AKA 137F Strikes Again (Brook Baker & Erika Norman)
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Transcript
Some stories never make national headlines, but stories from small towns and coastal communities deserve recognition too.
I'm Kylie Lowe, host of Dark Down East, a true crime podcast that gives voice to victims through investigative journalism and powerful storytelling.
Set in my home state of Maine and the greater New England area, it's my goal to dig through the archives to bring the stories of the people at the heart of these cases to light.
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Previously on Anatomy of Murder,
Pal Johnston.
Hi, Anastiga.
Hi.
A prosecutor who's been in the trenches.
Did everything from military intelligence, became a paratrooper, and then after 9-11, I did three combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.
A dead student with the markings of a sadistic killer.
She was nude.
She was displayed.
I think there were 11 stab wounds.
An FBI profile.
They said it's most likely a white male that she knows, a university student.
This is likely his first kill.
A killer with no name but a number.
No match on 137F.
That's what we heard over and over and over again.
And 137F was going to strike again.
That's exactly how we got him.
I'm Scott Weinberger, investigative journalist and former deputy sheriff.
I'm Anasega Nicolazi, former New York City homicide prosecutor and host of Investigation Discovery's True Conviction.
And this is Anatomy of Murder.
As a reminder, last week we were talking about the murder of Brooke Baker, and we'd interviewed Hal Johnson, a former Madison County, Indiana prosecutor.
We had also left off talking about another homicide that had happened almost a decade before.
So let's start there today.
The woman in that case, her name was Lisa McCracken.
Lisa McCracken was found dead lying on her back in her bedroom in her apartment near the university campus.
Lisa had been stabbed and there were signs of strangulation.
Once again, a young college student, white female, lived alone, sexually assaulted, stabbed.
Investigators found that her body was also posed, with her hands laid out behind her head.
There was no forced entry.
There was a window that was broken, but investigators could tell by the way the shards of glass were scattered throughout the room that it was broke while Lisa was trying to fight for her life.
A lot of similarities there.
I mean, similar victimology and the like.
And that had never been solved.
The murder weapon was also a knife taken from Lisa's kitchen.
And just like in Brooke's case, the medical examiner did find semen in their examination.
We did have DNA from that, though.
So what we requested was, could you take the Lisa McCracken sample and run it against 137F?
So let's just for a moment hypothesize, if there is a match, what is that going to tell us?
It may not only hold the answer to Brooke Baker, but maybe this also other homicide going back to 1987 of Lisa McCracken.
Just as a side note here, on another true crime series I produce, we interviewed Lisa's mother and she talked about how Lisa had an infectious joy about her.
And she will never forget the last words Lisa told her before she went back home to study for midterms.
And those words were, I love you.
So that should give you an understanding about how we have two sets of families looking for answers for their loved one.
So the stakes or the potential if this is a match are incredibly high for either one of these two brutal homicides.
So just imagine how high tensions are while they're waiting for the results of that DNA.
And the conclusion was there was no match on it.
If you're a year and a half into a murder case and you've interviewed scores of people and done dozens of DNA analysis and you're not getting any closer to anything, it was really feeling cold.
But you know, you have to imagine this is a big blow.
When you're really depending on science to come through for you.
It didn't happen at this point in this investigation.
So, not only are their high hopes dashed, but now they're left to pick up the pieces.
You know, the science usually gives them a good directive on where to go.
And when the science says no, you've got to go back to your standard investigative procedures and still try to talk to witnesses.
Do what you can to get more information.
But where we go now is even deeper and darker.
This is where the case, it's a stunning development, but also deeply troubling.
Because let's remember Hal Johnston's words when he said that maybe the only way to solve this case would be if the killer strikes again.
So let's now move to close to two years later, July 5th, 1999.
And here's what happened.
There was an apartment complex.
Just south of the university.
It was a multi-story building.
And
the manager of the building got a phone call from residents.
They were complaining there was no hot water.
So he goes out and determines that somebody's got hot water running in their apartment and they've just been running it for who knows how long.
It's in the same town of Vincennes, Indiana.
The manager of an apartment complex decides to find which apartment the water's been running.
He quickly locates it and uses the master key to walk in.
He opens the door and goes in and it's a scene of remarkable violence.
