Every Town - He Posed With Cops At Crime Scenes. He Was The One Who Put The BODIES There
Episode Date: April 3, 2026The Zombie Hunter: Phoenix's Most Dangerous Killer Hiding In Plain Sight 🗣 Go to Zocdoc.com/EVERYTOWN to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. 👀 Watch This Episode On Youtube: h...ttps://youtu.be/ewMJyX-dYdk 👁 Check out our movie AN ANGRY BOY: https://www.anangryboy.com 💀 MERCH: https://scary-mysteries-merch.dashery.com 💀 Scary Mysteries SECRET VAULT: https://www.patreon.com/c/scarymysteries/collections 🎧 Our Other Podcast Scary Mysteries: https://open.spotify.com/show/3ZooEZMoZ421WdsOVJhVkT 👁 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andrew.fitzg 👁 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@andrewfitzgerald 👁 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scarymysteriesofficial 👁 X: https://x.com/ScaryMysteries1 🗣 Business Inquiries, questions and comments hit us up at scarymysteries1@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Are you ready to dive into the unknown?
Join me, Peyton Moreland, on Into the Dark, the true crime podcast from Ono Media with a hint of horror and mystery.
Each week, I dive into a different case, breaking down the facts, and pondering the age-old question, why do people do what they do?
Now, sometimes the answer isn't so clear, and that's why I'll also explore conspiracy theories, hauntings, and all things spooky.
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Learning English is hard.
That's why I make easy stories in English,
where you can have fun while you learn.
You can listen to stories full of action.
romance and mystery.
Each episode, I tell stories for beginner, intermediate, and advanced learners,
and there's a story for every mood.
Whether you want something to wake you up or relax before going to bed,
easy stories in English is the podcast for you.
Every town has a dark side.
The following story is one that genuinely got under my skin,
because the man we're talking about today wasn't.
a killer who ever hidden fear. He was never hiding or laying low. In fact, he was the exact
opposite. He was out in public, showing up at parades, and posing for photos with cops, and
even signing autographs for fans. He had a costume car and a whole identity that people in Phoenix
loved him for. And the entire time for over 20 years, he was one of the most brutal killers
this city had ever seen.
Hey guys, it's Andrew.
Thanks for tuning into every town where today.
We have a real crazy one for you.
So if you haven't heard of this guy, you're in for a ride.
Let's head on over to Arizona now
and check out Brian Miller,
aka the zombie hunter.
To really understand what Brian Miller became,
you have to go back to before anyone was watching.
Before the costume, before those fans,
and before the police cars lined up to take photos with them.
You have to go back to 1989 when he was just a 16-year-old kid on a Phoenix City bus.
A 24-year-old woman named Celeste Bentley and got off at the same stop as Miller that May morning.
She was headed to her job at a department store near Paradise Valley Mall, just another Tuesday.
She noticed the teen, the way you notice anybody sharing the same sidewalk.
Briefly, no reason for concern, and then she moved on.
But a moment later he ran past her and she felt what she thought was a hard shove to her back.
She turned around to yell at him, and then she reached back, and her hand came away covered in blood.
And Miller had driven a knife into her upper back and then kept on running.
A doctor who treated her later said the blade had narrowly missed her spine and her organs.
Another inch in either direction in Celeste doesn't walk out of that hospital, and she might not have walked again at all.
And Miller was caught nearby shortly after.
He pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and was sent to juvie detention until he turned 18.
And look, that alone is serious.
A 16-year-old kid randomly stabbing a woman on her way to work.
I mean, that's not a kid making a bad choice.
It's something much darker and deep-rooted.
But here's the thing.
What came next?
Well, that's what should have changed everything.
And somehow, it didn't.
While Miller was locked up, his mother Ellen went through his room at home, and what she found made her stomach drop.
It was a hand-written document, titled simply Plan.
She took it straight to the police because what was in it wasn't an angry scribbling of a troubled kid.
It was organized, specific, and methodical.
