#213 Jason Flom with Joe Bryan - podcast episode cover

#213 Jason Flom with Joe Bryan

Jul 14, 202144 minEp. 213
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Episode description

Joe Bryan was a high school principal, and his wife Mickey Bryan was a 4th-grade teacher in the small town of Clifton, TX. On Tuesday, October 15th, 1985, Mickey did not show up for work. Her body was discovered later that day in her bedroom. Joe was 120 miles away in Austin at a conference at that time. Prosecutors came up with a theory that Joe drove back to Clifton, killed his wife, and returned to Austin, using the conference as an alibi. He was convicted with "bloodstain analysis" which was later exposed to be wholly unreliable.

For more on the junk science of bloodstain analysis check out Wrongful Conviction: Junk Science - Bloodstain Pattern Evidence with host Josh Dubin, released on August 10, 2020. https://www.wrongfulconvictionpodcast.com/podcast/s11e14-wrongful-conviction-junk-science-bloodstain-pattern-evidence

Learn more and get involved at:
https://innocencetexas.org/
https://www.propublica.org/article/texas-forensic-science-commission-blood-spatter-evidence-testimony-murder-case-joe-bryan
https://www.wrongfulconvictionpodcast.com/with-jason-flom

Wrongful Conviction  is a production of Lava for Good™ Podcasts in association with Signal Co. No1.

​​We have worked hard to ensure that all facts reported in this show are accurate. The views and opinions expressed by the individuals featured in this show are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Lava for Good.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Beloved couple Joe and Mickey Bryan, who had no children of their own, instead dedicated their lives to educating the children of Clifton, Texas. But while Joe attended an annual high school principal conference one hundred and twenty miles away in Austin, tragedy struck on October fifteenth, nineteen eighty five. After Mickey did not arrive at her fourth grade classroom and could not be reached, her principal went to the Brian home with Mickey's parents and found a gruesome crime scene.

Gunshots had spattered the walls, ceiling, and betting with Mickey's blood, and friends drove a distraught Joe Briant home from Austin. There were no witnesses, a missing gun and jewelry, a cigarette, but in a non smoking home, it looked like a burglary gone bat until Mickey's brother Charlie borrowed Joe's car while home for the funeral and allegedly found a flashlight in the trunk that tested positive for a few specks of the most common blood type TYPEO, same as Mickey's.

The sheer absurdity of Joe racing from Austin to Clifton and back unseen, free of physical evidence, and without a motive. Was overcome by this one object that was found outside of the crime scene, in a car that was not in Joe's possession. Despite DNA testing, it cast doubt on the flashlights connection to the crime scene, and evidence that pointed squarely at a murderous police officer who later took his own life. Joe Brian had to wait thirty five

long years for parole to finally set him free. This is wrongful conviction with Jason Flamm. Welcome back to wrongful conviction with Jason Flamm. That's me, of course, I'm your host.

And two and a half years ago I read a profoundly troubling series of articles in The New York Times, originally published in pro public of my Pam Collof, about the astounding case of Joe Bran, who served thirty five years in prison in Texas for a crime there is a zero percent possibility that he ever could have committed.

And you'll find out why as we go along. And it has haunted me ever since that day, and so I'm just deeply honored to have the man himself, Joe Brian all seventy nine years of age of him with us today on the show.

Speaker 2

So, Joe, you missed it a year? Oh did I miss a year? I'm oh, happy birthday. He's eighty years old. The congratulations.

Speaker 1

Well, I'm sorry you're here because of why you're here, but I'm very very happy and honored that you're here and with Joe is a renowned attorney Jesse Freud, thank you also for being here today on Raefel.

Speaker 3

Thank you for including me. Appreciate it.

Speaker 1

And I think this story is important for so many reasons because if anyone in the audist is thinking, well, that could never happen to me, If it could happen to Joe, it could happen to you. And what I mean by that is, Joe, you led not just an exemplary life, but really a rich fulfilling life up until this happened. And can you take us back all the way to your childhood and how you grew up in a small town in Texas, right.

Speaker 4

Grew up in Waco, grew up on a farm, ran animals and family, and headed absolutely wonderful childhood, tended church regularly and looking back, I had a very idyllic.

