Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - NURSING STUDENT HOLLY BOBO GOES INTO THE WOODS AND VANISHES: KILLER WALKS FREE?
Episode Date: July 24, 2025Holly Bobo, a beautiful young nursing student, disappears from her family home in Darden, Tennessee. She is last seen by her brother, Clint, walking into the woods at the back of their property with a... man wearing camouflage who looks familiar. The Holly Bobo murder case returns to court years after a Tennessee man’s conviction. A new legal filing has emerged, requesting a new trial based on statements made by a key trial witness who now claims to be recanting his testimony—the same testimony that helped convict his friend. Holly's case has already faced several setbacks over the years; could this be another? At the time of her disappearance, Holly Bobo was a 20-year-old nursing student at the University of Tennessee at Martin, attending classes at the Parsons Center. She lived with her parents and brother. On the morning of her disappearance, Clint, Holly's brother, was awakened by a noise outside the home. Believing he heard and saw his sister talking with her boyfriend, he thought nothing was wrong. However, when Clint spoke to their mother, she immediately sensed something was wrong and frantically called 911. That morning, Holly had woken up at 4:30 a.m. to study for an exam. Around 7:30 a.m., she answered a call from her boyfriend, Drew Scott, who was out turkey hunting. By that time, Holly's parents had already left for work, and Clint was still asleep. Twelve minutes later, Holly made her final cell phone call. Joining Nancy Grace today: Ben Powers - Criminal Defense Attorney, Facebook: Legal Powers Dr. Angela Arnold - Psychiatrist, AngelaArnoldMD.com, Former Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Obstetrics and Gynecology: Emory University, Former Medical Director of The Psychiatric Ob-Gyn Clinic at Grady Memorial Hospital, Todd G. Shipley, CFE, CFCE - Cyber Crime Expert, and Author: “Investigating Internet Crimes: An Introduction to Solving Crimes in Cyberspace;" X: @webcase Dr. Kendall Crowns - Chief Medical Examiner Tarrant County (Ft Worth), NEW Podcast --- launching on April 7th, Lecturer: Burnett School of Medicine at TCU (Texas Christian University) Shane Deitert - Former Assignment Editor for WATN in Memphis Dave Mack- Crime Stories Investigative Reporter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
A gorgeous young nursing student, Holly Bobo, walks into the woods and vanishes forever.
And tonight, her brutal killer to walk free?
I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories.
I want to thank you for being with us. Somebody has my daughter. Okay. I could pin down her.
If anyone's wondering, please get their nails.
No, no, wait.
Is that where you live?
Yes, I'm in school in the middle of Utah.
Okay, you in the middle of Karen?
Yes.
Okay, good.
I saw you screaming.
You looked out and somebody in full camouflage got Holly.
Oh my stars, you are hearing the heartbroken mother
of Holly Bobo begging, begging for law enforcement
to go immediately to her home.
You hear her stating, I'm at school,
she's a school teacher, I'm trying to get to my home.
Neighbors heard her screaming
and somebody in camouflage got Holly.
And that is how this case her disappearance kicked off.
Listen to more of that 911 call.
The pain in the mother's voice is almost unbearable. It's excruciating to hear it.
You are hearing Holly Bobo's mother raising the alarm.
Her daughter has been taken by a man in camo.
Joining me, an All-star panel to make sense
of what we are learning.
Straight up to Shane Deter,
joining us from Tennessee, former assignment editor,
WATN Memphis.
Shane, thank you for being with us.
Just hearing Holly's mother is heartbreaking
in the 911 call.
Her voice does sometimes scream,
and then she's begging, and she's crying,
and the excruciating trip from work,
trying to get home.
Describe, where was the mother
when she learns this is happening, Shane?
She was at work.
She is a school teacher,. She was at work. She is a school teacher.
And she was at work.
I know she was so upset that she had to have a friend
or a coworker drive her home.
I just couldn't imagine, you know, getting that call
and then making that call.
It was heartbreaking, as you heard.
I could not imagine the scare that that mother
had that that was her baby.
That is Holly Bobo's mother. But who is Holly?
Holly Bobo, a beautiful 20 year old nursing student at the University of Tennessee, Martin.
