URDIALES, ANDREW: People’s Magazine Investigates TV -
‘He attacked my sister and proceeded to stab her 41 times.’ People Magazine Investigates s3e13, brother, ID 2020
With crime scenes over 2,000 miles apart, the centre of it is a murderer whose desires to kill are so deep-seated he’ll go to any lengths to stalk his prey. ibid.
Andrew Urdiales is the prime suspect for the serial murders of three women. ibid.
Despite pleading not guilty by reason of insanity, Urdialis is found guilty of all eight murders in three trials. ibid.
URICK, SAM & TED YOUNG: Crime Stories TV - Dallas Observer News -
A baffling disappearance. A desert full of secrets. And an international manhunt that would test investigators. Crime Stories: Interview with the Devil
Two days after Gary [Patterson] disappeared, Waco police launch a missing persons investigation. But none of Gary’s co-workers know how to reach the mysterious Ned Wright. ibid.
Investigators run a background check on Ted Young. ibid.
[Sam] Urick [Gary’s father-in-law] is far more than a corrupt businessman; federal agents say he’s suspected of helping two rogue CIA agents ship 40,000 pounds of C4 explosive to Libyan terrorists in the mid-1980s. ibid.
Soon he was back in Waco with a new plan: Could Patterson fly to El Paso, where another development was under way, and meet with the company’s CEO, who would be visiting the site there? The meeting would be little more than a formality, Wright assured. They had already discussed matters and were prepared to offer him a job with an increased status, salary, and additional benefits – as well as a signing bonus of a new Chevrolet Suburban. Over lunch, Wright gave Patterson four $100 bills with which to purchase a plane ticket for the quick get-acquainted trip. If he took the job – ‘Which we’re certainly hoping you will,’ Wright told him – he could drive the Suburban back to Waco to give notice and begin putting his affairs in order. If not, they would fly him home in the corporate jet ...
Yet it began as a routine missing person’s case, filed the Monday morning after the young man’s departure. A grim-faced D C Patterson appeared at the Waco Police Department and immediately made it clear that he was convinced his son had been the victim of foul play. Also, he strongly suspected that a mean-spirited man named Sam Urick, Gary’s former father-in-law, was somehow involved. Dallas Observer News 26th October 2000