There are broken furniture and lamps.
There's been a fight at what appears to be bits of blood on the wall and he goes into the bathroom and the tub is running and there are towels in the tub and there are cushions from sofa in the living room.
But nobody's there.
You have to go right to the issue that brought the manager to that apartment.
It wasn't a neighbor hearing screams for help or the furniture breaking, but water running, towels in a tub and cushions from the sofa.
No signs of forced entry.
Does this all sound familiar?
The idea of a serial killer really was forgotten when police hopes were dashed of identifying the killer of both Brooke Baker and Lisa McCracken.
But now they have water running in similar circumstances again.
And so this gets our interest because now we have something that appears to be a signature, but here's the problem.
We don't have a body.
The apartment belonged to a woman by the name of Erica Norman.
Erica Norman, who was a Caucasian female, also a student of Vincennes University.
Well, once we identified who she was, detectives go back to the university to get information about who she was.
She was not from Knox County.
She was from Montgomery County, Indiana.
came from a very nice family.
She had a steady job.
She was a good student.
Another white female student at Vincennes University.
sounds all familiar and yes, investigators had many reasons to begin to compare Erika's and Brooks' case.
Also remember they have been down this road of connecting cases before.
I mean the victimology is fitting.
And I went out to the scene and looked and there had been a hellacious fight there but no sign of forced entry.
So given all these circumstances Anasega, I mean how certain do you believe they think the two cases are connected to the same killer.
We know that saying, if it walks like a duck and it sounds like a duck.
Well, they had thought that before, and the DNA proved them wrong when it came to connecting Brooke Baker and Lisa McCracken.
However, you have now two homicides in much more close proximity.
But remember, with Erica Norman, they don't have a body, so they don't yet even know that she is gone by sinister means or dead.
But I certainly think that it doesn't look good, and this really raises the antenna of all.
And they need to keep the other students of Vincennes and that community safe.
So if they are related, police have a haunting thought.
Someone is hunting down college girls in this town.
Everything seems to be matching up similar to Brooke, but I don't have a body.
Of course, everything begins at the crime scene.
And in Erica Norman's case, with the lack of a body, it all begins, as we always say, with developing that timeline.
Investigators want to know where Erica was that night and who was she with.
So what detectives determined, she had worked at a restaurant in downtown Vincennes.
There was a holiday inn where some of the kids would go there.
It was a bar, nightclub place.
Detectives go to the holiday inn and they're like, Oh, yeah, we knew the group there.
So, we start contacting people and they're coming in saying, Oh, yeah, Erica was there, and she got there about this time.
And they kept talking about a guy named Beach.
Who the hell is Beach?
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So now they have a name.
She left with Beach.
I mean, there was probably maybe seven or eight kids together that all knew each other, and there was this guy named Brian Jones.
Who the hell is Brian Jones?
We've been working on this case for two years and we've never heard the name Brian Jones.
How often is it that you right away get this name?
There is this person they've never heard of before, but they actually have people saying that he went home with Erica that night.
So we determined he'd been a Vincennes University student living in Vincennes working at a local bread factory.
He's not a suspect, right?
Because we don't know that he did anything.
A suspect is usually when investigators or prosecutors are really zeroing in on someone based on the evidence.
Well, a person of interest is just that.
There is something peaking the interest more than just, you know, a whim of a thought by investigators.
And that's what they have here because they actually have this person named and placed as the last person that was with Erica Norman before she disappeared.
So now with the name Brian Jones, the next step is to locate Jones.
And there are a lot of unanswered questions, including, is there a connection between Brian Jones, Erica Norman, and Brooke Baker?
Detectives go out and want to see if he'd give a statement.
He says, sure, I'll talk to you.
So our senses are up.
Our radar is on.
Something's going to happen here.
We've talked about this in prior episodes, about the mindset going in in to question a potential suspect, especially when they've agreed, at least in the beginning, to cooperate.
You know, as the investigator, your frame of mind is critical.
Your attitude or lack of attitude could be critical to a successful interview.
But the most important part is a command of the facts, to find those inconsistencies that someone who has not been truthful statements they cannot walk back.
This is at the time when Bill Clinton was being impeached.
You know, the famous, I did not have sex with that woman.
