Cold Case Files - A Lesson in Homicide
Episode Date: October 18, 2022When beloved Red Bank middle school teacher Jonelle Melton is found murdered in her Neptune City, New Jersey apartment in the fall of 2009, suspicion is cast on her soon-to-be ex-husband, who eventual...ly helps solve the crime years later. Check out our great sponsors! Clare: Go to clare.com/coldcase for 10% off your order! PDS Debt: Get free debt analysis by completing the quick and easy debt assessment at PDSDebt.com/cold SimpliSafe: Get 40% off your order when you visit SimpliSafe.com/coldcase
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An A&E original podcast.
This episode contains descriptions of violence.
Listener discretion is advised.
I remember meeting Janelle.
She was so excited and bubbly that it was infectious.
You couldn't help but smile.
And when she came to my house, it was like the sun came in.
And when she was taken, the sun left for a while.
When somebody you love is killed and there's no justice, there's no conviction. I don't want to
say I was walking in a dream because it was more like walking in a nightmare. As the years went on,
I started doubting whether she would ever have justice.
There are 120,000 unsolved murders in America.
Each one is a cold case.
Only 1% are ever solved.
This is one of those rare stories.
It's Monday morning, September 14th, 2009,
and the start of a brand new week at Red Bank Middle School in Red Bank, New Jersey.
Teacher Janelle Melton has something special planned for her fifth grade students.
A guest speaker of sorts.
Children excitedly shuffle into the classroom, but Janelle isn't there.
Michael Melton, Janelle's former husband, recalls what Janelle had planned for class that morning.
School had been in session for a couple weeks, and President Obama had did a speech about education.
She was going to bring her class to my class, and we were going to play the speech inside the classroom.
One of her students is Nasir Roundtree.
Mrs. Melton wanted to show us that we can be a part of history, and she actually attended the inauguration for Barack Obama.
Janelle had earlier shared a photograph of herself
at the inauguration with her students.
Her friend and colleague, Tony Merritt Graham,
remembers Janelle's excitement.
You could see the sense of wonder
and pride on her face and the seriousness.
Oh, she was going to that inauguration.
If she had to walk, she was going.
You hear me?
Janelle taught social studies,
had a passion for history,
and also knew how to teach it to students to
get them interested. She would learn all the quirky facts about the different
people that she was teaching and her enthusiasm about history. It transferred
to the students. They loved it. She was adamant, I'm going to be the teacher of
the year. She was writing lesson plans in August.
She was talking and thinking in terms of how she was going to implement lessons. It was inspiring.
Janelle and Michael both grew up in Trenton. Her elementary school was just down the road
from his family home. And I used to talk a little junk to her and, you know, flirt with her a little bit,
things of that nature. Once I graduated from college and I started working as a counselor
for school-based youth service, and she was also a teacher and I saw her, I was like, wow,
she looking good. So, like, you know what I mean? I'm fresh out of college. I'm a bachelor. So I
feel like I'm living a life. Like, I'm like, what's up with her?
Michael falls for Janelle hard, and he leaves his bachelor life behind.
She was the one.
And I felt like I should put a ring on her hand.
Me and Janelle got married in Jamaica August 28, 2003.
We had a ceremony in Jamaica at Sandals in Ocho Rios, and we had about 30 people.
It was beautiful, man.
I was still young then, though.
I was like 27, 28.
She was one year younger than me,
so she had to be about 26.
I was excited and stuff.
Like, I'm really married.
Michael and Janelle settle down in Neptune City,
where they're both employed as teachers at Red Bank Middle School.
Janelle's former student, Kadia Smith,
remembers them well.
Miss Mountain, she was always very happy, a happy-go-lucky woman,
while Mr. Mountain, he was very chill, he was very laid-back, very well put together.
They were definitely like yin and yang.
With a happy home life and rewarding careers, it looks as though Janelle and Michael have a solid foundation.
