OSWEGO, N.Y. -- Testimony continued Thursday in the hearing to reconsider Gary Thibodeau's conviction for the 1994 kidnapping of Heidi Allen.
James Steen, Roger Breckenridge, and Michael Bohrer all took the stand in recent days.
They say despite Tonya Priest's statements, they had nothing to do with Allen's disappearance and presumed death. But according to witnesses the court heard in court, they at least implied that they were involved.
Danielle Babcock worked as a telemarketer for Michael Bohrer for less than a year. She said she quit because of a disturbing statement Bohrer repeated to his employees.
"He would tell us several times that he would do us like he did Heidi," said Babcock.
Two other witnesses who didn't want to be filmed had similar stories about James Steen and Roger Breckenridge.
Joseph Mannino said that while in prison, James Steen told him he was the one who drove Heidi Allen's remains over the border to Canada in a scrapped van. He said Steen told him Allen was a "rat."
Amanda Braley, an acquaintance of Breckenridge and Steen, testified that she overheard Breckenridge talk about taking Allen to a scrapyard in a van, crushing it and sending it to Canada.
She says she also heard Steen tell someone, "I can tell you I will never see a day in prison for what we did to Heidi."
The district attorney asked the witnesses why they didn't immediately report what they knew to the authorities since it happened years ago.
In Babcock's case, she said she didn't believe Bohrer was an immediate threat.
"Did I think that he would honestly do anything to me? No, I didn't. But did it bother me to the point where I quit my job? Yes, it did," said Babcock.
As for Mannino, he said he assumed Steen got the van legally through some sort of evidence auction and scrapped it legally.
Braley said she was just one person and afraid to come forward.