Those lawyers don't know how to ask questions because what I always told the detectives was, when you question these men, go into extraordinary detail.
Have you had oral sex, anal sex, masturbate?
Is there any reason your semen should be in that house?
I don't want to have a lawyer come in later on and go, well, your meaning of sex and my meaning of sex are two different things.
And it was at this point in the interview that I could not have given Hal Johnston enough hand claps and knew that he was very like-minded to me, at least in these ways, because that's really it, right?
It's all about detail, detail, detail.
As difficult as it could be to listen to those terms, as you listeners and as jurors, they're really important facts.
If you just ask this open-ended question, maybe it gets you somewhere in the end, but maybe you leave a lot out there for the defense or someone later to pick holes in what that actually means.
But if you really drill it down to multiple questions and really almost box the person in, again, remember, ultimately they're not going to be able to get out from under responsibility if that's where the evidence puts them in the end.
So police bring Brian Jones to the station.
They put him in their room.
They know where they're going.
And then they start to interview him.
And one of the first things Brian Jones says is he admits to knowing Erica Norman.
He said, I met her at the holiday inn.
While my friends were there, and yeah, my nickname is Beach for BJ.
I took her home.
He said that they made macaroni and cheese, and they watched a movie for a little bit, and he left, and that was it.
And he said she was fine when I left, didn't have sex with her, didn't kill her, don't know where she is, don't know anything.
While this is getting to the direct connection to Erica without a body, at this point, it would be hard to prove she's dead.
Well, you know, we have no physical evidence to link into anything at this point.
Now investigators make a turn in that conversation.
So the police then say, well,
did you know Brooke Baker?
And he says, well, yeah, I knew Brooke.
Well, have you ever been to her house before?
Yeah, I've been to her house before.
And so we determined that he was living about two blocks away at the time of Brooke's murder with a couple of friends who we had interviewed, but those friends had never told us about him.
I mean, let's go back to the profile of Brooke Baker's killer developed by the FBI.
They said it's most likely a white male that she knows.
Check.
Most likely a university student.
Check.
And he lives close to Brooke.
Another check.
They get into, well, do you know what happened to Brooke?
I have no idea.
I left town after she was killed, and that was something we were looking for.
Somebody who would have left town.
He said he got a job somewhere else or something, moved to Fort Wayne with a girlfriend.
Okay, then he came back.
The police then, I think Bob Dunham in particular said, well, did you ever have sex with Brooke?
And he goes, no, I never had sex with Brooke at all.
And Bob's Bob's a very detailed.
Okay, anal sex, oral sex, mastery.
Is there any reason your DNA should be at 216 Harrison?
No, no reason at all.
I've been in there before.
I smoked marijuana there.
Brooke didn't like that, but I smoked marijuana, so that's it.
Remember, we talked about the fact that there was no forced entry into Brooke Baker's apartment.
Well, now with the interview of Brian Jones, the investigation shows that he probably was led into the apartment because Brooke Baker knew him.
So now you go from person of interest to suspicion on fire.
You have the guy that was last seen with Erica had also been in Brooke Baker's apartment at some point.
It's not just hypothesizing if there's a connection.
At least there is definitely a connection this much.
He also gave a DNA sample.
So what do we have to do?
Send it off for analysis and we have to wait now
for the DNA test to come back.
While investigators are waiting for results of the test, there's more more to be done.
In the meantime, we do some search warrants.
I get a search warrant for his car and I get a search warrant for his apartment.
They looked throughout the car and they didn't see anything that appeared to be unusual or potential forensic evidence.
But when they look in the trunk of that car a bit closer.
And this is where the evidence technicians really win an award here.
One of the investigators notices something that's going to take this investigation to a whole nother level.
When they popped the trunk and they looked inside in a corner, one of the evidence technicians saw the most bizarre part of this story.
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The interview with Brian Jones was paying dividends, and he was also consenting to give his DNA enter CSI investigators who targeted Brian Jones' car.
A smear of a, it's only about the size of a thumbprint, of a reddish material.
So now that piece is collected, often it would be cutting out that piece of fabric, the interior of the trunk, and then it's off to the lab.
Now, unfortunately, so often when you hear a red smear, it comes back something as benign as ketchup or paint.
