Crime Junkie - *BREAKING NEWS* MURDERED: Marcus Rutledge
Episode Date: February 10, 2025A young father moves to Nashville chasing his college dreams, but in June 1998, 23-year-old Marcus Rutledge vanishes after taking his daughter to daycare. His disappearance reveals a life filled with ...secrets...and even after the discovery of his skull, his family is left wondering if they'll ever know what really happened.If you have any information, please contact the Metro Nashville PD at 615-862-8600 or the department’s Crime Stoppers Division at 615-74-CRIME (615-742-7463). Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-marcus-rutledge/Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies. Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Brett.
And the story I have for you today is about how a young man's disappearance revealed
a secret life. And his secret life made it so much harder for investigators to solve
his disappearance. This is the story of Marcus Rutledge. So it's the afternoon on Monday, June 8, 1998, and a woman named Tawania is getting
kind of nervous.
She and her 23-year-old boyfriend Marcus Rutledge were supposed to meet up, but he's a no-show. Not even answering his cell phone.
She's like calling him and calling him,
but she's just not hearing anything back.
And when's the last time she spoke to him?
So it actually hasn't been very long.
I mean, he had spent the night at her place
and then took their two-year-old daughter to daycare
around like 10 o'clock that morning.
And they've even honestly talked on the phone
since at like 1, 1.30 that afternoon.
So truly, very little time has passed. It might not even honestly talked on the phone since at like 1, 1.30 that afternoon. So truly very little time has passed.
It might not even ring alarm bells for some people. But the thing is, this is totally uncharacteristic of Marcus not to answer his
phone. And if he did miss a call, he would get back to whoever tried him like ASAP. So right away, she knows in her gut that
something just doesn't feel right. So she reaches out to Marcus's parents, David and Geraldine, known as Jerry.
And she's just trying to see if they have heard anything from him.
They're not local.
They're in Southeast Michigan while Tawani and Marcus both live in Nashville, Tennessee.
Marcus had actually moved to Nashville to attend Tennessee State University, TSU.
But even with the distance, his family talks to him pretty regularly.
So Tawania is hoping that they might know where he is.
But it turns out they haven't heard from him either.
Now, according to what his dad David told our reporter Nina,
when he got that first call from Tawania, he understood her concern.
Like Marcus going MIA, even to him, is unheard of.
But, you know, he tries to reassure her at first.
Maybe Marcus just got held up somewhere.
It'll be fine. Just, like, give it a beat.
Right.
But Tawania says that she wants to go to Marcus'
duplex apartment to just check on him.
So David tells her, like, okay, just, like, keep me posted.
And meanwhile, he and Jerry start making a series
of unsuccessful calls to Marcus themselves,
trying to reach him.
So when Tawania pulls up to Marcus' apartment, his car, this red 1995 Plymouth Neon, isn't
there.
But instead of that reassuring her, like, oh, he's just out for some reason, she's
actually more convinced than ever that something is up and she needs to get into his apartment.
Now even though they've been together for a little bit, it doesn't look like she has
a key to his place.
So she devises this plan to call Marcus's best friend, Aethan Gibbs Jr., who basically
helps her just break into the place.
That feels like a pretty big leave.
I guess.
I mean, I think it's the unanswered phone calls.
They're just, again, I can't-
It's so unlike him.
So unlike him.
Even when she calls Aethan, like, he doesn't think she's overreacting. He's just, again, I can't... It's so unlike him. So unlike him. Even when she calls Ethan, like, he doesn't think she's overreacting.
He's just as concerned.
So when Ethan gets there, he and Tawania break in through a back window.
And what they find inside just kind of confirms for them that they made the right decision.
Because even though there's no sign of a struggle or foul play, Marcus' Rottweiler is shut in
his bathroom with no food or water, except, like, the water in the toilet.
And they can tell that he's been there for a while
because he had eaten part of the bathroom carpet.
And they know that Marcus would never leave his dog like that.
Not even for a short amount of time,
let alone for however long it took this dog
to start chewing on the rug.
So there's no indication that Marcus was planning
for any kind of trip, right?
Like his clothes are still there,
there's no bag or suitcase that's packed or even missing.
Like nothing is standing out to them.
So with David and Jerry's encouragement,
Tawania calls the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department
that very night, and an officer
comes to take a missing persons report.
Now, initially, he gets some basic details about Marcus.
He puts out a bolo for his car, which should stick out because, like, it has not only is
it red, but like has Michigan plates.
It's not local.
Right.
Now, even though there is nothing in his apartment that is obviously out of place, like it doesn't
appear that he was even robbed, nothing like that.
David told us that something was taken from Marcus's apartment that day that police do kind of check out.
So Marcus's landline phone was taken, but there's no mystery about who took it.
It was Tawania.
Why?
She says apparently it was her phone and she wanted it back?