Speaker 1

Life, And how did you find your way into the field of education at which you excelled right becoming ultimately a really loved and revered educator in Clifton, Texas, the principal of the school. But how did you make your decision to get into education.

Speaker 4

I always liked school, but at our church I started playing the piano full time when I was thirteen, And our church and our song leader was my principal at school, and I had tremendous respect for him, and I guess you could say that he is instrumental in guiding me in that direction. So I've always lived and breathed and thought education. Mickey and I were unfortunate enough not to be able to have children. We both lived in breathed education.

I helped her with our listening plans, with grading papers. We would discuss teaching objectives and gos and how to reach them. Then it was great.

Speaker 1

It sounds like it was. And from what I understand, the high school, middle and elementary schools were all on the same campus, and you were the high school principal and Mickey was the fourth grade teacher, and the two of you were obviously well known in the small town of Clifton, having had a hand to the education of

so many of the people there. So your shared dedication had made you to revered by parents and students alike, which brings me back to my point that if a beloved figure like yourself, who was leading an upstanding, fulfilling life, if this could happen to you, then nobody out there is safe because it could happen to anyone. And that brings me to the next part of your story, which

of course is October fourteenth, nineteen eighty five. Now you were out of town at an annual Texas Secondary School's Principals conference one hundred and twenty miles away in Austin, Texas, and this is a conference you who had attended for the previous fourteen years. Mickey had seen her parents Otis and Fira Blue that afternoon, as well as spoken to you as you graded papers and watched the cmas in your hotel room. The Country Music wards in Austin around

nine pm that night. So now the following day, October fifteenth, nineteen eighty five, Mickey, who was usually the first one to arrive at school, never did. The elementary school principal, Rex Daniels, was obviously concerned so he called your home and got no answer, So, knowing that you were in Austin, he called Mickey's parents, Otis and Verra, who met him at your home with the spare Key and her mother.

And this gives me the chills. Was the first to see the horrific and bloody crime scene in your bedroom, her daughter's body, Mickey's body laid across the length of the bed. Her nightgown was drawn up to her thighs, she was undressed from the waist down, and blood was spattered on the bed, the ceiling, and all four walls from apparent gunshots to the head and abdomen. And at this point Rex led the Blues ODIs Everra to the

living room where they called the police. And then, of course Joe, you received that awful, awful news.

Speaker 3

So Joe is alerted to the discovery of her body and to what happened to her. While he is in Austin, several friends from Clifton drive down to get him because of the distraught state he was in, and drive him back to Clifton.

Speaker 1

So the Texas Rangers led this investigation, as they often did in rural towns like Clifton and Texas ranger Joe Wiley interviewed you, Joe, and you answered all the questions, telling them about the three fifty seven loaded with birdshot that you kept in the bedroom, as well as a cash box under the bed that usually held around one thousand dollars.

Speaker 2

Both of them were.

Speaker 1

Reported missing at the time, as were Mickey's watch, wedding band, and diamond ring. There were no witnesses, no neighbors reported hearing anything, no obvious signs of forced entry, no bloody fingerprints, no seamen found in the rake kit so there was very little for the rangers to go on. Oddly, a cigarette, though, was found on the kitchen floor. Now this is important because Mickey didn't smoke, and neither did you, Joe. It

looked like a burglary gone bed. Now, Mickey's brother, Charlie Blue, was the vice president of an agrochemical firm out of Florida. He came to town with the investigator that the company kept on retainer, an ex FBI agent named Bud Saunders. Now, while Charlie was in town for Mickey's funeral, Joe lent Charlie his car and somewhere along the few days in which the car was in Charlie's possession. A flashlight with reddish brown specs was allegedly spontaneously found in the trunk of the.

Speaker 3

Car, and so Joe's car is out of his possession for a period of about five days, and then the flashlight is discovered when the car is in Joe's brother in law's possession. So the tipping point for and really the only point that supported Joe's arrest, was the discovery of the flashlight in his.

