Cold Case Files - Smoky Mountain Mystery
Episode Date: February 23, 2021After nearly two decades of silence, a man known as the Smoky Mountain Gypsy comes forward with information that could lead police to solve not one, but two different murders, which had never before b...een connected. Check out our great sponsors! 1-800-Contacts: Order online at 1800contacts.com - download their free app - or call 1-800 Contacts (1-800-266-8228) Madison Reed: Find your perfect shade at Madison-Reed.com to get 10% off plus FREE SHIPPING on your first Color Kit with code CCF SimpliSafe: Go to SimpliSafe.com/coldcase today to customize your system and get a free security camera. Tommy John: Returns and exchanges are FREE and RIGHT NOW get 15% OFF your FIRST ORDER at TommyJohn.com/coldcase Total Wireless: Get an unlimited talk, text and data plan for $25 per month. 1 gig at high speed, then 2G. Terms and conditions at TotalWireless.com
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Thank you for listening to this Podcast One production, available on Apple Podcasts and Podcast One.
Thank you for listening to this Podcast One production, available on Apple Podcasts and Podcast One.
On April 15th, 1979, Harriet Simmons left her home in Raleigh, North Carolina, for a weekend trip to Nashville.
The drive should have taken about eight hours, but Harriet Simmons never arrived at her destination.
Her family feared for her safety and reported her missing.
This is her son-in-law, Ronnie DeMint.
It was totally out of character for a mom not to call when we knew she would,
because her kids were her life, and she would never go that long and not be in touch with them.
One-third of all murder cases in America remain open.
Each one is called a cold case, and only 1% are ever solved. This is one of those
rare cases. From A&E, this is Cold Case Files, the podcast.
The family joins in the search. Ronnie retraces the route that Harriet would have taken to get to Nashville.
Two and a half hours into the search, he finds an important piece of evidence.
Harriet's car.
The car was parked just off an exit lane leading out of a rust area.
This is Ronnie again.
Seeing the car where it was, I know it was out of character that her mom would never stop the
car in that position. I just knew something happened as she was leaving that rest area.
I didn't know what, but I knew she would never stop her car there.
The police search the car for clues of Harriet's whereabouts. It's what they don't find that
makes them suspicious.
Her keys and purse are missing.
They also notice that the car has a flat tire and theorize that Harriet might have asked a stranger for help.
That stranger might have been responsible for her disappearance.
It was a new car.
Who leaves, I mean, a new car in her situation,
a brand new car that was in running condition and working order.
That was Richard, Harriet's son.
Richard and his six siblings, ranging in age from 9 to 22,
were growing increasingly anxious for information about their mother's disappearance.
Harriet's children suspected that the police were not taking her case seriously.
This is her daughter, Julia.
They acted as if she was a runaway mother.
You know, they stereotyped, she's single, she's da-da-da.
You know, and until, I mean, I actually remember talking to an investigator
and them actually saying, you know, the oldest one of you guys is 19 or 21, you know,
and they just really basically treated us like we were a bunch of little kids crying,
hey, I want my mommy, where is she?
Even if the detectives had the best of intentions,
there was no body, no fingerprints, and no usable evidence from the car.
Harriet Simmons' case was going nowhere.
That is, until 11 months later, when her missing persons investigation became a murder investigation.
In a rural area, 260 miles from Harriet's home in Raleigh,
Captain Mike Wright discovered a human skeleton.
The skull had been moved from the location of the rest of the bones probably by animal activity.
And so we did a grid search of the surrounding area
and then located articles of clothing and additional bones and evidence in the leaves.
The bones, clothing, and other additional evidence
were taken to the medical examiner for possible identification.
He determined that the victim was a woman between the ages of 45 and 55 years old.
He also noticed four cuts in the victim's clothing that matched identical cuts in the victim's bones.
This is Dr. John Butts, the medical examiner.
What we're looking at here is one of the ribs on the left side, and right here above the label, you can see a little nick in the bone.
So we put those together, the injuries to the bones, the injuries to the label, you can see a little nick in the bone. So we put those together, the injuries to the bones,
the injuries to the clothing,
the fact that we have a relatively young individual,
and the conclusion would be that she's died
as a result of being stabbed.
Using dental records, Dr. Butts was able to determine
that the remains found in the woods
belonged to Harriet Simmons.
The police notified Harriet's children.
This is her son, Jeffrey.
Of course, it's always a shadow hanging over your head.
Again, we were so relieved that she was found and we were able to bury her.
But, of course, you don't want someone to be caught for it.