Why did police let her take anything?
I don't know.
I don't know if they didn't realize that she even did at first.
We actually got to speak with Nashville cold case detective Matt Filter.
He is the one heading up the investigation now, although he wasn't on the force when
this all started, but he told us that Tawania actually took Marcus' caller ID because apparently she
wanted to look for numbers that she might recognize.
I don't know if the caller ID is built into the phone.
I don't know why she would take it instead of telling police.
I was gonna say, but couldn't she have checked it right there at the apartment?
I know.
This part doesn't totally add up for me.
But for whatever reason, she took
it with her.
Police do though get it back from her pretty quickly, like once they realize, but it's
useless to everyone because Detective Filter says that when she unplugged it at Marcus's
house, all of the numbers were automatically erased.
It like factory resets it.
Yes. It loses all the information.
So if she was trying to see something, that information is now gone.
And that's just one of the things weighing on David and Jerry's minds
as they make the 500 plus mile drive to Nashville the next day.
So when they arrive, Tawaniya's house is their first stop.
Now, Tawaniya isn't a stranger to them.
On like a past trip to Nashville, David and Tawania isn't a stranger to them.
On like a past trip to Nashville,
David and Jerry had taken her and Marcus out to dinner,
but this time they're not here for a friendly visit.
Like they want answers from her.
But Tawania tells them she has no idea
what could have happened to Marcus or where he might be.
And the only person she can think of
who Marcus spent a lot of time with is
Ethan. So Marcus's parents arranged to meet up with him at their son's duplex, but he doesn't have any insight to share either. He says that he is just as lost as they are and he wants to help them find Marcus any way he can.
However, David and Jerry can't help but notice that their son's friend seems
awfully nervous. Like, he's literally sweating, he can't sit still,
and there's just this uncomfortable energy that is, like, vibrating off of him.
Have they ever met Ethan before?
So, they actually know him pretty well, because up until a few months ago,
Ethan and Marcus shared an apartment. They were roommates.
But like Marcus had recently decided to get his own place.
So he moved out, like moved into this duplex that they had now looked at.
Did anything prompt that move or was it just like kind of growing up,
wanting your own space? Yeah, I think you can call it that.
I think the two just had like roommate issues,
but stuff that like two people who live together might encounter little things
that just like get under your skin.
Marcus reason you and I have never lived together.
Preach.
Marcus had, I guess, been into his family about Aethyn.
He's messy, his bills weren't getting paid on time, like that kind of thing.
But even after Marcus moved out, he and Aethyn stayed really close friends.
So like there is no bad blood between them.
And honestly, Marcus's family had always liked Aethyn.
He is a respectful guy from a good family.
They never had any cause for concern
about Marcus being around him.
And even now they're wondering if his reaction
is maybe just because of the circumstances.
I mean, his best friend is now missing,
seemingly vanished into thin air.
But Marcus's sister Felicia notices the same strange vibe
when Ethan takes her driving around
to look for her brother's missing car.
She's like, Ethan's acting tense.
He's not saying much other than just like suggesting places
where they should maybe look for the car.
He's saying that he's worried about the whole situation.
But again, nothing like incriminating.
It's just like, it could be chalked up
to the same thing, right?
Now as detectives start digging in,
they begin to learn more about Marcus's life.
He has two children, a nearly four-year-old son
with a former girlfriend in Knoxville,
and a two-year-old daughter with Tawania.
He is super involved with both kids,
always checks in with his son,
but that child and his mom haven't heard from him either.
According to Tennessean reporter Beth Warren, Marcus had last seen his son in May when they went to the zoo,
and they had been planning a big party for his upcoming birthday.
Was there any relationship drama?
No, no. He gets along well with both of his children's mothers, so like, that feels like a quick dead end, which is when they turn to his school.
Maybe someone at the university there
can help them piece things together.
Right.
But this is where they encountered the first big twist
in their investigation.
It turns out Marcus has been keeping some major secrets
from his family.
So police learn that Marcus actually dropped out major secrets from his family.
So police learn that Marcus actually dropped out of college the year before, back in 1997.
What?
Yeah, he's basically been pretending
to be a student ever since.
And his family had no idea.
In fact, the last time Marcus visited his parents,
which was just a few weeks before he went missing,
this was for Memorial Day, he was there for a cookout,
he said he left early because he had to study for an exam.
Did Tawania know?
I don't know.
So, the detective we talked to didn't know either,
and Nina tried calling the number
that Marcus' dad had for Tawania.
We're not sure if it's still the right number for her anymore.
Like, long story short, we haven't been if it's still the right number for her anymore.
Like, long story short, we haven't been able to talk
to her to figure that out.
But either way, his family was shocked
to find this out from police.
Like, going to TSU was the entire reason Marcus moved
to Nashville in the first place.