But just three years into their marriage, that foundation begins to crack.
She cared about me tremendously.
I had never met nobody that was so into me like that.
Whatever I needed, she was right there.
But the way I was raised, later on it kind of made me feel uncomfortable
because I wasn't used to that much affection.
So it was more of me being immature and not really being able to
handle that kind of love
and the responsibility of
being a husband. That's why
I filed for divorce. Most
of the people probably thought that she wanted to divorce
me, but she wouldn't have never left me.
She told me that. Once the
relationship had got to a certain point,
she felt comfortable with she had her own
space. You know what I'm saying?
And I respected that.
So we still saw each other all the time
and we talked on the phone every day.
The school bell rings, marking
the beginning of the school day, but Janelle
still hasn't arrived.
Hours pass and there's still no
sign of Janelle. The school
secretary asks Michael if he's heard from her.
Even though they aren't still together, they remain close friends.
Michael tells the secretary that he hasn't spoken to her.
She then asks Michael to check on his former wife at her home in Neptune City around 20 minutes away.
Michael pulls up outside Janelle's home and he sees her car parked in front of the house.
He feels a wave of relief because he knows that Janelle is home.
So I'm thinking I'm just going to bang on this door, yell out her name, tell her to get up, and tell her to go to work.
I yelled out her name. It was no answer.
And then I tried the doorknob, and the door was open.
And I went in, and I was still yelling out her name, yelling out her name.
And I made the quick left to go to the room.
And then when I walked in the room,
that's when I saw her on the floor.
When I found her, she had her nightgown on.
And I saw a little bit of blood at the top of the nightgown.
And her face looked like it had makeup on it.
So I immediately thought that she fell when she was doing her makeup.
And then that's when I picked up the phone and I called 911
and I told them to hurry up and come over.
And I was asking her, like, what did you do?
What did you do? What did you do?
I remember saying that because I thought that since we were separated,
she couldn't handle it and she had did something to herself.
Paramedics arrive at Janelle's apartment within one minute of Michael's phone call.
Michael was pacing back and forth in the bedroom as paramedics assist Janelle.
He felt her neck, and then that's when he told me she was dead.
Then that's when I just, like, dropped on my knees.
I started crying.
Then he said, you got to get out of here.
I guess because it's a crime scene now.
It was, like, surreal, like I was living a movie.
I couldn't believe it.
I just started screaming.
A shell-shocked Michael calls Red Bank Middle School and breaks the terrible news to Janelle's coworkers.
We drove to her apartment, and I saw the yellow tape.
And I said, oh my God.
I started screaming, oh my God.
I said, somebody hurt her.
This is a crime scene.
Deputy Chief of Detectives with Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office,
Albert DeAngelis, receives a phone call that morning.
I worked as the supervising lieutenant in charge of the forensic unit.
I received a call from the local departments that they had come in contact
with a deceased woman in an apartment complex.
He's directed to Brighton Arms Apartments.
Janelle's apartment is a garden-style apartment.
It's a two-story building, and Janelle lived on the first floor.
Her apartment is accessible from a common walkway.
With just a quick look at the crime scene,
detectives believe that they're searching for at least one male, most likely multiple.
Lieutenant Detective Scott Sammis explains further.
Because of how physical the crime scene was, how brutal it was, we believed it was a male more than one.
It's discovered by detectives that Janelle's killers have gained entry by forcing open a window in the kitchen dinette area.
Directly underneath the window, they find a chair that has a distinctive footprint,
which had come from somebody coming through the window.
The kitchen area is completely ransacked, with the refrigerator door open.
Even the contents of the refrigerator have been rifled through.
The kitchen cabinets were open. The closets went through.
They had gone through cereal boxes. Somebody was looking for something.
Detectives theorized that Janelle was killed in her bedroom during the late night hours of September 13th.
The scene at Janelle's apartment is gruesome enough
to traumatize even the most seasoned homicide detectives.
