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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace

What happened to little Lucas Hernandez? The search goes on

Crime Stories with Nancy Grace

iHeartPodcasts and CrimeOnline

True Crime, News

3.97.6K Ratings

🗓️ 12 April 2018

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The search of little Lucas Hernandez, who disappeared from his Kansas home, has been going on for almost two months. Nancy Grace updates the case of the missing 5-year-old boy and the charges against his step mom Emily Glass. Grace is joined by Klaas Kids founder and victims' advocate Marc Klaas, lawyer and psychologist Dr. Brian Russell -- host of Investigation Discovery's "Fatal Vows" series, Atlanta juvenile judge Ashley Willcott, and Crime Stories contributing reporter Chuck Roberts. Nancy also discusses the Chandra Levy case, which is the topic of this week's "Grace vs. Abrams" show on A&E.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. I hope you can join us tonight on A&E 11 PM Eastern.

0:26.3

The case of missing DC intern, Shondra Levy, is far from over. And that's a problem.

0:34.9

Dr. Brian Russell, you know, Dr. Russell, Gary Condon, the US Congressman from the Modesto

0:43.3

Area, allegedly was having an affair with this young girl whose dream comes true. She gets

0:50.7

an internship in DC. She travels all the way to DC where this married statesman allegedly

0:59.3

starts a sex affair with her. Then she goes missing. You know, Dr. Russell, of course, people

1:08.9

look at Condon when it all goes down. I mean, the allegations of a sex affair with a girl

1:15.7

20 plus years younger than you while you're married that just clouds the entire search for

1:22.9

the missing intern. Well, that's right. And even if you take out of the equation, the fact

1:30.6

that, you know, there's the age difference in these married and all that, you know, on

1:35.7

our show Fatal Vaz, we always talk about how when there is a murder, the authorities

1:44.1

always start. It's much more likely that somebody is murdered by somebody they know. And

1:51.3

oftentimes, somebody with whom they've been in a very close relationship, then it is that

1:57.4

they're murdered by a stranger. And so it makes total sense that the authorities start.

2:02.2

It's like a target. You know, you start at the bullseye. That's the individual who's now deceased.

2:10.2

And then that very first ring around the bullseye are the people who are closest, including

2:15.2

any significant others. And then you look at them first and work your way out progressively to

2:21.4

those outer circles where the strangers are. And so it makes total sense that he would have been

2:27.4

looked at. And he can't feel as can't feel any sympathy for him given the horrendous behavior

2:33.7

that he did engage in cheating on his wife and having this relationship with her.

2:38.2

Well, here's the other thing. He never publicly stated, yes, I had an affair.

2:46.2

It was stupid. I shouldn't have done it, but I had nothing to do with her disappearance. He

...

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