Cold Case Files - REOPENED: The Woman In The Woods

Episode Date: February 19, 2026

For 34 years Jody Loomis’ killer goes undetected. And even when genetic genealogy leads to a suspect, their guilt must be proven in court.Homes.com: We’ve done your homework.Thrive Market...: Go to ThriveMarket.com/coldcase for 30% off your first order, PLUS a free $60 gift!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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Starting point is 00:00:21 please contact Connix Ontario at 1866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario. This episode contains descriptions of violence and sexual assault. Listener discretion is advised. I was scared. I was crushed. Who did this? I need to find out what happened to her. When you're looking at somebody you think murdered your sister,
Starting point is 00:00:54 you're going to look them right in the eyes. You did that. I'm not looking away. 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 the afternoon of August 23rd, 1972,
Starting point is 00:01:28 in Snohomish County, Washington. 20-year-old Jody Loomis and her younger sister, Jaina, hop on their bikes and head off to visit their horse named Sadi for the afternoon. It was a beautiful day. Back in 1972, I'm 12th. I took off down the road to meet my girlfriend. Jody decided she was going to go to Sadi. and be back before dark.
Starting point is 00:01:50 My mom said, Jody, you got your dime. We always carried a dime for a telephone call, if anything ever took place. And she peddled off. Neighbors see Jody, with her dark blonde hair pulled back into a long ponytail, as she pedals past them down the street and out of view. An hour and a half later, a young couple drives into the woods in rural Snohomish County,
Starting point is 00:02:16 looking for a secluded hideaway to enjoy their secret road. romance. It's around 5.30 p.m. when they spot a log blocking the road ahead of them. When they get out to move the obstacle, they see the body of a young woman lying approximately 15 feet beyond the log. She was on her back, wearing a pair of knee-length socks, boots, and bikini-style underwear. There are clothes strewn around where she's lying. A dime on the dirt glistens in the afternoon sun. and there's a wound on the right side of her head. The couple rushes over to help and finds that the woman is still breathing, but she's unable to speak.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Desperate to try and save her, the couple carries her to their two-seater sports car, and as the man races to the hospital, his girlfriend tries to hold the woman's head up to keep her airways open. They're hopeful when they arrive at the hospital as she's still breathing, but the hope quickly fades as the woman's succors. comes to her injuries just as the doctors begin to examine her. The woman has no idea on her or any distinguishable belongings,
Starting point is 00:03:24 so detectives have no idea who she is. The young couple who found her bring police to the site where she had been spotted. It's a secluded area of a thousand-acre property owned by the Rice family. While investigating the scene, officers soon come across Ken Rice and his teenage son, Alan, chopping wood. We had no idea what it was about. I can't say exactly what I was going through my mind at 13. They separated us.
Starting point is 00:03:52 They just started asking us who we were and how long we'd been there. I think they asked my dad much more extensive questions. Kenda Rice, Ken's daughter, was question two. She had seen a girl on a bike cycled past while she was running the family fruit stand across the street. It's the first lead detectives get about the victim's identity. Later that night, Snohomish County Sheriff's Detective, Jim Sharp and former deputy coroner Ken Christensen
Starting point is 00:04:21 are called to Stevens Memorial Hospital in Edmonds, Washington, to investigate the suspicious death. That was a troubling sight to have her laying there with just shoes and her glasses were askew on her face, and she had a bullet hole in her head. We could see that there was dirt and leaves were stuffed in her underwear. Her boots would have been put on after the underwear was pulled back up. I observed what appeared to be seminal fluid in the crotch of the underwear.
Starting point is 00:04:53 It was obviously some kind of a sexually motivated homicide with a small caliber firearm. The detectives wanted to take the boots, so I removed the boots and placed them in beige-colored plastic bags. Detectives believe that the victim had been forced into the woods at gunpoint before being raped in the dirt beneath the trees. They think that she had been able to put her... underwear back on and was in the process of tying her left shoe when the killer shot her in the head. As night falls, Jody Loomis' parents begin to worry. The number one rule was be home before it gets dark. After a few hours, mom's upset. So his dad, they're starting to make calls. Something really is wrong. They searched through the neighborhood and woods before calling 911 and reporting Jody missing.
