Dateline NBC - Talking Dateline: 11 Minutes
Episode Date: May 21, 2025Blayne Alexander sits down with Josh Mankiewicz to talk about his episode “11 Minutes.” Michael Holton calls police after his son Madison throws a house party. Just 11 minutes after a deputy leave...s the house, another 911 call is placed. Madison’s parents have been shot. The 17-year-old is eventually charged with their murders. But as the case unfolds, serious questions are raised about the evidence that led to the teen’s arrest. Blayne and Josh dig into how the investigation shifted, the key roles Madison’s uncles played in challenging the charges, and what ultimately led to the case being dropped. Josh also shares a podcast-exclusive clip from his interview with Madison Holton.Have a question for Talking Dateline? DM us on social @DatelineNBC or leave a voicemail at (212) 413-5252 — your question might be featured in a future episode. Listen to the full episode of “11 Minutes” on Apple:https://apple.co/4jdo0eD Listen to the full episode on Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/episode/6v2lbkAxK8sS8cCLjpuMt0
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. I'm Blane Alexander, and today we are Talking Dateline. I'm here with the
one, the only, Josh Mankiewicz. Hi, Josh.
Hello.
Okay. So today's episode is called 11 Minutes. It's the story of 17-year-old Madison Holton,
who was charged with the September 2016 murder of his parents, Michael and Jennifer Holton,
after a family dispute turned deadly in their small town of Eclectic, Alabama.
Madison insisted he was innocent, joining forces with his uncles and a retired FBI investigator
who stepped in to fight for him. They raised serious doubts about the case against him
and pointed to a different explanation—that Madison's father may have murdered his mother
in a murder-suicide.
Now remember, if you haven't listened to or watched the full episode yet, it's right below this one on your podcast list. So go listen
to it or stream it now on Peacock and then come back here. And when we come back, we'll
have two extra clips from the story, including one from Madison Holton, the person at the
center of it all.
So stick around. All right, Josh, let's talk Dateline. Let's talk Dateline.
You squeezed a whole lot into an hour here, my friend.
Yeah.
There was a lot in the story.
It's a weird story because no matter which way
you go with this, whether you believe prosecutors
and the sheriff or whether you believe Madison
and his supporters, there are big holes in the story.
Like, like none of it makes sense.
Well, as I was watching this and going along, I'm thinking, oh, there are so many ways this
could go.
Oh yeah, he definitely did it.
Wait, no, he didn't do it.
Oh wait, he's handcuffed.
No, they have problems.
I mean, all of these things just kind of keep coming to where you really don't know how
it's going to shake out.
And in the end, nobody saw coming.
Well, I mean, then we did a good job because when you're watching and you're thinking,
oh, I understand it. Wait, I don't understand it. Wait, now I think it's this. And then
at the end, it's something you didn't see coming. That means we've done our job.
Yeah. Let's talk about this family. We start the story getting to know Madison, learning
about this family dynamic. They're dealing with a teenage son who they're trying to figure
out how to get a hold on him. And at the same time, the parents are going through a divorce themselves.
I can't imagine that kind of turmoil in one house at the same time.
Yeah. And that's the kind of dynamic that's going on in houses all across the country,
which was one sort of great thing about this story, is that it was kind of emblematic what
a lot of families are struggling with all over the United States. You and I know from our careers
and the stories we've covered,
all the things that can go wrong
when you have a teenager in the house, right?
And what was Madison doing?
Well, he was using some drugs
and he was inviting his friends over
when his parents weren't home.
And he was lying to them.
And he was kind of a little bit of discipline problem. But I mean, you look at that measured against the chart of all the
things that can happen with teenagers and those are not the worst things out there.
So he has a house party, but his parents really just don't know what to do. And they said
this is almost kind of like a parental scared straight, we're going to put some handcuffs on him. Some could say,
Hey, is this extreme or other people saying, Hey, we just parents need to do something
to get their son under control on the right path.
I mean, you know, handcuffs are one of those things like hitting your kids, which is you're
going to find people on both sides of that issue. That seemed a little extreme to me,
given that there was no testimony about him being violent
toward his parents.
There was certainly plenty of testimony about him
misbehaving and not being honest
and doing that kind of thing.
But you know, you have some record for beating people up
or fighting with his parents.
I mean, one senses that the parents were more
at the end of their rope than actually fearful of Madison.
