Episode 262

1h 13m
Naomi Jones was an exceptional 12-year-old girl. She was caring, smart, ambitious, responsible, and mature for her age. On May 31st, 2017, Naomi went missing from her Pensacola apartment. In response, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office launched a massive search effort, but for nearly a week, nobody could find the young girl. Finally, on the 5th day of the search, a local fisherman found something that he would likely never forget, and the tragic fate of Naomi Jones was finally revealed. 

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Transcript

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Sword and scale contains adult themes and violence and is not intended for all audiences.

Listener discretion is advised.

I can't imagine what went through your mind, what you were doing.

The sheer fucking terror that that little girl was going through.

Absolute terror.

She knew that she was going to fucking die.

Knew it when she stared her killer in the fucking eyes.

Hello.

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Sprawled across the western edge of Florida's panhandle, surrounded by over 50 miles of coastline, sits the well-known city of Pensacola.

It's a city that's mostly known for its beautiful beaches and for attracting surfers and camper van travelers.

While it's true that Pensacola has no shortage of surfer bros and hipsters, the majority of its population aren't beach bums.

Most of the people of Pensacola are just everyday Americans that do what everyday Americans typically do: they go to work.

Around 4 p.m.

on May 31st, 2017, a 38-year-old man named Robert Howard was planning to do just that.

Robert had just walked out of his girlfriend's Pensacola apartment and was planning to make an hour-long commute to work when he was stopped in the apartment complex's parking lot by two women.

The little girl's mom and another older lady stopped me and asked me if I had seen a little girl.

And I told him, no, I I just came down at the apartment.

And that's when she told me her daughter was missing.

And I talked with them for a few minutes.

And I told her last time I'm not being rude, but I got to go to work.

And I left.

The two women asked Robert about a young girl that they believed to be missing.

One of those young women was the girl's mother, and her name was Shantara Hurry.

Later that day, Shantera contacted her local police department and reported her daughter missing.

When police first began looking into the situation, they questioned the last person to have supposedly seen the missing girl, which happened to be her 10-year-old brother, Emmanuel.

My sister,

she

had walked outside, didn't let him see her.

Tell me more about that.

I was in the bedroom here.

My sister had walked outside, and my brother told me he was at the bed when when he said Naomi is coming.

And I went outside to look, and then I called my mom.

I told her what happened, and then

my mom had came in the whole body.

Okay, thank you for telling me about that.

And tell me what your sister's name is, Naomi.

And how old is she?

12, 12.

Okay.

Naomi Jones had recently celebrated her 12th birthday, and she lived in a small apartment with her mom and two younger brothers.

According to her brother Emmanuel, on the day that Naomi went missing, she and her brothers had just finished walking their dog.

They returned home, and all three of them went inside the apartment.

But then, Naomi went back outside by herself and didn't return.

What was going on before she left?

What was going on?

She was creeping,

and then what happened?

And then she walked upstairs

At the time of Naomi's disappearance, Naomi and her two younger brothers were home alone.

Little 12-year-old Naomi was looking after her two younger brothers, which wasn't an ideal situation.

But it was oftentimes the only option.

Naomi's mom was just 18 years old when Naomi was born, and she was single.

To support her kids, she worked two jobs.

Usually, hiring a nanny or finding a relative to look after the children wasn't an option.

So, big sister Naomi picked up the slack and took care of things while her mom was at work.

She leave the kids and work two jobs.

Them kids be at home by themselves.

But you got Naomi watching two little boys like she grown.

Would you say Naomi's a responsible 12-year-old?

Or would you say she's a typical 12-year-old?

I said she

responsible.

That girl right there, the sweetest girl in the world.

She ain't got no problem.

All she do, she keep her grades.

She go to school.

In a lot of ways, Naomi was an exceptional 12-year-old.

According to the adults in her life, Naomi was caring, smart, ambitious, and especially mature for her age.

Naomi dreamed of becoming a doctor or nurse.

And she had a mind for science.

One of her hobbies included using household ingredients to make different forms of slime.

Yes, slime.

In the clip you're about to hear, Naomi is creating a YouTube video and teaching her audience how they can also create slime.

Midway through the recording, one of her younger brothers plays a practical joke on her by snatching away her camera and running off with it.

So, this one right here was actually made with um

flour.

This is made with flour.

That's why it's like like so moist.

After Naomi was reported missing, the Scambia County Sheriff's Office began their search effort.

And they clearly took this case very seriously as they alerted every local media station and held several press conferences.

You know, those of you that have seen Naomi's picture, she's the all-American girl.

I mean, she's a child that you would want in your home.

That's the bright face you look at across the breakfast table every morning and give a kiss to before she goes to school.

To tell you that these cases are heartbreaking is to state it in the minimum.

For police and just about anyone who knew Naomi, there was a detail about this case that strongly suggested foul play,

and that Naomi wasn't just a runaway.

On the day that Naomi went missing, she walked out of the apartment.

She left without her cell phone.

Like most girls her age, Naomi's cell phone was usually glued to her hand.

But on that particular day, she just left it behind.

Tell me how come Naomi didn't take her phone.

I think it was because she wasn't, she wasn't going anywhere for

okay.

What makes you think that?

Because she's take

she takes her phone everywhere with her.

Uh-huh.

Nobody could say why Naomi went back outside on her own that day.

But she clearly didn't plan to be gone for long.

If she had, Naomi almost certainly would have taken her cellphone with her.

As the search effort to find Naomi continued, detectives at the Escambia County Sheriff's Office questioned a lot of people.

Among those people was Naomi's mom's ex-boyfriend, Arthur Bruce, who was no stranger to law enforcement.

In fact, when cops picked him up, there was an active warrant for his arrest.

Though it wasn't for anything too serious.

Apparently, Arthur had been previously busted with some marijuana and was subsequently placed on probation.

Arthur then violated that probation and a warrant was issued for his arrest.

