; authorities launch a cutting-edge investigation to find her. (OAD 9/22/23) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/ad...choices
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In the suburbs of D.C., a woman fails to show up for work and is found brutally murdered.
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We just walked in the door and there's blood in the foyer.
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The last thing we said on our phone call was, she said, I love you, Daddy, and I said, I love you too, baby.
And those were the last words I spoke.
Around 10.30, Polly opened the door, and that's when there was a man standing in the hall.
And he was holding a knife.
You're convinced he was stalking her.
Absolutely.
He said, who lives here?
And Polly said, I do.
and then he took Polly.
Bring her back.
Don't hurt her.
Just bring her back.
But did a crucial decision back then
make all the difference?
New revelations and an all-new look
at the story that terrified the country.
I hate this part of it.
He came over to my car.
He sees. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I was sightseeing.
At midnight.
At midnight.
I would say,
He was panic-stricken and I smelled fear.
And I literally grabbed him and pulled them close and said,
Mark, you need to be strong for your doctor.
This was my test right here, right now.
It was like a boogeyman came in and stole her out of that house.
For two weeks, the town of Petaluma,
virtually everyone who lives or works here,
has been consumed by the kidnapping of 12-year-old Polyclass.
The Polyclass case really changed.
everything.
The case has generated enormous local and national publicity.
I think it's so important that we just find her as soon as possible.
Polly's case was huge because of how it happened, because of where it happened.
This is a small town coming to grips with the idea that the problems of the world have come to the front door.
We should tell a story not only about the case itself, about the crime itself, but the impact.
She's legacy is that, you know, she changed how the FBI investigates crime.
12-year-old Polly Hannah-Klaas was in her own bedroom, having a slumber party.
Polly's kidnapping was a real wake-up call for a lot of parents that were so lulled into safety.
The suspect tied and gagged the girls while Pauley's mother slept in another room.
How could this have happened?
When our mother was right there, how could this have happened?
It's your worst nightmare.
It shocked the country.
the country. It happened here in Petaluma. What was it like like when right before the
kidnapping happened? Just like this. A neighborhood community, people walking their kids and
their dogs without any concern. It was just a typical American neighborhood. Wholesome
and robust. So let's start by setting the scene a little bit. Tell me a little bit
about Petaluma. Well Petaluma is a rather a small
rural community that is so all-American.
It's morning again in America.
It was featured in one of Ronald Reagan's campaign ads.
At that time was a very rural town, about 50,000 people.
It was kind of an all-American town.
American graffiti had been filmed in Petaluma.
I'll call you later.
Biggie Sue got married was filmed in Petaluma.
Small town Americana.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Nestled between wine country and San Francisco.
Exactly.
Yeah, 30 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge.
But it's an entirely different world, known for its eggs, known for its agriculture, known
for its cattle farms.
I am Annette Nelson and Polly was my best friend.
We all felt safe in Petaluma.
Everyone seemed to leave the doors unlocked before cell phones, so we all just kind of left notes
for our parents.
It must feel surreal that it's been 30 years.
It feels very surreal.
I have no idea where any of that time went.
I really don't.
I can't explain it.
I'm sure in many ways it feels like yesterday.
Well, it does.
I mean, just having these recurring thoughts
that I'm having brings it even closer than yesterday.
It all began in 1981 when Polly was born to Mark Klass and Eve Nicol.
Well, that was the greatest day of my life.
The day that Polly was born,
gave me new meaning in my life.
It taught me unconditional love.
The day you became a dad.
The day I became a dad, and I was really good at that.
She was daddy's little girl.
She was totally daddy's little girl.
There's no question about that.
As parents, Mark and Eve were a great team,
but as a married couple, not so much.
Their marriage was faltering, and by 1984,
when Polly was just three, they decided to go their separate ways.
Where my marriage was really a total
disaster with Eve, our divorce was quite successful.
Polly, she lived with my ex-wife up in Petaluma.
She adored her dad and saw him at least once a week.
Her mother remarried and had a little girl named Annie.
They shared a room in a very small Victorian cottage in Petaluma.
And you co-parented quite well?
I believe we did, yes.
I chose that area because I thought it was the most ideal place.
ABC News first spoke with Eve Nicol back in 1993.
Eve, tell me about Polly.
She is an incredibly sweet and sensitive and charming kid.
She's a lovely kid.
Polly was the girl who reminded everyone of someone they loved,
whether it was a daughter or a friend or a niece.
Polly was new at Cherry Valley in sixth grade,
and she was in my class,
and we met on the first day of school
and just instantly had a lot of fun together.
Holly was on the cusp between child and adolescent.
She was 12 going on 13.
She loved to play the clarinet, and she loved her read,
and most of all, she loved acting.
She's very musical.
She loves to play her piano and her clarinet.
She's really blossoming in terms of her friends.
If you look at pictures of her, you'll see she just sort of shines through the celluloid.
So in that morning, it was the first Friday in October, and Polly was really excited because her mother had said she could have a friend's sleepover.
The plan for October 1st was hatched at lunchtime that day.
We're all going to ask our parents, and we're going to have so much fun.
And then I wasn't able to go that night. I was getting over a cold.
In the early evening, around 6 o'clock or so,
Pauley and I had our daily conversation.
We pretty much talked every day.
She was very excited about her slumber party.
Yeah, she was having some girlfriends over.
The last thing we said on our phone call was she said,
I love you, Daddy, and I said, I love you too, baby.
And those were the last words I spoke.
The two girls who ended up going to the sleepover were Polly's six.
grade classmates Kate McLean and Jillian Pelham.
When Kate and her mother pulled up in the car, Polly and Jillian were poised on either side of the porch like two stone lions.
Typical 12-year-old girls talking about Halloween and they were playing games and getting makeup on, just enjoying the evening, you know.
Since it was a sleepover, Annie was going to sleep in her mom's room so that the big girls could kind of have their own privacy.
and they were playing around, they were playing a board game.
It's a Friday night, not terribly late, you know,
8, 9, 10 o'clock, and a warm October evening.
A lot of people were out.
Around 10.30, the girls were sitting or sprawled on the floor
playing a board game.
Polly stood up to go get the sleeping bags from the family room
and she opened the door and that's when there was a man standing in the hall.
And he was holding a knife.
It's impossible to imagine the only thing that.
to imagine the utter fear and confusion
that 12-year-old Polly and her friends
must have been feeling in those moments.
But what happened next would terrify parents
across the country and catapult this case
into the national spotlight.
Not only were the eyes of the volunteers
at the center conducting the search for Polly Clas
riveted on the screen, eyes across the country
were focused on the missing child.
You just don't think about someone coming into your home.
I don't want to want to be a daughter.
The family is asking anyone with any information about this kidnapping to please contact the Petaluma Police.