But just maybe they would be onto something.
It was human blood and we did reverse DNA on with Erica's parents because each one contributes half of the DNA to the child.
So we did a reverse DNA and then DNA analysts said it's Erica Norman.
The blood of a missing woman you believe to be dead in the trunk of your top suspect's car, that is a really big development.
How would he be able to explain that?
Now that you have Erica Norman's blood in Brian Jones' car, if he becomes 137F, can you use one to answer answer the other?
And really the answer technically is no.
You have to prove the evidence for each crime on its own.
However, there is something called modus operandi.
Sometimes there is such a significant signature, if you will, of a killer, there are certain things that they do that are so similar that you can use evidence of one for the other.
But that's something that you need to do later on in court and get permission from the judge.
This gave CSI investigators and case agents an opportunity to really extend their forensic search to Brian Jones' apartment.
Getting more physical evidence would really help this investigation move it forward and also could create a new theory.
Then the police in Brian Jones' apartment went in and actually disassembled part of the shower.
The shower door was an aluminum frame with a glass in it.
And what they noticed when they removed the glass is that there was a brownish, reddish streak of material in that, like a little gutter where the water would drip down.
Now, while it may seem an oddly specific place to look, it's actually pretty commonplace because if you think about it, whatever is on those materials is draining down.
And sometimes, even though there's water running, something gets caught.
So they literally take out these pieces of metal to see if there's something in the trap and other parts of the metal piping.
That sometimes, the way that it's configured, they can still get something even when someone is trying to cover their tracks.
That was sent off for analysis.
Once again, serologist says this is human blood.
DNA says it's Erica Norman.
So what I have at this point is sufficient evidence to say he put her in the trunk, drove her somewhere, came back and cleaned himself off,
and screwed up and just didn't get rid of all the evidence.
But I still don't have a body at this point.
Anasiga, how difficult is it to proceed with a prosecution without a body?
It's more difficult, and I think I'll leave it there because you have all these extra layers that you need to go through to ensure that that person is actually dead.
You know, we've talked about this before in past episodes.
It's looking at their bank accounts.
Have they been in touch with family or friends?
If they work or go to school, have they been showing up?
Have they been using any of their social media accounts?
Different things.
So while you certainly can get there, and there are many cases that not only have been prosecuted but successfully, you're not going to get there as quickly because you really need to ensure, while unfortunate, that in fact the person's actually dead.
The link is to Erica, but I don't have Erica's body.
And without a body, I can't say I got a homicide.
I got a missing person, but I don't have a homicide.
And what about 137F, the DNA sample tied to the murder of Brooke Baker?
Well, this next part of the story could easily be taken from a Tom Clancy novel.
In the likes of a Jack Ryan, best explained by Hal Johnston himself.
That's U.S.
Army Lieutenant Colonel Hal Johnston.
I had joined the Army National Guard.
I transferred from the Navy and we're doing war games, annual military training at Camp Atterbury, which is a big Army base in southern Indiana.
So I'm with the brigade there, 4,000 troops.
I've been out in the field for several days, and a sergeant comes up to me one day and says, the Indiana State Police are trying to get a hold of you.
Now, this is before cell phones and all that.
And they said, your wife's trying to get a hold of you, too.
So I called my wife, Jerry, and she said, Greg Winkler from State Police is trying to find you.
They have information for you.
And I said, is it on Brooke?
And she said, well, they wouldn't tell me, but they're excited.
Now you have Hal Johnson, not only a public servant as a prosecutor, but he is out in the field with 4,000 troops as part of the Army National Guard.
And Scott's reference couldn't be more apt.
I mean, there is no scene that could be better set in any movie than what you have here.
And this is like 11 o'clock at night.
So I finally get a hold of Greg at his house, I believe, and Greg says, it's a match.
Brian Jones is 137F.
Wow.
I mean, I knew the answer, but I never get tired of hearing him say that.
You feel it in your stomach.
You are elated, again, saddened, because again, none of this is ever good news.
It's good news because you are getting the identity of a killer.
And now they finally have a name to 137F.
I said, we have to arrest him tomorrow.
So, state police arranged for a helicopter to fly to Camp Atterbury.
I got emergency leave.