I mean, both his parents went there.
He wanted to follow in their footsteps.
I mean, the wild part is they thought
he was close to graduating. It's not just that he was going there, they were expecting to go to a graduation soon.
But that's not the only surprise in store for the family.
Because even though Marcus doesn't have a criminal record,
investigators also learn that he'd been selling weed.
And they think that he might have started when he was still a student,
because his clientele seems to mostly be other students.
Like, it doesn't seem that he was out on the streets dealing,
and we're talking small-scale stuff, like, not some big-time operation.
And Ethan actually admits this to police.
He says that he and Marcus both sell weed,
although I'm not sure if they work together or what.
And I don't know if Ethan is the first person that they hear this from,
or if he's just confirming this info that they learn or already had.
But he doesn't try to hide it, I think is the main point.
But that could be why he's acting so strange
around Marcus' family.
He knows they're all going to find out about this
and be upset about the drugs.
Maybe, yeah.
But here's the thing.
Even while he's being honest about the weed,
investigators still can't shake
this feeling like Ethan is holding something back. They just don't know what. Because I
don't think that all that stuff just stops after they learn the thing, right? Or what
they think could be the thing.
Did he know that Marcus had dropped out of school?
I assume he knew because they spent a decent amount of time together. I mean, I, I think I would tell you things I wouldn't necessarily tell my parents, like,
when I was his age, but there doesn't seem to be any solid confirmation of that.
Like, it's kind of like with Tawania, I mean, and even his other ex.
I don't know what any of them did or did not know about him dropping out of college.
But I do know that both women, Tawania and his other ex, seem to be aware that he
was selling weed. I know that much. In an interview with Dateline NBC reporter Josh
Mankiewicz, his son's mom said that he was doing it to help provide for their child.
And Tawania tells detectives the same thing, that this was just a way he could make enough
money to support everyone. But whatever the reason, his parents are hurt
and confused to find all of this out like this.
Like, it completely goes against his upbringing.
Like, they raised Marcus and his sister
in this solid home, they felt, that, like,
centered around family, it's centered around church.
David is actually an elected official.
Jerry is an elementary school teacher.
So, like, selling drugs,
lying about being in college, all of this is the last thing they expected from their son.
However, speaking of secrets, this wasn't the only time Marcus had kept a big one from his parents.
They actually didn't know about their grandson until he was born.
And Marcus was only 19 at the time.
I don't know how like churchy they raised him,
but I can see that maybe being a reason why he hit it.
Yeah, I mean, I think he was probably just afraid
that David and Jerry would be disappointed in him.
Right.
That's probably the reason he kept the school thing
to himself.
Like the disappointment that like,
not only is he disappointing them,
but he's already disappointed them.
So it's like one more thing.
Had they noticed any changes in Marcus's behavior?
Like looking back, like knowing
or finding out about all this now?
So at that Memorial Day cookout that I mentioned,
his sister Felicia thought that he seemed unusually stressed,
but when she asked him about it,
he just said that he had a lot going on in Nashville.
He didn't really elaborate,
and as far as his parents knew, everything was fine.
Like you can chalk stress up to the finals
he said he was gonna go study for.
I'd say schooling, yeah. Right.
So you can imagine how overwhelming this is for his family.
They are already dealing with him being missing,
but then to discover that he was living a life they really
knew nothing about, it was a lot. And David told us it's like walking through a nightmare.
And as investigators dig deeper into Marcus's life, more concerning details emerge. He had
gotten into a couple of altercations. One reported to police when it happened, about a year before
his disappearance,
and then another just a few months before he went missing. Both incidents were apparently
related to him selling weed, although Detective Filter won't share specifics about those altercations.
Were there people after him? Like, was anybody, like...
Not that investigators can tell. Like, I don't think there's anyone specific, or if there
is, they're not sharing that.
It seems like from everything they look at, they can't find any immediate dangers in his life.
No one is saying Marcus owed them money. No one has been making threats to him.
But they do discover something interesting. Back in mid-May, Marcus, they find out, had rented a car for like 10 days.
And this stood out because they know that he didn't get into an accident or anything.
So it doesn't look like his own car was out of commission or anything.
So why rent?
Right.
Now did he drive back and forth from Nashville to Knoxville a lot to see his son?
You know, that's like 360 miles each trip.
Maybe he didn't want to put the miles on his car. But Detective Filter pointed out an alternative possibility. He
says that when you're doing something illegal, you might not want to use your own car to
do that. But they don't know if he was doing something illegal with the car or what he
was using it for in those 10 days. They truly just have no idea.
Right. He just had a rental for 10 days.
Right, so they find that out,
but then beyond that, not much turns up.
There is a recent traffic ticket,
some receipts from a car wash,
like nothing that points investigators
in any real direction.