It laid out, step by step, exactly how Brian Miller intended to find a young woman, abduct her,
restrain her, essay her, kill her, and then dismember her.
As a reminder, he was just 16 years old.
When he was younger, he wrote this letter describing what he was going to do
or what he was fantasizing about doing to what he said was a 17-year-old girl in the letter.
Here's the messed up part.
Some of the specific details in that document, things about decapitation and what he wanted
to do afterward, the later match almost exactly what was done to the first woman he murdered.
He had written it all down years before he ever did it.
His mom was so terrified by what she found that when Brian was released, she refused to let
him come home, and she told the police directly, I am scared of my own son.
And then, Ryan Patrick Miller walked out a juvie detention at 18 years old, moved into a
halfway house run by the Mennonite Outreach Ministry in North Phoenix. In that note, it went into a file
and two years passed by. By May of 92, Miller was 19 years old, still living in the same place
and trying to figure things out. On the 26th of that month, 13-year-old Brandy Myers stepped into that
neighborhood when she left her family's home to collect donations for a school book drive. She was
going door-to-door, just a kid doing a school thing.
Her older sister Kristen later described her as her best friend, the girlie one between the two of them.
I'm always trying to keep up with Kristen who was outdoors and climbing trees even though it wasn't really her style.
You see, Brandy was developmentally delayed, emotionally closer to a nine or ten-year-old.
She was trusting, eager, and she saw the good in people the way kids like that do, openly and without suspicion.
as she headed out that evening with her clipboard and a purpose,
and she was last seen less than 70 feet from the building where Brian lived,
walking in the direction of his door, and she was never seen again.
Police came through hard in the days that followed.
K-9 units, door-to-door knocks,
and officers digging through trash bins looking for anything.
Miller was reportedly at work when they came to his building,
and in the end no suspect emerged because no body was ever found.
And like so many missing persons cases with nothing concrete to hold on to, it went cold.
When investigators wouldn't piece together until decades later was something that the people
in the Mennonite community hadn't forgotten.
Around that same time, a terrible smell had been coming from Miller's apartment.
Persistent enough that a group of neighbors eventually got together and did something about it.
They organized an informal cleanup of the space while Miller was gone.
gone. It went in, scrubbed surfaces, and threw things out without looking too closely at what
they were throwing away, and then they left. They had no idea what they had walked into,
no clue what they had just cleaned up. That was the fall of 92, several months after Brandy
Myers vanished, and it wouldn't mean anything to anyone for a very long time. Raise your hand
if you've been putting off a dental cleaning, an annual physical, or some nagging. There's some nagging.
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Six months after Brandy disappeared, Angela Brasso went out for an evening bike
ride. She was a 22-year-old tech worker who moved to Phoenix to build something, a career, some
independence, a life that was just starting to find its shape. She loved those night rides along the
canal paths after the heated died down. It was her thing, her way of unwinding. On November 8th of 92,
which was her birthday, she headed out around 7 p.m. Her boyfriend Joe encouraged her to go as he
stayed back to prepare her gifts and get her cake ready. But then he waited, and she didn't
return. Enough time had passed to make Joe grab his bike and go out looking. He was worried she might
have fell and hurt herself, but he couldn't find her. After that, he called her friends and called
her mother back in Pennsylvania, and eventually he called the police. The following morning,
authorities went searching and they fanned out from the canal and onto the neighboring properties.
And it was in one of those fields that they made the grisly discovery.
Angela hadn't just been stabbed and assaulted.
She'd been decapitated.
Her bicycle was nowhere to be found, and the same went for her head.
A week and a half later, a fisherman would end up pulling it from the canal.
It was found two miles from where her body lay in that field.
But the detail that really stood out here was that there was almost no decomposition after nearly two weeks.
The belief was that whoever did this had kept it refrigerated before putting it in the water,
which tells you something about who you're dealing with.
This was someone who was doing exactly what they wanted to do with a body,
and it was organized, deliberate, and sadistic.
