Cold Case Files - Queen of the Ozarks
Episode Date: January 3, 2023In June, 1985, a 20-year-old ‘Sucker Day’ festival queen is found brutalized. The small community of Nixa, Missouri are certain that her blood is on the hands of a local, wealthy businessman. But,... after 25 years, DNA reveals the true killer. Check out our great sponsors! Nutrafol: Grow thicker, healthier hair by going to Nutrafol.com and use code COLDCASE to save $15 off your first month’s subscription! Progressive: Quote your car insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 29 million drivers who trust Progressive!
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This Thursday, witness the return of Accused, Guilty or Innocent, the acclaimed true crime
series that puts you in the defendant's seat. Each week, follow defendants step by step as
they live through the nightmare of being charged and prosecuted for a serious crime,
all told from the perspective of the accused. Among the cases featured this season,
a young man stabs another man who threatened him and assaulted his brother. Was it
attempted murder or self-defense? A woman is charged with killing a man. Is she guilty of
masterminding the murder or an innocent witness? And a man who falls asleep while driving hits and
kills a road construction worker. Was he a reckless driver or an innocent man with an undiagnosed
medical condition? In each case, the stakes are high and emotions are raw
as defendants desperately grapple with the reality of the situation
and, in some cases, the chilling prospect of prison.
Accused, guilty, or innocent.
New season premieres Thursday at 9, 8 central.
Only on A&E.
Watch live, stream on the A&E app, or on demand.
An A&E. Watch live, stream on the A&E app, or on demand. An A&E original podcast. This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault. Listener discretion is advised.
I thought the world of Jackie Johns, it was an extremely personal case to me.
It haunts me to this day. I had known her for a number of years. She was the
sweetest person you'd ever meet, and I couldn't imagine why anyone would want to harm her. It was
the only case in my career that I just never could shake. There was a tremendous amount of pressure.
The family was desperate for answers. It's something you can't put into words until you feel that it's your personal
responsibility. And I was afraid I was going to die with this one unsolved.
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.
In June of 1985, Jackie Johns has just turned 20 years old,
and she lives in the tiny town of Nixa,
a rural cattle ranching community nestled in the Ozarks in the Midwest.
Jackie is just a typical young woman in the prime of her life
with a plethora of friends.
She's well-known in the tight-knit community for her friendly, charming, and outgoing demeanor,
which earned her friends with ease.
Jackie is very close with her sisters,
one of which is Jeannie Johns.
Jackie worked as a waitress in the next-to-sale barn cafe.
It used to be attached to what we called the sale barn,
where they had cattle auctions and so forth.
One of the regulars at the cafe where Jackie works
is Sheriff Dwight McNeil.
It was a very casual restaurant.
That's where I met Jackie years before.
She'd been a waitress there for some time.
She was the sweetest person you'd ever meet.
She was just one of those people.
She just exuded beauty and confidence and intelligence
every time you saw her. There was just something electric about it. Jackie's friend, Sonia
Bodenhammer, recalls how the cafe was a popular haunt for the local cowboys. A bunch of cowboys,
they come in with dirt and cow or horse manure or whatever on their boots,
and we would serve them.
Jackie always served them with a smile.
All of us girls probably flirted at one point.
Jackie and me both, I mean, probably more so her.
Jackie would work at the cafe, and her boyfriend, Cody,
actually worked at the cell bar.
He was a very quiet type guy.
We were a few years older, in the process of getting a divorce, but it wasn't final yet.
And she just fell head over heels for him.
At around 6.20 a.m. on June 18, 1985, Jackie's abandoned car is found along the highway.
Word reaches her sister Jeannie, and she simply
assumed that Jackie must have run out of gas.
I'll never forget that day.
My dad called, and he said, oh, they found Jackie's car
along the highway.
And I thought, oh, gosh, that silly girl has run out of gas.
Jackie's friend Lisa Thompson has another theory.
I thought she probably had spent the night with someone
and just left her car over there because that was something she would do. has another theory. I thought she probably had spent the night with someone
and just left her car over there because that
was something she would do.