Agents had no connection to anyone who might want to kidnap Polly.
They were really at a loss from where to even start.
When you look at the boldness of this kidnapping, that's why this one is so rare.
FBI agents and police spent today looking for evidence and canvassing the neighborhood.
It was like a boogie man came out.
and stole her out of that house.
Polly class is having a sleepover with two friends,
Kate and Jillian from her sixth grade class.
That happens millions of times in this country
on a Friday and Saturday night.
It's like apple pie and baseball.
Around 10.30 that night, her mother, Eve Nichol,
is asleep with Polly's younger half-sister, Annie,
in another room.
Shortly after I fell asleep,
an intruder came into the house,
appeared at the door to their room.
as Polly opened it to take the sleeping bags into the front room.
He had a large knife.
Initially, Kate and Jillian thought, is this a prank?
He said he would hurt them if they made a sound.
They didn't.
He said, don't look at me, lie down on the floor.
And so they lay down, face down on the floor like little dolls one by one.
He bound them and gagged them.
He used strips of white cloth, and over them he tied what they,
they could feel to be electrical cord.
He said he was only there for the money,
but it obviously had nothing to do with money.
He said, who lives here?
And Polly said I do.
And then he took Polly.
He told Kate and Jillian to count to 1,000
and said that by the time that they had gotten to 1,000,
Polly would be back.
They never got to a thousand.
Gillian was a gymnast, and she was flexible,
and she was able to get her feet through her arms
so that her arms were in front of her.
And then she used her teeth to untie herself.
And then she untied Kate.
And then they wake up your ex-wife.
The bedrooms were separated by a Jack and Jill bathroom,
one that connect both rooms.
The girl said Polly's gone.
Who took her?
The man.
What man?
So that's when Eve called 911.
911.
911?
Yeah.
What's the problem?
Hello?
Yeah.
I think we're going to have gotten into our house.
I'm saying to my daughter.
You can tell when you hear it that she's very confused.
She had a migraine, and she had gone to bed and taken a sleeping pill.
And so she is surfacing through sleep to wakefulness and realizing this,
this horrific reality that her daughter is gone.
It was hard to say the words, but I said my daughter has been taken.
Where you're at?
Yes.
What child is your daughter?
It's coming up.
At some point Kate got on the phone and she told them exactly what happened.
I had a knife.
I thought it was a joke.
She had a knife.
Yes.
He had a big knife.
Is he a white male?
Yes.
He has dark beard.
Yes.
How old?
I don't know.
30-year voting, baby.
Okay.
Have you ever seen this man before?
No.
The first people on the scene were detectives from the Petaluma Police Department.
They were there minutes later.
They came in and immediately started attending to the scene.
It was important that we make the girls feel safe.
It was important that we preserve evidence,
and it was important that we try to get as much information as we could
so we could get it out.
We walked through the bedroom scene and saw clothes that were laying on the floor
and items of clothing that have been used as bindings for the girls.
We had Nintendo cores that were cut.
that were cut.
We did photographs, collected, and processed the scene
for fingerprints.
But there really weren't any signs of burglary
or ransacking the house.
There was no forced entry to the front doors,
the back doors, or any of the windows.
Eve's purse was still on the kitchen table.
Her money was in it.
Everything was still there, except Polly.
It was like a boogeyman came in and stole her out of that house.
Meanwhile, outside, officers start fanning out
on the streets to ask if anyone in the neighborhood
saw anything suspicious.
There was a small apartment behind where Polly lived.
And some folks there had said that they had seen somebody
walking around.
We had gone to get a pizza on a couple of videos,
came home, we're watching the videos, nothing out of the ordinary.
Their front door is wide open, and it's only a few feet
from the back porch.
And they see at 10.30, this guy come down the driveway
go up in the back portion and go in to the back of the house.
I didn't think twice about it.
Sometimes Eve had friends over where there was family.
Others report seeing an unfamiliar man dressed in dark clothing on Polly Street,
possibly driving a small gray or black vehicle.
And at 12.14 a.m., a little over an hour after Eve called 911,
the Petaloma Police Department issues an alert with some of the details they've learned.
It went out over what's called an Aldoam.
points bulletin, an APB or a BOLO, to let other agencies know, hey, be on the lookout for
this kind of car, this kind of character, and whatever.
When the APB went out, it said not for press release, so it was not broadcast over certain
radio channels.
They didn't want the media to get wind of this kidnapping.
It wasn't an error per se, and it wasn't anyone's fault, but like that was a pivotal thing.
They decided if this is a kidnapping, the FBI needs to be involved immediately.
Bringing in the FBI was essential.
At the time in 1993, my title was a senior resident agent in the FBI office in Santa Rosa.
I was named the case agent on the night of the kidnapping.
When I got a call from Eddie Fryer from the FBI, he asked me, what do you need?
And I said, I need 100 agents right now, and he said, I'll have you 50 by the morning.
And Trudeau was where he did.
When I look back on the night of the kidnapping, and I met Sergeant Velbello.
I think we all dedicated ourselves.
We were going to do what's going to take to solve this case.
But even to an FBI team that has worked every kind of kidnapping case, this one does feel different.
When you look at the boldness of this kidnapping, a parent is home.
Three girls are having a slumber party.
The lights are on.
It's 10.30 at night.
There was no playbook for this.
It just didn't happen like this.
It defies logic.
Remember, this is 1993, so it's before so many of those other headline-grabbing cases,
like John Bonae Ramsey or Elizabeth Smart or Baby Sabrina.
When you do everything you can as a parent to protect your children, and I'm a very devoted
parent and always have been, you just don't think about someone coming into your home.
On the night that Polly went missing, Eve lit a candle and put it in the window of her home.
And she would light it every night.
I think Eve wanted to feel hope that her daughter would return and that was her way to
shine a light literally and hope that Polly would come back.
Far beyond that light, the very same night Polly disappears, a single mom and her daughter
have a frightening confrontation on a secluded country road.
When I pulled up and he came over to my car, the hair on the back of my neck stood up.
He was disheveled. He had sticks and twigs in his hair.
And he reaped, just reeked. I smelled fear.
Polly Class vanished from her home in Petaluma, California on October 1st, 1993.
For the 30th anniversary of her disappearance, Kim Cross sat down and told the story of the investigation from the
inside for her book in light of all darkness.
I am the daughter-in-law of Eddie Fryer,
the FBI case agent in charge of the Poly class investigation.
We do not gather as a family and not talk about Polly.
It's like part of our family DNA.
So is that what inspired the book?
I realized that I could get access because of my relationship
to people who would not talk to another journalist.
Detectives and FBI agents basically
pulled their bankers boxes out of their garages and
and just said, here you go.
And one of the police reports details an incident that happened the very night Polly disappeared.
About an hour after Polly was reported missing, a couple of deputies responded to a trespassing call on Pithian Road.