Nonetheless, when Arthur was brought in for questioning, he was cooperative and agreed to speak with detectives about Naomi.

During his interview, Arthur echoed how strange it was that Naomi had left without her cell phone.

Let me tell you something.

Naomi Don't go nowhere, sir.

Naomi don't go outside like that.

Naomi like the the phone.

She likes comprudes.

She likes to be in her room.

The phone was left in the house.

That don't sound right.

It just don't fucking sound right.

I don't fucking add up.

Detectives in this case had two very good reasons to question Arthur Bruce.

The first and the most obvious was that he was Naomi's mom's ex,

and he knew Naomi pretty well.

The second and much more concerning reason was that despite being the ex-boyfriend, Arthur was still communicating with Naomi through text messages.

While there was plenty of room for plausible deniability, some of Arthur's conversations with Naomi could have been considered

inappropriate for a grown man to have with a 12-year-old girl.

Naomi's birthday was free to come up.

And she asked me for a pair of space jam Jordan shoes.

And I went over...

Naomi text you wanting certain shoes.

Yeah, she wanted the shoes, the space jams.

And I said,

since you've been good and you kept your grades up, I said, listen to your mama, obey your mama, follow what your mama say, and I'll get you them shoes.

And she just wanted that one thing.

It was there some Space Jam Jordans.

Arthur asked Naomi what her shirt and shoe sizes were.

And according to Arthur, the only reason he asked her that question was because she wanted those things for her birthday.

This conversation apparently led to some conflict when Naomi's mom learned about it.

Did she text you from Naomi's phone getting upset with you for you texting Naomi?

Yeah, she told me not to text Naomi.

I asked Naomi what size she were.

And Naomi went and asked her mother, and her mother came and said, don't text Naomi no more.

Don't text us no more.

Don't get in contact contact with us no more, such and such.

And you can see on the text, I said, I respect that.

I understand that.

I said, y'all have a good day, blessed day.

I don't want no problems.

Alan Sagai, when we talked to Shantaris, you made it sound like

you were reaching out to Naomi in

almost a sexual way.

Oh,

and say, Do you see what you see what I'm saying?

Naturally, Arthur denied the accusation that anything he said to Naomi was meant as a sexual advance towards her.

Interestingly, when asked what he thought happened to Naomi, Arthur had his own theory.

Whatever going on with your gut feeling, what do you think happened?

I'm going to tell you something that shocks me.

And I wish y'all would have called that.

I called her the night you called me.

And first thing she said,

you want something about them $70,

all this red hump.

What the hell are you talking about?

Some money right now when your daughter misses?

We ain't talking about no money right now.

I said, what's going on with Naomi?

Don't worry about it.

I couldn't even talk to her.

I just hung the phone up.

Okay.

You think Sean Tara would hurt her own daughter?

I think that will happen, man.

And that's all cover-up?

Something just in my bones, man.

I just feel like it ain't right.

Because I think think the mother knows more than she know, man.

I don't disagree with you, but right now,

right now, Shantera is just, I mean, she's like flatlined.

She don't show no emotions.

She got Naomi somewhere.

Arthur seemingly suspected that Naomi's mom had something to do with Naomi's disappearance.

Which was a theory that detectives had considered.

For a mom whose 12-year-old daughter was missing, Shantara Hurry seemed pretty composed.

And her calm demeanor was on full display during her many media appearances.

If Naomi is out there, if anybody is watching that has my baby, I just need you to bring her back home.

My number is all over social media right now.

Just please bring my baby home.

Something else that struck detectives as strange was the story that they got from Naomi's brother, Emmanuel.

Initially, Emmanuel told police that when Naomi left the apartment, he was in his bedroom, lying down.

He claimed that he hadn't actually witnessed Naomi walk out the door, but he later changed his story.

So you saw her leave?

Okay.

So that was when she just left and you didn't see her again?

So Emmanuel, here's where I'm confused, because you told me earlier that you were asleep when she left, but now you're telling me that you heard her tell you that she forgot something and you saw her leave.

So those are two different things.

Help me understand.

How come you told me something different before?

What did mom say about coming here?

She said,

talk to me.

Did she tell you anything else?

Has anybody asked you to not talk about stuff or told you to keep secrets or anything like that?

Emmanuel was asked pointed questions about his mom because there was a possibility that he had been coached and instructed to lie about Naomi's disappearance.

But if that was the case, then detectives were never able to get Emmanuel to admit it.

As the theories of what happened to Naomi Jones began to stack up, the effort to find her continued.

By June 3rd, 2017, Naomi had been missing for over three days.

We've conducted 300 interviews, 30 search warrants.

We've gone not one mile, not two miles, but a three-mile radius.

We've checked our waterways.

We've checked a lot of Facebook posts.

We've got about 200-plus tips.

We've written down each one of those tips.

We do hope that and we pray that you guys will, the media will put this information out, not just locally, but regionally and then nationally, because right at this point, we really do not know what happened to Naomi.

Hundreds of volunteers came out to assist the search effort to find Naomi, and for nearly a week, Naomi's family and friends anxiously awaited for answers as they prayed for Naomi's safe return.

It wasn't until the fifth day that the search came to an abrupt end, when a simple fisherman came across something that he wouldn't soon forget.

It was on that day that the tragic fate of twelve-year-old Naomi Jones

was finally revealed.

So when I started this podcast, I didn't realize I was actually starting a small business.

Yikes.

There's nothing small about a small business.

You're working all of the time.

Thankfully, though, I have a partner with all the tools that I need to be successful.

You may have heard of them.

Their name is Shopify.

Shopify's point-of-sale system is a unified command center for your retail business.

It brings together in-store and online operations across up to a thousand locations.

Imagine being able to guarantee that shopping is always convenient.

Endless aisle, ship to customer, buy online, pick up in-store.

All these things are made simpler to customers so they can shop how they want, and staff have all the tools to close the sale every time.

