Cold Case Files - REOPENED: Blood on the Badge
Episode Date: November 20, 2025When a police officer is murdered in Atlanta, the suspect list is vague at best. The case seems destined to stay on the cold case shelf forever... until a brave little girl speaks up about he...r attacker and investigators close in on the man responsible for both crimes. Check out our falls deals!!Greenlight: Want your family to understand money? Start your risk-free trial today at Greenlight.com/coldcaseHomes.com: Looking for a new home? Homes.com has done your homework!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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An A&E original podcast.
This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault.
Use your best judgment.
Officer James Richard Green, often referred to as Jim or J.R., work the night shift in Atlanta, Georgia.
His lunch break fell at around 1 a.m., so he stopped at the all-night restaurant, Grandma's Biscuits, and got some to go.
He might have wanted to eat in his car
in case he needed to respond to a call
or maybe just to have some quiet time
to think about his upcoming wedding.
Either way, he parked his car in front of a closed gas station
and began to enjoy his meal.
It didn't last very long though
because just a few minutes later
Officer Jim Green was shot three times.
His body was discovered slumped over the steering wheel
with a napkin still in his hand.
From A&E, this is cold case files.
Once Officer Jim Green's murder went public,
the police started receiving a lot of tips.
But many of them were identified as bogus.
Fortunately, there was at least one credible tipster,
Charlotte Moore, who had been waiting for her ride home
from her work at a donut shop.
They were in, right.
right across in front of us.
And we had to stop to keep him hitting him.
He had very distinctive eyes.
You know, like real wild-eyed and scary, kind of.
It was 1971, pre-cellphones.
So Charlotte rushed home to report what she had witnessed.
When the police arrived, they discovered Jim's gun and badge had been taken.
Criminalist Kelly Fight was called to analyze the crime scene.
G. R. Green had a gunshot hole of entry
in the left side of his neck
that had a tattoo pattern about six inches in diameter
which indicated that the barrel of the gun
was probably six to ten inches from his neck
when it was fired.
A second bullet struck the left side of Green's head
and a third entered his right shoulder.
The bullets recovered from the left side of Green's body
were 38 caliber with eight distinct grooves
cut by the barrel of the gun
when the bullet was fired.
Another 30-caliber slug
was pulled from Green's right shoulder.
This one was marked with six groups,
indicating that the bullets were fired at Green
from two different guns.
Oh, it was definitely an execution.
One person firing from the driver's side
with the eight-groove 38 Special Revolver,
another person firing from the passenger side window
with the six-grove 38 Special.
Kelly fights theory, Jim Green was targeted, ambushed, and then executed.
There was no evidence suggesting Green ever fired his weapon or even got a chance to draw it from his holster.
Sergeant Lewis Graham was the lead on the investigation.
Why would you kill a police officer and take his weapon and tear his badge from his chest?
I mean, that really stuck with me throughout the whole investigation.
The nature of the crime led Sergeant Graham to believe he was dealing with someone who had a score to settle with Jim.
Maybe someone he had arrested.
Graham asked around about any enemies Jim might have had.
One of the people Graham talked with was Larry King, Jim Green's brother-in-law, and best friend.
I told him from the time we was kids, I never knew anybody, Jim, you know, as far as Jim,
getting fights or scrapes or anything else.
You know, he just wasn't that type.
He wasn't aggressive.
He just wasn't.
And I told him then when they did find out who killed Jim that it was going to be that
they shot the uniform and not Jim.
Sergeant Graham agreed.
Jim wasn't a violent person and didn't have any enemies that would want to seek that kind of revenge.
So then my other thought pattern was, okay, something or somebody has moved in on us.
and that is the road that I took.
I began to look at other crimes,
and I came up on this bank robbery.
The bank robbery happened a month before Jim was shot.
Sergeant Graham discovered that five possible suspects in the case
had been nabbed on weapons charges in nearby DeKalb County.
The five, John Leo Thomas, Samuel Cooper, Joanne Chesmer,
Twyman Myers, and Freddie Hilton,
were members of the Black Liberation Army, the BLA.
The BLA was a splinter group, once a part of the East Coast faction of the Black Panthers.
But to hear one former BLA member describe it.
The East Coast faction wanted to be more radical, you know, wanted to be more physical, more violent.
The West Coast faction wanted to be more political.
So we split off into what they're called the Black Liberation Army.
and I guess it just went crazy from there.
The group had known ties to several bank robberies,
and there was a rumor that killing a police officer
was the price of admission to the BLA.
As it turned out, four of the five suspects
and the Atlanta bank robbery were wanted in connection
with a separate officer shooting in New York.
Graham decided he needed to talk to them about Jim's murder.
Before he could do that, however, a problem developed.
They escaped from the Camp County Jail.
All of them.
They just escaped.
And I guess they scattered throughout the country, but I continued my investigation and determined they had a safe house.