This was a woman's driveway in wine country, and the driveway is really, really steep and curved.
That particular evening, it was a full moon, I remember, and it was called.
Dana Jaffe was a single mother who worked as a chef at one of Sonoma's celebrated restaurants,
and she had just come home from working at the restaurant, and she had a 12-year-old little girl,
and her babysitter had left.
And on the way out of the driveway, she encountered a stranger, and he was in a white pinto,
and it was stuck in a ditch on the driveway.
I very fearsome, scary character.
Somebody looked like Charles Manson, is the good person.
as the babysitter described it.
And she kind of slowly pulls up,
and this guy comes around and to her driver's side.
She had her door locked, but she sort of cracked her window,
and he came over and stuck his fingers in the crack of the window
and was saying, get out of the car, you need to help me.
I think she'd cracked it this far,
and she just rolled it right back up and took off.
It frightened her.
So she drove out and called you,
The hair on the back of my neck stood up, and I was aware that we were in a vulnerable situation.
And you felt vulnerable.
Well, no one had any business being up there at midnight.
My daughter joked and picked up the baseball bat and the mace, and I said, sure, why not?
And we were both dressed and out of the house in probably under two minutes.
I mean, I really pushed her. Get dressed now.
We need to get out now.
He got in the car because I knew I could lock my doors and we headed down the road to see what he was doing.
And by the time I got here to the gate and saw his car and saw that he wasn't in it, I became really concerned.
And she goes down and calls the sheriff's office, hey, I got a trespasser on my property.
Late at night doesn't belong there.
Two deputies showed up from the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office.
They followed her up the hill to the gate inside which this car was abandoned, and the stranger, the trespasser, was sort of standing by his car casually as if he was expecting them to show up.
At this point, it's been more than 45 minutes since Dana's babysitter first encountered him.
He came over to my car. He sees. I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I was sightseeing.
At midnight.
At midnight. And he was disheveled, and he reaped.
just reeked. I would say he was panic-stricken and he, I smelled fear. I just told him, I said,
well, these gentlemen behind you are going to take care of this. So I went ahead up to the house.
Two deputies start trying to figure out who he is, what's he doing there? And they're asking
basic questions. They get his driver's license. It checks out. They pat him down and they notice his
pants are wet. He's kind of sweating, you know. And it's a cool night, you know. It's a cool
October evening. They noticed he got debris in his hair and his clothes are all kind of messed up a little bit.
He said that he had been crawling around on the ground, trying to free his car by putting brush
under the tires. They didn't see any brush under the tires. Just things weren't adding up.
When the babysitter came down, she saw him wearing a sweatshirt and she noticed that it was inside out.
And when the deputy saw him, he was wearing a striped polo.
They searched his car. He's got a duffel bag there.
and they do a field sobriety test.
They had no way of checking whether or not he had a record.
The only thing he'd do is to see if he had a warrant out.
That's all they could check, and he didn't.
At that point in time, there were issues with
broadcasting criminal history information over the radio,
so they just ran in for wants and warrants, which would be typical.
It's a Friday night.
They're getting other calls backing up on the radio,
you know, other hot calls, and what they have right now,
as far as they know, as a trespasser.
At some point, when they could not unfree the car,
they drove up to Dana's house and asked for a rope or a chain.
They asked me if I wanted to press charges.
And I said, you know, I was thinking about it.
And they said, well, it'll mean that he has to come back
for his car, you know.
And it's like, no, no, just get him out of here.
I want him out of here.
When they pulled him out, they came back up.
at the house to drop off the chain.
And they said they had followed him down to Highway 12
and watched him turn off.
And I thanked them for their service.
And we went to bed talking about, wow, that was weird.
This moment, this night, will haunt everyone for years to come.
They were completely unaware that a child had been kidnapped.
When the two deputies were with this trespasser,
that APB went out.
It was not broadcast over.
their radio and so they did not know.
So you have to ask yourself, if they had known,
would it have made a difference?
24 hours later, we had a call into Mark Klass's phone.
It was a girl's voice and she said, it's Polly.
And we were just like, oh my God, we found her.
There you go, man.
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Worst nightmare in Petaluma.
A child is missing, snatched from her big.
last night.
We used to joke that if you walked out at the front door
of the police department and you had a bunch of satellite trucks
sitting out there, you were having a bad day.
It became a reality.
When I showed up that morning at the police department,
they were there in mass.
It was intense.
The family is asking anyone with any information
about this kidnapping to please contact the Petaluma Police.
It shook the town to its core.
its core, but it also brought them out in great numbers to bring Pauley home.
I care.
I got great kids at him.
I can help.
Bill Rhodes owned PIP printing, and he said, guys, give me a picture, give me some information
on what you want on a flyer.
And he said, I got 150 people down there, I'll get some flyers made up, and we'll
wallpaper, Sonoma County.
People just start showing up and he starts showing up and he starts to
giving them stacks of flyers and kids and college students and doctors and parents are putting them all over town.
One of these posters is going to work. We don't know which one. We pray to God it's not the one sitting in a box waiting for a 29-cent stamp.
People wanted to help it any way they can. There were impromptu search parties all over town.
We could form a big line and move along like this just so we don't miss any, you know, large areas.
The news report was that if anybody wants to come and volunteer because there's going to be searches, you can come to this print shop.
I just literally said, honey, we got to go and loaded my daughter in the car and we drove down there.
And she happened to have some skills, and she knew how to deal with the media.
So she sort of put her own life and her work aside and started typing up press releases.
This doesn't happen here.
And I think because this doesn't happen here, this is why we're all here.
There's someone called America's Most Wanted.
My name is John Walsh.
I was the host of America's Most Wanted for 25 years.
We would always get the first call because the cops would say, if you come, a big old white
hot spotlight of AMW is going to get right there and people are going to go and go, this
is serious.
So we made it real serious.
Now we need your help to bring Polly Class home.
Walsh says that over 25 years, his show has helped recover six.
61 children who'd been abducted by strangers.
The power of television and the power of a TV show that's popular,
Winona Ryder was from Petaluma.
She watched America's Most Wanted and she jumped into action.
Long before she was the mom on Stranger Things.
Winona Ryder was the star of 90s classics,
like Edward Scissorhands.
Somebody said, Winona Ryder on line four.
It's like, okay.
So you hit line four and I said, hello.
hello and I didn't hear anything for a minute.
I just, and then I started hearing crying.
And I said, oh, honey, I know this is really hard.
And she just finally was able to speak and said,
I'm from Petaluma, you know.
She looks like me.
What can I do?
She came home with no entourage and showed up
in jeans and a t-shirt.
I'm an actress.
Tell me what I can do.
She did every interview she could.
My greatest wish right now is to meet
her in person and to hug her.
