Diagnosis Murder Season 4 Episode 14 A History Of Murder
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00:00challenges, facing new responsibilities, not to mention the occasional full diaper.
00:05What is his mouth for a kind?
00:07In that spurt of growth, we come here today to begin work on a new addition to community
00:12research, named after our most celebrated alumnus, Dr. Raymond Huxley.
00:21Here today, this is Simon David.
00:25I'm trying to make him a quirk service.
00:27You're pretty happy about this, Mark.
00:31Delbury Huxley and I have been friends for a long time.
00:34And now joining Dr. Huxley is his daughter, Christine.
00:37Oh, I'm delighted.
00:38I wish you were to win a bet like this, trying to impress somebody.
00:43Of course, we wouldn't be here today without the efforts of our board of directors, amply
00:47represented by its senior member, Emmanuel Tubbs.
00:50Not to mention the generous funds provided by the Raymond Huxley Foundation for Cardiac Research,
01:00headed by our dear friend, the lovely Jane Ellington.
01:04You know, it's at times like these that our thoughts go back to times long past.
01:14I remember a story.
01:18I think we should save that story for another time.
01:21Okay, ladies and gentlemen, prepare yourself to be inevitable.
01:30Get it here, Norman!
01:32One, two, three!
01:35So that's what happened to Greg no longer.
01:58Thank you for the attention of Greg no longer.
02:15I'm the one.
02:16I'm the one.
02:17I'm the one.
02:20I'm the one.
02:23I'm the one.
02:24I'm the one.
02:57Good morning, Dr. Sloan.
03:07Good morning.
03:20Good morning, Dr. Sloan.
03:22Dr. Sloan, could you just call me Mark?
03:25I'm still getting used with that Dr. Martin.
03:27Sure.
03:28Dr. Nordhoff is looking for you.
03:30He is?
03:31Did he say why?
03:32Only that you could find him in the cardiology lab.
03:36I think he has good news.
03:37Thanks.
03:40Sorry.
03:42Excuse me.
03:43Oh, my fault.
03:49Whoa.
03:51Moving.
03:52Uh, Dr. Groudoff, you wanted to see me?
04:08Well, Sloan.
04:09You know my scrub nurse, Jane Ellington?
04:13Oh, sure.
04:14Hi, Jane.
04:15I want to take the voice to Dr. Huxley.
04:19I've used your application to join the cardiac surgical unit.
04:26Your credentials are impressive.
04:28Thanks.
04:29So what makes you want to join our team?
04:32Well, I guess I'm excited about the challenge.
04:35Except for Christian Barnard and South Africa, no one's doing the kind of work you're doing.
04:42Heart transplants, pacemaker installation, bypass surgery.
04:48It's tricky stuff.
04:51Requires careful and precise work.
04:54How are your hands?
04:57I don't know.
04:58Here, what do you think?
05:05Well, it doesn't seem to have to stop.
05:11Dad?
05:12Hmm?
05:13You okay?
05:14Yeah.
05:15Hold on.
05:16You know I almost became a heart surgeon?
05:19So what stopped you?
05:20The man I worked for disappeared.
05:22Did I get any sounds?
05:24Hold up a D-Wing?
05:26Uh, Dr. Gregory Nordoff?
05:28Right.
05:29It was right after I took up visitors here at the Community General.
05:32I was trying to decide between cardiac surgery and internal medicine for my specialty.
05:38Nordoff was a heart surgeon.
05:40Yeah.
05:41Oh, I wanted to be just like him.
05:44But after he disappeared, particularly in a way he disappeared, I kind of lost my interest in cardiac surgery.
05:50On the phone, a man who said there was evidence that Nordoff might have been murdered.
05:54That's right.
05:55How am I supposed to investigate a murder that took place over 30 years ago?
06:00Well, tell me about Nordoff.
06:02Who else was close to a mother than you?
06:05Greg Nordoff was a brilliant surgeon, but he wasn't that close to that many people.
06:10Ray Huxley there was his cardiac assistant.
06:14And Jane Ellington, who's now head of the Huxley Foundation.
06:17She was his nurse and assistant.
06:20What about people who know who might still be around?
06:23Manuel Tubbs.
06:24He's now senior member of the hospital board.
06:27He was this hospital's first bookkeeper.
06:30The police think it was Tubbs' accusation that caused Nordoff to disappear.
06:34What accusations?
