Dark Downeast - STILL UNSOLVED: The Murder of John Evers Robinson (Connecticut)
Episode Date: February 5, 2026In December of 2024, I shared an episode about a 24-year-old musician whose life was cut short in New Haven, Connecticut in 1990. More than three decades later, the murder of John Evers Robinson remai...ns unsolved and the questions surrounding what happened to him have only grown more complicated with time.I’m bringing this story back because it needs your attention and action in a new way. Here’s John’s sister, Jocelyn Jackson.“It’s been 35 years since a family member picked me up from high school and told me as we drove to the airport that my brother John was dead. I immediately went silent and started crying. When we got to the airport, it was to hug my mom through tears before she got on a plane to fly to New Haven. All I could think was that my big brother wasn’t in the world anymore. That moment left an indelible mark on my perception of the world. That moment was the beginning of my instinct to never stop seeking for justice, to never let the people who did this think they got away with murder. Those feelings I felt on that day with my family are the eternal repository of energy that I pull from each year as I continue to invite accountability for my brother's brutal unsolved murder. Unfortunately, a lot of families know this feeling. The feeling of decades passing, sometimes even knowing who’s responsible, but never enough evidence to get resolution. Every year I actively continue the momentum of his case by sharing his story in a new way. This year it’s by starting a petition on change.org to increase the reward money for new leads from witnesses. We know a lot of time has passed, but over the last few years as we’ve talked to John’s friends and visited New Haven, we have experienced how fresh people’s memories are still of John, and of the time that he went missing, and then was found dead. We believe that there are people out there who know more and can share more than they ever have before. Please come forward and share what you know. The smallest detail combined with other new leads can be what either links all the other information together or alternatively, finally destabilizes the code of silence amongst the co-conspirators that’s been kept for all these years. Thank you for taking the time to sign this petition. Thank you for helping us keep the momentum strong. It’s heartbreaking to think how much more harm has been caused in these last 35 years by the same people who killed my brother. We believe my brother knew his killers. We finally want to know them, too.”If you have information regarding the 1990 murder of John Evers Robinson in New Haven, Connecticut, please contact the Connecticut Cold Case Unit at 1 (866) 623-8058 or the New Haven Police Department at 1 (866) 888-8477.You can sign the petition to increase the reward for new leads in the 1990 unsolved murder of John Evers Robinson here.View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/stillmissing-johneversrobinson Dark Downeast is an Audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low.Follow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTokTo suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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In December of 2024, I shared an episode about a 24-year-old musician whose life was cut short in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1990.
More than three decades later, the murder of John Evers Robinson remains unsolved.
And the questions surrounding what happened to him have only grown more complicated with time.
Today, I'm bringing his story back because it needs your attention and action in a new way.
Here's John's sister, Jocelyn.
It's been 35 years since a family member picked me up from high school and told me as we drove to the airport that my brother John was dead.
I immediately went silent and started crying.
When we got to the airport, it was to hug my mom through the tears before she got on a plane to fly to New Haven.
All I could think was that my big brother wasn't in the world anymore.
That moment left an indelible mark on my perception of the world.
That moment was the beginning of my instinct to never stop seeing.
for justice to never let the people who did this think they got away with murder.
Those feelings I felt on that day with my family are the eternal repository of energy
that I pull from each year as I continue to invite accountability for my brother's brutal, unsolved murder.
Unfortunately, a lot of families know this feeling, the feeling of decades passing,
sometimes even knowing who's responsible, but never enough evidence to get resolution.
Every year I actively continue the momentum of this case by sharing his story in a new way.
This year it's by starting a petition on change.org to increase the reward money for new leads from witnesses.
We know a lot of time has passed, but over the last few years as we've talked to John's friends and visited New Haven,
we have experienced how fresh people's memories are still of John and of the time that he went missing and then was found dead.
We believe that there are people out there who know more and can share.
more than they ever have before. Please come forward and share what you know. The smallest detail
combined with other new leads can be what either links all the other information together
or alternatively finally destabilizes the code of silence amongst the co-conspirators that's been
kept for all these years. Thank you for taking the time to sign this petition. Thank you for helping
us keep the momentum strong. It's heartbreaking to think how much more
More harm has been caused in these last 35 years by the same people who killed my brother.