Winona Ryder even put $200,000 of her own money up for the reward.
She was dating Dave Perner, who is the lead singer for Soul Asylum.
By coincidence, Soul Asylum had just months before released their video for Runaway Train.
And he decided to make it about missing children.
And they had all these kids' faces in this music video that was running on MTV.
The goal of all this was to keep the media's attention.
We needed the media to keep the pressure on the cops so the cops would not step away from the case.
Police were working tirelessly, but they needed help.
So the FBI sent in their newest innovation, a quick response strike force of forensic experts known as the Evidence Response Response Team.
Tony Maxwell, one of the ERT members, came in and he started dusting with fluorescent powder.
Annie's mother, Eve, brought
Annie to me and she says she wants to help you look for her sister. If you read any
forensic science handbook, first thing they tell you is never let anybody help you
with the crime scene work. But you can't say no to a little girl. You can't say no
to a sister. She's going to have to live with this the rest of her life.
I says, okay, here's the fingerprint tape. When I need some, you pull some off the reel
and you give it to me and we'll lift some fingerprints. The FBI had technology that we didn't
have, for example, was the alternate light source.
We had never even heard of that.
We used an alternate light source, and we started dusting
with this fluorescent powder, which is 100 times more sensitive
than regular fingerprint powder.
He lifted 48 prints that had been missed.
We found a partial palm print that appeared
to be an adult print.
On my log, I wrote the word bingo.
It came from an unknown person, so it
was sent to the FBI car.
crime lab to wait for a suspect to compare it to.
The investigators did a trap and trace on Mark's phone,
and there was a call.
And a little girl called, and she said she was Pauley,
and she said that she was with the kidnapper,
there you go, man, it's going to be over in an hour.
We got the trap trace, and it came back to a house in Hayward.
We quickly called down to our FBI office in Hayward.
Get whoever you have sitting at a desk there.
Get in some cars.
Here's the address and get over there.
They busted through the door.
Got everybody on the floor.
It's like a normal family.
Now they got a house full of FBI agents with gun drawn.
We finally get the story from the young girl.
She called impersonating Holly that she was dared by her friends to call.
This was a hoax.
As investigators dig in,
They soon start to suspect that Polly's sleepover friends may have something to hide.
These are two 12-year-old girls who had been through an unbelievable trauma who were being accused of being complicit in their own crime.
Jogging the same questions over in your mind trying to trick you into saying something that's not true.
I mean, who does that?
We love you. We adore you.
And we're very confident that we'll see you again very soon.
Mark was very visible before the media.
Bring her back. Don't hurt her.
Just bring her back.
That caused a lot of people to call in and say,
I hope you guys are taking a look at Mark Class because I watched him on the news last night.
I can't even tell you the strength and the outpouring of love that I get out of this.
For sure, he's the one that's involved in his own daughter's disappearance.
Mark Class volunteered to be polygraphed.
I have to say that clinched it for me. He wasn't involved. Mark was just having a hard time and was just
emotionally done.
Holly Kloss's father, Mark, was near collapse this morning. I was whimpering. I said, I just can't do this anymore. This is
this is too much for me. I literally grabbed them and pulled them close and said, Mark, you need to be strong
for your doctor. He said, you see everything all of these people are doing and
You see how hard we're working.
And you're ready to give up?
He said, you can't do that.
You've always told her you'll be there for her.
And she needs you now more than she's ever needed you before in her life.
How did that hit you?
I realized that he was right.
And this was my test.
Right here, right now.
Investigators have been focusing on Polly's girlfriends,
Jillian and Kate, who'd been through that terrible.
kidnapping ordeal with her that night.
They definitely felt it was possible that Polly and her girlfriends did this as a prank.
And there was some discrepancies in the two girls' stories.
One saw a yellow bandana.
One would say I was laying here.
The other one would say no, it was there.
We started to look at those inconsistencies as a possible attempt of deception.
And is it possible that the girls know something that they're not telling us?
Now there are experts who are trained in child and adolescent forensic interviewing,
but at the time that didn't exist.
So they just reached into their toolkit and brought out the hammer.
They were accused of orchestrating Polly's disappearance with this theory
that Polly had run away with a boyfriend and that the girls were complicit in that whole act.
I remember they threatened the girls to take them to Juvenile Hall.
They were just job.
the same questions over in your mind, trying to trick you into saying something that's not true.
I mean, it's almost as if someone's saying you have to lie to me in order for me to leave you alone.
When we went back to the house, we had them walk through the whole crime scene.
And the way you're grasping a straw is trying to grab something that can maybe free up some of these memories.
One key detail stood out that the girls had been bound with power cords from Polly's Nintendo.
What made me feel that this was a real kid and a kid.
was the fact that the Nintendo chords were cut.
He's like, kids aren't going to cut their own cords.
They're not going to do that for a prank.
But there was still some skepticism,
and that's when the decision was made to polygraph the girls.
Gillian passed, but Kate's results were inconclusive.
The polygrapher noted she was clutching her teddy bear
and appeared agitated beforehand,
which of course could affect the results.
There are things that you grew to regret.
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely.
When you get a call from our two primary witnesses, their parents,
and said, you can't talk to our kids anymore, you know,
that's not handling young witness victims very well.
Investigators soon realized that the girls were innocent.
If I could say one thing to the girls, I would apologize for the way we treated them initially.
And I just hope they know that we were trying to do the right thing for Polly.
In hindsight, we would not do that again.
We should have handled them more tenderly.
everybody handles trauma differently.
And that just because somebody isn't crying and sad and shaking
doesn't mean they weren't traumatized.
Polly's two friends had never been happy
with the original sketch, the kidnapper.
So police tried something different.
We learned about this forensic sketch artist
who had a technique of getting detailed information
from victims like this.
Her name was Jeannie Boylan,
and she was hired by a show on ABC
to work with Jillian Kate.
Please welcome Jeannie Boylan.
Hello, Jeannie.
My job was to go in and to see if we could not
sort of pull out from memory what an eyewitness may have seen.
What she brought in was just a very calm and reassuring demeanor.
They've been through a lot.
They're 12-year-olds.
And they had high confidence in her approach
that it wasn't going to traumatize the girls anymore.
More than anything, these girls just needed to speak and they needed to be believed.
I spent a total of nine hours on the first day with the two girls.
It took a little time because they needed to remote and I happened to be a good listener.
So I would listen to them.
How's the new sketch coming?
New sketches waited and ready to be released.
I was about 2.30 this morning.
Within minutes of its release, the new sketch of the man believed to have kidnapped Polly Class was being printed for distribution.
It's amazing.
It's a face.
It's a portrait. I mean, we have a definite person that we're looking for now.
A sketch is a sketch. She drew a picture. So when we released that second sketch on our flyers,
people now could actually see a person. And the FBI was working to come up with a profile for the kidnapper.