She lives with her parents and brother Clint at the family home in Darden, Tennessee. April 13, Holly awakens at 430 a.m. to study for an
exam. Brother Clint wakes up to the sound of the family dogs barking around 745 a.m.
He looks out to see Holly and a man dressed in camouflage in the garage.
Clint thinks Holly and her boyfriend, Drew Scott, are having an argument.
As I listened a little bit closer, I could tell that that was Holly's voice.
I knew it was Holly.
So in my mind, the male's voice,
I knew to be Drew, you know, who is her boyfriend.
That's one of my friends at ABC 2020,
again, joining me at All-Star Panel.
You know, it's very disconcerting
to Dr. Angela Arnold joining us.
Renell's psychiatrist out of the Atlanta jurisdiction,
and you can find her at angelaarnaldmd.com,
because your day is going along as normal until it's not.
And you hear the mother, just, she can hardly talk.
She screams, then she begs, then she cries,
trying to get the entire community out pronto
to help find her daughter.
All she knows in this juncture is that a male wearing camo led her daughter,
took her daughter after an argument in their carport into the woods that goes along the Tennessee River.
That's all she knows when she's calling 911.
There she is at work.
She's a school teacher and she gets this call and her life will never be the same, Dr. Angie.
Imagine, Nancy, she has literally no control over what is happening to her daughter.
All she can do is try to get there as fast as she can and try to get as many people there
as fast as they can get there.
But she knows that she has no control over the situation.
I can't even imagine a more horrible feeling for a mother.
Now we just heard from our friends at ABC 2020, Clint Bobo speaking.
He was stating, as I listened a little closer I could tell it was Holly's
voice. So I knew if it's Holly then she must be talking to her boyfriend, Drew.
Okay, how did he come to the idea, Shane Dieter joining us from Tennessee, that
Holly was talking to the boyfriend?
Oh, Nancy, the night before the brother and Drew,
the boyfriend were talking, they were also friends.
And Drew talked about going hunting.
So when Holly's brother heard that and saw her going out,
you know, towards the wood with this man in camouflage,
he thought it was her boyfriend
or assumed it was her boyfriend or assumed it was her boyfriend.
This one critical mistake may have cost Holly her life.
When the brother, by all accounts, well-intentioned, looks out, he sees his sister with a guy.
They're talking and he thinks it's the boyfriend.
Listen.
Clint calls his mother Karen at work telling his mother, it looks like Holly and Drew are
having an argument, they're walking towards the woods.
Karen says, that is not Drew.
Grab a gun and shoot whoever is with Holly.
Drew is turkey hunting on Bobo family property.
Clint asks, you want me to shoot Drew?
Karen Bobo immediately calls 911 around 8 a.m.
I said, that's not true, get a gun and shoot him.
And Clint said, you want me to shoot Drew?
And I think that's when I hung up and called 911.
From our friends at ABC, so what she didn't know
out to Dave Matt, Crime Stories investigative reporter,
what he, the brother, didn't know
is when he told mom, some guy, I guess the boyfriend, is leading her down the trail to
the river into the woods, her response is she knew she did not have time to explain
Dave Mack.
She says, get a gun and
shoot him and
The brother Clint is just groggy. What he's just waking up. He's like you want me to shoot drew
But what the mother knew and the brother didn't know was at that very moment. The boyfriend wasn't even there. He was miles away
Turkey hunting with his own father.
But the brother didn't know that, he's like, what? Explain it, Dave.
That's exactly what happened.
Nancy, all right, Clint was just waking up
and he hears the dogs barking.
You mentioned that Karen knows that Drew is hunting because he's turkey hunting on
Bobo family property. It's actually Karen's grandmother. That's the property they're hunting
on. So he's 30 miles away. And so she knows it's not Drew. It can't be Drew. And Clint has no clue.
He's just blurry eyed. And he's like, he hears his sister, he hears her voice, but he hears a tinge
in her voice that he feels like they're arguing.
And I think he said he heard the word no.
But the way that he briefly saw it just in his mind,
he couldn't think, I mean, think about it,
it's early in the morning, who else would you be talking to?
You wouldn't be talking to somebody you didn't know
out by your car, getting ready to go to school.
That's why Clint was kind of out of it
and just assumed it was Drew right then.
