48 Hours - Death on Safari
Episode Date: April 17, 2022An American woman dies by gunshot on a safari trip. Was it murder or an accident? "48 Hours" contributor Debora Patta reports.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Pr...ivacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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ConstantContact.ca This story begins with an American couple, Dr. Larry Rudolph and his wife, Bianca.
Larry Rudolph is a well-known dentist in the Pittsburgh area.
Larry and Bianca got married after he graduated from dental school,
and they were both avid hunters.
They traveled several times a year internationally.
Lawrence and Bianca Rudolph traveled from the U.S. here to Zambia in 2016, heading to a safari hunting trip.
No one would have imagined Bianca would never make it home and that that journey would end years later with allegations of cover-ups, infidelity, fraud and murder.
On the morning of October 11, 2016, Lawrence Rudolph and his wife, Bianca, were preparing to return to the United States,
and just after 5 o'clock in the morning,
Lawrence was in the bathroom when he heard a shotgun,
and his wife screamed and came out to find her on the floor,
as he says, with a shotgun blast that killed her almost instantly.
Larry Rudolph told police that his wife, Bianca, was packing up,
and she was trying to put the shotgun into the soft shell case.
That's when he said he heard that gunshot.
The Zambian officials did rule that it was an accident.
They said that it appeared that it was an accidental discharge from the weapon.
Once the hunting trip was ended, the weapon should have been rendered safe.
It boggles the mind that two experienced hunters for this to have been an accident.
People trusted him.
I'm Dr. Larry Rudolph.
And they knew of him.
They knew his face.
They knew his commercials.
We'll help you overcome your fears.
If he was in the office, they all felt like they were meeting a celebrity.
You know, the man on TV, the dentist on TV. No sights, no sounds, and no fears. Well, if he was in the office, they all felt like they were meeting a celebrity. You know, the man on TV, the dentist on TV. No sights, no sounds, and no fears. We had people
come to the office and asked about Bianca and asked if she really did pass away, you know,
what happened. And we had to say we didn't know. There was a friend of Bianca who called the FBI
and said that she was suspicious that her friend's accidental
death was not really accidental. Lawrence Rudolph made sure Bianca's body was cremated within three
days. The friend suggested that there were a number of troubling things. Ms. Rudolph was a devout
Catholic and it expressed to her explicitly that she would never consider being cremated.
There were some certain things that just did not seem to add up.
A well-known local dentist is in jail in Colorado tonight.
FBI agents believe their investigation will prove he killed his wife while on vacation.
This case is about whether Lawrence Rudolph killed his wife with a shotgun,
or did his wife accidentally shoot herself
while packing the shotgun to leave?
Why did he want to kill his wife?
There's a financial motive.
We're talking about almost $5 million
in life insurance proceeds,
and he's had a long-term, apparently, affair
with the manager of his office.
Was it an accident, or did he do this?
Nobody knows what happened truly to Bianca,
but Dr. Rudolph. Thank you. The The The The The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The The Nearly two weeks after Bianca Rudolph's death, while on a hunting trip in Zambia,
family and friends in Arizona gathered to remember her at her funeral.
But at husband Larry Rudolph's Pennsylvania dental practice, there was a hush in the air.
Larry never talked about Bianca's death ever.
He was saying to everyone not to
talk about it and it made it sort of suspicious. Sherry Hauck worked as a dental assistant in Dr.
Rudolph's Three Rivers Dental Group for nearly eight years. The lucrative practice with five
offices in the Pittsburgh area specializes in sedation dentistry,
providing anesthesia for fearful patients.
I liked everything about how we treated our patients.
I really believed in everything we did and how he did it.
After years building his successful practice,
Dr. Rudolph, says Sherry, was now spending limited time in the office.
He and Bianca had lived in homes in both Pittsburgh and Arizona.
The couple had met while Larry was in dental school and Bianca was at the University of Pittsburgh.
Larry and Bianca got married in the early 80s, shortly after she graduated from college.
Megan Schiller is a reporter at Pittsburgh's CBS television station, KDKA.
They proceeded to have two kids. They had Julian, who was their son, who's now an attorney in
Florida. And they had a daughter, Anna, who is now following in her father's footsteps.
