Cold Case Files - REOPENED: Murder in the Midwest
Episode Date: June 25, 2026When the body of Lori Nesson is found in a ditch in 1974, her death is not ruled as a homicide. Her sister knows that there was foul play, but it takes 40 years for the cause of death to be c...hanged to homicide. Investigators now have to catch a killer with a four decade head start.Progressive: Multitask right now. Quote your car insurance at Progressive.com to join the over 28 million drivers who trust Progressive.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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This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault.
Listener discretion is advised.
All those years, nobody ever tried to figure out what happened to my sister, Lori.
Her death was not ruled as a homicide.
It was ruled as undetermined natural causes.
A 15-year-old girl is going to walk about 10 miles, take all her clothes off in the woods,
and then walk another five miles naked and lay down in a ditch and pull foliage over her.
I never thought it would be solved, but don't ever give up.
Somebody somewhere knows something.
Now, 45 years later, I want to make sure families know there is hope.
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 September 27, 1974, 1974 in Columbus, Ohio,
and 15-year-old Eastmore High School sophomore, Lori Nesson,
has plans to go to the football game.
After the game, Lori heads to a couple of parties,
and she's supposed to be spending the night with a friend.
By 11 the next morning,
Lori still hasn't come home,
and her 13-year-old sister, Tony, can see that her mother is worried.
Lori's mother starts making calls to her daughter's friends to see if anybody has seen Lori.
They said no.
The last that they had heard is Lori was just going to go home.
She's going to walk home.
It was 1974.
We walked places.
Lori's mother contacts the Columbus Police Department to file a missing persons report.
My mother was scared to death.
But she would not portray that to me because she did not want to scare me.
Tony and Lori's mother, Joyce, is raising her two girls on her own.
Joyce divorced the girl's father's years earlier.
But it doesn't change the focus and determination Lori exhibits from a young age.
She was a kid, but she was so ahead of her time.
She was a volunteer on McGovern's campaign in 1972,
so she would have been 12.
I mean, wrap your head around that, 12 years old,
and is volunteering to work on a presidential campaign.
She was off the charts, smart,
and she was extremely active in Israeli rights.
My family is Jewish.
She was so deep and so sensitive
and so wanted to be a voice,
for anybody that didn't have one, Lori would never disappear.
She might come home a little late, but never, ever would she disappear.
Lori has been missing for just a few hours when a call comes into a police department in a nearby town.
Reynoldsburg Police Sergeant Jim Costlow and Lieutenant Bill Early recall the report.
A husband and wife were hunting for hedge apples, and they see deceased.
young female laying in a ditch.
Detectives responded, and they document that it's a white female in her late teens.
She had no clothes on.
She did have what appeared to be some bruising on her left arm.
It was not obvious to them what had caused the death of this young woman.
They don't see any telltale sign like a rope around the neck or a gunshot wound or anything like that.
And then they examined the bottom of her feet, which appear to be, for the most of the
most part clean. It led
investigators out to the fact to believe that
whatever happened to the young
woman happened somewhere else and then
she was left there on Rose Hill Road.
The coroner takes
the unidentified victim's body to the
morgue and the story hits the local
news that night.
A friend of Lori's called
the police department and notified
them that a friend of his
matched the description of the
young woman that was found in Reynoldsburg
deceased.
The police asked Joyce Nesson to come to the morgue to identify her daughter's body.
Every parent's worst nightmare is confirmed when she sees Lori on the coroner's table.
Sadly, she has to break the news to her other daughter, Tony.
She said, I need to talk to you about Lori.
And I looked at her and I said, oh, well, what about her?
And she said, she's not coming home.
she's gone. She died.
I didn't understand one minute she was there and the next minute she was gone.
The coroner begins to investigate Lori's death.
The autopsy determined that she did have some kind of sexual relation with somebody,
but it was not ruled that she was raped,
and the manner of death was not ruled homicide.
They just weren't able to determine what that reason was.
It's possible that she had a drug overdose or she died of some other,
cause and was taken there by someone who panicked and dumped them.
The toxicology report is still pending, and so they continue to investigate this as a suspicious
death.
So the investigators, they do just a number of different interviews with fellow friends, students,
parents, just about anybody who had contact with her through the football game or any of these
after parties.
