New Eden (2020) s01e08 Episode Script
Helen Lafayette
1
(Gentle electronic music)
♪
♪♪♪
Narrator: Helen Lafayette.
A ruthless killer,
and criminal mastermind,
or a victim of unfair
circumstance
who couldn't outrun her past?
From a disturbing childhood
in the backwoods of Florida,
to a larger than life
secret identity.
Hannah: I had no idea how close
to death I really was.
Narrator: And beneath it all,
the intense obsession
that would lead
to a massive manhunt
across provincial lines.
(Sirens wail)
Sharon: She would've gone
to any lengths.
She was obsessed with her.
- Well, if Hannah Cafwell
hadn't gone digging,
Helen Lafayette would've gotten
away with murder.
Narrator: This is
"Helen Lafayette: A Killer
Among Us."
♪♪♪
(Gavel bangs)
♪♪♪
(Gavel bangs)
(Keys clack)
♪♪♪
Narrator: To many,
she was known as Grace Lee.
She and best friend,
Katherine Wryfield
were the leaders
of an experimental
women's community turned cult.
(Screaming)
Sharon: Grace was always
the warmer of the two.
More easy going.
If anyone was gonna snap
and kill someone,
it was Katherine,
to be honest with you.
- I am sick and tired
of bending over backwards
for you pathetic freaks!
Grace: I know Katherine
can be intense,
but she is our leader.
- Grace, you should take over.
Dana: Her ability to go
unnoticed, even in the midst
of a nationally televised
criminal trial,
is what was so remarkable,
and disturbing about her case.
She consistently showed
her ability
to completely transform herself.
- Stupid, silly Grace.
Dana: Inside and out.
Narrator: In 1981,
authorities raided
the New Eden property,
and found the body
of Agnes Wryfield,
Katherine's aunt.
Months later,
authorities would find
the dismembered remains
of a Jane Doe,
misidentified at the time
as former New Eden member,
Tabitha McNurtt.
Agnes Wryfield's death
was ruled to be an accident,
and when Tabitha McNurtt
proved to be alive
- Holy God!
- Hi, what's this?
Narrator: The case of the
mysterious second body
went cold.
Gary: The body of the victim
was missing her head.
So there was no way
to determine dental records.
And at the time there
was no DNA technology.
So even when it became clear
that this was not
Tabitha McNurtt's body,
there was still no way to tell
whose body it was.
- At the time, my department
was under investigation
for evidence tampering.
My superior, Hank Neston,
he-he-he tried to make
the body look
like Tabitha McNurtt to get
the murder conviction.
But when Ms. McNurtt showed up
alive a few months later,
our orders were to close
the book on the Jane Doe case,
and distance ourselves
from our mistakes.
And then nobody cared
whose body that was.
Narrator: The authorities
buried the unidentified body
in a pauper's grave,
and the investigation
ended there.
Until almost 10 years later,
when a now infamous documentary
would leave some with more
questions than answers.
- I never got the opportunity
to tell my version
of the New Eden story.
I mean, my career had all but
been destroyed by the trial.
Narrator: Hannah Cafwell,
the undercover journalist
posing as a member of the cult,
would recede from public life,
following Grace and Katherine's
trial.
Hannah: But after the trial,
I started to think that
we had all missed something.
We knew more than enough
about Katherine Wryfield.
But what about Grace?
I couldn't recall a single
detail from her past.
So I began to dig.
And it took a lot
of phone calls,
and a trip to Florida,
but eventually I found out
who Grace really was.
Narrator: It was this
very discovery
that would expose
Grace Lee's past,
and put Hannah
in mortal danger.
- I wanted to confront
Grace directly
about what I discovered,
and why she had lied.
So I wrote her in prison.
I wanted to give her the chance
to tell her side of the story,
but I never got a response.
Until a few weeks after she
had been released from prison.
I got a knock on my door.
And there she was,
standing right in front of me.
As soon as I saw her,
I knew I had hit on something
bigger than just a changed
name.
She was like a different
person.
I had no idea what
she would do, but
I let her in.
I managed to secretly
turn on my Dictaphone.
Grace, who is Helen Lafayette?
- You've always thought
you were so clever.
But you don't know shit!
You have no idea who
I really am.
- Why? What have you done?
- I've done what I've had to.
I was protecting her,
I was protecting all of you!
- Protecting who? From what?
- Oh Hannah, you think
you're smarter than me?
You think I can't see
what you're trying to do?
Hannah: I didn't recognize her.
The person standing in front
of me was like
a stranger.
Or a ghost.
Hannah: (on tape) I'm just
trying to understand, Grace.
Grace: (on tape) (Seething)
Don't you mean Helen?
- Is that your real name?
- You're the one who lied
about who she is!
- Sorry I lied back then,
but I still care about you,
Grace.
- (Laughs) Bull(bleep)!
You don't care,
I see through you.
I can see through everyone.
And yet none of you
could see through me.
You know, it's funny.
No one worries about
stupid, silly Grace.
Even when the truth was buried
right under your feet.
Even when I orchestrated
everything!
Made up all that (bleep)
for you to believe in.
For you to believe in her!
- Is this about Katherine?
- Don't you (bleep) talk
to me about Katherine!
- It was like the mere mention
of Katherine's name
had unlocked something.
Her eyes went black.
She became very agitated.
But it meant I was getting
closer to the truth.
Hannah: Does Katherine know
that you used to be Helen?
Grace: (Bleep) you!
- Does she know what
you were running from?
She didn't appreciate you.
- Stop it!
- She didn't ac-hey!
- You stop it!
- Hey! Stop that!
(Screams shrilly)
(Glass shatters)
- Suddenly she was just on me.
I mean, we went through
the glass table.
In that instant, I knew how
willing she was to kill me,
to kill in general.
She didn't hesitate.
I was bleeding pretty badly
from my face.
I couldn't breathe.
The room was going dark.
But I knew I had
to survive this.
Narrator: Fighting
for her life,
Hannah Cafwell would manage
to fend off Grace's attack.
Hannah: She went down,
and I just ran.
And by the time the police
got to my house,
she was gone.
Sam: Hannah Cafwell was
the first person to survive
an encounter like that
with Grace Lee.
And uh, because she did,
because of what she uncovered,
we were able to link Grace
to a 10-year-old cold case.
And uh, and discover
the identity
of our headless Jane Doe.
Narrator: When we return,
Helen's childhood,
and the path to murder.
♪♪♪
Narrator: Helen Lafayette was
born in Wewahitchka, Florida
on November 14th, 1955,
to a single mother,
Mary-Lynn Lafayette.