We believe my brother knew his killers.
We finally want to know them too.
The petition Jocelyn started is linked in the show notes and description of this episode so you can learn more.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is the case of John Evers Robinson on Darkdowne East.
It was just before 8.30 in the morning on Wednesday,
March 14, 1990, when firefighters responded to 178 Temple Street in New Haven, Connecticut.
Visitors and tenants in the building had noticed a strong foul odor emanating from the direction
of room number 208. When they peered into the mail slot on the door, they could make out
the shape of a person lying on the floor, and they swiftly called 911. First responders arriving
at room 208, found one of the door's two deadbolt locks engaged, and so they gained entry by
removing the door from its hinges. A paramedic then crossed the dark room to hoist open a window,
allowing fresh air and light to flood the small space and revealing the full scope of the
devastating scene. The body of a man was lying face down on the floor, the victim of a parent's
severe head trauma. Whatever happened here was brutal.
and violent. Seeing the condition of the person, the paramedics and other first responders
vacated the room and waited for police to arrive. A detective spoke with the property manager
of the building to figure out who the victim might be. The property manager explained that the
space was known to be used as a music studio and a check of lease documents showed that the
deceased was likely the tenant, a local musician. Receipts found in the pocket of a coat at the scene
were more confirmation.
This was 24-year-old John Evers Robinson.
John's sister, Jocelyn Jackson, has become the voice of his story.
She was just 15 years old when he was killed,
but she remembers him through a vibrant patchwork of firsthand experiences
with her caring, silly, older brother,
stitched together with the stories she's heard from other family members
and John's friends.
Those memories are almost always there's laughter in them
because, you know, the hijinks of older brother is just what it is.
It's the, like, the tickle fights in the family room.
It's the playing with the dog in the front yard.
It's the, you know, helping my mom run for a board of education and, like, painting signs together.
Jocelyn remembers her brother as a caretaker, a protector.
He looked out for her.
and those he cared about.
He was also someone who got an idea and went for it full steam ahead by any means necessary,
whether it was learning how to make a souffle,
eggs upon eggs sacrificed in the process,
or as a teenager, leaving the life he knew in Kansas with his mother and Jocelyn
to move in with his father in Connecticut.
He made the choice that he needed to go live with his father in New Haven,
and that happened very quickly.
It's like the decision made get on the plane.
John moved into Yale University housing with his father,
where he was in a graduate program at the time.
John himself was accepted to a private high school.
He explored science and art and sports,
but the passion that really took hold and continued well past high school was music.
John played bass and his genre of choice was punk,
though Phil Gallo described John's music in the New Haven Register
as more hardcore.
He and a rotating lineup of musicians formed a band in 1986,
most commonly known as sold-on murder, or just S-O-M.
John's nickname on the scene was Rockhead,
spelled R-O-K-K-E-D.
Jocelyn remembers listening to her brother's music on cassette tape as a kid.
Having that cassette tape was sort of a really sweet way to be a part of John's life.
I admit that the punk is hard.
It took more of my adult ears to go into a place of appreciation for the musicality.
You can hear John's music for yourself.
A posthumous album released by his friends and family is available to stream for free.
I'll link it for you at darkdownease.com.
Through his music, you found his stories and experience of politics.
and of social justice and of the messages and music often tell so much about someone's life
and their commitments.
And so I think that was the other way that he was able to share his vision for the world,
for his own place in it, is that he wanted to have a liberatory sort of approach to the world.
The punk scene in New Haven, Connecticut in the 1980s was a vibrant, gritty subculture,
shaped by the era's anti-establishment sentiment
and a rebellious spirit that mirrored the broader punk movements
across the United States.
And it was powerful to see how my brother
lifted himself up in an environment
that often was not populated by black folks.
It's so profoundly clear that he had a unassailable commitment
to music and to being a musician.
And that playing out gig work, you know,
finding the way to bring the songs that he wrote into the world
was such a clear focus for him.
Nearly all of John's energy and resources
were poured into his band and their efforts to record and release an album.
