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Undisclosed: Toward Justice

State v. Gary Mitchum Reeves – Episode 6 – The Body in the Well

Undisclosed: Toward Justice

mital

Society & Culture, True Crime, News

4.210.5K Ratings

🗓️ 21 August 2017

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

August 21, 2017 / After Bo Salmon was given a life sentence for the murder of Henry Ridley Jr., his wife Charlotte began cooperating with the GBI and told them stories about several other murders Bo and his friend Teddy Bear Mulkey had committed. But had Bo and Teddy Bear really done these other crimes?

(Photo: Booking photos of Teddy Bear Mulkey.)

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Did you know that all household electronic and lighting items are free to recycle?

0:04.6

When you recycle e-waste, you're not just preventing it going to landfill,

0:08.4

you're also giving it new life, recovering valuable resources that can be used again,

0:13.0

and stopping harmful substances from entering our environment.

0:16.2

Recycle for free with we, at your local authority recycling center,

0:20.4

or participating electrical retailer.

0:22.7

Visit wearland.ie for details.

0:25.0

A message from Wearland, the government-approved scheme for electrical and battery recycling.

0:30.6

The decision to parole Gary to release him from his life sentence early was made in July of 1981.

0:57.9

That's seven years give or take after his first arrest for graces murder.

1:03.7

Gary says that after his last habeas was denied in 1978,

1:08.2

he gave up on ever getting free to the legal system and focused all his efforts on obtaining parole.

1:13.6

He got a job as a runaround in Floyd County, which means that he was responsible for cleaning

1:17.7

county property, like the police station, which meant he had access to phones during the day,

1:22.8

because he was running around cleaning up after others and had free run essentially of the police station.

1:28.2

So he can make calls, have contact with the outside world,

1:31.8

and he asked people to write letters to the Georgia Board of Pardon Paroles to consider his

1:36.0

early release. The effort remarkably seems to have paid off. Technically, Gary was eligible for

1:44.4

parole in August of 1981, because back then, even if they're serving a life sentence,

1:50.9

you first came up for consideration after seven years. So in the parole board made the decision

1:55.5

six years and 11 months after Gary was first arrested to release him for roll. Well, that kind of fits.

2:03.7

When I first talked to Gary, he seemed confident that it was his letter writing campaign,

...

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