So here you have this devoted father
who has suddenly stopped checking in with his kids,
which seems completely out of character.
But they've also just learned that he's been living this whole other life that his
family knew nothing about.
And they really can't tell if he left on his own or if something happened to him.
But their thinking starts to shift on Tuesday, June 30th.
That is when a maintenance man at an apartment complex more than 20 miles from where Marcus
lives spots Marcus' missing Plymouth.
And this guy tells investigators that this car has been sitting in the same spot at Riverwood
Apartments for at least a couple of weeks.
Why is he just calling about it now?
Well, according to David, the guy contacts police because he saw something on the news
about Marcus's disappearance and the car.
So maybe he had only just realized.
I mean, again, it's not like anything bad about this car.
It's just kind of been there.
And then once they make known what car everyone's looking for,
he's like, oh, that's the car.
Does Marcus know someone who lives at this complex?
So that's the thing.
As far as anyone knows,
Marcus has zero connection to this complex.
And while investigators don't find any signs of violence in the car when they
look at it, like there's no blood or anything like that, the fact that it's
just sitting there, abandoned, makes them think something bad must have happened
to Marcus.
I mean, if he wanted to take off and start a new life, like-
How's he gonna get there?
The car is the thing you need, right? Like, or if you're gonna leave your car behind,
like, just leave it parked at your place. Why drive 20 miles and then ditch it at this
random apartment complex? And what's even more wild is, apparently, someone had been
driving the car around. The maintenance man tells detectives that he saw this middle-aged
guy occasionally using it
before it was left there for good around mid-June, so somebody who was definitely not 23-year-old Marcus.
Now, Detective Filter says that they never identified who this mystery driver was,
but he also says that there could be explanations that don't necessarily include this driver being
the one who did something
to Marcus.
Like he says, there is a world, right, where someone just handed this person the car without
telling them anything about Marcus.
Like could have been someone who didn't realize what they were driving around until they had
like found out it belonged to a missing person.
And then when they did, like that's when they left it there, didn't go back for it.
And was it locked up?
Were the keys there?
It wasn't locked, but Detective Filter couldn't find anything
in the reports that indicated if the keys were in it or not.
And the maintenance man had no clue who the driver was,
by the way, like, hence the vague description.
And this is a guy, the maintenance guy, he's like around a lot,
and he's like, I don't recognize him,
I hadn't seen him around before,
no idea why he was in the complex at all.
But it makes me feel like the driver had to have lived there or was close to someone who
did live there if he was at the complex back and forth a couple of times.
He was there and then he wasn't.
You would think, but all I know is that according to David, police canvassed the complex and
that didn't lead them to
Marcus or to anyone who knew Marcus.
Yeah, but what about the people who knew the driver? I know we don't know who he is, but
like, he doesn't live there, but that guy has to have a tie there. To me, it's a chain,
right? Like the person in the complex leads you to the driver, the driver leads you to
who gave him the car.
Right. And like if they're-
And like that goes all the way back to Marcus and why he doesn't have his car and where he is.
And if they did have something to do with it, right, and it's not just like a car that
was given to them, or even if again they now know it belongs to a missing person, like
I don't think they're going to be like fessing up to knowing him, right?
Right.
I don't know.
All the things are possible.
It's also possible that the canvassing they did was just light.
Again, maybe people were lying or option C,
I just truly don't know.
But they're hopeful that now that they have the car,
maybe they can find the driver another way
and maybe through forensic evidence.
So police have the Plymouth toad to their lab
and inside they find a gun
that's tucked under the driver's seat.
Now, is this more evidence of Marcus's double life?
Like did the gun belong to the person who was driving the car?
Did it belong to Marcus?
Like couldn't tell you because it doesn't look like the gun was actually registered
to anyone.
Though it seems like from, you know, what we learned from Detective Filter that everyone
assumes the gun was Marcus's.
They also managed to lift two fingerprints from the car, one from inside the driver's side window, and then another from a rented VHS tape that they find in the car. And the print from the tape
leads nowhere. The detective told us they confirmed it belonged to an employee at the
video rental place, which is like give me an older sentence. Right.
And the fingerprint on the window they eliminated or they eliminated
Ethan and Tawania as the sources of it, but they didn't like eliminate anyone else.
They couldn't determine who it belonged to.
Here's the wild part to me.
They said it could be Marcus's because Detective Filter says they don't have his prints on file.
But like here's where I get a little skeptical, like sure Marcus was never arrested so his prints
weren't in the system. Right. But they have access to his apartment, like couldn't they have lifted
his prints from there to compare? I mean you'd think. So those two prints were the only prints
in the car, right? Like I guess I thought you were saying that those were the only prints that weren't his.
Those are the only prints that were identifiable.
So Detective Filter...
Not like smudged or smeared or incomplete.
