_____________________________________________________
2 hour
special investigative report with
correspondent Richard
Schlesinger
and
Producer Marcie
Spencer.
Bizarre
Twists And Evidence Keep Turning Case On Its Head
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Murder on
Lockhart Road
The David Camm
Murders
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KVS wrapped production with 48
Hours
for a CBS 2 hour season special.
..."they
feature a stellar ‘cast’ of individual award
winning reporters and has been known to not just report on
stories, but make real differences."
(CBS) When
48 Hours premiered
in 1988, Time
magazine
said it could be the most innovative prime-time news series
since
60 Minutes debuted
in 1968.
48 Hours Mystery airs
Saturdays at 10 p.m. ET/PT. Check local listings.
In its unique approach,
48 Hours delves
into a single subject, examining it from multiple angles
with its saturation coverage and action-driven style. The
broadcast has received critical acclaim reflected in almost
20 Emmy awards, a George Foster Peabody Award, and an Ohio
State Award.
_____________________________________________________
Marcie
Spencer (Producer)
& correspondent
Richard Schlesinger.
Marcie is amazingly cool. She's got her stuff "very"
together.
These shots are from the IU Bloomington campus.
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![]()
(CBS) Richard
Schlesinger is a correspondent for
48 Hours Investigates
and contributes to the
CBS Evening News
and other broadcasts. He previously served as a full-time
correspondent for
48 Hours
(1990-97), reporting on a wide range of topics, including
innocent Americans behind bars, marriage and divorce in the
1990s and the middle-class recession. He was the sole
reporter for
48 Hours: "Death by Midnight,"
an in-depth profile of one convict facing the death
penalty, and for
48 Hours: "Searching for a Cure,"
an unprecedented look at an experiment for a potentially
groundbreaking new AIDS treatment.
Schlesinger also served as the reporter for
CBS Reports: "Enter the Jury Room,"
for which he won an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University
Award. The two-hour 1997 documentary, anchored by Ed
Bradley, examined the American jury system and marked the
first time network television cameras were given access to
actual jury deliberations. Schlesinger is also the
recipient of nine Emmy Awards.
He also served as an investigative reporter for the
CBS Evening News
and has been a substitute anchor for the
CBS Morning News
and the Weekend Editions of the
CBS Evening News
.
© MMII, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved.
_____________________________________________________
Between takes at the Indiana
University student union bldg.
A large room with soft lighting and dark wood made a great
looking set.
The windows and lights on chains were a big plus.
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Rigging
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Outside of this large window, Ken Smith placed some HMI's
with blue gels to light up the large tree for the night
shot.
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Ken
Smith - our director of photography and lighting director
Audio
and playback
Lighting is critical and Ken gives it that great look.
_
Checking
the lighting
__
Becky (my wife & jib assist) , Richard and Jack.
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Jack (my
production assistant) & Ken Smith the lighting
director.
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Loaded & ready to go...let's roll.
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High ceilings with a nice light to do a "drop shot"
to Richard
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Before a take. Notice in this night shot how the tree
outside the
window was lit to enhance the movement of the jib and gives
a
great sense of depth. (nice lighting Ken)
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Teaching my new friend Gavin, the finer points of operating
a Jib.
_____________________________________________________
Cassie and friend (IU psychology
students...really!)
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(CBS) David
Camm, a former Indiana state trooper, was found guilty in
2002 of shooting his wife and their two young children
execution-style inside the family SUV parked in their
garage two years earlier. But the two-year legal drama
didn't end with Camm's conviction. In fact, the conviction
was later overturned and, five years after the murders,
another suspect entered the picture. Was this ex-state cop
framed by a new suspect? Or had they worked together all
along?
Correspondent
Richard Schlesinger examines
the still unfolding drama on
48 Hours, this
Saturday, Dec. 9 at a special time, 9 p.m. ET/PT.
"I want my family back, I did not do this," Camm said
through tears.
Camm also said he had an alibi that placed him at a
basketball game where 11 other players recall seeing him
the very night and time of the murders: Sept. 28, 2000,
approximately between 7 p.m. and 9:20 p.m.
48 Hours' Schlesinger
tests the prosecution's theory that Camm may have been able
to slip out of the basketball game to commit the crimes.
Driving the actual alleged route,
48 Hours determined
that seven minutes was all the time Camm would have had to
kill his entire family and get back on the court to keep
his alibi intact.
There was also the issue of evidence at the crime scene
that never pointed to Camm: a foreign palm print on the SUV
and an unknown grey sweatshirt with foreign DNA and a name
written in the collar — "Backbone" — the way a
child's camp clothes might be labeled.
Despite Camm's consistent assertion of innocence, an alibi
and unexplained evidence at the scene, just three days
after the deaths of 35-year-old Kim, 5-year-old Jill, and
7-year-old Brad, Camm was arrested and ultimately convicted
of their murders.
When the Indiana State Appeals Court overturned the
conviction 2½ years later, Camm hoped he might be a free
man. But the story wasn't even close to being over.
Camm readied himself for the second trial, and the DNA on
that suspicious sweatshirt was finally tested, as was the
palm print. In the late afternoon of Feb. 14, 2005, the
databank of convicted felons produced a hit.
Who did that DNA belong to — and what did it mean for
the case against Camm?
Produced By Marcie Spencer
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights
Reserved.