She was really spontaneous about just, oh, I'm going to have fun.
I'll just go do this.
I get a phone call from my friend Dana.
She was at the cafe.
And she said, is Jackie with you?
And I said, no.
But I could hear something in her voice.
And I'm like, why? What's
up? And then she's like, they found her car on 160 and she's not in it. And I lost it. I was just
numb. Sheriff McNeil receives a phone call that morning from someone reporting the abandoned car. He's just 33 years old and new to the job.
I lived approximately four miles east of there, so I hurriedly dressed and drove directly to where the car was sitting.
The interior of the car was clearly a crime scene.
There was blood that had spattered
about the inside of the vehicle.
There were a pair of jeans located
that had one leg turned inside out.
There were some women's undergarments.
The steering wheel was bent.
A seat was bent.
It was clear from the volume of blood
that someone had been seriously injured and or died
as a result of the activity in that car.
News of the gruesome discovery inside the car spreads through the quiet town which is typically
best known for its annual summer festival called Sucker Day. Sucker Day was just held a few weeks
earlier. The summer festival is always a big event in the town,
as recalled by Amos Bridges,
editor-in-chief of Springfield News Leader.
Most of the small towns in southwest Missouri
have some kind of local festival.
I'm not sure how Nixa ended up with the suckerfish
being sort of the mascot of their festival,
but every year, residents in town would spend months catching suckerfish being sort of the mascot of their festival, but every year residents in town would spend months
catching suckerfish for this big festival.
It's a big deal.
It's just a celebration that's gone on for many years in the Nixa community.
Each Sucker Day Festival has its own queen,
and in the early 1980s, Jackie Johns wins the crown and leads the parade.
I was very proud when Jackie was crowned Sucker Day Queen,
because back then, Nixa was so small.
That was a big ordeal to get in the parade.
I'll never forget how beautiful she looked.
She was so happy.
I remember that day.
We rode in the back of the convertible, and she had her crown, and it kept falling off.
It was a lot of fun.
Jackie is cheered on by her three sisters,
Joyce, Jean, and Janice.
The four Johns girls were all well-known around town.
Jackie may have been the most extroverted of them, just a big personality, just very gregarious.
Jackie was the baby of the family,
the only one that was
living with mom and dad at that time. We were all out on our own. Jackie was
always mom and dad's little baby and even I protected her every chance I could.
The first time I met Jackie, we were in second grade and at recess she asked me
if she could come home with me and I said well I guess you can and so she rode the bus home with me and my mother is like I don't have these two
children so my mother was a little upset with me but after that Jackie and I were
close friends you hardly ever saw her in a bad mood and like my dad used to say
Jackie was the best and Landers anytime somebody had boy problems or something
Jackie would be the one they called to straighten it out everybody loved Jackie used to say Jackie was the best Ann Landers. Anytime somebody had boy problems or something,
Jackie would be the one they called to straighten it out.
Everybody loved Jackie.
I don't think anybody ever had a bad word to say about her.
Jackie and I were cheerleaders together.
She would use so much Aquanet on her hair,
at least one can to two.
And I was always afraid if anybody lit a cigarette or anything that the whole place was
going to blow up. Her hair would just be so firm. You couldn't move it. There's a picture I have of
her. And I mean, you can see the wings. They're just, you know, the 80s hair. And this all flowed perfectly. In the summer of 1985, Jackie buys her first car,
and it makes quite an impression on the streets of Nixa.
It's a black Camaro with all red seats.
It has a spoiler on the back and some fancy tires.
Jackie was in love with it and took pride in driving it all across town.
Everybody in town knew it was her car.
It had Jackie on it, the vanity plates,
and she loved that car.
It's that black Camaro that Sheriff Dwight McNeil
finds by the side of Highway 160 early that summer morning.
Once I was on scene, I requested assistance from the Missouri State Highway Patrol. Whatever happened inside that car was a very violent act.