Speaker 1

Car, and later DNA testing cast out on whether this flashlight was ever even at the crime scene at all. But nevertheless, unbeknownst to Joe at the time, a search warrant of the car was executed and the flashlight was sent to the state crime lab. Now this was nineteen eighty five, so there was no DNA testing, just soroology, and the testing done at the time determined that some of us back actually were blood the most common blood type, oh,

which also happened to be Mickey's blood type. Now, those speckles were found on an object that was not found at the crime scene, but in one of the couple's two cars, which was curiously not in Joe's possession. When the flashlight was allegedly found bind you if Joe had committed this crime, would he be using a flashlight to find his way around his own home to sneak up on his own wife. I mean, the state's theory is absolutely ridiculous, and this is just one of the many

reasons why. So the car was not impounded, but rather released to Charlie Blue, who left it in Joe's driveway. So Joe has no idea that his car has been searched. And this flashlight is the crux of the state's case, supported by a few other pieces of extremely dubious evidence.

Speaker 3

So their case really rested on four facts. The first and most important was the discovery of the flashlight. The second was a pair of what they said were semen stained underwear discovered in Mickey and Joe's bathroom that at the time in the eighties, they had said tested presumptively positive for the presence of semen, and that was Joe's blood type.

Speaker 1

And I mean, it's his house, so to find what maybe Joe's bodily fluids in his own home doesn't really implicate him. I mean, it would incriminate an intruder, but it's his freaking house.

Speaker 3

Anyway continue, so it got flashlight underwear, a explanation that Joe had given regarding opportunities for when the keys to his vehicle were out of his possession. And then the final point was the discovery of money in the trunk of his car following its return to him from his brother in law.

Speaker 1

So the money that was initially reported missing from the cash box under the bed didn't turn up when the search of the car was conducted either, but rather Joe

reported finding the cash after the fact. It was eight hundred and fifty dollars of the usual one thousand, and Joe reported this to the authorities, remembering that he and Mickey had taken the money to go shopping in Waco, and somehow they were like, wait, maybe he's hiding something, And so they try to use this to show motive that Joe wanted to either steal from his wife right or that he initially hid the cash to make it seem like.

Speaker 2

There was a robbery.

Speaker 1

But neither of those theories holds any water whatsoever. I mean, he'd either be robbing himself because they're married, or if he wanted the crime scene to look like a robbery, why in the world would he then tell the authorities about discovering the money. It makes no fucking sense whatsoever. He would have just kept it to himself.

Speaker 3

And so the state's theory of the case was that Joe had slipped out of his Austin hotel, driven home, let himself into his house with his key, shot mickey with the gun that they had kept by their bed, cleaned himself up after getting her blood all over him, changed clothes and shoes, and drove back to his hotel room in Austin, cleaned up again, and made it to his morning teachers conference meeting. So that's the state's theory, right.

Speaker 1

And this is a fantastical theory on so many levels. No one saw him do any of these things, right. No one saw him leave the hotel, no one saw him stop for gas, and it was pouring rain that night, and no one saw him soaking wet coming or going. And Joe had a condition, right, immacula condition which meant that he couldn't drive at night anyway, you couldn't see to drive at night. And there was no physical evidence that any of the things that the police said happened

actually happened. It's nonsensical and it wasn't just the fact that he was one hundred and twenty miles away and couldn't have realistically gone there and back without being seen unless he was some sort of ghost, but also the idea that he would have had to magically been able to make all this blood disappear from his body, and none of Mickey's blood got into the car either, that he allegedly drove back to Austin that night except for

the phantom flashlight that if were to believe the state's theory, he just totally fucked up and absentmindedly left it in the trunk while he meticulously managed to scrub everything else like some master crime scene manipulator, right, and then not to mention he had no motive. In fact, the opposite is true. They loved each other very much and everybody knew it. It wasn't a troubled marriage as we sometimes see.

Speaker 3

And just to the point of motive really quick. The first trial was at actually reversed for an improper insinuation that there was any financial motive for Joe to kill Mickey, and his defense attorneys tried to respond to that inaccuracy, they were denied by the trial court the right to do so, and that's actually the reason why Joe's case was reversed the first time and why he was retribed

so correct. There was never a motive established, and by the second trial, the state concedes that and talks to the jury panel about can you convict if we can't tell you what the motive is. So they were absolutely clear by the time the second trial rolls around that there was no motive because this didn't happen.

Speaker 1

Right, And you know, it gets worse when you start to see the way that they smeared his character, and of course it's a very contemporaneous story when we come to find out later that, in fact, the logical suspect and somebody who they knew to be the logical suspect at the time was in fact one of their.

