Criminology - Suzanne Simpson

Episode Date: November 24, 2024

Suzanne, a 51-year-old mother of four from Olmos Park, Texas, is currently missing but presumed dead. Despite multiple searches, including a sweep of the landfill in Bexar County, Suzanne still has no...t been found. Join Mike and Morf as they discuss the disappearance of Suzanne Simpson. It's a case with circumstances that are all too familiar to those who regularly follow true crime. Suzanne's husband, Brad, was a suspect from the start. And just weeks before this episode aired, he was arrested for Suzanne's murder. You can help support the show at patreon.com/criminology   An Emash Digital production

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Criminology is a true crime podcast that may contain discussion about violent or disturbing topics. Listener discretion is advised. Hello, everyone, and welcome to episode 335 of the criminology podcast. I'm Mike Ferguson. And this is Mike Morford. And Mr. Morford, how are you doing, buddy? I'm doing good. I'm doing some early Christmas shopping here.
Starting point is 00:00:52 I was waiting for you to jump on and decided to start spending some money on the holidays. How about you? Well, you know, that can be pretty easy nowadays with all the technology that we have. Now, I'm doing great. We had our first snow yesterday of the season and the puppy, first snow ever for the puppy. And Ivy was out, you know, looking at her footprints, trying to figure out this white stuff and what was going on. Yeah, the dogs love the snow. I was watching the football game last night, too.
Starting point is 00:01:25 It was pretty awesome to see that kind of. of action in the snow. Yeah, I watched some of it as well. But yeah, so first snow, hopefully it's a mild winter like we've had the last couple, but we'll have to wait and see. Let's go ahead and give our Patreon shoutouts. Beth jumped out at our highest level. And we had Margaret Gifford. So some great new support. We really appreciate it. Yeah, thank you, Beth and Margaret. I can't thank you enough for that. And for anyone else that would like to help support the show, you can do so by going to patreon.com slash criminology. And more if you mentioned shopping for the holiday season,
Starting point is 00:02:05 I was just talking to my wife the other day thinking the second half of this year is going so quickly for me. I felt like the summer, which is usually the other way around, but the summer lasted pretty long. It seemed like it went long. But the last two or four months, man, they are flying by. It seems like the older you get, the faster time seems to go.
Starting point is 00:02:29 Yeah, you remember hearing that when you were younger and thinking, oh, what are these people talking about? But it turns out it is true. All right. It's time to jump into this week's case and we've got a really big one. And it's one that's currently still unfolding and making headlines out of the state of Texas. We're talking about Suzanne Simpson. Suzanne, a 51-year-old mother of four from almost Park, Texas is currently missing.
Starting point is 00:02:57 but presumed debt. Despite multiple searches, including a sweep of the landfill in Bexar County, Suzanne still hasn't been found. It's a case with circumstances that are all too familiar to those who regularly follow true crime. Suzanne was a realtor in the San Antonio area, working for Nick's Realty, having been a realtor for 13 years. She lived with her husband, Brad, who was also in the luxury real estate business. They had been married for 22 years. When Suzanne vanished, their two youngest children who were 15 and 5 years old, both lived at home. But their oldest two children, who were 18 and 22, were off at college. Not much has been said about the marriage between Suzanne and Brad, or their lives together.
Starting point is 00:03:42 But we now know that if it ever was happy, it was unraveling by August 2023, if not earlier. But they stayed together and continued to try to work things out until Brad Simpson reported Suzanne missing on October 7, 2.3. 2004. Almost immediately, investigators began to suspect that he had something to do with her disappearance. And it wasn't just the husband always did it, tunnel vision, or the fact that he was the last person to see her. The more they investigated, the more all signs pointed directly to Brad. On October 6th, the last day Suzanne was seen alive, witnesses place her and Brad at a party, held at a member's only dinner club in Alamo Heights called the Argonne. the club offers an upscale environment and a five-star dining experience.
Starting point is 00:04:33 The Simpsons stood out there that night because they were fighting. It was also awkward because things clearly weren't great between them. They arrived and left separately to a friend's birthday party where they kind of made a scene. Suzanne also had their five-year-old daughter with her who likely witnessed the whole blow-up. Suzanne left the party at approximately 8.30,000. that night. On her way home, Suzanne stopped at HGB, a local grocery store at 915 when she left instead of going home. She called a family friend who lived nearby and asked if she could visit. One minute later, Suzanne called her mother, Barbara Clark, and told her that Brad had punched her
Starting point is 00:05:19 and heard her arm in back. She then went to the home of her family friend. Just after her phone call to her mom, Suzanne's cell phone service was shut off. According to KSAT.com news, the phone service was suspended at the request of the subscriber, which seems to mean that Brad was able to cut off her cell phone service, hoping she would have to come home because it was late at night and there would be no way to contact anyone. Data from Brad's phone would later approve that he accessed their AT&T account from his phone
Starting point is 00:05:51 at the same time that Suzanne's service was suspended. We do know that at some point, Suzanne did end up back at their house on the 500 block of East Almost Drive. So did Brad. So clearly more something was going on that night. The two weren't getting along. People saw them fighting at this party. And then you have Suzanne telling her mother that Brad punched her and hurt her arm.
Starting point is 00:06:20 And one of the things that, you know, really jumped out at me was Suzanne's cell phone service being shut off. And, you know, the authorities kind of putting it together that it was Brad on his cell phone, accessing the AT&T account and shutting down her phone. I mean, who in the world does that? And I think the real troubling thing about it is it was on the heels of her telling her mom that Brad had punched her. So, you know, very troubling to see that shut down right after that. And there was talk about, well, you know, he, he thought that would force her to come home. But to me, it just seems like such a, a risky thing to do, right? We all kind of live by our cell phones these days. But there's also the element of safety in having a cell phone.
