Cold Case Files - The Tourniquet - Burning Desire

Episode Date: October 21, 2025

DNA evidence found on a murder victim whose body had been dumped in a Dairy Queen drive-thru leads to the arrest of Houston’s notorious tourniquet killer. A young woman is found shot and bu...rned in a California olive orchard.Happy Mammoth: Go to HappyMammoth.com and get 15% off your first order with code COLDCASE at checkout!!Homes.com: We’ve done your homework.IQBAR - Get 20% off all IQBAR products plus free shipping by texting COLD to 64000Rosetta Stone: Cold Case Files listeners can get Rosetta Stone’s lifetime membership for 50% off when you go to RosettaStone.com/coldcaseSee 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 00:00:00 Okay, let's talk about the original enemies to lovers story. Before all of our reality TV couples, before the rom-coms, we binge, there was Elizabeth Bennett and Mr. Darcy in pride and prejudice. And Audible has just dropped a brand new original that will have you completely hooked, I am. It's not just any audiobook. This is a full cast performance. So Marisa Abella, you might know her from industry, brings Elizabeth Bennett to life.
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Starting point is 00:00:58 So whether it's your first time experiencing Pride and Prejudice or you've read it a million times, you're going to fall absolutely in love all over again. So go listen to Pride and Prejudice now at audible.cai slash Jane Austen. Hi, Cold Case listeners. I'm Marissa Pinson. And if you're enjoying this show, I just want to remind you that episodes of Cold Case Files as well as the A&E Classic Podcast, I survived, American Justice, and City Confidential are all available ad-free on the new A&E Crime and Investigation Channel. on Apple Podcasts and Apple Plus for just $4.99 a month or $39.99 a year. And now on to the show. This program contains subject matter that may be disturbing to some listeners. Listener discretion is advised. There are over 100,000 cold cases in America. Only 1% are ever solved. This is one of those rare stories. It's April 16th, 1992. Ron Horowitz is a crime scene investigator for the city of Houston.
Starting point is 00:02:07 I was in the homicide office when the call came down that there was a D.O.A. behind a dairy plane on Westview. The young lady's body was laying approximately right here. On a spring morning, he responds to a murder call. Her panties were dropped, pulled down to her knees. The victim lies in the drive-thru lane of the local Dairy Queen. And she had this little rope tied around her neck with a piece of, I believe, dowel or wood. Horowitz documents the scene on film, then turns his attention to physical evidence.
Starting point is 00:02:45 Investigators recover semen from the young woman's mouth and scrapings from under her fingernails. And begin with a simple question, who is the victim? One hour later, at 11 a.m., 23-year-old Rosa Agrada turns on a local news broadcast. The lead story is about the woman found dead at the Dairy Queen. Rosa spots something familiar about the victim, whose feet are peeking out of the sheet that covers her. I looked at the TV, and the only thing I could see was her shoes. Rosa recognizes the white and gold shoes as identical to ones owned by her friend, Maria del Carmen, Estrada. Maria was supposed to meet at Rosa's house earlier that morning, but never showed up.
Starting point is 00:03:32 Now Rosa sees the shoes and wonders. I said, no, it's not her. It's not her. She got to do, she's probably doing something else and she forgot to tell me. Rosa gets in the car and searches for her friend. First place that I started looking for her, it was right here, this place. That was a store. I came in there and I said, well, she probably went into the store to buy something. This is the street that I, she walked. After 10 hours of searching, Rosa comes up empty, and at 10 o'clock, she approaches a detective at the crime scene. He showed me some pictures. I just start crying a lot and saying it's not her, it's not her. Then he asked me again, because I was saying that, are you sure it is her? And I told him, it is her.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Rosa Agrata identifies the body of her best friend, Maria Estrada. Houston homicide investigates, questioning the victim's boyfriend who has a solid alibi. Next, they turn to a list of known sex offenders, eliminating each intern. Six months after her body was discovered, Maria Estrada's murder remains unsolved. And her evidence is shifted to permanent storage among the cold files. I got called at 12.48 a.m. I was at home in bed asleep. Two years later, on August 8, 1994, a call comes into the Houston Police Department. The body of a young girl has been found in an empty parking lot on the city's near north side.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Bob King is a homicide detective. It looked like her body had been carried and then laid on its right side. All she had on was the t-shirt she had been wearing when she left her house. It was a Halloween t-shirt with a black t-shirt. with a black cat and a pumpkin and a bat. The nine-year-old is IDed as Diana Rebojar. Twelve hours earlier, she had left home on a walk to the grocery store
Starting point is 00:05:33 to buy some sugar for her mother, Virginia. I went and informed at the Tienda, me said that she had regressed out of the Tienda. And I went and I said to my husband to her policeia, and I wasque with... And so Diana walked from her duplex, northbound along North Maine here, to the Wing Fong Market.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And people saw her as she went along her way. She bought the bag of sugar, and she was on her way back. A man sitting on his porch, saw her pass in front of him. Another man stopped and said, go home, Mihita, and she said she was. Diana was two blocks from her home when she simply vanished. The child has been sexually assaulted and strangled to death. The ligature was peculiar in that it was a tourniquet, a nylon cord, which turned out to be parachute cord, tightened with a bamboo stick. King believes the tourniquet could be a signature unique to this killer.