That was my sense.
Like this is more about teaching you a lesson
than protecting us.
But I gotta say, I mean, putting handcuffs on somebody
is kind of a thing you do when you're afraid
of what they're going to do,
not where they're going in life at the moment.
I thought it was notable that the dad just
apparently had handcuffs there ready to be put on, right? He was a former fire chief,
former mayor. There's some embarrassment issues that you kind of pointed to. I was struck
by the fact that Madison's dad got a call from somebody, from a friend, somebody who
knew and said, hey, my kid came home from your house under the influence of something.
You need to figure out what's going on basically, right?
I had that happened in Atlanta or in LA.
It may not have been like, I know exactly the kid
and the parent and who to call.
That is the kind of small town.
I mean, there's literally, I think one traffic light,
or at least there was when we were there.
This was one of the few places
that we've been at Dateline.
They were not glad to see us in Eclectic.
We were in the town cafe, the coffee shop
where everybody meets, and we were talking to somebody there.
And the people at the next table heard it,
and they went to the manager, and the manager came over
and said, I want you guys to leave.
That's unusual, because generally,
yeah, when we're in a small, any town,
when we're in a small town,
generally people, sometimes they know why you're there,
but they don't necessarily want you out of there.
I would think that that's a nod to
just how difficult this story was,
that they don't wanna talk about it,
they don't want it to be put on a national platform,
I assume.
Right, and I think that's exactly what it was.
I mean, I think this is anguish for everybody
because no matter what you believe, right, Michael and April were vital members of that
community. And I think they're, I think what they were probably saying to us is, you know,
we miss them, we respect them, we don't want to talk about this.
Yeah, interesting. I thought the interviews that you did do were very compelling. I mean,
obviously you sat down with Madison himself. I'm curious, what was your impression of him?
You know, he was very forthright. His demeanor with me was not tremendously different from
his demeanor with the cops. You know, he said, yes, sir, and no, sir. He was looking at me.
He was paying attention. He wasn't looking down. He wasn't mumbling. He was ready for
whatever came.
And again, remember, your attorney may tell you to talk to police or not, but you're certainly
not required to talk with reporters. But he did. And that earned him some points with
me because I asked him all the questions that you'd want to ask. Like, you know, what's
the story here? And he was pretty good about that.
When we come back, we will hear an extra clip
from Josh's interview with one of the men
who set out to free Madison, his uncle, Chris Owenby.
Madison's uncles, Chris and Mike, absolutely believed him
and they stepped up immediately to help him.
The family rallied behind him.
I'm curious what stood out to you in your conversations with them.
I think they were convinced not because they believed Madison, but because they knew what
Michael and April were going through. And they probably had sort of a ringside seat
to what was happening in that marriage in a way that Madison wouldn't have. So my guess is they knew things about that marriage,
about what was happening and what Michael in particular,
the dad was going through that made them think
this has nothing to do with Madison.
When you were talking to Madison, he said at one point,
I don't remember which uncle, Chris or Mike,
but he said he'd only had maybe a five minute conversation
with him ever before in life. I mean, they weren't very familiar, it seems.
No, no. That's why I thought like this really had to do with not with knowing Madison, but
with seeing whatever they saw in that marriage and hearing whatever they had heard.
We actually have an extra clip from your interview with Chris Owenby that didn't make it into
the show. Here in this clip, he's describing what it was like to tell the kids that their father
had been killed and their mother was fighting for her life.
And I walked in the house. And of course, the other two kids were playing in the house.
I said, look, I need you to come into the living room or the kitchen so I can talk to
you. They came in and sat down at the table and I said,
look, there's no use waiting for me to tell you this,
but your dad shot your mom and killed himself
and we got to go to the hospital.
And I didn't know how else to tell them.
I think I looked at Tonya and I said,
my God, I got to tell them their parents are gone.
How do you tell two kids that?
And she said, you just tell them. And that's what I did.
Alan Taylor It was a fight for her life that April eventually
lost the next day. She was alive, I think, when she went to the hospital. But 24 hours later,
I don't think she was.
Tanya Brown She was gone. Wow. To hear him describe having
to tell the children that, no matter how you say it, it's not going to soften the blow at all.
Alan Taylor You're giving somebody information that not going to soften the blow at all.
You're giving somebody information that's going to split their life in two.