Starting point is 00:07:23 phone if something were to happen. And let's not forget, she's with the five-year-old. So that whole thing to me has a very ominous ring to it. Once they were both at home, a commotion caused one of their nearby neighbors who lived across the street to look out the window sometime between 10 and 11 that night. As he looked out of his bedroom window, the neighbor spotted two people who he recognized as Brad and Suzanne Simpson outside in his front yard. According to KSAT News and an arrest warrant, Brad was grabbing at Suzanne and was clearly attempting to keep her from running away.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Suzanne broke free from Brad's grasp and ran away from him. He chased her and was trying to grab her. At the time, the two were heading west on their street. In the time it took the neighbor to get outside with a flashlight. to try any kind of intervention or help, they were gone. The neighbor, though, could still hear them and heard two, possibly three screams coming from a wooded area on the east side of his home. After hearing the screams, he ran back inside his home.
Starting point is 00:08:40 The neighbor stayed alert, even after going back inside. An hour after hearing the commotion and seeing Suzanne trying to get away from Brad, the neighbor saw Brad once again. this time he was by himself he got into his truck a black 2019 GMC Sierra and left he was gone for one to two hours before returning and there's no doubt that this is a huge part of this case you know first of all you have a neighbor and this happens in many of the cases that we do someone's either looking out the window just by chance or they look out the window because they hear something, which is what happened in this case. But what this guy saw, what this neighbor saw was pretty alarming. Morf, you know, he recognized the two people. They were neighbors, Brad and Suzanne, but they're obviously in some type of altercation where it appears Suzanne is trying to get away from Brad and he's grabbing her.
Starting point is 00:09:48 And when she does get away, he runs after her. And then the neighbor hears screaming. Yeah, I think all of that immediately following the stuff we already talked about, you know, her telling her mom she was punched, her phone being shut down by Brad. And now you have this neighbor witnessing all this. It's a dire looking picture. You know, and credit to this guy because he grabbed,
Starting point is 00:10:18 a flashlight. He went outside. He was going to try to intervene. But unfortunately, by the time he got out there, they were already down the street somewhere. But obviously, this guy stayed pretty alert to realize when Brad came back. You know, it was an hour or two that he was gone in his truck and then came back. So obviously, the neighbor was invested at this point in what was going on trying to figure out, hey, what's happening between these two people? But the one thing that, you know, I didn't see in the research was that this neighbor ever called the police. And this is something that, you know, we kind of touch on in a number of episodes. But a lot of times it's someone hearing something from inside their house.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Maybe it's a gunshot, but they don't know for sure. And we, you know, question whether or not they should call the police. This one here to me seems a little more clear cut. Now, you could make the argument that, you know, these are neighbors. You don't want to get them in trouble. That thought might go through someone's head, but this seems like a pretty bad scene. Yeah, especially after this neighbor took the time to watch to see what was going on and obviously felt something was off that he needed to pay it.
Starting point is 00:11:48 attention so the fact that he didn't call the police while it was unfolding is a little bit perplexing to me. Despite Brad turning off Suzanne's phone service, her phone was still active the next morning. The last ping from her device occurred at 715 on the 7th, and the GPS showed that at that time it was not pinging at the Simpson home. It was pinging from the parking lot of a Mexican restaurant called Panchitos less than half a mile away. Brad Simpson apparently claims to have thought everything was normal until 3 o'clock that afternoon when he received the call from their daughter's school informing him that Suzanne hadn't shown up for pickup, and their five-year-old daughter was still there.
Starting point is 00:12:31 Suzanne always handled the pickup from school. According to Brad, he didn't panic. He just went to the school and picked up their child. It would be another seven hours before he decided to report his wife missing. He claimed to have seen Suzanne that more. morning before he left to drop their five-year-old off at school. He said that at 6.30 that morning, she was asleep when he peeked into a separate room. The next morning on the 8th, Brad didn't show up for a scheduled interview with detectives. Instead, he went to a second property he owned in
Starting point is 00:13:00 Bandera County, over an hour away. Though he was uncooperative and had nothing to say to investigators, he did call his brother Barton Simpson and apologize for causing so much trouble. So there's a couple of things here more for me that, you know, just seem off. And obviously we know they're off, but you have someone who doesn't report their wife missing for quite a long time. You know, I get it. He says that he saw her in the morning, but then she doesn't pick their youngest up from school. Okay. He goes to pick her up.
Starting point is 00:13:38 He doesn't panic, he says. But then it's another seven hours before he decides to report his wife missing. And then not showing up for a scheduled interview with detectives. I mean, all of that just seems off to me. It seems as though you're not worried about your wife at all. All along, these things are troubling from Brad hitting Suzanne to turning off her phone. Then the neighbor sees the scuffle. Now she's missing on.
Starting point is 00:14:11 of a sudden he's not in a rush to do anything about it. You know, it's leading down a road that just doesn't look good and it looks like something bad has happened here. And it doesn't look good for Brad Simpson. That afternoon, a staff member from their child's school reported some troubling statements made by the Simpson's child. The little girl said she had witnessed her parents fighting, which resulted in a bruise on Suzanne's elbow.
Starting point is 00:14:39 The child also noted that Brad's. took Suzanne's phone from her. Just before 10 p.m., minutes short of 24 hours, since Brad's missing persons report, the neighbor came forward to tell investigators about the fight, the screams, and Brad's late night trip. Less than three hours after receiving this information, authorities obtained a warrant for Brad's arrest.