It was evident to the detectives involved
that Janelle Melton was the victim of a brutal beating,
and she was tortured.
And in our opinion, these injuries were caused over time
until her death in an attempt to get either information
or something from her.
Ultimately, without leaving witnesses,
they shot her through the head and killed her.
Forensic experts are called to the apartment and they scour the scene in search of items that could be telltale clues.
Throughout the house, we noticed that there were no candles.
We know that the victim was not a smoker.
There were no cigarettes. There were no ashtrays.
But at the base of that window, we located a pink-colored lighter, and the lighter itself seemed to be out of place.
There was that piece of gray-colored duct tape.
It appeared that it was used in a manner
that could potentially have been a binding,
and it had obvious signs of blood staining on it.
And located near Jonnell Melton's body
were used latex gloves.
They were collected for evidence
and submitted to the laboratory for examination.
While evidence inside the apartment is collected to be analyzed,
detectives head outside to speak with a distraught Michael.
Chief of Police Matthew Quagligato
explains why Michael needed to be interviewed.
Michael was the soon-to-be ex-husband.
He was the first one to discover her body.
He was close with her. So I'm sure the detectives wanted to get a feel for what he was thinking about her
at the time. After some routine questions, Michael is asked to come down to police headquarters for
further questioning. At first, the detectives started out like they was trying to get information
to ask me about our relationship. And then when I started answering the questions and telling them,
then they started getting a little, like, a little invasive.
I don't want to offend you or anything, and I know this is a little personal,
but, like, were you guys still sexually involved or something like that?
Sometimes, yeah.
But I still loved her, but I just knew that once we got into the marriage thing,
it wasn't going to be, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Detectives informael about the ransacking
of the apartment he tells them that he didn't even notice the disarray in the apartment i think once
i saw her everything else just shut down even if they was trying to come off to me like crazy and
stuff i just still was answering their questions because i knew i didn't do nothing michael tells
detectives that on the night of Janelle's murder,
he was visiting a friend.
Later that same night, he went to his girlfriend's home.
Michael agrees to give a voluntary DNA sample
and then leaves police headquarters
to grieve with family and friends.
Meanwhile, detectives make their next moves.
They check out Michael's alibi for the night of Janelle's murder
and continue to search her apartment for evidence that could lead to her killers. There were forensics detectives
outside in dumpsters behind bushes just trying to find any type of evidence they could.
When detectives speak with Michael's girlfriend, she confirms that he was at home that night
verifying his alibi. Michael's phone records also place him miles away
from Janelle's apartment the night that she was killed.
Detectives are confident that Michael is not involved in Janelle's slaying.
There was no reason for Michael to ever be involved in anything like this.
He still had a wonderful relationship with Janelle.
Although they were ex-spouses, they didn't act like ex-spouses.
They had a really nice
personal and working relationship.
Detectives might have moved on from Michael as a person of interest, but the media hasn't.
They latch onto Michael as a suspect in Janelle's murder
and divulge details of their upcoming divorce finalization.
Now, all of this time, I'm thinking that I'm being truthful
and helping them, like, telling them everything they needed to know.
And then two days later, when a newspaper article came out,
that's when I knew that something was wrong.
It said she was found.
It didn't say who found her.
In the last paragraph, it said she was estranged from her husband.
And when I saw the word estranged, I said, whoa.
Then it said their divorce was supposed to be final October 6th.
And this was like September 16th.
So now I'm like, oh, my God.
They trying to say I killed her.
One week after Janelle is found shot dead
in her apartment, friends, family, and colleagues
gather to say their final goodbyes.
A lot of Janelle's students also attend,
including Nasir.
They actually shut school down for the funeral.
When we went in, that's when it all became real for me.
I'm sitting in the front.
Look down the aisle, and the three detectives
just walking down the aisle.
Terror just went through me. I was scared.
They just walked past and shook my hand
and gave my condolences,
but then they was in the lobby area
talking to her different friends,
asking them different stuff and this and that,
and I just felt that that was so disrespectful.