Starting point is 00:06:38 He shares photographs of the Rebouyar crime scene with other detectives. Sergeant Rick Maxey said, well, whoever killed Rebiar killed Estrada. And I said, who's Estrada? And he said, well, we call her the Dairy Queen girl. She was murdered in April of 1992. King pulls the cold file on the Estrada case, and the more he reads, the more similarities he finds between the murders of Diana Rebojar and Maria Estrada. Both had been strangled the same peculiar tourniquet-style ligature.
Starting point is 00:07:12 They were both Hispanic. They were both small in stature and young. Diana Rebiar was nine, Maria Estrada was 21, but she was very small. King orders forensic testing on the Rebojar case, but there is no useful evidence. Seamen from the Estrada case, however, provides a limited DNA profile. We brought in many potential suspects who provided samples of their blood, their hair, their saliva for us to compare to the DNA in the Estrada case, but none of them ever matched. After a year-long investigation, Detective King has come up with no viable suspect.
Starting point is 00:07:57 This kind of case can take a heavy toll on you. And if you don't find him, it's going to keep on. And more girls are going to die. So it becomes a life and death matter. It would be the first thing I thought about when I got up in the morning, the last thing I thought about when I went to sleep at night. and all hours during the day. The two murders would continue to haunt King until one day in 1995 when a phone rings in a newsroom and at the other end of the line
Starting point is 00:08:28 is a serial killer. And then I asked him, I said, I am talking to the killer. And he hung up. Barbara McGuña works the assignment desk at KPRC in Houston. Among her duties is handling calls on the station's tip line.
Starting point is 00:08:45 I said, this is the tip line. He said, I have a tip for you. And I said, what would that be? And he said, there's a serial killer on the loose. I said, okay, well, how can, you know, how can you prove this? And he said, I'm going to prove it to you. I'm going to tell you where you can find a body. The caller directs Magunya to a vacant field just beyond the city limits, where he claims
Starting point is 00:09:05 police will find a woman's body. I had asked him specifically point blank. I said, I'm talking to the killer. He didn't answer. kind of like, it was almost like a breath, almost like a sigh, almost like a relief sigh. And then I asked him, I said, I am talking to the killer. And he hung up. There was nothing here. It was vacant. Weeds were approximately knee-high or better. And we started back in this area searching and didn't find anything.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Roger Wedgworth is a homicide detective with Harris County. Acting on McGuania's tip, He searches the field, hoping the whole thing is a hoax. So we went to the northwest part of this vacant area, and as we were walking down, smelled a foul odor, which we recognized to be a decomposing flesh, and we followed that smell up to this area right in here. Bedded down in the grass is the severely decomposed body of a woman. Around her neck is a rope, tightly bound with a toothbrush.
Starting point is 00:10:18 The makeshift tourniquet warrants a call to Houston homicide and Detective Bob King. We had made the detectives with the Harris County Homicide Division aware of our cases, that we were looking for any murders involving maybe Hispanic victim who has been strangled with a tourniquet. Detective King has worked two similar cases. the 1992 murder of Maria Estrada and the 94 murder of Diana Reboliar. The latest victim is 16 and IDed as a local girl Dana Sanchez. These girls are all strangled.