Greta: Mary-Lynn was
a very emotional woman,
always having some kind
of outburst.
We'd offer to watch
Helen sometimes.
we had a little hardware
store in town,
and she would spend
her day there.
We would give her little
chores to do.
She was a very bright
little girl.
Garth: Mhmm.
Gretta: Exceptional, even.
But Mary-Lynn could be
very controlling,
and possessive.
Not quite right up there,
I don't think.
- Mhmm.
Narrator: But when Helen
turned 14,
her insular life
with Mary-Lynn
would change forever.
In 1969, Mary-Lynn
began a relationship
with a travelling salesman,
named William Keefer.
- Mary-Lynn was head
over heels.
And suddenly she started
acting like Helen
was getting in the way
of her happiness.
I remember coming home once,
and seeing Helen sitting
on the porch,
waiting to be invited back
into the house,
like like a beaten-down dog.
And it broke my heart,
didn't it?
- Mhmm.
Narrator: Shortly after
his relationship
with Mary-Lynn began,
William Keefer would move
into the Lafayette home.
William Keefer had a history
of preying on lonely women,
taking their money,
and often becoming abusive
towards them.
Gretta: I remember that night.
We heard all kinds of screaming
and hollering
coming from next door,
and the sound of breaking
glass.
And Garth called the police.
You remember that, Garth?
- (Deep inhale)
Mhmm.
Narrator: One night,
Keef,
and Helen witnessed him
screaming at Mary-Lynn.
Sensing her mother
was in danger,
a 14-year-old Helen
would attack William Keefer
with a liquor bottle.
(Glass shatters)
William Keefer threatened
to press charges
if Helen stayed in the home.
So Mary-Lynn had Helen
placed into foster care.
- The foster system
in Florida in the late 60s
was not ideal.
As you can imagine.
and Holy Trinity
had a reputation.
It was a harsh environment,
ran more like a juvenile
detention centre.
Narrator: Lonely and abandoned,
Helen would cling
to the first friend
she met at Holy Trinity.
A troublemaker
named Lisa Grover.
Hannah: She took Helen
under her wing,
and Helen, used to being
the giver
in a co-dependent relationship,
would do anything
that Lisa asked.
Narrator: In early 1971,
Lisa would convince Helen
that they should run away
from Holy Trinity,
and head for California.
♪♪♪
Jonny: We're touring Indiana in
the early 70s on our own dime.
Well, we had a band,
and a sound,
and we just letting the road
take us where it took us.
Narrator: Helen and Lisa
met the members
of "Bucket of Love"
while hitchhiking,
and at Lisa's insistence,
began traveling with the band.
Jonny: At some point, you know,
we had these two chicks
traveling with us.
And Lisa well
Lisa was a wild one for sure.
And her and Micky, well, they
got hot and heavy early on,
and I remember Helen
didn't like that much.
I think she wanted
Lisa all to herself.
You know, women get a little
clingy.
Sam: Micky Stanton had had
dust-ups with the law before.
Um, drugs, petty theft.
So when he wound up dead
in an alley
with multiple stab wounds,
um local authorities
at the time
didn't think much of it.
This was just another
drug deal gone bad.
Narrator: Except what
authorities didn't know
was that Lisa and Micky
had had a fight that night,
one witnessed
by Helen Lafayette.
And when Micky moved on Lisa,
Helen struck a fatal blow.
Hannah: It was her mother
and William Keefer
all over again,
except this time
Helen went too far.
Helen killed Micky Stanton,
and Lisa Grover
would've witnessed it.
Narrator: Distressed
by Helen's actions,
and fearful of being
implicated,
Lisa told Helen they should go
their separate ways.
(Strums guitar)
- They both took off
after that.
We just figured Lisa
was all busted up
over Micky getting stabbed,
and just assumed that Helen
went with her.
That's life on the road.
(Strums guitar)
- And that was the last time
that anyone recalls seeing,
or meeting Helen Lafayette.
Narrator: Eight months later,
Grace Lee would turn up
at an experimental farm
called Valhalla Ranch.
And it was there
she would instantly form
an intense bond
with Katherine Wryfield.
A bond that would prove
to be fatal.
When we return,
Lisa Grover reappears,
and Grace Lee's past
catches up with her.
♪♪♪
- You get the hell outta here!
Sam: As it turned out,
Lisa Grover,
had been living in a halfway
house in Seattle.
You know, she was troubled,
an addict.
Um, her life had gone
you know,
pretty much how you'd expect.
Narrator: In 1981, Lisa Grover
saw a news story
about a woman named Grace Lee,
who had thwarted a bank robbery
in Penticton, British Columbia.
Hannah: Lisa was probably
the only person
who could recognize Grace
as Helen.
And here Lisa was, broke,
desperate,
and there was her old friend,
holding a big cheque.
Lisa thought she could
blackmail Grace
by threatening to expose her
as Helen,
and Micky Stanton's killer.
- You get the hell outta here!
Hannah: I never asked Grace
who that woman was.
I mean, things that New Eden
were already so tense,
I thought it was just some
local trying to gain access.
But it never sat right with me.
- At the time, Grace was
controlling who came in
and out of the property,
and she was exhibiting some
very strange behavior.
But we just assumed that
was because of the way
the Katherine was treating her,
you know,
not because she had cut
someone up,
and buried her around
our property.
I mean, that's just not
the sort of thing
you assume about a person.
- We believe that Lisa took
a bus across the border,
and found a way to New Eden.
When she threatened to expose
Grace's identity
to Katherine
and the other women,
Grace then lured her
into the woods,
and out of earshot.
And she then likely strangled
Lisa to death,
and hid the body in the woods
until she could return
to dismember it,
and bury the evidence.
Now, will we believe that
she would've had access
to all kinds of farm equipment
to achieve this task.
Gary: When we re-examined
Lisa Grover's remains,
we could see, through certain
false starts in the cuts,
The incisions had a W-shaped
pattern,
which usually indicated
teeth of a handsaw.
To dismember a body
with that kind of tool
would be very, um,
very labor intensive.
You would have to be
very determined.
Narrator: In late 1991,
based on the recorded
conversation
between Hannah Cafwell
and Helen Lafayette,
authorities would exhume
the remains
of the dismembered Jane Doe
that had been found
nearly a decade earlier
on the edges of the New Eden
property.
They also would return
to the New Eden property
with one objective:
Locate the missing skull
of Helen Lafayette's victim.