Mary Ellen O'Toole believed it was likely an experienced criminal, comfortable taking big risks.
Especially a small house with thin walls, with a mother who was asleep in the bedroom,
adjacent to the victim's bedroom.
She also felt that this was not an impulsive kidnapping.
This was someone that had likely targeted Polly.
It's hard to begin to think of anything else
other than we're moving down the track
of being a sexually motivated crime.
And then 10 days in, a promising new lead
now may prove her right.
Falejo PD calls and says Friday night.
We had a guy break into a house over here.
The house is occupied by a woman and her 12-year-old daughter.
He had a rape kit with him.
Bindings, blindfolds, duct tape,
and we started focusing on him, you know,
mid-November as possibly being our suspect.
That was Xavier Garcia, a criminal, a sex offender.
We spent well over 10,000 investigative hours on him.
But we were never able to make the nexus
between his crimes in other cities
and the city of Petaluma.
But then, a walk in the woods,
changes everything. It was the pivotal moment in this case. Evidence is uncovered. Could this be a clue
to finding Polly? Almost made me sick to my stomach. Their jagged edges lined up like a puzzle.
I said, you better get down here. This could be it.
Polly's case was huge. There's just no question about it. It was huge because of how it happened.
It was huge because of where it happened. A lot of print, a lot of news.
media, the frenzy was national.
What did you find?
There was a pair of little girls' tights that were red.
How did it dawn on you that these dots connected to Polly?
A brand new book, now bringing every detail of the Polly class case together for the first time.
I kept telling the cops, it's a repeat offender.
It's a repeat offender with a rap sheet this long.
You better get down here.
This could be it.
The hair on the back of my neck went up.
You know where she was now?
I just exploded.
Describe that explosion for me.
I had to be held down.
Richard Allen Davis should be spinning a spit in hell right now.
I felt like she called to me.
That she let me there.
She loved?
The parents' worst nightmare in Petaluma.
A middle-aged man slipped into this home and abducted to
conducted 12-year-old Polly class at Knife Point.
If you're the man who has Polly, please just let somebody know that she's okay.
Hundreds of volunteers comb the area for clues.
I really miss her. I'm so worried.
Days and weeks go by, and some of it is a blur.
Volunteers and police say they will leave no stone unturned in the search for Polly class.
We all prayed a lot. You always have hope.
We will never stop. We will never close until we have accomplished our mission,
and we get my little girl back.
Did you take a day off in those few months?
No, no.
We put everything into this case.
I mean, everything.
We had worked pretty hard, and it was discouraging
not to have a solid lead,
and then came the fine on the 27th.
Dana Jaffe was a woman that lived miles away.
Two months after the kidnapping,
she discovers a scene on her mountain property.
Our girlfriend had come up for a hike.
up for a hike and we went for a walk along the trails.
What did you find?
I found a man sweatshirt and was turned inside out and laid out with the arms extended.
There was a pair of little girls tights that were red.
And there was a piece of white cloth quite long that had been knotted in several places.
We found a condom that was used.
And at that point did you think?
I thought this is maybe a crime scene.
Oh, she called the sheriff's office.
And I say nothing call.
I say kids having a party up on the hillside is what typically this stuff is.
Still, police come out to investigate.
And then Larry Pelton is sent in to take a look.
His attention is quickly drawn to the strips of knotted fabric.
Almost made me sick to my stomach when I saw it because I knew immediately
that that is exactly the same stuff that I collected from Polly's bed.
that were used on the other girls to tie them up.
I get on the phone, Larry says, you better get down here.
This could be it.
The hair on the back of my neck went up.
The question now is, who left all this here?
Dana Jaffe tells an officer that she had an encounter with that intimidating stranger nearby,
just two months earlier.
I realized that that was where the car had been parked.
And I told him, I said, you know what?
There was a trespasser on the property.
And then he pulled the calls for service for that night,
and he found that there was indeed an encounter.
Finally, they have the name of a suspect, Richard Allen Davis.
There was striking similarities in his appearance to the sketch that had been done by Jeannie Voilin.
The characteristics were all there, the coarse hair, the width to the face,
the bags around the eyes, the lines on the forehead.
I've got the full rap sheet.
It had everything you would think an offender would have on
on his record for somebody or a crime like that.
And he'd only been out for about six months
from his previous kidnapping charge.
Getting that committed our crime.
In 1994, ABC Sam Donaldson spoke to three
of Davis's previous victims.
Selina Verage says Davis and a woman companion
told her if she didn't withdraw $6,000 from her bank,
they would hunt up her father and daughter and killed them.
He hit me in the head with his gun.
And he hit me in the head about five times.
He was laughing and he was smiling.
smiling. Marge Freeman was beaten by Davis in her bedroom. I woke up with this man
standing over me, beating me with a poker. 30 sutures were required to close the lacerations
in my scalp. Francis Mays says Davis forced her into a car at knife point and tried to rape her.
I grabbed the knife by the blade and I hung on and he was trying to take it away from me.
I unlocked the door and I ran out. Davis later pled guilty.
to kidnapping, and prosecutors dropped the other charges.
What he inflicted on the victims was indicative of someone that really had no empathy or remorse,
basically the traits of a psychopath.
They are pretty sure they have their man, but still, they need forensic proof.
So the evidence is rushed to the FBI crime lab in D.C.
The shards of cloth found on Danny Joppy's property matched conclusively.
the shards of cloth that were found in Polly's bedroom.
Their jagged edges lined up like a puzzle.
When the fingerprint examiner called me,
because I have an identical palm print from her bedroom
that was collected by the FBI,
the night of the kidnapping to Richard Allen Davis.
I tell people I spent 30 years in the bureau
and that was my best day.
But there is no time to waste.
Even as investigators work to track down Davis,
they quickly moved to search Dana Jaffey's property for Polly.
It must have been the full force of federal, state, local law enforcement.
We felt very certain that she was there.
They throw everything they have into a desperate search, but come up empty.
No human remains have been found.
I feel like I brought her home.
I felt like she called to me that she let me there.
Still, investigators haven't found Polly, but they are about to move in on
Richard Allen Davis.
We got our warrants ready, had SWAT teams ready.
They have three SWAT teams.
They have snipers.
They've got surveillance, the whole nine yards.
Petaluma police say they have significant new information in the Polycross kidnapping case.
Hey, fleece and Walter.
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I don't know why I can't find a fella.
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After the discovery on Dana Jaffe's property,
investigators now know who they're looking for,
Richard Allen Davis.
They just need to find him.
We had found out where are you staying at the Coyote Valley,
Indian Reservation, just north of Ukiya.
We developed information that he was staying at his relatives' house.
We had SWAT teams ready.
We had Evidence Recovery Team ready.
We went and staged on a hill overlooking the area where that we thought Davis was housed.