And let's face it, acquiring new customers is expensive.

With Shopify POS, you can keep shoppers coming back with personalized experiences and first-party data that give marketing teams a competitive edge.

In fact, it's proven.

Based on a report from EY, businesses on Shopify POS see real results, like 22% better total cost of ownership and benefits equivalent to an 8.9% uplift in sales on average relative to the market set surveyed.

So if you have a retail or online business, then I'll tell you what, Shopify is a fantastic partner to have on your side.

Get all the big stuff for your small business right with Shopify.

Sign up for your $1 a month trial and start selling today at shopify.com slash sword and scale.

All one word.

Just go to shopify.com slash swordandscale and sign up.

You'll thank me later.

You will.

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In June of 2017, 12-year-old Naomi Jones went missing from the Aspen Village Apartments in Pensacola, Florida, where she lived with her mom and two younger brothers.

In response to Naomi's disappearance, the Escambia County Sheriff's Office launched a massive and highly organized search effort.

But after three days of relentless searching, there was still no sign of Naomi.

It's continuing in the pressure to try to find Naomi Jones.

I wish this morning we had some good news for you.

Unfortunately, we do not.

The search continues today.

We want to thank all those folks that are involved.

We've got civilian agencies here, the Class Kids Foundation, which has had over 150 volunteers from around the nation, by the way, to come and help us in our search for Naomi.

I will tell you the community and the nation that we are triple-checking at this point, areas that we have been over.

As the days dragged on, Naomi's younger brothers struggled to understand the possibility that Naomi may never be found and that she may never be coming home.

Do you have any worries about Naomi?

How long has she been gone for?

Tokyo?

Three days.

How are you feeling about that?

Sad.

Yeah.

Yeah.

As for the adults in Naomi's life, They held on to hope that Naomi would be found and that she would be be safely returned to her family.

As the search for Naomi continued, detectives assigned to the case continued asking questions.

Eventually, they ended up speaking with a young man named Jermaine Portis, who sometimes went by the nickname Man-Man.

What's your what days do you usually work out there?

What's your work schedule?

Monday,

sometimes I'll be off like Monday to Tuesday, sometimes Tuesday and Wednesday.

At the time of this police interview, Jermaine Portis was 23 years old, and he worked as a dishwasher and busboy at a nearby motel.

The detectives assigned to the Naomi Jones case were led to Jermaine through Naomi's phone records.

Your Facebook page has a phone number associated with it, okay?

That phone number has been texting Naomi, the missing girl.

In order to create a Facebook account, a person needs to provide a phone number or an email address.

In Jermaine's case, when he created his Facebook page, he used a phone number, and that phone number had recently exchanged text messages with Naomi.

Yet Jermaine denied that he knew Naomi at all, and he couldn't explain how or why Naomi had the phone number that was linked to his Facebook.

In fact, Jermaine claimed that the phone number wasn't even his and it belonged to his older sister.

Yeah, because I don't know how my sister's number ended up in the little girl phone.

I don't know.

I don't know.

I don't know how that number ended.

Who's your sister?

Laquita Portis.

How old is Laquita?

She's like 27, 28.

Would there be any, does she still have that that number?

Yeah.

Okay.

So, when was the last time you had access to her phone?

It's been so long, I don't remember, man, to be honest with you.

Like, I really don't.

And if so, and if I did was to get on her phone,

it wasn't like texting the girl, Wyoming, whoever was shit.

I don't even know the girl.

You know what I'm saying?

I don't even know how that number ended up in her phone, period.

Jermaine explained that when he created his Facebook page, he didn't have a phone.

So he just used his sister's number to set up the account.

While that seemed plausible, it still didn't explain why Naomi had that number in her phone.

So after hearing Jermaine's explanation, or rather, his lack of one, the detectives began asking him about his whereabouts on the day that Naomi went missing.

This

didn't go well for Jermaine.

Go ahead and tell me about your day, Wednesday, the 31st, what you did from the time you woke up.

I was working.

I was working.

Okay, what's your schedule?

What time did you go in?

I go in at 5 in the morning.

Okay.

Naomi went missing on May 31st at around 1.30 p.m.

Jermaine's typical work shift was 5 a.m.

to 1 p.m.

leaving him plenty of time to make his way over to Naomi's apartment.

At the same time, Jermaine couldn't even give a straight answer as to whether he even worked that day at all.

And you're positive you went to work that day?

If

not,

I was off.

I don't know.

But either way it goes, I understand I'm trying to get the story and all that.

But either way it goes,

I don't know if you're...

I probably do the same thing every day at night.

I just hang out with my friends and stuff like that.

Okay, with these kind of situations, we're talking to a lot of different people.

And generalizing, I do the same thing every day.

In this situation, it isn't going to cut it.

Maybe I went to work.

Maybe I didn't.

Maybe I saw some friends.

Maybe I didn't.

Dumb criminals lie about all the wrong things, don't they?

And as far as alibis go, Jermaine's was about as ambiguous as you could get.

The cops don't like that, by the way.

And when they pushed him about it, the only thing Jermaine could say was that he never met Naomi and he had no idea who she even was.

Unfortunately for him, detectives had information that suggested otherwise.

We talked to one of your neighbors and they said that they've seen

Naomi come to your house a few times.

It's funny to me because

people start pointing fingers and saying things.

But where is she?

I don't know.

Nobody knows.

I don't know, but I know.

Only one person knows.

Therefore, you shouldn't say you've seen the girl come to my house.

You've never seen the girl come to my house.

No, in the past, they've seen her.

In the past, I never seen her in the past.

I never seen the girl appear.

I never seen her.

Not only had his neighbors supposedly spotted Naomi at Jermaine's house, but according to detectives, another witness placed Jermaine Jermaine at Naomi's apartment complex on the day she went missing.

There were some people there

with her on the 31st, and they said that Man Man was over there that morning.