John rented room number 208 at 178 Temple Street in downtown New York.
which he commonly referred to as the loft for a recording and practice space for the band.
He also sublet the studio by the hour, collecting a small fee from other musicians.
Though it was not intended for residential use, John may have been staying at the loft on and off, too.
He had fallen behind on rent at the apartment he shared with a few roommates and had been asked to move out.
He was often houseless. He was finding a way to
make money, live his life, and also make music. And sometimes that was staying on people's
couches. Sometimes he had his own apartment. And he was always just trying to figure out how they say,
you know, make ends meet in order to keep making music. For work, outside of playing shows with his
band, John was a manager at Ashley's Ice Cream in New Haven. The job came with a paycheck and
access to the ice cream delivery truck
for logging the band's gear
around to venues for gigs.
It was just another way John used
what he had to support his dreams.
But as Jocelyn learned,
her brother also took some risks.
As I've heard from friends,
one of the ways he entered into drug culture
was trying to find money through that
as a way to fund his music.
That's heartbreaking to me that that was his choice.
And I know the realities of the 80s,
as well, and I know that that time was sort of rampant with drug culture.
Sources indicate that John was known to buy and sell small quantities of pot to friends and Yale students.
However, as the investigation would reveal, John was making plans for a bigger buy,
and other individuals had put money on the line with him, too.
The details of this deal and other potentially volatile situations John was involved in
came to light as police began to interview John's friends and acquaintances.
John's sister Jocelyn has obtained over 100 pages of the original 1990 NHPD case file for John's case via FOIA request.
She questions why it was released.
If the case had always been considered open and active,
there would have been qualified exemptions to reject her request.
But nonetheless, she has the documents, and she shared them with me,
everything from incident reports, witness statements, and interview transcripts, and the autopsy findings.
According to incident reports contained in the case file, John's body was found lying on his stomach on the carpeted floor of room 208,
with his right forearm underneath his lower abdomen area and his left arm above his head.
His head was slightly sideways, with extensive visible trauma to the left of his forehead, eye, and nose.
The mostly unfurnished space had only a wooden chair and a step ladder off to one side.
There were sections of blood spattered cardboard on the carpeted floor, a pile of clothing,
a pair of sneakers, and a backpack, the contents of which appeared to be dumped onto the floor around it.
Among the items, investigators found a key ring with two small keys,
a separate single key in the pile near the backpack, and another key ring with 17 keys on it.
An officer observed that room 208 was adjoined by a smaller room, which had shelving, some large speakers, and crates with music stands inside, among some other items.
The exterior windows in this smaller room couldn't be secured because the locks appeared to be broken, and an officer writes in one incident report that it was easy to climb in and out of the windows onto the roof, which led to a fire escape and down into an alley.
About five feet from John's head was a piece of cardboard with what appeared to be partial footprints
from the sole of a shoe, maybe even three different shoes.
A music stand in the adjoining room had partial latent fingerprints on it.
A check for prints on the windows into the adjoining room also revealed more latent prints.
Based on the location of blood spatters, spots, swipes, prints, and apparent transfer bloodstains,
an officer theorized that most, if not all of the trauma, occurred in the main room where
John's body was found. But there was also reason to believe that John's body had been moved
within the space after his death. There's no mention in the incident reports of any drugs found
at the scene, although an officer describes an empty, small, plastic narcotics vial found near
John's body with blood on it, but not in blood. There were several additional items for
photographed as potential evidence that also had blood on them, but they were not necessarily
resting in blood. After the local medical examiner and an associate state medical examiner arrived,
they discovered that John also had trauma to the back of his skull. In his left back pocket,
they found $200 in cash, $10, $20 bills, along with his driver's license, a piece of paper
with a handwritten name and phone number and a guitar pick.
John's body was transported from the scene
for an official autopsy that same day.
Associate medical examiner Dr. Melka Shaw
determined that John died as the result of cranio-cerebral injuries.
He had multiple skull fractures,
likely caused by blows to the head with a blunt object.
The ME theorized that the murder weapon
was an object shaped like a baseball bat.
