20/20 - The After Show: Tracking Susana
Episode Date: May 11, 2026Deborah Roberts spoke with John Quiñones to reveal in-depth details in the shocking disappearance of 16-year-old Susana Morales. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Spring has a way of reintroducing your home to the light.
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They shape the light itself.
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These are not off-the-shelf window treatments.
They're precision-engineered,
professionally measured and expertly installed.
The kind of upgrade that doesn't just refresh a room, it elevates it.
And because you'll work with a local expert, every detail is handled for you, from
inspiration to installation.
There's a store in your area where you can get Hunter Douglas Shades.
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Hi there, everybody. Welcome to 2020 The After Show. So good to have you with us, as always.
I'm Deborah Roberts. And as we always do, we're going to dig a little deeper into our most
recent episode of 2020. And this one, if you saw it, I'm sure you haven't forgotten it.
And if you haven't, you're going to hear some details about the heartbreaking story of the
murder of 16-year-old Susanna Morales. Now, those who knew her described her as somebody who was
full of light, somebody who loved music, and she was living sort of the classic immigrant story.
Her mother came here from Mexico, setting out to live the American dream, and then only to
find a nightmare. On July 26, 2022, Susanna vanished while walking home from a friend's house
in Norcross, Georgia. And it wasn't really until a chilling discovery made almost by chance
in the middle of the woods that led police to a shocking realization of who might be.
have been responsible for the murder. It is one that that community just couldn't shake.
Well, my colleague and friend John Cignonas covered the story for 2020, and as always, he just does
an expert job of bringing us into all those details and all the humanity of these stories.
And John is here to help us put the pieces of this puzzle together with some exclusive
details from what happened inside the investigation. And he's going to give us a chance to
see some clips that you didn't get a chance to see on Friday night.
interviews also with law enforcement and Susanna's family.
John, as always, it's good to see you.
I wish you were here in the studio, but good to see you there.
Great to be here, Deb.
Thank you.
Yeah, you and I always have such an interesting time talking about stories
because we go way back and have such perspective
with so many stories that we've covered over the years.
And I have to say, the first thing that came to mind,
you know, in talking to you about this one,
is your father, you've got a daughter, I'm a mother, I've got a daughter.
and the death of a young girl, a teen girl, and the desperation of her family trying to find answers.
I mean, this one really, I think, just kind of gets at you and pulls at the heartstrings.
What about you when you set out to start looking into the story?
Of course.
You know, our daughters are precious.
I only have one daughter, two boys, and her, Andrea.
And I worry about her all the time.
And she's now, you know, 30 years old, and I still worry about her.
So, yeah, it does much home.
And this was a woman from Mexico.
I did the interview in Spanish with Maria, Susanna's mother.
And it was incredibly touching.
Yeah.
And it hit home.
Yeah, it did hit home.
And you can sort of really feel it from the way you tell the story.
Take us back, John, about the night that she went missing because, you know, she's a classic 16-year-old who wasn't exactly truthful to her mom.
She said she was going to her friend Esmerald's house.
What exactly did we find out?
I mean, obviously, from everything we heard, she was a sweet girl, a good girl, but she, you know, she didn't want to tell her mom everything.
She was a teen. She was a teenage girl, you know, and it all started off that night, Deb, quite innocently enough.
Susanna didn't want to eat fish, which her mother had cooked for dinner that night for the family.
So she asked her mom if she could instead go to her friend's house.
You mentioned Esmeralda.
She lived just a few blocks away, and the mom said, okay.
But then it gets late into the night.
When she doesn't come home, her mother calls the friend, Esmeralda, and she covers for Susanna.
She says, oh, yeah, she's on her way home now.
Well, as it turns out, she was never at Esmeralda's house.
She instead had gone to another apartment, her friend Kelly's place.
She didn't tell that to her mom because her mom didn't like Susanna hanging out with Kelly.
And that's how it all started.
And John, what we learn in the piece is that, you know, it's like that, that bum,
that heartbeat.
It wasn't like Susanna not to answer her phone or reply to text messages.
And, you know, we all kind of know that feeling of having a kid, even our grown children, right?