06:36Tubbs claimed that Nordoff stole $50,000 in hospital funds.
06:40And actually, the money was from a research fund that Nordoff controlled.
06:44The DA decided that Nordoff took off due to avoid being prosecuted for measurement,
06:50and nearly everybody else agreed.
06:52I agreed.
06:54But you didn't.
06:55Well, I wasn't sure.
06:57So why didn't you investigate?
06:59Well, I wish I had.
07:01But it was a bad, bad time.
07:04Reg Nordoff disappeared on the worst day that I have ever, ever lived through.
07:11The wounds for President Kennedy...
07:14I just found out all scheduled third weeks were canceled this morning because of construction problems.
07:19Does that mean...
07:20President Kennedy has been shot for drawing a would-be assassin in Dallas, Texas.
07:27Stay tuned to CBS News for a further detail.
07:32From Dallas, Texas, the flash, apparently official,
07:35President Kennedy died at 1 p.m.
07:40That's over.
07:41That's right.
07:42Some 38 minutes ago.
07:44Vice President Johnson has left the hospital.
07:47Henry, have you heard?
07:49I don't know where he has received it.
07:52What?
07:53It's President Kennedy.
07:55He's dead.
07:56After the assassination, I couldn't think about anything else for weeks.
08:01By the time he did think about it, Nordoff's case was closed.
08:06Never did feel right about it.
08:08Sounds like he had good reason.
08:11It's impossible to be absolutely certain given the condition of the corpse.
08:16And as you can see, there is no corpse.
08:18But judging by the double fracture in the right rear hemisphere of the skull, I'd say he was killed from two blows by a heavy blood object.
08:30Anything that might help us identify the killer?
08:33Anything like blood stains or hair samples?
08:36Sorry.
08:37After more than 30 years, nothing would have remained from Nordoff Warren's attacker.
08:41Where'd you find this?
08:43Right at the bottom of the plastic bag.
08:45It says, hold the earpiece from the hearing aid.
08:47Pretty big.
08:48It's a pretty silicone chip.
08:50Was there a separate battery pack and microphone?
08:53Not that I found.
08:54But the question is, did it belong to the victim or his killer?
08:59Did Nordoff have a hearing problem?
09:02I don't remember seeing him wearing a hearing aid, although he might have worn one or taken himself in public.
09:07He was pretty vain.
09:08You know, we could get Chester to track down his family or his physician.
09:11They would know.
09:12They need to be notified anyway.
09:14You know, there's someone else who might know.
09:16His old scrub nurse, Jane Ellington.
09:21He was a long time ago.
09:24There's no need to fall apart.
09:27But we were still wrong about it.
09:30We would see so.
09:36Would you mind?
09:37I have a board meeting.
09:39I have to go.
09:43Maybe you should give us something.
09:48I think we need a friend, man.
09:49Maybe.
09:50I knew that way quite shocked.
09:51All these years.
09:54I thought he'd betrayed us.
09:57But we betrayed him.
09:58I betrayed him.
09:59I betrayed him.
10:00Oh, mother.
10:02Oh, mother.
10:03Oh, mother.
10:04Uh, Dr. Nardoff, you wanted to see me?
10:05Hello, Sloan.
10:06Hello, Sloan.
10:07You're my scrub nurse, Jane Ellington.
10:08Oh, sure.
10:09Hi, Jane.
10:10Hi, Jane.
10:11Um, I'll give you a support for Dr. Huxley.
10:12You loved him.
10:13I don't know why I didn't realize that.
10:14But we betrayed him.
10:15We betrayed him.
10:16I betrayed him.
10:17Oh, mother.
10:18Oh, mother.
10:19Uh, Dr. Nardoff, you wanted to see me?
10:21Hello, Sloan.
10:22You're my scrub nurse, Jane Ellington.
10:23Oh, sure.
10:24Hi, Jane.
10:25Um, I'll give you a support for Dr. Huxley.
10:26You loved him.
10:27I don't know why I didn't realize that until just this moment.
10:30And he loved me.
10:32But we were careful to keep it secret.
10:35Greg was married, and I was ashamed.
10:38And I loved him.
10:40And I loved him.
10:42And I loved him.
10:44And I loved him.
10:45I loved him.
10:46And I loved him.
10:47And I loved him.
10:48And I loved him.
10:49And I loved him.
10:50And I loved him.
10:51And I loved him.
10:52And I loved him.
10:53And I loved him.
10:54And I loved him.