That's what they said.

I wasn't.

So you're sure you were at work that day?

Yep.

But if I was not,

I was not around.

I mean, if you can explain, yeah, okay, I went over to the apartment that morning, but I didn't have anything to do with it.

If I was to be on the move, but I came to slide like that because I wasn't there.

I don't know him.

Y'all just can't, like, get me messed up behind something that I really ain't got nothing to do with.

You know what I'm saying?

So even if it was to go farther, if y'all seen me around somebody or whatever, I didn't do nothing wrong.

I didn't, I know I did.

Confidently, Jermaine maintained that had nothing to do with Naomi's disappearance and that he had never even met her.

After a few hours of questioning and a whole lot of denial, Jermaine was sent home, and he remained a potential suspect.

Within hours of Jermaine leaving the police station, the case took a sudden turn.

12-year-old Naomi Jones had finally been found.

Naomi Jones was found in 8 Mile Creek Monday morning.

She had been missing for five days.

The sheriff's office says based on the preliminary autopsy, she had been killed within the first 24 to 36 hours after her abduction.

The area where she was found has turned into a growing memorial.

However, that spot is not where she was killed, according to the sheriff's office.

The sheriff would not go into detail about how she died, only that her cause of death is asphyxiation.

Five days after she was first reported missing, a local fisherman found Naomi's small and lifeless body lying under a bridge in a creek about 10 miles from the apartment complex where she lived.

Naomi was found partially submerged.

She was wearing the same tank top she had on when she went missing, but she was nude from the waist down.

Later, an autopsy revealed that Naomi died of asphyxiation.

The medical examiner concluded that she had likely been strangled to death.

For the detectives that saw and pulled Naomi's body out of the creek, it was a day and an event that they will likely never forget.

Hang out with her friends, go to school,

find a boyfriend,

get married, have kids.

At just 12 years old, Naomi's life had ended.

All of her aspirations and the potential of who she could have become was lost forever.

When the news broke, the local community rallied behind Naomi's family.

and hundreds of people attended a vigil to honor Naomi and support Naomi's

I would love to thank you all for coming out today.

It means the world to me to know that every single one of you took your time out of your day to come down here.

We love you, girl.

And I'll see how many bottles

The search for Naomi had ended, but now the hunt was on to find her killer.

During the search and throughout the investigation, the police questioned hundreds of people, but their best lead came when they interviewed a young man named Robert Howard.

When Naomi's mom first learned that her daughter was missing, she rushed home from work and called Naomi's grandmother.

Together, the two of them began knocking on every door in her apartment complex, asking the residents if they'd seen Naomi.

As they were doing this, they ran into Robert just as he was on his way to work.

On my way out,

I ran into, I don't know the girl's mom's name, but her and another older lady.

And that's when she asked me, have I seen her daughter?

And I'm like, well, no, ma'am, I just came out the apartment.

And she was like, well, it's it's my daughter.

And I'm like, well, no, ma'am.

She's like, well, she's missing.

And I stood there and talked with them for a minute before I left.

So you hadn't seen Naomi?

Do you know who Naomi is?

Yes, I know exactly who she is.

I see her.

Well, you see her every time we're here in and out of the apartment.

Her and her brothers are either out there playing with their dog or they're on that back balcony or they're in between the apartments playing.

Had you seen her at all that day?

No, ma'am.

Okay.

38-year-old Robert Howard lived and worked in Bruton, Alabama, which was about an hour away from the apartment complex where Naomi lived.

But Robert would often spend days at a time at his girlfriend's apartment, which was just a few doors away from Naomi's apartment.

Your girlfriend lives in the apartment.

And what's her name again?

Lauren Ewing.

What is it?

Lauren Ewing.

And you guys have a child together?

One year.

A baby, right?

One-year-old?

Okay.

How old is uh lauren

lauren's 30 30 yes how old are you now 38.

how long have you been involved with uh lauren

a couple years

according to robert he and his girlfriend lauren had dated for over two years and they had a child together yet they lived an hour apart For detectives, this seemed like an odd arrangement, but they did confirm that all of it was true when they spoke to Lauren.

How long have you been with Robert?

Two years.

About two years.

Okay.

Does Robert live with you?

No.

So explain to me how that works out because he's up in Bruton at work and he also keeps a place up there too.

Given that Robert frequently stayed at Lauren's apartment and that the two of them were basically Naomi's neighbors, the cops wanted to find out exactly what they did on the day that Naomi went missing.

As for Lauren, her day was pretty easy to track and verify.

Lauren went to work in the morning and didn't return until the early evening.

She left her apartment while Naomi was still accounted for and didn't return until long after Naomi went missing.

So Lauren seemed to be in the clear.

Okay, so when you left that morning at six, was Robert there?

Yes.

Okay.

And

when you got home, was Robert there?

No.

Okay, right.

Now,

that

night, I guess you probably would have come home and gone to sleep at some point.

Is that fair to say?

Do you remember him coming home to your house

after you had been to sleep?

Yes.

Okay.

What did he do?

Um

Robert told investigators that on the day that Naomi went missing, he woke up at Lauren's apartment, went to the gym, and then returned to the apartment.

Then he drove to Lauren's work to quickly visit her, which Lauren...

later confirmed.

After that, Robert returned to the apartment one more time and prepared to go to work.

You work at Fruit Carr?

Yes.

What is your schedule at work?

Um, Fortnite shift.

Time between 3:30 and 5.

Did you work that Wednesday that Naomi went missing?

The initial?

I got to work maybe like between 5.15, 5.30, somewhere from there, so I'm going to say I left the apartment around 4:30.

Robert was a night shift employee at a large train repair facility.

On the night in question, and on most nights, Robert worked alongside only one other employee.

So you work with Robert.

I heard that you two are the only two at night?

Yes, that's nice.

Okay.

All right.

Okay.

According to his co-worker, Robert did show up to work on the evening that Naomi Jones went missing, and he worked a full shift.