Speaker 2

Own It was a police officer.

Speaker 1

Because we cannot leave out at this this is the small town of Clifton, Texas, and this was the second murder and unsolved for the time being, in a very short period of time.

Speaker 2

And of course we.

Speaker 1

Know how that works, right, That creates the pressure. And so Joe, do you mind telling us about that murder and how that played a role in your wrongful conviction.

Speaker 4

Judy Whitley, a high school student, was murdered. They didn't know who did it. There were suspicions, but no facts. People are alarmed that this could happen in our community to a high school child. So the police department, so to speak, is put under a lot of pressure to find whoever killed Judy Whitley. Well, my opinion, based on what I know now is that Dennis Dunlap did it.

Speaker 1

Jesse, this Dennis Dunlop character is a very troubling and profound example of how the sort of blue wall protects itself.

Speaker 2

So tell us about.

Speaker 1

That Dunlap and what his role was in these two cases.

Speaker 3

So, Dennis Dunlap was a member of the Clifton Police Department in nineteen eighty five, and he was originally a suspect in the Judy Whitley case, and that was because he had a connection to Judy's family and suspicious items found in his possession after he eventually leaves the police department in the direction of the then Clifton Police chief. And this was a situation where he tried to be

very involved from the get go. I don't think that's very uncommon for actual perpetrators to try and find out as much information as they can about the crime that they did commit. He attracts understandable suspicion, and from what we can tell based on records at the time, he was encouraged by the then police chief to leave the community because of all of the suspicion growing around him and how it did look even back then that he was a good, strong suspect for the death of Judy Whitley.

So he leaves the community.

Speaker 1

And we have so much evidence now that this Dunlap character he almost certainly killed miss Whitley, but also most likely was the murder in this case. He of course took his own life right and.

Speaker 3

After Dennis Dunlap commits suicide on the front page of the Clifton Record, the Clifton Police Department in nineteen ninety nine announces that they've solved the Judy Whitley case and that Dennis Dunlap was responsible. But Joe doesn't get access to that information beyond what's publicly reported until twenty twelve. It's not until late twenty fourteen twenty fifteen that we won going through old files discover that while he did

leave the department, he did not leave the area. He was reported to be in the Waco Clifton area the day that Nicky was murdered. Law enforcement knew it, and in nineteen ninety six, his ex wife gives an interview to the Texas Rangers as well as the then Clifton Police chief, and Dennis's ex wife says that Dennis did admit to her that he was with Mickey the night she was killed.

Speaker 4

Of course, when Mickey got killed, everybody was shocked. She was very she was very popular. I had grown up there, highly respected. People wanted an answer. They wanted to know who killed Judy Whitley, and they wanted to know who killed Nicky. And the police, under a great deal of pressure, I think, jumped on the first wagon they could jump on. They got what they wanted, that solved the case, so the pressure was off. Dennis destroyed Mickey's life and they destroyed my life.

Speaker 1

This episode is underwritten by Paul Weiss Rifkin, Porton and Garrison, a leading international law firm. Paul Weiss has long had an unwavering commitment to providing impactful, pro bono legal assistance to the most vulnerable members of our society and in support of the public interest, including extensive work in the criminal justice area. I mean, we could spend this entire podcast talking about all the different pieces of exculpatory evidence.

Speaker 2

There was a cigarette but found in the house. Neither Jone nor making smoked. Right.

Speaker 1

There was the fact that he was one hundred and twenty miles away. We've talked about that already.

Speaker 4

They can't get me there. We proved the model Joe mar Carr reproved ro about gasoline.

Speaker 2

Right.

Speaker 1

There was the fact that the flashlight wasn't found at the crime scene. It was found in the trunk of the car that wasn't in Joe's possession for several days. In fact, there was in the possession of somebody who we know light on the stand, the fact that there was another likely or even obvious suspect, and they pushed it under the rugged. There was the absence of any blood anywhere on Joe, around Joe in his car, you know,

so supposedly this flashlight somehow was the only blood. So they wanted us to believe that he was holding the flashlight in one hand while shooting the gun with the other hand.

Speaker 3

In his own home, in his own right, because.