But investigators did not find
anything resembling a potential murder weapon at the scene.
The state of decomposition indicated that John was likely killed sometime on Monday, March 12.
Back at the loft, with the investigation well underway, a detective intercepted a man who had
shown up at the scene looking for John. The man, who all call by the fake name Patrick,
said that he was trying to find John because he was supposed to be renting room 208 from him,
and he had paid hundreds of dollars in back rent for the studio on John's behalf.
After showing up to the scene of the murder looking for the man who had just been found dead,
Patrick was escorted to the detective division to give a statement.
He told a New Haven detective that the last time he saw John was the past Friday, March 9th,
at a restaurant where they met up to chat about the loft.
John had been locked out by the management company for non-payment.
So Patrick had agreed to pay the $330 of back rent, and in return, Patrick said John promised to turn the loft over to him to use for his computer business.
But that hadn't happened yet.
He received the new keys to the loft from the management company, but Patrick says he immediately gave them to John.
Patrick said they talked about something else that day, too.
John needed a check in the amount of $660, which seems like it was separate.
from the back rent payment.
As Patrick explained it,
John said he needed to prove to somebody
that he had money coming in soon.
Patrick told John he didn't have that much in his account,
and the check would likely bounce if he tried to cash it,
but John said it didn't matter.
It was basically just for show.
Patrick told the detective he agreed to this
and later wrote a check payable to cash
and left it under his apartment door for John to pick up.
When Patrick left his apartment on Saturday morning,
March 10th around 8 a.m., the check was there, and it was gone by the time he came back around
11. Patrick claimed he never saw or heard from John again after that, but not for lack of trying.
Over the next few days, Patrick called the number he had for John's previous apartment,
but John's old roommate said he wasn't there. Patrick tried to find John at the studio on the 13th,
but there was no answer when he knocked on the door to Room 208, so he left. Patrick said he didn't have
anything else to say that might be helpful to the investigation, but agreed to take a polygraph test.
A little over a week later, as Patrick answered the polygraph examiner's questions,
he appeared more and more nervous until finally Patrick said he did have more information about
John's murder than he shared in his first statement. He agreed to tell investigators what he knew.
In his second statement taken on March 23, 1990, Patrick said,
he'd actually seen John as recently as Monday the 12th.
According to Patrick, John had been working on getting money together to buy several pounds of pot.
The plan was to buy it from two guys, who all call by the fake names, Cody and Hank.
Patrick himself had contributed $400 cash to the buy, which John picked up from Patrick's apartment around 12.30 p.m. on the 12th.
Patrick said that to his knowledge, John was supposed to close to close.
the deal around 1.30 the same afternoon. Patrick said that when he hadn't heard from John
hours later, possibly between 6 and 7 p.m., he went to the loft where he believed the deal was
happening between John and Cody and Hank. As far as he could tell, room 208 was empty,
so he left and went back to his apartment. Patrick said that on his way out, he noticed a white
car parked outside at the corner of Temple and Crown, and a man was standing next to it. He
thought it looked like Cody, but wasn't 100% sure. A little later, maybe an hour or an hour
and a half, Patrick says he went back to the loft. This time, as Patrick was going up the stairs,
he heard voices. He stopped a few feet shy of the door to the studio and listened. What he heard
was bad. It sounded like John was in the studio with someone else. It sounded like Hank. He'd never
been formerly introduced to Hank, but he'd heard Hank's voice before and believed it was him.
The voice was saying, where is it? And John was saying no. Then, Patrick says he heard loud
thumbs and a crash of what he thought could be drums. Patrick told the detective he thought
John was, quote, about to be shot, end quote. And so he got out of there fast. Patrick said he
worried about John all night, but thought maybe he just got beat up and would be fine.
The next day, he and a friend went over to the loft to see if they could find John.
Patrick said they noticed an odor as they got closer to the door of room 208, and when they
knocked, no one answered. Patrick said in his statement, quote, at that point, I knew for sure
John was dead, end quote. Patrick explained that he didn't call the police after what he heard.
because he was scared and he didn't want to get involved.
And he didn't disclose this part of his story during his first statement
because he was afraid he'd have to testify
and he didn't want his parents to know he was involved with drugs.