Starting point is 00:15:05 53-year-old Brad Simpson was found at 1.30 a.m. on October 9, 24, driving east on Interstate 10, about 30 miles north of San Antonio, when officers from the Kendall County Sheriff's Office made the arrest and booked him into custody. He was charged with family violence, specifically assault, causing bodily injury and unlawful restraint since these acts had witnesses. He was granted a bond, but it was steep, $1 million per charge he was facing. The next day, he was transferred from the Kendall County Jail to the Baxar County Jail. Despite the fact that Suzanne was still missing, things were moving quickly in the investigation. On October 11th, a federal hold was placed on Brad Simpson.
Starting point is 00:15:54 For seven hours on the same day, authorities searched an area about a mile away from the 542 East Mile Marker, where he was arrested on Interstate 10. The next day, authorities from the Texas Department of Public Safety obtained a warrant authorizing a search, of a landfill in southeast Bexar County. The warrant was filed under seal, so exactly what they expected to find or why they thought it would be found in the landfill is unknown. Investigators released a photo of Suzanne from the Argyle Dinner Club showing what she was last known to be wearing, which was a black knee-length dress and black high heels.
Starting point is 00:16:33 While they were almost certain she was not just a missing person and was likely a homicide victim, almost parked police chief Fidel Villegos told KSAT news that the investigators didn't want to miss an opportunity to say, hey, this is what she looks like in case someone out there knows where she is or she's hiding away or something. It's been established that the couple was not happy with each other at the Argyle and we know that she was in distress.
Starting point is 00:17:05 So this is one of those cases where a person stayed of mind may have caused them to take off. It seems that there was a possibility at least that Suzanne could have been angry any of the time to calm down before going home and figured she would leave Brad with the kids and the responsibilities. She also could have been terrified in waiting for Brad to calm down before she returned. Either way, investigators remained open to the possibility that Suzanne was still alive. Chief Vigas told the San Antonio report, we're holding out hope that maybe she's trying to be away from the home to get away from that situation. And I don't know what you think, Morph, but I mean, I think the police have to be open at this
Starting point is 00:17:48 point in time because they don't have evidence that definitively says, you know, Suzanne is dead. Now, they might believe that she was a homicide victim, but the possibility still exists. that, you know, she could have just wanted to get away from Brad, either for him to cool off or to let her cool off. So they're at least entertaining that possibility. However unlikely, they might think it is. You know, when you talk about tunnel vision, whether their words ring true or not, it seems like they're open to a number of different possibilities at this point. And I think they had to be open to that possibility because if she was alive, she could be in danger or, you know, it might be a situation where time was of the essence to find her. So I think they had to keep that as a possibility.
Starting point is 00:18:48 The San Antonio Police Department joined the search on October 15th at the request of the almost Park Police Department. As the investigation unfolded, the public learned that the federal hold placed on Simpson was, due to a federal charge he was facing. During searches of the Simpson home, authorities discovered a short-barreled rifle, which he didn't legally own. This charge alone meant that he could be sentenced up to 10 years in a federal prison
Starting point is 00:19:20 in addition to a maximum fine of $250,000. This federal hold meant that if he managed to post a high bail, which could be easier than usual for people in professions like real estate, he would have been placed into the custody of the U.S. Marshal Service instead of being released to his home. So no matter how you looked at it,
Starting point is 00:19:45 Brad was in a lot of hot water. And a lot of times in movies, you know, you see people sawing off the barrels of a rifle or a shotgun with a hacksaw. I don't know what act it was, but some act many years ago made owning those types of weapons illegal. And this actually happened to me in a way.
Starting point is 00:20:10 When my grandfather passed away a number of years ago, a short-barreled rifle was found that he owned, I don't know, legally, illegally. I'm not sure, but it was handed down to me. And as soon as I got it, I thought, I don't think this is legal. So I actually called my local police and had them come out, told them the story, and they took it for me and said that they would just hold it. Kind of a strange situation, but I didn't get in trouble or anything.
Starting point is 00:20:44 I was honest about it and explained how it happened. Yeah, and I think maybe that's the difference between you and Brad here. You know, you came forward and said, hey, I've got this gun. What do with it? And Brad, on the other hand, wasn't honest. about that gun and decided to hold on to it. Well, and you wonder why Brad had it. You know, whether he cut the barrel off himself or, you know, we don't know how it happened.
Starting point is 00:21:14 And we don't know what that weapon might have been used for. In the suburbs of D.C., a woman fails to show up for work and is found brutally murdered. I wonder what's emergency. We just walked in the door and there's blood in the foyer. For the next two decades, the case remained unsolved. until new technology allowed investigators to do what had once been impossible. A new series from ABC Audio in 2020, blood and water. Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:21:46 Sometimes in missing persons cases, one of spouses accused of murdering their missing partner, their immediate family will rally around them and support them, showing how much they believe in their innocence. This was not the case for Brad. Instead, his family was fully on the side of Suzanne and her family. It's not clear what made them abandon Brad and instead support Suzanne's family. They were also concerned for Brad and Suzanne's kids. Just one day after Brad's arrest, his mother spoke to KSAT news
Starting point is 00:22:16 and talked about the total disbelief she was experiencing, but it was clear that her focus was not on helping her son, saying, We are a devastated family, and we do need privacy, and that's all we're asking for, because our only concern right now are these children and these grandchildren. And I just wonder more if, you know, his family not being on his side had to do with all of the information that was coming out. I mean, we said it, right? None of it made him look good.
Starting point is 00:22:47 And I think in a lot of the cases that we've done where the family does rally around someone, the information that would make them turn away from their loved one, doesn't come out until much later. Maybe that's just a little different in this case. Yeah, we also don't know what went on behind the scenes in the years leading up to Suzanne going missing. Maybe his family was aware that he had some issues or maybe Suzanne was afraid of him or maybe they saw that he treated Suzanne badly.