Presumably, had Robert abducted and murdered Naomi earlier that day, he almost certainly would have been acting differently or showing some signs that he did something horrible, right?

Then I clocked in.

He was there.

It was right at 5.30 when he got there.

Okay.

How is he acting?

Like his normal self.

I mean, just like every day.

I mean, I ain't seen no difference.

We start sitting out.

We look at our paperwork, you know, we laugh, we tell each other what we did over the weekend.

Just, I mean, just like a normal person.

As far as this co-worker could tell, Robert seemed like his same old self.

But as investigators began looking into the type of man that Robert was,

they quickly learned that Robert was pretty good at keeping secrets.

During his interview, Robert admitted admitted that in addition to dating Lauren and having a child with her, and pretty much living at her apartment, Robert was also dating another woman.

She was 37-year-old Yolanda Mitchell.

What kind of relationship do you have with her?

We mess around.

Okay.

How old is she?

37.

Assume Lauren doesn't know about you.

Okay.

I got you.

Just a little some on the side for me.

I got you.

It turned out that on the day that Naomi Jones went missing, Robert visited Yolanda on his way to work.

Yolanda had just come from a funeral and needed a shoulder to cry on, if you know what I mean.

So, Robert obliged.

What was your relationship with him?

Brains split and wearing

nobody

really knew about our relationship.

Okay.

On the phone with you in this time frame, did he seem nervous, weird, anything?

No, he, when I called, when I called him, when I got out of that funeral, he was very supportive, very encouraging.

Like, I literally broke down crying because, like I said, I just walked out of the funeral and I literally broke down crying.

And he's like, it's okay, babe, cry.

That's what you need to do.

Just cry.

It's going to be okay.

All of that.

That's our whole conversation.

If you can look beyond the fact that Robert was cheating on the mother of his child,

you might be inclined to think that maybe he's a decent guy.

After all, offering emotional support to someone that just left a funeral is a kind and decent thing to do.

Unfortunately for Robert, the investigators knew better.

They've been around the block for a while.

They've seen a few things.

They knew a lot of things, in fact, that Robert and his friends and girlfriends didn't know.

They knew that this man wasn't decent at all.

Robert Howard was a registered sex offender and had previously spent 15 years in prison.

What is your background or your history?

When I was in high, well, right, I got out of high school, me and a girl was messed around.

She got pregnant.

And her...

So I said, I got,

well, I copped out because I didn't have no money to try to afford a lawyer, so I had to cop out.

And I did 15 years.

How old were you?

Like 18 years old.

What year was that?

1998.

What was the charge?

First degree rape.

First degree rape?

Yes.

And that was in Alabama.

Yes.

Robert claimed that the 19-year-old woman that accused him of rape had lied to the police.

And Robert was unable to afford a good attorney.

So he had no choice but to accept the plea deal from the Alabama prosecutor.

Of course, that story is kind of hard to believe when you consider that Robert was later convicted of raping yet another woman.

Was there another charge that you had in your history?

Yeah, it was

say the same thing.

It was just another girl put in.

They were like, basically, like,

I did this the same thing to this other girl.

You got her pregnant, or you just.

No, I didn't get her pregnant.

You just messed around and she said, I made her.

And it's the same time that this other girl said the same thing.

So you were 18.

How was old?

It was this girl?

Same age.

To sum up, detectives were questioning a twice-convicted rapist that was pretty much living at the same apartment complex as 12-year-old Naomi Jones.

As bad as all that looked,

Robert's criminal history and his living arrangements didn't exactly prove that he abducted and murdered Naomi.

What could prove it, though, or at least help convince a jury, was Robert's early morning visit to the area where Naomi's body was found.

Were you

in that area or over that way on

last Wednesday, the 31st?

Yes, sir.

Okay.

And what do you drive?

I have a silver

altima.

You saw an altima?

Yes, ma'am.

Okay.

Naomi's body was found under a small bridge over Eight Mile Creek in Pensacola, about 10 miles from where Naomi lived.

As luck would have it, there are several traffic surveillance cameras in that area.

What if I were to tell you that your

car was in the area where her body was found that night?

No, that's impossible.

Because it could have been.

Why?

Tell me why.

Because when I have my car, it's either at work, when I live at work, it comes straight back to Johnson Avenue.

Long as a part of it.

Did anybody else have your car then?

The one over has my car.

If we were to subpoena your phone records, I'm going to show you in that area?

Nobody wouldn't show me in that area.

Detectives had irrefutable evidence that Robert drove to Eight Mile Creek about 12 hours after Naomi's disappearance.

Not only that, but they could also place him at the apartment complex at the time that Naomi went missing.

I was going to be honest with you,

what time did you pick Naomi up?

I never picked Naomi up.

See, being honest with you.

You sure about that?

I'm positive.

Well,

about the time you leave your apartment is the time she goes missing.

But the thing about that is, when I drop Lauren off, I go straight to Bruton.

So how is it that I can pick her up?

The thing about that is, is that we already have your phone records.

Okay.

And you were at the apartments at 1.30.

I was gone at 1.30.

Phone records show no.

You were there at 1.30.

That phone number that you gave me, it's the phone number we subpoena for the records, you were at the apartments at 1.30.

You were not in Bruton.

Detectives knew that Robert was lying.

And they could prove it.

They had him dead to rights.

And yes, I figured out what that saying means.

Thanks for the help in the comments.

So after a few more hours of poking and prodding at Robert, some partial truth

coming out.

Robert eventually admitted that he had done something horrible and unforgivable.

Robert Howard confessed to killing 12-year-old Naomi Jones.

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On June 5th, 2017, after an exhaustive search effort, the dead body of 12-year-old Naomi Jones was found under a small bridge at 8 Mile Creek in Pensacola, Florida.

It was later determined that Naomi had been strangled to death and her body was thrown off a bridge.