Yeah, Detective Filter told us the car was examined meticulously, is what he said,
and that it didn't appear to be wiped down or anything like that.
That's a question we asked.
Yeah.
But he says he also can't say for sure, Again, he wasn't on the case back then. So from what I can tell, those are the ones that
were, they were able to pull. And here's the thing, prints aside, what really concerns
investigators is what they don't find in the car, which is any proof that Marcus was
alive after June 8th. All of the receipts, everything in the car, predates his disappearance.
Now, meanwhile, so they find this. Marcus' family is back in Michigan at this point trying
to process their new reality. To David and Jerry, each revelation about their son feels
like another piece of the puzzle, one that they never thought they would have to solve.
His student loan notices are starting to come in the mail,
which is this reminder of a life that he was supposed to be building.
And there's something else that's coming in,
something far stranger than student loan bills.
Shortly after their son goes missing, Jerry and David start getting these
strange phone calls on their home phone in Michigan.
The phone will ring and ring, but when they pick up, it's nothing. Just silence on the other end.
And Jerry, they don't just like say hello and stop talking. I mean, Jerry pleads with the caller,
like Marcus, if this is you, please just say something.
But whoever is on the other end never speaks.
And Felicia remembers it happening like two or three times in those first couple of months.
And according to an article by Jax Miller for Oxygen Network, Marcus' son's mom was
getting the same kind of unsettling, quiet calls.
Do police try to trace these calls?
Not that I'm aware of.
Like I don't know if they even try to begin with or if the problem was like, from what
I can tell, there's no pattern to this or anything.
So I don't know if they just think they're weird or if they just didn't care enough to
do it.
I don't know.
But these calls do give his loved ones hope that Marcus is still out there maybe, maybe still alive.
Investigators though, they are not as optimistic.
The calls are, like I said, super sporadic.
Months will go by without a single one.
And in that time, the leads are even fewer.
So almost as quickly as it all begins, the case goes cold.
Police don't have enough to work with, no real trail to follow.
All of the fragments that they've uncovered about Marcus haven't even fit together into any kind of coherent picture.
No one they speak with seems to have the whole story.
Well, almost no one.
They're still pretty sure that Ethan knows way more than he's letting on.
Maybe he doesn't know exactly what happened to Marcus,
but Detective Filter believes that he had some idea of what happened,
or who might have been involved.
Because even though he was upfront about, you know, selling weed,
for whatever reason, after that and beyond that point,
it appears that he kind of just shut down.
And while it's possible that given time
he might've decided to share more,
that is a chance that he doesn't get.
Because little do detectives know,
they are about to have a new case to work
and their victim will be Ethan.
So let me take you to February, 1999.
By now, Marcus has been missing for about eight
and a half months, and the case is at a complete standstill.
Investigators are convinced that Ethan knows more
than he's letting on, but he's not talking.
Now, around this time, Ethan is tied up with someone new,
this brand new roommate of sorts, this guy named
Charles D. Brown Jr.
And this new arrangement is raising some eyebrows, especially with Ethan's brother Jonathan.
Jonathan has been staying with Ethan, but as soon as Charles moves in, Jonathan's like
on peacing out for a bit, like he just wants to get away from the guy.
Because Charles is one of Ethan's closest friends, but Jonathan has never approved of
him.
He didn't think that Charles was the type of person his brother should hang out with.
And there was definitely reasons for concern.
So according to articles in the Tennessean by Kirk Loggins and Cathy Carlson, Charles
had passed arrests for aggravated assault, unlawful weapon possession, and selling and
possessing weed.
He had also been shot and shot someone during an attempted home invasion that happened.
Interestingly that attempted home invasion happened one day after Marcus went missing.
You know we don't believe in coincidences anymore.
Right, so let me rewind real quick and tell you about this home invasion,
because the details are interesting, to say the least.
So in the morning on June 9th, 1998,
three or four masked men broke into Charles' apartment.
And at the time, he was living with his girlfriend
and two young children.
And everyone was home when the intruders broke in.
They demanded money, and then they started shooting.
They're like spraying bullets everywhere
with at least two guns.
Charles gets shot five times and somehow,
not only did he manage to survive,
he also returned fire and hit one of the gunmen
who then took off.
And John Yates reported something really intriguing
for the Tennessean.
Witnesses told police that they saw the suspects flee from Charles' place in two vehicles,
including a red one that they thought looked like a Chevy Corsica.
And when I googled a red Chevy Corsica, it looks an awful lot like Marcus' then-missing red Plymouth,
which I actually have the photos to show you
because it's just two bonkers.
Okay, so this one is the Corsica, and this is the Ashley.
They're like identical.
They're kind of like the same car.
They definitely look incredibly similar.
I mean, like if you weren't like a car person.
Right, or like, not even a car person,
but like you knew your makes and models,
you could easily mix those up.