Lori was last seen by a friend leaving the party at about 10 after midnight,
and then again, within a few minutes after that,
two more friends that had me driving by, saw Lori walking.
Lori only lived a few minutes walk away from the party she had gone to.
Her body was found miles away from her home,
so investigators believe that she had accepted a ride from someone.
This theory doesn't sit well with those who know Lori.
Everybody was very adamant about Lori would not get into a car with a stranger.
No way, okay?
So the police said that she got into a car with someone she knew.
In my experience, people are killed by, more often not by people that they know.
This nice little Jewish group of kids now started looking at each other like, well, who did she get in the car with?
Within a day of Lori's body being discovered, the news of her death dominates the local media outlets,
and the coverage leads to tips.
One of those tips stands out above the rest.
They receive a call from a woman named Donna Up,
who worked at Mount Carmelese Hospital and had been on her way to work at around 5.45 in the morning.
And she says, I recall seeing a girl dressed in similar clothing to what you were.
what Lori Nesson was wearing when she went missing.
She also reports that she saw a small red-colored car
that was pulled off in a lane.
That two locals was called Lover's Lane.
They did focus on people that had access to their red car.
Scott Richards drove a red Mustang.
Lori and Scott were like super, super close, like best friends.
And he lived on the same street as us.
Scott Richards was around 16.
He hosted the after party at his president.
parents' house that she first went to after the football game.
The investigators take a closer look at Scott Richards.
He was in their circle of friends and acquaintances.
But her friends said he was strange and we think he could do something like that.
It wasn't just like one person.
And the more information you get on somebody and the more people are telling you the
same thing, that information carries more weight than other.
So please acted on that.
They went and interviewed Scott Richards at.
as a suspect.
He's able through his parents and himself
to account for his whereabouts
and the time frame from the after party
to when she's found dead.
So even though there may be some lingering doubts,
there's no ring door camera video
and there's no cell phone GPSing.
So they can't even really go out
and verify someone's story.
They have to take it at face value.
Two days after Lori's body was found,
the Reynoldsburg police get a call about potential evidence.
Reynoldsburg police actually got a phone call
that somebody had found shoes on the side of the road in Gahanna,
which is a neighboring suburb.
And then another report came in that the sweater and a jeans were found.
The clothing was located approximately three miles from where Lori's body was found.
Lori's clothes and shoes are strewn along the right side of the road.
It would be logical to draw the idea that there were perhaps two people in the car when that clothing was thrown out.
Someone's driving and then someone's in the passenger's side from where the clothing went out the window.
I didn't know any of the circumstances surrounding her death.
I did not know that her clothes were in Gahanna.
My mom was just protecting me.
I don't think a 13-year-old could understand the violence that serves.
around at Lori's death.
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During the first week of the investigation, the investigators come across a report Lori's mom had filed in August 1973.
According to the report, Lori, who was 14 at the time, was leaving school when a man tried to lure her into his car.
Lori escaped and ran home to tell her mother what had happened.
An officer puts two and two together and says, I think I know who this is because this is somebody that they had dealt with.
His name was Eugene Gwe.
He was known to operate in that area on the east side of Columbus,
and he would try and lure girls into his car.
Mr. Gway was followed to a bar
where it was noted that Mr. Gwe had
what looked like to be maybe like an infected laceration
on his head or his face,
and that he could have been injured in a struggle
if Lorry was fighting for her life.
And they decide, hey, we should probably talk to this guy.
He's very non-committal on his whereabouts around the time frame of the crime,
nothing that they're able to confirm.
He doesn't have an alibi.
They actually have a photograph of her, and they show it to him.
Not only does he recognize her, he makes a comment about,
yeah, I didn't like her because she had braces.
And so that raises some of the red flags for the investigators
that this is somebody that we should really zero in on.
Eugengewe denies being involved with Lori's death,
and he agrees to do a policy.
in October 1974.
The investigators received a phone message from the attorney that now represents Eugene Gwey,
who says that he will not be taking the polygraph.
They do get permission via consent to search his vehicle in the hopes that they might find
something that would link Eugene Gweif to Lori Nesson, and they don't come up with any evidence.
Once he retains an attorney, there really isn't anything left for them to do.
do. It's now November
1974, and the
toxicology results from Lori's autopsy
come back.
The results show
that there were no drugs or alcohol
in her system at the time of her death.
