"Somehow it got in the media that we were investigating this thing." "And a lot of girls started calling me and talking to me." "They wanted us to know that there was credibility, but they didn't want their names used." "Didn't want their families, husbands, knowing anything's going on." "And we started rolling from there." "I interviewed over a hundred girls myself." "Firsthand." "What happened" "As we were getting into this, we had to cut it off because, I mean, we had so many victims, we were gonna go work on the best cases." ""Maskell had a police officer pick me up."" ""Maskell was running around with the police, put me in the car."" ""Maskell pulled me into his office and examined me on his desk."" "And those were the cases that we felt we could really do something with." "We believed that we had a credible case." "This is what we call a red ball case." "A red ball case is any case that's gonna cause national media attention." "So you have to work with the state's attorney." "So, we were taking it directly to..." "Sharon May's office." "To Sharon May." "I'm telling you, Sharon May ran interference for the Church any time we got a priest case." "She'd kill it." "We get this anonymous thing." "Well, the guy turned out to be this guy name Storey." "Mr. Storey calls up." "He says, "Know where the farmers' market parking lot is?" "Be there at midnight." "Come alone." "I got information that'll blow this case wide open."" "So, we go down there on the parking lot." "When he gets in the car and says, "Start driving." So we do." "We start driving." "And we get to Holy Cross Cemetery." "Oh, it's dark as hell." "It's midnight." "He goes, "Go to the back."" ""I wanna tell you where I buried the stuff from Father Maskell."" "One of the boxes that I saw had girls with their shirts open, exposing their breasts." "And there was records in there talking about this individual girl, like a profile." "Clearly in high school." "And it's a lot of boxes." "And they're in plastic bags." "And that's typical pedophile." "A pedophile cannot separate with his collection." "He can't do it." "Even though he knows he can't get to it, he knows it's there." "You saw pictures yourself, correct?" "I saw pictures myself, yes, I did." "Enough to arrest Maskell?" "We could've done it right then and there." "But what I'm saying is... every damn time we had a case involving a priest," "Sharon May ran interference for the Church." "She was the division chief of the Sex Offense Unit." "She ran interference." "How did she run interference?" "You'd ask for a warrant." ""I'll have to look at it." "I don't know."" "If you got information, and you don't get it within the first 48, it's gone." "It's gone." "That's that old doctor." "The top one is my credentials." "My badge." "Here's my retirement." "Summation on my 38 years in Baltimore County Police." "Came on in 1955 and then retired in '92." "I find it hard to believe." "In our society, they go for the deep pockets." "And once you open the door, a flood could come in." "I would say, prove it to me." "Not with recalled memory." "With facts." "Beyond a shadow of a doubt." "I would say so." "I know he had a brother with the police department." "Joe Maskell." "He was a friend and fellow officer." "He was the chaplain of Baltimore County, state police, and the Air National Guard." "He used to come in ride-alongs." "He used to come down and I'd let him shoot when I was working." "We'd have a little target practice." "He had a friend in Dundalk." "He went out on a boat with him." "In fact, I fished with him on a couple occasions." "He wasn't a typical... you know, saint." "I know if I got in a fight... and he was riding with me as a chaplain, he'd be there by my side." "That's the type of individual he was." "He's a priest, but I think he really wanted to be a police like his brother." "He was just like... any other member of the police force to me." "I don't think his name ever come up... until all the recall memory come about." "That's when Maskell's name..." "That's when I started getting inquiries... about Sister Cesnik." "But, you know, I-- I've got to be objective." "I think like a police." "If I thought it was him... he wouldn't have been walking free." "I would've did what I was supposed to do."