They picked me up at like 5 a.m.
I'm in Army fatigues.
I haven't showered in several days.
They drop me off at a local parking lot because the helicopter can get in there.
And I meet the team.
So just picture this.
Here is a guy in full battle fatigues, war paint still on his face, and he jumps out of a state police helicopter to get a warrant to arrest the bad guy.
You know, are we sure this is not Jack Ryan?
And we get together, go to a local restaurant where we can sit around a table and we talk to him.
I said, what are we going to do?
And I said, we got to get the guy arrested today.
I said, this is what we've been waiting for.
It's him.
We had all the senior detectives there.
And I said, okay, guys, I'm going to go around the table.
I'm going to ask you one question.
And I just want a yes or no.
And I pointed to Bob and I said,
is Brian Jones the guy?
And he said, yes.
Greg Winkler.
Is Brian Jones the guy?
Yes.
Larry Eck, is he the guy?
Yes.
I believe it too.
I said, so let's go get a warrant.
And meetings like this in these long-term investigations, they're not uncommon.
I cannot even tell you how many of these roundtables we would have in various supervisors' offices in homicide or in our conference rooms.
And you want to make sure that there is a real meeting of the minds before you take this very big next step of deciding to make an arrest.
I'm still filthy dirty, but I already had a lot of the probable gods done because I'd done so many search warrants.
But now we could finally add what we'd always wanted to add, which is 137F is consistent with him to like one in so many billion.
And the DNA analyst, in his opinion, says that Brian Jones is the one who contributed the semen.
And so I asked for a probable cause to be found for one count of rape and one count of murder for Brooke Baker.
So for a moment, if you're saying, okay, but you're investigating him for Erica Norman's homicide, but now he's arrested on Brooke Baker's, but not yet Erica Norman.
And here's why they would break that up.
Because at the end of the day, you want to get this guy off the street because they not only want to hold him responsible for what he's done to one or more, you want to make sure he doesn't strike again.
Getting him in and him being charged in Brooke Baker's murder gives you the opportunity as an investigator to sit him down and let him realize all that you have against him in the Brooke Baker case, hoping he realizes that he's going to go away for a very, very long time.
And perhaps he'll give you the information on where is Erica Norman's body.
Now, state police had determined that Brian Jones was supposed to appear in Evansville for a traffic ticket that day.
So they get the warrant, they race down to Evansville to the courthouse, and as Brian Jones walks in, they go up and arrest him.
And what's interesting is that they just said, you're under arrest.
He never said what for, which we thought was interesting.
And now here's something that's important for us to remember.
No one is ever compelled to talk to the police, and you can never use someone's silence as evidence against them for that very reason.
However, the fact that he doesn't even bat an I, not a why, not a for what, nothing.
You can't use it in court, but it's something we can certainly think about ourselves.
You know, while his reaction is not evidence of guilt, it is pretty telling.
And Hal Johnston sets the scene in the courtroom so well.
He gave me a real weird look when he came in the courtroom because he had never seen me before.
I don't have any civilian clothes, so
I've still got like camouflage on my face and I'm in U.S.
Army battle fatigues.
So he's looking at me like, who the hell is this guy?
And I love that.
I picture him in these military fatigues, as he said, literally still with the, I don't even know what the word is for it, the dark grease paint that is under the eyes.
And what a sight, what a bizarre sight that must have been for all.
But it really goes to the real intrigue of this all.
So we bring him in, he's charged with Brooke Baker, and of course the media goes bananas over the whole thing, but Erica is still missing.
This is the face of 137F, and it's Brian Jones.
Will he admit the connection?
And will he also confirm to investigators what happened to Erica Norman?
Is this connection somehow with Erica Norman?
We're convinced it is,
but I can't do anything until we find her.
Is she dead?
And if she is, where's her body?
Now our work really begins.
This isn't solving the case.
This is now I have to prosecute the case.
And it's one thing to investigate, and it's something else to get the damn thing ready for trial.
And it's going to be a real challenge.
But what's still haunting me is where the hell is Erica?
What happened to her?
Little did he know he was about to find out.
A farmer, he was at a tractor route, and he detected a smell.
And he said, you know, I'm a farmer.
He said, I'm used to a lot of smells of dead bodies, of animals and the like.