Yeah. Yeah. Let's talk about Greg Biggs. He's a former FBI agent.
Yes. Greg Biggs was under no obligation to help Madison, but he did. And he made a tremendous
difference I thought, because he started uncovering all kinds of like little things
in the investigation that hadn't made sense, things that a defense attorney would use.
And he uttered a memorable line that the women of a date with Dateline talk about all the
time and that many people talk with me about. In fact, I have a screenshot of this moment with Chiron
with the subtitles in my phone,
which I send to people sometimes,
which is I kissed a dead dog on the road when I was 17,
which he said, right?
Yes, when he said this, he said,
you know, kids do foolish things all the time.
I'm like, yeah, I'm with you.
Kids do do silly things.
Like, of course we all do.
He's like, yeah, let me tell you my story.
I kissed a dead dog.
I was like, wait, wait, wait, I can't go with you there.
I...
Yeah.
I believe it was some kind of like,
probably pre-college, high school, college road trip.
He was with his friends and was either a dare
or losing a bet.
I can't quite remember that little moment,
which of course has nothing to do with Madison Alton.
He certainly illustrated to us
that there is a very wide spectrum
of kids do foolish things when they're young.
I was doing a story once, I said in the interview
with one of the people in the case, I said,
you know, I jumped off the garage holding an umbrella
like I was Mary Poppins, right?
Cause I thought it would be like a parachute, right?
And guess what?
Yeah, it wasn't.
Didn't work, I'm assuming?
No, landed in a bush, I got cuts on my arms.
I mean, I'm lucky I didn't break anything, but I didn't.
Yeah.
Can I ask how old were you
when you tried this flying experiment?
I was 37.
No, I was, this was just last year.
Growing man, yeah.
Yeah, I was, well, let's see.
We were not living in the United States.
So I would have been probably seven. That's what I think, well, let's see, we were not living in the United States. So I would have
been probably seven. That's what I think, seven or eight.
Okay.
Yeah, but yeah.
Within that realm, within that safe realm of, okay, this is cute and it makes sense.
Right, right. So like post seeing Mary Poppins or the Wizard of Oz, both of which have, I
believe, scenes in which people are, use umbrellas and are carried by the wind.
It could make sense. I could see who that could follow.
Yeah. I was seven years old and clearly influenced by things I saw on television.
Well, insofar as the case is involved, he was an interesting character in that too,
right? Madison kind of said, this guy was my guardian angel. They met essentially by
chance.
Yeah, they met in a church group.
And I really do think that without Greg Biggs involvement,
the case against Madison Holton
would have gotten into a courtroom.
I do.
Hmm.
You know, what does that say about the initial investigation?
That somebody from the outside,
a former FBI agent could come through and say,
no, this was wrong, this was wrong, this was wrong.
Certainly you kind of have to look at the initial investigation and say, okay, maybe
there's some questions.
Yeah.
I mean, to give the benefit of the doubt to local law enforcement down there, this is
a little more complicated case than they usually get.
And you know, this is not a jurisdiction that gets a tremendous amount of murders on which forensics tell one story
and eyewitnesses tell a completely different one
and you can't tell which is which.
Because even the forensics, like, were a little bit,
you know, flawed, like there wasn't any blood on Madison.
So he shoots mom and dad, but then there's no,
there's no blood spatter.
And there's clearly he doesn't have time
to like change his clothes or wash it off in those 11 minutes. So that was something that sort
of was a hole in the armor of the state's case.
We look at investigations all the time and sometimes big elaborate investigations by
major departments that get a lot of homicides. Sometimes there can be a thing or two that
they should have done differently and that can make the difference. I mean, in this case, like at first,
clearly law enforcement thought this was a murder-suicide.
Again, which is something that's gonna come out at trial.
I mean, like any defense attorney is gonna say,
you know, in their opening statement,
law enforcement believed at first
that this Michael's parents in a murder- because their marriage was failing and they were right.
That's what they thought. And they were correct. And we don't need to go any farther than that.
When we come back, we have an extra clip from Madison Holton himself.
Let's talk about the march up to trial, the lead up to trial that never happens. You'll point this out, and I think that this was such a strong point to make in this story,
but life sentence feels daunting. And then two life sentences feels, you know, also daunting.
But when you're 17 years old, I can't imagine walking into trial, what you think will be
a trial with that on the table possibly ahead of you.
Yeah.