Two days later, Graham and a SWAT team stormed a known BLA safe house in southeast Atlanta,
where they found weapons, explosives, and plans for more bank robberies.
What they didn't find was any trade.
of their suspects.
In September of 1972,
almost a year after the murder of Officer Jim Green,
Louis Graham got his first break in the case.
One of the men interested in the case, Samuel Cooper,
had been arrested in Florida.
Cooper was one of the men who had broken out of jail
before he could be interviewed about Officer Green's murder.
So Sergeant Graham flew to Florida for a sit-down with a 20-year-old.
I really suspect that he wouldn't talk to us
but what I found out was he talked very freely
and I found out that he was just a young kid
he was scared and he was really ready to give it all up
Cooper admitted to taking part in the Atlanta bank robbery
then detectives pressed him on the murder of Officer Green
within 30 minutes Cooper told the detectives
that his fellow BLA members,
Twyman Myers, and Freddie Hilton, were involved.
He said that Myers and Hilton killed Officer Green
and presented the officer's badge and gun
to the group's leader,
39-year-old John Leo Thomas.
By the end of the interview,
Sergeant Graham believed he had an airtight case.
I was really pumped up.
We had the identities of the people
who killed the police officer.
We had a person who was willing to testify.
And I was really ready to go.
Graham flew back to Atlanta and took his case to the district attorney, who promptly declined to prosecute.
I was shocked. I couldn't believe it. I was hurt. But then I was a police officer, so I moved on.
In November in 1973, Twyman Myers was killed in a shootout with the New York State police.
Freddie Hilton disappeared, and the James Green case went cold. It would stay that
way for more than 30 years until a 12-year-old girl bravely spoke up about Freddie Hilton and the
abuse he subjected her to.
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In January 2001, 30 years after Officer Green's murder, a woman and her daughter entered the 69th precinct in Brooklyn, New York.
The woman said they needed help.
Her living boyfriend, Kamau Zediki, had been molesting her daughter.
Detective Chris Karolkowski took the case.
Kamau Siddiqui was dating the mother at that time.
He was actually living with them for seven years.
and over the course of six years he was sexually abusing this girl
and the girl broke down and she told her mother
would have been going on for all these years.
The detective ran a background check while filing for a warrant,
but Kamau Siddiqui didn't seem to have any offenses in his past.
In fact, he didn't have much of a past at all.
We couldn't find anything.
He was working for the phone company for 18 years.
He didn't even have any, uh,
traffic tickets, you know, it was an upstanding citizen.
But when the police arrested Siddiqui on a molestation charge,
they discovered a loaded handgun.
So they added criminal possession of a weapon to his charges as well.
At the station, Detective Karolkowski began to interview Siddiqui,
and he quickly discovered why his background check didn't reveal anything.
He told me that his real name was Freddie Hilton.
And I asked him why he was using Kamau Siddiqui.
He told me that when he got out of prison, he wanted to start over and leave Freddie Hilton in the past.
So he changed his name.
A check on the name, Freddie Hilton, revealed a new piece of information.
Hilton was still wanted for questioning for his possible involvement in the 1971 shooting of Atlanta police officer Jim Green.
Carol Kowalski followed up with a phone call to Atlanta cold case detective Jim Rose.
He had advised me that he arrested Freddie Hilton.
on some charges, and that there was some reference that he was possibly implicated or a suspect
in the murder of Officer Green.
Detective Rose dug further into the files on the BLA, hoping to find information that would
lead to Jim Green's murder.
My goals were to meet and find ex-Black Liberation Army members and interview them to see
if they could recall and back up some of the story that I have.
about Freddie Hilton and Twyman Myers coming back into the safe house
and bragging about the murder of Officer Jimmy Green.
Investigator M.C. Cox was assigned to assist Rose in the investigation.
The two detectives traveled the East Coast by helicopter,
reaching out to former members of the BLA, hoping to find someone who might talk.
We had to question them about their knowledge of what happened,
whether they wanted to participate or tell us to go to hell or whatever.
We had to ask because we had to follow up.
Every lead that we had, we had to contact every individual that we had on the list that had something to do with that case.
Avon White was 53 years old, an assistant pastor at his church.
He worked with young people on making the right choices in life, but he hadn't always been a pastor.
In 1969, at age 18, he joined the Black Panther Party.
Two years later, the party split and Avon White sided with the more violent Black Liberation Army.
John Thomas, a former Green Beret, brought him to Atlanta and was teaching him to kill cops.
He was like our leader.
He was training us to do stuff like how to rob banks and how to survive in the woods and stuff like that.
You know, how to shoot guns.
none of us didn't have any kind of train like that.
In 1973, White was sentenced to a seven-year prison term for bank robbery,
a time in his life that he had put behind him until the police knocked on his door.
I got him looked, I've seen these couple of guys.
I thought it was the man that was supposed to give me an estimate for my gutters on that day.
I got back in bed, they kept knocking.