I was in charge of our SWAT team at the time.
My team secured part of the area.
We needed perimeter control.
We hadn't established that.
So I said, hey, we got to put some guys on the perimeter here.
So we hit the house.
Three SWAT teams simultaneously hit.
And so there's that moment of silence,
and I get in a little nervous
because the moments of more than a minute or so.
And finally it comes over the radio.
He's not there.
And I almost like scream. What do you mean?
He wasn't there.
But then we got a radio call from one of the deputies
who had been on the perimeter control,
and he said he thought he may have our suspect.
There we encountered Richard Allen Davis in his van.
He shaved his beard off, which made it harder to identify him.
Actually, and holstered my weapon and kept it to my side,
but thought this guy could be armed and dangerous.
It certainly was dangerous.
I asked him to step out of the car, keeping his hands in plain view.
And as I had holstered up, then I handed him off to Mike Meese, who handcuffed.
who handcuffed him, and then we put him back in that deputy's car.
We seized his pentone.
We shipped it down here to Petaluma for our evidence folks to go through it.
We knew we wanted to talk to him, but we didn't want to alert him immediately
or other people in the area immediately that he was being arrested for potentially kidnapping
Pauley Class.
After Davis's arrest, I was actually the first person to interview Davis.
Felt a little bit sick to my stomach.
Butterflies, worrying about doing it right.
I did not want to screw up this case.
I needed to get a story.
No matter what that story is, I need a story before he invokes his Miranda rights.
Davis's story initially is that he had nothing to do with it.
He's arrogant, almost cocky, you know, in his denials of being involved.
In my mind, he's been thinking about this the whole time and coming up with an alibi.
During the interview, Richard Allen Davis made comments that he's killed people like that,
inferring to child molesters and murderers and he's killed people like that in prison.
But we had never talked about anything about possibly sexual assault.
of Polly.
It's like a TV scenario where the witness says something and the police say, hey, how did
you know that?
He was starting to get angry at the time because of our questioning line had changed and
he wasn't feeling as comfortable.
So we got at least a little more interview out of him before he decided that he wasn't
going to talk any longer without an attorney.
Do you remember first hearing about Richard Allen?
They showed me a Polaroid picture, even I, a Polaroid picture of Richard Allen Davis,
and they said, this is the guy, we know it's the guy.
They asked me, do you know him?
And I said, I've never seen this guy.
I don't know who this guy is, and neither of us had ever seen him.
In Petaluma, California, police say they now have a prime suspect in the kidnapping of 12-year-old
Polly Class.
The man who has been arrested for parole violations, who may be connected to the
the poly-class kidnapping is Richard Allen Davis of San Francisco.
He is 39 years.
A lot of print, a lot of news media, the frenzy was national.
Richard Davis is what you would call a career criminal.
Davis's rap sheet for San Mateo County alone dates back 20 years to when he was 19 years old.
I kept telling the cops, it's a repeat offender with a rap sheet this long, and it was.
Richard Allen Davis should have never been out.
Move back.
People in law enforcement who I've discussed this with are stunned to realize that we routinely let people,
these types of revolving door career criminals out long before their time is served.
He was not closely monitored, and so the system's failures were that there were opportunities to take him off the street.
It turns out Davis has had contact with law enforcement twice after Polly's abduction.
There was that encounter with police on Dana Jackson.
and he was arrested for DUI 18 days after Polly went missing.
Richard Allen Davis will be transported down here to be looked at by the two little girls who witnessed Polly's kidnapping.
Kate and Jillian are asked to come in to see if they can pick Davis out of a suspect lineup.
We had a process of making the different suspect read from a script.
Basically some of the stuff that was said to the girls in the bedroom that night.
just so they could hear their voices also.
But neither Kate nor Gillian could positively identify Davis in that lineup.
The girls only saw them for a couple of seconds.
It was a stretch that they would actually pull them out of a lineup two months later.
At the time I was deciding on the charges, I started out first by saying,
can we prove this without Polyclos's body being recovered?
While law enforcement is deciding exactly how to proceed with Richard Allen Davis,
they get a surprising message from the man himself.
The jail said, yeah, Davis wants to talk to you.
And so they put Richard Allen Davis on the phone.
And what he tells them changes the course of this investigation.
She lied? We look at her.
Richard Davis was arrested for an investigation of parole violations.
He's not been charged with kidnapping.
A gentleman down in San Mateo County.
He's reading the paper, big paper.
Davis's palm print discovered in Polly's bedroom.
He goes, I know that guy.
He came to work for me after he got released out of prison about five months ago.
He jumps in his car and he books it up to Mendocino County Jail.
They put him into the glass in, you know, little room, visitor room, they're on a phone.
He pointed to his palm and sort of mouth the words.
Davis gets up and walks away.
Has a jailer, get him on the phone and says, hey, I want to talk to you guys now.
I was going to try and I figured let me get this thing back here and I was in the room outside the interview room where I could watch on a TV screen the actual interview taking place and listening to it to get information and take notes that might help us in locating Polly.
There's one thing about that was on.
And I only had this belfry before it's up.
There's one thing about that interview that to me is so striking.
If you didn't know who was who, if you didn't know,
that's an FBI agent, that's a homicide detective,
and that's the offender.
They were like three friends sitting around the table
discussing this case as though they were all equals.
Do you need some more coffee?
Do you want a cup of coffee?
Back then, people smoked.
Hey, can I get you a cigarette?
So you want them to feel engaged with you.
You want them to feel like an equal
because then they're going to contribute more.
With Davis now comfortable,
investigators get right to the crucial question.
First thing is good first time.
Is she alive?
Just going to go get her?
She's not a lot.
She's not alive.
His story was, he was in Petalim and
is it his mother and he couldn't get a haul
Why don't you tell me what happened that night?
So I was parked downtown, there's some park along some main street.
So I went over at 7-11, got a quart of beer.
Mm-hmm.
Went back, sitting in the park, had my car parked around the corner.
What car should have?
Yeah, depends.
He says he gets a beer.
He smokes a PCP cigarette.
He's kind of got fuzzy after that.
What do you remember about that?
I was just going into the window.
Which window did you go in?
The front window, okay.
There was no forced entry to the front doors, the back doors,
or appearance that anybody had come in or out of any of the windows.
I guess I went in and pulled them all lie down or whatever.
What were they?
They're in the bed, I guess.
There was three going in there, I guess.
Okay.
I sat down with a number of investigators.
of investigators and had kind of a director's cut where we watched the confession tape together
and they said, see that body language, this is what, this is how we interpret that. See how he
suddenly can't remember any detail once he goes into Polly's house. He's trying to distance
himself from the crime. He's trying to get away from the idea it was premeditated.
The next thing I basically remember is driving down a road and I heard in the front seat, cut, turned out
some road.