After the funeral, Michael takes steps to defend himself.
Then one of my friends, he was an attorney,
and he said that,
they're going to try to pin this on you.
I'm going to represent you pro bono.
Don't say nothing to nobody.
Don't talk to them no more or anything.
I can understand why Michael Melton had an attorney,
because the way he was treated in the beginning as a suspect. All eyes is on me. Everybody turned against me.
When I get back to work, it's a memo on my desk. And the memo says you are not allowed to go into any schools and you can't have no contact with kids. Then I lost it. I just was like, why y'all
treat me like a criminal? I didn't do anything. Like, why are y'all doing this to me?
With his attorney in tow, Michael meets with school officials to discuss his employment.
He agrees to take a desk job while the investigation into Janelle's murder continues.
Now, the school is right behind the Board of Education.
So I'm seeing these kids, but I can't go into the school and I can't have no contact with them. Two months after Janelle's murder, DNA testing is complete on the duct tape found at the crime scene.
The results do very little to assist in Michael's defense.
In fact, they do the opposite.
The evidence came back. The duct tape found in the hallway came back to Mike Mellon.
The DNA testing determines that there were two contributors of
DNA on the duct tape, Janelle and Michael. Detectives believe that the duct tape was
used to bind Janelle to a chair before she was killed. Michael has an explanation for his DNA
being on the duct tape. The day I found Janelle, my sneaker got caught on the duct tape. So then
when I pulled the duct tape off of my shoe, that's how myaker got caught on the duct tape. So then when I pulled the duct tape off of my shoe,
that's how my DNA got found on the duct tape.
Michael was checking to see if Janelle was alive.
Forensic testing on the crime scene evidence is murky.
There is no clear-cut answer on the boot print found on the chair,
and forensic experts are unable to lift a usable fingerprint from the latex gloves.
In the case of the cigarette lighter, DNA-able evidence was recovered,
but they were unable to identify who the major contributor was on that item.
As a result, I requested that we transport that evidence to the New York City Medical Examiner's Office
for additional DNA analysis.
They had great advances in DNA analysis,
and we were able to, on occasion, either exclude or include a potential donor.
While detectives wait for the DNA results on the lighter,
they take a second look at some of the tips they received early on in the investigation.
Well, back in 2009, Brighton Arms was generally safe,
so everyone was really shocked, especially the residents who have lived there for years.
In one instance, one of the neighbors believed he heard a loud noise on the night Janelle was killed.
Nevertheless, he didn't call the police. Another lady living two doors down from Janelle
was awoken that night by her dogs barking. She looked out the window to see
somebody in the back of the apartment complex. She too failed to call the police.
The thought of knowing that there were individuals that actually knew or had some sort of idea of
what had happened, it made me question, like, how do you know these things but hold on to them?
I was actually angered at the fact that no one was caught or no one witnessed anything or, you know, no one came forward.
And for us not to have any answers, I was, there were so many emotions going through me.
The case drags on without an arrest, leaving Michael in limbo.
His life is engulfed in a dark cloud of suspicion.
Everybody turned against me.
Her family turned against me.
I knew that they thought I did it.
Everywhere you go, you feel like people pointing at you.
You feel the chatter.
You can't really go to no, like, football games or basketball games.
The grocery stores, everywhere I went,
I felt shame, even though I didn't do nothing.
That was the only time in my life
I ever contemplated suicide.
As a coping mechanism, Michael turns to alcohol.
Eventually, the months turn into years,
and by December 2012,
it's been over three years since Janelle was
killed. Her family braces for the third holiday season without her. But just a couple of weeks
before Christmas, the DNA results on the lighter come back. They were able to identify the major
contributor to the DNA as Gregory Jean-Baptiste. Gregory Jean-Baptiste is heavily involved in gangs,
specifically the Bloods.