- Based on Hannah's recorded
conversation with Grace
Grace: (on tape) None of you
could see through me.
Sam: We believed that
the victim's missing head
was still somewhere
on the New Eden property.
And we had to find it
in or.
Grace: (on tape) Even when
the truth was buried
right under your feet.
Sharon: They found
Lisa Grover's head
buried in the old apiary.
Right there, right
in the middle of everything!
I mean
that poor woman's head,
under all of those bees.
It really makes you wonder
if that's why
all those little things died.
Narrator: Helen Lafayette
ki,
and became Grace Lee
to hide from her crime.
A decade later,
she killed Lisa Grover
to keep that secret safe.
But it would be another
10 years before Grace
would try to kill again,
and this time,
she wouldn't be as successful.
But Helen Lafayette's story
wasn't over yet.
First, they'd have
to catch her.
- As Grace Lee, Helen had
proven time and again
that she was incredibly
skilled at blending in
when she wanted to,
and making people like her.
And she had acquired many
practical skills
to help her with that.
Hannah: By the time
of their trial,
she had an entire nation
fooled.
Think about how smart
you'd have to be
in order to convince everyone
you're that stupid.
- I guess she figured
the stupider we looked,
the less capable of murder
we'd seem.
Narrator: With the help
of inspector, Sam Aarons,
the serious crimes division
would begin a covert search
to find Grace Lee.
Sam: We thought that
if we didn't go public
with our search, she might
be more likely to slip up,
and more likely to expose
herself.
But she just kept slipping
through our fingers.
And that's when we brought in
Dana Bashuk to help us
track her next move.
- Katherine Wryfield
was the obvious answer.
Helen slash Grace had a pattern
of forming incredibly strong
bonds with women.
First with her mother,
and then with Lisa Grover.
Violence would only ensue when
something happened
to break that bond.
I advised them
to contact Katherine,
who had returned to her
family home in Toronto.
- I assumed Grace
would kill Katherine.
After all she had put
her through, my God.
I was glued to the news
station, you know,
just waiting for
the inevitable.
To be clear,
Katherine being killed.
- It would all lead back
to Katherine.
It always had.
Narrator: A visit from the past
turns fatal.
When we come back.
♪♪♪
(Birds chirp)
(Kettle whistles)
(Water pours)
(Clangs)
♪♪♪
♪♪♪
Katherine: I never knew
Helen Lafayette.
But I did know Grace Lee.
Grace Lee.
I knew her very well.
We spent nearly every day
together for 15 years.
And in a way,
we were like sisters.
I don't have a sister,
but I think I know what
it feels like.
Intense, you know.
Kind of suffocating.
But sweet, sometimes,
and in a way
you know, Grace
Grace always supported me.
She really, really wanted me
to be happy.
And I guess
well, I was there to teach
Grace about the world.
(Laughs)
I was her Henry Higgins,
and she my Eliza Doolittle.
At least that's the way I felt.
Before I learned the truth.
- Each of Grace's bonds
were eventually broken
when she felt rejected
by her mother,
by Lisa.
And in those cases,
the cause of the fracturing
was the figure of a male
intruder.
But when it came to Katherine,
that bond would last decades,
and withstand quite a bit
of strain.
And I think part of that
was because there were no men
present for Grace
to perceive as a threat,
and especially no men vying
for Katherine's attention.
- I mean, of course,
there were no men around.
It was an all-female cult--
uh, uh, commune.
It was an all-female commune.
So, there you go.
It didn't mean that
there wasn't the occasional
delivery man, but
I would usually shoo them away
before Grace could see them
eyeing me up.
So in a way, I'm pretty lucky.
- Well, we didn't know how
Katherine would react
to the truth about Grace's
identity,
but-huh!
At the time, uh,
she was our only hope
of bringing her in.
And we were really hoping
that she would cooperate.
Narrator: The special unit
would approach
Katherine Wryfield,
and brief her on Grace's past.
- When they told me what
had happened,
I felt betrayed.
I mean, of course I did.
But was I frightened?
I mean, no.
Not at first.
- When we talked to Katherine,
we-we found out that Grace had
been calling her regularly,
almost daily, just to talk.
It was a massive,
massive leap for us.
Narrator: Working with Dana,
Sam's unit convinced Katherine
to submit to a wiretap
so they could track
Helen's whereabouts.
Katherine: I mean,
there were just,
there were so many emotions,
you know, just
just bubbling up inside of me.
It was-it was extremely
complicated.
And I don't think that anyone
can blame me for that.
Narrator: But the special
unit's gambit
to use Katherine
to get to Grace
wouldn't go according to plan.
- I guess the instructions
weren't clear.
♪♪♪
Narrator: A hot-blooded
mistake, an ice-cold trail,
and a deadly showdown.
When we come back.
♪♪♪
- There were all these men
in my house,
barking orders at me.
You know, you gotta keep her
on the phone for this long.
Don't get emotional.
Just keep her talking.
Sit down. Stop crying.
And uh, it was very intense.
And this was Grace
we were talking about.
They didn't know her.
They didn't know me.
I think that I responded as
any human person would have.
(Phone rings)
Narrator: On February 7th,
1992,
Katherine Wryfield received
a call from Grace Lee
at 4:45 p.m.
(Phone rings)
She was instructed to keep
Grace on the phone
for at least two minutes.
Katherine: Hello?
Grace: Hi Katherine,
how are ya?
- Uh, I'm-I'm good.
- Good.
Listen, I just wanted
to tell you that um--
- Don't you dare (bleep)
come near me!
- What?
- I know where you are, Helen!
- I know what you did!
They're coming for you,
you psycho!
And I never want to see
you again!
(Bleep) you! (Bleep) you
for what you did to me!
(Phone clicks off,
Katherine gasps)
Sam: That was our only lead.
Okay? And uh, after that,
we knew that Grace
would vanish
you know, for good this time.
- They said they couldn't
trace the call.
They-you know, they didn't
have enough time.
And I do blame myself.
I do.
I-I mean, I couldn't contain
a,
you-you know, and
I just don't think anyone
understands what that level
of betrayal really feels like.
I had to get that off my chest,
or it would've driven me insane.
I'm glad I did it.
No regrets.
- Katherine had effectively
broken her bond with Grace
by rejecting Helen,
which now meant that Katherine
was also in immediate danger.
- The next thing I know,
I'm being told that I have
to be placed
into witness protection,
that my life is in danger,
and that this Helen Lafayette,
that Grace was coming for me.
Narrator: Katherine Wryfield
was placed into
the protected witness program.