Patrick submitted to fingerprinting and photos
and he turned over either one or two pairs of his sneakers for analysis.
Investigators followed up with Patrick's friend,
who he said went with him to look for John on the morning of the 13th.
The friend told an NHPD did,
detective that he was hanging out at Patrick's place with him on the night of March 12th.
According to a summary of the friend's statement contained in the case file,
the friend says he got to Patrick's house around six or seven that night,
and Patrick had left the apartment twice, just as Patrick said he did.
The friend said Patrick told him he was going to the loft to get some pot.
The friend had been to the loft with Patrick before half a dozen times
and had even entered through the window before.
So when Patrick said the loft, his friend knew the place he referenced.
When Patrick got back the second time, he seemed very upset.
The friend could hear Patrick in the bathroom crying, and at one point, Patrick asked for the phone
and a phone number for the police department and then a number for the anonymous tip line,
but Patrick didn't end up making any calls.
At the end of the interview, the friend agreed to give his fingerprints and shoe prints.
Now, Patrick wasn't the only witness who saw John on March 12,
and he's not believed to be the last person with John before he was killed.
One witness told police that around 1.25 p.m. on that Monday,
John asked to borrow $200, and the witness agreed.
He told John to meet him at an ATM on Broadway.
When John arrived, he was in the passenger seat of a tan-colored car.
The witness couldn't be sure, but he thought the driver might be someone named Coe.
Cody, who police knew to be one of the men Patrick told them John was supposedly planning to buy pot from that day.
Detectives tracked Cody down to ask him a few questions, and he confirmed that around 1.30 p.m. on Monday, the 12,
he was driving down the street when he spotted John in a gas station parking lot flagging him down.
John asked Cody for a ride, and Cody drove him to an ATM where he got cash from that other witness.
Cody says he then dropped John off downtown on the corner of Temple Street and Crown Street,
just down the street from the loft.
As far as the case file documents and interview statements from 1990 show at this point,
Cody was the last person to have physical contact with John.
And the person we're calling Cody appears again and again in witness statements
within the 1990 case file documents, often paired with Hank,
whose voice Patrick claimed he heard inside the studio at Room 208
on the last day John was known to be alive.
Police learned through interviews with John's former roommate
that these individuals, Hank and Cody,
had called the apartment where John once lived several times since Sunday
looking for John and asking where he was.
The roommate said the calls were threatening in tone.
They told the roommate that John owed them money.
On March 25, 1990, New Haven Police obtained search warrants for the apartments of Hank and Cody.
At Hank's apartment, police seized several pairs of shoes in a set of keys.
During a search of Cody's apartment, police collected several pairs of sneakers there,
as well as a 12-inch pipe wrapped with black tape.
It is clear from the incident reports and witness statements that NHPD detectives were investigating this
alleged deal between John, Hank, and Cody as a potential motive for John's murder.
But it wouldn't be the only threat that detectives had to follow.
What we know about the punk scene in New Haven is that it was filled with a variety of different folks,
with a variety of different motivations for being there.
Some people were punk because of the politic of it all.
Some people were punk because of the anarchy of it all.
Some people were punk because of the white supremacy of it all.
And within the punk community, there were absolutely folks that represented the skinhead culture.
At the risk of oversimplifying, the term skinhead refers to a subculture that originated in the United Kingdom during the late 1960s.
Its members are often characterized by their closely cropped or shaped heads, distinct style of dress, and association.
with specific music genres and cultural values.
Over time, the movement splintered,
with some factions embracing multiculturalism
and others aligning with far-right extremism.
For the purposes of this case,
we're focusing on groups in New Haven
and Greater New England associated with neo-Nazism and white supremacy,
which are sometimes linked to hate crimes and extremist ideologies.
NHPD case file documents from 9h7,
from 1990 indicate that in the months and weeks leading up to John's murder,
he'd been in at least one physical altercation with people associated with the
skinhead culture within the New Haven punk music scene.
We know that over many months there was the escalation of a conflict between him and
other folks in the music community.
And we know that lows were thrown, you know, people got hit.