I was fearful that there might actually be a body in the trunk of the car,
but there was also the possibility that Jackie might have been still alive.
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Potential savings will vary. Discounts not available in all states and situations. Jackie John's vehicle had been found alongside US-160.
I was very desperate to find out where she was.
After examining the interior of the car, we opened the trunk.
There was no body.
There was a bumper jack lying loose in the floor of the trunk, which had a
substantial amount of blood on the lug of the jack. I was very concerned about where she was
and what condition she might be in. I also felt a tremendous amount of pressure to locate her for
the sake of her family. In June of 1985, I'd been the sheriff
for a little over five months.
You were trained never to become personally involved
in these types of cases,
but there was no escaping that for me
because I had known her for so many years.
The whole family was just good people.
Sheriff McNeil begins his investigation
by interviewing all of Jackie's friends and co-workers
to try and piece together her movements on the previous evening.
On that night of the 17th of June, it was busy, super busy.
So you don't get much interaction because you're just constantly cleaning tables or, you know, whatever.
In the middle of her shift, Jackie leaves the cafe and goes next door to the sale barn.
For some reason, she went to the cattle side to look for Dana, her girlfriend, and that was very
unusual. She hardly ever went over there. We still can't figure out why Jackie was looking for Dana
that night. That's one mystery that we can't figure out. But then her boyfriend showed up
close to the end of shift.
She was outside talking to him and I was sweeping and mopping, a little irritated because, you know,
she usually helps. And I come out the door that night and she hollered at me. She goes,
are you done? And I'm like, yeah. And she goes, okay, I'll see you tomorrow. Jackie's sister Jeannie last saw her younger sibling just three days prior to her going missing.
Her and a friend of hers came over to my apartment.
And she seemed in great spirits.
But Jackie shared with some of her friends that she felt like she was being watched.
She did not want to be by herself anymore.
You know, she didn't want to stay by herself at Mom and Dad's.
She wanted somebody there all the time.
For some reason, Jackie was scared.
On that fateful night, Jackie says goodbye to her boyfriend and coworkers,
and she leaves the cafe alone.
On her way back home, she stops at 7-Eleven.
One of the items of evidence that we located in the car was a receipt which gave us a timeline of exactly when she arrived at the convenience store.
She was her normal self, according to the cashier.
He saw no sign of distress.
He was under the impression she was leaving there and heading home, which was probably only five minutes away.
Sheriff McNeil calls on the citizens of Nixa to assist in the search for Jackie.
Like most of the Ozarks,
the town is surrounded by sprawling,
sparsely populated farmland.
We actually set up a command post
in the parking lot of the Sail Barn Cafe.
There were people on horseback, ATVs, motorcycles.
We prepared a grid map expanding out from her car.
It was just, oh, hundreds and hundreds of people.
It was just amazing.
I think everybody next to us was just in shock.
My mom and dad, they were just devastated.
Each day, Sonia would travel to Jackie's parents' home,
where she and Jackie's siblings would try to think of all the places that Jackie liked to go.
I think everybody was just in a daze.
I mean, you want to find Jackie, but you don't want to find her, if that makes sense.
I just didn't feel like she was gone.
I never gave up hope.
I kept thinking she was alive. I don't recall sleeping
for five days. It was just so tiring, and that was hard. That was really hard.
As the search for Jackie continues, Sheriff McNeil interviews her boyfriend, Cody. Cody is one of the
last people to see her before she arrived at the convenience store.
So that was extremely important
to get him eliminated as a suspect
as quickly as possible.
Cody tells investigators
that he was home when Jackie went missing,
but he has few other details to offer.
He's a tough guy.
He's a cowboy and a ranch hand
and not the kind of guy that wears his emotions on his
sleeve.
There was no one to corroborate his alibi, but no one had anything to say about Cody.
He wasn't a violent type of person, a jealous type of person.
Four days after Jackie disappears, her parents receive a phone call that confirms their very
worst fears.
I was actually at my mom and dad's house, and the phone rang, and it was one of my dad's
friends.