Starting point is 00:05:53 It doesn't take long for the police to make the connection. And then that knock comes at the door and you see those officers and you let them inside and they've got this look on their face. Oh, it's something I'll never forget. You know, when they said we think Jody's not alive and you're going to need to come down and ID her. My mom fell to the floor. My dad couldn't catch her.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Jim, Jody's fiancee was standing beside me. He was an extension of our family, and I could hear him crying. It's this whole feeling of everything just crushes, crushes. Yeah, right then and there. John Paul and Rosemary Loomis lived in the Mill Creek area with their three children. John Paul Jr., Jody and Jana. Jody was blonde-haired and blue-eyed and stood around five feet, too. But she had an air of authority that her friends and family loved.
Starting point is 00:06:56 Her best friend Pat Weeland remembers Jody's nature. Jody and I met in high school. She loved animals, loved outdoors, and very quick to defend anybody or any animal that she felt was being abused or not treated properly. So one day Jody had ran across these hunters. They were target shooting with these pigeons. And so Jody gave them a peace of her mind, told them, they better stop, picked up this pigeon and brought him home.
Starting point is 00:07:30 We just nursed him and he became a part of our family. So very true to Jody's nature, I would expect nothing else. I think what a kind and gentle and loving person she was. Her final moments on this planet were beyond horrible, just awful, just so unfair. How could somebody in a split moment decide, I'm going to rape that person, and then I'm going to take their life. That's a mind that you wonder, what else have they done? As the community is left reeling from the senseless tragedy,
Starting point is 00:08:13 the coroner tries to determine Jody's cause of death. In 1972, we were a rural area, and these things just didn't happen. It's terrible. Everybody wanted to make sure everything was done right. She had gunshot wound to the right side of the head. The pathologist recovered several 22-caliber slug fragments. It really affected me. I have a step-sister, and every time I looked at the young lady on the table, all I could see was my sister.
Starting point is 00:08:43 The coroner confirms that Jody died from the gunshot wound to her head and discovers that she'd been sexually assaulted. Vaginal swaps taken at the autopsy found intact Bromatozoa. But DNA analysis did not exist in 1972, so there was not a lot. much to go on. With no immediate clues pointing to the killer, everyone becomes a suspect. Jody's fiancé Jim had been living with the family at the time. The couple was incredibly in love, and Jim is close to Jody's parents and siblings. Jody's fiancé was, to me, as a 12-year-old, he was full of laughs, and he would pull pranks, and that was so up my alley. He loved her, and he had a way of making her laugh
Starting point is 00:09:38 and finding the humor in things. He was also a musician, and he would play the guitar and would sing. Let's say Jody comes home, and she's irritated that maybe we didn't do what we were supposed to do. Then he would start singing a love song on the guitar. so that she would hopefully change her mood. Yeah, so it was a lot of fun. It was a good time.
Starting point is 00:10:08 He is devastated by the loss of his fiancé. Although the investigators are looking into him, Jim has a solid alibi. He had actually been at work at the hospital where her body was taken, and he didn't realize that she was there. You know what, finally got my grocery routine under control. Thrive Market. I used to bounce between three different stores trying to find everything
Starting point is 00:10:42 my family needed, gluten-free snacks for my husband, protein options for me, and juice boxes without all the extra sugar for the kids. Now I just open up the Thrive Market app, tap a few filters, and everything shows up on my doorstep. Thrive Market is a membership-based grocery service where you can shop from wherever you are. Just hop on their app. The membership breaks down to just $5 a month. That's less and what I spend on coffee. And this actually saves me money. I've discovered brands like Siette, Simple Mills, and Poppy, that taste just like our old favorites, but without all the weird ingredients. Thrive Market gives you versions with less sugar, fewer sketchy ingredients, and more nutrition. My favorite part, no hidden delivery fees, no service charges, and I can
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Starting point is 00:11:52 plus a free $60 gift. If it wasn't someone that was close to the victim, detectives wonder if it could have been someone living close to where she was found. The Rice family. The Rice's walked right into the crime scene. You just got that feeling of they gotta know something. Something doesn't seem right. How could they not know?