There was conflict that was leading to violence.
Howard Altman writes for the New Haven advocate that a possible theory of John's murder was that he, quote,
was attacked by Nazi skinheads, possibly for racial motives, possibly to settle an old score involving a stolen symbol.
End quote.
John's former roommate said in an interview with police that an acquaintance of Johns had stolen an estimated $800 in musical equipment from another band.
The witness said that the band members had beaten John up over it
and at another time had showed up at John's house looking for him.
The former roommate also claimed that members of this band had further harassed John
at the St. Patrick's Day Parade, which took place in New Haven just the day before John's murder.
Another witness told investigators that John and his band had been playing at a club on York
Street about two months earlier when several subjects,
known as quote-unquote skinheads attacked John. The witness identified one of the alleged attackers
by name, but didn't think he or any of his associates would have killed John. One of these alleged
attackers called NHPD the day after John's body was discovered. We'll call him by the fake name,
Henry. Henry had heard that the police were looking for him. An incident report contained in the
case file summarizes Henry's conversation with a detective. He said that he belonged to a group
known as the skinheads, and there was in fact an ongoing conflict between them and John Robinson.
Henry's explanation aligned with what witnesses had said. He and his group believed it was John
who stole symbols from their group and sold them for $900 profit. Henry said that there had been
several verbal confrontations, but no threats to kill him. Henry said that the last time he saw
John was at the St. Patrick's Day parade. Word on the street, according to Henry, was that John was
hit and killed with either a microphone or an amplifier. Case file documents show that a few days
after this phone call, two detectives tried to find Henry at his apartment, but he wasn't home.
While the detectives were there, though, three people walked out of Henry's apartment.
They told detectives that they were off to continue a road trip out of state
and had spent the night at Henry's place the night before.
As the three individuals were loading up into their car,
one detective spotted an aluminum baseball bat sitting on the back seat.
The detective asked the three people whose bat it was,
and they said it belonged to Henry, and they were bringing it with them.
A baseball bat was interesting.
The investigation hadn't uncovered a murder weapon,
but the medical examiner suggested a baseball bat-type object was used to kill John.
The detective asked if he could take the bat, and the three people turned it over to the police.
Several pieces of evidence have undergone forensic examination in this case,
including items taken from the scene of John Robinson's murder,
prints collected from Patrick and his friend,
and other items seized at Cody and Hank's apartments.
None of the four pairs of footwear collected from Cody's apartment matched bloody imprints found at the scene of the murder.
The key ring seized from his apartment did not have any keys that matched the door to John's studio or the adjoining room.
The pipe wrapped in electrical tape did not appear to have any connection to the crime.
However, case file documents note that it was sent to the state police forensic lab for further analysis.
The footwear and keys seized from Hank's apartment were similar.
similarly inspected, but none of his shoes appeared to match the tread designs of the ones found
in blood at the murder scene, and the keys also did not match the deadbolt or other locks
at the scene. However, when investigators analyzed the pair of sneakers turned over by Patrick,
those did appear to be the same design as a bloody print on a piece of cardboard found in the loft.
The shoes were sent off for further testing and analysis for possible blood residue at the
forensic lab. Now, that piece of cardboard with bloody footprints was believed to have up to three
different shoe prints on it. Interestingly, one of the other tread patterns appeared to match the shoes
of Patrick's friend, who said he accompanied Patrick to the Temple Street building looking for John,
but that tread pattern was also similar to shoes worn by a first responder at the scene. There's a
note in the case file that police planned to track down Patrick's friend's shoes to test for blood
residue, but it's unclear if that ever happened. When police compared the fingerprints found at the
scene of the murder to those on file, they identified a few matches. Case file documents show
that a latent print from a metal music stand at the scene was identified as Patrick's left
ring finger. A latent print found on an interior window matched the left
middle finger of Patrick's friend.
Now, these partial print matches could be innocuous.
Both Patrick and his friend told police that they'd been in the loft space before,
so it's not surprising that their prints were there.
A few weeks later, police showed up at Patrick's home with a search warrant.
Patrick told them they'd find drugs in his apartment and he turned over a bag of cocaine.