He said, this was really unusual.
So he stopped his tractor, walked into the field a few dozen feet from the road, and found this, he didn't know what it was, but he thought, I've got to get hold of the police.
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The case took a dramatic turn after 16 days of intensive searching for Erica.
Indiana State Police get a call from Illinois State Police.
They believe it's a human body in a cornfield.
Farmers found it just off Highway 50, who, by the way, had a few years earlier found the body of another victim from Vincennes in his field.
I mean, that's a bit scary to have not only one dead body on your property, but two.
But obviously they're unrelated, but still a bit weird.
He called the county sheriff first.
Sheriff came out and looked.
Sheriff said, we need Illinois State Police here.
Illinois State Police came out.
The level of deterioration is such, this is in the late summer where it's extremely hot.
This is very, very humid because you're down in the fields near the Wabash River.
So high humidity, very high heat.
It was unrecognizable as a human being.
The phrase used by the pathologist in Illinois was necrotic mass.
It looked like tar had been poured out.
Necrotic or necrosis is a process where human tissue disintegrates, and you can imagine the rest of that.
I mean, I've seen a lot of dead bodies, but this was extraordinary, the level of deterioration.
Now, when you are left, unfortunately, with this level of decomposition, you can imagine how difficult it is to make sense of what led this person
to be there.
But there are certain things that usually remain.
You often have bone, teeth.
And it gives you the opportunity to do dental impressions, dental identification, and DNA testing to confirm the identity of a body in that state or that condition.
Sometimes there are clues left around the body.
So that's where investigators really need to try to turn.
There was a wallet nearby, and the wallet was Erica Norman's wallet.
While the wallet makes it likely, it's still not conclusive identification.
Forensics will be needed to definitively determine that, yes, this is Erica, but also how she died.
So Illinois has to conduct their investigation, which includes doing what's called a coroner's jury, which is kind of an interesting process.
Can you talk a little bit about what a coroner's jury is?
I'm going to nerd out a little bit here because a coroner's jury is something that I'd never heard about.
So when I spoke to Hal, I really had him explain it to me.
And it's a reminder why depending on where you are really matters in these cases, because in New York, for example, when you have a case that's going to be a felony, we have to present that to a grand jury.
And that basically is making sure that we have enough evidence to move forward even with the prosecution.
But in Indiana, they have what's called the coroner's jury, which means that they can't even get to that until they have an actual jury decide on the cause of death, that they basically have to stamp or affirm what the coroner has found.
That yes, the cause of death was X, which means the manner of death is Y.
I think it's an antiquated system.
200 years ago, you just brought in the local people and they tried to investigate the case.
You know, Midwestern states, a lot of our constitutions are based on Virginia, but I mean Virginia's old constitutions.
So
some of our systems out here in the Midwest are a little archaic, but that's just what Illinois has used for years.
It's really interesting to me that it shows all the different moving parts that you need to understand not just where you are, but what's happening in other places.
When the body went off for the pathology work in Illinois, they did forensic analysis of the teeth.
We We got hold of the parents, which was horrible, having to explain to them that we think we found your daughter.
The Illinois pathologist gave a positive ID through the dental records.
He ruled manner of death, homicide.
The cause of death, it was unknown.
When you get the undetermined, which sometimes you get when they just can't tell whether this is the manner is natural or homicide or what caused the death, it really leaves a question mark not only just don't have answers, but for a prosecution.
What I had were two murders.
Despite my best efforts, Judge Crawley decided to give him two separate teams of attorneys.
So you got one guy listening to two sets of lawyers.
And the first set of lawyers on the Brooke Baker case was headed by a local defense attorney who was famous for telling clients, I'm going to win the case.
I am going to get you off.
You don't plead into anything.
I'm going to get you off.
His other team of attorneys are much more rational and seasoned and said, you need to plead to this because there's no way we can win a trial.
Faced with all of the evidence in Erica's case, Jones pled guilty to murdering Erica Norman.
He received 60 years in prison, but he pled not guilty for Brooke Baker, and that case went to trial.
Ultimately, the decision was made that if the prosecution ended up with a conviction, they would be asking the jury for life without the possibility of parole.
But, you know, why do you think Anasekee would move forward with one and plead to another?