During the murder investigation, Escambia County detectives interviewed hundreds of people.

Among those questioned was 38-year-old Robert Howard.

Robert lived and worked in Bruton, Alabama, but he often stayed at his girlfriend's apartment in Pensacola, which happened to be in the same apartment complex where Naomi lived and was last seen alive.

We all know that in true crime cases, there's usually not a lot of extenuating circumstances.

If it looks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, then Adnan probably did it.

You know, common sense.

The kind of thing that isn't around that much these days.

There's also the fact, of course, that Robert was a registered sex offender.

In the late 90s, he was convicted of first-degree rape twice and spent 15 years in prison.

After learning about Robert and his history, Investigators used phone records and surveillance footage to track Robert's movements on the day that Naomi Jones went missing.

Once a sex offender?

always a sex offender.

Investigators knew and, more importantly, could prove that Robert was at the apartment complex when Naomi was abducted, and that Robert had driven to the creek where her body was found about 12 hours after her disappearance.

In other words, Robert was fucked.

Given his background, the evidence, along with the fact that Robert was the only person they interviewed that lied about their whereabouts the cops knew they had their man

despite all of this when questioned Robert refused to confess and he continued to lie I think one or two things happen

you either have a fetish

or were attracted to Naomi

and

you got her to get in your car

and things might have gotten, let's say, a little carried away.

Or either you're just a stone-cold

rapist or killer man.

I mean, it's one of the things.

It's neither, because I never got her to get in my car.

She's never been in my car.

So which is it?

Did you pick her up and have her?

I did not pick her up.

I did not have anything to do with that child.

I think she got in your car.

I think she didn't.

Robert denied having anything to do with Naomi's disappearance and her death.

But he also denied that he was ever near Eight Mile Creek.

Basically, he told cops that reality wasn't reality.

Where have I heard that before?

Oh, yeah.

Oh, yeah.

Oh, yeah.

Everywhere.

Everywhere.

We have your car on video up there.

You say you do, but I'm telling you, you don't.

We have your car on video.

We have your phone records that show your exact route from where you were at, from the apartments, to Bruton, back down to where she was found, and they show exactly which route you went.

You can't deny it.

It's your phone number.

If you say you got my car on video and you say this is showing all of this, let me see it because

there's no way.

Robert really thought he could call the cops bluff by asking to see the evidence, but there was no bluff.

His car was captured on camera in the area where Naomi was found, and when Robert asked to see the footage, detectives obliged.

What's that?

A Nissan Altima.

Okay, and what is that supposed to mean?

That's your car.

Okay, so how are you just going to tell me that's my car?

Because your phone puts you in that exact spot that that car is at.

at the exact time that that car is on that video.

Detectives could definitively prove that Robert was at the scene scene where Naomi's body was found.

There was simply no way around it.

He couldn't deny it.

I mean, he could, but he was denying a fact.

It's pretty obvious.

When faced with this,

finally,

Robert changed his story.

He admitted to going to the creek, but claimed that his visit there had nothing to do with throwing the dead body of a 12-year-old girl off a bridge.

No, no, he was there for, you know, something else.

Maybe bird watching or hunting for butterflies.

Some sort of ornithology type venture.

Whatever that means.

Maybe some kind of caterpillar collecting expedition or the cataloging of leaves for a scrapbooking album of some sort.

I don't know.

Why do people go outside anymore?

I don't even know.

I'm a podcaster, after all.

Was somebody else with you?

No, no one else is with me.

You were by yourself.

But I was told that something would be there.

What was supposed to be there?

It was supposed to be

what exactly?

It's just supposed to be something to benefit me.

But I did that.

Something to benefit me, I guess.

Something pussy?

Fuck no, I don't hope not.

How's it going to benefit you?

Monetarily?

It didn't say.

It just said something to benefit you.

Do you

say a fortune cookie?

I have no idea.

Robert told investigators that that he found a letter on his windshield that directed him to Eight Mile Creek.

This letter was apparently very vague and only suggested that if Robert drove to the creek, he would find something that would benefit him.

It was a note from me.

It was a note on the car.

And it says something to benefit you.

From Naomi?

No.

Who's it from?

It didn't have no name from nobody.

or to nobody.

It was just on the car.

That is the absolute worst fucking story

and i'm telling you the dynasty they got true

robert yes sir that is the absolute silliest bullshit that i've ever heard

that is absolutely fucking ridiculous listen to me see i thought we were getting somewhere and you pulled something i know

i know you don't believe me fuck no i don't believe you fuck no

Y'all are next door fucking neighbors.

She goes missing that afternoon, and you're driving around where she's dumped at.

Not only driving around, you fucking stop.

Doing circles.

You know why?

Because you're fucking nervous.

You don't know where to put her.

Obviously, Robert's story about some ambiguous note left on his car was bullshit.

Cops knew it.

I mean, you know it.

I know it.

Everybody knows it.

Robert knows it.

And the cops were pretty much done playing these little games with them.

So you are a cold-blooded murderer.

I'm a cold blood.

Because you're sitting here denying, denying, denying.

You don't care.

You just put it like you just deny everything and lie because we have proof that you're lying.

But this child has never been in my house.

A 12-year-old baby is dead.

She just turned 12.

She's 11 years old.

I did not touch that child.

I did not have that child.

She's never been with me.

She has.

You killed her.

No, I did not.

You killed her.

I killed her.

You You raped her and you killed her.

No, I did not.

Yes, you did.

No, I did not.

What did you do, then?

I didn't do anything.

You didn't have her.

You raped that baby.

Was she scared?

I don't know.

She was.

I didn't have her.

Did she cry?

I didn't have her.

You know, crying.

She cried for her mama.

I have no idea.

Did she beg you to stop?

I don't know what you're talking about.

You fucked her, didn't you?

No, sir.

No, sir.

You stuck your dick in that little 12-year-old girl.

No, sir.