10:55And I loved him.
10:56And I loved him.
10:57And I loved him.
10:58And I loved him.
10:59But when he disappeared, without a word, and all that money was gone...
11:02You thought he left you?
11:03No.
11:05For more than 30 years, I hated him.
11:08Well, a lot of people turned on him when he disappeared.
11:13But I knew him, Mark.
11:15I should've defended him.
11:18I had to fix that straight.
11:20Excuse me.
11:21Wait. Excuse me. Can you see Dad for a minute?
11:25What's up?
11:25He won't let me examine him, but I don't like his color.
11:29All this has hit him pretty hard.
11:31Where is he?
11:32He's in exam room four. He says you're the only doctor he trusts.
11:36I've been a cardiac surgeon for five years,
11:37and he still treats me like I've just stopped playing with my Barbies.
11:41Should I be okay?
11:45I've got a lot to think about.
11:48But now that I know Greg didn't run off,
11:50I'm beginning to remember things in a whole new light.
11:55Me too. Talk later.
12:05So, let's go to you there.
12:07Mind if I take a pass on that?
12:09It's not like I can do anything.
12:12She's the doctor.
12:14Anyway, I'm late for lunch.
12:15Oh, who's the lucky girl this time, Miss November?
12:18No, she was lying, Mom.
12:24David is a compelling argument against genetic inheritance.
12:29He must take after his mother.
12:31She didn't take after Dad.
12:32Oh, Ray certainly has you to be proud of.
12:37Oh, you'd think so.
12:39Unfortunately, I seem to remind him too much of my mother,
12:42the ex-Mrs. Huxley.
12:44Oh, ah, excuse me.
12:46I rescheduled a surgery this morning.
12:47I'm doing the OR.
12:48Okay, I'll tell Ray.
12:49Oh, it doesn't matter.
12:50It's you.
12:51He needs to see.
12:51Hey, Sloan.
13:01Glad you're here.
13:03Just finished.
13:04You got Mr. Genovese's pre-off.
13:06Care to assist?
13:07I'd love to, but don't you already have an assistant?
13:10No, no, please.
13:11I've done a hundred of these.
13:12What's one more?
13:13Let us see.
13:13The newest member of our team, Mark Sloan.
13:17And this is my right-hand man, Raymond Huxley.
13:22Oh, glad to meet you.
13:23I hope you ate your Wheaties this morning.
13:25The pace can get pretty frantic here.
13:27We live on guts and IV caffeine.
13:31What I'm saying is welcome aboard.
13:34Thanks.
13:39Took you long enough.
13:43Ray, are you all right?
13:44Just started.
13:45House 110, BP, AD over 50, radiating pain, upper left thorax, family skin, shortness of breath.
14:02How haven't you admitted?
14:04Nurse!
14:05Seeing Greg after all these years.
14:08No talk.
14:09Dr. Sloan?
14:11Yes, I need a goody and an orderly right away.
14:13Thanks.
14:15You may have admired the man.
14:18I loved him like a father.
14:21Broke my heart.
14:23It disappeared.
14:26All that money was missing.
14:29Broke my heart.
14:31I'm hearing bilateral rails in both fields.
14:34I know.
14:36Pain started a month ago.
14:39Angiographs on.
14:41Triple vessel disease.
14:43Man, I'm practically inverted.
14:49Miniature, pacemaker technology.
14:52Runs up where the heart is so damaged.
14:55It can't even benefit from my own technology.
14:58I'd lie on the table.
15:00Ray, did David and Christine know about this?
15:02I don't need my family holding over me, waiting for me to fill up.
15:11If Greg didn't take off the way we thought, that means he didn't take the money.
15:19Somebody else stole it.
15:22And frame him.
15:23You guys, you have to find out who took the money.
15:31Who?
15:32Whoever did that must be killing me.
15:35What I do right now is get you to ICU.
15:39I called him a little while on the way out.
15:40I thought it worked out for Huxley.
15:57Not good.
16:01Who's that?
16:03I don't know.
16:04He was so energetic and ambitious when I knew him 30 years ago.
16:13Gee, I see him now.
16:17It's odd.
16:18Whoever just paid to me isn't answering.
16:21Well, maybe they put their number in wrong.
16:23Well, maybe.
16:24He was found in the hospital garage by a security guard, and given the temperature of her body,
16:32I wouldn't say she'd been dead for more than an hour.
16:36What does a throat wound tell you?