She would be relocated
to La Dore,
a remote town in Quebec.
- Oh! No.
I hated it there.
Yeah, the French Canadian
accent, it's very grating.
You know, it's a lot
of hunh hunh hunh!
Hunh hunh hunh.
Hoh hoh hoh.
Rude, disgusting men.
No, I-I-I don't even
speak the language,
so there was a lot of
this goin' on.
And they weren't really
trying hard,
so overall, I'd say I do not
recommend rural Quebec,
even when you are hiding
from a murderer.
(Chuckles)
Sam: We put Katherine
into protective custody,
but as soon as she went
underground, so did Grace.
Um, at that point, we released
her photo as a wanted person
across the country.
We set up an ongoing
citizen's hotline,
but no one turned her in.
Narrator: Authorities would
fail to capture Grace Lee
for nearly two years.
Sam: Helen Lafayette,
Grace Lee.
Whoever she was,
when she disappeared,
she was gone, and
we started to wonder
if she was even still alive.
- Grace wasn't going to
reappear unless she wanted to.
She had been a step ahead
of everyone
for most of her life.
The only way she was going
to come out from the shadows,
make herself vulnerable,
was if she could track down
Katherine.
For Katherine she would
come out.
Narrator: On March 22nd, 1994,
Katherine Wryfield would awake
from a nap
to find Grace Lee sitting
in her living room.
(Glass shatters)
To this day, no one knows
how Grace was able to locate
Miss Wryfield in protective
custody.
- Katherine was under
round-the-clock surveillance.
you know, we still don't know
how it happened.
Maybe a shift change,
just some bad luck.
We-we don't know.
Um, but suddenly we're getting
a call from officers
saying that they've spotted
Grace Lee inside the house
with Miss Wryfield,
and she's armed.
Narrator: Airborne and ground
units were called
to Katherine Wryfield's
La Dore residence,
but instructed not
to go inside.
- We were dealing with
a hostage situation.
We informed both women that
we had the house surrounded,
but there was silence.
No shots were fired,
and we could tell
from the heat signature
that both women were alive,
and inside the house.
But that's all that
we had to go on.
And uh, and we just had
to wait like that
for what felt like hours.
- Despite everything
that Grace did,
despite what she did to me,
I couldn't help
but feel bad for her.
I mean, she was so damaged
by these relationships
from her past,
including, at times,
her relationship
with Katherine.
- Like I said, it always
came back to Katherine.
Katherine never had a way
with people,
except Grace.
And I believe Grace would've
done anything for her.
Narrator: Armed officers
would wait outside
of Katherine's home
for nearly two hours.
To this day, Katherine Wryfield
is the only person
who can tell us what transpired
between the two women.
- I saw that there was a gun
on the table.
But she was just sitting there.
With her head in her hands.
And then she looked up,
and she smiled.
And after two years alone
in that hick town
it was the most familiar
smile in the world.
I made us some tea,
and we just talked,
you know.
Just talked about
stupid, silly little things.
Things she had seen
on her travels.
The past.
Little jokes we had shared,
you know.
How I didn't care
for the French.
It just really felt like
(Sighs)
nothing had ever really
happened, you know?
None of those bad things.
I don't know how long
we sat and talked like that.
But I looked up,
and I could see that the police
cars were pulling up.
We could hear the helicopter
overhead,
and that they were uh,
trying to communicate
with us.
I told her, you know,
you can turn yourself in.
This can all be over.
(Sighs)
And that's
that's when she started to cry.
(Sobs)
She said that she was just
so sick
of that voice.
In her head that-that made her
do all those things.
So I took her in my arms.
And I just remember
that she felt so small,
like a child.
I just let her cry on me.
(Shaky exhale)
And she looked up.
And she said, you know,
let's get outta here.
Let's run away.
We can start a new life
together.
But I think she knew.
She knew that
I was gonna say no.
So she
nodded and kinda got up,
took the gun.
And then she smiled at me.
She said, I love you.
I love you so much.
I said-I said, please,
you know, turn yourself in.
Just-just for me.
(Sobs)
She just walked to the door.
And there was something
something different
in her eyes.
Something final.
(Helicopter rotor beat)
Officer 1: Hold position.
Officer 2: Standby, Chief
Officer 3: Standby on 114,
we're waiting
for confirmation on that.
Officer 4: Do you have her
in your sights?
Helicopter pilot: Confirming
that, above the house now.
Uh copy that, door's opening.
Officer 1: Alright,
just be calm,
everything's gonna be alright.
Okay, I need you to take
a couple more steps forward.
Alright now I'm gonna need you
to put the gun down, okay?
Okay, everything's gonna be
alright.
Everything's gonna be good.
Now
just right there, alright?
That's good, just stop.
Okay. I'm gonna need you
to put the gun on the ground,
okay? Slowly.
Now look at me.
Can you hear me? I need you
to put the gun down.
Do you hear me? Look at me.
Put the gun down.
Put down the gun!
Put the gun down!
(Gunshots pop, screams)
(Officers shout, screaming)
(Gunshots pop repeatedly)
(Helicopter rotors beat)
Officer 2: We got a 111, K.O.
Dispatcher: 10-4,
688 De Sante Avenue.
(Police radio chatter)
- Grace!
- Hold your fire.
- Grace!
Officer: Hold your fire. Second
subject out of the house.
- Get back! Keep them back!
(Reporters shout)
- Give her some room!
(Cameras click)
Officer 2: Get back!
What are you doing?!
- Give her some room!
(Crowd shouts)
Officer 1: Katherine, it's safe
now, you're gonna be alright.
Reporters: Katherine!
Katherine!
Katherine, please! Please!
Katherine! Katherine!
Katherine!
How does this feel?
Are you alright?
Katherine! Katherine!
How does this-are you alright?
Katherine! Katherine!
(All shouting questions)
Can you tell us exactly
what happened?
Katherine, what did you talk
to her about?
Katherine, we're over here!
How are you feeling?
Katherine! Katherine!
Kathe?
Katherine! Katherine!
(All shouting at once)
(Cameras click)
(Reporters shout)
♪♪♪
♪ I like the way
you smile at me ♪
♪ I feel the heat
that enveloped me ♪
♪ And what I saw
I like to see ♪
♪ I never knew
how evil grew ♪
♪ I'd like to steer away
from you ♪
♪ My friends told me
to keep clear of you ♪
♪ But something drew me
near to you ♪
♪ I never knew
how evil grew ♪
♪ Evil grows in the dark ♪
♪ Where the sun,
it never shines ♪
♪ Evil grows in cracks
and holes and lives ♪
(Gentle electronic music)
♪
♪♪♪
Narrator: Helen Lafayette.