And Karen obviously knew it couldn't be. She knew it could.
That's why she grabbed a gun and shoot him. That was her best.
She didn't go shoot him. She knew intuitively, a mother's intuition knew her daughter was in trouble
and that man meant no good.
Number one, what's your mercy?
Somebody has my daughter. I have kidnapped her.. Somebody full camouflage got Holly. Please get everybody in the community out there.
They're on their way, sweetie.
I got everybody on their way right now already.
Oh my God.
Clint Bobo can see sister Holly, the man in camo
on a trail that leads to a logging road.
And Clint notices the man is bigger than her boyfriend drew.
Holly's mother, Karen, tells Clint to grab a pistol
and go outside toward the garage calling 911 as he walks.
And he's going to call 911.
And he's going to call 911. And he's going to call 911. and Clint notices the man is bigger than her boyfriend Drew. Holly's mother Karen tells Clint to grab a pistol and go outside toward the garage,
calling 911 as he walks. In the garage, Clint finds blood stains.
Police arrive at the Bobo residence in 10 minutes.
Straight back out to Shane Deter, former assignment editor at WATM Memphis.
Shane, what is it that Clint the brother saw? First of all, a neighbor hears screams.
A neighbor hears a woman,
we now know to be Holly Boba, screaming.
The neighbor calls the mom at school where she's working.
The mom tells Clint to look out,
well get up son, go look outside.
And he's saying, well, you know, she's walking into the woods with a guy in camo.
But Shane, describe for me what Clint saw, you know, when he saw them kneeling in the
carport.
He just thought it was his sister having an argument with her boyfriend.
So again, like we said, he saw the guy in camouflage.
He didn't realize that Drew was 30 miles away. And so he, you know, he did what most people
would do, you know, until his mom told him to get a gun. Then he went out and found the
blood. So Dave Mack explained to me, when he looks out,
they're not walking yet.
No.
They're kneeling.
They're in the artwork.
Kneeling.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Describe that.
That's what really set Clint off, Nancy,
because he sees Holly kneeling,
and he sees the other person also kneeling.
It's not something you see
on any kind of given day and the guy's just waking up and so he sees what he
thinks is Holly and her boyfriend but they're kneeling. They're not in a way
that he would expect them to be and that's a very important point here
because he didn't take immediate corrective action because he thought
that Drew was breaking up with Holly. He sees
Holly kneeling. He hears her say, no, you start putting it all together and you realize he
didn't want to insert himself into that situation. He didn't see it as dangerous. Somebody on
their knees, if they're both kneeling, that's not a dangerous situation, Nancy. And that's
the way he described it.
Todd Shipley joining me from Reno, former detective sergeant with the Nevada Police
Department.
Twenty-five years in LA.
You know, interesting.
We look back at every crime, right, and you can say woulda, coulda, shoulda.
If he, he, he should have known that wasn't Drew, the boyfriend. He could have called 911.
He would have done the right thing, but the reality is he couldn't see the guy's face
ever. He never saw the perp's face. He saw him from behind. He describes him as wearing camo,
a baseball hat, and that he had dark hair coming
out from under his cap that, you know, kind of went under his collar to show how long the hair was.
He said he was 5, 10, to 6 feet. Hey, that could be anybody. And that he weighed 180 to up around 200
pounds. But he never saw his face. So all the speculation that it's the brother
Clint's fault, it's not. Clint is not the one that kidnapped Holly Bobo. It's not his
fault. He did not see the perp's face. And isn't it true, Shipley, that in every case
people say, if only, fill in the blank, if only I had worn a seatbelt, if only I hadn't gone to the
liquor store, if only I hadn't gone jogging. I mean, that could be a million scenarios.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda. But it doesn't fit here because he didn't see the face. He could not have
known who the perp is. No, of course. I mean, we all regret things that have happened,
especially in those stress situations where, you know,
the person realizes later that if they had intervened,
the whole situation could have changed.
And so that poor young man is regretting, you know,
so many things in his life and has for years.
But had he walked out there,
it would have been a very different situation.
But we don't know whether that person was armed, what was happening. He could have gotten killed
himself too at that point in time. We just don't know because it's all what is after the fact.
That's the unfortunate thing.