They were camping down at the Lake Springfield, and he called to say they found the body.
Two fishermen had come across a body floating in Springfield Lake,
around five miles north of where Jackie's car was found.
It was the body of a nude woman, but there was no question as to who it was.
After recovering Jackie's body and getting her out of the lake,
I was sick to my stomach. I was mad. I was sad for the family.
It would be hard to put into words
all of the emotions that I felt that day on that boat ramp.
You feel that it's your personal responsibility.
As the sheriff of that very small department in 1985,
I had five deputy sheriffs to cover 600 square miles. To say
that we were understaffed and we were short of resources is not an exaggeration.
I had to make a trip up to see Les and Shirley Johns to tell them we had located their daughter.
That was one of the worst experiences you can have as a law enforcement officer. When
you know the people, when you know them on a personal level,
it makes it twice as hard.
The officers, you could tell
they were just as devastated as the rest of us.
And you could tell it really took a toll on them.
Dwight knew Jackie personally,
so that was what was really even more devastating for her.
They didn't want us to see her body.
They had cut off Jackie's rings, and that's how I for her. They didn't want us to see her body. They had cut off Jackie's rings,
and that's how I identified her.
I definitely recognized the rings
because one of them I had given to Jackie
for her birthday,
a week and a half before she was killed.
A lot of tears, anger.
It was just, it was devastating.
She's gone forever.
Thinking about Jackie and her final moments,
I can't even fathom. I know her,
that she probably fought like hell. After Jackie was murdered, our family was just never the same.
It was just awful. And it was hard to deal with the fact that somebody was out there,
killed your best friend. I wasn't a carefree kid anymore.
I was scared of my own shadow.
My whole perspective on life,
the day they found her in the lake,
it was a day that changed my life forever.
To this day, I feel like if I had gotten to go with her,
she'd still be alive. Jackie's body is transported to the medical examiner's office
for a cause of death to be determined.
The autopsy finds that she had died as a result of blunt force trauma.
There was also evidence that Jackie had been raped.
The pathologist also finds puncture wounds that are consistent with the lugs on the face of her bumper jack
that were found in the trunk.
We were also able to recover a semen sample,
which was fortunate considering the length of time that she'd been in the lake.
Four days after Jackie's body is found, her family lays her to rest.
Most of the town of Nixa turns out to bid her one final farewell.
Nixa High School allowed them to have the funeral at the gymnasium there.
It was standing room only.
It's kind of like a blur to me.
My dad preached part of the funeral, and he said, Sonia, please, if I see you crying,
I won't be able to get through this.
And so I stayed stoic for my father.
We videotaped people coming and going to see if someone appeared that we perhaps should
be considering as a suspect. It just seemed like one of the few things that we had available to us at the time.
There were a lot of people there, but we did not see anyone that looked out of place.
We interviewed other employees from the Sail Barn Cafe,
as well as the folks who regularly frequented that restaurant.
Multiple officers were conducting multiple interviews all day, every day.
Almost immediately, one regular customer at the cafe stands out.
Investigators learn of someone who was acting strange at the cafe
around Jackie on one or more occasions.
Jackie kind of was getting creeped out about this guy.
He was a little off, but he would bring her flowers, he would bring her candy.
He was the only person with any type of unusual activity at the time
that jumped out as someone we probably needed to make contact with as quickly as possible.
But as it turned out, he was alibied.
He was in another jail in the area, and we were able to eliminate him as a suspect.
Desperate for any kind of lead, Sheriff McNeil sets up a hotline for tips on the case,
hoping that somebody in the small town saw something suspicious that night.
It doesn't take long before a tip comes in.
Two men who were purchasing fuel on that night at the convenience store
had seen a very distinctive pickup truck
backed into a bank parking lot
directly across the street from the convenience store.
It was white
over powder blue. It was the 60s model Chevrolet Cheyenne and this particular
truck had custom aftermarket wheels on it. The odds of there being two trucks
that looked like that in Southwest Missouri at that time were very, very remote. 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. Sheriff McNeil hopes that he's finally caught a break in the murder case.