Starting point is 00:23:24 And maybe that's why they were so quick to be on her side. and her family side. Yeah, that's true. We don't know a lot about the family dynamics. Maybe maybe more will come out in the future. On October 16th, 10 days after Suzanne had last been seen alive, Brad's brother Barton issued a written public statement. According to KSAT news, it read, until Brad chooses to cooperate, we will continue to cooperate for him. As we have from the very beginning of this heartbreaking ordeal. This is not how he was raised, and this is not who we are. Our parents instilled in us the values of honoring and protecting others, and they are truly remarkable people. The devastation this is caused to our family is overwhelming. Brad's refusal
Starting point is 00:24:16 to cooperate is unacceptable. My sister and brother-in-law have stepped up to take care of the children, but the impact on our parents has been shattering. Our lives have been irreparably changed. We will not rest until we find Suzanne. And it was signed Barton T. Simpson. So I think, you know, there was a real emphasis there that they were going to cooperate with the police in Brad's place because he wasn't doing it. Yeah, it was pretty clear that the family was. all in on finding Suzanne and getting him to do the right thing and start talking.
Starting point is 00:25:01 And it wasn't just Brad's siblings that chose not to stand by him. He and Suzanne's children immediately stood with their mother. Her 20-year-old daughter posted a series of stories on her Instagram page, urging other women in the Alamo Heights area to speak out about domestic violence. In one of these stories, she made known her belief that her father was guilty, writing, He took my mother's life in a state of rage and control. The search of the landfill stopped on October 17th after five days. Authorities didn't find any traces of Suzanne or anything to further their investigation.
Starting point is 00:25:43 Almost Park Mayor Aaron Harrison told KSAT News, the search would now focus on the wooded areas in and around, Almost Park. By October 19th, the assistance of Texas search and rescue, a non-profit first responder organization, headquartered in Austin, had been requested by the almost Park Police Department. And Morif, one of the things that I did like hearing about is that the Almost Park Police Department was not shy about requesting assistance from other agencies. You know, a lot of times you hear about these police departments, they, want to try to keep everyone else away. They don't want other agencies coming in and helping them.
Starting point is 00:26:28 And you and I have talked about it a number of times. Why wouldn't you want some of these bigger agencies or help from other entities? So that's kind of refreshing. You don't always hear that. Yeah, it seems like an all hands on deck situation where you would want as many resources as you can have, trying to help you solve a case and find this person. James Cotter, a longtime business partner of Brad's, was arrested on October 21st, in charge with two counts, tampering with evidence with the intent to impair an investigation and possession of prohibited weapons. According to investigators, he went over to the Simpson home and retrieved an AK-47
Starting point is 00:27:13 that Brad had failed to properly register and had also, illegally modified, turning it into a machine gun. It's interesting, authorities admit that this information came from a tip. Publicly, the person is anonymous, but they had previously provided information in this investigation that turned out to be true. So when they were notified that Cotter had been asked to help Simpson hide a fully automatic AK-47 rifle, they quickly moved on the information. This person also provided some kind of video. evidence, proving that there wasn't AK-47 in a vault inside the home before authorities searched it. This gun was not found during searches of the home. This wasn't just a case of Carter holding
Starting point is 00:28:03 on to this gun for his friend. He also lied about it. He said it was a 22-caliber rifle. It was the tipster who told investigators it was actually a fully automatic AK-47. Cotter also went to great lengths to hide it for Brad Simpson. The tipster told authorities the firearm could be found behind a wall in the bedroom. When detectives searched Cotter's home, they did find a gun behind the wall-mounted TV in his bedroom. There was a string tied to the AK-47 so that it could be easily retrieved later. Bond was set for James Cotter at $1 million, which according to KSAT News, his attorney Robert Maurer called Ridiculous. Mauer felt that his client was being used to get the Simpson. The attorney said, obviously they want to keep him in jail because they want to coerce him into
Starting point is 00:28:50 cooperating. So no doubt what this guy did was wrong, but a million dollar bond, that does seem very large. And it seems like it had something to do with Brad Simpson. I would have to agree with that. I don't know how many people are getting a million dollar bond for, you know, a gun charge on their own. I do know fully automatic AK-47 is a pretty serious thing on its own. I don't know what time, you know, amount of time that carries if you're found guilty of it or what the bond would be, but it seems like a really serious charge, let alone the fact you've got Suzanne missing and maybe there's some connection there. Yeah, I don't want to downplay the charge, but it does seem as though the bond amount at least may have had something to do with Brad and Suzanne being missing.
Starting point is 00:29:49 James Cotter gave authorities permission to look through his cell phone and electronic communications. They found a text message from Brad Simpson at 4.35 p.m. on October 8th, the day after he reported Suzanne missing, asking for Cotter's help. According to KSAT news, the text read, If you're in Bandera, can you haul ass and meet me at your house? I don't have much time. Cotter replied that he would be there in just 40 minutes. Brad also told James Cotter to make sure to leave all that shit in the pump house, especially that gun, indicating that Cotter may have grabbed more than just the firearm.
Starting point is 00:30:31 According to the arrest warrant, at 8.31 p.m., James Cotter texted Brad Simpson. Get over here. I won't tell anyone and then texted him saying, you're my brother. The day after James Carter's arrest, Brad Simpson was charged with tampering with evidence with the intent to impair an investigation and possession of prohibited weapons, bringing his total charge count to six, including the federal charge. It turns out that this was not the first time that the two real estate partners were facing legal problems. They were both named as co-defendants in 2012 when James Cotter's company,
Starting point is 00:31:07 Cotter and Sons, Inc. was sued by a janitorial company called BJA Corporation. At the time, Brad Simpson was working as the manager of Cotter's company. The next year, Cotter and Sun sued Brad Simpson for using the company to hire Premier Facility Solutions of San Antonio, or PFS, a company that he started in 2009 at above-market rates. He was basically paying himself twice for the same job. There was a lot more to it, and they were back and forth until 2015 when the case went to trial. BJ Corporation won a judgment of $930,000 from Cotter and Sons, but the jury specified that the damages would not come from James Cotter or Brad Simpson.