Speaker 1

He didn't know the way around his own little home.

Speaker 2

Right. Yeah, it wasn't like he lived in.

Speaker 3

So of all the things, right, you need a flashlight in your own home.

Speaker 1

Right, But then he would have cleaned up every single trace of blood from everything, right, And then somehow or other spaced out and thrown this flashlight that had this tiny microscop And then we get to the blood spatter, right of all the junk sciences, and you know, we have a whole show devoted to junk science.

Speaker 2

You know. Blood spatter is a quote unquote.

Speaker 1

Scientific protocol which is used in courtrooms all over this country and as far back as Joe's trial eighty five, probably more than that. It is a nonsensical practice in which these charlatans posing as scientists pretend to be able to know by examining blood, as in Joe's case, where they just examined an empty room with blood all over it, and we're magically able to tell you what happened in there. You might as well just bring in a psychic.

Speaker 2

While you're at it.

Speaker 1

But this practice is taught in a forty hour course that I don't know if anyone's ever failed. You just pay the money, you go take your forty hour course. If you fail, they give you your certificate anyway. In fact, so it doesn't matter if you fail, and then you can go testify in court as a supposed expert. And so talk to us, Jesse, please about blood spatter and how it played a role in Joe's case.

Speaker 3

Specifically, bloodstain pattern analysis is the scientific study of the static consequences resulting from dynamic blood shedding events, and it involves detecting and describing and analyzing the size, shape, distribution, number, location, and pattern of bloodstains, as well as the nature of their target surfaces and the relationship among various stains at

a particular scene. So as I understand it, and this is really mostly from preparing for the evidentiary hearing in Joe's case, is that bloodstain pattern analysis is based in accepted and proven sciences. The problem with it is what you said, which is the training of practitioners and using

it properly within its correct limits. And that's what happened here with Detective Thorman, a purported practitioner whose training was a single forty hour course, and the practitioner admitted that this was the first major complex scene he had analyzed as a supposedly certified practitioner who between our evidentiary hearing did eventually recant and admit that his methodologies and application were mostly incorrect and admitted that then a lot of

his conclusions in testimony was incorrect. And so, like we talked about at the beginning, what was the state's theory and why is bloodstain pattern analysis? Why was it important to the state securing a conviction twice against Joe? And it was used to explain why there was no physical evidence, like you said, what was connecting him. The flashlight was discovered in complete isolation, with no context away from the

crime scene. His car was clean. There's never anything on him physically discovered, not in his hotel room, not on his person later And so the bloodstain pattern analysis proffered Detective Foreman was used to fill the very clear gaps in the state's case and to make an impossible theory of the case seem plausible.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and I just want to quote from Pam Koloff's a wonderful article where she actually went to her great credit to Yukon, Oklahoma, where she participated in one of these classes that she paid six hundred and something dollars for and she talks about I'm just going to quote now, armed with calipers, scientific calculators and string, we measured bloodstains, plugged our data into equations, and tried to trace the

trajectories of individual droplets back towards their source. As was true with pattern classification, there were many ways to get this wrong. Small deviations with the calipers resulted in markedly different results. Still, Griffin, who was the instructor, had us press forward. He said, quote, We're not really going to focus on the math and physics. It just kind of bogs things down. Uh, that's me editorialzing.

Speaker 2

What okay? He told us.

Speaker 1

She goes on to say at the outset, quote, I'll teach you which keys under your calculator to press. It's unbelievable, And then back to PAMs. It was upon this shaky foundation that Dorman had tried to reverse engineer the shooting at the Brian home.

Speaker 2

Looking over his nineteen eighty.

Speaker 1

Five report one night back at my hotel, I could see where his analysis went awry. According to his report, he believed he was determining the alleged height from which the shots were fired, a conclusion his data could not yield. I began to wonder if his assessment of the flashlight, too, was faulty when he asserted that the blood on the lens was backspatter from a close range shooting. Now it goes on, because they teach you in this class as well how to present testimony as if you're an expert.

Its basically teach you how to act in court, to pretend better that you actually know what you're talking about, and to be more persuasive, and how to be able to dodge questions from you know, quality defense attorney. I mean, let's face it, not too many of these blood spatter people come in and testify for the defense. So they're teaching you, in essence, how to frame people. And that's exactly what they did in Joe's case, and it makes me sick.