HOFFMAN Extensive searches of the area around the Bobo home are conducted on foot and with dogs.
Hour and a half, her cell phone traveled throughout Decatur County. The phone tracks
north to a wooded area near I-40,
stops moving between 830 a.m. and 9 a.m. and begins moving again as it pings back
south toward the Bobo residence but not on the same route. Today Matt Crimes,
Touring Investigative Reporter, we heard earlier that when the brother Clint goes
into the garage he sees blood stains on the garage floor and there were
at least two blood stains as I recall one about the size of a fist and one a
much smaller blood drop drop that's significant that it was a drop not a
smear not a transfer but a drop, not a smear, not a transfer, but a drop.
Describe the blood the brother Clint finds in the Bobo family garage.
The blood drop, as you just mentioned, Nancy, that's actually the real big indicator that there was probably an injury
that was bleeding profusely enough that it would fall off of her body.
By the way, the blood did test as for Holly Bobo.
Now, Clint has to assume it's his sister's blood
when he sees it, which most of us would.
The bigger of the two could have been,
it could have happened anyway.
You can fall down on something, you can sit on something.
We know that she was kneeling in the garage and it's the blood drop
that actually is the biggest part of this because it shows it's a fresh cut.
That is bleeding enough that it's not just a smear.
You didn't just cut your finger and smear it on the, on the floor.
It's actually dropping from your body freely onto the floor.
And it actually can indicate they'll look at that blood to see if it's going
towards her car or away from her car.
Was she attacked on her way to the car?
Was she surprised on her, you know,
there's any number of ways that they'll use
that blood droplet to find out exactly
how she was attacked, when it happened,
and who probably did it.
What does it mean?
When you take this blood spatter in conjunction with
the story that Clint the brother is telling, it's a very very disturbing
story. The search is on on foot with dogs. The phone, her phone tracks north to a
wooded area near I-40. It stops moving. Remember all this is happening in the
early morning hours. She gets up to study at 430 a.m.
She's heading to school.
Mom's at work.
Dad's at work.
The phone stops moving by 9 a.m.
It begins moving again, pinging back south toward the Bobo home, but on a different route
than a discovery.
Several items belonging to Holly are found scattered
throughout the area on country roads. Her lunch, homework, a receipt with her name
on it, a card from school, her cell phone, and a SIM card which have been removed
from the phone. Many would argue that the discovery of her belonging school papers,
homework, her lunch is random. No. Joining me is a veteran trial lawyer, criminal
defense attorney, Ben Powers, and you can find him at LegalPowers.com. Ben, please,
if possible, take off your defense hat just one moment. The fact that her items
were scattered along various country roads is significant. It sounds like they
were thrown out a window of a vehicle. So now we have to figure out. She was walking,
being forced to walk by a guy in camo up a trail that leads down to the Tennessee River.
But yet her items that she would have had like in a backpack or in her arm are scattered along various
country roads. What, if anything, can I deduce from that, Ben Powers?
So, the first inference that I have is something's already happened to Holly by that point. Something
very serious has probably already happened to her. Something grave has already happened
to her because now they're trying to distance themselves from her and her belongings. And they're just throwing them
out the window as they drive because they think that's the best way to get rid of this backpack
of contents that they now have that they're trying to get themselves away from. And in turn,
what they've done is basically created a trail of breadcrumbs in the direction they went to help
hone in the investigation in
that direction.
But my first impression is that it's a sign that something bad had happened prior to that
moment.
And now they're trying to distance themselves from that by getting rid of any evidence that
can tie them to Holly Bobo.
Investigators put together a timeline of what happened to Holly Bobo.
Waking up early to study for her test, Holly gets a call from her boyfriend Drew at 7.30.
Drew is turkey hunting on Bobo family property with his dad about 30 minutes away.
Holly sends a text at 7.42 a.m.
Holly did not send or answer another text or call after 7.42 a.m.
At 7.43 a.m.
Holly walks to the carport to get in her car and go to school.
The so-called A train. Word gets around that the A train may have had something to do with Holly Bobo's disappearance.
What is the A train? I'll tell you. It's Zach Adams, Shane Austin, Jason Autry, and Zach Adams' brother, John Dillon Adams.
Adams, Adams, Austin, Autry.