Starting point is 00:31:54 According to KSAT news, Henry Gonzalez, Brad Simpson's attorney in the matter, said Simpson won at the trial court and the case was ultimately resolved 100% in his favor. But this wouldn't be the last time that Simpson was in civil court over finances. He's been sued by American Express twice for not paying credit card bills. In 2019, he and one of his companies, Live Oak Investments owed nearly $15,000. The next year, he was sued again, this time for racking up over $11,000 in unpaid charges on his business gold rewards car. It's clear that Brad Simpson and James Carter were thick as thieves and had a troubling track record together. What's unclear is what lengths James Carter would go to for Brad Simpson.
Starting point is 00:32:47 Some might argue that he was trying to help out a friend who he believed was innocent, and that him hiding the gun was basically eliminating a reason for authorities to look at Brad for something that wasn't connected to Suzanne's case. From what's been released so far, there's no clear indication that Brad Simpson directly asked James Cotter to help cover up a murder or admit that the firearm was used in any crime. His text suggests a friend down on his luck, afraid that the judgment of people who had never even met him would seal his fate. Another text from Brad to James read,
Starting point is 00:33:22 Sorry for the urgency, but you're all I got, especially now. Social media is destroying me. So maybe James really was. trying to help his friend out. On the other hand, how many people would have a hole in their wall, ready to hide something for their friend at the drop of a hat, knowing that their spouse was missing and that as a result, they were going to be under scrutiny from law enforcement to many, someone willing to do things like this for a friend might be in the habit of hiding things and evading authorities.
Starting point is 00:33:58 And I thought, you know, the whole time I was going through this research, Morp that this relationship between James Cotter and Brad Simpson was kind of a strange one. I mean, clearly they were friends. They were business partners and different ventures, but only a friend would do something such as James Cotter did for Brad. But then you go back in time and it seems like they were suing each other. you know, in years past. So I got a strange vibe from the relationship.
Starting point is 00:34:39 And I just got to say, Mike, I like you. But if you ever show up at my house asking me to hide a gun in my wall, I'll probably have some questions of you. Well, that's the thing, right? You know, you hear sayings like, well, you know, he's a type of person that would do anything for a friend. Well, what does anything mean, right? There's a line for everyone.
Starting point is 00:35:03 You know, as close as people are, as friends are, you know, your car breaks down, you call me, I'll come help you out. I'll do anything like that. I'm not covering up a murder. I'm not helping you bury a body. There are lines that I will not cross. And I'm sure that goes for a lot of people, most people. And even if it was not even a murder, just that AK-47 hiding a fully AK-47 that you know is illegal and is a federal offense, to do that shows that he's, you know, pretty tight with Brad.
Starting point is 00:35:48 Yeah, because he's taking a huge chance, right? Just by taking possession of that firearm and hiding it. He's taking a chance that he's going to get caught up in this and catch a charge himself, and that's what ultimately happened. Robert Maurer, the attorney for James Cotter, asked for his bail to be reduced and noted that he'd been stuck in a holding cell since his arrest. According to KSAT News, Maurer called it perhaps the most unconstitutional, egregious action he had witnessed in his 30 years of law practice.
Starting point is 00:36:25 However, the Bexar County Sheriff's Office noted that Cotter had. had not made any complaints nor grievances about his conditions, and also refuted the holding cell claim, clarifying that Cotter has been housed in a cell in a living unit at the Baxar County Jail. As far as Brad Simpson, even while he was being held in jail, he had to appear for hearings in Baxar County Children's Court, he was able to attend a Child Protective Services hearing. By a Zoom on October 29th, he claimed to have no clue.
Starting point is 00:36:59 where Suzanne was since he hadn't seen her since about 10.30 p.m. on October 6th. He said he figured she was with her sorority sisters in Austin, which he called her happy place. On October 7, 2004, Brad Simpson was officially charged with the murder of his wife, Suzanne, though her body has still not been found. According to K-E-N-S-5 News, his brother Barton called the new charge heartbreaking, but said that it brings the family some peace to know the authorities have gathered sufficient evidence to feel confident in moving forward with charges. And we've already talked about it, but I think, you know, this latest quote from Barton just shows it that much more clearly, you know, how all in they were kind of against Brad.
Starting point is 00:37:57 and on the side of Suzanne and her family. Yeah, I think it's pretty clear that they were in favor of doing what's right rather than just blindly supporting somebody just because they were family. They wanted to have Suzanne found and wanted justice. It's unclear what exactly gave law enforcement the confidence to charge Brad with Suzanne's murder. It's purely speculation, but it's certainly possible. that James Cotter agreed to reveal what he knew to police. On November 8th, James Cotter was able to post bail after it was reduced from an initial $1 million down to just $50,000 for each charge he was facing for a total of $100,000.
Starting point is 00:38:42 He's required to wear a GPS ankle monitor. He had to surrender his passport and is prohibited from having any contact with Brad Simpson. He also cannot be in possession of any firearms while out on bond. So we talked about it earlier, you know, how this one million dollar bond seemed to be pretty high, right, for James Cotter. And his defense attorney made the insinuation that he was being held for questioning. And that's the reason why the bond was so high. He might have been correct about that. And it could be possible that James Cotter gave up vital importance.