Starting point is 00:10:59 They're all strangled with a tourniquet-style ligature. They're all young, 9, 16, 21 years old. They're all very small in stature. They all have long hair. which we considered a factor for control. The conclusion was these three cases are linked up. So once that decision had been made, then the management decided to look,
Starting point is 00:11:27 we need to pool our resources and work the cases together. Sergeant Danny Billingsley leads a task force of city and county investigators in the hunt for the tourniquet killer. Well, you know, there was no doubt in our mind this guy's going to hit again. And we were just waiting for that to happen.
Starting point is 00:11:46 I mean, our biggest fear was before we could get up on him, he was going to kill another woman. For the suspects that looked really pretty good, myself and other detectives would go out, find him, try to get his cooperation. The sex offenders that lived in the area, all those sort of things were run out and checked. The investigators on the case have more than 50 years combined field experience.
Starting point is 00:12:19 After six months, however, they have nothing to show for their efforts. With newer crimes on the rise, the task force is disbanded, and the murders of three young girls are returned to the cold files. In 2002, seven years after their work on the task force, detectives Harry Ficaris and Roger Wedgworth are still tracking killers and haven't forgotten about the one who likes to use a tourniquet. You won't ever forget about a homicide that you've worked on, but especially this case because you know that there's a serial killer
Starting point is 00:12:52 that was responsible for these people. So it's always there and you're always wondering, well, when is he going to strike again? Now working in Harris County's cold case unit, Ficaris and Wedworth begin with the murder of 16-year-old Dana Sanchez. When her body was found, she was not clothed. And the only thing that was on her person was the ligature around her neck and a toothbrush that was used to tighten up that ligature. It was just one of those shots, you know, in the dark, hoping that we could get something out of that.
Starting point is 00:13:27 Harris County sends the ligature to Orchid Cellmark Laboratories for DNA testing. That was the only evidence that we had that we could process at all. And then, of course, whenever we sent it off, we found out everything was two degrees. rated. But then again, we knew that the city had some cases, so we started talking to them about processing some of their evidence with a new technology. Detective Bob King pulls material from the other two tourniquet cases out of Houston's evidence locker. Now, the Harris County homicide detectives on the Cole case squad said we exclusively use Orchid Cellmark to test our evidence. And there is an analyst up there named Catherine Long.
Starting point is 00:14:10 who is just great and she can find this evidence. If there is DNA to be had, she will find it. Do it place the, once we open the fingernails, place them in a tube and pour or place liquid on top of them. In September of 2003, DNA analyst Catherine Long receives evidence from the Houston homicides. Long begins her testing on fingernail clippings from Maria Estrada.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Once we get the debris off of the fingernail, basically what we're doing is just opening up the cells and taking the DNA out, purifying it. Long identifies an unknown male DNA profile from underneath Maria's fingernails, most likely skin from her attacker. When we finally got something that was male, especially under fingernails, that's a pretty intimate sample.
Starting point is 00:15:04 And it was a good feeling. Long sends the profile through Kodis, a national database of DNA profiles taken from criminal offenders. An hour later, she gets a call. CODIS has a hit. The DNA profile actually matched somebody who was in the CODIS database, and that was Tony Shore. I know with this profile, I just feel in my heart that it's going to be a conviction at that point.
Starting point is 00:15:32 The new suspect is 41 years old, with a criminal history that includes molesting his two daughters. The more Detective Wedgworth hears, the better the chances for a conviction. Oh, I think somebody's going to jail. That's exactly what I think. Are you planning a trip this fall or over the holidays? Think how much more meaningful it could be when you can greet locals in their own language. Or order your favorite meal with confidence. Rosetta Stone helps you travel smarter and connect deeper. So every conversation feels more authentic.