Why is it that people cannot shut their pie holes?
How is it?
Let me go to Dr. Kendall Crowns joining us.
Now his expertise is dead bodies.
But how do the dead bodies get there?
And how do we solve cases?
Dr. Kendall Crowns is with us, the chief medical examiner, Tarrant County.
That's Fort Worth.
Never a lack of business.
He is the star of a podcast about to hit the airwaves, Mayhem in the morgue.
He is the esteemed lecturer at the Burnett School of Medicine at TCU.
Dr. Kendall Crowns, for every dead body that is a victim of homicide that you see on your
table, I guarantee you 50% of those cases are solved by loose lips that sink ships. When you look at one of the victims
that you autopsy, that you cut apart to determine cause of death, can you imagine
that somewhere out there a killer is bragging?
Mark Bailey Yeah, I...
Often when I'm doing the autopsies, I think about what the individual who may have done this is doing right at that present time. Often they're already in custody, but sometimes
they're not. And you kind of always have to wonder, did you walk past them on your way
into work that day? Did you run into them at the grocery store or something of that
nature? You never know. But you are right, Nancy. People really love to boast about the
things they do and the evil that they commit on other individuals.
CRIME STORIES WITH NANCY GRACE
Nothing is stronger than a mother's love.
Nothing is stronger on this earth than a mother's love, it is said.
Much like Natalie Holloway's mother, Beth, confronted Natalie's killer trying to get the truth.
Of course, you're in VanderSloot. Totally blew her off. It's such an a-hole technical legal term. Here, Holly's mother hears the rumblings,
hears the rumors that A-Train had something to do with Holly's
disappearance. At this time she has no idea where her daughter is and she
confronts them. Listen. Karen taught Zach Adams and Jason Audrey when they were in
grade school and knows the type of men they are. All deny any involvement.
I asked them, do they know anything
about our daughters' abduction?
Of course, they all denied it.
That from our friends at ABC 2020.
Well, to use a technical legal term on you,
Dr. Angela Arnold, she's got balls the size of coconuts.
Wow, she sure does.
And Nancy, you need to have balls the size of coconuts
to take care of your own children
when things like this happen,
because you can't leave it in anyone else's hands.
I don't blame her in the least for going after these kids
and confronting them and asking them what they did.
Why are you calling them kids?
Well, I believe I am.
The A train.
I called them kids because-
Yeah, I believe you did. When she taught. I called them kids because when she taught them they were kids.
These are grown men.
And you know what, Nancy, maybe that had something to do with the fact that she was able to confront
them also because maybe she thought of them as kids because they were kids when she knew
them and taught them.
I understand that they're grown men and they should all go away and suffer grown men consequences for what they did to this beautiful girl. Yeah, you know what?
You said something really interesting right there. Well, a lot really
interesting. But the fact that she knew them. She taught two of them fourth grade.
And you know Nancy as well as I do. The word is they took Holly Bobo out of her own carport on her way to nursing school.
A girl they knew if this is true.
So at that juncture, straight out to Shane Dieter, what did the A train have to say back?
I bet they got a big laugh off Holly's mother coming to ask them, where's Holly?
They claimed that they had nothing to do with it.
And, you know, they were out bragging about it.
And the mother was listening to these stories.
You talk about someone that's involved, you know, it's her daughter.
And then she taught these kids, she knows them.
And Mrs. Bobo is a mama bear and she went after them. I mean, and
that's, you know, I hear a bunch of stories that that's how cases are solved is a parent
gets involved and has to go after the people. And that's so dangerous. That shows you how
brave the mother is. Shane Dietert, you are so right.
Shane Dietert joining us from this jurisdiction of Tennessee, who was on the case from the
very, very beginning.
So the mom goes after them, the so-called A train, and they laugh her off.
But the word is bubbling around this tiny,
tiny town in Tennessee.
The word is bubbling that the A train is somehow responsible.
And then a break.
A random arrest of Dylan Adams on a weapons charge cracks the ice.
Adams tells police in April 13th he went to Zach's house to get his truck and saw
Holly Bobo sitting in a green chair in the living room wearing a pink t-shirt with Jason
Autry standing nearby.
Adams also tells police his brother was wearing camouflage shorts, black cutoff sleeve t-shirt
and a pair of green crocs.