Anna, a friend of Sherry's, is also a dentist at the practice. Anna described her mom
as like an angel. She loved her mom. People that knew Bianca Rudolph described her as a very kind,
caring person. Sherry never met Bianca and there may have been a reason why. She says
Larry was having an affair with the woman who managed the offices, Laurie Millar.
Larry and Laurie's affair just seemed like it was just very open.
As far as I know, it was probably going on for 20 years.
It was just uncomfortable and you just didn't talk about it.
In the office, Sherry saw different sides of Larry.
In the office, Sherry saw different sides of Larry.
Larry could be very nice and he could change attitude within a matter of minutes.
That erratic behaviour, Sherry says, was one of the reasons she left her job. He could throw tempers and we'd sort of just call it like he was going Rudolph.
and we'd sort of just call it like he was going Rudolph.
Something Larry did enjoy talking about in the office and took pride in was his hobby, big game hunting.
Larry Rudolph and Bianca riddled for avid hunters.
That was a huge part of their life.
They were both like very well known for it.
Hi, my name is Dr. Larry Rudolph,
and it's my privilege to be serving as your president of Safari Club International.
Rudolph served for several years as the president of Safari Club International,
a group that promotes hunting.
We are first for hunters, period.
First for hunters!
He traveled the world recording messages for members.
I'm here on the banks of the Kufuri River in Zambia.
I've been doing some lion hunting and just having a great adventure.
His term, though, would be tainted by claims he damaged the club's reputation
through alleged misconduct, including supposed adultery.
Larry denied the claims and sued for defamation.
The case was ultimately settled, but Larry was ousted as a club member.
But his passion for hunting endured.
And in 2016, he and Bianca headed to a favorite location, Kafue National Park in Zambia.
Kafue National Park is considered a big game paradise, the oldest and the most prestigious national park in that area of southern Africa.
Just to put it in scale, it's the size of New Jersey.
size of New Jersey. The park has one section that is a protected wildlife sanctuary and an adjacent area referred to as game management that allows hunting. On the trip, the Rudolphs stayed in this
two-room cabin consisting of a bedroom and a bathroom. Bianca wants to finally hunt a leopard.
to finally hunt a leopard.
She'd been trying for years to hunt a leopard.
The trip lasted about 10 days,
a time that was happy, according to Spencer Kakoma,
the local game scout accompanying the couple.
They were laughing at each other,
kissing each other, hugging each other.
Did you think they were a happily married couple?
I was even admiring that because I'm also married.
And did you see any tension
between Larry and Bianca Rudolph?
No, I didn't see any
tension. Bianca never did
shoot a leopard and on the final
day of the safari, before the
Rudolphs went to their cabin,
Spencer says as is daily protocol,
the guns were emptied of all ammunition.
And you saw Bianca Rudolph cleaning her gun of live ammunition?
I saw Bianca Rudolph doing that.
It was clean, there was no ammunition which was there.
You saw it with your own eyes?
Yes.
It was the end of the Rudolph Zambian hunting trip.
They were supposedly packing up and getting ready to fly home.
But then Bianca Rudolph suffered a fatal gunshot wound.
Spencer was working about 30 yards away when he heard the gunshot and ran to the cabin,
finding 56-year-old Bianca Rudolph dead on the floor, shot in the heart.
The weapon was a 12-gauge shotgun similar to this.
Spencer says the gun, partially in a soft-sided case,
was next to her.
And Larry Rudolph seemed inconsolable, sobbing.
It's a crime, a crime.
Let me just kill myself because my wife,
she has committed suicide.
She has killed herself.
I want to kill myself also.
Spencer says Larry first claimed Bianca died by suicide,
shooting herself intentionally while he was in the bathroom.
And he says Larry was so distraught
that he ran to a nearby river,
saying he wanted to jump in and kill himself.
Spencer says he calmed Larry down
and they went back to the cabin.
But now Larry had a different version of events.
It was no longer a suicide, but that Bianca accidentally shot herself packing up the gun.
Were you surprised that a shot had gone off?
Yeah, that's one of the things which made me suspect.
I saw Bianca Rudolph removing the ammunition from the organs.
So how do you think ammunition got into the shotgun?
I think there must be just someone who loaded it.
Somebody loaded that gun?
Yes.
Things were not adding up for Spencer.
He and Larry Rudolph went to the local police station.
Spencer, he and Larry Rudolph went to the local police station.