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Starting point is 00:17:19 started and claim your 50% off today. Don't miss out. Go to rosettastone.com slash cold case and start learning today. Homes.com knows that when it comes to home shopping, it's never just about the house or condo. It's about the home. And what makes a home is more than just the house or property. It's a location and neighborhood. If you have kids, it's a also schools, nearby parks, and transportation options. That's why Homes.com goes above and beyond to bring home shoppers the in-depth information they need to find the right home. And when I say in-depth, I'm talking deep. Each listing features comprehensive information about the 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
Starting point is 00:18:04 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. Well, I was just on patrol, and a homicide sergeant in an unmarked unit got on the radio and asked for backup. On October 24, 2003, less than two hours into his shift, Houston police officer Robert Farmer, responds to a call for assistance on an arrest. He just told me the man standing down the street wearing a black t-shirt is wanted for murder. Let's go get it.
Starting point is 00:18:46 The suspect is a convicted sex offender named Anthony Allen Shore. He has been linked by DNA to one murder and by M.O. to two others. Police approach Shore at the record yard where he works and tells him he's under arrest. I told him to put his hands behind his back to handcuff him. And I noticed he had a cigarette in his hand. I told him to drop it, and he wouldn't drop it. So I'd cracked him on the knuckles with a flashlight to knock the cigarette out of his hand. And after that, there was no further resistance.
Starting point is 00:19:18 He was sitting in a chair against the wall, calm, cool, collective, so to speak. Houston Homicide Sergeant John Swame is known as a master interrogator and is brought in to talk to Anthony Shore. The interview takes place in a 10 by 20. 12-foot room. So I showed him the scene photos, basically all of them, all of the scene photos in the Estrada case. I was looking at him to see what his reaction was to the photos, whether he was going to have a reaction to the photos, which he did not, which concerned me.
Starting point is 00:19:55 Which, you know, I'm thinking, well, you know, it's going to be a long night. For over an hour, Swam questions Shore about Maria Estrada, under whose fingernails Shore's DNA was discovered, about 9-year-old Diana Rebolyar, and about 16-year-old Dana Sanchez, both of whom were also raped and strangled. For over an hour, Shore offers nothing. Then, close to midnight, and for no apparent reason, Anthony Shore decides to talk. He puts his hand on the photos of the three cases we knew he did, and he says, John, I'm going to tell you about these cases, and I'm going to give you a couple of bonuses. What do you think about that?
Starting point is 00:20:35 Of course, I think that's great. That's wonderful. And he's kind of looking down the floor, and then he looks up, looks right in my eyes and says, does the name Laura Tremblayam anything to you, John? The name means a lot to Detective Swame. In 1986, he was the lead investigator on the Laura Tremblay case, a 15-year-old girl who was raped and strangled to death.
Starting point is 00:20:59 It was a case Swam could never solve. You could have probably hip-haired. me with a feather knocked me over because, you know, this was another case that I had worked on for many months, you know, and never had a clue who did it. Let's start with at the start and just tell me. First was Lori and Tremblay. And he's kind of got this little gleam in his eye, like he knew that I investigated the case. I undid her bra.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Everything got out of hand. She freaked out. And we got into a fight. I tried to knock her out because I just really freaked out. It's not right. I took this cotton cord and I tried to make sure that she would never, ever tell anybody. And I strangled her. And the cotton cord broke more than once.
Starting point is 00:21:50 It wasn't working. That's all I had. Do you just use your hands or do you use some kind of... This is a cord. Look at your... Yeah, I know, but I mean, did you use them? Yeah, my hands. I...
Starting point is 00:21:59 Your hands? My fingers... Ficked up sensing. And you... He says, well, it was my first one. He said, actually, I put my hand in there and twisted it. And when I did, I injured my finger. And so I decided I better start doing something else.
Starting point is 00:22:14 And so that's basically why he used the tourniquet later on. After confessing to the murder of Laura Tremblay, Shore moves on to another victim police have never connected to him. Talk about another case that y'all don't know about. Okay. There's a reason. I want to talk about this. I said, well, Tony, what's important about him?