A ruthless killer,
and criminal mastermind,
or a victim of unfair
circumstance
who couldn't outrun her past?
From a disturbing childhood
in the backwoods of Florida,
to a larger than life
secret identity.
Hannah: I had no idea how close
to death I really was.
Narrator: And beneath it all,
the intense obsession
that would lead
to a massive manhunt
across provincial lines.
(Sirens wail)
Sharon: She would've gone
to any lengths.
She was obsessed with her.
- Well, if Hannah Cafwell
hadn't gone digging,
Helen Lafayette would've gotten
away with murder.
Narrator: This is
"Helen Lafayette: A Killer
Among Us."
♪♪♪
(Gavel bangs)
♪♪♪
(Gavel bangs)
(Keys clack)
♪♪♪
Narrator: To many,
she was known as Grace Lee.
She and best friend,
Katherine Wryfield
were the leaders
of an experimental
women's community turned cult.
(Screaming)
Sharon: Grace was always
the warmer of the two.
More easy going.
If anyone was gonna snap
and kill someone,
it was Katherine,
to be honest with you.
- I am sick and tired
of bending over backwards
for you pathetic freaks!
Grace: I know Katherine
can be intense,
but she is our leader.
- Grace, you should take over.
Dana: Her ability to go
unnoticed, even in the midst
of a nationally televised
criminal trial,
is what was so remarkable,
and disturbing about her case.
She consistently showed
her ability
to completely transform herself.
- Stupid, silly Grace.
Dana: Inside and out.
Narrator: In 1981,
authorities raided
the New Eden property,
and found the body
of Agnes Wryfield,
Katherine's aunt.
Months later,
authorities would find
the dismembered remains
of a Jane Doe,
misidentified at the time
as former New Eden member,
Tabitha McNurtt.
Agnes Wryfield's death
was ruled to be an accident,
and when Tabitha McNurtt
proved to be alive
- Holy God!
- Hi, what's this?
Narrator: The case of the
mysterious second body
went cold.
Gary: The body of the victim
was missing her head.
So there was no way
to determine dental records.
And at the time there
was no DNA technology.
So even when it became clear
that this was not
Tabitha McNurtt's body,
there was still no way to tell
whose body it was.
- At the time, my department
was under investigation
for evidence tampering.
My superior, Hank Neston,
he-he-he tried to make
the body look
like Tabitha McNurtt to get
the murder conviction.
But when Ms. McNurtt showed up
alive a few months later,
our orders were to close
the book on the Jane Doe case,
and distance ourselves
from our mistakes.
And then nobody cared
whose body that was.
Narrator: The authorities
buried the unidentified body
in a pauper's grave,
and the investigation
ended there.
Until almost 10 years later,
when a now infamous documentary
would leave some with more
questions than answers.
- I never got the opportunity
to tell my version
of the New Eden story.
I mean, my career had all but
been destroyed by the trial.
Narrator: Hannah Cafwell,
the undercover journalist
posing as a member of the cult,
would recede from public life,
following Grace and Katherine's
trial.
Hannah: But after the trial,
I started to think that
we had all missed something.
We knew more than enough
about Katherine Wryfield.
But what about Grace?
I couldn't recall a single
detail from her past.
So I began to dig.
And it took a lot
of phone calls,
and a trip to Florida,
but eventually I found out
who Grace really was.
Narrator: It was this
very discovery
that would expose
Grace Lee's past,
and put Hannah
in mortal danger.
- I wanted to confront
Grace directly
about what I discovered,
and why she had lied.
So I wrote her in prison.
I wanted to give her the chance
to tell her side of the story,
but I never got a response.
Until a few weeks after she
had been released from prison.
I got a knock on my door.
And there she was,
standing right in front of me.
As soon as I saw her,
I knew I had hit on something
bigger than just a changed
name.
She was like a different
person.
I had no idea what
she would do, but
I let her in.
I managed to secretly
turn on my Dictaphone.
Grace, who is Helen Lafayette?
- You've always thought
you were so clever.
But you don't know shit!
You have no idea who
I really am.
- Why? What have you done?
- I've done what I've had to.
I was protecting her,
I was protecting all of you!
- Protecting who? From what?
- Oh Hannah, you think
you're smarter than me?
You think I can't see
what you're trying to do?
Hannah: I didn't recognize her.
The person standing in front
of me was like
a stranger.
Or a ghost.
Hannah: (on tape) I'm just
trying to understand, Grace.
Grace: (on tape) (Seething)
Don't you mean Helen?
- Is that your real name?
- You're the one who lied
about who she is!
- Sorry I lied back then,
but I still care about you,
Grace.
- (Laughs) Bull(bleep)!
You don't care,
I see through you.
I can see through everyone.
And yet none of you
could see through me.
You know, it's funny.
No one worries about
stupid, silly Grace.
Even when the truth was buried
right under your feet.
Even when I orchestrated
everything!
Made up all that (bleep)
for you to believe in.
For you to believe in her!
- Is this about Katherine?
- Don't you (bleep) talk
to me about Katherine!
- It was like the mere mention
of Katherine's name
had unlocked something.
Her eyes went black.
She became very agitated.
But it meant I was getting
closer to the truth.
Hannah: Does Katherine know
that you used to be Helen?
Grace: (Bleep) you!
- Does she know what
you were running from?
She didn't appreciate you.
- Stop it!
- She didn't ac-hey!
- You stop it!
- Hey! Stop that!
(Screams shrilly)
(Glass shatters)
- Suddenly she was just on me.
I mean, we went through
the glass table.
In that instant, I knew how
willing she was to kill me,
to kill in general.
She didn't hesitate.
I was bleeding pretty badly
from my face.
I couldn't breathe.
The room was going dark.
But I knew I had
to survive this.
Narrator: Fighting
for her life,
Hannah Cafwell would manage
to fend off Grace's attack.
Hannah: She went down,
and I just ran.
And by the time the police
got to my house,
she was gone.
Sam: Hannah Cafwell was
the first person to survive
an encounter like that
with Grace Lee.
And uh, because she did,
because of what she uncovered,
we were able to link Grace
to a 10-year-old cold case.
And uh, and discover
the identity
of our headless Jane Doe.
Narrator: When we return,
Helen's childhood,
and the path to murder.
♪♪♪
Narrator: Helen Lafayette was
born in Wewahitchka, Florida
on November 14th, 1955,
to a single mother,
Mary-Lynn Lafayette.