Once they received the final
coroner's report, it's not ruled
as a homicide. It's ruled
as a accidental death
from unknown origin.
There's more questions and answers.
You didn't have to be some kind of
brain to live. You didn't have to be some kind of
brain to look at the circumstances
surrounding her death and where her clothes were
and where her body was in relation to where we lived,
how anybody could rule that as anything
but a homicide is beyond me.
The accidental death ruling means that the investigation
comes to an end.
And as far as finding a potential killer,
the case goes cold.
Lori's family tries to pick up the pieces,
and Joyce wants to make sure her surviving daughter
can lead a normal life.
We've never talked about Lori, ever.
It was too painful for my mom.
I truly 100% believe that if Lori would have been an only child,
I do not believe my mom would have survived it.
She had me, so she still had to go on.
My mom made me go back to school.
She got me involved in riding horses.
I played sports and got good grades and a boyfriend.
My mom was always a very, very vivacious person that loved to entertain,
love to go to parties, love to dance, and then it all stopped.
She went to work, and she came home.
There was always something missing, and it was Lori.
I always wondered,
who took my sister from me.
At some point, there's got to be some kind of answer somewhere,
but I didn't know where to go or how to get it.
44 years passed by, and it's August 2019,
when Officer Craig Brafford gets wind of the case.
I came across the case August of 2019
while looking through the file room.
It's what piqued my curiosity is the death certificate
did not list a manner of death as homicide.
It was listed as undetermined.
Although the patrol officer is not a detective,
he spends his free time re-examining local cold cases.
When Lori went missing, she was the same age as my daughter was.
She was 15 years old.
And I couldn't imagine going through the next 46 years with no answers.
Officer Bratford gets permission from the deputy chief
to investigate the case on his own time.
He gathers the case file.
and pours over the autopsy photos.
There were some injuries that were not listed.
Some trauma may have been behind a left ear,
but my aha moment was there was one photograph in particular
of a detective that lifted up Lori's upper lip,
and there was a lot of damage,
which was consistent with possibly being rubbed
against the top braces that Lori had,
so someone could have been mashing her,
her mouth down to try to keep her quiet.
This was a clear, clear, obvious homicide.
It's February 2020, 45 years after Lori was murdered.
And Officer Brafford informs Lori's sister that he's investigating the cold case.
I never thought it would be solved because, how could it be?
It wasn't even ruled a homicide.
All those years, nobody ever, ever.
cared about what happened to her until Craig Brafford.
I contacted Tony.
I felt she deserved answers.
Her family deserved answers.
And I felt that we had an opportunity now to do this, to do it right.
He said, well, I don't want to reopen an old wound,
but I would like to talk to you about your sister.
And literally, the minute he said that,
it was like somebody punched me in the stomach.
So the first thing that I said to Craig when I finally could catch my breath was you can't reopen something that was never closed.
Before Brafford can move forward, he needs to convince the coroner that Lori's death was no accident.
She was murdered.
The county coroner and some of the other physicians would have to sit down and review all the aspects of a case before the elected coroner would sign off on it.
After five months of deliberation, the coroner's office comes back with a decision in September 2020.
The manner of death is overturned and changed from undetermined to homicidal violence.
Craig got her case reopened, and for the first time in 45 years, I felt that somebody actually cared about Lori.
And so it was extremely emotional.
for me. That was extremely
satisfied, but we still had an uphill
battle on our hands because we still
had an investigation to conduct.
The two main people that had been
looked at at the time, a Eugene
Gway, and a friend of Lori's
Scott Richard had both passed
away several years ago.
Detectives hoped new
forensic technology will give them a
solid lead. They submit
Lori's clothing to the crime lab for DNA
testing. Bureau
of Criminal Investigations
Forensics.
scientist, Devaney Herdman, gets involved with the case.
Unfortunately, this case came in right before the start of the COVID pandemic, and that did
slow progress.
Like most of the country, we were working from home and definitely can't do DNA analysis
from my house.
Suspects from the 1970s have died.
That combined with the global pandemic slows the case to a crawl.
Tony is determined not to let the case go cold again.
Here it is November, and I got nothing.
And that's when I called Lieutenant Early,
and I said, I'm going to the media.
Somebody somewhere knows something.
And we need to find that person.
