4.4 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 1 February 2023
⏱️ 26 minutes
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18-year-old Brittany Phillips is last seen on September 27, 2004. Just before 10 p.m., she dropped the friend off at home and then drove to her own apartment on 65th Street. The following day, Tulsa Police find Brittany raped and murdered in her Tulsa apartment. In 2019, DNA led to a possible suspect. That person was cleared.
In this episode of Zone 7, Crime Scene Investigator, Sheryl McCollum, brings Dr. Maggie Zingman, the mother of Brittany Phillips back onto Zone 7. They discuss the latest evidence discovery in Brittany’s case - a letter mailed after Brittany’s tentative death timeline. This changes the timeline of the case and gives even more reason to reinterview friends and suspects, re analyze all evidence and dna in Brittany’s unsolved murder.
ANYONE with ANY information about the murder of Brittany Phillips murder or latest evidence contact the Tulsa Police Department Homicide Unit at 918-596-9135
Show Notes:
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Sheryl “Mac” McCollum is an Emmy Award-winning CSI, a writer for CrimeOnLine, Forensic and Crime Scene Expert for Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, and a CSI for a metro Atlanta Police Department. She is the co-author of the textbook., Cold Case: Pathways to Justice. Sheryl is also the founder and director of the Cold Case Investigative Research Institute, a collaboration between universities and colleges that brings researchers, practitioners, students and the criminal justice community together to advance techniques in solving cold cases and assist families and law enforcement with solvability factors for unsolved homicides, missing persons, and kidnapping cases.
You can connect and learn more about Sheryl’s work by visiting the CCIRI website https://coldcasecrimes.org
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0:00.0 | We recorded with Dr. Maggie Zingman in early January. |
0:05.4 | And from that short amount of time from when we recorded to the release date of her episode, |
0:12.5 | some developments have occurred. |
0:14.9 | Maggie came across some new key information that I believe needs to not only be discussed here, I think it needs |
0:24.7 | to be added to our existing knowledge of this case. For Brittany, it might go to time |
0:32.7 | of death. It might add a potential witness. It definitely adds a place of interest. This additional |
0:41.0 | information has got a specific location, a specific day, and a specific time frame. Some people |
0:51.1 | may say, well, she shouldn't be talking about it. She should wait. |
0:54.7 | It might hurt the case. |
0:56.6 | I don't know how it would hurt the case to bring this out. |
0:59.6 | Because bringing it out, we're going to be able to find out if somebody did a favor or ran an errand for Brittany. |
1:08.2 | This particular piece of evidence is critical to put in the public to plead for |
1:14.7 | somebody to come forward. |
1:24.5 | One thing that I know I inherited from my mama is I love time capsules, messages and bottles, |
1:33.3 | and these letters that are sometimes lost for long periods of time, and then delivered. |
1:39.3 | I remember there was a letter that was written by a young soldier in like 1945 that was delivered to his |
1:50.4 | widow in 2021. It had been lost all that time. I think it was a letter that he wrote to his mom. |
2:00.7 | And somehow the Postal Service |
2:03.1 | came up with it. And of course his mama was long gone. He was also deceased. So his wife is who |
2:12.5 | they delivered it to. And I just love stories like that. Cold cases are a lot like a time capsule. Everything stops when a crime happens. The victim doesn't get me older. They don't go back to work. They don't go back to school. They don't contact family ever again. That file is encased and preserved and locked away. |
2:37.8 | And sometimes it didn't open for years or decades. |
2:42.6 | And just like the long lost love letter that gets delivered 50 years later, |
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