Rudolph was interviewed for about 30 minutes by now-retired police commander Rostan Yeyinga,
and Larry told him Bianca accidentally shot herself while packing the gun.
They had a gunshot and they screamed.
We said he rushed to the bedroom
and then he found the wife lying down in the poor blood.
Did you believe him?
I believed him because I wasn't there.
I wasn't there.
Commander Yeyinga sent his investigators to the scene,
who told him it matched Dr. Rudolph's description of events.
to the scene who told him it matched Dr. Rudolph's description of events.
They believe the shotgun found approximately three feet from Bianca's body was discharged while inside its case
and reported that Dr. Rudolph had tried to resuscitate his wife.
It was decided that this was an accident.
Yes, this is the report that we received.
The police report, dated two days after Bianca's
death, concluded Dr. Lawrence Rudolph rushed to the bedroom only to find his wife lying on the
floor bleeding. The findings further suggested the firearm was loaded from the previous hunting
activities, causing the firearm to accidentally fire. This is, to me, a little bit astounding that they would have made that conclusive, declarative statement
that this was absolutely an accident so soon after Ms. Rudolph died.
What do you think of the decision by police in Zambia to rule Bianca Rudolph's death accidental?
Chat now with the 48 Hours team on Facebook and Twitter. California desert to a remote base near Joshua Tree National Park. They have to alert the military. And when they do, the NCIS gets involved.
From CBS Studios and CBS News, this is 48 Hours NCIS.
Listen to 48 Hours NCIS ad-free starting October 29th on Amazon Music.
As a kid growing up in Chicago, there was one horror movie I was too scared to watch.
It was called Candyman.
But did you know that the movie Candyman was partly inspired by an actual murder? Listen to Candyman, the true story behind the bathroom mirror murder, wherever you get your podcasts.
Bianca Rudolph's death in Zambia was devastating for her daughter Anna.
Anna always said Bianca was like the best mom and just did everything,
was like a very good person and was very wholesome and kind.
Dental assistant Sherry Hauck says Larry Rudolph didn't tell Anna or her brother Julian
about their mother's passing for nearly a week.
Anna had troubling questions about what had happened.
She had no idea whether her mom got shot in the face or the chest or anywhere.
She just would say, I want to know what happened to my mom.
And at the Kafue National Park, there were doubts too.
From the moment the gunshot rang out early that October morning. It's a loud boom.
David Katz is a ballistics expert and former special agent at the Drug Enforcement Agency.
We asked him to review documents in this case.
He says the blast from the Rudolph's 12-gauge shotgun would have been ferocious.
Bianca Rudolph screamed after the gunshot.
GameScout's Spencer Kakoma instantly knew that sound meant trouble.
She didn't scream help. She screamed, ah!
Then that's how we rushed there.
Within 15 seconds, we reached there.
She was dead already.
From the beginning, Spencer said he had questions
about Larry's version of events,
including when Larry told him he was in the bath
when he heard the gunshot
and raced out to find Bianca dead.
But when you saw him, he was fully dressed.
With shoes. It confused me.
15 seconds to be fully clothed with shoes is pretty quick.
Exactly.
But local police say Larry told them he was wrapped in a towel when Spencer arrived.
Kafue National Park investigator Masua Musese also had questions
about what he saw in the couple's cabin.
He says he observed the wound on Bianca's chest, the gun nearby,
and wondered how she could have accidentally shot herself in the heart
while handling the long-barreled weapon.
What did you think? What was your theory?
To me, I suspected that there should be a foul play
because the way the firearm was lying,
the way the deceased was lying,
the way the bullet went through,
because to me, to say that she shot herself, I doubt it.
So, Mr Musese, did you ever voice your suspicions
of foul play to the Zambian police?
I voiced my
suspicion to the police.
And what did they say
in response? In response,
the Zambian police told me that
the police will really investigate
at the bottom of the issue.
But did they?
They didn't.
Within days, says reporter Megan Schiller,
local officials allowed Bianca's remains to be cremated in Zambia.
Even the paper over there reported what had happened as an accidental shooting.
And the comments on social media were people saying that it seems suspicious to them.
One reader suggested, this doesn't sound right. Something fishy here?
And it was suspicious to one of Bianca's friends.
Certain Bianca was opposed to cremation for religious reasons,
the friend made a call about two weeks later and set a chain of events in motion.