Tony was very adamant about the fact that she wanted to run a news story on it.
So one of our local reporters from a news channel here was willing to do that.
Who know the name?
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Men in Black, one through three.
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It's December 2020, and Gene Adams,
The brother of 17-year-old Karen Adams, who had been murdered just six months after Lori in 1975,
here's about Lori's case.
I get a phone call from my cousin, Gene.
She says, have you seen this story on TV about Lori Neeson?
She said, no, I haven't.
And she said, well, that sounds just like Karen.
So she called the police apartment.
Karen Adams' body had been discovered around two and a half miles from where Lori had been found.
The detectives feel as though the timeline and geographical closeness of the murders
show a connection between Karen and Lori's cases.
At the time of the murder, Karen Adams lived just 10 minutes from Lori Nesson.
On the night she was killed, Karen told her parents she was going out for an hour.
She drove off and never came back.
She said she was going to see a friend about a scarf.
that she'd left over there and was going to go get it and she'd be right back.
11 o'clock turned around and we knew something was going on then.
Karen was never out late at night.
The next morning, Karen was reported missing.
I was driving around, talking with her friends, trying to find my sister.
I found her car in a parking lot.
I knew something was wrong.
She would have never left that car.
Never.
Karen had finally saved enough money from her waitressing job
to purchase the car just a few months earlier.
It was her first car and her pride and joy.
I'd worked on a little bit, fixed it up a little bit for her,
and I remember her taking me for a ride
and how happy she was to have that car.
That's the only memory that I kind of keep.
Me and her riding around that car,
Karen was the third of five children.
Poor girls, one boy, I'm the oldest.
She's special to our family.
Had a great sense of humor.
She was looking so much forward to her future.
Franklin County Sheriff's Office,
cold case detective Chuck Clark,
solved Karen's case in 2011.
He recalls the details of the discovery of Karen's body
on March 10, 1975.
It was roughly six to eight miles east of Whitehall
where Karen lived.
Two people just happened to look in the ditch and saw a body.
We got the call from the police.
They'd found her body.
It's like somebody just pulled my guts out of me.
All I could think of was how Karen's last few moments were.
She had some marks on her neck,
and once they took her from the scene and did the autopsy,
obviously that was confirmed that once she was sexually assaulted,
and two that she was strangled to death.
There were no witnesses or fingerprints.
The detectives followed as many leads as they could.
They spent a good six months to a year on it.
They interviewed everyone they could and ran out of leads.
The family was, hey, what are you people doing?
I asked to see the file on Karen.
They wouldn't show it to me.
I just couldn't get any answers.
I tried bribing people.
That didn't help.
And then it got colder and colder and colder and pretty soon everybody forgets.
In December 2010, 35 years after Karen's murder,
cold case detective Chuck Clark is searching the database for an inactive case to take on.
That's when he finds Karen Adams' file.
Her case seemed to have one of the highest probabilities of being solved,
mainly because DNA had come around.
A forensic test on Karen's clothes
reveals the DNA profiles of two unknown males.
They put them in CODUS, which is the system that identifies suspects.
One came back as unknown,
and one was a known male that had done time in prison
for rape and kidnapping,
and his name was Robert Meyer.
Meyer had been arrested and convicted of raping and kidnapping two women in Toledo, Ohio, in 1976.
Just a year after Karen Adams' murder.
He spent 25 years in prison and was released in 2001.
When he was released, he was required to provide a DNA sample because of his conviction.
We just needed to get a DNA swab from him to very, very,
the hit that I got CODIS from the lab.
We knocked on his door.
Mr. Meyer was very cordial, very polite,
and he was very compliant.
So I got DNA swabs from each cheek
and took those swabs right to the lab to be compared.
Detectives showed up my door.
He said they had a DNA hit with CODIS,
and as soon as they get the evidence confirmed,
they were going to arrest him.
It all came back like a flood.
It seemed feeling that I got when I found out to Karen
had got killed. I got again.
They never told me the name.
What they told me was it was a 71-year-old convicted rapist
that was living in Cincinnati.
Well, all you have to do is go to the Hamilton County Sex Offender website
and figure out how many 71-year-old guys you got there.
One.
I got an address.
off the website, I went down the scene.
I took my gun, and I knocked on his door.