Speaker 3

It's, I think, a perfect example of a situation where juris trust the prosecutors in their community and they trust law enforcement, and Joe's case, sadly isn't the only example of this. When prosecutors go to juris and paint a picture using, like Joe said, fabricated evidence and an impossible narrative and show them awful photos of a crime that clearly did happen and ask them to say, okay, either

don't hold somebody responsible or hold somebody responsible. Right, and especially in the context of what this community had just gone through, like you just said, with the loss of Judy Whitley just a few months prior, and then the loss of Mickey and her brother in particular, paid a

special prosecutor to prosecute Joe. And so you've got somebody who's got a financial incentive to get a conviction, and you have a jury who's being told about that financial arrangement, right, that knows this is what the victim's family paid for. This is clearly what they believed what jury was going to let him walk out of a courtroom. There just wasn't in any jurisdiction in nineteen eighty five, eighty six, and eighty nine that just sadly wasn't going to happen.

Speaker 1

So with this nonsensical blood spatter analysis and this flashlight that wasn't even found at the crime scene as the big smoking gun, and then the assassinations on his character, it was a almost a foregone conclusion. So can you take us back to that moment when the judge read the verdict.

Speaker 4

Well, it's very unreal. You already know your life has changed forever because of everything that's already happened. But then now people are going to look at you like you and I'm going to end up in prison. There's something I didn't do, and I'm gonna have to fight every day to maintain my personal integrity. You think, how can people do this? But what is really troubling is that you know that people know that what they've done is not right, and they don't have any trouble doing what's wrong.

Everything that happened really hurts. I just don't go there very often. But God has a purpose for each of us. And when I first went to prison, I was very angry with God and did not go to church and didn't tell anybody I was a Christian or even played the piano. And after I'd been there, probably eight weeks, the chaplain told me that I understand that you play the piano and that you're a Christian. And I said,

how do you know I haven't told anybody. Well, he wanted to hear me play the piano, so we went into the chapel and I said, what do you want to hear, and he told me, and I played the songs when we went back to the chapel and he asked if I would play the piano for the chapel services and I said, no, I will not, And I told him I was mad at God, and I said, but how did you know that I was a Christian,

that I played the piano? And he comes out with a letter from my high school principal when I grew up, who led the singing at the church where I play. And he told Chaplain Pickett, I've done Joe since he was five. I believe he's innocent. I know he's hurt, and if you can get him to play the piano for your church services, you'll be blessed and it will help him. And I told him I'm not playing, and that wise Chaplain told me, well, you think about it

tonight and you let me know in the morning. I got zero sleep that night because God was all over me, saying, you so to speak, Who do you think gave you that skill? I did? I want you to use it for me. So the next morning I called Chaplain Picket and told him I would play for the chapel services, and he says, good, we at choir practice today at two o'clock and I was in and busy for the rest of my stay. So we can do anything through Christ. And when I asked God for peace, he gave me peace.

Speaker 1

Well, I'm glad that you found that, and I'm glad you're here today because you are a living testament to the human spirits.

Speaker 2

So yeah, so then here we are.

Speaker 1

You've now been sentenced to ninety nine years in prison. Right, I love life sentence because no one's ever lived that long, and you know you weren't going to be the first. Again to me, the idea that you're still here with you know, three brain cells to rub together and be able to sit up right and have a laugh and have a smile on your face, it's it's inspiring. It's

you know, it's what I'll tell you right now. For those of us that do this work, it's what drives us forward is knowing that there are people like you who have this otherworldly uh uh. You know, courage is the best way I can and grace.

Speaker 3

And perseverance of of course, you know, when I pick up this case in November of twenty thirteen as a law student, it's my whole life, like my whole life. Joe had been fighting this fight, and it's an unbelievable set of strength and endurance to maintain your innocence and keep fighting for that period of time. It's unbelievable. And most people give up, right, we know, innocent people plead guilty, and innocent people end up giving up just to move

on with their lives. And the fact that he hasn't, I think just speaks so much to the character that everybody in that community knows he has and knew he had, and just his spirit.