16:38Well, the condition of the purse ransacked, the contents emptied, her jewelry was missing.
16:44Looks like a mugging gone bad.
16:46One wound, one clean cut.
16:48So we can rule out a frenzy killing.
16:50Yeah, she wasn't molested pre- or post-mortem.
16:53It wasn't a sex crime.
16:54Anything else out of the ordinary?
16:56Just this.
17:00Some kind of black residue in the index and forefinger.
17:03Yeah, it looks like ink.
17:04I sent a sample down to the police crime lab.
17:07They should have the results this afternoon.
17:10Such a nice lady.
17:12That's what makes this job so hard.
17:15Thanks.
17:16Thanks.
17:20Hi.
17:24Hi.
17:26Amanda, fill you in.
17:28Jane Ellington killed in a possible mugging there, or a murder, made her look like a mugging.
17:34You know, there's two things that are bothering me.
17:36This morning, Jane told me that finding Greg Nordoff's body was making her see past events in a whole new light.
17:44She happened to say what events?
17:45No.
17:46Sally?
17:47Yes, Doctor?
17:47The other thing that's bothering me is that she paged me on her cell phone just minutes before she was killed.
17:58Well, you think she knew something that pointed to Nordoff's killer?
18:01Yes.
18:01And killed, keep her silent.
18:04You know, Jane phoned from her car.
18:06It makes me wonder if she was meeting someone, going somewhere.
18:09And I'll see what I can find out.
18:11Okay.
18:13It's funny.
18:13It's 30 years ago.
18:15My instincts told me there was something wrong with the disappearance of Greg Nordoff.
18:20If I'd just done something then.
18:21Jane Ellington might still be alive.
18:23No.
18:24Dad, you can't blame yourself now for something you didn't do 30 years ago.
18:29Only now it isn't about 30 years ago.
18:31This one that was killed the day.
18:32I'll let you know when I can dig up.
18:35Okay.
18:36Talk to you.
18:39Under the circumstances, I don't see what other course we can take.
18:43You can reschedule the ceremony and finish dedicating the new wall to my father later.
18:47Finding Nordoff's body behind the wall has turned the dedication into a media circus.
18:54That kind of bad publicity can have a devastating impact on the hospital's stock.
19:00What about the impact on my father's reputation?
19:04I won't let you do this.
19:06I don't have to listen to this anymore.
19:14Look, Nordoff.
19:15I don't have to listen to this anymore.
19:17You do have to listen, Chubbs.
19:19You practically accused me of stealing hospital funds.
19:22That is a very serious allegation.
19:25There is $50,000 missing from the surgical research fund that you control.
19:31And if you didn't take it, then who did?
19:34I'm not the only one who has access to those funds.
19:37You're the head bookkeeper.
19:38Maybe you embezzled the money yourself.
19:41That's absurd.
19:42Is it?
19:43Tell you what I'll do.
19:44I'll look at the books myself.
19:46And if they've been cooked, I will know it.
19:48And, mister, you will pay.
19:52You heard?
19:56Couldn't help it.
19:57My father's memorial is ruined.
19:59Rich as he is, you wouldn't think Tubbs would care about a few lousy stock points.
20:03Money is the only thing that matters to him.
20:05You have enough money.
20:07You can buy all the memorials you want.
20:08This is a hospital, David.
20:14The Raymond Huxley Pavilion for Advanced Cardiac Surgery.
20:19Paid for by the Raymond Huxley Foundation for the advancement of the reputation of Raymond Huxley.
20:25A division of Raymond Huxley.
20:26Ag Services, Inc.
20:30Money really is the only thing that matters, sis.
20:34I wish you wouldn't always manage to meet my worst expectations.
20:37You heard?
20:50I didn't know what.
20:52I suppose it's best.
20:53It's funny, Mark.
20:59You start off thinking that healing is the only thing that really matters.
21:04And you realize how complicated life and medicine are.
21:08Things aren't what they seem.
21:14People aren't who you think they are.
21:21People we believed in betray us.
21:24Are you all right?
21:30Just lessons, Mark.
21:34Lessons we all have to learn.
21:38That's the last time I saw him alive.
21:52Hey.
21:54Gregory Nordhoff's wife died 12 years ago.
21:57Well, does he have any other family?
21:58Just a second cousin in Minnesota who he fell out of touch with in 1958.
22:03What about a personal physician?
