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- Interview Aaron Azeriah
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Q = Det. Armstrong
A = Azeriah
- Q Thank you for coming in. To start, please state
your full name, date of birth, and address for the
record.
A Aaron Azeriah, February 12, 1969. I live at XXXXXX.
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- Q That's the 8 Ball Lounge?
- A Right. There's a house on the property behind the
bar.
-
- Q Thank you. Now then Mr. Azeriah, where were you
during the period Ms. Knight was abducted and killed?
- A I'm not sure of the dates - when all that was
happening. I was in Tangier with my father from April 27
to May 31.
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- Q What about for the rest of the time?
- A Nothing. I've been here working. Seven days a week,
sometimes twelve hours a day. It's not easy.
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- Q Do you make much money?
- A Oh sure. It's a popular place. But I run it. So
it's a lot of work. We don't have much staff, because of
keeping costs down.
-
- Q I see. Where did you get the 10,000 dollars?
- A For the loan?
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- Q Yes.
- A It was mostly personal funds. I mean, obviously
some of my paycheck was in there, but it was personal
funds. I have money saved up, my mother left me something
I've been earning interest on. I used some money from the
bar, but not much.
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- Q How did you pay Ms. Knight? In cash?
- A No. She wanted cash but I gave her a check. I told
her she could go cash it if that's what she really
wanted. I didn't want to deal with all that cash.
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- Q Why did Ms. Knight want the loan?
- A She told me it was to pay for school. She told me
she was going to get the money from her parents and she
just needed it until she got the check from her parents.
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- Q Why did you give it to her?
A I trusted her, I guess. I mean, I thought about it for
a while, and I knew it was a lot just for tuition, but
sometimes it's hard to talk about the real reason you
need money. I knew she'd been through a lot, and I
trusted her.
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- Q What else might she have used the money for?
- A I really don't know. All I'm saying is it seemed
like a lot for classes and books.
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- Q What was the collateral?
- A None really. I told her to pay it back in a couple
of weeks. It was our understanding that it was a really
temporary thing.
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- Q Did she pay it back?
- A No. Not a cent.
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- Q Did you have any kind of agreement about what to
do?
- A No. Not really. Sometimes with loans I ask them to
come to the bar and work, to work it off.
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- Q So you loan a lot of people money?
- A Yeah, but not like Purity. You know, small stuff,
200 dollars, 500 dollars. Never over a thousand. I
wouldn't say it's a lot of people - it's mostly friends.
If they can't pay I just say I could use some help at
work and they come in for a few days and that's it. It's
not like slavery or anything. I pretty much forgive the
loan - most people don't work enough to pay it off.
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- Q Have you ever charged interest for loans?
- A No. Never. It's just like an IOU, pretty much.
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- Q Have you ever been involved in book making?
- A No.
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- Q Did you forgive Ms. Knight's loan? Did she work it
off?
- A No. Ten thousand dollars is too much money. I told
her to come in and work, but that was mostly just to make
sure she didn't skip town. I needed to keep an eye on
her.
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- Q Did she ever come in?
- A Not to work, no.
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- Q But she came to the bar?
- A Yeah. She liked the atmosphere. Sometimes she came
to hear a band, but mostly it was just to hang out.
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- Q What did you do about the loan?
- A Obviously I was pretty mad about it. I tried to
give her plenty of leeway, knowing she was going through
a tough time, but I felt betrayed. I just kept after her
about it. I didn't really know what else to do. I guess
eventually I might have asked her to sell stuff -
jewelry, I don't know.
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- Q Did you ever contact her parents yourself?
- A No. I figured it was her business to deal with
them. To be honest, I just wanted my money back. I didn't
want to get entangled in her life.
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- Q Did you ever consider pressing charges or going to
court?
- A No. No offense to you, but I figure the less the
law is involved, the better. I figured it was just
something she and I needed to work out.
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- Q Was Ms. Knight supporting herself in any way?
- A Not as far as I know. She did volunteer work, as
far as I know, and that was it. She was living off the
loan money. I guess she was hoping to live off her
parents.
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- Q She was volunteering at the animal shelter?
- A Yeah.
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- Q When was the last time you saw Ms. Knight?
- A I guess she came by at the end of February. It was
a Friday, I guess it was February 28.
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- Q What happened?
- A The bar was crowded, I told her to come back some
other time so we could talk. I was working behind the
bar. I remember not being glad to see her - I was too
mad. It annoyed me that she was paying for her drinks
with my money. She stuck around for a while, not really
talking to anyone. And then she left.
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- Q Did she come by again?
- A No, no calls either. That was it.
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- Q And you didn't tell the police when she
disappeared?
- A No. I figured she'd finally done it - skipped town.
When I heard maybe it was a kidnapping, then I didn't
know what to think.
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- Q What was the exact nature of your relationship?
- A I guess you could say we'd been friends before the
whole loan thing.
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- Q Did you ever have sexual relations?
- A No. Nothing like that. It was mostly just letters
until she came to Oxford. Then I guess we saw each other
every couple of weeks.
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- Q Did you want to be romantically involved?
- A No. Not really. What I mean is, we had a different
kind of relationship. We weren't dating, we weren't
having sex, but we were intimate. It doesn't fit in a
category.
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- Q What about in Europe?
- A We met in Spain. I guess it was late July, so about
a year ago. It was just one night, we talked for a long
while and I gave her my address.
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- Q Are you married?
- A No.
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- Q Do you have any children?
- A No.
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- Q What about younger brothers or sisters?
- A No, none.
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- Q Are you currently romantically involved with
someone?
- A No. I'm not happy about it, but I really don't have
time for anything serious.
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- Q Have you ever heard of the band Ego Shovel?
- A Sure. They're local.
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- Q Have they ever played here?
- A No. They didn't really fit the crowd here. We get
mostly blues here. Blues and just traditional stuff. A
lot of the bands here play for free, it's just students
jamming or whatever. It's not really that serious.
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- Q Do you know Blaine Pitzer?
- A I know of him. He's in Ego Shovel. I've never met
him.
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- Q Do you know Dave Woolowrth?
- A No. Never heard of him.
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- Q All right, Mr. Azeriah. Just one more question. Why
do you think Ms. Knight was murdered?
- A I don't know. As far as I knew she was pretty nice
to people. I can't see her having real enemies. Maybe she
was a little naÔve about that - sometimes she was
nice to people at the bar too much. She was basically a
trusting person, which was something she'd worked on. We
talked about that a lot in our letters - learning to
trust people when people are basically bad. Maybe I'm
wrong because I know she was pretty much a loner and
didn't have a lot of friends, but just with strangers in
the bar she was always very open and willing to talk.
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- Q Thank you. We'll give you a call.
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