He's arrested and brought down to police headquarters
to be interviewed.
This is a picture of the young lady.
Her name was Janelle Melton.
All right.
I've never seen her.
Despite the fact that his DNA is found on the lighter at the crime scene,
Jean-Baptiste denies any involvement in Janelle's murder.
Jean-Baptiste acknowledges that the lighter is his,
but he denies knowing Janelle or ever being at her apartment.
He offers an explanation as to how his DNA was at the apartment
anyway.
Drugs, drugs is my thing.
I shake a lot of hands when I was done.
The DNA evidence propels Jean-Baptiste into the lead suspect in Janelle's murder.
But the DNA alone isn't enough to charge him.
Without something more, Jean-Baptiste will go free.
Not only do we have to accept the fact that she was murdered,
but I have to also accept the fact that there's no justice.
Detectives investigating the murder of Janelle are still interviewing Jean-Baptiste.
They go around in circles as Jean-Baptiste continues to profess his innocence.
All right, man, I'm done, man.
You done?
Yeah.
But now you just trying to... Trying to what?
Detectives believe that they have their man
and theorize that Jean-Baptiste, possibly along with others, murdered Janelle.
But they have no way to prove it.
Jean-Baptiste is released without charge, and the murder of Janelle goes cold.
Assistant prosecutor Matthew Bogner
explains why the evidence wasn't the smoking gun
detectives had hoped it was.
The problem with it was it was not DNA
on something that was used to harm Janelle.
It was found on an otherwise innocent object
in another room.
You know, it wasn't like a mask or a gun or a knife.
It was on a lighter under a window.
Once Jean-Baptiste is released,
detectives are determined to reignite the investigation
and catch Janelle's killers.
They assign the cold case to two narcotic squad detectives,
Scott Sammis and Matthew Quagliato.
This case needed a new set of eyes.
They needed somebody who was not going to stop
until these individuals were brought for justice.
We reviewed multiple reports.
We reviewed the whole case.
Basically, we reopened up everything
as it was just a brand-new case.
Despite the energy the new detectives bring
to the investigation,
fresh leads are difficult to come by.
As they pore over old reports and evidence,
Michael Melton lives his life branded as a killer.
Everywhere I turned, I couldn't get away from it.
I see the original detective in the barbershop,
and he'd still say something to me.
So it was going on, like, for years like that.
They just made my life hell, man.
And there was nothing I could do about it.
Michael is fed up with being cloaked in suspicion, and he can't wait for detectives any longer.
He reaches out to a friend to help him clear his name.
If something happened in Brighton Arms right there,
the streets talk.
I knew I couldn't go out there and get information
from anybody because I'm not from there.
So I knew he could.
He called this guy over, and he told the guy, like,
yo, this my mans. He just this guy over, and he told the guy, like,
yo, this my man's.
He just want to know what happened to his wife.
It's driving him crazy.
We came back two days later,
and the guy told me what happened.
Michael's friend doesn't reveal the killer's names,
but he does reveal crucial details
about the night that Janelle was killed.
Michael wants to immediately go to detectives to disclose what he has learned.
But cooperating with police has its risks.
I truly believe it comes back to gang intimidation and people not wanting to come forward because either they don't trust the cops or they believe that the cops are going to put them in a bad predicament, where certainly their lives and their family lives could be put at task.
Despite the danger, Michael tells detectives what he knows.
According to Michael's source, the killers were not after Janelle on the night of the murder.
Information from the street reveals that individual gang members
were looking to rob a man by the name of David Munch, who lived next door to Janelle.
The guy next door to her had $15,000 in the freezer
and some drugs in the house,
and the girlfriend was running her mouth at a party,
and some stick-up kids heard her at the party.
So they came to rob their house,
and then they went to the wrong house.
And then I guess they assumed that Janelle was the girlfriend.
Now I knew that somebody else besides me knew
I didn't have nothing to do with it.
You get what I'm saying?