With no suspects and no leads, Jeffrey's hope for justice doesn't seem likely. That is, until Captain Wright receives an
early morning phone call. I was at home and it was around four o'clock in the morning and the
dispatcher called and said that a body had been located. The location of the second victim was
only 18 miles from the spot where Harriet had been
discovered.
Captain Wright responds to the scene on the bank of the French Broad River in Asheville,
North Carolina.
A local resident tells Captain Wright how he discovered the woman.
She had been stabbed to the chest and a local resident here had heard her call for help when she had
crawled up out of the water, and he had attempted to give CPR.
Investigators began to search the crime scene, looking for evidence, looking for a way to identify the victim.
Investigator David Bassard was working at the scene when another call came in.
An abandoned car had been found nearby.
This is Investigator Bassard.
City police officers initially found the car.
They had been contacted by a Southern Railway dispatcher.
The train crew had seen the car while the train been contacted by a Southern Railway dispatcher.
The train crew had seen the car while the train was crossing this trestle here,
and the vehicle was in the river about 20 feet off the shore, upriver from the bridge,
and the car was partially submerged about 20 feet off the bank.
The police wondered if there was a connection between the abandoned car and the murder just down the river.
They run the license plates through the database at the Department of Motor Vehicles.
It's registered to a local woman, Margaret McConnell.
They said that they had found the car in the river, and they explained what had happened.
Then they asked some of the family to come downtown.
That was Margaret.
She wasn't the victim found by the river,
but she knew who was.
Her 21-year-old daughter, Betty Sue,
had taken the car to work earlier in the evening.
Betty Sue never came back home.
Margaret identifies her daughter's body for the police.
I can't explain how we felt,
how, you know, it was the most terrible thing I'd ever gone through.
A team of local and state investigators is assembled to work on the case.
They start by looking into the life of Betty Sue, her friends, her family, what she liked to do, and where she worked.
Betty Sue worked the night shift at a local donut shop.
She left work at 1 a.m. on the night she was killed.
It would have been physically possible for someone to have killed the victim at the other location,
driven the car back here, pushed the car into the river here,
and climbed up a very small embankment following along the trestle
and be back to the railroad yard where all the railroad workers would be expected to be within a matter of minutes.
That was Investigator Bessard.
The investigation team had also uncovered the fact that the donut shop was frequented by railroad workers.
This is Special Agent Bill Matthews, another member of the investigation team.
There were quite a few railroad men that would come and go in the course of two or three days.
Once we determined who all was there,
we had to find out where they lived and try to interview them that way. In addition to identifying
and interviewing suspects, the investigative team also turned their attention to the car,
which had to be dried out after being retrieved from the river. There were no fingerprints,
no blood, and no leads.
With no viable leads, Betty Sue McConnell joined Harriet Simmons in the file of cold cases.
In the year 1998, 19 years after the murder of Harriet and Betty Sue,
a man known as the Smoky Mountain Gypsy brought a renewed focus to their cases. His given name was Jerry Harmon, and he had a secret. I grew up very much around storytelling and was
a storyteller myself, and the most devastating thing that ever happened to me was a story that I
felt I couldn't tell. I was afraid to tell. What could terrify a man into keeping a devastating secret for 19 years?
It turns out that Jerry Harmon was partially motivated into silence by guilt and shame,
the same feelings that are often associated with an alcohol use disorder.
I lived in a bottle for a long time.
I climbed inside of a bottle and I stayed there and I didn't feel anything. And then the time came when that didn't work anymore. And finally, it just got to the
point to where it was just unbearable. That unbearable feeling led Jerry Harmon to the
office of Captain Pat Hefner at the County Sheriff's Department. Harmon told the police
that he knew things, things that the police needed to know. I knew that I had
been with someone who had committed cold-blooded murder.
Captain Hefner listened as Harmon began his story. It started on August 25th of 1979. He and his
friend had been drinking and partying and driving around for most of the day.
Jerry Harmon was 19 at the time, and his friend, Terry Hyatt, was 22.
After a day of drinking and driving around town, the two men visited a local bar.
Around 2.30 a.m., they decided to leave, loading back into Terry Hyatt's truck.
Here's Jerry Harmon telling the story of what happened next.
There was a young lady pulled up on the driver's side at a traffic light,
and Terry made an obscene gesture towards her,
and then when she turned to the left, he ran her off the road.
And then he jumped out and ran up to her car and jerked the door open
and yelled back at me and said, follow me.
And he jumped in her car and took off.
Harmon did as he was told and followed the car in Terry Hyatt's truck.
They drove for a few miles and then turned down a dirt road.
