Going West: True Crime - Aranda Briones // 473
Episode Date: January 31, 2025In January of 2019, a 16-year-old girl went missing, last seen at a community park near her Moreno Valley, California home. As police searched for any sign of her, a sinister revenge plot unfolded bef...ore their eyes, with the main suspect in her likely murder described as nothing but “pure evil.” This is the story of Aranda Briones.
Transcript
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What is going on true crime fans? I'm your host T and I'm your host Daphne and you're listening to going west
Hello everybody. Hope you're doing well today big shout out and thank you to Jessica and Justin for recommending today's case.
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All right guys, this is episode 473 of Going West.
So let's get into it. We've obtained booking records showing that two men believed to be brothers have been
arrested in connection with this case.
Both of them arrested early this morning in Hisperia.
Now this comes about four weeks after Aranda Briones first went missing.
According to the family at the time, she was last seen by one of those suspects.
They are suspected of killing Aranda Briones, who has been missing since mid-January.
I know what it is true.
She's alive to me.
She's always going to be alive until I find otherwise.
She's alive.
In January of 2019, a 16-year-old girl went missing,
last seen at a community park near her Moreno Valley, California home.
As police searched for any sign of her,
a sinister revenge plot unfolded before their eyes,
with the main suspect in her likely murder described as nothing but pure evil.
This is the story of Aranda Briones was born on June 1st, 2002 in Moreno Valley, California, so just east
of Los Angeles out in Riverside County.
Sadly, at the start of her life, Aranda's parents were pretty absent, so she was actually
adopted by her maternal grandparents at the age of three.
And although she had such a loving family, it's said that her grandparents didn't put
very many rules into place for her.
So early on in her life as well, they say that she wound up in some troublesome situations.
I'm going to get into that a little bit more here in a bit.
But she and her grandmother were very, very close.
She was one of her strongest positive influence in her life.
So it was a huge tragedy for the family
and Aranda in particular,
when her grandmother passed away in 2016,
when Aranda was just about 14 years old.
But despite her early life's rockiness,
Aranda strive to work hard
and be kind to everyone she met.
A friend named Amanda Johnson remembered,
quote, she was a kind spirit and was always joyful even in the bad moments. A
former classmate described her as a happy person and a sweet girl and it's
known that her adoptive family, so really her extended family, was close and loving.
Her grandpa Carl and her uncles who all resided together raised her quote, like a daughter
and a sister.
Her older brother Daniel who described Aranda as his best friend said quote, she was not
without her troubles and questionable decisions, but she was a bright soul.
Aranda was filled with unlimited potential that she was only beginning to tap into.
Now, in the months before her disappearance, Aranda seemed to be turning her life around because according to her family,
she was working a job she loved and she also was a talented,
self-taught makeup artist running an Instagram page
for the various looks that she came up with.
And I know that feels weird for me to say she was turning her life around
without any examples of how it wasn't going well, that she came up with. And I know that feels weird for me to say she was turning her life around without,
you know, any examples of how it wasn't going well, you know,
other than what happened with her, uh, her parents and her grandma.
But really all we could find was that she smoked weed and ran in crowds that
sold and did drugs. So nothing too crazy,
but I think the emphasis is mostly just, you know,
on being somewhat in a drug crowd.
But it's sad because I feel like especially considering
how recent this case is,
there should be so much more information about her,
but it seems like she really slipped through the cracks.
But the biggest part of the things we're looking up
is because of something that happened to her in 2017,
which Heath will tell us about in a moment.
But first, going into 2018, Aranda even reconnected with her father around this time in question.
Now, Aranda's dad, his name is Landry Briones, better known as Choppo Lee,
had been in and out of prison since she was born.
Admittedly, he hadn't seen her since she was about four years
old, but they finally reunited in November of 2018, which was an occasion that Choppo Lee called
the happiest moment of his life. So that must have been an emotional time for, you know, 16-year-old
Aranda as well. And a little more backstory on his record. Choppo Lee was convicted of selling drugs in 2007 after an undercover cop busted him for
selling cocaine that summer.
So a prior felon with six prison stints under his belt, he was sentenced to 13 years in
prison which is exactly what took him away from his daughter for most of her life.
But after his release and their reunion, he was working to maintain a permanent place
in Aranda's life and really just try to be the best dad he could for her.