Starting point is 00:39:24 in exchange for, you know, lowering his bond. Like you said, more of it's purely speculation at this point. I'm sure more on that will come out in the future. This is a case that, like you said early on, is still unfolding. So we'll have to wait and see on that. The arrest warrant for Brad Simpson was unsealed on November 12th. And it contained some important details. It revealed that at around 1233,
Starting point is 00:39:54 on October 7th, during the time he was gone after the neighbor saw Brad Chase Suzanne. His truck was captured by the security cameras at the local HEB, and it's important to note that the bed was empty, aside from a large ice chest. Later on, the morning of October 7th, Simpson took their five-year-old daughter to school in his GMC Sierra. she was dropped off at 7.53 a.m. He also went to a water burger that morning where his truck was captured by their surveillance cameras. He used his debit card to purchase food there. That morning Simpson had a large heavy-duty trash can and three white trash bags in the bed of the truck, along with an ice chest and a large bulky item wrapped in a blue tarp that seemed to be weighed down with a
Starting point is 00:40:51 metal firewood rack. Just before 10 a.m., about half an hour after he went to Waddeberger, Brad Simpson went to Home Depot. His purchases there paint a very clear and disturbing picture. He bought a 30-ounce bottle of chlorox disinfectant spray, insect repellent, a box of heavy-duty contractors' trash bags, two bags of cement, and a construction bucket with a lid. He used cash for his transaction. A man in the parking lot of Home Depot recalls Simpson asking him for directions to the nearest dump site. According to KSAT News, data shows that Brad then placed his phone into lockdown mode before heading to a waste site inborn, where his truck was spotted leaving.
Starting point is 00:41:35 After this, he went to the gas station, while still unborn, almost a half hour northwest of Omos Park. At 1115, he bought two one-gallon jugs of water. He paid for these items using cash. it's interesting that the only thing Brad used a debit card for that morning was food, but he used cash for all the supplies that he bought. And a lot of people would think he was trying not to leave a record or a paper trail buying these items. So I think it just goes to show that you might have a plan and it might be well thought out and you might think, hey, I'm going to not leave this paper trail.
Starting point is 00:42:11 But all along the way, Brad has interactions with people. he's caught on store surveillance cameras, there's witnesses. So they're still able to piece things together despite him apparently trying not to leave a trail of what he had done. Well, and it's another case of someone being caught on camera at one of these big box stores, buying what you would have to say more is very incriminating items. Now, there are a lot of people that might buy. the exact same thing. And there would be nothing to those purchases, but those purchases aren't made,
Starting point is 00:42:57 you know, in the wake of your spouse going missing. And that's what kind of obviously makes his purchases look very suspicious. And the fact that, you know, he used cash for the purchases goes back to what you said. it does seem as though he was trying very hard not to leave a paper trip. Now, why did he use the debit card to purchase his food at Waterberger? Did he think that that was going to give him an alibi or a point of reference, but throw off the rest of it? I don't know about that.
Starting point is 00:43:42 Yeah, I take it as he thought, okay, later. later on when they go through my records and they go through my card statements, my bank statements, they'll say, okay, he ate a meal at a fast food place. So what, what they, police wouldn't see was that he had purchases at Home Depot to where they could go back and track those purchases, but it seems like he didn't count on witnesses or surveillance video helping put him there. Yeah, I think it's another instance of someone thinking that they're small. martyr than what they are. They think what they're doing is going to fool everyone. But it doesn't. Surveillance from the gas station captured the contents of the bed of the truck.
Starting point is 00:44:28 Once again, the blue tarp trash can and firewood rack were still inside. But the trash bags were gone. During this trip, he was now wearing cowboy boots, while earlier footage showed he was wearing sandals. At 141 p.m., the bed of his truck was seen on surveillance again. This time, thanks to a license plate reader in Kendall County, the blue tarp was gone, and the firewood rack had been moved. In between the gas station and the license plate surveillance, Brad was in the Medina area. For 13 minutes, Medina is about 40 miles west of born. During this time, it appears that, Simpson turned off his cell phone. But his vehicle infotainment system was still recording GPS data.
Starting point is 00:45:20 He then went right back to Kendall County where Bourne is located. After this activity, Brad likely waited for the call from the school knowing that the alarm would be sound when Suzanne didn't pick up their daughter. After that, Brad Simpson picked up their five-year-old daughter from school around 3.30 p.m. Surveillance cameras at the school recorded the truck yet again, showing that the firewood rack was now missing. The trash can and ice chest were still there, but by 4.10 p.m. when the truck was recorded by a security system at a car wash, the trash can was gone, too. According to KSAT news, on this footage from the car wash, dried cement splashes could be seen near the rear passenger side in the bed. When authorities searched the Simpson home,
Starting point is 00:46:04 the box of trash bags he purchased at Home Depot was found with four bags missing. The firewood rack, heavy-duty trash can, and one of the bags of quick reek cement that he bought at Home Depot were also found. The 30-ounce bottle of Kurox was found in the rear passenger compartment of the GMC. So it seems pretty clear that, from what we've talked about, that Brad was trying to cover his tracks and not leave a paper trail of these items that he bought at Home Depot, but then many of those items were found inside his home and his truck. So, you know, he thought he was smart on one hand, not leaving a paper trial. On the other hand, he left these same items that looked incriminating in his possession. I think it's an instance of, you know, people thinking that they can
Starting point is 00:46:55 outsmart the police. But I think it's easier said than done to, you know, clean everything up, get rid of everything. It's, it's just not that easy. Thankfully so, because that's what keeps a lot of people from getting away with some of these heinous crimes. Also go back to, you know, some of this security footage, video footage. Very telling more when, you know, the bed of your truck is seen with these items at a certain time. And then later on, video shows. that some of those items are gone. Okay. Where did they go?