Starting point is 00:22:36 Why don't want to tell me about this? He says, well, I didn't kill her. I fought off the evilness, and I was able to do so, and I didn't kill her. So it's important to me. Got her cooperation and tied her up with electrical cord and raped her. I thought that I was going to do this again. But I promised myself that I wasn't going to take any more lives, no matter what, sick being fucked up as it sounds. I really, really, really was trying to get better in a really
Starting point is 00:23:11 sick-demanded way. I don't discount. I'm not stupid, but I was trying not to do what I promised myself I wasn't going to. Shore provides the name of his victim, 14 years old at the time of the attack, and says that it occurred in 1993, a year after he killed Maria Estrada. Schor admits that he didn't stop there, going on to kill Diana Rebellyar, and finally, Dana Sanchez. I was driving around. I saw this girl, she had this look that she was angry and upset, and she was at a pay phone. He sees her on the phone, she hangs up. He can tell she's trouble if something's wrong, trying to get to my boyfriend's house.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Jump right? And we went driving. I started flirting with her, pet on her. She was joking like, no, no, no. I'm like, no, no, no, I got a boyfriend, this and that. So I grabbed her, pulled her into the back of the van. She was fighting so hard, and I didn't want it to happen. And once again, I knew that I couldn't stop.
Starting point is 00:24:19 I knew there was nothing I could do to get out of this. And I used to ligature. Eight days after killing Dana Sanchez, Schor says he called the anonymous tip line at Local 2 News. and told them where her body could be found. With five confessions on tape, Shore claims he is told all there is to tell. He told me, John, I told you, I gave you 100%.
Starting point is 00:24:42 I told you what I did, and that's all I did, and I'm giving you 100%. Anthony Shore is a psychopath. He had, for years, permitted himself the pleasure of indulging in those psychopathic desires, and it was time to put an end to it. Prosecutor Therese Booth decides to charge Anthony Schor only on the case with the strongest DNA evidence, the case of Maria del Carmen Estrada.
Starting point is 00:25:10 On October 21st, 2004, a jury finds Shaw guilty of capital murder. In the penalty phase, Boos seeks a death sentence and brings before the jury all the other victims to clinch her argument. They had no idea that they were going to be hearing about a serial killer. Booth's strategy works. After less than an hour of deliberation, the jury sentences Anthony Shore to death. It's like, finally, you're seeing some justice, you know, finally. And justice has been served with him.
Starting point is 00:25:44 He's on death row, and that's where he belongs. Despite the conviction and Shore's confession tapes, investigators are not convinced they have at all, and believe there might be more victims in Shores' past. If you've got a female strangled, ligature, you've got evidence, check it against Shore. That's all I can tell you. The plan is that after he has been on death row for a while and he's forgotten and lonely that maybe that he'll want to talk to us and open up about any other crimes he might have committed.
Starting point is 00:26:24 Anthony Shore was executed by lethal injection on January 18, 2018. Ben Grassmuck is an officer for the California Highway Patrol. On January 4th, 1997, just before midnight, Grassmuck sweeps his beat, a quiet stretch along Highway 99 in Madera County. We're on State Route 99, and we're in the area where Fresno County and Madeira County meet. And when we were still in the freeway, I happened to glance over there, and I saw a fire. Grassmuck follows the flames into a nearby olive orchard, where he discovers a body. The torso was on fire, and I can see her, I'll never forget, her two legs sticking up out of the fire towards me.
Starting point is 00:27:19 I immediately knew it was a woman, and I immediately knew she'd been murdered. It appeared that she was relatively young. Detective Kathy Starr responds to the scene. There was extensive burning to the body. The victim was lying on her back. Her legs were up and open. There aren't any homes in this area. It's not a widely traveled road here.
Starting point is 00:27:42 So to come in here, dump a body, set the fire. Very unlikely that you're going to be noticed. Star combs the orchard for clues. and happens upon some footprints in the dirt. There were two sets of footprints. One appeared to have been wearing socks. The other was clearly a bare footprint. The prints and nearby tire tracks are photographed.
Starting point is 00:28:09 Meanwhile, at the morgue, the pathologist determines the victim was shot twice in the head. This would be the first gunshot wound that exited here. This was the second gunshot wound where the 25 caliber. the bullet was recovered. Starr believes the victim was shot dead and then set on fire in an effort to cover up the crime. Next, Star sets out to ID the victim.