And then he got the girl out of the car, came back to the truck, got into the truck with her and I got away from
there, you know, and it was obvious what was going on. He was raping this young lady. And
I was just terrified. And then when he finished, I remember he came up to me and said, you
know, asked me if I was going to do anything. And I said, oh, no, no, no, no, no. Well,
he got in her car and started driving up and down the road extremely fast, you know. And I said, oh, no, no, no, no, no. Well, he got in her car and started driving up
and down the road extremely fast, you know. And I remember telling her, get out of here. Go. Leave.
And she kept saying, that's my sister's car. I can't leave my sister's car. And I said,
forget your sister's car. You know, just get away from here. The woman doesn't leave,
and Terry Hyatt pushes her back into the car.
He starts to drive, once again ordering Jerry Harmon to follow.
And no one could ever be as hard on me as I've been on myself.
I should have done this, I could have done that.
But at the time, it was just, I was totally freaking out.
And I just followed him.
I couldn't comprehend what was happening.
Why did I not try to do something?
But still, the thought had never occurred to me to ask if someone was going to die.
That just didn't seem real, you know.
Then we went, and he took her car by some water.
Hyatt pulled the woman out of the car and dragged her towards the river.
And then I heard this girl screaming.
It was, I assumed he was raping her again or something, you know.
I mean, that's what I figured was going on.
And he came back up there.
And then it dawned on me.
I didn't hear the girl anymore.
And I said, you killed that girl, didn't you?
And then he told me, yeah, he had.
Hyatt took the car up the river a couple of miles and pushed it into the water.
When he got back into his truck, his message to the understandably upset Jerry Harmon was clear. I was just freaked out, and he said,
you better not ever tell anybody about this,
because you were here with me, and you'll go to prison the rest of your life just like I will.
After 19 years of silence, Captain Hefner was the first person to hear this horrific story of rape and murder.
Harmon was even able to provide the captain
with the location where the body and the car had been dumped. This is Captain Hefner.
That's what keyed me off because I knew that they had recovered a body at or near the French
Broad River from 1979 or 1980. So I began researching, you know, the ones from 1979 and came up with the name Betty Sue
McConnell. Captain Hefner assigned the case to Detective Ann Benjamin and Agent Tim Shook. Both
were part of the state's cold case team. They started their investigation by talking once again
to Jerry Harmon. Harmon was old enough to remember when the murder happened, but was his account of the crime accurate?
This is Detective Benjamin.
His statement about where it occurred, the description of her car, the fact that it was left in a river,
all those statements that he made led us to believe that he knew exactly what he was talking about. He had mentioned that if we really wanted to verify his story, we need to talk
to Mr. Hyatt's best friend at the time, which was Lester Dean Helms. The investigators, surprised
by this additional information, attempted to locate Lester Helms. They wanted to speak to him
as a witness to see if he would corroborate Jerry Harmon's story. We weren't really accusing him of anything except guilty knowledge
of things that Terry Hyatt would have done.
It took two months, but Detective Benjamin and Special Agent Shook found Lester Helms.
He was a resident in a nursing home.
They asked Helms what he knows about Terry Hyatt and the murder of a woman.
Lester Helms, without hesitation, confirms that Terry Hyatt and the murder of a woman. Lester Helms, without hesitation, confirms that
Terry Hyatt had committed murder. However, the details that followed were not what the investigators
expected. This is Special Agent Shook. And when we ask him to relate what he recalls, he starts
talking about a lady with a flat tire being abducted along the interstate.
Lester Helms was recounting the details of a murder,
but it didn't appear to be the same murder that Jerry Harmon had shared.
In Lester Helms' statement, Terry Hyatt had raped a woman and then dumped her body in the woods, 18 miles from where Betty Sue was found.
Though initially confused,
it didn't take the investigators long to relate the new story to an old crime.
As we're walking out to the car, I remember turning to Tim and saying,
what was that all about? And he says, I think I know.
I had read the file and it began to click. That sounds like the Harriet Simmons murder because
her skeletal
remains had been found in Buncombe County up near the Blue Ridge Parkway. The cases of Harriet
Simmons and Betty Sue McConnell had never been connected before. Both women had been abducted
from a car and stabbed several times, and both victims had been dumped in a remote location.
This discovery did, however, leave one question unanswered.
If these cases had gone unconnected for 19 years,
was it possible that there were even more victims?
Detective Benjamin looks up Terry Hyatt's criminal record
and discovers that he'd been sent to prison in 1979 for kidnapping.
The kidnapping had occurred just a few months after Betty Sue's murder.
The woman's name was Carolyn Brigman, and she had survived the attack.
She was alive.
Detective Benjamin spoke with her.
Ms. Brigman was very, very fearful all these years of him.
He had threatened her that he would come back and get her at the trial.
She didn't have a driver's license.