I mean, like it's, you know, it's, you don't get to think to yourself, well, I've had a
pretty good life because you had almost no life at that point.
And suddenly you're realizing the rest of it's going to be in a place like where I've
been locked up only worse with some scarier people. That is a daunting future to look at. And I think he thought, absolutely
until Greg Biggs got involved, I sort of felt like Madison thought he was probably going
to get convicted even with the support of his uncles.
Sure. You know, what happens next almost sounds like something out of a courtroom TV show,
right?
Everyone starts rushing around, there's a flurry of activity, and then suddenly the
charges are dropped.
Look, prosecutors have a duty under the legal canons of ethics not to bring cases that they
don't think they can win.
And it's one reason why, and we've talked about this before, one reason why these murder
prosecutors go into court
and they got a record of like 29 and one,
like they almost never lose.
And that's because they have an overwhelming case
before they go in.
And this prosecutor did not have an overwhelming case.
And I think they thought we are gonna lose
and we cannot be confident that we will win.
And if you're not confident that you're gonna win,
you are not supposed to bring the case.
They drop the charges and that end,
like you said, that's the ethically responsible thing to do.
Oh, no question, no question.
And again, you have leave to represent if you want.
I mean, if you get more evidence,
you know, look, we talk about this all the time.
What leads to a prosecution
when there couldn't have been one before?
And it's two things.
Changes in technology, changes in circumstance, right?
Changes in technology, suddenly you can get touch DNA
from places where you couldn't get it before.
Suddenly this person was in that room.
They said they weren't in that room,
but we now know they were in that room
because their DNA was on the doorknob on the inside.
So that story they told us about not being there,
they're lying, that's one way.
The other is, you know, I am not in love with you anymore
and I'm not gonna lie for you anymore.
And when I said that you were with me
when that person got killed,
I'm not gonna tell that lie anymore.
Changes in technology, changes in circumstance.
Either one of those could get Madison
holed back in a courtroom.
Of course you talk to Madison.
Sometimes we do these stories where someone is exonerated
and you know they're not gonna be tried again.
They can move on with their life,
not having to wonder or worry.
That's not the case for Madison here.
He could face charges again.
Let's listen to the two of you talking
about that.
You know they can refile.
Yeah, they can.
And I think they'd like to.
Oh, they would love to. But at the end of the day, they're going to lose either way.
They think they're all good. They think they're this and that because they're police, but
they're not. They're just human beings at the end of the day, just like me.
You don't think they have a case?
They don't have a case.
They didn't have a case in the first place.
You think you should never have been arrested?
Oh, without a doubt, I should have never been arrested.
Listening to him, there's no wavering in his voice.
I agree. I agree.
And also, I mean, he's absolutely provably right about one thing,
which is he never should
have been arrested because people who you don't think you have enough evidence to convict
should not be arrested. I mean, I think, you know, what, eight years have passed since
we did that story. He has not been retried. I think the chances that that's going to happen
significantly diminish with each passing year.
You know, you ended with Madison talking about the fact that he visits his mother's grave,
but he doesn't visit his dad's grave, even though they're separated by steps. It has
to be just a very big internal struggle for him.
You know, the fact that he told me that felt like
sort of powerful evidence of his lack of guilt.
You've gotta believe that he is one sophisticated criminal
to have committed a murder, gotten away with it,
and then made up a story like that.
That felt to me as if he were telling the truth,
which is I visit my mom's grave, I can't go to my dad's grave and look at it and say, I'm sorry that you're not here.
I must say that that struck me as genuine.
Yeah. Well, like I said, my friend, you packed a whole lot into this hour. There were a lot
of twists and turns and it was a very compelling story. So thanks so much as always for talking
Dateline with me.
Great to see you.
And that's it for our Talking Dateline this week.
Thanks of course to all of you for listening so faithfully every week.
Remember if you have any questions about our stories or a case that you think we should
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Well, see, I heard that that rang directly to your landline, Josh.
Oh, no, no, it's good.
It rings right to Keith's desk and he will call you back like instantly.
And have a long conversation.
Yes.
Yeah, he's got nothing else to do.
So call that line or record yourself and send it to us via DM on social media. Thanks so much
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trial of Sean Combs. She's getting updates from NBC News correspondent Chloe Moloss every day after court, and those conversations are dropped in the Dateline True Crime Weekly
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