Adams says his brother Zach Adams told him he raped Holly Bobo and videotaped it.
This confession led to Zach Adams, Jason Autry and Shane Austin.
His confession led to Jason Autry agreeing to testify
against Zach Adams.
And now you're saying that Shane Austin is sitting there.
You're sitting there.
Jason Autry is sitting there.
Is there anybody else involved?
Was Holly my little kid now?
Was she my...
Oh, my stars.
That's from our friends at ABC 2020.
Let me understand this Ben Powers.
So nobody knows what's happened to Holly.
The mom confronts the A train about their
potential involvement. Do they know where she is? She's desperate. You know why?
Because Zach Adams has been bragging. Don't you love a bragger for a client
that can't keep his pie hole shut? Saying things like to his girlfriend, you're gonna end up tied up in a hole, just like Holly.
Or, I'll do the same thing to you, I did to Holly.
Bragging the bravado he must have had, saying all that,
and it gets around.
You can't say things like that in a small town,
and nobody find out.
Well, Mom found out and confronted him. And don't you know,
Ben Powers, the first minute they could arrest the brother, Dylan, John Dylan Adams, brother
of Zach the bragger, they started putting the screws to him, right?
Yeah. I mean, once they started really drilling him about the details and getting him to admit
very incriminating things like, you know, she's in their home, she's wearing a pink
t-shirt, these are the guys that are with me, this is who did what, and this is the
condition of things, and this is what happened.
I mean, from that point, it's just a matter of trying to corroborate what he's saying
if you're the state.
If you're on the defense side, you're pointing out all the ways his story doesn't match the
physical evidence that they've collected and doesn't match other electronic
data like cell ping data and other messages that might be recovered from cell phones and
things like that. But that's where it goes next is you try to either build a statement
or discredit the statement.
Right. Todd Shipley joining us, former Detective Sergeant Reno Nevada, author of Surviving
a Cyber Attack.
Hey, Todd, also, the level of detail in John Dillon's description.
He gets to the house and there he sees Holly Bobo in a pink top, sitting there.
His brother is wearing camo shorts, a black cutoff t-shirt, and green crocs, and the brother brags
that they've holly and videoed it.
That's a lot of detail for somebody to make up.
Well, it depends on what they're trying
to defend themselves with.
Are they trying to put the blame on somebody else
and give very detailed information
about what they supposedly did and when it
could have been himself that did it. I'm not sure that we know all those facts. And as
mentioned earlier by your guest was the details don't match up with the evidence and that
becomes problematic and where the prosecution or the law enforcement is gonna go with the
evidence, do they disprove what he said or do they try to build their case around that
statement?
And that becomes a very difficult thing to do.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
What happened to Holly Bobo and will her killer now walk free?
Is that possible?
In what world can that happen?
Because not only do we have the brother of Zachary Adams
when he gets arrested on an unrelated gun charge,
spill it all about Holly being raped and murdered,
now we have another member of the so-called A-Train singing like a nightingale.
Listen.
I'm standing over the top of her with my hands on my knees.
She's being right here.
At that time, I see the foot moving.
The sound of the sound of distress.
It sounded like, mmm, a call from the blanket.
I told him, I said, this s*** is still alive.
From our friends at ABC 2020, that's Jason Autry describing what happened to Holly Bobo.
I mean, did you hear that, Dr. Kendall Crowns? He describes a multicolored blanket that is in the back of one of the other perps' truck.
And he's looking at it and the foot moves and he hears an audible sigh.
And they realize, Holly Bobo is still alive.
Yes, that can happen occasionally in murders where they the individual is bound to still be alive after the initial assault that they thought they killed him with.
Often we see this in strangulations.
And what happens then is they will use whatever means they have available to make sure they end that person's life so that person can't wake up and testify against them at a later date.
life so that person can't wake up and testify against them at a later date. They may beat their head ends with a rock. If they have knives available, they may stab them multiple
times. I've even seen them try to cut heads off. And then they'll also, in this case,
shoot them in the head with a gun.