When you reach out to them and they don't get back.
Give us a sense of what Maria told you she felt in those early moments of just not hearing from her daughter.
She was desperate.
She shows us the texts and you saw them where she says, me, how, you know, my daughter,
where are you?
You know, Mi'amu, where are you?
And she keeps reaching out to her and there's no response.
But as it turns out, Susanna had a friend named Kaya,
and Kaya had downloaded this app called Life 360.
And it's a popular GPS-based app that tracks real-time locations of people on their phone.
People will give permission to each other to do this, families and friends.
And on that app, you can see her phone.
at least, leaving Kelly's apartment complex at around 10 p.m. So it wasn't that late. And you can
actually see Susanna starting to move to walk home on Singleton Road toward her street, which was
Santa Ana Drive. And then Susanna's phone starts moving in the opposite direction. And it's going
very quickly, around 40 miles an hour. And then at 1029, Kaya receives a text message saying that
Susanna's phone has experienced a crash alert, meaning there's been, you know, some sort of
accident or some sort of hard force trauma to her phone. And that starts them raising their eyebrows.
I had never heard of this 360 app. I just thought that was fascinating, John, the idea that in
real time you can kind of get a sense of where someone is and so forth. And this was a critical
piece of evidence for them to actually be able to have this when they begin looking for her.
Right. Right.
The police step in.
Of course, they call the cops.
But at this point, the police are thinking Susanna might be a runaway, right?
Because there was no evidence of any kind of foul play.
They cannot consider her being abducted.
But Susanna's sister, and this family was amazing,
Susanna's sister Jasmine argues that, you know, this could well be an abduction.
And she points to that app, that Live 360 data,
which shows, you know, Susanna's phone,
suddenly taking off at 40 miles an hour and then seeming to crash, well, then police go ahead and
they file a police report that day.
And Susanna's name is put into the system as a missing person that very day.
So it didn't take long.
She's now a missing person.
Yeah, police are kind of thinking that she might be a runaway and her sister is insistent
that that's not happening.
And then they find evidence of Susanna walking home.
So suddenly there's real suspicion that there's something that has happened here.
or something afoul.
And there's a new development.
Again, the Morales family was amazing.
They just wouldn't give up.
They start canvassing the whole neighborhood
where she had walked.
And they find surveillance video.
The family finds a business
that shows them their surveillance camera
that captures Susanna walking.
But then, as I mentioned,
that 360 app shows her suddenly turning around
and going speeding in the opposite direction,
indicating that maybe she was abducted.
Now, police tell the family that that could be interpreted in two ways.
This could either be that she got into a vehicle, right, with someone she knew, willingly,
or yes, it could be that she was taken by force.
But the family wouldn't give up.
They post up missing posters, and the mom goes on Facebook,
and she starts desperately pleading for information.
And she does interviews, by the way, with local Spanish-speaking media.
So they're just desperately getting the word out about this missing daughter.
And John, that's what I thought was so touching and also kind of gives me goosebumps really to this moment,
thinking about a family's desperation and how a family won't give up.
When they feel like they know their family member, they know what she might be capable of or not.
Police were trying to be helpful, but they are also trying to be realistic.
It's a teenager.
But the family would not give up.
Our team sat down with Lieutenant Biggers, who was one of the investigators on Susanna's case.
He began to kind of take matters into his own hands.
He's trying to help bring her home to her family.
And we showed some of that interview on Friday night, of course.
But here's a bit of it that if you were watching,
you didn't get a chance to see on Friday.
Let's take a look.
I remember I went to my mom and dad on Thanksgiving,
and then I came back and dropped my wife and kids off,
and I drove my personal car and looking.
I remember like it was yesterday.
I went looking, drove my personal car down off Indian Trail looking for, hoping that I would, even then I had hope that I would see her.
John, we saw Lieutenant Biggers getting pretty emotional during these interviews.
I mean, this was kind of a mind-boggling case.
I mean, what was that like for you seeing this, you know, cop become so emotional in this search?
He was a family man himself.
He has a 16-year-old daughter.
He's married to a Hispanic woman.
He could see the pain in Maria,
and he just didn't want to give up.