Other witnesses spotted a distinctive vintage truck across the street from the crime scene.
Sheriff McNeil believes that the truck belongs to Gerald Carnahan,
the son of a prominent Nixa businessman.
Everyone in Nix is pretty familiar with the Carnahan family.
Gerald's father had been involved in a number of successful ventures,
including a foundry that was located just about a mile south of the Sail Barn Cafe.
Gerald Carnahan was a very clean-cut, professional-looking fellow
and came into the office for his interview as cool as he could be,
but professing that he would do anything he could to help the investigation.
He knew Jackie. He admitted that in the interview from the sale barn cafe.
And we said, we have witnesses who placed Gerald's truck
at the scene where Jackie was last seen.
He denied that and stated that he was at home.
Carnahan's alibi is his 19-year-old stepdaughter.
Investigators make contact with the stepdaughter,
and she tells them that she and Carnahan had been out for dinner on the evening Jackie vanished.
It was her story that, when they returned home, Carnahan stayed home all night.
This alibi was inconsistent with the eyewitnesses
who had seen his truck at the convenience store.
Carnahan also tells investigators
that Jackie had briefly worked for his family's business.
She quit.
There were allegations that Gerald had hit on her
while she worked there
and then continued pursuing her after she left.
As investigators are working on this angle, another tip comes in about the distinctive truck.
And that witness turned out to be Gerald Carnahan's brother.
If you drive straight across Highway 160 from the convenience store, the road makes a sweeping curve.
At that time, there was a large hayfield on the right, just west of Gerald's parents' home and Jackie John's home.
And he saw Gerald's truck parked in that field at that intersection.
Carnahan's brother tells investigators that he asked him not to share this information with police.
We asked Gerald to take a polygraph examination, which he agreed to do.
But the following day, at the appointed time, he failed to show up.
Sheriff McNeil now has deep suspicions about Carnahan's alibis, with no fewer than three witnesses saying his truck was near the crime scene that night.
But still, the sheriff has no solid proof connecting Carnahan to Jackie's murder.
He knows he can't go to Prosecutor Durrell Moore with only suspicions. You had no direct evidence of any kind,
either forensic evidence or witnesses,
that actually put Gerald with Jackie that night.
Suspicion would have been all you had.
Sheriff McNeil can only bide his time
and hope that he can gather more evidence.
But then he learns that Carnahan is about to leave the country
to travel to Asia to work in a family-owned factory.
We became very desperate to keep him from getting on that plane to an Asian country beyond our extradition treaties.
Sheriff McNeil asks prosecutors to charge Carnahan with tampering with evidence by pressuring his stepdaughter to give him an alibi.
Lying to a police officer, unlike a federal officer, is not a crime.
We asked for and received the warrant for tampering or manufacturing false evidence
in a criminal case.
It was a stretch, but it was all we had at the time.
And as a result of getting the warrant, we were able to intercept him as he literally got on the plane at Los Angeles.
And the FBI took him into custody and took him off the plane.
Authorities in Nixa convene a grand jury with sweeping powers to look into the entire Jackie Johns case.
It was our hope that it might buy us some more time
to gather some more physical evidence.
It would also put us in a position
to interview him one more time.
When Sheriff McNeil and the investigators
talked to Gerald Carnahan again,
he still said he was home by 10 o'clock.
He said, I know I was home by 10 o'clock,
10 o'clock news was going, and I never left again. I went up and went to bed. The grand jury sends Carnahan to
trial on the tampering charge based on the highly questionable alibi he gave police. There's still
no murder charge, but for the family, it's a step in the right direction. But then the family is hit with a massive blow
when the judge throws out the charge for lack of physical evidence.
We were doing everything we could and everything in the book and then some,
but we still weren't able to get it done.
With the charge dismissed and no more leads, the case begins to go cold.
It remained a cold case.
It kind of fell off the radar.