22:04He's retired, and he sold his practice to a medical group in 1972.
22:10He died in 1979.
22:13All of his records were transferred to microfilm in 1980.
22:16Where's that microfilm now?
22:18Purged in 94.
22:20So, nobody anywhere has any medical records of the long-dead Gregory Nordhoff.
22:26Well, try the hospital archives.
22:27Yet, Community General keeps complete health files on all the medical staff for insurance purposes.
22:34Now, Nordhoff's records could still be there.
22:37You mean the archives downtown on 4th Street?
22:39I hate that place.
22:41It's dirty, and it's stinky.
22:43Well, that's true of your place, too.
22:45But that doesn't keep you from going home at night, does it?
22:47Please, come on.
22:48And on top of all of it, it's a wild goose chase.
22:50No, we need those files to help us find out if Nordhoff wore a hearing aid.
22:55There'll be a good goose and chase.
22:57Oh, I've heard about Jane.
23:15Terrible.
23:16Terrible.
23:17Today, of all days.
23:20You know, I talked to her after you left.
23:23And I was just wondering if she realized.
23:26Realized what?
23:28Well, if Greg Nordhoff was murdered, that means he didn't take off with the imbecile funds.
23:34You're probably right.
23:36I mean, if he didn't find any money, it was a body.
23:40You think the killer took it?
23:43It happened a long time ago.
23:46You know, speaking of money, I've always kind of envy you, Manny.
23:52Me?
23:53For having sex, why?
23:54Well, you built up quite a substantial fortune.
23:57In the last 30 years.
23:59Which is pretty impressive for a guy who's on a bookkeeper's salary.
24:03Which is secret.
24:05The truth.
24:06Hmm?
24:07Dumb luck.
24:09Oh, you're kidding.
24:10No, no, no, no.
24:11Before Medicare inflated the values of the medical industry, I bought stock.
24:16Blue Cross Community General, drug manufacturers.
24:20Oh, and then you were one of the original investors in Huxley's cardiac services.
24:25Oh, that was a natural.
24:26I mean, buying a piece of Ray's pacemaker company was one of the smartest investments ever made.
24:33Wish I had your insights.
24:35Every time I invest money, it's a disaster.
24:37Well, that's the price you pay when you play the stock market.
24:43Well, they say it takes money to make money.
24:46Where'd you get yours, Stanley?
24:48Excuse me.
24:49Well, you know, the money for your first investment.
24:52You must have saved every penny you earn.
24:54I never saved a dime.
24:57Huh?
24:59The money that I invested, I inherited.
25:08Oh, I see.
25:10More Dumb luck.
25:12Any other illusions you'd like me to shatter?
25:14No.
25:14No, thanks.
25:15Well, that I'm ready to see.
25:23Dennis?
25:23Dr. Huxley's in VTAC.
25:25I've given him a hundred milligram bolus of lidocins on a two milligram a minute drip.
25:28I've ordered blood gases.
25:29I'm just giving him one amp of psyllium bicarbonate.
25:35He's superlating.
25:37Travel.
25:39300 joules.
25:40He's flabbering.
25:41Charge.
25:42Clear.
25:47Charge.
25:48Clear.
25:52No response.
25:53Call it.
26:071.44 p.m.
26:09Check.
26:101.44 p.m.
26:11I see you could join us, Jane.
26:23The chief of surgery cornered me.
26:25Because of all the new construction, two ORs are down.
26:28He wants to know when OR6 will be free.
26:31We'll be finished when we're finished.
26:33Are you really transferring out of cardiac surgery into clinical medicine, Sloan?
26:38I just think it can make more of a difference in medicine than surgery.
26:43I don't have your hands ready.
26:44It's because of Greg Nordhoff and the embezzlement thing.
26:48You're disillusioned.
26:50I'm tying it off.
26:54Greg used to be a great man, but his work was at a dead end and he knew it.
26:58That's why he ran away.
27:00Not because of the money?
27:01Who knows why he took the money.
27:03The real problem was he didn't have a vision for the future.
27:07Sponge.
27:09What about you, Jane?
27:11You're not quitting the team because Greg's gone, are you?
27:16No.
27:19Good.
27:19The future's for people like us, Sloan.
27:23We have new ideas and we're young.
27:26Is that what medicine's about?
27:27New ideas?
27:29Well, you can't be a great surgeon without new ideas.
27:32Surgeons hold life and death in their hands.
27:36Great surgeons break the old rules and make new ones.