There are different reasons, and again, I'm just guessing here, but a lot of times it really comes down to time, the amount of prison time that a defendant is facing.
So while getting a 60-year sentence would be the natural end of many people's lives at that point, there are different things in corrections laws, which, even though if you get 60 years, depending on where you're serving your time, you may get out or be eligible for parole many years before.
Brian Jones has already pled guilty in the murder of Erica.
Now the stakes were high because the Brooke Baker case would go to the jury.
Would Hal Johnston be able to convince jurors that this actually was the heinous crime as he described?
So by pleading guilty, what I felt was I've got that conviction in my pocket.
Maybe he's really crazy and would take the stand, but if he did, he's doomed because the first thing I'll introduce is the copy of that conviction on Erica Norman.
Now, prosecutors love when defendants decide to take the stand.
But with everything, there's also concerns because now the defendant is going to give the jury their own version of events.
And while you hope the truth shows itself for what it is, you never know.
Maybe the jury buys what the defendant's saying.
I think what he wanted to do was to get up and say, well, I went over there and had sex and I left and then the policeman came over and killed her.
That's ended up being their defense.
And here you have a guy like Jones who has actually been convicted for another homicide.
Now, that type of evidence is normally never allowed in before the jury because it's overly prejudicial.
And remember, a defendant, no matter what, always has to be convicted for only the evidence in that particular case.
Where here you have something so powerful and also probative, but the jury is normally never going to hear it.
But in this case, Hal Johnston had a strategy for that.
In a criminal case, usually the defendant's criminal history is not introduced unless they testify and you have what's called an impeachable offense.
Well, in Indiana, one of the main impeachable offenses is murder.
So if Brian Jones chose to take the stand, my first question is, are you the same Brian Jones who pled guilty in this court and here's a certified copy of your conviction on the murder of Erica Norman?
Thank you, because that goes to your credibility.
You're a convicted murderer.
What do you think the jury's response is going to be at that point?
They're not going to believe a word he says.
If Brian Jones takes the stand, he can ask him the question if he had pled guilty and thus was now a convicted murderer.
So there really is a difference because the judge's ruling says that if they take the stand, the jury should know that because it goes to their credibility.
Because again, if you're deciding if someone is telling the truth, you want all the information you can have that a judge rules is applicable in making that determination.
It was the case.
TV stations in Indianapolis, TV stations in Chicago carried stories about it.
Chicago newspapers carried stories about it.
For the first time, I get a phone call one night from my sister in Texas and said, were you just on TV?
And when I sat down to prepare the case, I simply felt overwhelmed.
And I was sitting in my library.
I've got all this evidence out.
I've got so many interviews.
I mean, they interviewed maybe a couple hundred people.
And I'm thinking, how the hell do I handle this?
Well, one of the things I've developed as a prosecutor over the years to understand my case, it sounds odd, but I would play a game, and the game is, you only have one witness.
Who do you choose?
Well, my answer is my DNA analyst.
And then I realized that's my case.
But I have to build up to it.
I can't put him on the stand first.
I've got to build up to him.
So, let's say I can only have two witnesses.
Who's the second witness?
My pathologist.
Got to get the pathologist in.
Because these two are dealing with facts.
The DNA is a fact.
The pathology pathology report is a fact.
The bruising, the rape, all that, that's a fact.
So I started building my case that way.
So once I came up with that, it helped streamline my case and allowed me to really focus to build up to that point.
And then I decided my last witness would be Bob Dunham because he would then testify that Jones denied ever having sex with Brook Baker.
And I would rest my case at that point.
Hal Johnston was ready to go to trial.
There was a tremendous amount writing for Hal Johnston's case and for Brooke Baker's family.
At trial, there was another piece of evidence that Hal shared with the jury.
Analysts had gone back and
looked at Brooke's fingernails and had removed material from the fingernails.
That material was consistent with 137F.
And we had witnesses who had seen Brian Jones the next night and campus with scratches on his face.
Jury heard the case, went out, deliberated, and came back.
He was convicted of rape and murder.
Keep in mind that during the Brooke Baker trial, nobody could breathe a word about Erica Norman because there was a motion to limity, and I can't mention that murder.
The jury was polled.