I can't imagine what went through through your mind, what you were doing.

The sheer fucking terror that that little girl was going through.

Absolute terror.

She knew that she was going to fucking die.

Knew it.

She stared her killer in the fucking eyes.

At this point, investigators had a solid case.

There was plenty of evidence that a jury could easily understand, and they didn't really need Robert to admit to anything.

Still, you know, a confession is always nice.

It doesn't hurt.

And to hear what actually happened from the horse's mouth puts a little closure on things.

So they continued to question Robert and tried to tap into his empathy, if there was any there.

Taught in that 12-year-old girl

that she'd still be at home walking her bulldog with her two little brothers that thought the world of her

and her mom out there busting her fucking ass

working to put food on the fucking table for her kids

you know the guilt that she's got for this because she wasn't at home she was at fucking work

she 12 year old girl playing the mother role taking care of the kids

So her mother could go to work.

She comes back home with her two little brothers after walking that dog and tells her little brother I'll be right back.

She walks out that door.

And her mother's worst nightmare came fucking true.

She met you.

Robert made it pretty clear that he didn't give a damn about Naomi's mom or her two brothers.

It was only after the detective offered to help Robert that he was willing to talk.

In other words, Robert's only concern was himself.

All's not lost.

I'll help you through it.

Because we're going to talk about it.

Because right now, I'm your only saving grace.

How?

You know what kind of shit it looks like on a 12-year-old kid?

Don't want to put you to fucking death.

I need something for sure and right.

I mean,

I don't want to spend the rest of my life in prison.

After several hours of interrogation, and only after the prospect of getting something for himself came up, Robert finally said something that was basically a confession.

He asked the investigator if there was something in Naomi's mouth when she was found.

And indeed, there was.

The forensic team found candy in her mouth.

And that information had not been released to the public.

It was something that only the killer could know.

Did they find the candy in her mouth?

Yes.

Found candy in her mouth?

Yes.

What was it?

Was candy.

I have no idea.

I just know she thinks we can.

God.

In asking this question, Robert revealed himself as the killer.

But why did he ask it?

Of all the things he could say or ask, why bring up the candy in Naomi's mouth?

For investigators, this question represented the twisted and evil gratification that Robert had in what he had done to Naomi.

In any case, after revealing himself as the killer, Robert then went to spin a story about how Naomi died.

According to Robert, on the day of the murder, he ran into Naomi in the parking lot of her apartment complex and she unexpectedly started to flirt with him.

Thank you.

She was like, well, where's Lawrence?

I said, Lauren, I wanted.

She said, can I come in with you?

And I told her, no,

she couldn't come in.

When I make it to the door, she's at the top of the steps, and I tell her to go back home.

She stands there, and she's like, why can't I come in?

Why can't I come?

I said, because you can't.

You don't need to be over here.

She stands there and she's making gestures to my can she come in?

Can she come in with me?

I said, no, you can't come in.

She coming on to you a little bit?

She's trying to.

Robert explained that 12-year-old Naomi made very aggressive sexual advances towards him.

Something straight out of penthouse letters, if you can imagine that.

And remember that reference.

He said that this 12-year-old girl insisted on going into the apartment where Robert stayed with his girlfriend.

And she's making gestures, sexual gestures.

Like what?

Can she see the dick?

She can handle the dick.

And at this time, it's when she didn't grab my dick, but she grabbed it, like my shirt, the bottom of my shirt, like she was trying to.

She's keeping on, keeping on.

Even if you ain't trying to do nothing, I mean, maybe she was just talking to you to see if she could see my dick.

I don't know.

But I didn't show it to her.

Right.

Because that's what every pre-teen girl wants.

To see a 40-year-old man's penis.

Sure.

Of course, Robert's telling of these events was no more believable than his ridiculous note on the car story.

But the fact that he was lying wasn't the worst of it.

The worst part was the fact that he was trying to blame the murder victim, a child,

for what happened next.

According to Robert, when Naomi refused to accept his rejection of her, he decided to strangle her.

Because that makes total sense.

Before I realized, I had choked her out.

I don't just rather.

And I didn't really mean for it to happen.

I didn't mean to do it.

I thought she was just, they just blacked out, but I had

choked her pretty damn good to the point where she wasn't breathing.

Robert claimed that he didn't intend to kill Naomi.

And as expected, he denied raping her.

Once again, we have a case where the bad guy is willing to admit to murder, but won't admit to raping his victim.

Weird.

All this stuff,

she didn't have no bottoms and stuff like that.

I don't know nothing about that.

I didn't do anything to her, sexually.

Like I say, I mean,

I choked her out, yes.

I'll admit that I did choke her out, but I did not.

That's why.

Why did I have sex with her in my car?

No, I didn't do any of that.

Robert denied raping Naomi.

And surprisingly, the prosecutors in Escambia County never sought rape charges against him.

So can you all say definitively if Naomi was sexually abused in the time frame before or after her death?

It's possible that prosecutors were unable to prove that Naomi had been raped.

But it's also possible that they didn't feel like they needed to.

Perhaps they didn't want that information to be made public if it wasn't necessary to do so.

But legally speaking, that wasn't the most pressing issue.

Robert claimed that Naomi's death was an accident.

If a jury was convinced of that, Robert could be convicted of second-degree murder or even manslaughter.

For prosecutors and Naomi's mom, That would be devastating.

They wanted a first-degree murder conviction and a death sentence.

I just want them to give him the death penalty.

That's what he deserves.

And that's a major part of it, getting justice for Naomi.

The case against Robert Howard took two years to go to trial.

And in the end, Florida prosecutors were not able to obtain a death sentence.

They did, however, convince a jury to return a first-degree murder conviction.

And Robert was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

In many ways, Robert Howard is an unremarkable rapist and murderer.

He was terrible at covering up his crimes, and he was one of the worst liars we've ever come across.

Meaning that he sucks at it.