She didn't want anybody to track her. So I actually found her through her children. Carolyn Brinkman had been
walking down the street when she noticed a man who appeared to be having trouble with his truck.
As she walked by, the man reached out and grabbed her. He put a knife to her throat and told her not
to yell and to get into the truck. Carolyn, even 20 years later,
struggles to talk about what happened to her.
This is her daughter, Melissa.
My mom was trying to convince him to let her go,
that she wouldn't tell anybody.
After a while, he told her that he was going to do something he had never done before,
and he was going to give her back her life.
The details that Carolyn Br Brigman shared about her attack
were almost identical to the two unsolved murders
that Terry Hyatt was suspected of committing.
In order for the investigators to convict Terry Hyatt,
they needed the testimony of Carolyn Brigman.
She was very willing to go ahead and testify in court,
which we desperately wanted, and she agreed to.
Trauma affects people in different ways. There's no right way to react to trauma.
People also recover from trauma using different methods.
I hope this was a healing experience for Carolyn Brighman. On November 19, 1998, Terry Alvin Hyatt was brought in for questioning
about the murders of Harriet Simmons and Betty Sue McConnell.
Now 40 years old, Terry Hyatt brought his father with him for support.
He seemed fairly willing to talk, but his father was very apprehensive and,
you know, would rather we weren't there. But of course, Terry was in his 40s then,
and he made the decision to talk to us. He's first questioned about Betty Sue McConnell.
Hyatt places himself at the scene of the crime, but he denies that he killed Betty Sue.
The investigators then begin to ask questions about Harriet Simmons.
Hyatt doesn't answer, and then he asks for an attorney.
He's arrested for the murder of both women.
Rodney Hasty was the prosecutor in Terry Hyatt's case,
and even though it appears obvious that Hyatt was the culprit,
the physical evidence was lacking.
We didn't have any, you know, hardcore DNA evidence
that could show that he was the person that raped them,
but we had lots and lots of pieces of the puzzle that, when assembled,
painted a clear picture that this guy is the one that committed these murders.
Despite the lack of DNA, the prosecution seeks the death penalty,
and on January 6, 2000, Terry Alvin Hyatt's trial begins.
The first to testify on behalf of the prosecution is Jerry Harmon.
I knew I was finally doing what I should have done before.
He'd killed an innocent woman that had a family and had done nothing to him whatsoever.
No kind of self-defense was involved. It was just cold murder.
Harmon's testimony is followed by Lester Helms. The final witness for the prosecution is Carolyn
Brickman. Rodney Hastie, the prosecutor, describes the impact of her testimony.
I have not seen more chilling testimony come from the witness stand than I did that day
when all the family members were there in the courtroom
lined up hearing this for the first time.
And here this woman is, brave enough
to be the only one that lived.
And at the time she testified, for all she knew,
the jury might let him go and walk out of that courtroom.
On January 31, 2000,
a jury finds Terry Hyatt guilty on all counts.
The judge then announces his sentence.
Terry Alvin Hyatt will be put to death as by law provided.
While on death row, Terry Hyatt's DNA was collected and entered into the state databank.
Another match is found.
A woman named Jerrianne Jones was raped and murdered in Charlotte.
When faced with the DNA evidence
and offered a deal to avoid a second death sentence,
Terry Hyatt confessed.
I was killing time riding around drinking, getting high.
And when I spotted her,
I guess I thought it wouldn't have sex with her.
I basically forced her into the back of the truck before she even knew what was going on.
I had to cover up my stupidity on the snake.
That's why I had to do it.
That's when you killed her?
You said that she couldn't tell anybody what you'd done?
She tried to run.
Okay.
From the back of the truck.
I grabbed her.
I grabbed her and stabbed her at the same time.
The families of Harriet Simmons and Betty Sue McConnell were present in the courtroom
on the day that Terry Hyatt pled guilty to the murder of Jerry Jones.
Here's Jeffrey Jones, Harriet's son.
We grieve for the other Jones family.
And we offer our complete support, and we're glad
that he's being exposed for what he is.
In 2009, Terry Hyatt filed a motion with the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals claiming that
he was improperly questioned without an attorney.
A three-judge panel denied his claim and upheld his conviction and sentence.
Terry Hyatt has been on death row for the past 17 years.
Margaret McConnell continues to grieve for her daughter, Betty Sue.
When asked how she feels about Terry Hyatt's sentence, this is what she had to say.
Some days I think he should sit there and suffer, but I don't think he's doing that
because I really don't think it bothers him.
I may be wrong, but I really don't.
So I think he should just be put to death.
I really do.
Cold Case Files, the podcast is hosted by Brooke Giddings. Thank you. Files TV series was produced by Curtis Productions and hosted by Bill Curtis.
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