Starting point is 00:12:17 The police considered my brother and my father potential suspects because they were right in the vicinity where the young lady was found. The police want to find out what Ken Rice and his son Allen were doing there. And they want to know if the father and son, son had any involvement in what happened to Jody. I doubted that my brother had anything to do with it. I didn't know about my dad. I didn't believe that he could hide such a thing,
Starting point is 00:12:46 but there was always a question in my mind because my dad, he liked the ladies, and he made lots of comments when you're watching TV about, oh, she'd be a good lay or something like that. But, yeah, there were personal reasons, you know, in our family, And so it makes you wonder. It had to be really frustrating for the detectives, not having any good solid leads to go on.
Starting point is 00:13:10 The best information that they had was that a couple years prior, there were a bunch of men that were getting together in those woods to meet each other, but nothing linked them to Jody's killing. Ken Rice and his 13-year-old son were just chopping wood on their own land. There was nothing more to indicate
Starting point is 00:13:31 they had anything to do with the murder. so detectives try to move on from considering them as suspects. For almost two years, the investigation stalls until April 1974, when a tip comes in about a group associated with a biker gang that had been bragging about raping and killing a young woman. The Reapers Roadmen were maybe a half a dozen guys, and they liked to party and ride motorcycles. One of them ended up shooting at a train and hitting the conductor,
Starting point is 00:14:01 and his gun was found to be a 22 pistol, the same type of a weapon used to kill Jody. The detectives managed to get a hold of the gun and bullets from the case, and they send it to the FBI for analysis. Ballistics testing concludes that the 22-caliber gun is not the one that fired the fatal round into Jody's skull. But just as one line of inquiry slammed shut, A serial killer targeting young women in the Pacific Northwest emerges as a suspect.
Starting point is 00:14:36 There were numerous murders that were taking place. They had been raped. They didn't know who it was. I believed that Jody could have been one of his victims. How vicious somebody must be. He's still out there. We've got to catch him. It's the summer of 1974, and young women have been vanishing over the course of several months near Issaquah, Washington. The police believe the man responsible was a man named Ted Bundy. The similarities between Jody's case and the Bundy murders were that she was the right age group, college age, and probably the right hairstyle.
Starting point is 00:15:21 A lot of them had their hair parted down the center. Jody parted her hair down the center. While Jody matches Bundy's victim profile, her murder doesn't match up with his M. Ted Bundy is notorious for using a ruse to lure his victims into a false sense of security. He would put his arm in a sling or act like he needed help before getting the women into his car. But Jody was seen riding her bicycle. The method of murder also doesn't match. Bundy often bludgeoned his victims.
Starting point is 00:15:55 Jody had been shot. And Bundy disposes of the women he killed in a different manner, too. It just didn't fit right. Serial killers are human beings, and human beings are creatures of habit. Jody's family is disappointed when the investigation stalls once again. And this time, the investigation goes cold for three decades. Decades pass, but Jody's bedroom remains unchanged, much like her family's determination to find out who killed the 20-year-old who never made it home.
Starting point is 00:16:35 It has been 32 years since Jody Loomis was murdered, and a new investigative unit has been designated the task of looking into the cold case. So in 2005, my parents were called. They said that there was new life being bred back into the case. Wow, that was our lucky day. That was our lucky day. Jody's case fits the criteria that the cold case team is looking for. Advancements in forensic technology mean that DNA evidence can be utilized in unsolved murder investigations.