Davis tells investigators about the moment he got stuck in the ditch at Dana Jaffe's property
on Pythian Road.
She was still alive and everything, you know, trying to figure out what the I'm going to do at
that point.
Yeah, the car got stuck.
I had to get out of a car.
I was sit upon an embankment.
I tried to get the car out.
Couldn't get it out.
The lady came down.
Where was she?
When the lady came down?
She was out sitting up on the event.
Had she been alive on that hillside,
I don't have any doubt she would have made some noise.
I don't have any doubt.
Davis then tells the investigators
that once he left Dana Jaffe's property,
he went to a gas station where he claims
Polly asked to use the bathroom.
I was out of the car and
what?
It's more strangled her.
Or she was coming back to the car
to get back in.
Strangled her?
Yeah.
She used to strangler.
She's cloth.
That's Davis' story of the night.
But investigators say they believe there's far more to it
than what he's admitted to.
What I felt was supported by the evidence
was that Davis had singled up poly class to kidnap her
maybe up to two months beforehand.
And I feel very strongly that he knew
where she lived by the night of the crime.
He stalked her.
He prepared for the kidnapping.
He went into the bedroom.
He specifically wanted the girl that lived there.
And investigators believe there is a very specific reason
he ended up stuck on Dana Jaffe's property.
He finds himself driving, looking for some way
to get around Santa Rosa.
I think maybe he thought Pithion Road was the way
to get around the city and I get caught with a body in the car.
If somebody is being transported in the car
and you don't want that person to be seen,
the floorboard is going to be the spot for.
My theory of the case was he killed there on the side of the hill because she was bound and gagged and all these things have been
untied and found up on the hillside.
After the babysitter went down, he could have went up on the hill, assaulted, Bolly and killed her at that time.
He never confessed to sexually assaulting her.
Did I believe he didn't?
No.
In prison, it's a big difference between
between being a murderer versus someone
that sexually assaulted a little girl
and then murdered her.
In my opinion, he did not want to admit to that.
I know a piece of .
Just telling me to know.
This is hard, though.
I understand that.
And I appreciate you being mad enough
to own up to what happened.
Richard Allen Davis should be spinning
on a spit in hell right now.
That's how I feel about that.
Better get off your chest?
No.
Investigators now had Davis' story.
They just didn't know how much of it was actually true.
And they still didn't have Polly.
My focus then was to get closure for the parents
by finding her body.
So would Davis answer the one question
that everyone wanted to know?
You know where she is, ma'am?
Can you tell me?
Richard Allen Davis is sitting in an interrogation room.
He's admitted to being the person responsible
for Polly Class' abduction and murder.
But to ensure this is going to hold up in court,
investigators know they need to locate Polly's remains.
Can you tell me about where she is?
And outside Cloverdale.
And outside Cloverdale.
Cloverdale is an odd place for something like this.
From Petaloma, it's a straight,
drive up 101.
And so they put our off the roadish.
I'm sure somebody could walk up at Binder.
And I'm probably more than you do to the head.
And so they put him in the car and then they drove to Cloverdale.
Dave Alford, Sergeant Vale Bellow.
The three of us got in the car and headed up north and we met at Cloverdale.
I had mixed feelings.
I don't trust suspects.
I don't trust information until I can verify it.
Can you cover up?
Yeah.
What you cover a piece of white?
When Dave Alfred and I walked out there and found the board and lifted it up and, you
know, there's a body there.
I mean, but it was a vast decomposition.
You got Richard Allen Davis who's sitting there leaning up against a car, smoking a cigarette
like he doesn't have a care in the world.
In the darkness, his lane, Polly-Class,
you have to suppress the rage that kind of builds up in you.
I started to kind of reach for my shoulder holster
and thought I just put him down.
I'll just say he reached for somebody's gun
and we had to shoot him.
And Eddie kind of caught my eye.
I had to put my hand on his that was going for his gun.
What a horrible place for such a beautiful girl
to be put.
You know, I was convinced it was polyclass, so I called down and said, yeah, tell the parents we found polyclass.
It was that moment.
It was, again, Eve and I being called into the police station, and they didn't have to tell us anything, Christ.
We walked in, and there were tears in their eyes, you know?
There were tears in their eyes, and I'll never forget this.
I remember that Eve started crying, the cops were crying, and I didn't cry.
But we said we need to tell our families.
So I made a phone call and I said, you know, it's over.
She's dead.
They're here to announce tonight that Polly Class is dead.
Marjorie Barling was one of the thousands who volunteered in the search for Polly.
Petaluma is an innocent town.
We don't have that innocence anymore.
For the first time in two months we went home and it was there that I was there that I,
I understood and realized and just exploded.
Describe that explosion for me.
I started screaming.
I had to be held down because I probably was on the verge
of trashing my condo.
It was really difficult.
It's just the pain.
It just poured out.
The pain just poured out.
And I was like, thank God.
Our family was with us.
Thank God.
What did you see in your...
husband's eyes in those moments. On the night, Polly went missing. Eve lit a candle and
put it in her window and said it would burn until Polly was found. And then on the
night that her body was discovered, it was extinguished. We were at my birthday party,
on my birthday, and Gillian's aunt said you need to bring Annette to Jillian's house.
The whole way I was saying to my mom, she probably wants to see us,
before she does a news conference.
And then I remember hearing Kate and Jillian crying inside the house.
And I was going around thanking my friends for being out there in the sun, you know, long hours,
just to guard the crime scene.
A friend of mine, he just looked at me.
And before I could say anything, he said, I'm sorry, Eddie.
I'm happy to welcome the world to our parish church, where tonight we continue to remember Polly.
massive turnout. You know, there were people that weren't able to get into the church.
So many people in Petaluma were invested in that whole case.
We sat in the front row, Linda Ronstadt performed.
Somewhere out there was Polly's very favorite song.
Somewhere
Oh,
Beneath.
We were all sitting together, all of Polly's friends,
her family was nearby.
It was just deeply sad.
that we wouldn't be able to make any more memories together.
After the outpouring of grief, this story wasn't over.
Now, the people of Petaluma wanted justice for Polly Class,
and the trial ahead would once again transfix and shock the entire country.
It was my opportunity to look him in the eye and say what I felt and what I believed.
This is the beginning of the end for Richard Allen Davis.
He was 10 feet away from him.
so I took my shot.
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Spring has a way of reintroducing your home to the light.
The day stretch a little longer.
Mornings feel softer.
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You may remember the murder of Polly Class.
The man accused in her death goes on trial next month.
The reason this case took almost three years to get to trial is not unusual in a capital case.
I was amazed by how many people had actually physically had gotten out.
searching for polyclass.
I was convinced there's no way we could get a fair trial in Sonoma County.
They renewed their motion to change venue and I said, I agree.