Because people could say they believe you,
but now somebody else besides me I knew knew that.
Michael's cooperation with the police might pay off.
The theory that the killers went to the wrong apartment
makes sense to detectives working the case.
The way Brighton Arms is set up,
the apartments all look the same. Every window from every apartment is the same. It's extremely
hard from that backside to identify what apartment is the exact apartment that you're looking for.
Detectives know that the target was David Munch, but that only gets them so far.
They still have no idea who the killers are.
We were working 12-hour days, but we were moving forward
and documenting all the individuals we were speaking with,
and I continued to hit the streets and my confidential sources
that I had used in the past for information.
Finally, the hard work pays off.
An informant gives detectives the name of three men
who allegedly killed Janelle. The informant gives detectives the name of three men who allegedly killed Janelle.
The informant also names a fourth person,
a woman who was the getaway driver.
The information coming in to me was that these individuals,
Ebenezer Byrd, Gregory Jean Baptiste,
and Jerry Sprawling, with a female,
committed this horrific homicide.
They were in gangs, specifically the Bloods.
The different sets were different at the times,
but certainly Ebenezer Byrd was running this group,
and he continued to run the group when he was in prison.
Jean-Baptiste, Byrd, and Sprauding all deny
that they had anything to do with Janelle's murder.
And as long as the three men stick to their stories,
then detectives can't charge them with anything.
That is, unless they can find a witness
who can place them at the crime scene.
Eventually, I get a phone call from a number on my phone
that I don't recognize,
and it's a family member from a girl named Norika Scott.
Now, Norika Scott was also a girlfriend of Ebenezer Byrd.
According to the informant,
Byrd is one of the killers.
If Byrd and Norika are in a relationship,
then there's a chance that she could
confirm the informant's story,
or at least give the detective something else
that could help crack the case.
It was key for me to identify the driver
who drove these individuals
to the crime scene.
You want me to leave? No, I don't want you to leave. You want to go home or you drove these individuals to the crime scene. You want me to leave?
I don't fucking really know.
I don't want you to leave.
You want to go home or you want to go to county?
I don't really give a damn what happened.
I'm Lola.
And I'm Megan.
And we're the hosts of Trust Me, cults, extreme belief, and manipulation.
We both have childhood cult experiences, and we're here to debunk the myths about people
who join them and show that anyone can be manipulated.
Our past interviews include survivors and former members of the Manson family, NXIVM, MS-13, Teal Swan, Heaven's Gate, Children of God, and the Branch Davidians.
Join us every week as we help you spot the red flags.
Get new episodes of Trust Me every Wednesday on Podcast One or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's now been six years since Janelle was killed and detectives are finally getting somewhere.
Detective Scott Sammis and Matthew Quagliato
want to question Norika Scott, the girlfriend of Bird.
Norika's father brings her down to police headquarters
to be interviewed.
Her father is concerned because he knows the relationship she has with Bird,
and he knows that the unsolved murder of Janelle is hot in the media.
The conversation between Norika and her father is recorded as they sit down in the interrogation room.
You need to talk. I'm here. I could have stayed home.
Maybe you should step out because you're putting me under way more pressure
than I'm already under in my ear, Dad.
Do you understand how I'm feeling?
I'm not smarter than you.
The interaction between Narika and her father speak volumes.
The video shows her cooperation, how scared she is.
It's so important that you tell me the truth
because she's relying on it.
I want you to look at her.
I want you to understand, okay?
Narika said that when she was at a prison visit
with Ebenezer Byrd, he had confessed to her
that him, Gregory Jean-Baptiste, Jerry Sprawling
were involved in the murder of Janelle Melton.
Narika gives detectives the name
of the alleged getaway driver,
Elizabeth Pinto.
Pinto was a former girlfriend of Byrd,
and she is brought to police headquarters to be questioned.
If Elizabeth Pinto was there when this crime took place,
it was so important for us to corroborate this information
if, in fact, she's the driver.