Starting point is 00:28:33 If we didn't know who the victim was, we weren't going to find out who the suspect was. Starr puts out an APB on her Jane Doe and then waits. There are a lot of missing persons cases. It's 4th of July weekend, so we were real uncertain as to how soon we were going to be able
Starting point is 00:28:50 to identify this victim. I know, like I started to feel like something is wrong. Ruth Pimentel has an uneasy feeling. Her best friend, Andrea Bourne, is missing. Annie called me at 7 and said she was on my way to my house, our house, and she was with Jay. And she never came home. And I think Jay's done something to her. Jay is J.L. Travis, Andrea's boyfriend, and the last known person to see her alive.
Starting point is 00:29:19 I knew his history, like I knew he was in jail. You know, I knew that he had guns and that he held him to Annie's head in the past and that she had told me that. So I really thought that something was wrong, and I told that to the police. Fresno police take down the missing persons report and compare the details to Starr's bulletin about the burning body. They have here as a white female adult in her 20s, five-year-old. nine blue eyes and blonde hair. And that matched the information that we had taken so far on
Starting point is 00:29:57 our Jane Doe. Dental records confirm the body to be that of Andrea Bourne. You just kind of like your mind can wrap around this and say, okay, this is what happened to my beautiful, happy, sweet daughter. Gloria Barnes is Andrea's mother. On July 9th, Detective Star tells her that her daughter is dead. She said, well, we have made a positive identification on the body, and I'm really sorry to tell you that it is your daughter, Annie. And I just started to cry. They said, well, her body was burned beyond recognition. And I just totally lost it. As Gloria deals with the loss of her daughter, Kathy Starr turns her attention to Andrea's boyfriend, J.L. Travis. Okay. This The date is July 6th.
Starting point is 00:30:51 My name is Detective Kathy Starr. In a small interview room, J.L. Travis tells detectives he had nothing to do with Annie's disappearance, insisting he took her to a pool party on the 4th of July, then dropped her safely at home. Detective Terry Ginder assists in the interrogation. So I kissed her and she got out of the car and she shut the door. After that, she started walking to her door. She opened the door up and I drove off.
Starting point is 00:31:21 He was avoiding eye contact. His body language suggested that he was not wanting to open up and be truthful with us. It was very hard to believe him because he wasn't consistent. Even when he was trying to act as though he was grieving for his lost girlfriend, it was so transparent. It was almost laughable, how little he cared. Detective Starr and Ginder questioned J.L. for hours, probing his story and searching for a motive.
Starting point is 00:31:53 Eventually, J.L. tells detectives that just weeks earlier, Annie had met someone new. You had become aware of Annie's involvement with another person. Can you tell me about that? I had paged her because I put I Love You in her pager. Then she had paged me back. And she told me, don't page her no more because she had a new boyfriend and he don't appreciate me Paige in her. And I said, oh, I didn't know you had a boyfriend. Jealousy. I think the victim was going to leave J.L. And I think he was having a hard time coping with that. Jealously makes people do some strange things. But detectives will need more than a theory to arrest J.L. Travis. Starr then asks to look at J.L.'s feet. I was looking for
Starting point is 00:32:48 anything on his feet that would be consistent with walking out in that orchard. As you can see, we have abrasions in his feet and small puncture wounds, which could very well have been made by the debris in that field. Along with the abrasions, the size and shape of Travis' feet matched the bare footprints found in the orchard. There were similarities, yes, the shape of the toes, the way the toes overlapped here and here, the size of the of the big toe. With the evidentiary trail heating up, Star decides she wants to examine Travis's car. We compared the tire tracks, and they didn't match in size or tire impression to what we had
Starting point is 00:33:32 at the crime scene. There was no blood, even on the windshield. There was negative for blood. Detectives have an intriguing circumstantial case, but not enough for an arrest. After more than 12 hours of questioning, Star releases JL. L. Travis. We knew we had our guy, and now it was just building the case so that we had enough evidence that we could convince the jury of that. We continually were trapping him in lies and inconsistencies.
Starting point is 00:34:01 He was just not trustworthy. J.L. Travis has talked at length about the day that Andrea Bourne was killed. Now, Starr takes his statements and tries to find any holes in his story. He had mentioned to me that after Leibald the pool party and driving Annie home. His cousin, Kevin Mitchell, was with him. So we went looking for Kevin Mitchell. Mitchell repeats the same story J.L. Travis told,
Starting point is 00:34:28 except for one small detail. He was the one that initially told us that they were in Tracy DeVaris' car. Tracy is J.L.'s other girlfriend. He has two children with her. There was no reason to not think that she had been murdered in that car. Even if she had been transported in that vehicle, there would have been trace evidence that would have been left.