And they recovered male DNA from the scene.
Hundreds of tips came in, and there were hundreds of interviews.
And the persons of interest list eventually grew up over 600 names,
but the DNA matched nothing in any database.
Without that one piece, the investigation had a ceiling it couldn't push through.
Then came September of 93, 10 months after Angela's murder.
Melanie Bernice was a 17-year-old high school student
who had dipped out for a bike ride on the night of September 21st
while her mother was out in town having dinner.
When her mom came home and found her gone,
she started calling Melanie's friends, but no one knew anything.
As the hours ticked by, the worry that it started as a low hum turned into something she couldn't ignore anymore.
Early the following morning, a woman riding along the canal with her young daughter strapped in the bike seat behind her,
rode through what looked like a puddle coming out from one of the tunnels beneath the interstate.
But something about it bothered her enough to turn around and loop back for a second look.
This puddle, it was red, and there were drag marks beside it.
leading from the path towards the water.
Police were called and it didn't take long for them to find Melanie laying face down in that canal.
She too had been stabbed several times, Anna S-Aid,
but this seemed as different from Angela's in ways that told investigators something important.
Melanie's own clothes had been removed and she'd been dressed up in a teal body suit that wasn't hers.
And furthermore, the letters W.S.C. had been carved into her chest.
The killer had stayed and taken his time.
There was nothing frantic or impulsive about any of it.
He enjoyed what he was doing.
When the DNA from Melanie's scene came back from a lab,
well, it matched the DNA from Angela's murder.
Same man, both women,
and he had simply walked away from it, twice.
Phoenix PD escalated everything they had.
Undercover officers worked the canal paths at night,
and DNA samples were pulled from persons of interest,
across multiple states.
The unknown profile was then uploaded to Kodas,
the National Criminal DNA Database.
No match.
Years passed by,
and the canal murders settled into Phoenix's collective memory
the way the worst unsolved cases do,
as something unresolved,
but always still there just under the surface.
The kind of thing that parents who lived through it
still brought up when explaining
why they didn't let their kids go out after dark.
And then in 2011 a detective named Troy Hillman took over the cold case unit and went back
through everything from the beginning.
He later described reading those original files as one of the most disturbing things he'd
encounter in his entire career, the kind of details, he said, that don't leave you.
Because of that, he became obsessed.
His unit flew across the country collecting additional DNA samples to rule people out.
They brought in forensic experts to build a profile.
of whoever had done this.
And what that profile kept pointing to
was someone local,
someone drawn to acting out violent fantasies,
someone who was very likely
already hiding somewhere inside those case files.
By 2014, a forensic genealogist
named Colleen Fitzpatrick had been developing something
that didn't really exist before.
Through her company,
Identifinder is International.
She had built software that could do something
that criminal justice,
system had never had access to. Instead of searching for a direct hit in a law enforcement database,
well, it could mind public genealogy websites, the kind people used to trace their ancestry
for partial DNA matches. That means that every person who submits their DNA to find out if
they're 12% Scandinavian or whatever is actually now a possible solver of crimes. If a relative of a killer
is curious enough about where they came from, well, if it's past,
Patrick's software could take a killer's DNA and find that partial match online, build out a family
tree from there, and work backward through the bloodline until it found its way to the killer
himself. The science was brand new at the time, completely untested in a real criminal case.
When Hillman brought the idea to department leadership, it took him three months just to get
approval to fund it. Nobody knew if it would work because it had never been tried before.
The Phoenix police sent Fitzpatrick the DNA profile from the canal murders.
Our team ran it through the system, and they came back with a surname, Miller.
It is one of the most common last names in the country, so this was a starting point, not an answer.
But it was more than the investigation it produced in over 20 years.
Hillman went back to his master list and pulled every person named Miller from those 600-plus files.
and six names came up and he started working through them one by one.
And there, partway down the list was a name that had been sitting in those files since the early 90s.
Brian Patrick Miller, 42 years old with a Phoenix address.