Anyway, within an hour of the home invasion,
a man named James Cowan shows up at the hospital
with multiple gunshot wounds.
Cowan tells police some story about getting shot from a car,
but court records show that the bullet recovered
during his surgery matched a gun
that the shooters left behind at Charles' apartment.
So I'm guessing that Cowan was hit by maybe friendly fire
during the chaos, because again,
it didn't come from like Charles' gun.
Supposedly it was a gun left behind.
Again, I don't know if that matters or not, but whatever.
Now this Cowan guy was no stranger to detectives.
He was actually a potential suspect in six homicides.
Oh my god.
Yeah, as far as I can tell, Cowan was never arrested for murder. He was, however, arrested
and convicted of attempted first-degree murder, especially aggravated robbery,
and aggravated burglary for the home invasion on Charles. And he was sentenced to six decades
in prison because of the violent nature of the crime and his
extensive rap sheet, which included multiple drug-related felonies.
Now, in connection to all of this, Charles wasn't arrested since he was acting in self-defense.
But investigators didn't believe that Cowan and the crew he came with just randomly chose
Charles' house to rob.
Did they arrest anyone else in connection to it?
I mean, it was more than one person, right?
It was, but as far as I know, they didn't, like, arrest anyone or charge anyone except
for Cowan.
Did they recover the gun used to shoot at Charles?
So that's not totally clear from the court records.
They say they recovered two guns.
They recovered a nine millimeter found in the backyard and they had Charles's gun,
which is a.357 revolver.
But there were at least three guns involved because according to testimony at one point
during this struggle, an accomplice of Cowan's threw him a quote unquote big gun when
the first gun that he was using ran out of ammunition.
What about the gun in Marcus's car?
Well, so at the time this is happening, I mean, they're not gonna find that for weeks,
but when they do find it,
I know that they run the bullets through their database
to check for links to other crimes, but nothing comes up.
So I don't think that gun was used in this.
If that's what you're getting at?
Yeah.
Okay, so that happens.
Now let's jump back to February of 1999.
According to Kirk Loggins, on the 18th,
Ethan informs his brother that Charles
is gonna crash with him, right?
And so this is when Jonathan's like,
don't like this guy, I'm gonna peace out.
A couple of days after that,
Ethan tells him that Charles was quote unquote,
going crazy.
Like apparently he was super paranoid.
He was saying that his girlfriend
was trying to have him killed.
But it's not like Jonathan moved away.
I mean, I don't think Charles was supposed to be a permanent fixture.
He just needed to crash for a couple of days.
So the night of Tuesday, February 23rd, Jonathan comes back to the house.
And when he pulls up, the door to the duplex is wide open.
And when he makes his way inside, there on the floor, he sees his brother,
Aethon's body, stiff and cold.
He had been shot multiple times.
Now, police believe that Aethon was actually killed days before he was found,
sometime before noon that past Sunday.
They also think that there might have been more than one weapon used, and
shell casings that they
find appear to be from a 40 caliber gun. Now they don't see any signs of forced entry,
although they do notice that something is missing.
Aethans white Pontiac Grand Am. But the next day someone spots this vehicle in Nashville's
Inglewood neighborhood, which is like 18 miles from Aethans apartment, and they recognize
it from the news reports.
This is feeling too similar.
Right?
And Aethans aunt tells Kathy Carlson that his family doesn't know of any connections
that he has to that area.
Of course.
Now obviously, the biggest difference between Marcus and Aethans' cases are that Aethans
is clearly a homicide, he's been
found, while Marcus is still a missing person.
And while detectives are still basically in the dark about what happened to Marcus, they've
got a pretty good theory forming about who might be responsible for Aethans' murder.
It's gotta be Charles.
Yeah, and mostly because an Inglewood woman IDs him as the guy that she saw leaving Aethans
car on her street the day before his body was found.
Wait, how old is Charles?
I'm wondering if he could have been the one seen driving Marcus's car?
No, they thought that guy was middle-aged.
Charles is like Marcus's age, like 23.
Early 20s, okay.
Right.
But still, police can't ignore how sketchy his behavior gets.
Kirk Loggins reported that Charles skips Ethan's funeral and completely ghosts police when
they try to question him further.
A friend who hung out with Charles and Ethan over the weekend tells investigators that
Charles was seriously worried about his own safety, possibly because of that home invasion
that we talked about.
Now Charles was apparently so convinced that someone was after him that he was wearing a bulletproof vest around and he had at least two guns in his SUV, including a.40 caliber,
like the shell casings found at the scene.
So, talking or not, they do have enough on him to charge him with Aethon's murder in early March, and after a few days on the run,
he ends up turning himself in.
Hold up, what's the motive?
Charles got paranoid and then just snapped on Aethon?
No, so not likely.