There was one point when this case became an active international investigation,
and that is when Bianca's friend called the attaché of the FBI in South Africa
and said that she suspected foul play.
Mary Fulginiti is a former federal prosecutor and CBS News consultant.
She says Bianca's friend told the FBI about Larry's affair,
said Larry had been verbally abusive to Bianca
and reported that Larry and Bianca had fights about money.
She opened a Pandora's box as to why Lawrence would want to kill his wife.
Even the consulate chief at the U.S. Embassy in Zambia had suspicions.
He spoke on the phone with Larry Rudolph just hours after Bianca's death.
The consular chief had a bad feeling, he said, because Lawrence quickly turned it to cremation and getting out of the country, which he thought was highly suspect.
The consular chief was a former Marine with decades of experience with weapons.
was a former Marine with decades of experience with weapons. Unbeknownst to Larry, he decided to inspect Bianca's body before it was cremated. He measured the shotgun wound and took photos.
The consular chief said, based on looking at Bianca's body, he didn't think there was any way
that she could have done this to herself, that she could have been leaning on the shotgun. He
said it looked like someone was holding the shotgun several feet away and fired it at her. The consular chief turned his photos
and notes over to the FBI. An inquiry into Bianca's death was underway. Retired FBI supervisory
special agent and CBS News consultant James Galeano, says international investigations take time.
This case is being investigated outside of the United States.
It presents a ton of different problems that you have to deal with.
Back home, life went on for Larry.
The FBI kept working the case both in the U.S. and in Zambia,
and investigators eventually made their way back
to Game Scout Spencer Kakoma.
So five years later, you heard from the FBI?
Yes, that's when they caught me.
Were you surprised?
Yes, I was surprised.
Over the course of five years,
FBI investigators interviewed numerous people,
reviewed documents, photos, and conducted forensic tests,
eventually filing a complaint, listing evidence of possible foul play in Bianca Rudolph's death.
The complaint lays out a neat roadmap of a lot of circumstantial evidence
that points in the direction of Lawrence Rudolph as the murder of his wife, Bianca.
Zambia's Kafue National Park.
Vast.
Stunning.
Serene.
But retired police commander Rostan Yeyenga will never forget the day back in 2016
when that gunshot rang out from this cabin,
killing Bianca Rudolph.
When your officers went to the scene, what did they see?
Yeah, what they told me was that they found a dead body line facing upwards.
And years later, he still recalls his conversation with Dr. Rudolph.
He seemed to be sorrowful, you know?
He was very sorrowful?
Yeah.
You know, when you lose your beloved one, you can't be in that mood. He was very sorrowful?
Yeyenga says the initial investigation was not rushed and says at the time no one told him
they suspected Larry had anything to do with his wife's death.
What was the most powerful thing that he said to you that convinced you this man is innocent?
To say he's innocent.
That was his story.
You're so easily convinced.
I just have to tell you a story and you believe me.
It's coming from your mouth.
I can believe you. Whatever story you tell
me, I can believe it. But could an experienced hunter like Bianca accidentally shoot herself
in the heart while placing a long-barreled shotgun into a gun case? For the shooters out
in the audience, everyone's going to understand immediately, there's a visceral feeling. No,
don't do it. Ballistics expert David Katz says if that happened, Bianca would have been pointing the muzzle at
herself, ignoring safety protocol. Whether the gun is loaded or unloaded, if you know your way
around guns, you would never under any circumstances point that weapon towards you or another human
being. Katz often works with firearms at the company he owns, Global Security Group.
At our request, he reviewed the initial FBI complaint. The complaint, in fairness to Larry
Rudolph, it's just the government's version of events. It's a one-sided document. So I want to
be completely fair to Larry Rudolph. In the complaint, the FBI interviewed a Zambian ballistics expert
who performed what's called
a drop test
to determine if the gun
could have accidentally misfired
if Bianca dropped it on the ground.
The question is,
if you slam the weapon hard enough,
if you drop it,
if you bang it on the ground,
will that weapon discharge?
The Zambian ballistics expert
repeatedly dropped the
Rudolph's gun, most likely loaded with a dummy round about four and a half feet onto cement,
and reported the gun did not misfire. The complaint lists some of the other FBI findings,
including the results of a series of tests using a 12-gauge shotgun of the same make and model as the gun that killed Bianca,
and a soft-sided gun case like the Rudolphs.
