MAN: The surveillance
on the bridge was covert.
I remember sitting in the car.
 The radio squelch broke.
 And I heard something
 about a splash.
MAN 2:
It was three in the morning.
MAN 3:
They looked up on the bridge
and they could see headlights.
MAN: They had pulled
 someone over.
 I said, "You know why
 we pulled you over?"
And he goes, "Yeah,
it's got something to do
with those missing kids."
♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS) ♪
REPORTER:
 July 29, 1979.
Police find the badly decomposed
 bodies of two teenagers.
Next thing you know,
another body.
WOMAN: It didn't become
the story it should've been
 until there were nine
young people who were dead.
Black children were missing.
ALL: (REPEATING) Missing.
Okay, now this is gonna get bad.
MAN 4: The killings accelerated
 in pace.
MAN 5: Kids are disappearing
 once a month.
MAN 6:
Mayor Jackson-- he went up
to the White House and said,
"I want every living FBI agent
on the planet in Atlanta."
MAN 7: It had to be somebody
the kids knew and trusted.
 He was the connection.
 Who is this guy,
 Wayne Williams?
WOMAN 3: We found the killer
 and that's it,
but that really wasn't it.
MAN 8: You had people saying
that this has to be the clan.
 Or this has to be
 some crooked cop,
but nobody really knew anything.
They didn't follow those leads.
They chose Wayne.
This could've turned
into a riot
because people were that angry.
You are killing our children.
MAN 9: Elected officials
did not want this case to go on.
 The families never had
 any closure.
 WOMAN 4: We have begun
 going through evidence
to see if there was anything
 never tested.
We have an obligation to insure
that every investigative lead
is followed.
WOMAN 5:
I wanna know who killed Curtis.
I'm not gonna stop
because I'm a warrior.
This vulnerability that at
any moment you could be stolen.
We come from stolen people.
That's deep in our psyche.
Do what should've been done.
Solve the cases.
MAN 10: It's one of those
memories you have of Atlanta.
You really wish
you didn't have it.
♪ (MUSIC CONCLUDES) ♪