Greta: Mary-Lynn was
a very emotional woman,
always having some kind
of outburst.
We'd offer to watch
Helen sometimes.
we had a little hardware
store in town,
and she would spend
her day there.
We would give her little
chores to do.
She was a very bright
little girl.
Garth: Mhmm.
Gretta: Exceptional, even.
But Mary-Lynn could be
very controlling,
and possessive.
Not quite right up there,
I don't think.
- Mhmm.
Narrator: But when Helen
turned 14,
her insular life
with Mary-Lynn
would change forever.
In 1969, Mary-Lynn
began a relationship
with a travelling salesman,
named William Keefer.
- Mary-Lynn was head
over heels.
And suddenly she started
acting like Helen
was getting in the way
of her happiness.
I remember coming home once,
and seeing Helen sitting
on the porch,
waiting to be invited back
into the house,
like like a beaten-down dog.
And it broke my heart,
didn't it?
- Mhmm.
Narrator: Shortly after
his relationship
with Mary-Lynn began,
William Keefer would move
into the Lafayette home.
William Keefer had a history
of preying on lonely women,
taking their money,
and often becoming abusive
towards them.
Gretta: I remember that night.
We heard all kinds of screaming
and hollering
coming from next door,
and the sound of breaking
glass.
And Garth called the police.
You remember that, Garth?
- (Deep inhale)
Mhmm.
Narrator: One night,
Keef,
and Helen witnessed him
screaming at Mary-Lynn.
Sensing her mother
was in danger,
a 14-year-old Helen
would attack William Keefer
with a liquor bottle.
(Glass shatters)
William Keefer threatened
to press charges
if Helen stayed in the home.
So Mary-Lynn had Helen
placed into foster care.
- The foster system
in Florida in the late 60s
was not ideal.
As you can imagine.
and Holy Trinity
had a reputation.
It was a harsh environment,
ran more like a juvenile
detention centre.
Narrator: Lonely and abandoned,
Helen would cling
to the first friend
she met at Holy Trinity.
A troublemaker
named Lisa Grover.
Hannah: She took Helen
under her wing,
and Helen, used to being
the giver
in a co-dependent relationship,
would do anything
that Lisa asked.
Narrator: In early 1971,
Lisa would convince Helen
that they should run away
from Holy Trinity,
and head for California.
♪♪♪
Jonny: We're touring Indiana in
the early 70s on our own dime.
Well, we had a band,
and a sound,
and we just letting the road
take us where it took us.
Narrator: Helen and Lisa
met the members
of "Bucket of Love"
while hitchhiking,
and at Lisa's insistence,
began traveling with the band.
Jonny: At some point, you know,
we had these two chicks
traveling with us.
And Lisa well
Lisa was a wild one for sure.
And her and Micky, well, they
got hot and heavy early on,
and I remember Helen
didn't like that much.
I think she wanted
Lisa all to herself.
You know, women get a little
clingy.
Sam: Micky Stanton had had
dust-ups with the law before.
Um, drugs, petty theft.
So when he wound up dead
in an alley
with multiple stab wounds,
um local authorities
at the time
didn't think much of it.
This was just another
drug deal gone bad.
Narrator: Except what
authorities didn't know
was that Lisa and Micky
had had a fight that night,
one witnessed
by Helen Lafayette.
And when Micky moved on Lisa,
Helen struck a fatal blow.
Hannah: It was her mother
and William Keefer
all over again,
except this time
Helen went too far.
Helen killed Micky Stanton,
and Lisa Grover
would've witnessed it.
Narrator: Distressed
by Helen's actions,
and fearful of being
implicated,
Lisa told Helen they should go
their separate ways.
(Strums guitar)
- They both took off
after that.
We just figured Lisa
was all busted up
over Micky getting stabbed,
and just assumed that Helen
went with her.
That's life on the road.
(Strums guitar)
- And that was the last time
that anyone recalls seeing,
or meeting Helen Lafayette.
Narrator: Eight months later,
Grace Lee would turn up
at an experimental farm
called Valhalla Ranch.
And it was there
she would instantly form
an intense bond
with Katherine Wryfield.
A bond that would prove
to be fatal.
When we return,
Lisa Grover reappears,
and Grace Lee's past
catches up with her.
♪♪♪
- You get the hell outta here!
Sam: As it turned out,
Lisa Grover,
had been living in a halfway
house in Seattle.
You know, she was troubled,
an addict.
Um, her life had gone
you know,
pretty much how you'd expect.
Narrator: In 1981, Lisa Grover
saw a news story
about a woman named Grace Lee,
who had thwarted a bank robbery
in Penticton, British Columbia.
Hannah: Lisa was probably
the only person
who could recognize Grace
as Helen.
And here Lisa was, broke,
desperate,
and there was her old friend,
holding a big cheque.
Lisa thought she could
blackmail Grace
by threatening to expose her
as Helen,
and Micky Stanton's killer.
- You get the hell outta here!
Hannah: I never asked Grace
who that woman was.
I mean, things that New Eden
were already so tense,
I thought it was just some
local trying to gain access.
But it never sat right with me.
- At the time, Grace was
controlling who came in
and out of the property,
and she was exhibiting some
very strange behavior.
But we just assumed that
was because of the way
the Katherine was treating her,
you know,
not because she had cut
someone up,
and buried her around
our property.
I mean, that's just not
the sort of thing
you assume about a person.
- We believe that Lisa took
a bus across the border,
and found a way to New Eden.
When she threatened to expose
Grace's identity
to Katherine
and the other women,
Grace then lured her
into the woods,
and out of earshot.
And she then likely strangled
Lisa to death,
and hid the body in the woods
until she could return
to dismember it,
and bury the evidence.
Now, will we believe that
she would've had access
to all kinds of farm equipment
to achieve this task.
Gary: When we re-examined
Lisa Grover's remains,
we could see, through certain
false starts in the cuts,
The incisions had a W-shaped
pattern,
which usually indicated
teeth of a handsaw.
To dismember a body
with that kind of tool
would be very, um,
very labor intensive.
You would have to be
very determined.
Narrator: In late 1991,
based on the recorded
conversation
between Hannah Cafwell
and Helen Lafayette,
authorities would exhume
the remains
of the dismembered Jane Doe
that had been found
nearly a decade earlier
on the edges of the New Eden
property.
They also would return
to the New Eden property
with one objective:
Locate the missing skull
of Helen Lafayette's victim.
- Based on Hannah's recorded
conversation with Grace
Grace: (on tape) None of you
could see through me.