He even worked weekends on this case,
because he connected with him.
And up to this point,
there was no solid evidence of an abduction.
There were no witnesses, no suspects.
So they had very little to go on.
It takes a while, John.
And that's what I think was so fascinating about this story
and also so heartbreaking.
I mean, time just kind of dragged on.
You know, we go from months to months.
I mean, the case would drag on for nearly seven months with no leads, no further evidence, and no answers.
So, of course, everybody's trying to figure out what happened to 16-year-old Susanna.
Well, John, don't go anywhere and don't you go anywhere because we're going to take a quick break.
But when we come back, John is going to take us through sort of a shocking discovery that police made about Susanna's killer that just nobody could believe.
And then there's going to be more emotional interviews with Susanna's family.
that we're going to reveal to you that you haven't had a chance to see. So don't go anywhere.
We'll be right back.
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Welcome back to 2020 The After Show.
I'm here with John Kenyones, my colleague who is talking with me about the heartbreaking story he just brought to us on 2020.
about 16-year-old Susanna Morales,
who disappeared after walking home
from her friend's home
in her Georgia neighborhood,
and she was never heard from again.
The investigation had gone on for months.
Her family was convinced
that she was not a runaway
and that something had happened,
but police were not able to crack this case.
And then, John, there was a break
on February 6, 2003,
when a man who was just off-roading in a wooded area
happens to find skeletal remains
more than 20 miles from where Susanna had vanished.
And it was a complicated crime scene, wasn't it?
Yes, yes.
The skeletal remains were scattered throughout the woods in that area.
Remember, her body had been out there months.
There was exposure to the elements.
There was decomposition, animal activity in the woods, after all, right?
No clothing or personal items belonging to Susanna were found at the scene.
Nothing was found.
And the medical examiner could not even determine an exact cause of death.
Also, because of all that decomposition, there were no body fluids or blood recovered at the scene.
But what they did find, Deborah, were fingernails painted black.
It was the color of Susanna's nails the night she went missing.
And also at the scene, they suddenly find a critical piece of evidence, a Glock 19 hands.
gun. And that was absolutely critical. This is what they needed to zero in on her killer.
Heartbreaking, heartbreaking for the family because they were holding out hope all that time that
they would find her. And then they find this evidence and they find the remains. But the gun, John,
belonged to Miles Bryant, a Doraville police officer. I mean, that was mind-blowing. This man,
Miles Bryant, was not only a member of the Doraville Police Department, he was also a member of the
Army National Guard. And what's more, he lived and he worked at the same apartment complex
where she had visited her friend and from where she had disappeared. John, let's talk about the
family because you did get a chance to bond with the family. I mean, obviously, you know,
maybe at a certain point they began to consider the possibility that something bad had happened
to her. But while this investigation is unspooling, and I want to get back to this with Bryant,
but tell us more about the family and how they were processing all of this, all those months later.
They were just shattered, you know. They were heartbroken. To this day, the mother still thinks it's a nightmare.
Even after everything they've been through and we'll get into that, the trial and all that.
But the family is just a very close-knit, you know, Mexican family. All girls, they work really hard.
You know, the mom worked at a fast food restaurant, a long-we.
with her daughter. Susanna kept a really tight-knit relationship with her family.
You know, she didn't want a kinsenera, for example, the 15th birthday,
and there's some of the most precious pictures that they have as memories are Susanna with the family.
She instead wanted to go have a dinner, I think, at a fast food restaurant, a tacos with her mom.
So they were shattered. They were just totally distraught, and I'll get into more of that.
as we go on here. So they lose their daughter. Then the reality is there that they found her remains.
They know she's gone. And now this investigation, and it's all about what is going to be revealed.
John, your reporting was so intense about this because what police discovers it after Susanna went missing,
Bryant, this police officer reported that his gun was missing. And that's obviously is too coincidental.
And now looking back, you know, police are kind of trying to figure out what's at play here.
And, you know, clearly they have theories now.
Brian tells police, oh, I had a break in into my car, which I left unlocked at the apartment complex where he lived and worked.
He claimed someone broke into his unlocked truck, in fact, and stole his wallet and then also stole the gun.