So the judge said, okay, Santa Clara.
And at the same time, there was another high-profile case heading to trial in California.
This came right on the heels of the OJ Simpson trial.
If it doesn't fit, you must acquit.
It seemed like that everything that could go wrong,
when the case went wrong.
Not guilty of the crime of murder.
The trial was a disaster.
There will be no repeat of the OJ case here.
It just made me work harder.
Most people here in Petaluma say they're glad the trial is finally underway.
What they say they'd like even more is to put all of this behind them for good.
What was it like to watch Richard Allen Davis walk into that courtroom every day?
Well, just being in that close proximity to that monster was kind of unbelievable.
It's the devil that destroys your life.
I mean, that's what he is.
He's a devil that destroyed our life.
We figured out that it would be in Mr. Davis's best interest
not to plead guilty.
In this particular case, there was robbery, burglary, kidnapping,
attempted lewd act on a child with four special circumstances.
The jury had to find one or more of those special circumstances.
true for it to become eligible for the death penalty.
Perhaps the most compelling story today was told by 14-year-old Jillian Pelham.
She and another girl were with Polly for his sleepover the night Davis allegedly
snatched Polly from her home.
Kate and Jillian, they were allowed to have one adult of their choosing go up to the stand
with them, and they both chose Jeannie Boylan.
Jeannie's an incredibly talented and compassionate woman, and there's a lot of
love in Jeannie's heart, and I think she was able to quickly convey that to both of the girls.
It faced long enough to be a part of the trial.
I became extremely close, especially with the girls.
I felt like I wanted to continue to be there in the event they needed me again.
I think they liked her because she believed them.
She was just sort of quiet support.
I just remember sitting on the witness stand with them and having them grip my hand
and getting through that with each of the girls.
After nearly a month and a half of the trial, the case finally went to jury.
They deliberated for more than 20 hours before returning a verdict.
We, the jury, in above-entitled action, find the defendant, Richard Allen Davis, guilty of the felony.
Davis was found guilty, and the jury determined those four special circumstances to be true.
At the end of the guilt phase, he turned towards me, and he looked at me, and he flipped both middle fingers out.
I always thought that was an opportunity for people to see into his soul.
The other incident happened after the penalty phase.
Mr. Davis, do you have any comment you would like to make at this time on the report or the recommendation?
Judge Hastings allowed the killer to make a statement.
I would also like to state for the record that the main reason I know that I did not attempt any lewd act that night was because of a statement the young girl made to me.
me when walking her up the campaign.
Just don't do me like my dad.
I had to pay my dues.
When that happened, my mother, who was sitting one person
over from me, just, I thought you would die.
I really did.
He was 10 feet away from me, so I took my shot.
I got nowhere.
I was completely surrounded.
by bailiffs within a moment.
He made those statements to Mark Glass just to be malicious and hurtful,
to a father who just lost his daughter.
That doesn't tell you he deserved a maximum penalty.
I don't know what does.
It is the order of this court, you shall suffer the death penalty,
said penalty to be inflicted within the walls of the state prison at San Quentin, California.
We found Pauley.
But, and we solved the case.
That's some gratification, not a lot, but some.
What made this case even more difficult
is that it resulted in the passage of the Three Strikes Law.
California enacted a three strikes sentencing law.
It sets mandatory punishments, including 25 years to life
for any three-time felony offender.
This basically says if you commit your third violent felony,
you are going to go to prison without the possibility.
of parole. You get three chances.
There was such a sense of public outrage of how could this person, a repeat offender,
been let out to kidnap Polly.
So that was used to rally support for the three strikes laws and get them passed.
Three strikes was about enhancement.
Criminals were leaving California because they didn't want to be faced with being accountable
for their own activities.
Everyone felt a connection to her.
And over the last three decades,
Those connections have multiplied into something truly extraordinary.
It's a pretty nice legacy.
Eve kept a candle burning in the window until Polly was recovered.
Detective Pat Parks was so moved by the case that he wrote a poem for Polly.
We raised the darkness of the night.
Your face, our only guiding light.
We knew your love by a mother's candle.
by a father's anguish, too tough to handle.
We assured ourselves that faith alone would be enough to bring you home.
When you died, your love by millions multiplied.
As we race the darkness of the night, your face remains our guiding light.
We will run the race and endure each mile.
Encouraged by your enchanting smile.
So that's the case in a few words.
Her body was found out in that field in Cloverdale.
I live here in Snowman County.
I drive by going one place or another.
Every time I do go by, I stop by there.
It's my way to kind of honor that hollow ground.
Every time I go by there, there's a new addition to this area.
A new cross.
A ribbon tied in a tree.
quite often, teddy bears, jewelry spread out, and rocks.
And then people place rocks, and people will paint a message on there,
remembering some other missing child, usually a date,
could be a birth date or a date missing, some notation about that case.
Everyone felt a connection to her.
When I see candles and rocks with things on it,
I appreciate that she touched so many people.
Polly's case changed America. She changed childhood in America, but she also changed how the FBI
investigates crime. So many of the procedures, technologies, protocols for kidnapping that were used and tested and proven in her case are now used today to improve how we not only find missing kids, but investigate crime.
Quite simply, my dream is to save a child. And that the next family that has a family that has a
this kind of tragedy, that it'll have a happy outcome.
I love children, and if anything I can do can help protect them,
then I think Polly'd be real proud of me.
If you were to look back on those 30 years now,
what do you think is the lasting legacy?
I think the legislation,
I think the attention that we brought to the case,
and I think that our very active, proactive, proactive,
work and search and rescue.
I think of the work that we've done,
those are the lasting elements of her legacy.
It's pretty nice legacy.
Well, I think her legacy is strong.
I do.
But still, I mean, you know, I trade it for a hug.
He would trade it all for one more hug.
Richard Allen Davis, the man convicted of murdering Polly Class,
remains on death row at San Quentin State Prison.
In 2019, California's Governor Gavin Newsom issued an executive order declaring a moratorium on all executions in that state.
That is our program for tonight. Thanks for watching.
I'm David Muir and from all of us here at 2020 and ABC News.
Good night.
Thanks for listening to the 2020 True Crime Vault.
We hope you'll join us Friday nights at nine on ABC for all new broadcast episodes.
See you then.
Mr. Sugar, we've run out of places to hide our money.
We could do really bad things together.
On Thursday, May 28.
Crime is on the rise in Philly.
Say hi to your wife from it.
Hulu's hilarious comedy.
We're in the middle of a crisis here.
Deli Boys is back with it all new season.
You care more about the business than you do your own brother.
More money, more problems.
We rebuild Darko on our own.
No help from any man.
I'm a man.
Deli Boys season two.
Streams May 28th on Hulu and Hulu on Disney Plus for bundle subscribers.
Terms apply.