Sam: We believed that
the victim's missing head
was still somewhere
on the New Eden property.
And we had to find it
in or.
Grace: (on tape) Even when
the truth was buried
right under your feet.
Sharon: They found
Lisa Grover's head
buried in the old apiary.
Right there, right
in the middle of everything!
I mean
that poor woman's head,
under all of those bees.
It really makes you wonder
if that's why
all those little things died.
Narrator: Helen Lafayette
ki,
and became Grace Lee
to hide from her crime.
A decade later,
she killed Lisa Grover
to keep that secret safe.
But it would be another
10 years before Grace
would try to kill again,
and this time,
she wouldn't be as successful.
But Helen Lafayette's story
wasn't over yet.
First, they'd have
to catch her.
- As Grace Lee, Helen had
proven time and again
that she was incredibly
skilled at blending in
when she wanted to,
and making people like her.
And she had acquired many
practical skills
to help her with that.
Hannah: By the time
of their trial,
she had an entire nation
fooled.
Think about how smart
you'd have to be
in order to convince everyone
you're that stupid.
- I guess she figured
the stupider we looked,
the less capable of murder
we'd seem.
Narrator: With the help
of inspector, Sam Aarons,
the serious crimes division
would begin a covert search
to find Grace Lee.
Sam: We thought that
if we didn't go public
with our search, she might
be more likely to slip up,
and more likely to expose
herself.
But she just kept slipping
through our fingers.
And that's when we brought in
Dana Bashuk to help us
track her next move.
- Katherine Wryfield
was the obvious answer.
Helen slash Grace had a pattern
of forming incredibly strong
bonds with women.
First with her mother,
and then with Lisa Grover.
Violence would only ensue when
something happened
to break that bond.
I advised them
to contact Katherine,
who had returned to her
family home in Toronto.
- I assumed Grace
would kill Katherine.
After all she had put
her through, my God.
I was glued to the news
station, you know,
just waiting for
the inevitable.
To be clear,
Katherine being killed.
- It would all lead back
to Katherine.
It always had.
Narrator: A visit from the past
turns fatal.
When we come back.
♪♪♪
(Birds chirp)
(Kettle whistles)
(Water pours)
(Clangs)
♪♪♪
♪♪♪
Katherine: I never knew
Helen Lafayette.
But I did know Grace Lee.
Grace Lee.
I knew her very well.
We spent nearly every day
together for 15 years.
And in a way,
we were like sisters.
I don't have a sister,
but I think I know what
it feels like.
Intense, you know.
Kind of suffocating.
But sweet, sometimes,
and in a way
you know, Grace
Grace always supported me.
She really, really wanted me
to be happy.
And I guess
well, I was there to teach
Grace about the world.
(Laughs)
I was her Henry Higgins,
and she my Eliza Doolittle.
At least that's the way I felt.
Before I learned the truth.
- Each of Grace's bonds
were eventually broken
when she felt rejected
by her mother,
by Lisa.
And in those cases,
the cause of the fracturing
was the figure of a male
intruder.
But when it came to Katherine,
that bond would last decades,
and withstand quite a bit
of strain.
And I think part of that
was because there were no men
present for Grace
to perceive as a threat,
and especially no men vying
for Katherine's attention.
- I mean, of course,
there were no men around.
It was an all-female cult--
uh, uh, commune.
It was an all-female commune.
So, there you go.
It didn't mean that
there wasn't the occasional
delivery man, but
I would usually shoo them away
before Grace could see them
eyeing me up.
So in a way, I'm pretty lucky.
- Well, we didn't know how
Katherine would react
to the truth about Grace's
identity,
but-huh!
At the time, uh,
she was our only hope
of bringing her in.
And we were really hoping
that she would cooperate.
Narrator: The special unit
would approach
Katherine Wryfield,
and brief her on Grace's past.
- When they told me what
had happened,
I felt betrayed.
I mean, of course I did.
But was I frightened?
I mean, no.
Not at first.
- When we talked to Katherine,
we-we found out that Grace had
been calling her regularly,
almost daily, just to talk.
It was a massive,
massive leap for us.
Narrator: Working with Dana,
Sam's unit convinced Katherine
to submit to a wiretap
so they could track
Helen's whereabouts.
Katherine: I mean,
there were just,
there were so many emotions,
you know, just
just bubbling up inside of me.
It was-it was extremely
complicated.
And I don't think that anyone
can blame me for that.
Narrator: But the special
unit's gambit
to use Katherine
to get to Grace
wouldn't go according to plan.
- I guess the instructions
weren't clear.
♪♪♪
Narrator: A hot-blooded
mistake, an ice-cold trail,
and a deadly showdown.
When we come back.
♪♪♪
- There were all these men
in my house,
barking orders at me.
You know, you gotta keep her
on the phone for this long.
Don't get emotional.
Just keep her talking.
Sit down. Stop crying.
And uh, it was very intense.
And this was Grace
we were talking about.
They didn't know her.
They didn't know me.
I think that I responded as
any human person would have.
(Phone rings)
Narrator: On February 7th,
1992,
Katherine Wryfield received
a call from Grace Lee
at 4:45 p.m.
(Phone rings)
She was instructed to keep
Grace on the phone
for at least two minutes.
Katherine: Hello?
Grace: Hi Katherine,
how are ya?
- Uh, I'm-I'm good.
- Good.
Listen, I just wanted
to tell you that um--
- Don't you dare (bleep)
come near me!
- What?
- I know where you are, Helen!
- I know what you did!
They're coming for you,
you psycho!
And I never want to see
you again!
(Bleep) you! (Bleep) you
for what you did to me!
(Phone clicks off,
Katherine gasps)
Sam: That was our only lead.
Okay? And uh, after that,
we knew that Grace
would vanish
you know, for good this time.
- They said they couldn't
trace the call.
They-you know, they didn't
have enough time.
And I do blame myself.
I do.
I-I mean, I couldn't contain
a,
you-you know, and
I just don't think anyone
understands what that level
of betrayal really feels like.
I had to get that off my chest,
or it would've driven me insane.
I'm glad I did it.
No regrets.
- Katherine had effectively
broken her bond with Grace
by rejecting Helen,
which now meant that Katherine
was also in immediate danger.
- The next thing I know,
I'm being told that I have
to be placed
into witness protection,
that my life is in danger,
and that this Helen Lafayette,
that Grace was coming for me.
Narrator: Katherine Wryfield
was placed into
the protected witness program.
She would be relocated
to La Dore,
a remote town in Quebec.