Starting point is 00:17:12 With the intact spermatozoa that had been collected during Jody's autopsy, the investigators are hopeful that they could solve this case. Then we found out that there was no DNA evidence anywhere. We couldn't find it all we're missing. You know, we were just flabbergasted. And it was just devastating when we realized that, Those things had been lost. So it was like a last ditch resort that we hoped to God
Starting point is 00:17:43 that we could get something off of the rest of the clothes that we still had in evidence. The all-important DNA samples are nowhere to be found. In early 2008, Detective Jim Sharf decides to try to find a profile from other evidence that was collected. But we had Jody's shirt, her bra, jeans, and both of her boots. I sent all those items to the State Patrol Crime Lab
Starting point is 00:18:13 to see if they could find any DNA evidence that might have been missed or left on another article of clothing. It took some time. May 15, 2008, was one of my greatest days as a detective. I got a phone call from the forensic analyst at the State Patrol Crime Lab,
Starting point is 00:18:34 telling me that he found a spot of DNA evidence on Jody Loomis' left boot. We were so excited about it that we drove to the crime lab and went back to his workstation and he showed us the slide and I counted 25 speratozoa on it. And it was like, yeah,
Starting point is 00:18:56 we actually do have what we need to solve this case. It was wonderful. After 36 years, it's a much-needed break in the case that offers Jody's family, family and friends renewed hope. We were very excited, you know, we're going to find who this person was.
Starting point is 00:19:16 I felt that, oh, if they have the DNA, then surely they will get the person not understanding then, not necessarily. The DNA profile is run through the CODIS, the database used to track and store DNA. But whoever left that stain on Jody's body is not in the system. It's disappointing. But investigators are now focused on comparing the sample to those questioned in the original investigation. They start with Ken Rice and his son Alan, who had been working in the woods close to
Starting point is 00:19:51 where Jody was found. The Rice family, that was one of the names that kept popping up. Oh, I wonder if they knew something that just wasn't being told or somebody didn't remember something. Sheriff Sharf came back to our family and DNA tested my dad and my brother. Alan Rice is happy to cooperate, but he's unethical. sure how helpful he can be. I didn't have any new information on who might be guilty because I had no information at all,
Starting point is 00:20:22 really. I just thought it was kind of civic duty to come in and help out. They asked kind of all the logical questions, including, did you do it? At the end, they asked if I would be willing to give them a DNA sample, and I did. Kenda Rice is anxious to finally find out if the killer had been close to home the entire time. It was really emotional. because I was just waiting to hear, waiting for that shoe to drop. Is it possible that it was my father or my brother, my dad, and my brother were actually ruled out? It was a big, huge relief. With the Rises eliminated, the detectives chase a new lead.
Starting point is 00:21:05 Someone called in to report that the man who owned a barn at a Strowski farm, where Jody kept her horse, could be responsible for her murder. He knew Jody Loomis, and they were far from amicable. I was aware that they were looking at the owner of the barn. The wife was a close friend of my sisters, and the husband was not. He made some kind of an off-color comment to Jody at one time that Jody's father learned about, and her father had words with him. The barn owner has no alibi for the time Jody was killed,
Starting point is 00:21:42 and Detective Scharf brings him in a little bit of his. for questioning. Jody didn't usually cycle to the barn to ride her horse saudi. So it seemed unlikely the barn owner would have had the opportunity to kill her. So he agrees to provide a DNA sample for comparison. He was an older man, elderly. He was cooperative. We had his DNA tested. We were able to rule out the man that owned the barn. The detectives even tracked down members of the motorcycle gang that was investigated years earlier. Some of the members were dead. but the detectives are able to eliminate them as suspects by testing their children's DNA. You now have a DNA profile, and if you can't match that up with anybody, you don't have anybody to pursue.