27:49I'm sorry I didn't tell you about this hard condition.
27:59Christine, I suppose he kept it from you so you wouldn't worry.
28:06Oh, God.
28:14The invisible man vanishes one more time.
28:17Oh, please don't start.
28:19Only this time he's gone for good.
28:22So, David, I know you're upset.
28:24David is always upset because Dad never paid enough attention to him.
28:27Well, maybe if you did something worthy of his attention.
28:30Oh, like Daddy's little girl?
28:33Following in his surgical footsteps like some happy little clone?
28:36At least I had his respect.
28:47Sorry about that.
28:48It's all right.
28:49Sounds like David and your dad had some rough times.
28:56David was a disappointment to Dad.
29:00He was happy enough that I went into medicine, but I was still a disappointment to him.
29:13You see, I look exactly like my mother.
29:17And every time he looked at you?
29:20He saw her.
29:21He couldn't stand that.
29:24So, he dealt with it by not looking at me.
29:30You're not serious.
29:31The first time my father looked me in the eyes after the divorce was on the day of my college commencement when I told him I was going to medical school.
29:40Oh, I can't believe Frank, you'd be that cold.
29:44My father was a great surgeon.
29:47Great men don't live by other men's rules.
29:49Dr. Christine, I'm doing surgery.
29:53Well, honey, maybe you'd better put it on.
29:55Well, you're upset.
29:56Dad, I postponed this procedure twice today.
29:59I can't put it off anymore.
30:00Thanks for being my father's friend.
30:16Is that what medicine's about?
30:18New ideas?
30:20You can't be a great surgeon without new ideas.
30:24Surgeons hold life and death in their hands.
30:27Great surgeons break the old rules and make new ones.
30:37The black residue on Jane Ellington's fingertips.
30:41Ink?
30:42No.
30:43Wax and carbon.
30:44Apparently, Jane was handling some old-fashioned carbon paper.
30:48It's odd.
30:49You hardly ever see that stuff anymore.
30:51You know, the way we photocopy everything.
30:53I didn't even recognize it was carbon paper at first.
30:55Did you find any carbon paper in her car?
30:58No.
30:58They did find these.
31:01Parking lot ticket stubs.
31:03Both time-stamped for today.
31:06This one was a few minutes before she called my dad.
31:09It's from the parking garage downstairs.
31:11Which means she wasn't leaving Community General.
31:13She was coming back.
31:15Well, does the other ticket stub tell you where she'd been?
31:17Well, not specifically, but it's time-dated 40 minutes before this other one.
31:21That's a public lot downtown on 4th Street, which makes it kind of hard.
31:25Community General keeps her archives in a warehouse down on 4th Street.
31:31Would Jane Ellington have known that hospital archives are kept in this warehouse?
31:35Sure.
31:36She was a nurse here for years.
31:37Jesse's down at that warehouse right now looking for Gregory Nordhoff's medical records.
31:44Carbon papers.
31:45Old records.
31:46Jane could have gone down to that warehouse to look for Gregory's records as well.
31:51And whatever she found out must be why she was killed.
31:55And if the murderer finds out Jesse's down there...
31:58I'm on it.
31:58Okay, 1964.
32:24Okay, where's 63?
32:2663.
32:28Oh.
32:31Ah, great.
32:53Okay.
32:54Mitchell.
32:56...Mitchell...
33:00...Michaels...
33:02...Nixon...
33:04...Nixon...
33:07...Nor Mert...
33:11...Nor Loth...
33:26Hi...
33:28Chessy...
33:33Chessy...
33:35J.Nixon...
33:43Hi...
33:45Hi....
33:50...M聽stext ...