- Oh! No.
I hated it there.
Yeah, the French Canadian
accent, it's very grating.
You know, it's a lot
of hunh hunh hunh!
Hunh hunh hunh.
Hoh hoh hoh.
Rude, disgusting men.
No, I-I-I don't even
speak the language,
so there was a lot of
this goin' on.
And they weren't really
trying hard,
so overall, I'd say I do not
recommend rural Quebec,
even when you are hiding
from a murderer.
(Chuckles)
Sam: We put Katherine
into protective custody,
but as soon as she went
underground, so did Grace.
Um, at that point, we released
her photo as a wanted person
across the country.
We set up an ongoing
citizen's hotline,
but no one turned her in.
Narrator: Authorities would
fail to capture Grace Lee
for nearly two years.
Sam: Helen Lafayette,
Grace Lee.
Whoever she was,
when she disappeared,
she was gone, and
we started to wonder
if she was even still alive.
- Grace wasn't going to
reappear unless she wanted to.
She had been a step ahead
of everyone
for most of her life.
The only way she was going
to come out from the shadows,
make herself vulnerable,
was if she could track down
Katherine.
For Katherine she would
come out.
Narrator: On March 22nd, 1994,
Katherine Wryfield would awake
from a nap
to find Grace Lee sitting
in her living room.
(Glass shatters)
To this day, no one knows
how Grace was able to locate
Miss Wryfield in protective
custody.
- Katherine was under
round-the-clock surveillance.
you know, we still don't know
how it happened.
Maybe a shift change,
just some bad luck.
We-we don't know.
Um, but suddenly we're getting
a call from officers
saying that they've spotted
Grace Lee inside the house
with Miss Wryfield,
and she's armed.
Narrator: Airborne and ground
units were called
to Katherine Wryfield's
La Dore residence,
but instructed not
to go inside.
- We were dealing with
a hostage situation.
We informed both women that
we had the house surrounded,
but there was silence.
No shots were fired,
and we could tell
from the heat signature
that both women were alive,
and inside the house.
But that's all that
we had to go on.
And uh, and we just had
to wait like that
for what felt like hours.
- Despite everything
that Grace did,
despite what she did to me,
I couldn't help
but feel bad for her.
I mean, she was so damaged
by these relationships
from her past,
including, at times,
her relationship
with Katherine.
- Like I said, it always
came back to Katherine.
Katherine never had a way
with people,
except Grace.
And I believe Grace would've
done anything for her.
Narrator: Armed officers
would wait outside
of Katherine's home
for nearly two hours.
To this day, Katherine Wryfield
is the only person
who can tell us what transpired
between the two women.
- I saw that there was a gun
on the table.
But she was just sitting there.
With her head in her hands.
And then she looked up,
and she smiled.
And after two years alone
in that hick town
it was the most familiar
smile in the world.
I made us some tea,
and we just talked,
you know.
Just talked about
stupid, silly little things.
Things she had seen
on her travels.
The past.
Little jokes we had shared,
you know.
How I didn't care
for the French.
It just really felt like
(Sighs)
nothing had ever really
happened, you know?
None of those bad things.
I don't know how long
we sat and talked like that.
But I looked up,
and I could see that the police
cars were pulling up.
We could hear the helicopter
overhead,
and that they were uh,
trying to communicate
with us.
I told her, you know,
you can turn yourself in.
This can all be over.
(Sighs)
And that's
that's when she started to cry.
(Sobs)
She said that she was just
so sick
of that voice.
In her head that-that made her
do all those things.
So I took her in my arms.
And I just remember
that she felt so small,
like a child.
I just let her cry on me.
(Shaky exhale)
And she looked up.
And she said, you know,
let's get outta here.
Let's run away.
We can start a new life
together.
But I think she knew.
She knew that
I was gonna say no.
So she
nodded and kinda got up,
took the gun.
And then she smiled at me.
She said, I love you.
I love you so much.
I said-I said, please,
you know, turn yourself in.
Just-just for me.
(Sobs)
She just walked to the door.
And there was something
something different
in her eyes.
Something final.
(Helicopter rotor beat)
Officer 1: Hold position.
Officer 2: Standby, Chief
Officer 3: Standby on 114,
we're waiting
for confirmation on that.
Officer 4: Do you have her
in your sights?
Helicopter pilot: Confirming
that, above the house now.
Uh copy that, door's opening.
Officer 1: Alright,
just be calm,
everything's gonna be alright.
Okay, I need you to take
a couple more steps forward.
Alright now I'm gonna need you
to put the gun down, okay?
Okay, everything's gonna be
alright.
Everything's gonna be good.
Now
just right there, alright?
That's good, just stop.
Okay. I'm gonna need you
to put the gun on the ground,
okay? Slowly.
Now look at me.
Can you hear me? I need you
to put the gun down.
Do you hear me? Look at me.
Put the gun down.
Put down the gun!
Put the gun down!
(Gunshots pop, screams)
(Officers shout, screaming)
(Gunshots pop repeatedly)
(Helicopter rotors beat)
Officer 2: We got a 111, K.O.
Dispatcher: 10-4,
688 De Sante Avenue.
(Police radio chatter)
- Grace!
- Hold your fire.
- Grace!
Officer: Hold your fire. Second
subject out of the house.
- Get back! Keep them back!
(Reporters shout)
- Give her some room!
(Cameras click)
Officer 2: Get back!
What are you doing?!
- Give her some room!
(Crowd shouts)
Officer 1: Katherine, it's safe
now, you're gonna be alright.
Reporters: Katherine!
Katherine!
Katherine, please! Please!
Katherine! Katherine!
Katherine!
How does this feel?
Are you alright?
Katherine! Katherine!
How does this-are you alright?
Katherine! Katherine!
(All shouting questions)
Can you tell us exactly
what happened?
Katherine, what did you talk
to her about?
Katherine, we're over here!
How are you feeling?
Katherine! Katherine!
Kathe?
Katherine! Katherine!
(All shouting at once)
(Cameras click)
(Reporters shout)
♪♪♪
♪ I like the way
you smile at me ♪
♪ I feel the heat
that enveloped me ♪
♪ And what I saw
I like to see ♪
♪ I never knew
how evil grew ♪
♪ I'd like to steer away
from you ♪
♪ My friends told me
to keep clear of you ♪
♪ But something drew me
near to you ♪
♪ I never knew
how evil grew ♪
♪ Evil grows in the dark ♪
♪ Where the sun,
it never shines ♪
♪ Evil grows in cracks
and holes and lives ♪