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Starting point is 00:22:59 neighborhood complete with a video guide. They also have details about local schools with test scores, state rankings, and student-to-teacher ratio. They even have an agent directory with the sales history of each agent. So when it comes to finding a home, not just a house, this is everything you need to know all in one place. Homes.com. We've done your homework. I didn't know if I'd ever see the face of who murdered my sister. Over the years, you're just always grabbing at different straws and different things. And then if you hear anything, you're passing it on to the detectives. You just never let go of it.
Starting point is 00:23:37 For 10 long years, there isn't much to hold on to. But everything changes with one forensic advance. It's now the summer of 2018, 46 years after Jody Loomis' murder. And Detective Sharf learns about... about forensic genealogy. Using a suspect's DNA, a genetic genealogist can search for partial matches in public DNA databases. Those partial matches lead to a family tree.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Someone in that family tree can end up being an exact match. The DNA sample is sent to a genetic genealogist who spends 58 hours over a three-day period, re-engineering a family tree to whittle the potential matches down to a son of Jeketa, an hour Albert Miller. The Millers have six sons and one daughter. So investigators look at the six males to see which one of them was likely Jody's killer.
Starting point is 00:24:32 One had sexual criminal history, and that was Terrence Miller. A couple of years after Jody's murder, he was arrested for statutory rape and child molestation, but he got a deferred prosecution for going through counseling, so Terry didn't go to prison. So now that we knew that he was a sex offender, we started following Terrence Miller around. Undercover officers are tasked with trailing Miller in hopes that they can obtain unknown sample of his DNA without alerting him. The officers follow Miller to a casino where he buys a cup of coffee. Seconds after he discards the cup into a garbage can, the officers retrieve it and take it in as evidence to be sent into the crime lab. On September 6, 2018, the results are in.
Starting point is 00:25:25 It is a match. You're just like, yes, you know who did it now, and this person's still alive. I was taking care of my mom at the time. She didn't have long to live, and I just said, Mom, they are so close. She couldn't say a lot at this point. She made it through that night. and she just beamed, she got to know. Detective Sharf and Deputy Prosecutor Craig Matheson
Starting point is 00:26:02 start to build a case against the suspected murderer. Now we need to figure out who Terrence Miller is. Where do you live in 1972? Where did he work? And all of this is stuff that occurred almost 50 years ago. What witnesses do we have that are still alive that can help us put this case together? Over the following months, investigators piece together.
Starting point is 00:26:27 the case against Miller, a man who has lived his entire life in Snohomish County. A few years after Jody was killed, Miller had married his neighbor, and together, they run a small ceramic shop in the community that had been haunted by Jody's murder for so long. It's close to home for Detective Sharf, too. Terry Miller kept this secret all these years from everybody he knew. My brother and his wife every Monday bowled with Terry Miller for six or seven years. Undercover detectives are sent to the ceramic shop operated out of the garage at Miller's home. Acting as a couple that were interested in learning how to make ceramics, they bought some ceramics while they were there.
Starting point is 00:27:10 The female asked to use the restroom. Terry wasn't there, but his wife was, so she took the woman into the house, and that gave the man an opportunity to use his phone to videotape the interior of the ceramic shop. And while he was doing that, he observed a newspaper sitting out that was seven months old. That was the only periodical on a table in the shop at the time they were there. And the newspaper article recounted the arrest and then charging of a guy for double murder from the mid-80s using the technology of genetic genealogy. It was an odd coincidence.
Starting point is 00:27:53 Or Mr. Miller is keeping up with what technology is doing for law enforcement. The detectives believe that Miller knows they are onto him. Once they have everything they need, the investigators make their move and arrest Miller in his home in Edmonds, Washington, in April 2019. It was great to have him in custody, and now our next task was to interview him
Starting point is 00:28:19 and hopefully get a confession out of him. If not, we needed some provable lies. The detectives started turning the screws on him about talking specifically about the Loomis homicide. When we brought up Jody Loomis, he denied knowing her and denied ever having sex with her. So that was a key thing that we needed to prove in court. Miller was ultimately charged with one count of first-degree murder,
Starting point is 00:28:48 so premeditated murder. And he pled not guilty to that, and trial dates were set. Now, whether we can prove that, Terry Miller is the guy or not is still an open question. So much time had passed. It was a very daunting task. Prosecutors are preparing to try Terrence Miller for the 1972 murder of Jody Loomis.