Starting point is 00:34:51 Starr pays Tracy a visit and asks to see her car. Her story is, well, I'm sorry my car was stolen. How convenient that her car is stolen three days after Annie's homicide and that she forgot to mention to us the fact that she had loaned that car to jail that time. Detectives don't believe Tracy Tavares any more than they believed her boyfriend. Starr sees Tavares as a jealous and perhaps a violent girlfriend. She wanted Annie out of the way, and we felt that she had the influence over J.L. That she could make that happen. I think we tried every tact we could take with her to try to get her to best up, to crack.
Starting point is 00:35:35 She was, I felt very much going to stand by J.L. No matter what. Yeah. Detectives believe the best way to crack Tracy is to find her car. Within weeks, the vehicles recovered in the garage at Kevin Mitchell's mom's house. We're thinking, we've got our car, and we're going to find the trace evidence in this car. When we searched the car, this car was pristine. It was cleaner than anything you would get off a showroom floor.
Starting point is 00:36:04 Tracy Tavares' car yields no connections to the murder. And after three months, Starr gets pulled off the case and onto more recent homicides. It was very difficult to let go. Yeah, especially being so close, being so close in having to let go of it. Andrea Bourne's murder falls into the cold files, where it will stay for three years, until J.L. Travis's cousin, Kevin Mitchell, resurfaces. We were just driving, and I heard Jay, you know, and that's when he shot her. This episode is brought to you by IQ Bar.
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Starting point is 00:39:20 That's happy mammoth.com. Use code cold case for 15% off today. Every case deserves attention. This one cried for attention. Vince Savala is a one-man team, working the oldest and toughest cases in the cold files. Well, whenever fresh eyes look at a case, they may see something that the original investigator didn't see. In 1999, Zavala picks up the unsolved murder of Andrea Bourne and digs in.
Starting point is 00:39:53 The Madeira County Sheriff's Department had focused on three individuals, Jacob Lee Travis, Kevin Mitchell, and Tracy DeVars. When I reviewed the case filed from the Madera County Sheriff's Department, naturally those three people jumped out at me as being primary suspect. In 1997, the three were caught in a web of lies. Travis and Tavares had been interviewed on five different occasions and given five different stories. Kevin Mitchell had been interviewed once and gave a completely different story. Zavala begins the process of re-examining evidence and tracking down leads.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Two months later, he gets his first break. I later discovered by interviewing several people that Jacob Lee, Travis, by his own admission, did, in fact, possess a 25-caliber handgun. So he had the same type of weapon that was used to murder Andrea Bourne in his possession less than 24 hours before she was murdered. This began to put the wheels in motion. Next, Zavala turns to Tracy Tavares' car. Tavares claimed it was stolen just days after the murder.
Starting point is 00:41:06 Police at the time believed the theft report to be made up. A set of prints lifted from the vehicle, however, provide Zavala with an opportunity. The prints were recovered during the initial investigation, but they were never compared to anyone. So we compared him to Kevin Mitchell. The prince belonged to Kevin Mitchell, putting him in line for a potential charge of Grand Theft Auto, unless Mitchell is willing to talk. And they were like, well, you're wondering for Grand Theft Auto. And I'm thinking, oh my God, I just started crying, and I was just told him, look, I'm going to tell you guys.
Starting point is 00:41:40 the truth. We look for the truth. Kevin of his own free will that wants to explain the truth as he knows it. Am I correct, Kevin? On March 15, 2001, Kevin Mitchell sits down with cold case detectives and begins to talk. He was very willing to talk. In my opinion, on one hand, he was relieved to get it off his chest. And of course, on the other hand, he felt if he was truthful and cooperated with us, perhaps the arm of justice wouldn't hit him as hard. Mitchell tells Zavala on July 4, 1997, he went to a pool party and then caught a ride home with Andrea Bourne and J.L. Travis. They were always talking about, I mean, I couldn't hear him because the music was up loud
Starting point is 00:42:27 and there in the front. And could you see if it was a normal conversation? You know, it don't seem, I mean, it seemed like they were arguing. or anything. According to Mitchell, the conversation between Andrea Bourne and J.L. Travis appeared to be normal until J.L. pulled a gun. It was all of, it was like within a split second. When he had got the gun and it was close to her head, she tried to move his hand and she like screamed J. and then it was too late. I can't stop him. That was basically the defining moment in the investigation.