Everybody said, that's my verdict.
And the judge said, you're not quite done yet.
He said, the state has filed a request for life without parole.
Let me break this down a little bit here because sometimes there are two distinct portions of the trial.
The jury found him guilty.
So, with that guilty verdict, there is now a sentencing phase.
In Indiana, when you are looking for a potential sentence of life without the possibility of parole, well, that is a decision that a jury needs to listen and decide to.
And so, it is now in that second portion where his guilt has already been established that now Hal Johnson is able to actually bring in the aggravating factor of Erica Norman's murder as one of the reasons why they are seeking this penalty of life without the possibility of of ever getting out on parole.
I remember getting up and saying, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I can finally say someone's name who I've not been able to tell you about, and that's a young woman named Erica Norman, and Brian Jones had killed again.
And the jury had a look on their face like, holy crap, and here's the evidence.
And they went out.
I mean, it was a very quick deliberation because at that point they said, this is too much.
So the jury unanimously recommended to the judge that he receive life without parole.
So at sentencing, the judge entered the standard sentence on the murder and then he said, I accept the jury's recommendation of life without parole and I hereby sentence you to life without parole.
For Hal Johnston and his team, for all the investigators involved in the Brooke Baker case, there was a lot to celebrate in bringing justice to Brooke Baker's family.
But there was one more case that still had not been resolved, and one more phone call for Hal Johnston to answer.
I happened to be at state police headquarters.
I was actually working on the Brook Baker trial, and one of the analysts came in and said, what the hell is going on with Knox County and DNA and murder?
I said, what do you mean?
He goes, didn't you hear we got a hit on Lisa McCracken?
Three years later, Lisa's case had gone cold, and unfortunately, it had to take another murder to know what happened to her.
Now, stay with me for a moment.
A 15-year-old girl was babysitting in a home right near hers on June 17, 1995.
She was babysitting a five-year-old girl when the house caught fire.
But when police and firefighters arrived, the five-year-old girl was rescued and she survived, but they found the body of that 15-year-old girl.
Her injuries had nothing to do with the fire, and it was determined that the fire was set after she was already dead.
Witnesses near the home ID'd a local man as Jeffrey Whipps.
Police went to interview Whipps at his house, and police said he acted and appeared so nervous he was sweating.
They also saw that Jeffrey had a burn mark and blood on his shoes.
DNA confirmed that he was also involved in the murder of Lisa McCracken.
The Lisa McCracken case, that was the first case in Indiana, according to Howell, to be solved with DNA.
And at the time that they got that DNA match to her killer, Jeffrey Whipps, he was already in prison serving an 89-year prison sentence for another homicide that he had pled guilty to.
So now we have three separate homicides, two related by the killer and one completely unrelated, except you have to wonder if it was these two later homicides that brought about the renewed interest that ultimately got the answer for Lisa McCracken's family, too.
What an incredible twisty Troney rode in this investigation.
When I look at this case, there are so many different levels and facets in it all.
Brian Jones was just someone who could not take no for an answer.
His drive to murder appeared to be sexual in nature, to dominate.
Never once throughout this entire process did he show any remorse for his actions or his victims.
And without Erica's case, he may have gotten away with murder.
When Brian Jones murdered Brooke Baker, he took away a voice, a 19-year-old who dreamed of being a storyteller, a journalist, silenced in the most horrific of ways.
Let's think about these three young women: Lisa, Brooke, Erica, and the voices they could have been, and the many men and women in law enforcement.
And Hal Johnston, how it was their voices and their perseverance that made sure that justice was achieved for all three.
Tune in next week for another new episode of Anatomy of Murder.
Anatomy of Murder is an audio chuck original produced and created by Weinberger Media and Frasetti Media.
Ashley Flowers is executive producer.
I think Chuck would approve.
Hi, everyone.
I'm investigative journalist and park enthusiast Delia Diambra.
And every week on my podcast, Park Predators, I take you into the heart of our world's most stunning locations to uncover what sinister crimes have unfolded in these serene settings.
From unsolved murders to chilling disappearances, each Tuesday we dive deep into the details of cases that will leave you knowing sometimes the most beautiful places hide the darkest secrets.
Listen to Park Predators Now, wherever you listen to podcasts.