33:51still dizzy oxygen helps who am i well for a person who smells like a smoked turkey
34:04so it was dr nordhoff according to his medical file there wasn't anything wrong with his hearing
34:10at all and if this uh hearing aid wasn't his it could have belonged to whoever killed him
34:15yeah maybe you can find the owner by tracing the serial number there's no serial number
34:21is there a manufacturer's label no label either so what does that mean well this isn't a production
34:28model it's a prototype test model hey what was it doing in norov's body bag that's a good question
34:35hey steve by the way back at the warehouse thanks for the lift oh no problem you can adjust my back
34:42later i did confirm that that fire was arson and it was started in the northeast corner of the
34:47warehouse that doesn't make any sense the personnel medical files were all in the southwest corner
34:53the only thing the killer wanted was to destroy nordhoff's file why didn't he just uh grab it out
34:59of jesse's hand when uh he knocked him out why start a fire another part of the warehouse nordhoff's file
35:05wasn't the killer's target she's saying that jane was murdered because of something she found in the
35:11northeast corner of the warehouse and i'd like to know what records the uh hospital keeps there
35:16well we'll see what we can find out thanks uh either one of you seen emmanuel tubs yeah a few minutes
35:22ago he's in the boardroom thank you mr tubs
35:32well take your short advice charles we'll talk later
35:39you are mark slung's son the police detective my god i would like to say that i remember you when you
35:47were just this high but i'm afraid that would date me this isn't a social call oh that's ominous
35:54you told my father that you inherited the money to start investing i checked you want to know what i
36:00found i'll save you the time there was no inheritance the truth is i stole the money
36:06from gregory nordhoff surgical research fund you admit you embezzled the money
36:13my attorney just told me the statute of limitations ran out a long time ago
36:20why not clear nordhoff's name gregory was a good man mr tubs it's true you can't be prosecuted for a
36:2730 year old embezzlement but there's something your attorneys may not have told you and that would be
36:34there is no statute of limitations on murder
36:41well we called every medical supply company that community general uses turns out that only a
36:46handful of them were making medical prototypes in 1963 and about four of them were making electronic
36:52prototypes like hearing aids you might send it through thank you apparently dr nordhoff contacted
36:59one of those companies in late 1963. mark he had an idea for a prototype pacemaker and wanted to see
37:05if they had the expertise to design it and produce it they developed specs off of his idea and they used
37:12this earpiece as a sample for their electronic work except that's the last they ever heard of him
37:17they figured he gave his idea to someone else do the company keep the specs on nordhoff budget you're
37:23faxing us a copy right now
37:37are you all right
37:38lessons we all have to learn
37:55what is it i recognize this this is the design for a miniature pacemaker ray huxley claims to have
38:04invented in 1965 that's two years after nordhoff developed the same idea with another manufacturer
38:12dr huxley stole nordhoff's pacemaker design and made a fortune from it
38:17you know the day he vanished nordhoff said to me the friends we believe in betray us he was talking
38:25about huxley so nordhoff found out that dr huxley was stealing his work there was a confrontation
38:31and huxley killed nordhoff walled up the body in the new construction and let everybody think that
38:36dr nordhoff ran off of embezzled funds we just solved a 30 year old murder i know dr huxley was a
38:44friend of yours mark well what kind of a friend is the man who lies to you for 30 years well at
38:51least we know who killed dr nordhoff didn't kill jane ellington no he didn't because jane was murdered
38:56in the garage and dr huxley was up here having a heart attack could have had a better alibi so we
39:02just solved a 30 year old murder today's murder is just as big a mystery
39:16finding out that gregory nordhoff didn't steal the money and run away made jane ellington think
39:21twice about things that had happened years ago aren't you hitting nah i'm assisting dr gleason in the
39:26livery section in about 15 minutes it's the way okay so while she was rethinking old times jane went
39:33to the archive she found something she called mark and someone killed her but who and why so we need
39:38to know what she was looking for norman said that he would have a list of files from that section of
39:43the warehouse at around four o'clock let's go let's go no did you just hear me i said i have to do the
39:49delivery section research grant applications 1963. norman said the hospital kept carbon copies of
39:57all the grant proposals submitted by the medical staff and that's what was stored in the area with
40:02fire broke out nordhoff filed a grant application for his miniature pacemaker and jane did the paperwork
40:09so there's a carbon copy of that paperwork stored in the warehouse archive that's what she went looking
40:14for proof that ray huxley stole nordhoff's pacemaker design well if jane took that application then she
40:22would know that huxley stole nordhoff's design why would she continue to work for him maybe she lost
40:28more than a lover when nordhoff disappeared so as long as jane thought that nordhoff was a crook she