They did gun tests. They did a study with people who were about the same height as Bianca and had similar arm lengths.
The FBI performed a reach study, which Katz says would determine if Bianca could have reached the trigger
while packing the shotgun into a gun bag. 15 women who were near Bianca's height were tested.
None was able to reach the trigger of the shotgun while zipping the case. This is not a live weapon.
We asked Katz to demonstrate how the test might have been done with the help of this woman who is five
feet four and a half inches Bianca was five feet four inches I'm gonna measure your arm FBI
analysts used a photo of Bianca to measure her arm length they estimated Bianca's longest possible
right arm length at 28.75 inches 29 inches So your reach is slightly longer than the maximum reach as
estimated by the FBI. The gun used in this demonstration is not the same make and model
as the Rudolph's gun. It is not a weapon. It just looks like one. It's a prop gun,
non-functional and not capable of holding a bullet. According to the FBI, the model of gun the Rudolphs had
was approximately 31.1875 inches from trigger to muzzle.
We attached a wooden dowel to the barrel of the prop gun
to make it match that length.
So I'm going to take this weapon, I'm going to point it at your chest
right where the wound on the victim was placed.
The idea is that somehow the weapon could be discharged accidentally as if it was being
pushed into a gun case. So let's bend over. Keep going. Keep going. If you can touch the ground
even with it. Now try to stretch out and touch the trigger. You're not on the trigger, you're close to the trigger.
Okay.
Next, Katz added a gun case similar to the one the Rudolphs owned.
All right, let's say you were zipping.
Can you reach your hand in and touch the trigger?
The woman in our demonstration was able to reach the trigger.
Just about, just about.
Yeah.
I guess what I'm left with is this conclusion.
Possible. Unlikely, but with sufficient leaning forward.
But that would then suggest, without any doubt, a contact shot.
A contact shot is a gunshot wound occurring when the muzzle of the gun
is in direct contact with the body at the moment the gun fires.
This is a 12-gauge shotgun shell. It contains pellets of double-aught buckshot.
In a contact shot, there is no time for the pellets to spread. Instead, they go straight
into the tissue in one tight group, the same diameter as the gun barrel.
With contact shot, you're going to get this. Further away, you're going to get this. Further away, you're going to get this.
Further away, you're going to get this.
Katz says those photos of Bianca's body
taken by the consular chief in Zambia
may rule out death by a contact shot.
The most critically important issue in this case
is how far from her body was the muzzle of that shotgun
when the rounds were fired.
When the consular chief took
those photos, he also measured Bianca's shotgun wound and noted the pellets covered approximately
six centimeters in diameter, roughly two and a half inches. That pattern would be impossible
if the muzzle had been pressed against the victim's body. So from what distance would a weapon have to be fired to cause a two
and a half inch wound? We asked Katz to use this real shotgun to show us how rounds fired from
different distances can make different sized wounds. We didn't have access to key information
about Rudolph's gun, but the long barrel of this gun measures the same distance from trigger to muzzle,
approximately 31.1875 inches. Cats fired into a block made of ballistic gelatin
designed to simulate the effects of bullet wounds in human tissue.
Fire!
human tissue. When I fired the last round that was from 10 feet, there are discernible pellet wounds here, here, here. This is why the consular chief was suspicious when he saw the wound,
because he saw a wound that was more like this.
FBI investigators also compared shot patterns
created by firing from various distances
and estimated that Bianca's wound
depicted in the photographs was
created by a shot from a distance
of between two and three and one half feet.
The complaint's conclusion,
Bianca Rudolph was not killed
by an accidental discharge.
And it wasn't just ballistics catching the attention of the FBI.
This is a case that's going to be made on the totality of the circumstances.
Do you think it was physically possible for Bianca Rudolph to shoot herself?
Chat now with the 48 Hours team on Facebook and Twitter.
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Anna always said how she wished she had more time with her mum.
Sherry Halk says Bianca's death continues to haunt the Rudolph's daughter, Anna.
She was devastated that she couldn't even say goodbye to her.
It appears Larry Rudolph wasted no time setting up house
with his longtime rumored girlfriend, Laurie Milliron, in Paradise Valley.
Within weeks, she had moved into their home in Arizona.
Rudolph's business continued to thrive.
No sights, no sounds, and no fears, only at Three Rivers Dental.