After discovering the address of the man suspected
of killing his sister 35 years earlier,
Jean Adams heads to Robert Meyer's house with a gun.
I kept thinking about my sister's last moments
and how bad I wanted to hurt Robert Meyer.
I had a gun in my pocket.
He opened the door.
What do you want?
Inside my head, this ring.
like I was going to blow up.
I stood within two feet of him.
And I didn't see his face.
I seen my mother's face.
I just couldn't do it.
He doesn't deserve that much attention.
There's no way I could kill that man
and put my mother through more heartache over this.
I just turned around and walked away.
In September 2011, the DNA hit is confirmed.
And Meyer is transported to the Cincinnati Police Department
for an interview with Detective Clark.
Meyer denies knowing Karen Adams.
I got the feeling that he actually didn't remember.
I think it would have been possible.
Who knows how many other crimes he committed against women?
They arrested him.
He pleads guilty to murder.
He was convicted, sentenced, 25 years in life.
He died four years later.
Meyer's conviction and death brings some closure to the case.
But the identity of Karen's other attacker is still a mystery.
I discovered that he had an accomplice in Toledo.
That person's name was Charles Weber.
Robert Meyer and Charles Weber actually met in prison back in the early to mid-1960s.
They lived together as soon as they get out of prison,
and one of them's out of prison not two weeks,
and we have Lori Nesson show up dead.
Around six months later, we have Karen Adams,
who is found dead.
And then Weber and Meyer actually moved to Toledo, Ohio,
and they attempted twice more
to abduct sexually assault and murder two more victims.
Charles Weber went to prison until 1989,
and he was released, and he died,
so we didn't have the opportunity to get his DNA.
Four years later in March 2016, Detective Clark tracks down Charles Weber's biological son.
Using familial DNA, he can confirm that Weber was the second suspect in Karen Adams' murder.
It is such a relief to find out who did this and move on with your life and keep the memories of what you had that were good and let the rest of it go.
But that is the hardest thing to do.
It's December 2020, a news story.
stories about Lori Nesson's case generate tips.
We received calls with people saying the news story about the death of Lori Neston
and it sounded very similar to the death of Karen Adams.
I contacted Devania Herbman at the DNA lab.
She was actually familiar with the Karen Adams case because she had done the DNA analysis on it.
I had started comparing Karen's profile from her underwear to the profile.
from Lori's genes, they were identical.
And not only did we get one foreign individual,
but the same two foreign individuals that did this to Lori.
The DNA match and stories from Weber's and Myers,
surviving victims, lead to a theory about what happened the night
Lori Nesson was murdered.
The women in Toledo said that they tried to approach them
none of the guise of needing help.
And then once they got close to the car,
they jump out and would grab them.
They forced her into the vehicle,
sexually assaulted her,
and then decided that killing her
was the best way of concealing their crime.
Convinced that Weber and Meyer killed Lori?
Investigators finally have answers
for Lori's sister Tony.
Once Craig told me,
that Lori's case had been solved, and they're both dead.
I think I did ask, is there any way that we could exhum their bodies
so that I could run over them with my truck multiple times?
I'm very upset that they never had to pay for what they did to my sister.
But I can't spend the rest of my life being concerned with them.
So what we did on July 13th, which we did,
was my 60th birthday. We did a very small memorial service at the graveside. My mom is buried next to Lori,
and I got to tell them both that Lori's case was solved and that they could rest in peace.
The tragedies of their sister's murders bond Gene and Tony together as friends.
Me and Tony Heson has become very good friends over this. We'll always be in this together.
We talk quite often about the need to do shows like this to get the word out.
Law enforcement and the families all believe that there are other victims out there.
We're sure of that.
If you know of anybody that sounds like this story, contact your local authorities.
I want to make sure that these families out there and friends don't ever give up.
Don't ever give up.
There's always some sort of hope.
And if my story can help another family,
then all of the pain that I've been through is worth it.
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 McCamey Lynn.
Our executive producers are Jesse Katz, Maitei Kueva, 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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Catch Anchorman, the legend of Ron Burgundy.
Fantastic.
Men in black, one through three.
That's what I'm talking about.
Mean girls.
Start up.
Titanic.
I'm the key in the world.
And so much more.
For showtimes, press nothing.
They're free 24-7.
That is so fetch.
On Pluto TV.
Stream now.
Pay never.