Starting point is 00:43:13 This pretty much is the last nail. We have a strong circumstantial case, and now we have a witness to the murder of Andrea Boy. I'm just basically like, I don't know what to do right now. You know, I was pretty scared, and he shoots her again. I was just sitting in the car, and she was still alive at the time, And, you know, she had this very, very distinctive, like, breathing going on. I couldn't do anything to save her life.
Starting point is 00:43:43 I couldn't do anything. I wanted to, but I couldn't because I was scared for my life. As Andrea Bourne lay dying in the front seat, Mitchell says J.L. drove to the Olive Orchard. He laid her down and he poured gas around her and then on her and then set it on fire and we left. He had this, like, this look in his eyes. I won't forget that look. It's just like the stare that you stare down a victim.
Starting point is 00:44:11 And if you say anything, you could be one too. Four days later, Mitchell says J.L. and Tracy Tavares were back, asking for a favor. They called me over and they said, Kevin, I want you to get rid of the car. They said, don't worry about nothing. You know, the insurance to take care of it. You said at some point Tracy gave you the key. Yeah, she took her key off her. Keep ringing in game of her key.
Starting point is 00:44:37 That was an important statement because we knew that Andrea Bourne had been murdered in Tracy DeVars' vehicle. Now Tracy DeVars, Jacob Lee Travis, and Kevin Mitchell have made plans to dispose of the vehicle in an attempt to hinder. Mitchell tells Zavala he hid the car at his mom's house and then left town. After two years of legwork, Zavala believes his case is made. He has an eyewitness to the murder, and finally an arrest warrant in hand for J.L. Travis. I didn't find it unusual that he was still with Tracy DeVars. In my opinion, he felt safe that he was never going to be arrested for the murder of Andrea Bourne. They were living out in rural Fresno County on a piece of property owned by Tracy DeVars' family.
Starting point is 00:45:31 On March 20th, Detective Zavala brings Travis to the Madera County Sheriff's Office and charges him with murder. He was shocked initially. Initially, when I interviewed him, he was very remorseful. And at that point, I thought he may confess. And he then snapped out of it and denied any involvement. J.L. Travis is sent to jail to await trial. Meanwhile, Zavala turns to the woman he believes. leaves to be his accomplice, Tracy Tavares.
Starting point is 00:46:04 Worst case scenario, I think she was involved. Lease case scenario, she knew what happened and she was not truthful with law enforcement. Zavala books Tavares on insurance fraud for falsely reporting her car stolen, but she takes a plea and will serve no time. It's frustrating, but we can only do the best we can with what we have. Kevin Mitchell is never charged with a crime. J.L. Travis, however, does not get off so easy. On February 20, 2003, he pleads guilty to a charge of second-degree murder
Starting point is 00:46:37 and receives 15 years to life. He wanted the best of all worlds. He wanted this young, beautiful, intelligent woman, Andrea Bourne. He wanted the mother of his children, Tracy DeVaris. He wanted his cake and he wanted to eat it too. I think he realized that he was losing her. And rather than if he couldn't have her, no one was going to happen.
Starting point is 00:47:03 And so that was the motive for killing her. When you're the victim of this kind of crime, you don't have any closure. Gloria Barnes lives alone, surrounded by fragments of her daughter's life. It just never goes away. It just kind of eats at you. And you try to go on with your life,
Starting point is 00:47:25 and you try to find some happiness. And then it just has... It's like you're going through the motions. This October, fear is free on Pluto TV with horror movie collections from paranormal activity, The Ring. You will die in seven days. Scream. And from dusk till dawn.
Starting point is 00:47:51 This is my kind of place. And don't miss the man-made nightmares in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein or the world ending chaos in 28 days later. There's something in the blood. All the scares, all for free. Pluto TV, stream now, pay never.

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