The family looked at me as a total failure.
That added to the pressure,
the fact that the family was personally angry with me.
Maybe I shouldn't have taken that so personally,
but it's the only homicide that I ever worked
while I was in law enforcement that I couldn't shake.
You're trained not to do that, but there was no way I could get away from that one.
No way.
I was born in Springfield, grew up there and in Nixa.
So heard a lot about the Jackie Johns case as I was growing up.
It was kind of unavoidable.
I think this case haunted a lot of people.
It changed the way that I raised my kids.
I have a daughter.
She's 21 now.
When she would think we were being too strict on her
or something with her curfew, you know, I'd say,
I couldn't go through that again, you know,
if something were to happen to you.
The months gradually transform into years,
and Jackie's family is trying hard
to pick up the pieces of their old life and move on.
Then, in March of 1993, the small town of Nixa is rocked by another crime
that brings back memories of Jackie's murder eight years earlier.
A young woman, I think she was around 18, was walking down the street
when Gerald Carnahan pulls up next to her and attempts to kidnap her.
And she managed to get away, but he is apprehended.
It was really bizarre because, you know, if you're Gerald Carnahan,
you know, everyone in town knows who you are.
And he attempts to kidnap an 18-year-old in a part of town that was not at all secluded.
And he wasn't even alone.
A friend of his was driving the car.
So it was really a strange situation.
There was a sense that he considered himself untouchable.
Carnahan is convicted of the attempted kidnapping, but he only receives a two-year prison sentence.
And when he gets out of prison,
he continues to find himself in shocking situations.
While out on bond, police respond to an alarm at his home.
When police arrive, Carnahan keeps officers at bay
with a fully loaded shotgun.
He's charged with assaulting an officer
and using a gun while drunk
and is slapped with an additional 15-month sentence.
By the late 90s, Jackie's case wasn't on the nightly news
and in some ways people had moved on.
I never lost hope.
I always felt like that it was solvable.
We just needed a break.
Looking back, it was the most thoroughly investigated case
in the history of Christian County at that point,
and perhaps even still today.
But we just did not have that last piece of science
to help us close the deal.
Sheriff McNeil's term had ended back in 1988,
just three years after Jackie's murder.
But he keeps track of developments in DNA technology as the years pass.
I had discussed DNA profiling with the Springfield Police Department
a few years earlier,
and it was decided that we would not attempt to make a DNA comparison
because there was a chance that we might wind up destroying the small sample that we had.
By 2007, it had been 22 years since Jackie was killed.
Sergeant Daniel Nash, the new cold case detective at the Missouri Highway Patrol,
picks up the baton.
DNA is becoming more mainstream now,
and we can do a lot more than we could.
But because the swab had been in the water for multiple days,
it was a big concern that that may be for naught,
but we decided to do it anyway.
With just one little sample left,
there was no telling what was going to happen.
Miraculously, enough of the sample has survived.
Jason Wyckoff, a DNA criminalist at the Missouri State Highway Patrol Crime Laboratory, examines the sample.
The samples did show degradation, but sperm cells are one of the most resistant cells in the body to breaking open and
releasing their DNA. Their job is to get through to the egg to fertilize it
through a harsh environment. So the profile from the sperm fraction was
nearly complete. It's August of 2007. I remember distinctly Dan Nash informs me
that the lab has actually finally been able to develop a DNA profile.
I immediately thought, oh, my, that's awesome, that's great.
We have this DNA, but now who do we match it to?
I immediately thought, it's probably going to be the boyfriend.
I mean, in any kind of crime of violence like this,
the statistics are very, very clear that usually it's someone
that you know that harms you.
Although Jackie's boyfriend, Cody, was never considered a serious suspect, investigators
back in 1985 didn't have the tools to rule him out with complete certainty.
Cody was very helpful, very cooperative.
We took a buccal swab out of the inside of his mouth
and we sent that to the crime lab.
He comes back and it's not Cody.
The only suspect left is Gerald Carnahan.