So obviously, as Daphne mentioned, things were kind of looking up for her in late 2018
and early 2019.
But just over a year prior, she was embroiled in this legal scandal that actually threatened
her academic career and, of course, the trajectory of her life.
And this plays a major role in what happened to her.
Because while attending Moreno Valley High School, a chance encounter at a local park
at the age of just 15 changed her life forever.
On Tuesday, November 7th, 2017,
Aranda decided to skip school and hang out at a local park for the day with some friends,
including a friend named Owen Shover.
But what was supposed to be a relaxing and fun day off
completely flip-flopped when they spotted a school resource officer patrolling for truants.
You know, to just punish kids that were skipping school.
Well, as this school resource patrol officer approached them, the students all scattered
and they ran off in different directions, but seemingly, in a moment of panic, Owen,
who was just shy of 17 years old, pulled out a small caliber handgun that he had been carrying
on him, and he tossed it to Aranda, telling her to hang on to it before taking off.
Now why this guy, you know, as a teenager had this gun and how we obtained it is a complete mystery,
but obviously Aranda started to panic because not only was the gun just tossed to her,
but now she's responsible for a weapon that she's not legally allowed to be carrying.
So 15 year old Aranda decided to throw the gun in a nearby drainage canal.
However, the officer actually witnessed her doing this, and naturally, he apprehended her.
After this, Aranda was brought into her school for questioning with the administration and also the officer,
and she broke down and told them exactly what happened.
That the gun belonged to a friend or a quasi-friend of hers and that he was basically trying to
use her as a scapegoat.
Now three months after this, in February of 2018, the incident was brought before the
school board and the school board members voted to expel both Owen and Aranda for this
ordeal.
Now as you guys can imagine, the fallout for both of these teens was significant.
Aranda was forced to enroll in a continuation school for expelled students, and then Owen
did the same, but actually wound up moving out of the home that he shared with his mom,
and moving in with his father in Hesperia, California, which is about an hour north of Moreno Valley, located in San Bernardino County.
So displaced from his school, his friends, and home,
Owen was just enraged at how the situation had played out.
Then don't throw guns at people!
Yeah, I mean, obviously you're the person that made the mistake, so you can't really be mad at anybody else here.
Yeah.
So, while Aranda was focusing on making up for her situation and looking toward graduating,
Owen was plotting his revenge.
But none the wiser to his schemes, again, things were looking up for Aranda.
She was making better choices, and she was just focusing on herself.
But after the ordeal, she confided in her brother Daniel that she was afraid of Owen
and what he might do to retaliate.
And this was something that was very, very much on her mind.
Between November 18th of 2018 and January of 2019, Owen's texts and social media activity proved that he was attempting to
illegally procure a gun for the second time. The Riverside County Sheriff's Central Homicide
Unit later revealed that they discovered a string of texts, as well as communications on both
Snapchat and Facebook, wherein 18-year-old Owen was tapping into
connections for illegal access to a firearm.
And somehow, he was successfully able to obtain one.
On Saturday, January 12, 2019, over a year after Aranda and Owen were caught with the
gun in the park, Owen asked her if she wanted him to pick her up for a few hours.
He later explained that he had asked her if she wanted to assist him in making some drug deliveries
and to come along as he, quote,
Rob's drug dealers.
Now, it's possible that Aranda, now 16 years old, was happy about the possibility that
Owen had finally forgiven her and that that's why, now 16 years old, was happy about the possibility that Owen had finally
forgiven her, and that that's why she willingly accepted his risky and dangerous invitation
as to not upset him further.
But whatever the reason, Aranda was picked up by Owen the following afternoon, which
was Sunday, January 13th, 2019.
Her family last saw her at home around 2 p.m.
when she headed out,
only telling them that she was meeting up with friends,
not mentioning Owen or, of course, the drug stuff.
She and Owen then met up at the Moreno Valley Community Park,
which is on the southwest side of the city,
where he picked her up in his Nissan Versa at around 5 p.m.
And it seems like there's that gap in time because she had also met up with some other friends at the park,
and actually, two of them allegedly witnessed her getting picked up by Owen,
and said that they then headed north and away from the park.
So it's not necessarily untrue that she was going to hang out with friends.
She just probably left out the part
that she was gonna meet up with Owen as well.