What was it knocking for?
I got it answered the door.
Detective Rose said he was with Atlanta PD
and he was here to question me about a murder in Atlanta.
Detective Rose explained that they were not there to charge or arrest Pastor White.
They just needed information about the men who had killed Officer Green back in 1971.
We spoke for maybe five or ten minutes and I asked him if he could come with me
so that I could audio tape and videotape an interview with him.
White agreed to a recorded interview.
Detective James Rose with the City of Atlanta Police Department homicide unit,
and this is Detective Joe Lawrence,
and we're here to investigate the murder of a police officer,
which occurred back in 1971.
White's statement corroborated the information Sam Cooper provided decades earlier.
Freddie Hilton and Twyman Myers killed Officer Green,
and one detail White remembered, solidified the...
investigator's certainty.
After he shot him, I think it took his gun and his badge from it.
I kind of remember that they had brought it back to the back to the house.
When it was that, that was their proof that they had killed him.
I just told them what I knew.
And leave it in the hands of the Lord, you know, because the Bible teaches me that
no weapon for them against me shall prosper.
and I believe that.
After two hours of questioning White,
he had no new information to share,
but agreed to cooperate with police.
Jim Rose moved to the next name on his list
of former BLA members, Bobby Brown,
who was located in Philadelphia.
Like Avon White,
Brown wanted to put his past behind him.
On February 17, 2001,
he sat down with police
and identified Twyman Myers
and Freddie Hilton as the killers.
Can you remember there were exact words?
They said they took care of business.
And that meant to you?
That meant to me that they shot a killer with his officer.
The final person on the list of former BLA members was Ron Anderson, who was living in New York City.
New York detectives conducted the interview where Anderson shared a very familiar story.
Fred Hilton came up to me, came to the bed where I was at.
He says, and he came to me, and he says that we have shot a police officer.
And I want you to get rid of this gun.
Anderson then explained, he didn't get rid of the gun, but rather gave it right back to Hilton.
When you gave the bag back to Freddie Hilton, was it a gun in the bag still?
The guns and the bags were still in the bag.
Can you describe the gun at all?
With the consistent and detailed statements of Avon White, Bobby Brown, and Ron Anderson as evidence, a warrant was issued for Freddie Hilton's arrest.
On June 18, 2002, Hilton was extradited from New York to Georgia to face a murder charge.
The testimony of Hilton's former associates in the BLA was key to a conviction.
They testified, knowing any of them, could have been in Hilton's shoes.
I guess it was what they called the luck of the draw, because that could have been me.
You know, he was an Avon.
I want you to go kill that cop.
You know, I can't tell him, no.
He would kill me.
I look back on it now, and I thank God that he never gave me such an order.
One by one, each of the three witnesses took the stand.
Here's a clip of Ron Anderson's testimony.
What did you do with those items?
After a while, I came back to the house, and we gave it back to Fred Hilton.
Prosecutor Al Dixon believed the witnesses were telling the truth.
Avon White, Bobby Brown, and Ronald Anderson, had no reason to lie.
It was 30 years ago.
I think they were genuinely sorry about the fact that an officer had been killed.
and the last thing they really wanted to do
was to have to come down here and testify
and, of course, they could have said
they didn't remember anything, but they didn't.
The jury also found the witness is credible
and Hilton was convicted of murder
and sentenced to life plus 18 years.
Here's Detective Rosigad.
It was very emotional.
I think it was justice served, but long overdue.
And there was a lot of relief.
In my case, I guess it was like taking a thousand pound weight off my back.
Jim Green's best friend, Larry King, felt like the verdict was too little, too late.
Freddie Hilton lived his life for 30 years out there doing whatever he did and making his life
and where Jim never had that opportunity, but I wish that it would have been more on the table other than just life imprisonment.
To me, that would have been final justice if they could have taken his life,
just like he took Jim's life.
Because of the investigative team's success in solving Jim Green's cold case,
Chief Pennington of the Atlanta Police Department
decided to create a team dedicated to unsolved cases.
I think we have to send a strong message to people that commit these heinous crimes of murder,
that we're going to track you down and we're going to continue to work on those cases
if it takes forever.
Freddie Hilton is continuing to serve out a sentence
in a Georgia State prison.
He's 68 years old.
Cold Case Files, the podcast, is hosted by Brooke Giddings,
produced by McCamey Lynn and Steve Delamator.
Our executive producers are Jesse Katz and Ted Butler.
Our music was created by Blake Maples.
This podcast is distributed by Podcast One.
The Cold Case Files TV series was produced by Curtis Productions
and is hosted by Bill Curtis.
You can find me at Brooke Gettings on Twitter and at Brooke the podcaster on Instagram.
I'm also active in the Facebook group, Podcast for Justice.
Check out more cold case files at aetv.com or learn more about cases like this one by visiting
the A&E Real Crime blog at AETV.com slash real crime.