So at this point, we start trying to get a search warrant
to get a DNA sample from Mr. Carnahan himself.
But Carnahan is out of the country,
and investigators don't know when or if he's coming back.
Investigators finally have DNA evidence
that could solve Jackie's murder,
but their prime suspect is overseas,
well beyond the reach of the law.
We basically started working with Homeland Security to notify us when Mr.
Carnahan would would come back to the United States and probably six or seven
months after that we get a call that says Mr. Carnahan is on a flight and he's
landing in New York
and then he's going to be traveling to Springfield.
We were concerned that he would not be cooperative.
So we came up with a ruse that myself and another investigator went into the office
of the company and we told the receptionist lady that we were high school friends with
Mr. Carnahan and that we were planning a reunion. We sat down and he says, I don't think I
remember you guys from school. What was your names again? What's this all about?
And then that's when we told him that we had a search warrant for his DNA and we
said this is about the Jackie Johns death investigation and I saw a small
little tear, right,
coming down the corner of his eye.
Sergeant Nash collects the DNA swab
and rushes it by plane to the state's main crime lab
in Jefferson City.
There's a sense of urgency among the investigators
due to the fact that Carnahan made frequent trips to China.
The crime lab person, Jason Wyckoff, is going to basically stay at the crime lab all night and work on this because we want to get this back immediately.
I began the initial steps of the processing, basically extracting the sample, and I was able to get the results by the next day.
I think, like, at 5.30 in the morning, my phone rings,
and I remember Jason saying,
we got a match, it's him.
And it was a great day.
It was August 10th, it was my birthday,
and I couldn't have had a better gift.
It felt like someone had lifted a car off of me.
There was just a wave of relief that I experienced
from that phone call that's hard to describe.
On September 13, 2010,
Prosecutor Darrell Moore charges Carnahan
with the rape and murder of Jackie Johns.
When they brought him in in handcuffs, you know, that was a total relief.
Finally, he's getting his justice, you know, right here.
And I don't know, a lot of anger, a lot of anger.
I just couldn't hardly stand to look at him.
There was a lot of anxiety in the courtroom.
It was tense because we got into some very graphic testimony
regarding the cause of death and the autopsy,
and that was difficult for her family to see and listen to.
The family agrees to waive the death penalty to shorten the trial
in the hopes that Jackie's ailing 83-year-old father
will live long enough to finally see justice served.
My dad didn't feel like he was up to going up to the trial,
so we'd just call him and update him all the time.
The whole two weeks of the trial was so hard to rest.
It was awful.
So when they called us back in and said the jury
has decided, we all piled back
into the courtroom and just sit there and held
hands and just waited.
I thought
finally he was going to pay
for what he did to her.
And then the judge read the verdict. He's guilty
of first degree murder. He's guilty of rape.
Even though the judge instructs
everybody in the courtroom,
remain composed, don't react, you
can imagine the family reacted.
It was just so hard to hold back screams.
It was elation.
I was at her dad's house.
Tears, tears of joy.
I mean, relief.
He got to see it, thank goodness.
The jury sentences Gerald Carnahan
to two consecutive life sentences
without the possibility of parole.
It's not really closure,
but I feel like there was justice.
Finally.
That's an awful feeling to think that he got away with murder for 22 years.
I would be less than honest if I didn't say there was an element of personal satisfaction
because every police officer has one that they carry with them to the grave.
And I was afraid I was going to die with this one unsolved.
It's really hard to talk about her,
to have your friend ripped out of your life,
and not have that person there anymore.
It was probably the hardest thing I've ever gone through.
So it was very hard.
What I miss most about Jackie, her friendship.
Was always there if you needed a shoulder to cry on.
I mean, her smile.
That was probably the best.
Every time I cross Springfield Lake, every time I go by the Livestock Cafe,
every time I go by that intersection, I still have thoughts of that case.
I always will. I don't think there's any getting away from it.
And I'm so thankful that we were finally able to resolve that.
But I'm just glad it's finally closed.
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.