Exactly.
A short while later,
Aranda was posting on Snapchat from inside Owen's car.
She posted five pictures in total,
one of which was captioned, my homie.
She also bragged that he was letting her drive his car. But as the hours crept by, she didn't make it home.
And although Aranda frequently left home to, you know, go spend time with friends,
she had a bunch of friends that she loved hanging out with,
it was rare that she wouldn't at least check in with her family if she was staying out.
So the next day, she was reported missing.
You know, because also, the next day is a Monday, so for her not to go to school, they knew
she was taking school seriously now at her continuation school, she's not just gonna
blow it off.
Yeah, absolutely. And the same day that the missing person's report was filed, which
was Monday, January 14th, police also spoke with Owen about Aranda's disappearance
after discovering that her most recent activity
on social media was taking pictures from inside his car
and then posting them to Snapchat.
So they knew that he was the last
or one of the last people to see her.
Yeah, and they got on that fast.
Yes, they did.
And according to 18-year-old Owen,
he had dropped 16 year
old Aranda back at the Moreno Valley Community Park where they had met up at
around 6 p.m. and he hadn't seen her after that apparently. So he's saying
that they hung out for only an hour he picked her up from the park was with her
for less than an hour and then dropped her back off at that same park. Yes but
also according to some sources this may have taken place at that same park. Yes, but also, according to some sources, this may have taken place at another nearby
park which was called the Bayside Park.
And then, Owen claimed that he watched Aranda go from his car into a silver four-door sedan,
but that he didn't know the identity of the driver.
So here he is, already trying to put police onto somebody else, but none of
Aranda's family could pinpoint anybody that they knew who drove that similar car.
So this wasn't really stirring up any new leads.
And after her final updates to Snapchat, Aranda went silent and didn't check her social media
accounts nor answer any texts or calls from anyone.
So obviously this is very alarming.
She's a teenage girl, she's probably using her social media quite often, and now she
is radio silent.
So aside from the hour that Owen purportedly spent with her on the last night that she
was seen in public, he claimed that he didn't know her whereabouts or her movements.
As the days passed and fears mounted as to Aranda's whereabouts, one of her most outspoken
advocates became her father, Chapo Lee.
In an interview with the press, he said through tears that, until they find her body, he'll
believe that she's still alive.
He said staunchly, quote, I know what is true.
She's alive to me. She's always
going to be alive until I find her. She's alive. Now, the FBI, alongside with the Riverside
County Special Investigations Bureau and a special enforcement team, as well as their
human trafficking division, all contributed to the investigation into Aranda's disappearance.
In addition to the professional efforts, Aranda's family did everything they could,
including passing out flyers in the area and orchestrating three vigils in the two weeks following her last public sighting.
And these three events drew hundreds of people.
And attendees were encouraged to wear blue, which was Aranda's favorite color.
Dozens of friends and family members whose lives had been touched by Aranda spoke to the crowd,
sharing treasured memories including even Aranda's first grade teacher.
The organizer of the vigils described Aranda as Moreno Valley's daughter.
A tip line was established for information and
cadaver dogs were marched through parts of the San Bernardino Mountains where
they believed that it was possible that a Ronda's body had been concealed but
none of the dogs were able to find any evidence that would lead them to the
remains or any proof that she was deceased at all. Drones also searched overhead, but they just could
not find any sign of Aranda anywhere.
Aranda's family claimed that they were suspicious of Owen from the beginning. Her uncle Matthew
maintained, quote, I think he's a bad influence in my opinion. He used to go to Moreno Valley
High School and they stopped hanging out for like a year.
She never talked about him and then all of a sudden they started hanging out and out of the
blue air she disappeared. Neighbors of Owen's dad's home in Hisperia claimed that their property had
been visited by the police three times in the three weeks that had passed since Aranda's disappearance.
But it wasn't until Owen's Nissan Versa was searched that there was sufficient evidence
to make an arrest.
When police forensically processed the last place Aranda was known to be, which was inside
Owen's vehicle, they found a substance that suspiciously resembled blood pooled beneath
the carpet in the trunk.
And after testing it,
that substance was confirmed to match Aranda's DNA.
However, the defense latched on to the fact
that the substance was only presumed to be blood
and could not be confirmed with complete accuracy.