Speaker 1

Which brings us to that long, long fight, the post conviction litigation, and all the things that were discovered along the way, not to mention what was already known, which should have kept them from ever even bringing Joe to trial. I mean, the sheer breadth of this, it's insane to believe that none of it was enough to spring him out of there with the state acknowledging his actual innocence. And I'm going to just list some of it now, right, So, no one saw Joe leave the hotel in Austin, and

no one saw him back in Clifton. I mean, it's one hundred and twenty mile journey he would have had to stop for gas at some point, right, And then the mileage on Joe's car proved that he did not make the journey back and forth to Austin. According to the state's own admission, he had no motive to kill Mickey, so all that nonsense about the cash or stage robbery

was just nonsense. And then Dennis Dunlap, Okay, the main suspect in Judy Whitley's murder who was forced out of Clifton PD as a result, and who they laid blame for it on after he killed himself, But only after he killed himself. His wife told the rangers and the Clifton Police chief in nineteen ninety nine that Dunlap admitted to being with Mickey on the night she was killed. I mean, what the fuck? And he doesn't get to learn about that from nineteen ninety nine until twenty and

twelve when they finally released these documents to him. So thirty five long years roll by with no one acknowledging his innocence because of this flashlight that wasn't even found at the crime scene, but rather was found in the car, that wasn't in Joe's possession or control. Rather it was in the possession of the man that brought an investigator to his own sister's funeral and paid a special prosecutor

to make sure that they nailed Joe but Jesse. DNA testing was finally done on that flashlight in twenty eighteen, testing that wasn't available in nineteen eighty five. It hadn't been invented yet. What did they find out? Yeah?

Speaker 3

So I think the simplest way is the question that was asked at the evidentiary hearing, which is, can the State of Texas prove that Mickey's DNA is on that flashlight? And the answer to that question by the state's analyst was no. There's two results from a twenty eighteen set of DNA testing. One was on the lens of the flashlight that was an inconclusive result, and then there was a DNA test of the swab from the handle and

the power button of the flashlight that excluded him and Mickey. So, does modern testing prove that Mickey's DNA is on that flashlight? And the answer to that is now.

Speaker 1

So there was Type O blood, the most common blood type, on this flashlight, but not necessary from the crime scene.

Speaker 3

That would be our position. The state's position would obviously be different, but modern testing cannot corroborate the state's position.

Speaker 1

And add that conclusion to the already patently ridiculous theory of this crime and what was discovered about Dunlap, and it's all just becomes very hard to swallow that it took this long for you, Joe, to finally be free, but all appeals were exhausted, and then despite an exemplary disciplinary record, you're involvement in the chapel, playing piano, tutoring, the parole board denied you seven times. Is that right?

Speaker 3

Yeah?

Speaker 4

Seven times?

Speaker 1

Yeah, So your patience has tried and tried and tried, but finally, Joe, finally you were freed just a short while ago.

Speaker 2

And what was that like?

Speaker 4

I mean, well, there are many tears. You're so thankful to be out and it's beautiful to see people who care for you and love youaiting for you out there when you get outside. Jesse was one of those waiting, along with my family and other people who were interested in in my case. A lot of people could not be there, and it was understandable.

Speaker 3

It was right at the beginning of Corona a couple of weeks after the world shut down.

Speaker 4

Yes, absolutely wonderful though to be able to hug your family and to get into the vehicle and go home. The young lady that we're watching right now is very instrumental.

Speaker 3

Well, and it's not definitely not only me, Walter.

Speaker 4

I know that, I know that Walter and Leon and Allison and Shay and Allen.

Speaker 3

Joe has wonderful parole lawyers. Yes, again, Joe is not free like we just talked about because the courts did their thing. Joe's free because thankfully he had parole lawyers that were able to explain the circumstances to the parole board in a way that clearly made sense. And so they are really the heroes.

Speaker 4

Thank God, I'm home. My brother and his wife have provided a home for me, and I am just fabulously grateful and it's encouraging, very humbling what others have done to help me.