He's really, really, really bad at it.

For detectives, this wasn't exactly a difficult case to close.

But if there's anything about Robert that does stand out, it's his ability to trick the people around him and convince them that he was just a normal, decent, and trustworthy guy.

I wouldn't have suspected Robert.

Never would have.

Those who know Robert Howard describe him as an athlete from Bruton close to his family.

He ran tracking everything.

He ran football, tailback, he ran tracking.

But why shock in the small town?

Howard is a known sex offender who spent 15 years in prison for a rape case in 1999.

One of the victims was my cousin.

One woman said she is related to his first victim, and everyone admits they did not believe her at the time.

Now they wish they would have listened.

I didn't want to believe he did what they was.

accusing him of doing.

Robert Howard was clean-cut, athletic, and carried himself with modest confidence.

If you were only able to look at him and were forced to make an assumption, you'd probably think he was a normal dude that had his life together.

Robert also spoke well and always seemed genuine with his politeness.

He was universally accepted into every social setting around him.

As for the people that knew him best, specifically the women he was dating, learning that Robert was a rapist and childkiller was a hard pill to swallow.

So hard, in fact, that his secret girlfriend Yolanda refused to accept it.

Even after Robert confessed.

So he confessed to doing this?

I find it hard to believe.

Just simply because of the way he acted.

towards me.

He's always been very affectionate.

Like,

he was very sweet, very sweet, very charming.

He was always like that.

So, you know, even then, I didn't.

I didn't believe it then.

I don't believe it now.

I just can't see him

raping anybody.

That's what I'm saying.

You know, with the psychopath, sociopath mentality.

I mean, sometimes those people can act like nothing's wrong and go on with my mom wife's daily activities, and you would never know.

I said, I've been

going over it and over it in my head, and I just don't.

What did I miss?

Or how did I miss it?

As for Robert's girlfriend Lauren, who was the mother of his one-year-old child at the time, the news that Robert had murdered a 12-year-old girl didn't go over well.

And in that sense, your fault, you just believed you took what he said at face value because he seems very,

very intelligent and very

polite and well-mannered and well-spoken and you took him at face value

anything like that you know

of course

i'm so stupid you can't go you cannot do do not

take any kind of blame blame yourself I mean

like I said sometimes we think we know somebody and we really don't.

I mean, he had you fooled, just like he's had.

He had us fooled.

How long did it take us to get here?

A week.

He had a lot of people fooled, not just you.

He had everybody fooled.

Of course, no one in this story has been more devastated by Robert's actions than Naomi's mom.

To this day, Shantara Hurry continues to wonder who her daughter would have become had her life not been so tragically stolen.

On April 15th, Naomi Jones would have celebrated her 14th birthday.

Okay, yeah, this is one of my favorites.

Her mother says she would have been a rising eighth grader trying out for the cheer squad and learning how to drive.

It's so hard, and

I

don't know how I'm doing it.

I don't...

I just think it's the grace of God, to be honest.

Instead, her family now holds on to the memories they had with her for 12 years.

The girl full of life who loved Hello Kitty and dreamed of becoming a nurse or doctor.

Like when I'm preparing plates, I still will prepare plates for three kids.

That's like the hardest thing to, you know.

Meh, man, Naomi and Jaden, come on, it's time to go.

I still do that all the time.

It goes without saying that the story of Naomi Jones is a sad one.

It's heartbreaking.

It's depressing.

Not only because of the young life that was lost, but also because Naomi's story reveals a harsh truth about the world that we live in.

And it's a truth that Naomi's mom understands too well.

Just because you have a neighbor if you live in an apartment complex, and just because you see them in passing, it doesn't mean that you can trust them.

Naomi's mom has a very specific message about trusting neighbors and being wary of people that you frequently see in passing.

Frankly, it really sucks that this poor mother has to go around and make people aware of stranger danger.

But that is the world that we live in.

Even more depressing, the story of Naomi Jones is a grim reminder.

that no matter how close we become to someone, and no matter how well we think we know them, we may not know

them at all.

Robert Howard is a complete sociopath, a pathological liar, a rapist, and a child murderer.

Yet nobody around him,

not even those closest to him, saw the danger that he posed.

Despite his violent criminal past and not one but two rape convictions, Robert was still able to mask the monster that he is.

In fact, there was a moment in time that perfectly illustrates just how good he was at doing this.

After Robert murdered Naomi and before he dumped her body, he drove from Florida to Alabama toward his job.

Before arriving there, he made a stop to visit his secret girlfriend, Yolanda, who was in distress after having just left a funeral.

Yolanda sat in the passenger seat of Robert's car and shared her grief with him.

Robert consoled her.

He was her shoulder to cry on.

As she cried, Robert smiled, wiped away her tears, and told Yolanda that everything would be okay.

All the while, Naomi's Naomi's dead body was lying in the back seat of his car,

hidden under a raincoat.

Robert didn't visit Yolanda to help her.

He didn't care about her feelings or have any real interest in helping her through a difficult time.

The reason Robert went to go see Yolanda that day was because he wanted to establish a false alibi.

He tried to use a woman's grief to protect himself while the corpse of his 12-year-old murder victim was in the back seat.

Robert Howard is a monster, and his ability to hide that fact

was almost

effortless.

All it took

was a raincoat

and a smile.

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Stay safe.

Hey guys, this is Danielle.

I was just listening to one of your shows yesterday and you were fishing at us.

and I just think that it's so funny when you

let it out on the air for us and I'm just always curious like if you've ever like recorded a three-minute bitching session at us and then your editors are like maybe a little bit too harsh today Mike and then you have to like redo it.

Maybe not.

Either way, love the show, love you, and

keep it up.

Keep fishing at us.

I kind of enjoy it.

I laugh.

Anyway,

bye.

Let me answer your question, Danielle.

It happens every week.

Motherfucking cinema, cinnamon, cinema, cinnamon.

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