And then surprisingly, the vehicle was released back to the Shover family after it was forensically
processed even before the arrests were made.
According to the subsequent trial brief, the investigation uncovered, quote, extensive
and compelling evidence that the defendant meticulously planned and carried out the murder
of Aranda.
I mean, yeah, there's no way around this. Her blood DNA is in the trunk of your fucking car.
Yeah, like this even included a search of Owen's truck using luminol, which revealed what was
described as, quote, the presence of a significant amount of blood that had pooled toward the bottom of the trunk
underneath the carpeting. So this must've been a place that Owen like couldn't
or didn't know that he needed to clean. Yeah. I'm kind of assuming he forgot about it.
Yeah. But thankfully that was the case so that they were able to find it. Now, between 1 and 2 a.m. on Monday, February 11, 2019,
so nearly a month after Aranda disappeared,
a flurry of police cars and even a SWAT team
descended upon Owen's Hisparia home.
In a shocking turn of events,
both Owen Shover and his older brother, Gary,
were arrested for the murder of Aranda Briones.
And kind of shockingly, knowing at least the type of person that Owen is,
both of them went willingly and the arrests were made without any issue.
So they didn't run, thank God.
Yeah. Now interestingly, aside from his expulsion, Owen had no criminal history and Gary had no run-ins with the
law at all, though we know that Owen was definitely involved in criminal activity
like drugs and possession of firearms, but he just hadn't been caught other
than that time at the park in November of 2017.
Lieutenant Chris Durham from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department
announced in a press conference about the case, quote,
I don't know what was taken from their backyard.
I do know that evidence was collected that confirmed that our investigators believe that
Miss Briones was the victim of a homicide.
And that points at these two brothers.
He did refuse to divulge what was taken from the yard and how it was related to Aranda
and also her murder, but a neighbor of Owen and Gary's revealed, quote, it was like a blanket and a coat, and
then they started sitting all these little markers around and digging in other places.
Owen's defense attorney, his name is Steven Allen, later argued that while Aranda's DNA
was recovered from within his car, there was no way to prove that Aranda had actually died
as a result of whatever ailment had caused that spilled blood.
Whatever ailment?
Yeah, like what?
Well, both he and Owen maintained that she had taken off
in this mysterious silver vehicle,
which Stephen said flatly, quote,
Owen didn't know anything about.
And yet, Owen didn't explain Aranda being injured either.
So they're trying to create this narrative that,
well, her blood may be in the car, but it doesn't mean she died in the car and died from this blood loss from the car.
Yet they're not explaining then how that blood got there anyway.
It's such a reach. It's such an insane and silly reach that he's trying to say that
just because there was blood in the car doesn't mean she died there.
Like, what else would have happened?
You think she, like, broke her leg and then sat in, like, Owen's trunk and just let her leg bleed into the carpet?
Yeah, but then he also didn't mention that?
Yeah, let's be realistic here.
Like, I just think these defense arguments
are so stupid and so far-fetched that it's almost, well, it is frankly disrespectful.
And their argument just got dumber when his defense attorney planted the seed that the
silver car was involved in a collision, and that perhaps Aranda had more than likely been
killed in a car accident, insinuating
that she was involved in two different kinds of accidents, and that the one that killed
her was not Owen's fault.
But there was never any credence given to this idea because the GPS activity on Owen's
phone, well, it proved otherwise. was. We love when phone pings and security footage prove the bad guys wrong.
Yes, we do.
And this was definitely the evidence that the investigation needed because tracking
the mobile phone tower pings made by 18-year-old Owen's phone,
detectives were able to loosely reconstruct the route that Owen made in his car on the evening that Aranda vanished.
On January 13, 2019, following Moreno Valley's city-wide camera system, as well as personal home security cameras. Owen's Nissan's whereabouts could be followed around the vicinity of Box Springs Mountain,
which is located in northwestern Riverside County.
It's littered with hiking trails, and this is just about 10 minutes from downtown Moreno
Valley.
Stephen Allen, again Owen's defense attorney, attempted to cast doubt on the accuracy of
the security footage being recorded, of course, saying, quote, Let me tell you a little bit
about the cameras, though, which you're going to hear.
The district attorney thinks they have a perfect case in regards to those cameras.
But what you're going to hear is that a lot of the cameras that are citywide in Moreno Valley
were not functional or operational prior to January 15, 2019, and the day that Aranda
disappeared was January 13.
However, Lt. Chris Durham debunked this argument, confirming, quote,
"...the camera system was reviewed and ultimately it destroyed the timeline he provided.
So the prosecution alleges that Aranda was murdered at some point between when they arrived in the Box Springs Mountain area
and when Owen met up with his brother Gary about two hours later.
After about 20 minutes in the vicinity of Box Springs Mountain, Owen's car started
traveling north toward San Bernardino, which is again the area he lived in.
He then pivoted to travel through the San Bernardino Mountains, which is a journey that
would have taken him about an hour to complete.
Owen drove through the mountains along State Route 18 and State Route 138, crossing the
Big Bear Lake Arrowhead areas.
And at some point along his journey,
Owen stopped the car and picked up his brother Gary,
reportedly at a mobile home park,
continuing his journey north to his house
on the other side of the mountain,
down in the desert in Hisperia.
But after he did, Owen turned his phone off, ending its location
data. And when it pinged again, he was back at home in Hisperia because between
833 and 1014 p.m. on the evening of January 13th, there was no location data
for Owen's phone with it not pinging again until they were nearly home driving
down the street of his dad's residence.
So obviously that's very suspicious.
You turn your phone off on this little journey and then you turn it on when you get almost
home.
Yeah.
And this is the two or four hours after he says he dropped Aranda back at that park.
And to give perspective on why they were likely
in this area, other than the fact that it's one
of the routes from the Riverside area to Hisperia,
their family actually owned a second home in Lake Arrowhead,
which is in the San Bernardino Mountains.
And this is where the boys are believed
to have dropped Aranda's body that night.
Yes, this area is known to have poor cell service
because you're in the mountains.
I actually lived in Lake Arrowhead for a year
during my childhood and Heath just got back from Big Bear,
but Heath and I were texting and talking
while you were actually on the 18 and the 138, just fine.
Yeah, we were.
I mean, I was texting and calling you
while I was on the ski mountain.
Yes, you know, this actually making me think a lot of the Idaho Four case when
Brian Coburger's phone turned off also inconvenient places during the night of
the murders. And then it turned back on when he was almost home as well.
So I think Owen very much was aware of his location data being
tracked like any other phone and that he turned it off to avoid the specifics there.
Absolutely, 100% agree.
Well, luckily police knew about this home in Lake Arrowhead,
so they were hoping that this would be a slam dunk.
After it was searched, the house turned up a bag
of marijuana, lighter fluid, and shovels,
remember that for a second, but no sign of veranda.
However, the most damning piece of evidence
from their journey came in the form of a Facebook message
that Owen sent to his 21 year old brother, Gary,
before they convened, which read, quote,
be ready for tonight, get shovels and lighter fluid ready.
I mean, what else could this possibly mean?
More idiots sending damning messages, just like in Nicole Lovell's case from last week.
Yes, I mean, it's just like...
I think these people don't really think that police are gonna look through all their social media accounts
and find these messages, but they always do.
But it's like, what else would you be talking about?
Get shovels and lighter fluid ready?
That sounds like you're trying to burn and bury a body.
Yes, it does.
And I'm assuming that this is exactly what that case was.
Well, after the arrests were made,
Choppo Lee, remember this is Aranda's father,
told the press angrily, quote,
"'Whoever killed my daughter,
"'they're gonna have to meet their maker.
"'When you meet God, let's see if you can stare him in the face.
The day after the arrest, February 12th, 2019, a press conference was held helmed by Lieutenant
Chris Durham.
When he was asked what the sheriff's department presumed happened to Aranda, he admitted,
quote, I don't know.
Because of Owen's desperate ploy to get a gun prior to his hangout with Aranda, and because of the amount of blood that was recovered in the trunk,
it seems most plausible that he was able to illegally obtain a gun, and
that he shot her before disposing of both her and the gun.
This is what police were surmising.
Thus, Owen Shover was charged with felony first-degree murder, and Gary was charged
with second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit a crime, and both men pleaded not guilty.
Well, with COVID delays, Aranda's case was dragged out for years to the obvious agony
of her family.
Now, because of the added special charge of lying in wait, the possibility of the death
penalty loomed heavily over Owen's case.
In the opening statements of his client's trial, Owen's defense attorney against Stephen
Allen delivered a scathing overview of Aranda's short life, attempting to portray her as someone
who brought on her own fate.
Which is just such a messed up way to go about this entire thing.
Steven said quote,
"...she was into drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, using cocaine, doing drugs, and
hanging out with people without any restrictions.
She was running around late at night, doing things that maybe she shouldn't have been doing. Some of those things might have included robbing drug dealers." He added
smugly quote, maybe it wasn't the right path, but it was the path that Aranda was on.
Uh, what about your client?
Yeah, I mean, and this is his whole thing. He asked to attack her, and that way he can
defend Owen, and this is the way he's doing it.
Well that's why it's so despicable. I understand this is his job.
But it's almost like the things he's saying, he's trying to make Aranda look bad.
But Owen was doing these things.
So it's kind of like, it's kind of a hypocritical thing to say.
It absolutely is. Well, he continued on to clarify that Aranda had no reason to be afraid of Owen, as her brother alleged,
and that she likely wasn't fearful of Owen as the prosecution said, because she had willingly gone along on the
excursion when Owen invited her that day, and seemed to be posting happily alongside her old friend.
Steven explained, quote, "...when you look at it, you don't see any sense of fear in Aranda being with Owen Shover. In fact, she's snapchatting the entire
thing and the people want you to believe that this incident from over a year ago
where both Aranda and Owen were expelled led to somehow this murder that they
believe occurred. But you know what you don't have is proof of that. There's no
body, there's no weapon, there's no evidence that Aranda Briones is dead.
Steven also proclaimed that the lack of physical evidence should cast enough reasonable doubt on
his client saying quote, if Owen were planning this murder that the people want you to believe
without a body, without a weapon, do you think he's gonna let Aranda Snapchat pictures
in the car with him?
It doesn't make sense.
I mean, he's not gonna sit there and tell her,
hey, don't Snapchat, you know,
inside my car as we're driving around
because I'm gonna kill you later.
So he probably wouldn't have said anything anyway.
I mean, I understand why Stephen is saying this,
but it just feels like all of his arguments
are really loose and flat.
You know, like as if just because he didn't stop her
from Snapchatting means that he couldn't
have planned her murder.
Right.
It's just, that's all he has.
Right, again, grasping at straws.
Yeah.
Well, in his next argument,
he attempted to malign Aranda's family,
describing how Aranda had disappeared from home before, and that perhaps she didn't want to come
back. He explained, quote, Aranda liked to run around at night, but she usually comes back.
The defense even went so far as to try to justify Owen's spontaneous trip to the mountains,
saying that it was one of Aranda's favorite places to go.
Stephen said, quote, The Box Spring Mountains.
That was an area that Aranda frequented.
She liked to go up to that area.
She liked to hang out.
She liked to drink.
She liked to do the things that she did up there.
And so Owen drove her around.
But Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestron stood by Aranda's role as
the innocent victim of a heinous crime.
Mike said morosely, quote, the victim didn't deserve this.
She was just a kid.
She had her whole life ahead of her.
This was a tremendous loss, all because of one person's choice. It's truly heartbreaking."
Mike added that he found Owens' behavior in the courtroom distasteful and despicable, saying,
quote, He's a stone cold killer. On the day of his conviction, he spoke to his grandfather from jail,
wondering whether he should get a trophy for being a convicted
murderer.
He has shown no remorse.
Well, 23-year-old Owen Shover was found guilty of Aranda's murder in August of 2024, after
the jury deliberated for just one day.
Ahead of Owen's sentencing, Judge Timothy J. Hollenhurst told him, quote,
There are many questions left unanswered,
none more than,
Where is Aranda?
Mr. Shover, from what I can tell about you,
it appears that you are not capable of feeling remorse,
so I do not intend to lecture you on how devastating your actions were in this
case.
However, there's no question in this court's
mind that you are the face of pure evil.
These are really big statements from two different people. A judge and the DA.
I mean, yeah, they really ripped into him.
But that shows you how horrible this was in their eyes and how guilty he was in their
eyes.
Yep, absolutely. Well, on October 25th, 2024,
Owen was sentenced for his crime
and was handed life in prison
without the possibility of parole.
In response to the sentence,
Stephen Allen again, his defense attorney, said,
We're sad about the sentence,
and hopefully the appellate process
will find some instructional error
or error along the process.
But thus far, his defense team has not announced any plans to appeal.
Twenty of Aranda's friends and family members gathered in the courtroom,
and multiple people made tearful victim impact statements before the Shover brothers and the court.
Aranda's teenage cousins said through Sobs, quote,
"'That regret physically hurts,
"'that I didn't hug you and tell you how much you meant
"'to me.
"'Even though we were cousins,
"'you were like a sister to me.'"
Aranda's aunt Deborah bemoaned that the family
would miss out on so many firsts
that she would never get to share with them,
saying, quote,
"'We had no idea that the sun would set so soon on her dreams.
Her uncle Matthew, who viewed her more of a sister than a niece, called losing Aranda the most
heartbreaking thing that he had ever been through.
On what should have been the day of her high school graduation,
he wrote, quote, In all of our eyes, even though she isn't here, she graduated early.
Also, she probably would have been manager by now.
She loved to work more than anything.
To the shock and disappointment of Aranda's loved ones, Gary Shover received just 12 months
of probation for his role in Aranda's murder.
He served time in prison while awaiting trial, but managed to vacate his charges in a plea
deal with the Riverside County District Attorney's Office.
The charges against him were waived by a judge in a preliminary hearing, and he was ordered
to serve just 12 months of probation as well as to pay restitution to Aranda's family,
and that amount will be decided
by the Department of Probation.
Aranda's body, though believed to have been left
in the San Bernardino Mountains, still has never been found.
Current lawyer and former FBI agent Bobby Chacon
weighed in on how he believes Owen
was able to conceal her body, saying,
quote, This is an area of California that's over 2000 square miles or 5000 square kilometers.
These mountains and they are rugged terrain.
These are difficult mountains to search.
They do it by helicopter in a lot of places because it's too steep to get in there.
Now how he was able to hide her body,
because by no account is he an avid hiker or an outdoorsman,
I don't know how he was able to hide her.
I assume she was buried because on his property,
they did find some burnt out clothes and blankets
buried on his property.
So he has a habit maybe of burying things.
So I assume he buried her.
Volunteer groups have scoured the mountainsides
over the years, but the chances of finding her remains
are sadly pretty minuscule.
Mike Hester and again the DA agreed
that it would be an uphill battle
and one which may never come to fruition,
admitting quote,
there are sheer cliffs out in those mountains, thousand foot drops. battle, and one which may never come to fruition, admitting, quote,
there are sheer cliffs out in those mountains, thousand foot drops.
On the day of her disappearance,
Aranda Briones was wearing a white and blue jacket, a dark colored shirt,
and dark jeans.
She stood at five feet, four inches tall tall and weighed about 110 pounds.
She had brown hair and hazel eyes and her nose was pierced.
If you have any information about the whereabouts of Aranda Briones,
please call the Riverside County Sheriff's Department at 951-955-2400.
Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West.
Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode.
In a lot of cases that we've covered where a body has not been recovered, sometimes,
you know, years later remains are found.
So hopefully at some point, soon hopefully, Aranda's remains will be found and she can
be laid to rest by her family.
Yeah, because I mean, at this point, we really have no answers.
Her family has no answers.
They only have what we can all presume what happened.
Cause everybody kind of thinks the same thing.
Yeah.
But we don't know for sure.
We don't know exactly what happened, where she is, um,
what exactly she went through.
So yeah, that's why we said in the very beginning, please,
even though there is some resolution, of course, which is so important,
please make sure you share this case
because if her remains are found one day,
we can really only hope that that happens
and then her family can have some much needed full closure.
Absolutely, and if you wanna see photos from this case
and all the other cases that we've covered,
head on over to our socials,
give us a follower on Instagram at goingwestpodcast,
and we're also on Facebook.
Yes, thank you guys for tuning in. in again big shout out to the two who recommended this episode or this case
Jessica and Justin if you have a case that you want us to cover just shoot us an email going West podcast at gmail.com
We have a massive list of hundreds of cases, but we're always excited to get new ones sent in so please do so
Alright guys, so for everybody out there in the world, don't be a stranger. I'm just a little bit of a wimp, but I'm just a little bit of a wimp you