Speaker 1

I know I speak on behalf of all of your supporters when I say that we wish you every blessing that life has to offer. I hope you live to be one hundred and eighty and that you can enjoy every moment of it. And we now have the closing segment of the show, which I think our audience has come to really expect and appreciate. I know it's my favorite part of the show because this is the part where again I thank you too amazing human beings, Jesse Freud and Joe Brian for being here with me and

sharing your stories. And then I get to turn my microphone off and leave yours on for a segment of the show we call closing arguments, and it works like this. We're going to start with Jesse. We're going to save well due respect, Jesse. We're going to save the best for last. The floor is yours, so Jesse, please just tell us whatever you got and then pass the mic.

Speaker 2

Off to Joe.

Speaker 3

I almost feel so unoriginal because I think I'm going to end where you started, which is what can listeners learn from what happened to Joe? And obviously the injustice also that happened to Mickey, which and that still remains. The wrong person is still being legally held accountable for killing Mickey, and so that is a horrible injustice, and so what can the public learn from that? And I think the first thing is what you said, which is if this can happen to Joe Brian. This can happen

to anyone. And I remember as a law student when I became fascinated with this case before I even got to know Joe. It really struck me that this is a case that can make people think that the problems of the criminal justice system, if they think those don't apply to them, after learning about what happened to Joe, they should think that these things apply to them. And so I hate that the injustice that remains for the wrong person being held accountable for Mickey's murder, and I

hate that Joe's life was likewise stolen from him. But I hope what we can all as a society learn from that, which is cops and prosecutors are people too, and when they come before twelve random folks in a jury and they're asking members of the community to do something, have the courage to think critically about what you're being asked to do and truly hold the state to their burden.

I think our community can do what sometimes and sadly cops and prosecutors don't do, which have the courage to say this isn't enough, and we're not going to have two loss of lives, because that's what we've got here. Mickey's life was taken and Joe's life was taken, and that is preventable. This was preventable. Our courts had an opportunity to fix it and refuse to do so. And so America can learn something from what happened to Joe

and Mickey. It's go be good jurors, hold the state to their burden, and have the courage to fight injustice from the jury box.

Speaker 2

Joe, over to you, number one.

Speaker 4

I still respect law enforcement. I still respect courts and judges and district attorneys. Well, what I want them to do is to work for justice, not conviction. If conviction is a part of that justice, then so be it. But if you're proven later that your decision was wrong after a conviction, be man or woman enough or judge enough or whatever enough of a person say hey, we

mess this up and we need to correct it. Don't just stick your head in the sand and say that's not what I want to hear, and we're not going to change our opinion. Because even in our discovery hearings, the judge had them test the flashlight again for the third or fourth time, and the state's lab came back with the report was and he said, there's two DNA profiles on the flashlight. One is not Mickey Brian and one is not Joe Brian. So whose DNA is on

that flashlight? And that was to me a key point in evidence they used against me, just like they said they're seemen on the underwear, and then when they were DNA tested, there's no seeming there. So who's lying? When did the last start? Who did it and who backed up who in protecting that person's decision. Why are we not looking for the truth. And if you think it can't happen to you in America, you are wrong. And

it doesn't happen just to black people either. It happens to white people too, and people like Jesse and Walter in the Texas Innocence Project, and you, Jason, who worked with the Innocence people. If it weren't for you, we would have no hope. I sleep well at night because I'm innocent and I'm honest. I'm not perfect. But Micky was my wife, and I loved her, and I cherished her, I respected her, and I miss her, and I wish her family we'd be just as concerned about who actually

killed her as we are, and I wish they. You know, hey, look maybe we were misled, maybe we were used in that conviction process that somebody else won't it. We can do anything through Jesus Christ. I'm still living with him every day, and I'm still relying on him to give me the strength and the hope, and I still don't having trouble going to sleep at night.

Speaker 1

Thank you for listening to Wrongful Conviction with Jason Flahm. Please support your local innocence projects and go to the link in our bio to see how you can help. I'd like to thank our production team, Connor Hall, Jeff Cliburn, and Kevin Warnis.

Speaker 2

The music on the.

Speaker 1

Show, as always, is by three time OSCAR nominated composer Jay Ralph. Be sure to follow us on Instagram at Wrongful Conviction and on Facebook at Wrongful Conviction Podcast. Wrongful Conviction with Jason Flahm is a production of Lava for Good Podcasts in association with Signal Company Number one.

Speaker 4

The Man, Why the Land in the World,

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