The one other item seized from the apartment that's specifically noted in an incident report,
was an aluminum baseball bat found in a closet.
Patrick was later arrested for possession of narcotic
and possession with intent to sell,
stemming from the cocaine he disclosed to police during the search.
But if anything came from the evidence collected
during multiple searches at the scene of the murder
or from the homes of Hank and Cody and Patrick,
that information isn't revealed in the 1990 case file documents I have access to.
I don't know if any testing was completed on the Iron Piper.
wrapped in electrical tape, or either of the baseball bats belonging to Henry and Patrick.
We know for sure that if anything was found, it didn't lead to any charges relating to John's murder.
But all of these things never led to substantive evidence. It never led to any confessions.
It never led to anything that could concretely tie anyone to the murder. So it went inactive.
For years, Jocelyn and her family waited for updates,
but John's case remained unsolved and stagnant,
until almost 20 years later,
when new evidence reignited the investigation.
Based on conversations Jocelyn has had with the detectives assigned to her brother's case,
it was new evidence generated by the FBI that reactivated the investigation in 2009 and again in 2023.
There is evidence that's still present from 1999 that can be tested with new technology.
And we know that's something that's being pursued by investigators.
The reactivated case includes interviews with certain persons of interest.
Some of the people who were identified early on as having knowledge of or alleged connection to John's murder.
We don't know who exactly detectives have interviewed
or which suspects or persons of interest
have been approached in recent years.
Neither myself or Jocelyn have been able to obtain any further files
after the 1990 files were released to her.
But there's some reasonable assumptions to be made
from the case docs we do have.
Knowing that there was violence in his life that was happening,
knowing that there was the presence of drug culture,
these are some of the things that rise to the...
the top as far as motivations for someone killing John in the way that they killed him.
There's the person we're calling Patrick. Patrick had given John money and was also supposed to be
taking over the lease or at least sharing space at the loft with John, but that whole situation
seemed to be in flux or maybe John hadn't kept up his end of the deal. Patrick admitted to going to
the building where the murder happened more than once on the day of and after John was killed.
There are the individuals we're calling Hank and Cody,
who were alleged to be involved in selling John a large quantity of drugs
on the day of his murder.
Witnesses placed John with Cody on the day of the murder.
Police have said from the beginning that they believe John knew his killer.
It's possible John let them into the loft that night,
not expecting what was to come.
And yet, the door to the loft was locked when first responders arrived.
So what's the scenario?
here? Did someone have a key to lock up on their way out? Patrick claims he was set to take over the
lease from John and that the management company had given him a set of keys to room 208, but that he
turned them over immediately to John. And this could be true. Among the 20 different keys found at
the scene and near John's body, an officer identified one key on a ring that went to the top
deadbolt on the door to room 208. So if that key ring was John's, and maybe he did obtain the
key from Patrick prior to his death, and Patrick didn't have one and couldn't have locked up from the
outside if he was somehow involved with John's murder. But then again, it's also possible whoever
was involved with John's killing left through a window. A witness statement in the case file
indicates John himself was known to climb through a window to room 208 on occasion,
and an incident report states it would have been easy to access the roof and fire escape
from the windows in the studio. There's also one other detail from Patrick's statement that
feels worthy of addressing. Patrick said that when he was standing outside of room 208 on the
presumed night of the murder, and he heard that altercation inside, he also heard a crash that sounded
like it could be drums. Some sources, including reporting by Michael Foley for the New Haven Register,
state that there was a drum set reportedly in the loft space as of March 9th, but the room was
empty and no drums were found there when John's body was discovered. So if what Patrick heard was
in fact the crash of drums during a physical altercation, where did they go? Did John's killer or
killers steal them? Did someone else who had access to the loft,
take them before John was murdered or after? I don't see mention of police locating a drum set
in the 1990 case file documents I have access to at this point. Several people, including names I
haven't even mentioned, knew John was likely carrying a large sum of money on the day he was last seen
alive. Was he robbed for that money? If so, why was $200 in cash left behind in his pocket? Is it more plausible
that John was fatally beaten for another reason,
perhaps as an end to the ongoing conflict between him and members of another band,
are Henry and the so-called skinheads who had ongoing beef with John
responsible for his brutal murder?