Detective Filter actually refers to Aethon's murder as drug-related,
because he believes that Aethon was selling weed when he was killed, so he was wrapped up in what could have been a dangerous crowd.
Although, if he was, he was clearly keeping some secrets of his own from certain family
members because his aunt says that Aethan was working as a tax consultant at his father's
income tax business.
So I don't know that they're connecting it to, like, Charles'
paranoid, like, or if they're saying the paranoia is separate
and Charles did it because it was a drug thing.
I don't know, it's a little, like, convoluted and muddy.
Uh-huh.
Either way, at first, investigators suspect
that there could be a connection between Aethon's murder
and Marcus' disappearance.
And when the Rutledge family hears about Aethon's death,
they can hardly believe it. Marcus' sister, And when the Rutledge family hears about Ethan's death,
they can hardly believe it.
Marcus' sister Felicia is devastated,
because in her mind, Ethan was the one person who could fill
in maybe someday all the blanks about her brother,
and now he's gone.
But Charles' arrest is a hopeful sign for Marcus' dad, David,
because he figures that once police start,
like, pushing on Charles, maybe the dam will will burst and maybe they can finally find his son. But here comes another unexpected twist.
I wish I could tell you more about what investigators learned from Charles,
but there is not much info available. We know that a
preliminary hearing is held later that March. Charles is emotional. He's sobbing at times and
like shaking his head throughout the proceedings. The judge finds sufficient evidence to send the
case to a grand jury. But it doesn't look like Charles is ever actually indicted. Or if he is, the DA decides not to pursue it because the murder charge just disappears.
What?
How?
I guess there just wasn't enough to move forward.
I mean, the headline for Kirk Loggins' article about the prelim was literally,
Hearing Short on Evidence in Bellevue Slaying.
So the evidence presented by the state,
I mean, we know it was mostly circumstantial.
Like, I mean, they had witnesses
who could talk about Charles' behavior.
They could talk about the fact that he had guns,
but they couldn't actually connect him to the murder itself
or even, like I said, establish a clear timeline or motive.
But I thought his gun was used to kill Aethon.
No, he just had the same type of gun as the one used to kill Ethan.
What about that witness who ID'd him dropping Ethan's car though?
Not enough.
Detective Filter thinks that the DA in the end just like wasn't confident that they
could get a conviction, so they just dismissed the charges, probably hoping that they'd
be able to build a stronger case later.
But for whatever reason, that never happened.
Aethan's murder is still considered unsolved today.
And when it comes to any connection between Aethan's murder and Marcus going missing,
while there might be some witness overlap between the investigations, police say they've
never been able to establish any direct link between the two.
Though it's interesting, Detective Filter says that as far as he can tell from the case
file, investigators only really looked at Charles.
Like, there's nothing showing that they ever dug into Cowan or his associates in connection
with Marcus' disappearance.
And then when we asked him about it, he told us, like, yeah, you know, that's an angle maybe worth exploring.
Which like, yeah.
But no one has in, oh, about three decades?
No.
I mean, to me, the timing alone,
the home invasion a day after he went missing,
not to mention the red car stuff.
I know.
It definitely raises like a couple of questions at least.
Plus, we know that Cowan was already being looked at
for other violent crimes at that point, right?
So, I don't know, we'll have to see.
We'll have to wait and see if Filter pursues that lead.
Oh, and we actually did try and get in touch with Cowan,
who was actually released from prison more than a decade ago
and is out there on parole, but we couldn't reach him.
And Charles, who has been in and out of lockup over the years for various crimes,
he is in prison now on drug-related charges, so we couldn't make contact with him.
Now, whether or not any of these guys were involved, police still believe
that Ethan knew more than he led on, and that he took some secrets about Marcus' disappearance
to his grave.
Do they have any theories about where Marcus could be?
I mean, as similar and connected as these cases seem,
it stands out so much that Marcus just vanished,
while Aethon was just shot and left in his home
on the floor.
Like, why the difference?
Well, I mean, they don't have any theories on a connection
because they can't prove the cases are connected at all.
So like, without that link, you can't even build upon that, right?
Like, they're just stuck.
So that was pretty much it.
Like, years pass.
Tips aren't coming in.
Media coverage is minimal.
And the case just sits there. But around 2010, something significant does happen.
The Rutledge family learns that Marcus had another big secret.
They find out that he had a daughter.
With who?
Tawania.
Another one?
No.
But they never knew he had a daughter.
How is that even possible?
I mean, didn't investigators know?
So they did.
I don't know how this happened, but it looks like they never communicated that to his family,
which like, why would you write like I can maybe they thought like, oh, surely they know
about this grandchild.
Yeah, there's no need to bring up something so obvious.
Right.
But, like, wouldn't it come up when the police were getting basic information?
Like, if his parents had mentioned their grandson, wouldn't someone have said, like, oh, and
what about your granddaughter?