But strangely enough, he tells the officer that day that he does not want police detectives,
assigned to the case. That's a bit of a red flag, right? Investors, of course, are now pretty suspicious.
They believe that Brian dropped his gun while he was trying to dispose of Susanna's body out there in
the woods. They're convinced that by claiming his gun was stolen, Brian was just trying to cover his
tracks. And what police now have to confront is that this is a police officer who you would think
is there to serve and protect, but now clearly something has gone on. He's possibly got a different
life, a double life. And the community has to come to grips with this. Police are sort of
confident at this point that they know who the killer is, that it is indeed Bryant. They've got
phone records that show he was in the exact location where Susanna's body was found that same night.
What are they theorizing about what might have happened? Well, one of the theories was that Miles
Bryant had seen Susanna Morales before and that he had a
approached her. The theory is that he likely saw her again that night, and this time she's walking
home alone, the dark. He follows her, and then as she turns into the street where she lived,
he took her, maybe forcibly, we don't know if her certain, and then drove her into the other
direction. That's why that app showed her speeding away at 40 miles an hour. At some point,
shortly thereafter, he throws her cell phone out the window of...
of this truck, which caused that crash indication on the app.
She appears to have been killed and then dumped in the woods.
Prosecutors believe he likely intended, may well have intended to rape her,
but they were not able to prove that during his trial.
Remember, the body of Susanna was completely decomposed when she was eventually found.
Yeah.
You can only surmise what he might have done to her because they weren't
able to tell, but they could definitely see she didn't, she wasn't clothed. Now, you're talking about
police investigating an officer who knows a little bit about strategy and what might be coming. So they
had to have a particular strategy to try to get him to cooperate. They were, you know, they were being
coy with him, but they were essentially just trying to get him to possibly fess up.
This man is a police officer. He knows how these investigations work, right? So investigators then have to
try and pretend that they're questioning everyone, right?
He's just one other person.
And by the way, they're telling him they need his help.
So they take him in, right, for questioning.
They notice that in the squad car on their way to questioning,
his hands are shaking.
And then they ask him why, and he says,
he tells police, well, I was out there that night.
But I've been fighting, I had been fighting with my girlfriend.
and he claims that she chased him down the road.
Well, investigators then interview that girlfriend,
and she tells them that that was not true.
It was a lie.
Yeah, and things began to unravel from there.
Well, he refuses to admit anything.
If you saw our program, you see how this all played out.
But he was arrested, and as John said,
eventually stood trial for the murder of Susanna Morales.
John, I want to talk about that case. I want to talk about the courtroom. But first, we've got to squeeze in another quick break. But when we come back, we're going to take you inside the courtroom. Some shocking moments at trial. And then big questions about Bryant, you know, and possible conviction. Is he going to be convicted or walk free? You want to hear all the details. So don't go anywhere, John and I will be right back.
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softer. Your home opens up after a long winter. But with more light comes more glare, more heat,
less privacy. That's where Hunter Douglas comes in. Hunter Douglas shades are designed to do more than
cover windows. They shape the light itself. From beautifully diffused morning sun to complete privacy
at night, every shade is custom crafted to fit your home perfectly. These are not off-the-shelf
window treatments. They're precision engineered, professionally measured, and expertly installed.
The kind of upgrade that doesn't just refresh a room, it elevates it.
And because you'll work with a local expert, every detail is handled for you, from inspiration to installation.
There's a store in your area where you can get Hunter Douglas Shades.
Ready to get started?
Visit night and day, decor.com or call 647-360-6151.
That's night and day decor.com.
Welcome back to 2020 The After Show. I'm talking with John Cignonas about the piece that he just reported on for 2020. A horrifying case of a young girl named Susanna Morales, who was found dead. And then the police officer, Miles Bryant, who was charged in her murder, went to court. John, he pleaded not guilty. He stood at trial. He chose not to testify, which all the lawyers that we have interviewed and talked to on our pieces tell us that obviously that's his.
right. He doesn't have to testify, but our team spoke with prosecutors. And this was a detail that we
actually sort of didn't necessarily touch on in our episode. But tell us a little bit about what
we learned about some of the motivation for him not taking the stand. Well, he was expected
to take the stand, right? His defense attorney had said in his opening arguments that statements,
that he would, that Brian would testify.