It deserves note that Henry went on to become a very well-known public person,
Without getting too specific so as to identify him directly, Henry entered the entertainment industry.
As he gained more publicity for his work, he revealed things about himself and his past in public media outlets.
He told stories of his days participating in skinhead culture as well as leading a gang.
He publicly described specific violence that he and his associates have inflicted on people.
By his own statements, his violent past has served as source material, an inspiration for some of his work.
These folks can tell their story of being violent actors in society,
and they can tell the story in public ways and be applauded for them.
They can tell their stories of violence in terms that are not explicit,
but are definitely in other ways overt admitting to murder publicly.
And that's not enough.
To this day, more than three decades later,
no one has been arrested or charged with any crimes
as it relates to the murder of John Evers Robinson.
I think we're at the phase of really relying on perpetrators and witnesses
to find it within themselves to tell the truth.
In the years since she lost her big brother,
Jocelyn has experienced heavy grief and heartache,
intertwined with powerful moments of connection and healing.
At points in my life, I even tried to play bass
because of many different reasons,
but I did get to,
my mom was given one of John's bass guitars at the memorial service,
and I wanted to play that instrument.
there's something
I think many people probably have this experience of
you know like there's these objects
that we have from people that have passed away
they have different meaning but
how powerful it was to
you know I was part of a band for a little bit when I was in law school
and I was playing John's bass guitar
and just that small embodiment
of being in a
circumstance
that mere Johns was so healing and so expressive
and so just right on time for that phase of my life.
And it was powerful to be on this instrument
that he made some of these sounds on these songs that he recorded
to put my fingers on a fret
where he also put that care and that attention.
I was not good at it.
like I was not, you know, it didn't last in a substantial way.
And it wasn't about that.
It was about wanting to have another one of those experiences in life
where I felt like I was close to my brother.
And that instrument provided that.
Making music provided that.
In early 2024, Jocelyn released a three-episode podcast
under the same name as her late brother's band, sold-on murder.
She interviews John's parents, loved ones, and friends to learn more about him and the circumstances of his life at the time he was killed.
I'll link it for you in the show notes.
That podcast is just one way she is seeking answers for her brother, her family, and for herself.
Jocelyn knows that by taking on this role as the face and the voice of her brother's case,
there are potential safety implications.
Individuals believe to have direct knowledge of or connection to John's murder,
are still alive.
Yet, she remains unafraid and committed to the pursuit of justice and restoration.
The reason I am pursuing justice in this way, pursuing accountability in this way,
pursuing restoration in this way is because for 35 years, I have not had peace.
And I demand in my lifetime to have the resolution in my heart of what created these
circumstances for my brother to be this brutally murdered and to have the release of that from what
my entire family has carried all these years.
Jocelyn has a message for the people involved in her brother's murder.
One of the abiding heartbreaks of this experience is that my brother was alone, that he died alone.
And I don't want the person who killed him to get the impression that he was alone in life.
I want everyone involved to know that my brother was surrounded by people that loved him.
And you taking his life was taking a part of us.
I understand that people who kill often don't feel remorse in ways that I can relate to.
But I really need there to be a knowing that you took someone's son,
you took someone's friend, you took someone's brother,
you took someone's heart and we're still alive, living with that.
And there's no version of reality in which John is not taken care of by us for the rest of our lives.
You killed him, but he's still alive with us.
And I think that's mostly what I want them to know.
If you have information regarding the 1990 murder of John Evers Robinson in New Haven, Connecticut,
please contact the Connecticut Cold Case Unit at 1866-623-8058, or the New Haven Police Department at 1866-88-8-477.
Thank you for listening to Dark Down East.
You can find all source material for this case at Darkdowneast.com.
Be sure to follow the show on Instagram at Darkdowneast.
This platform is for the families and friends who have lost their loved ones
and for those who are still searching for answers.
I'm not about to let those names or their stories get lost with time.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is Darkdowne East.
Dark Down East is a production of Kylie Media and Audio Check.
I think Chuck would approve.
