4.4 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 8 February 2023
⏱️ 42 minutes
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On the morning of August 3rd, 1970, Gwendolyn Moore was hoisted out of a dry well just outside of Hogansville, Georgia. Chief Officer Buddy Bryant was at the scene along with then-fifteen-year-old, Clay Bryant. The case was deemed an accident… until thirty years later.
In this episode of Zone 7, Crime Scene Investigator, Sheryl McCollum, talks with Clay Bryant. Clay has been recognized as one of the most prolific cold case investigators in the United States. Sheryl and Clay discuss Clay's childhood, growing up in the front seat of his father's police car, and following his footsteps into law enforcement. Clay discusses how old politics can get in the way of solving a case, and how he solved the cold case of Gwendolyn Moore; one of the longest-standing spousal abuse cases Clay has ever seen. Clay also discusses the importance of new technology for solving crimes, and the undeniable value of needing officers to be a part of the community.
Show Notes:
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Sheryl “Mac” McCollum is an Emmy Award-winning CSI, a writer for CrimeOnLine, a 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 | It is so important to hear from law enforcement that have solved cold cases, |
0:06.2 | especially if you've got a case that didn't have any DNA from a suspect, |
0:11.7 | no suspect fingerprints, and no murder weapon. |
0:15.8 | Having the opportunity to sit and listen to a detective, chief of police, or prosecutor is a gift. |
0:25.4 | What Clay Bryant gives us today is better than a police academy training. |
0:32.9 | You are straight up in the front seat of his patrol car. And he's given you the best advice he can |
0:40.8 | after decades and decades and decades of being a law enforcement officer, being a detective, |
0:49.6 | being a chief of police. And I want everybody to understand how important today is. It's not an active |
0:55.9 | cold case, but this is a training day. This is the essence of what Zone 7 is. This is somebody |
1:05.0 | that I trust to have my back, to tell me the truth, to help me in any situation that I find myself in, |
1:12.7 | good or bad. Clay Bryant is going to be with you tonight and next week, |
1:19.4 | and he's going to tell you how he solved a cold case with no DNA, no murder weapon, |
1:24.6 | no eyewitness, no fingerprints, nothing. So you can take what he's telling you |
1:31.2 | and make it applicable to your case and say, you know what? I might have one partial print, |
1:38.8 | but I'm going to go back and talk to this person, and then I'm going to go to the mechanic |
1:43.6 | that she went to a week |
1:44.9 | before. Nobody's ever talked to him. And it could be the difference in breaking your case wide open |
1:51.4 | or it's still sitting on the shelf. He is literally giving you his playbook. In the South, the Sunday drive or any driving trip serves as a way for the family members to catch up, entertain each other, and spend some captive hours bonded. |
2:16.6 | I loved getting there as much as our final destination. |
2:21.8 | When I was younger, the seven of us piling into one car, laughing, singing, playing road games |
2:28.0 | with some of my favorite memories. But the best time on those road trips were after dark when the Atlanta radio station would fade |
2:39.6 | at a range and the car would get real quiet and my mom would take that opportunity with her |
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