And everyone was looking forward to hearing what he,
Miles Bryant, would say, Susanna's family.
You know, they wanted answers.
But then Brian chooses not to testify.
And it turns out that he had been speaking to his mother
by telephone from jail.
You know, those phone calls are recorded.
And those calls reveal that it was his mother
who was the one who convinced him not to,
to take the stand. She thought the prosecutor would just destroy him, that Miles Bryant, if he testified,
would only look worse if he took the stand. And it seems like Brian then, in the end,
wound up listening to his mother. Yeah, he did. But it didn't really help him. A jury did find him
guilty. Four counts related to Susanna's death in June of 2024. And he was given a sentence of
life in prison without the possibility of parole. I mean, this is a cop.
who now is finding himself in prison for a murder.
He actually apologized to Susanna's family at the sentencing.
And her family, as you said, has just been heartbroken.
And hearing from her sister in the interview in your piece was really something else.
But we've also got a little more of her interview that we didn't get a chance to hear on Friday night reacting to what Brian said.
Let's take a look.
I felt maybe just like a little bit of relief that we got partial because of adults.
He was this for Susanna, and that he wasn't able to walk away free from what he did.
I didn't care about his biology, to be honest, because we still had that unknown of what happened that night.
I don't feel like I have closure, because I feel like the unknown is still eats me to this day.
I would want to know what happened that night.
John, she talks about how she wanted to know more.
She just needed to know why this happened.
And there's still unanswered questions here.
Give us a sense of how the family.
is coping with the idea. It's one thing if they have, and I don't want to say closure,
because we always find out that these folks don't have closure, but some kind of a resolution.
But in this case, they don't have it, do they? And they have to live with that.
Absolutely. They really don't. Like I said, they're just, they're heartbroken. They,
they wound up moving from the house that they used to live in. And even then, her mother didn't
want to leave, didn't want to move from that house, because she still thought that Susanna
would walk home and walk in through that front door.
one of these days. You know, Bryant requested a new trial. And in March, a Gwinnett County judge denied
his motion for that new trial. But now we understand that Brian's appellant attorney has filed a
notice indicating that he wants to take this case to the Georgia Supreme Court. So we'll see what
happens. So stay tuned. We may not have seen the end of this just yet. But at this point,
He has been denied, so he's still in prison.
You talked so passionately and eloquently and just so heart-wrenchingly about her mother,
Suzanne's mother.
And, you know, you really had a chance to know this family.
And they had to make a choice to sit down and talk and share their emotional reaction to all of this.
Give me a sense, John, of this family, because at the end of the day, it's also about the family left to deal with the impact and the emotional turmoil of what they're.
dealt with. What kind of impact did her mom leave on you? And did they give you a sense of how,
you know, what they're hoping people will take away from, from this tragedy that they've experienced?
Yeah, she wants Maria, the mother. She wants us all to remember that life is incredibly precious
and fleeting. And she reminds us all not to give up. You know, this family never gave up.
If you don't feel like there's enough being done, get out there yourselves, she tells us.
Conduct your own investigation.
Canvass the neighborhoods.
Look for the security video, you know, in surveillance videos.
Put up posters, you know.
Ask for those surveillance videos and use the media to spread the word as she did,
not only in English but also in Spanish.
Yeah, yeah.
No, well, they certainly did not give up.
I mean, they were sort of an example of a family.
that just absolutely did everything they could to try to find some resolution.
And John, I'm sure speaking with you and being able to speak with you in Spanish and, you know,
knowing your story, your mom shared her name, I'm sure that brought them a list,
a little bit of comfort in talking about this story and sitting down and sharing their feelings.
And it's so obvious in what you brought to us.
So thank you as always.
I hope so.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, John, I really appreciate it as always for you being with us.
And I thank you for being with us.
And of course, you can watch our latest 2020 episodes on Friday nights on ABC.
And you can stream episodes like this one on Disney Plus and Hulu.
Thanks so much for being with us.
And you all take care.
Have a good day.
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