How you holding up?
I'm okay.
You all right?
Matt and I bring her to one of the Perth Amboy police departments,
and we go live.
And probably the most important interview of my life.
So tell me about in September, early September, what happens?
You could see there's a little bit of fear in her eyes.
She is very trembly in her voice.
She's very standoffish.
She really doesn't want to talk about it.
Pinto eventually breaks down and admits
that she was the getaway driver.
They all get dressed up in black,
as they, you know, have done before.
And they tell me to drop them off.
I dropped them off at a location.
Let me, let's slow down a little bit.
I go over with pictures of these guys.
Who's this? That's Ebenezer Byrd.
Who's this? Gregory Jean Baptiste.
Who's this? Jerry Sproul.
And you continue to have her ID these guys.
Where did they tell you where they were going?
They just told me to drive. They told me where to go.
Is there anything else you wanted to add?
I'm sorry that this happened.
I'm sorry. I couldn't say it sooner.
The confession is massive.
Elizabeth Pinto pleads guilty to conspiracy.
As part of her plea agreement, she enters into an agreement through which she has to cooperate and testify against the other defendants. Pinto goes one step further
and offers to show detectives exactly what happened the night Janelle was killed.
She tells detectives that during their drive over to Janelle's apartment,
Bird, Sean Baptiste, and Sprauding all put on latex gloves.
From the description of the gloves,
they sound exactly like the ones that were found at the crime scene.
She said she parked up on the area where this white van is going now, and she says that she
sees them walking across towards Brighton Arms right there. It's a direct path of where Brighton
Arms 2 was and where Janelle Melton was living at the time. Elizabeth Pinto says that she stays
there for a while, and then after approximately 10 to 15 minutes, all three individuals come back running.
Pinto's statements establish her as a rock-solid witness.
Cell phone data also corroborate her account, placing Bird, Jean-Baptiste, and Sprauding at the apartment complex the night of the murder. Their cell phones were pinging to various phone towers in the area,
leaving behind a GPS trail.
It's enough for detectives to make an arrest.
Gregory Jean-Baptiste, Jerry Sprauding, and Ebenezer Bird
are all charged with first-degree felony murder,
second-degree robbery, conspiracy, and unlawful weapons charges.
All three men maintain that they are innocent of Janelle's murder.
They were going to be charged with felony murder based on the fact that she was killed
in the course of a robbery.
They broke into Janelle's apartment and were attempting to rob her, and that's why she
was killed.
She was a valued member of the community, and no one deserves for this to happen to
them.
But of all people, it's the fact that it happened to Janelle, it's even worse.
When this happened, it was like it reignited me, like, you know, like my hope, like, wow,
you mean she could get justice?
We knew this was the trial of our lifetime.
We absolutely knew that.
We came this far to make the arrests,
and we wanted to put full justice for Janelle.
The murder trial begins in January 2019,
nine years and four months after Janelle was killed in her apartment.
Monmouth County prosecutors have a solid case against the three defendants.
Their star witness is Elizabeth Pinto,
who tells the jury that she was with the three men
the night Janelle was killed.
Michael is seated in the courtroom.
I'm walking, and then I see the three guys
over here on the left.
I see the attorneys, and then I see the jury.
And then I go up and sit down, and it's like,
wow, this is real.
Throughout the trial, there's contentious motions going
on between the defense and the state.
They tried to make it look like Mike Melton did it,
and that really didn't happen based on the evidence.
Police tested so many different items of evidence
and went through so much forensic testing,
and yet still the defense is, well, what about this?
They didn't test this, or they didn't do that.
They could have done this.
What if, you know, that type of test this, or they didn't do that. They could have done this. What if?
You know, that type of thing.
So we had to counteract that.
The prosecutors tell the jury what they believe happened the night Janelle was killed.
So the night of September 13th into September 14th,
Janelle was home by herself.
