Beyond Nancy Guthrie Part 5 | Alonzo Brooks: The Coroner and the Code of Silence
Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
True Crime Today
3.3 • 907 Ratings
🗓️ 8 April 2026
⏱️ 18 minutes
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Summary
The Nancy Guthrie case has forced a national conversation about what happens when the wrong people handle the most critical moments of an investigation. In Tucson, the questions have centered on staffing decisions, sidelined veterans, and whether competence or loyalty determined who was in the room. This five-part series has traced that same failure across decades and jurisdictions. And in this final episode, it comes down to something so basic it defies belief: a family that found their own son's body in an area law enforcement claimed they already searched.
Alonzo Brooks was twenty-three years old. Mixed race — Mexican and Black. He went to a house party in the tiny Kansas town of La Cygne in April 2004. He was one of only three Black men among a hundred guests. The FBI's own summary states that attendees directed racial slurs at him. His friends left at different times through miscommunication, leaving him alone with no ride home. He never came back.
The Linn County Sheriff's Office searched. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation searched. The FBI was contacted. They found his boots and hat. They didn't find Alonzo. A month later, his family put on orange vests, walked to a creek behind the farmhouse, and found his body in under an hour — less than seven hundred feet from where he was last seen alive.
Then a coroner ruled the cause of death undetermined. That coroner — Dr. Erik Mitchell — had been forced to resign from a previous position in New York after an investigation found he had removed organs without family consent and improperly stored body parts. That single ruling shut the case down for sixteen years. In 2020, the FBI exhumed the body. The Armed Forces Medical Examiner ruled it a homicide — exactly what the family had been saying all along. No arrests have been made. The reward stands at a hundred thousand dollars.
The Guthrie case is still open. The people making the calls right now — who handles the evidence, who leads the search, who makes the critical determinations — will decide whether Nancy's family gets answers. This series exists because every one of these families deserved better. And because the families still waiting deserve to know what it costs when the wrong people are in the room.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske. |
| 0:03.6 | Here now, Tony Bruske. |
| 0:07.1 | A wiped down kitchen in Boulder. |
| 0:11.1 | A misfiled Tipendalfi, a phone call from inside. |
| 0:19.1 | The police department in Bardstown, a car, a carpet, a machete that vanished from a Hollywood evidence room. |
| 0:25.8 | Four cases that we've already talked about in the series this week, four families who lost their chance at justice because the people in the room were not the right ones. |
| 0:36.6 | A Nancy Guthrie case is the thread that connects all of them because |
| 0:42.3 | every question this series this week has raised about personnel qualifications and who was making |
| 0:49.8 | the calls and the critical hours is a question that her family is living with right now. |
| 0:57.6 | And this final case is the one that strips everything down to the most basic form. |
| 1:03.1 | Because when the wrong people handle the search, the wrong expert examines the body and the |
| 1:08.3 | system decides your son's death doesn't warrant a murder investigation. |
| 1:12.5 | Sometimes the only people left to fight are the ones with the most to lose. |
| 1:21.9 | I want you to give me your thoughts in the comments section and substack and YouTube as we work |
| 1:26.9 | our way through this |
| 1:27.8 | conversation today i'm looking forward to reading him we'll continue our conversation there |
| 1:32.4 | the links by the way are in the description 50 family members in orange vests found him in under an |
| 1:43.1 | hour law enforcement had been searching for orange vests found him in under an hour. |
| 1:51.5 | Law enforcement had been searching for a month, the Lynn County Sheriff's Office, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the FBI, the search of an area around the farmhouse where Alonzo |
| 1:57.4 | Brooks was last seen alive. They searched parts of Middle Creek. |
| 2:01.0 | They found his boots and his hat in a field across from the house, |
| 2:04.6 | but they didn't find Alonzo. |
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