And Dr. Angela Arnold, did you hear the callous nature to which you referred to Holly? He
sees the foot move. He sees her foot move, he hears her sigh, and he
says, this is still alive. Oh, well, Nancy, they never, they never didn't have a
callous feeling towards her. They kidnapped her, they murdered her, they never had any
warm and fuzzy feelings towards her, so that just describes how all of them are, okay?
Nancy, they're a bunch of psychopaths.
They're a bunch of psychopaths.
They wanted to rape her.
And you know, Nancy, what the sad thing is,
you know, when we talk about,
she was ganged, Nancy, not just one of them.
She was ganged.
This poor woman suffered unmercifully
at the hands of these horrific psychopaths.
Talk about singing like a bird.
Listen to Autry.
At that time, boom.
The gun sound, the gun went off.
And it sounded like boom, boom, boom.
Underneath that bridge, it was just one shot, boom, boom, underneath that bridge.
It was just one shot, but it echoed underneath that bridge
all the way down that damn river bottom.
And when that gun went off, birds went up and were just
all up under that bridge.
And it was just dead silence for just a second.
From our friends at ABC 2020,
Ben Powers, criminal defense attorney,
why isn't all your clients have guns that just go off?
Nobody ever says he shot her under the bridge and then it echoed twice.
It sounded like three gunshots from the echo under that concrete bridge and then the birds
flew up in the air and then everything was dead silent.
How?
What?
All your clients, the gun just goes off.
Nobody pulls the trigger.
I know that I have all my clients that the gun just goes off.
I think the state tries to put a gun in my clients' hands and say that they used it intentionally,
but that doesn't always match the forensic evidence that we have in the case.
But that's certainly what the state likes to do is it's cleaner to say this person shot
intentionally. But on a case like this, those such details.
Those pesky guns that just go off with such incredible precision that they actually kill
the victim when they just go off. And that's what they're saying here, Autry. He's singing but he ain't singing on tune because he's saying the gun went off and boom, boom, boom
from the three, the shot and the two echoes underneath the bridge and the birds fly off.
Now, we have a problem. We've got John Dillon Adams confessing.
We have Autry testifying in the hopes that someday, somehow, he'll get a plea, a cheap
plea, but yet it's still a no-body case.
How hard is it to prove a no-body case, Ben Powers?
Well, I think it's really hard for the state because they're gonna rely on probably not
the most outstanding witness or witnesses.
You know, they're probably not the first choice for the state on who they'd put on the stand
because I'm sure they have a lot of character flaws, possible drug abuse histories, things
like that. I believe one or
all of them were pretty familiar. Did you say possible flaws? Character flaws, yeah. Did you
just say possible flaws? You mean a rap sheet as long as I-75? Is that a possible flaw in your mind?
That's one example of a possible flaw. But yeah, that's a rap sheet, just bad character. I mean, even the ones that are
testifying are involved. You know, they're not a good Samaritan. They're just trying to help
themselves. And so that brings into some concern, are they really testifying to do the right thing
or are they testifying to save themselves? Oh dear Lord in heaven. That's where it goes back to the forensics.
And without forensics, without a body, my name is testimony. Heaven drops another bombshell in the state's lap.
Listen.
Six months after the arrest of Dylan Adams and subsequent arrest of others, Larry Stone
is hunting ginseng in a wooded area about 20 miles from Darden.
Stone says he saw a large bucket in the woods and beneath the bucket he found a human skull.
Investigators recover the skull and other remains in the area and positively identify Holly Bobo. Her skull
has a bullet hole in the back and fracturing her cheekbone as it exited.
Straight out to Dr. Kendall Crowns, chief medical examiner Tarrant County, star of
mayhem in the morgue. Dr. Kendall Crowns decipher what we just learned that was found by two ginseng hunters.
They see a bucket.
They look under the bucket.
Of course they looked under the bucket.
They couldn't help themselves.
And they find Holly Bobo's skull.
So what they described is the skull had no flesh on it
and it had a entrance wound in the back,
right side of the head,
and an exit wound on the left side
of the facial bones or of the cheek. So it showed that she was kind of executed by a single gunshot wound
to the back of the head.
Dr. Crowns, how do you explain the fact that only a few of her bones were found? That doesn't
necessarily mean she was dismembered, does it?