He and Laurie split their time between Pittsburgh, Arizona, and a vacation home in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.
After a while, I thought, well, if it wasn't an accident, wouldn't he have been arrested by now?
Nothing's really happened.
But in December 2021, more than five years after Bianca's death, Rudolph's new life with Laurie was about to change.
And that FBI complaint would turn out to be the key.
The federal prosecutors and the FBI agents had decided that they had enough information to essentially charge Larry with crimes.
Laurie Millaren's attorney, John Dill, says the pair was at the Cabo home.
They were going down there for vacation and having a return flight.
He wasn't fleeing or disappearing or anything like that.
But their holiday came to a sudden and surprising end when local authorities arrested Rudolph.
Laurie's reaction when he was arrested, obviously she was shocked.
Lori's reaction when he was arrested, obviously she was shocked.
Mexican police executed a warrant for Lawrence Rudolph's arrest for the foreign murder of Bianca Rudolph and for mail fraud
relating to Rudolph collecting Bianca's life insurance.
The FBI said the insurance never should have been paid
because it believed Rudolph murdered Bianca.
Larry Rudolph was the beneficiary
and he was the recipient of nearly $5 million of insurance money.
Those millions were spread out over nine separate policies.
One of the insurance companies where Larry mailed a claim
is located in Colorado.
So that's where the case will be tried.
Bianca died on October 11th and the first claim was submitted on October 31st.
I'm not sure if there's a time period when there's an accidental death
that somebody's supposed to wait so it doesn't look wrong.
In a court filing, the defense claims there was no financial motive for the alleged crime, asserting that Rudolph's dental practice alone was worth $8 million.
What's more, Dill says, the fact that all nine policies were paid proves Bianca's death was, as Rudolph described, and Zambian officials ruled, an accident.
You'll see insurance companies went through a full investigation,
including going to Africa.
But Mary Fulginiti says not so fast.
For one thing, the FBI's resources would have allowed
for a much more thorough investigation into Bianca's cause of death.
They just have access to more things.
They have ballistic experts,
access to the counselor chief and other witnesses in Africa
that I'm not sure the insurance firm had access to, to talk to.
Within days of his arrest, Rudolph was extradited to Denver.
A grand jury was convened there to hear evidence about his case.
Everyone in Pittsburgh was talking about how this dentist,
who was a well-known, respected dentist, could possibly be accused by the FBI.
Sherry says word of Rudolph's arrest hit Anna hard.
She was just devastated.
I called to check on her and she would not talk about her dad being arrested.
She just talked to me about anything but that.
Lori Milliron followed Rudolph to Denver.
She was about to become involved in the case as well
by way of a subpoena.
She was called to go before the grand jury
and she was in town for his bond hearing
and went and testified.
About two weeks after Rudolph's arrest in Mexico, that grand jury handed down
their indictment. FBI agents believe their investigation will prove he killed his wife
while on vacation before allegedly collecting millions in insurance money. It seems that the
multi-million dollar windfall of insurance money Rudolph received wasn't the only motive the FBI believes was behind
Bianca's murder. In the complaint, it says Laurie Miller had given Rudolph an ultimatum.
You have one year to get rid of the practice and leave your wife.
Dill says there was no ultimatum. That allegation came from a disgruntled employee
according to a defense motion.
All we can say is that's not what the evidence is going to be.
As for the speed of Bianca's cremation,
Rudolph's attorney says that's no attempt at a cover-up,
that both he and Bianca had expressed their final wishes.
The defense is going to argue, well, they have a will,
and in the will, it was the directive of both parties to be cremated.
Murders on foreign soil are difficult to prove,
and the length of investigation might actually be a liability.
What the defense is going to do is try to make it look like
this case, which is five-plus years old,
has stale testimony,
stale witnesses, stale everything. But it turns out that years after Bianca Rudolph died,
there would be something new after all. Another arrest that no one saw coming.
that no one saw coming.
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The truth about the death of Bianca Rudolph,
wife and mother,
has remained as elusive as the Zambian leopard she hunted.
Her husband stood charged with murder and mail fraud.
Then, come February 2022, this case would grow even more complex when Laurie Milliron was charged.
As if the story couldn't get any stranger, now we know that his alleged longtime girlfriend, Lori Milliron, is now facing federal charges.