Starting point is 00:29:11 But the passage of time poses a major challenge. At that point, all of the detectives that had been involved in the initial investigation were dead. The medical examiner who had conducted the autopsy was dead. Both of Jody's parents at that point were dead. So we need to figure out what witnesses that we still have left and how we're going to get that boot in front of a jury.
Starting point is 00:29:36 We requested that the judge imposed bail in the amount of $1 million for Mr. Miller. And then Mr. Miller was incarcerated pending trial. Over the course of the next several months, when Mr. Miller was in jail, he made a number of phone calls to his wife. Every phone call is recorded. He had made comments to the effect that, you know, I'm going to jail. They've got me. They got the DNA. In July 2019, the accused killer does something no one had anticipated.
Starting point is 00:30:12 He uses his assets to bail out on a million-dollar bond. The man suspected of killing a young woman is back in the community, something that strikes fear into Jaina's heart. Can this really be happening that with DNA and a murder, He's out. He gets to go home. Really upset us when we found that out. I was terrified for Jana. He could come after her.
Starting point is 00:30:36 What if he just decided, you know, I'm going to come after the family? You know, what do I have to lose? Miller remains out on bail when the trial finally begins at Snohomish County Courthouse on October 26, 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. After each day of testimony, Miller is able to go home. Prosecutor Craig Matheson has been able to gather enough witnesses. his from law enforcement and the coroner's office from 1972 in order to present all of the evidence to the jury. It's a strong case, but the defendant seems emotionless.
Starting point is 00:31:10 During the trial, Terry Miller was very stoned-faced. When you're looking at somebody you think murdered your sister, you're going to look them right in the eyes. Prosecuting attorney Matheson delivers his closing argument to the jury on Friday, November 6th, and the jury breaks for the weekend. As deliberations are underway on Monday, November 9th, Attorney Matheson
Starting point is 00:31:32 receives a phone call from patrol. They're at the Miller House. Miller had committed suicide that morning. He did it with a 22 handgun, the same type of a weapon that he used to kill Jody. It's a crushing blow.
Starting point is 00:31:57 But the jury hasn't been informed, and they continue to deliberate. A little while later, everyone is summoned back into the courtroom to hear the jury's decision. Jody's family and friends anxiously await that verdict. It's a very intense moment when you're sitting there and you're looking at the jury and you're looking at the judge and the jury announces that he's guilty. Oh, thank goodness.
Starting point is 00:32:31 It's a bittersweet outcome as Miller had taken his own life just before he was convicted of Jody Loomis' murder. There was no justice when that trigger was pulled. I wanted him to go to prison because I pretty much knew what was going to happen to him in prison, and it was not going to be pretty. I wanted the Loomis family to see Miller convicted. I wanted them to see him be handcuffed and led from the courtroom. He took that from them. But it was very rewarding because that family had been waiting a long time.
Starting point is 00:33:06 Despite everything, Jaina hopes that something good can come out of the tragedy that had plagued her family for almost 50. years. We need to learn from what happened to Jody and try and make it to where we take care of other families that are going through this, of not knowing, and try to help. That's what Jody would want. She would want that. I miss her for all my years that I had with her, and I miss her for all the years I didn't
Starting point is 00:33:37 have with her. All the things that she cared about that I couldn't share with her because some of her. Somebody was so evil, Jody, I love you so much. And that's why you don't give up hope is because I love you. Yeah, I love you, Jody. 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.
Starting point is 00:34:19 For A&E, our senior producer is John Thrasher, and our supervising producer is McCamey 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. Pluto TV, we're celebrating Black History Month
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