Shortly after the murders, an anonymous caller had tipped police that a teenager named Brian Miller had access to a teal body suit,
similar to the one Melanie Bernice was found wearing.
That tip had been looked at and then quietly set aside.
He was too young, they thought, and they moved on.
Now, Hillman pulled the full file and started reading.
That was when he saw the 1989 stabbing of Celeste Bentley.
He saw the note marked Plan and what a teenage Miller had written he wanted to do to a young woman.
He saw the proximity to where Brandy Myers was last seen in 92.
He saw a man with a documented.
history of violence against women who had been in Phoenix for both murders whose last name
had just been flagged by a genetic genealogy search for the very first time in history.
The hair on the back of his neck stood straight up. What Hillman didn't know yet was what Miller
had been doing with himself for the past 20 years. Detective Clark Schwarzkopf began the surveillance,
watching Miller on his breaks at the Amazon warehouse. He did the same. He did the same. He did the same,
routine every single day. Another clocked out, walked to the parking lot, sat in his car and
proceeded to blast music loud enough to hear from across the lot. When he was done expelling
whatever release the music gave him, he just went back inside, predictable as a clock. You could say
perhaps that's ordinary, but the car he was sitting in was anything but. It was an old
Crown Vic police cruiser that had been completely transformed.
Fake blood running down the doors,
and green emergency lights where the standard ones used to be.
A full-sized zombie mannequin was strapped in the back seat behind bars like a trophy
and custom graphics across the back that read Zombie Hunter.
This wasn't just a car, it was a whole identity.
For years, Miller had been showing up at Phoenix comic conventions, parades, and car shows.
He was always in full costume consisting of a long trench coat.
goggles, hard hat, fabricated gatling gun, and people, they loved him for it.
Fans came specifically looking for him, the lines formed for autographs.
And for those who knew this guy, well, they described him as a harmless marshmallow.
Gentle, unassuming, a good single dad who brought his 15-year-old daughter everywhere he went
and seemed genuinely incapable of making anyone uncomfortable.
And cops posed with him. Actual uniform police officers smiling arm and arm with Brian Miller,
completely unaware of what they were standing next to. When investigators obtained a search
warrant and then gained access to his house, what they found painted a very different picture
than what people thought of this guy. The front door couldn't be opened. Belongings were stacked floor-to-ceiling
throughout the house, with narrow paths carved through the piles just to reach the bathroom and the
kitchen. And on the outside of his refrigerator, not hidden away or tucked in a drawer, but right
there where anyone walking into the kitchen could see it, was a photograph of an actual
decapitated human head, taped up like a piece of art, reminiscent of what had happened to Angela.
And his teenage daughter, well, she saw it every single day. To make a little bit of a piece of art,
An arrest, though, they needed his DNA, and Schwarzkopf had an idea.
Security person, I told him that we were out there doing security on that particular.
Miller was interested, and they arranged to meet properly and go over the details.
Which is how this killer ended up sitting across from a cold case detective at a Chili's
restaurant in Phoenix on January 2, 2015.
Schwarzkopf had coordinated everything in advance.
Undercover detectives were already inside.
They had personally pulled a clean glass straight from the dishwasher and moved it to a specific booth away from other customers.
Nothing contaminated, nothing left to chance.
Every single thing Miller touched at that table was going to be collected the second he walked out that door.
What Schwarzkopf hadn't planned on was for Miller showing up with his daughter.
She sat with him through the entire meal while Miller ordered a burger and a water.
He ate that burger in about five bites.
and didn't use any silverware.
And then he didn't touch his drink.
Just let it sit there.
Schwarzkopf kept the conversation going,
and asked Miller if you wanted something else,
all while running through scenarios in his head
about how this whole thing was about to fall apart
because of one untouched glass of water.
And then, Brian finally picked it up and drank.
Schwarzkopf had what he needed.
After the meal, Miller gave him a quick,
tour of the zombie hunter car, and they parted ways like two guys who'd just had a perfectly normal
lunch. The moment Miller was gone, those undercover detectives moved in and secured the glass.