Seven federal counts alleging she provided false and misleading testimony to a grand jury sitting in the District of Colorado. Just over a month after that testimony,
Laurie Milliron was arrested. She's accused of lying about her relationship with Larry.
She's accused of lying about what Larry said in the days and months following Bianca's sudden
death. I think she was shocked. She did not expect this to happen.
A 64-year-old woman,
she faces as much as 30 years in prison for those charges.
But her attorney, John Dill, emphasizes...
There's no allegations by the government
that she was somehow involved or had anything to do
with what happened to Bianca Rudolph in 2016.
Dill says that the speculation and the charges against his client are all false.
The truth is, Laurie Milliron is not a criminal.
She didn't perjure herself, didn't lie to the grand jury.
But former prosecutor Mary Fulginiti says there may be another reason the government
filed those seven counts against Laurie Millar.
They might have also charged her because they would like to put some pressure on her to cooperate.
Pressuring Rudolph's longtime girlfriend to be the star witness against him.
Well, if I was the prosecutor in this case, I would absolutely be hoping that she was going to come forward and possibly cooperate against him. Well, if I was the prosecutor in this case, I would absolutely be hoping that she was going to come forward
and possibly cooperate against him.
And she's the one witness that could possibly do him in.
Hi, I'm Dr. Larry Rudolph,
president of Safari Club International.
For now, from home detention in Arizona,
Laurie Millar is still connected with Rudolph,
running his multi-million dollar
dentistry practice, but forbidden to contact him. Still attempting to work, yeah, from where she is.
It's a lot more difficult, obviously. The government plans to try them together in the
same courtroom, an outcome their lawyers fought against and lost. The two on trial together, a powerful image
that could impact Laurie Millaren. Laurie Millaren does not want to be sitting next to
Lawrence Rudolph for trial because he's charged with murder and she wants nothing to do with that
and she doesn't want any of that prejudice to spill over to her, which will ultimately say,
oh, well, she was a part of it. I mean, she's the lover. And in this pre-trial affidavit filed
by Rudolph's attorneys and signed by Laurie, she wrote that, Larry and I were romantically involved
and Mrs. Bianca Rudolph was aware of that. The suggestion, the affair was an open secret,
not a motive for murder, but the prosecution may soon test the loyalties of Laurie Millaren and Larry Rudolph.
And see if they stay aligned or if at the end of the day she does ultimately cooperate.
Our defense is basically that what their government is saying,
not only can't they prove it, that's not the facts.
Over the years and across an ocean, facts have been hard to come by in this case.
Retired FBI Special Agent James Galliano knows time can be a prosecution's toughest challenge.
Memories get rusty and cloudy. Documents get lost or destroyed.
With every day that passes, it gets more and more difficult
to close a loop here, get the evidence you need,
and make a conviction.
There's a lot of hurdles that have to be overcome here,
so it's by no means an easy prosecution.
7,000 miles and a world away,
Bianca Rudolph's death has impacted those who barely knew her.
Former police commander Rostan Yeyenga
still thinks it was all a terrible accident.
There will be no evidence connecting to the murder.
There will be no evidence connecting Dr Rudolph to the murder?
I don't think so.
From the experience that i had no
but one time scout spencer kakoma was so shaken by this experience that he quit his job
he believes that in his beautiful country as bianca rudolph, she became the prey. Yes, I'm just happy with the American investigation.
She wanted to escape, but they have managed to corner her.
Larry Rudolph and his legal team declined to speak with 48 Hours at this time.
His lawyers provided the following statement.
Dr. Rudolph is innocent.
The Zambian authorities who were there and investigated said so.
The insurance companies who paid the claim after they investigated said so.
Strangely, five years later, the feds brought charges without any real evidence,
no eyewitnesses, no forensics, no anything,
except for some speculation sprinkled into a chasm of conjecture.
Anna and Julian have lost their mother.
Sources tell us they have expressed support for their father.
And now, what really happened in the country Bianca Rudolph cherished will be decided in a Colorado courtroom.
An aspiring filmmaker fascinated by Dexter. I think he got ideas from the show. Was this
just his screenplay? He had a table set up for his victims similar to which Dexter. I think he got ideas from the show. Was this just his screenplay?
He had a table set up for his victims,
similar to what Dexter uses.
Or his own murder confession.
It's like you're watching the movies,
but now happening in real life.
48 Hours, Saturday on CBS.
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