In the early seventies a little girl goes missing, then a college student and three more people; two young women and a 35 year old man who, perhaps, walked into something he wasn't supposed to see.
It takes place over the span of just a few years and is an astonishing amount of crime for the rural area of the Lewis-Clark Valley.
We follow the brilliant and practical Sheriff Detective Jackie Nichols as she searches for answers. She's very likable and relatable in her efforts to convict a "person of interest" for these crimes.
The "person of interest" has too many links and connections to call them coincidences anymore. He's everywhere. We never learn his name, which may be frustrating to some, but not me. If Detective Nichols and the whole town know, that's good enough. It's an ongoing investigation, after all.
We're given titillating information and facts that lead us to the same conclusion as law enforcement. However, circumstantial isn't going to cut it. They need DNA, stronger connections of the dots.
We follow Nichols as she goes to great, great lengths to find that evidence. Often on her own time, she has built of wealth of details and information.
It's a very watchable yet a frustrating two hour docu-series. But, just because we don't get immediate resolution doesn't mean it isn't worth your time. It is.
The more people who watch it, the better. Someone, somewhere saw or knows something. Let's get justice for these people.