It does not. Sometimes when an individual dies in a wooded area, animals come out and they scavenge the
vultures, crows, if there's razor hogs in the area, coyotes, anything can come in and
take parts of the body away and they'll spread them over a wide vast area of the wooded spot and you'll find bones everywhere.
And in fact, they can drag them off for miles and you may never find all that person again.
The case took years to solve and longer to get to court. But once there, prosecutor Paul Hagerman
laid out Zach Adams told Jason Autry that he, Shane Austin and John Dylan Adams had kidnapped
and raped a colleague. Autry saw a blanket in the bed of Adams' truck.
There was a body in the blanket.
Hagerman says Autry has been offered immunity to testify
and is going to tell the jury.
He asks Zack Adams,
how did this blank get in your truck?
The plan was to gut her body so it would sink in the water,
but Holly moved and made a noise.
That's when Zack Adams got a gun
and shot Holly in the back of the head.
He took her.
He killed.
He scored.
He bragged.
And he almost got away with it.
That from our friends at Law News.
So let me understand.
Shane Dietert, these guys convicted.
How is it that some way the lead member of the A train could walk free. How can this be?
My understanding is Nancy that Autry has recanted his testimony and has
admitted that he did it to get a deal and And that's where we're staying when you lose your star witness.
Then you got to count on some others.
Hold on just a moment, Shane Deer. Let me understand something. So we've got Jason Autry
testifying at trial with a story so rich in detail, it's hard not to believe, even talking
about his own involvement. But then let's don't forget about Ben Powers, that John Dillon Adams also took a guilty
plea to 35 years behind bars.
So what, they're going to plead guilty to 35 years and eight years respectively because
they didn't do it?
Well, I think they're going to take a plea in that situation because the state's got
a witness that they're concerned about testifying and being able to put it all together in a
compelling way. And what they're looking at is the possibility of life without parole.
Or the next best thing would be life with parole, which is 51 years. And so under those circumstances, there's a lot of motive to take a plea that doesn't
always have to do with guilt or innocence, but rather self-preservation.
Now, isn't it also true to Dave Mack that when I said it was critical where her discarded
items were found, that many of them were found just 75 feet
from one of the perps' driveways.
Another coincidence, Dave Mack.
The fascinating part about where those items were found,
Nancy, as you pointed out, is these men were familiar
so much with the area that they were driving.
The first drive away from the house
and then back towards it on different roads,
but back in the same direction. 75 feet from Shane Austin's front door, that's
where they found a receipt with Holly Bobo's name on it. Now you mentioned a
minute ago about the guilty pleas and things like that. Of the four members of
the A train, only Zach Adams actually went to trial. You know we've got Autry
rolling over on everybody and creating such an
incredible story on the stand is so articulate.
The judge said he was the best witness he'd ever seen.
John Dillon Adams, you know, there, he just, he, he was the reason they even got
an arrest to start with when there was no body found and Shane Austin actually
committed suicide in February of 2015.
So he committed suicide and they never get a plea.
Gee, I wonder why.
But they offered him a deal, Nancy.
He got busted as killing Holly Bobo and committed suicide.
So two of them take a plea.
One commits suicide and the other goes to trial and is now saying it's all a big lie.
But let me ask you one more thing. Isn't it true Dave Mac that
Autry gave the statement about how Holly Bobo was shot once in the back of the head then
the skull is found and lo and behold it's exactly what he says happened. Exactly as
Autry describes it.
Odd that you would tell the truth and claim it's a lie.
You know, none of it makes sense.
But I don't know, when you've got lifelong criminals and drug addicts and dealers,
you can't believe anything they're saying.
But when they tell the truth and it matches up with the evidence you've got,
I kind of think you go ahead and believe that.
Yeah, especially in light of the fact that they describe what happened before the skull
is found.
So I guess they're clairvoyant yet again.
This is coming to the court under a very little used writ of quorum anebus, which means that
according to the convicted killer Zachary Adams, he wants to correct the record of its factual inaccuracies.
Okay, you go ahead and get after that.
We wait as justice unfolds, and now we remember an American hero police officer, Ciara Burton, just 28 years old, shot and killed at a traffic stop. Survived by fiancee set to be wed in
just nine days, Ciara and canine partner Brev. American hero, police officer Ciara Burton.
Nancy Grace signing off. Goodbye, friend. Thank you.