Starting point is 00:47:39 What did you do with them? One detail that emerged is that it seems Brad was not going to report Suzanne missing that night, but had to change his plans. And whatever story he was concocting, because one of Suzanne's friends called him that night to ask what was going on. According to the friend, Brad seemed unconcerned and hadn't concoctored. and hadn't contacted any authorities, so the friend told Brad she was going to call the authorities if he didn't.
Starting point is 00:48:10 The friend did call police at 9.57 p.m. On October 6, to report Suzanne's disappearance, Brad didn't call until 10.11 p.m. He left a voicemail for the chief of police about the situation and claimed that he had last seen Suzanne the previous night, around 11 p.m. It wasn't until later that his story changed and he said she was at home the next morning as he left to take their child to school. So I wonder if it's possible that Brad was getting confused by his own stories or having to lie repeatedly and maybe stumbled on his lies because he's telling the police chief on a voicemail that he last saw his wife at 11 p.m.
Starting point is 00:48:57 but later is changing a story to say she was at home the next morning when he took their daughter to school. So, you know, it's little things like that that please pick up on when you stumble over important details like that. Well, and it certainly doesn't make him look good. Neither does the fact that it doesn't appear as though he was even going to report his wife missing at all. And he only did it because he knew he was going to look bad when one of Suzanne's friends was going to call. So he figured, well, I better hurry up and make the call because if not, I'm going to look back. The affidavit also reveals that on October 9th, investigators searched a home in Bandera County, where they discovered a burn site with an active fire still going.
Starting point is 00:49:50 A laptop and multiple cell phones all apparently belonged to Browell. Brad Simpson had been burned and left in the pile of ashes. Investigators were able to recover data from these devices. According to Court TV, the phones revealed two notes titled This Next Life and Last Will and Testament, which apologized for physically assaulting Suzanne in August 2023 and again on October 6, 2024. This note was created on October 8th the day before his arrest. And here we have something else. that doesn't make Brad look good at all.
Starting point is 00:50:25 A person who's not guilty of anything doesn't need to burn their laptop, their, you know, all their cell phones. They don't need to do that type of stuff. And it's what investigators were able to recover that is kind of perplexing. You know, these notes, one titled This Next Life and then obviously the last will and testament, you can take those a couple of different ways. You know, was Brad possibly thinking about ending his life or was he about to go on the run? I think either scenario further paints a picture of him as somebody that was up to no good
Starting point is 00:51:10 and trying to cover his tracks and probably strengthened his family's support for Suzanne after hearing these details. Well, the last thing I would ever want to do is tell someone how to get away with a crime. What I would say is it seems to me that everything this guy did just pointed to him as being guilty. Now, I'm sure he thought nobody was ever going to find this stuff. Nobody was going to know that he bought all these things at Home Depot. He didn't count on video surveillance capturing the bed of his truck at different points in time, but he wasn't a mastermind, criminal, obviously.
Starting point is 00:52:04 In August 2023, Suzanne had disclosed at least one domestic violence incident to her personal banker. According to KENS5 News, Suzanne told the banker that if she went missing to look for her. her in a lake. According to the arrest warrant, in September 2003, Brad Simpson texted someone about another incident, writing, I still feel bad about tonight. I never should have grabbed her phone and drove off, but she was so protective of it. My dumb ass didn't know her pass code, so I got locked out and had to bring it back. I really have no interest
Starting point is 00:52:46 in looking through her phone or anybody else's. He added, These devices are the devil. And this revelation, you know, has a tone of jealousy to it. It almost seems as though Brad thought Suzanne had something on her phone that she didn't want him to see. And he wanted to get a look at it, but he couldn't because he didn't know her past code. Again, it's speculation, but it kind of seems that way. Well, based on everything else we've heard, you know, the way he had hit her, some of the things that had happened that we've gone over, it wouldn't surprise me if he was jealous or suspicious of her and was trying to control her and maybe wanted to see what things she had on her phone. And this was him, you know, look reflecting on that.
Starting point is 00:53:42 Yeah, I'm with you on that. When Brad Simpson was arrested, investigators noticed they had multiple bruises. and cuts on his hands and arms, and according to KSAT News, did not appear surprised to hear that he was being taken into custody, and he showed little emotion, considering that his wife was missing. His vehicle was seized and searched on October 20th, but stains inside turned up to be Brad's blood, not Suzanne's. Suzanne's cell phone has not been found. Brad claims that she lost it during that shopping trip to H.E.B. Just before she was last seen alive.
Starting point is 00:54:17 But dad approves that as a lie. And I'm always shocked when someone shows so little emotion in a situation like this, right? A person's not surprised to hear that they're being taken into custody. A husband shows little emotion about the fact that his wife is missing. I mean, none of that adds up. up. I mean, you just think about any loved one in your life, whether it's a spouse, a sibling, a parent. If you thought for a second that they were missing or potentially in danger, there would be all kinds of emotions coursing through you. And that's aside from the fact that the police are
Starting point is 00:55:09 looking at you and actually taking you into custody. So none of that makes sense to me. Yeah, and we talk about in different episodes how some people react to different situations differently. But if your wife's missing and you're being arrested for it, you think that combination is going to elicit some kind of response and emotions. And that wasn't the case for Brad. Brad Simpson remains in custody at the Baxar County Jail, pending a likely trial, which has yet to be scheduled. His bond is currently set at $5 million total, $2 million for the murder charge, in addition to the $3 million for other various charges.