40:33didn't care if huxley was one too but once she realized that nordhoff had been murdered and that
40:39she'd been wrong about him ray became a number one suspect and she knew where to go to get
40:44the proof to expose him and gave huxley a reason to kill her but he was having a heart attack who
40:50else would have motive to want her dead emmanuel tubbs david huxley and dr christine huxley why those
40:58three money see tubbs is the major stockholder in huxley's cardiac services david and christine will
41:05inherit their father's estate which includes huxley cardiac services so if jane exposed the truth
41:12lawsuits from nordhoff's relatives would bankrupt huxley cardiac services ruining tubs and exhausting
41:18christine and david's inheritance yeah they stood to lose a fortune you know unless jane was stopped
41:24this is great what i've been running my butt off for that livery section now i find out that half the
41:29ors are down because of the new construction and that procedure has been postponed till 6 a.m tomorrow
41:35morning i used to sleep until 6 a.m and then i had a baby
41:46i just found out all scheduled surgeries were cancelled this morning because of construction
41:50problems does that mean president kennedy has been shot by a would-be assassin in dallas texas
41:59stay tuned to cbs news for further details
42:01from dallas texas the flash apparently official president kennedy died at 1 p.m oh
42:12where are you going to die some 38 minutes ago ray what you heard johnson has left in the hospital
42:21heard what uh dallas but we do not you know i thought he was dazed like the rest of us because
42:28he heard kennedy died he hadn't heard who hadn't heard and he hadn't just come from surgery because
42:36all the ors were closed because of the new construction are you getting any of this what
42:41does this have to do with finding jane's killer everything the blood wasn't from surgery because
42:47the surgery was cancelled see for yourselves
42:58rough procedure sometimes it seems like they're all rough a lot of blood on your scuds comes with
43:03the job can't be a surgeon without occasionally wearing a little blood i know in fact we get so
43:08accustomed to seeing surgeons with blood spattered scrub we don't think twice about it anymore excuse me
43:14it's been a long day for example when i saw your father in bloody scrub the day kennedy was killed
43:20i just assumed he'd been in surgery but all surgeries were cancelled that day because the building
43:26construction so how did he get blood on the scrubs
43:33you know
43:35by killing greg nordorf
43:37what are you talking about
43:41my father never killed anyone
43:42well i know ray killed dr nordorf
43:46don't be crazy
43:49and i have a pretty good idea who killed jane ellen can do
43:53who
43:56you know if i were you i'd get those in laundry right away bloodstains have a way of setting
44:00permanent unless you wash it right out even then they do have ways of making bloodstains reappear
44:17what you're looking for
44:31are these what you're looking for dr husson what are you doing here looking for these no uh
44:54uh actually i uh i left a notebook in a lab coat this morning
45:01no these are what you were wearing this morning
45:05these are the scrubs you wore clean to your father's dedication ceremony
45:09and the same scrub you were wearing when i saw you hours later arguing with tubs
45:14only the second time they weren't clean they were bloody
45:22well like we said bloody scrubs go with the job well that's right yeah i didn't think anything
45:28about it at the time your surgeon i saw what i expected to see
45:33just as i did when i saw your father on bloody scrubs years ago only his scrubs weren't bloody
45:41from surgery and neither were yours don't be ridiculous i had an angioplast at 10 o'clock this
45:47morning you told me a couple of hours ago you had to reschedule that procedure twice so on file at
45:53the nurses station the first time you were scheduled was because of the commotion around the discovery of
46:00greg nardolph's body the second time it was because you were busy killing jane ellington
46:10you can't prove that
46:16can i see those oh i don't think so the police will want to run some dna tests on these blood stains
46:23and they want to compare a sample of these stains with jane's blood that you know what they'll find
46:30yeah
46:41how long have you known your father killed greg nardolph
46:48only since this morning he told us after they found the body in the wall
46:53you thought we'd be so shocked
47:02you know what's strange you were surprised
47:12after the way he treated my mother and me
47:14nothing he did would ever surprise me
47:22you killed jane to save your inheritance
47:24i never cared about the money
47:35i never cared about the money
47:39i never cared about the money
47:45believe it or not
48:03believe it or not
48:04i killed her to save him
48:18read her rights
48:19get her out of here
48:33save bed we'll find jane i like this blood on this
48:36i'm surprised she did it
48:40no
48:43a little sad
48:44a good hospital is like a healthy baby
48:52like a healthy baby she is always growing
48:55taking on new challenges and facing new responsibilities
48:59doesn't he have any other speeches
49:01well look he's putting everybody to sleep
49:03quiet mark is out on his feet
49:06uh well i i don't think he's asleep
49:22wait a few years
49:24you'll find out
49:33the mythical god of love is about to change emily's love life in a way she'd never imagined
49:45cynthia gibb and suzanne summer star in a family channel original movie
49:49love struck tomorrow night at nine