Former Federal Agent Brendan Banfield Found Guilty — What the Defense Got Wrong
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 4 February 2026
⏱️ 20 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
The verdict is in. Brendan Banfield, the former IRS criminal investigator, has been convicted of aggravated murder in the deaths of his wife Christine and Ryan Banfield. The jury deliberated nine hours and came back with guilty on everything. No lesser charges, no compromises. Life without parole.
Today on True Crime Today, defense attorney Bob Motta breaks down what happened in that Virginia courtroom and why the defense strategy failed. At the center of this case was Juliana, the au pair who admitted involvement but cut a deal that dropped her murder charge to manslaughter. She walked out of custody the day she testified. The defense hammered her as bought and paid for — a witness saying whatever prosecutors wanted to hear. Twelve jurors still believed her over Banfield.
Bob explains the problem: attacking credibility only works if you give the jury something else to grab onto. The defense told jurors what didn't happen but never painted a clear picture of what did. That's a dangerous game in a double murder trial.
We also break down Banfield's decision to testify. He took that stand and told jurors no reasonable person would kill their wife over a six-week fling. Bob analyzes whether that helped him or sealed his fate — and why defendants who think they can explain away evidence often make things worse.
The DNA, the digital forensics fight, the investigation itself — it all gets examined. This is Part 1 of our Banfield verdict analysis, and it answers one question: where exactly did this case fall apart for the defense?
#BrendanBanfield #BanfieldTrial #TrueCrimeToday #ChristineBanfield #BobMotta #AggravatedMurder #DoubleHomicide #DefenseAttorney #VirginiaCase #JuryVerdict
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske, Stacey Cole, and Todd Michaels. |
| 0:09.2 | Brandon Banfield, just got convicted of aggravated murder. |
| 0:12.9 | The jury didn't buy his story, shockingly. |
| 0:15.2 | They believe the au pair. |
| 0:17.0 | And now a former federal agent is going to spend the rest of his life in prison. |
| 0:21.6 | Bob Mata, defense attorney, host of the podcast, Defense Diaries here to break down what happened in that courtroom, what the defense strategy was, why it failed, whether Banfield hurt himself by taking the stand, and the testimony, this case, what it brought to the forefront, what it lost. |
| 0:41.1 | Bob, the jury took nine hours, came back guilty on everything. |
| 0:46.5 | No compromises. |
| 0:48.1 | When you heard the verdict, from your perspective, were you surprised? |
| 0:52.3 | Did you see this coming based on what we saw at the trial? |
| 0:55.9 | To be honest, no. |
| 0:58.4 | Look, coming out of the state's case in chief, |
| 1:02.2 | I was a little less confident that they had met their burden. |
| 1:06.9 | However, like Brennan Banfield was the gift that kept on giving. |
| 1:12.4 | And I felt once he testified that that he really, really helped the state's case, |
| 1:18.5 | because Tony, in this in this type of situation, when you're talking about a jury who, you know, |
| 1:25.5 | points that lawyers think are big deals going into a trial, like, |
| 1:29.2 | oh, we got to drive home this point. |
| 1:31.1 | Those aren't necessarily the things that always are what jurors are going to hang their hats on. |
| 1:37.0 | One thing that inevitably is a thing that a juror will hang their hat on is, do I think |
| 1:43.3 | that this guy is a lying piece of shit? |
| 1:46.6 | And like that, like at the end of the day, I think ultimately the way that I felt his testimony went is that they were going to pull from that that he was a lying piece of shit. |
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