But as Schwarzkopf drove away from that Chili's, well, he was genuinely not convinced they had
their man, because he had just spent an hour watching Brian Miller with his daughter, how naturally
was with her, how easy and how completely ordinary he was. And he could not make
that person fit the violence on those canal paths in 92 and 93.
As Scott was telling him, they were about to clear Brian Miller and move on.
Eleven days later, though, they got the results back. It was a match.
After that meeting, they took Miller's glass, and it was the DNA from that glass that led
to his arrest.
The DNA from that glass was the same DNA that had been sitting in those case files for over two
decades, collected from the bodies of Angela Brasso and Melanie Bernice.
The Miller was arrested that same day. In the interrogation room when detectives told him his
DNA had been matched to both victims, that he said he didn't see how that was possible.
When they pushed harder, he said he couldn't remember everything he'd done back then,
but that he knew he hadn't killed anyone. The trial didn't begin until October of 2022,
more than seven years after his arrest.
Competency hearings, lengthy delays, and ultimately a decision by Miller to waive his right to a jury trial entirely.
So just him and a judge.
His defense team stood up in that courtroom and did something unexpected.
They conceded everything.
The DNA, the murders, all of it.
Brian Miller killed those women, they said.
He just shouldn't be held responsible because he didn't have the mental capacity to understand what he was doing at the time.
They built their entire case around his childhood.
A mother documented as deeply abusive,
who had used her law enforcement belt on him as discipline,
starting when he was five years old,
who neighbors described as someone who openly resented her own son.
In the defense, they're going to try to establish that he was not guilty by reason of insanity,
and one of the requirements there is that he did not know that what he was doing was wrong.
So getting sort of two different views.
views of the same scene there.
A defense psychologist testified that Miller had developed dissociative amnesia from that
trauma, that he had carried out the murders in a dissociative state and had no memory of them
afterward.
And Miller himself, he rejected all of it.
And from prison, he maintained consistently that he didn't have dissociative amnesia.
He just knew he hadn't committed the murders at all.
But the prosecutors, well, they had a simple answer at all.
that. He remembered stabbing Celeste Bentley in 1989, and he remembered a 2002 stabbing in Washington
State, clearly enough, to mount a self-defense case and get acquitted. His memory, they argued,
was selective in a way that mapped perfectly onto his legal exposure. After six months of
testimony and 36 witnesses, Will Miller was found guilty on all counts, and he was sentenced to death.
From Death Row, Brian Miller writes,
Long, carefully worded letters about being misunderstood,
about masks and how everyone wears one,
about how the media took a costume he put on a few times a year
and built an entire monster around it that had nothing to do with who he actually was.
He writes about his daughter, from whom he's been largely estranged since his arrest,
and says he isn't going to push her,
and he knows she'll reach out when she's ready.
He has opinions about the death penalty, about the men around him on death row, and he says he's always been against it.
What he doesn't write about, not really, is Angela Brasso or Melanie Bernice, and not Brandy Myers either, whose case is still officially open and whose body has never been found.
And here's what the case is left behind beyond the conviction.
It was the first cold case in history solved through investigative genetic genealogy.
The method Colleen Fitzpatrick helped develop,
that Troy Hillman fought for three months just to get funded.
That nobody was sure would even work, but it did.
And since then, the same approach has been used
to crack hundreds of cold cases all across the country.
It changed forensic investigation permanently.
Which means that somewhere out there right now,
there's a detective sitting with a case file that's been cold for 20 years.
Because of what happened along the Arizona Canal in 92 and 93,
because of Angela and Melanie?
Well, they have a tool that didn't exist before,
and soon enough, another killer will get caught.
So that's going to do it for today's episode of Everytown.
Hope you enjoyed it.
And if you did, well, great.
Glad you stuck around to the end.
Remember to come on back here next week
for another episode filled with wild and crazy stories
because you never know.
Maybe your town will be next.