Starting point is 00:55:55 According to KSAT News, Suzanne has been described as the kindest, sweetest person, a great friend, and a wonderful mom. Her oldest daughter said she was a phenomenal mother and called her hardworking, driven, loving and kind. There has been no activity on any of her bank accounts or cards, and everyone who knows her agrees that she would never leave her children or her parents worrying and wondering about her. In their hearts, they know she's gone and that Brad is responsible, but they still would like to have answers and to be able to properly lay Suzanne to rest. And, you know, this is something we talk about, something that I think about in many cases.
Starting point is 00:56:39 especially on the unsolved side of things. You know, there's a question. And there was the same question in this case. At least the police kept the possibility open. You know, could Suzanne have wanted to distance herself from Brad? But at a certain point, as time goes by, I think that notion went out the window. And I think it does in a lot of cases. because, you know, here you have a mother of four children.
Starting point is 00:57:15 She's not just going to up and leave them. And you have no activity on her bank accounts. Okay. Well, how is she living? How is she buying food? You know, some of that stuff at a certain point just starts to make very little sense in the way of someone just up and disappearing, leaving their life. I think for the most part, it's normally not the case.
Starting point is 00:57:45 Yeah. And, you know, at the end of the episode here, it just seems that Brad, in some regards, it seems like he had a plan. He had ways that he thought he might be able to get away with this. But at the end, I wonder what's his long-term expectation? did he just think that nobody would notice his wife was missing? It seems like he didn't think everything through. And again, maybe this is a rush.
Starting point is 00:58:21 He didn't have a chance to think things through before whatever happened happened. And he had to scramble. And maybe his plan could have been better had he had time. But luckily, police were able to find the important things they needed to find. to feel strong enough that, you know, there was a case against him, arrest him. And, you know, it seems like a prosecution can be done even though there's no body. Yeah. And we can't sit here and say that Brad Simpson is guilty, obviously, because he hasn't been found guilty.
Starting point is 00:58:57 I think, you know, you go through everything that we talked about. I think it's going to be hard for a jury to dismiss a lot of the, you know, evidence, even though a lot of it is circumstantial. It's very telling. And I don't know when it will happen, but I have a strong feeling that a jury is going to find Brad Simpson guilty of the murder of his wife. I'm hoping that he does the right thing before that time. And maybe for exchange in taking the death penalty off the table, maybe he leads them to
Starting point is 00:59:37 her body and cooperates with them fully because it would be the right thing to do, although he may not have any remorse. He may just be all about self-preservation. And if he is about self-preservation, maybe taking the death penalty off the table would entice him to cooperate and just to do it for his kids. You know, if he has any kind of morals or any kind of goodness in him, you know, maybe he can do that to try and make things. easier on them.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Well, this is Texas. So, you know, the death penalty is definitely going to be in play in Texas. And in a lot of instances, that's a huge chip that the authorities have, you know, the ability to offer someone to take that death penalty off the table in exchange for information, a confession, and maybe even more importantly, resolution for Suzanne's family in, you know, retrieving her body, allowing them to give her a proper burial
Starting point is 01:00:51 and lay her to rest. And that is very important to them, I'm sure. Yeah, and time is, you know, maybe working against Brad in some ways to cooperate because if somebody else finds those remains and the police are able to recover them before he makes a deal, then there would be no point in the prosecution making a deal at that point, because then they would have her body and it would be an even stronger case.
Starting point is 01:01:21 So, you know, if he is all about self-preservation, maybe he'll come to those senses and say I should cooperate and try and make a deal for myself and tell them where Suzanne is at. Yeah, it's hard to get into the minds of some of these people because you can't make sense of what this guy is accused of doing and is thought to have done. So it's hard to make sense of what he might do in the future, but we'll have to wait and see on that. Investigators are still asking for help from the public. It's not too late to call on a tip if you know where Suzanne Simpson could be located or if you believe you saw Brad Simpson wore's Black 2019 GMC Sierra with Texas plate MDW 7050 on the night of October 6th into the morning of October 7th.
Starting point is 01:02:14 You can call Detective Hector Ruiz at 210, 209, 2701, Detective Melissa Campbell at 210, 219, 2702, or the almost parked dispatch desk at 210822, 2000. authorities believe that Suzanne's remains are likely near the Bandera area. And, you know, in this episode, we did talk about some acts of domestic violence. If you yourself or anyone you know may be the victim of domestic violence, you can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233. someone is available to talk with you 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Some more if we kind of already wrapped up the episode and talking about Brad and what's likely to come. Some of it were just going to have to wait to see how it unfolds.
Starting point is 01:03:17 But at least for me, it's pretty hard not to think that the authorities are going to make a pretty compelling case against It's Brad Simpson, but you know, you never know what a jury will do. It'll be up to them to decide his fate. Yeah, this is a case that we're going to have to pay close attention to because things could unfold in the very near future. You know, Suzanne's remains might be found. Brad might take a deal. So we'll have to see if anything develops. And then if it does make it the trial, it'll be interesting to see how that goes and how. how this case plays out with a jury. Yeah. And my other thought is, is that there will be more information probably that comes out, especially if he does make a deal, information that wasn't known at the time that, you know, we're recording this episode. So that will be interesting
Starting point is 01:04:19 to see if that happens as well. But that's it for our episode on Suzanne Simpson. If you love the show, but haven't done so yet. Take a minute. Go out, give us a five-star rating. You can leave a review, but also keep telling your friends. Word of mouth about the podcast really helps us out. If you want to find us on social media, we're on X with the handle at Criminology Pod. You can also find us on Facebook by going to Facebook.com slash criminology podcast. And you can join our Facebook discussion group, criminology podcast, discussion in the fans. So that's it for another episode of Criminology. but Morph and I will be back with all of you next Saturday night with a brand new episode.
Starting point is 01:05:03 So until then for Mike and Morph. We'll talk to you next week. Take care, everyone.

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