At that same time, Elizabeth Pinto is going over
to Ebenezer Byrd's mom's house in Asbury Park,
where she finds Byrd, Jean-Baptiste, and Spralding, getting ready for what they're about to do.
They drive over.
She parks the car.
They tell her to wait for them.
Two of them break in through the back.
Jean Baptiste goes in through the window, drops the lighter, steps on the chair, leaves
a footprint, and then walks down, opens a sliding glass door so the second person can
get in.
Now there's multiple of them in the apartment.
They find Janelle in the bedroom, bind her, they hold her down.
They're looking for money in Munch's freezer, and they're not finding it.
And then finally, when they realize that they're in the wrong place,
they shoot her in the head, and they leave her for dead.
DNA found on the lighter puts Jean-Baptiste at the scene.
GPS records from the men's phones all place him at the scene,
and Pinto's eyewitness testimony brings everything together.
I drove them to, I guess you could say, steal some money
that they heard was in an apartment.
And all three of them got out of the car
and went on their way into the apartment complex.
And I didn't see them for a little bit after that.
Gregory Jean-Baptiste, Ebenezer Byrd, and Jerry Sprauding
are all found guilty of first-degree murder,
robbery, conspiracy, and weapons charges.
A fourth man, James Fair,
pleads guilty to conspiracy to commit burglary.
James Fair was guilty for spreading the word
to other gang members that there was money
in David Munch's apartment.
Once I heard the first guilty, I just knew that it was gonna be guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty. Then it was just like, yes. I remember doing that fist bump thing like
real happy, like yes, like it's over. And the verdict came down on my birthday.
When I heard it, I was at school, I couldn't contain myself. I ran into the principal's office,
who had a relationship with Janelle and loved her,
and I told her, and we just started hugging and crying.
We just started hugging and crying.
-♪
Gregory Jean-Baptiste, Ebenezer Byrd,
and Jerry Sprauding are all sentenced to life in prison.
Despite their convictions, they all maintain their innocence. Ebenezer Byrd and Jerry Sprauding are all sentenced to life in prison.
Despite their convictions, they all maintain their innocence.
In exchange for her testimony, Elizabeth Pinto is allowed to plead guilty to conspiracy and
is sentenced to probation.
James Fair is currently serving an 82-year sentence for previous convictions on 78 unrelated
crimes.
He's eligible for parole in 2065.
On that day, 2009, two people died.
Not only she died, but I died too because I wasn't the same person after that.
It makes me feel, like, sad that I wasn't there to protect her.
What people fail to realize,
I got in this situation trying to do the right thing.
I hit my bottom with alcoholism and I had to go back to rehab. I found out I had a disease
and I did the steps and I had my spiritual awakening. It totally changed my life. Like I
could see the world different than I ever could see it before in my life. Once I got past the
anger and I learned how to forgive, then I started learning how to forgive everybody
in the situation.
Michael isn't the only one who holds tightly
to the fond memories of Janelle.
Her students do as well.
I've succeeded.
You know, I went off to college.
I was, I made it.
And I'm just like, I wish that she was here for me
to share these experiences with her, to share these memories,
to share these stories with her.
She was somebody that I knew was in this world that knew me
and still loved me.
She always saw the best in people,
and she always saw their potential.
I miss her. I guess potential. I miss her.
I guess I'll always miss her.
Here we are, like 12 years, something like that.
The pain and the anguish has diminished,
but the missing her, that's still right there.
It's right there. Cold Case Files is hosted by Paula Barrows.
It's produced by the Law and Crime Network
and written by Eileen McFarlane and Emily G. Thompson.
Our composer is Blake Maples.
For A&E, our senior producer is John Thrasher,
and our supervising producer is McKamey Lynn.
Our executive producers are Jesse Katz,
Maite Cueva, and Peter Tarshis.
This podcast is based on A&E's Emmy-winning TV series,
Cold Case Files.
For more Cold Case Files, visit aetv.com.
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