You would think, but it didn't happen.
And I guess, like, the part that I can't get over is, like, the fact that Tawania never
mentioned it either, which makes you wonder, what other secrets she had because that feels like
a secret.
It doesn't feel like something that just like gets missed, right?
Like they come, they have dinner with her before.
They're like, they're all...
She's like a main contact when Marcus goes missing.
Like they're in communication with her.
Yeah.
You would think when she calls them to be like, oh, he's like, he's not answering his phone.
Or when's the last time you saw him
when he went to drop our daughter off at daycare?
That's how we started the story.
So it feels like something that got intentionally left out.
I don't know, I wish we could talk to her,
but we haven't been able to get ahold of her, like I said.
I mean, how did they even find out about their granddaughter?
I don't know the exact details of how this unfolds.
I just know that Marcus' son somehow connected with her on Facebook, and then that's when
the rest of the family found out.
So like, it's fuzzy.
But this is one of those that even though it's a shock, it's at least a good surprise.
Like, they have another little piece of Marcus to hold onto.
And despite Marcus keeping her a secret, I have to imagine that even he'd be happy knowing
that they all have finally found each other.
And just in time, because in 2015, Marcus' mom, Jerry, passes away.
And then in 2020, Detective Filter, who is in the Nashville PD's cold case unit, this
is when he picks up the investigation for what started as like a pretty routine reason. Basically, they were doing like DNA housekeeping. They
only have DNA from one of Marcus's kids in CODIS. So, Filter wanted to get more family
profiles into the system so that they can be prepared if they ever need to make comparisons,
if they are fine remains.
Did something specific prompt that? Like, were there remains that could have been his
that were found?
Nothing like that. I think he just wanted to be proactive. He was making sure all of
their bases were covered. And that DNA update was going to be the extent of it. But once
he started talking to David and learning more about Marcus, he just like, I don't know,
the case like latched on to him. He like kept digging. He wanted to see if he could help
the Rutledge's, like get some answers some way.
Hi, me, big update.
So that was kind of where our episode was supposed to end.
Britt and I wrapped it up, did the usual call to action.
But literally just this last week, right as we were about to release this episode,
something huge happened, a major break in the case.
On January 31st, police announced that Marcus' remains have been found.
There was a skull that had been found by a hunter back on December 8th,
2010 in some woods near Ashland City Highway and Pecan Valley Road.
That is nearly 13 miles from where Marcus' car was found and 30 miles from his apartment.
Now the sequence of events is a little baffling for me and I'm sure frustrating for Marcus'
family who are still coping with the news.
And I say baffling because DNA from this unidentified skull wasn't uploaded to CODIS until a month
after we interviewed the police.
So we interviewed them in October, and
then the ME submitted the skull DNA to CODIS in November.
This is of 2024, and we don't know why it took so long.
Marcus's DNA had been in CODIS for years.
And you heard right before our record scratch moment that even more of his family's DNA had been added by Detective Filter to ensure that there
would be enough to get a match to any unidentified remains that might surface.
The DNA match that they got was a match to DNA collected from Marcus's daughter.
It's just a shame that it didn't come 14 years sooner,
cuz it puts detectives even further behind than they would have been in 2010.
Detective Filter told us it is unclear if police searched the woods thoroughly at
the time when the skull was found.
So he is planning to do a search of his own, hoping to find more.
Because unfortunately, even though they now know where Marcus has been,
the skull hasn't told them much.
There were no wounds or markings on it that gave a clue as to how Marcus was killed.
But detectives are clear that they do believe Marcus was killed.
And this missing persons case is now actively being worked as a homicide.
Which filter believed was the case even before finding Marcus's skull?
He believes that Marcus's involvement in selling weed likely played a role in his death.
The problem is, even after this major breakthrough, police still have not gotten a single solid
lead.
I'm not kidding you, not even one.
And Detective Filter doesn't think this case is going to be solved by science.
What they need is for someone who knows the truth to finally start talking.
Now Marcus's family, they were holding out hope for so long that he was still alive.
They held out that hope till the very end.
It's what our whole ending was about.
So this news was devastating to them.
But maybe now that everyone knows where he was and where he was found,
it could help connect some of the dots about what happened in those crucial days
after June 8th, 1998.
They are convinced someone out there knows exactly what happened to him.
And maybe you're that someone.
So if you have any information about the death of Marcus Rutledge or
even Ethan's murder, contact the Metro Nashville Police Department at 615-862-8600.
You can also call the department's Crime Stoppers Division at 615-74-CRIME.
That's 615-742-7463.
You can find all the source material for this episode on our website, CrimeJunkiePodcast.com.
You can also follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
And we'll be back next week with a brand new episode. Crime Junkie is an AudioChuck production.
So, what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo