Morbid - Episode 353: Justice For Katie Palmer
Episode Date: August 17, 2022On the morning of April 21st John Palmer and his wife Katie decided to start their day off with a nice walk together before the craziness of their day to day ensued. They didn’t know that o...ne of their neighbors would also be out that morning, driving his F-250, impaired to say the least. Katie and John were both hit by that man, Cory Todd Foster. John suffered serious injuries that left him in the ICU and unfortunately, Katie was killed in the crash. Cory Todd Foster, who has a 20 year history of vehicular crimes including DWI, reckless driving and speeding faced absolutely no charges. A huge thank you to John Palmer for speaking to us about Katie's life and the injustice surrounding her death. There are so many injustices in this case that will leave you infuriated, but the fight is not over. There will be justice for Katie Palmer, and all of us can have a hand in helping. For more information and updates on Katie’s case these are the best links:Katie Palmer ProjectJustice For Katie Palmer WebpageJustice For Katie Palmer Facebook GroupJustice For Katie Palmer Twitter See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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What you see with Katie is what you get. She was a very genuine person and just a console
and what a loss. Hey weirdos, I'm Melina, I'm Ash, and episode of morbid is going to be a bit different than your typical morbid
episode.
Yeah.
This is a call to action episode, really.
Yeah.
The voice you just heard at the beginning of this episode is the voice of John Palmer,
who we were fortunate enough to be able to interview about his wife's case. He's like such a sweet heart. He was.
This family just will like make you love them immediately. Yeah, this family reminds you of your family. It really does.
This could be anybody's family. Exactly. Well, John Palmer lost his wife, Katie, on April 21, 2020.
That morning, the two of them just decided to start their day together. They just wanted
to go on a walk together for the crazy day started. Something we all do, something we all
take for granted. Yeah. So they head down Glenwood Drive in
Grace and County, Texas while they're out for their walk. And while they're doing so,
another man in their neighborhood
was also starting his morning.
Cory Todd Foster had spent the better part of the night
before up late drinking whiskey.
And I wouldn't say that he was necessarily
in the right frame of mind to be operating a vehicle that morning.
And we'll get way into that later, don't worry.
Sure, well, that morning it was a particularly dewy morning.
A lot of condensation had build up on Corey's windshield.
And instead of waiting for that to clear,
for his windshield to clear,
he made the decision to head out for the day
with very limited visibility.
Because not only was his windshield
all condensationed up, but it was a pretty foggy morning
and a very bright
morning.
And he was driving directly in the direction that the sun was coming up.
He was.
And he was heading to pick up some guys for work that day.
He actually was traveling in the same direction that the Palmer's were traveling in.
Now listen, the Palmer's were doing exactly what they were supposed to be doing.
There's no sidewalk on that particular road, so they were walking alongside the road against traffic, just like they were supposed to be doing. There's no sidewalk on that particular road, so they were walking
alongside the road against traffic, just like they were supposed to. But somehow, as he was making
his way down Glenwood Drive, Cory Todd Foster recklessly drove on to the wrong side of the road,
and struck both of the Palmer's. Katie was unfortunately killed from the impact and John sustained major major injuries.
And Corey Todd Foster received absolutely no consequences, despite having a 20-year
history of vehicular crimes, including DWI, reckless driving, and speeding.
It is the most infuriating thing you will ever hear.
It's I can't get over it.
He got nothing, not even a slap on the wrist.
He killed a woman, and he got nothing.
But before we get into all the details,
that make this case so incredibly infuriating
for this family, and for anybody that's going to listen
to this episode, I think we should begin
at the, the loss at the center of it.
We're going to let Katie's husband, John, who survived this traumatic accident
tell you exactly who his wife Katie Palmer was.
Katie was kind and beautiful both inside and out.
A lover of science and nature.
Again, she taught middle school science at Scott Middle School,
brought a STEM program to Scott Middle School because, again,
she loved teaching, but she also loved learning.
And I think that STEM program was as much for her as it was for the kids,
because she enjoyed her job so much.
She looked at those kids like they were her own kids.
She was constantly bringing clothes up to the school
for kids that didn't have the essential supplies
they needed or the clothes that they needed.
And in fact, last year at Scott Middle School,
they renovated a room and filled it full of
clothes for kids that needed clothing items and named it Katie's closet.
Yeah, that's who she was.
She brought children's programs to the National Wildlife Refuge, Hagerman Wildlife Refuge, to get kids interested in the outdoors and science.
She had studied biology at Austin College.
That's where we met and fell in love with ornthology.
So she loved birds.
So again, going out there to go teach those kids,
you know, she got just as much out of it as they did. And earlier this year,
they built a pavilion. It was an educational pavilion, and they dedicated that to her.
So she's made an impact throughout this this community. And I've said this many times,
she was an excellent teacher, but she told me that being a mom was her most important job.
She loved our kids, loved Bell and Brandon.
They were always the most important things in her life
and our life.
Absolutely love those kids.
When she was hit and killed by Corey Foster, that was about the time that COVID was starting to shut
everything down.
Teachers were doing remote teaching.
Kids were doing remote learning
and there's a golf course bias.
It was a golf course.
It had been shut down, but her and the kids would go on walks
out there.
She was introducing them all the time to nature.
And they loved it.
They loved her, and she loved them.
And it was great. She was such an outstanding mom,
such an outstanding mom. She loved her family. Her mom was her best friend. She spoke with
her dad every day. Her mom and her would go to, I mean, god, lunch or dinner or just go run around town. They always love to be in each other's company and if there was any kind of
of weather cell that came into our area
Katie was on the phone with with her dad and
I've never met two people that could talk so long about an, you know, upcoming storm.
And then my gosh, oh man, just have you seen this?
Well, there's a, you know, a low pressure front coming in.
I don't even know the correct word.
Did I just sit here and go and, and you guys really talked for an hour over this thunderstorm?
That's just a strange thing.
I feel like is it going to rain though?
What's going to happen?
That's all I need to know.
Yes or no?
Do I need an umbrella?
But I loved her family.
Again, mom, dad, sisters, brothers, cousins, family was always first.
And Katie was just an exceptional person.
And she's going to be greatly missed by our family
and by this community as well.
So now that you have a better idea about who Katie was
and really just what a significant loss this is
to not only those who knew her personally,
but the entire community.
I mean, she did so much for her community.
Truly.
But now that you have a better idea about that,
let's talk about what exactly was happening
that morning on that road.
Now the posted speed limit on Glenwood Drive
is 30 miles an hour.
There is literally no way on this green earth
that Corey Todd Foster was traveling at that speed.
No way.
None, logic tells us this, math tells us this,
science reality tells us this.
No, we know that he wasn't because of how far
Katie and John were both thrown.
Now, had Corey been traveling the posted speed limit, Katie and John would have been thrown
about 50.6 feet for a forward projection trajectory.
But instead, they both were launched about 70 to 75 feet before making impact with the
ground.
That meant that Corey Foster had to have been traveling
way over the posted speed limit, way over.
Yeah.
Like, nowhere, this was definitely,
and I think like he claims, and I think John says
in the next clip, we're gonna play of John,
that he claimed it was like he was going 15 miles per hour.
Yep.
Wow.
What a lie.
Not a surf.
What a breeze and lie.
And the thing is, speeding was not the only factor
in this crash, because later cell phone records would show
that Corey was on the phone when he struck John and Katie Palmer.
And he himself said that he should not have driven that morning
because of the limited visibility, which
is already breaking a law, because according
to the Texas Transportation Code 552.008, the driver's two exercise
do care. The operator of a vehicle shall exercise do care
to avoid colliding with a pedestrian on a roadway, meaning
that Corey making the decision to drive his F-250 that
morning when he himself could not see. And he said, so
that's not exercising do care. No, and it's like he's driving when he can't see.
He's driving like at least slightly intoxicated from the night before.
And he's on the phone on top of it so you can't see out your windshield and you are admittedly
telling me you can't see and the sun was coming up and that made it even worse.
You're on the phone?
Well, this is happening.
And you're looking down dialing the number
as John Palmer is going to tell us.
How long?
Manually dialing.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's...
There's so much here that points to him
making so many multiple bad choices.
It's outrageous.
And for me, the alcohol is one of the biggest factors here.
Yeah.
The responding officer to refalcatube
is heard on body camera footage,
saying that he smelled alcohol on Cory's breath,
even as he was making his way up to the vehicle.
Making his way to the vehicle.
Not even in front of the man.
Yeah.
Now Cory said to the officer,
because immediately,
Tariq was like, have you been drinking?
Because I can smell the whiskey coming off of your breath.
Cory claimed that he had stopped drinking
at 7 p.m. the previous night.
But Officer Alcathebe is heard again
on body camera footage saying himself
that he does not believe this to be true.
Yeah, so he even goes to give Cory a field sobriety test
which he did pass and then also a breathalyzer.
Now, this is something that's important to note here.
This breathalyzer test was taken about 50 minutes,
so close to an hour after Cory had already struck the Palmer's.
So the test comes back at a .06, 0.02 points under the legal limit.
Yeah, that's, come on.
I mean, let's be real here.
Had he taken that test an hour before when he struck the Palmer's, I guarantee it would have been either at or above the legal one.
He was still intoxicated from the night before, which should tell you a lot.
And Officer Alcathebe's own report states that the three major contributing factors in the collision in the collision are all due to Cory's negligence.
Yes. The impaired visibility cited in the report,
wrong side not passing cited in the report,
and again, Cory fosters intake of alcoholic beverages,
may have contributed, excuse me,
did contribute to the crash.
Yeah, and he, Alcathebe says it in his report
that he believes that alcohol and his intake of alcohol the night before
may have been part of this crash.
He acknowledges it right there.
In writing.
And nothing happens.
How?
Nothing happens.
He just killed a woman and critically injured her husband.
And it's like, nobody's gonna give him a blood test.
Right, like he's not gonna be taken somewhere
where they can really find out
how much alcohol is in a system here.
And that is something that we're definitely going to get to later.
But before we get there, let's have John Palmer kind of walk us through what he can remember from this morning.
Katie and I were on the opposite side of the road.
We were walking alongside the road and we had our backs to where
Cory was coming from because we were on the correct side of the road facing on
comic traffic.
When we were walking, and again, we did not hear his truck, and he had a large truck.
That's one thing that I keep on going back to, you know.
We Katie had such good hearing. I could be in our living room with the TV turned
on like at a volume 6 out of 100 and she would send me a text to turn the TV down. Our bedroom was
all the way and back and I just that's one thing that you know you you keep on going over these
these little things these these little things, and just you kill yourself
with the what-ifs.
And we didn't hear it.
And I don't know.
I don't know.
When he hit us, I immediately knew as I was flying through the air that we were hit.
And I'm walking with her and I remember her turning over her shoulder and saying something
to me with the smile.
And then next thing I know, I'm flying through the air and I could see his truck out of my
peripheral vision and we were, seemed to be going about the same speed
and then I hit the ground and rolled.
And he would tell a DPS that he was going 15 miles per hour,
which obviously is one of many lives that he told that day.
The troopers joked on scene that he told them he was going 15 and they all laughed
and said 50. They actually they said bullshit 50. Funny how that didn't make it into the
report. Yeah. And his speed was not recorded on the little black box that everybody's vehicle has because what has to happen for your vehicle
to record speed is that there has to be a big impact, which I guess Katie's body wrapping
around the hood of this truck was not a big enough impact and he did not slam on his
brakes. He came to a rolling stop. So there was no impact sensor that told
that little black box to record, uh, nor did he slam on his brakes. Which is a lot.
That says everything. It absolutely tells you what kind of mental state that he was in.
Yeah. Um, I don't know about you all, but I would believe that a person in a
normal mental state, if you're already driving three tenths of a mile,
admittedly driving three tenths of a mile blind. And you hit something.
I think a, again, a person in a normal mental state would immediately slam on their brakes.
Absolutely.
Just hit something.
And that collision of Cory hitting us was heard by a neighbor that lived across the
street from where the collision took place.
And he was maybe a hundred feet away.
And he looked through his kitchen window while he was getting his coffee and saw Cory getting
out of his truck.
He obviously didn't know that Cory had hit us.
He just thought that was Cory slamming his car door and thought he was getting his dog.
Cory's dog was always loose.
So he just, that's, that's what he thought.
But it was enough for the neighbor to hear it.
Again, roughly 100 feet away.
Yeah.
And have him look out and see what was going on.
But it wasn't enough for Corey to rapidly decelerate.
Corey was going well over 30 miles an hour.
The third party report has it at 33 to 43 miles per hour,
but the issue that we have with that
is that Tareef Alcathebe, again,
Tareef was the investigating officer for DPS,
last on scene, he showed up and did not mark the scene at all.
We've had meetings with DPS and asked them why.
And they said, too much it already been disturbed,
which part of my language, that's just a bullshit excuse.
Yeah, it is.
Certainly.
Sorry.
No, don't have to be.
Okay, well, I just let it fly.
If I need to clean it up, I absolutely will, but I'm just gonna call it, I'm just going to call it, I'm just going to call it what it is, just a bullshit excuse
that had he had marked where the truck had stopped, which had he had done his job and talked
to the neighbor who was out there talking to every other DPS officer, letting them know
that Cory Foster is always drinking. who was out there talking to every other DPS officer,
letting them know that Cory Foster is always drinking.
And he can be seen talking to DPS officers.
I think he spoke with Jack Hill at length,
but Jack didn't have his body camera turned on.
Tareef did, and you can see, Jack Hill speaking to this neighbor.
And if Tereaf had actually talked to any one of the neighbors that were on site that either
heard the collision or were there minutes after, maybe he could have got some additional
information.
But if he had marked where the truck had stopped, where the neighbor had solved the truck,
if he had interviewed the other neighbor to find out exactly where Katie's body was.
I think he could have asked even Cory Foster where he picked our shoes up that because
you know we were hit so hard we were knocked out of our shoes.
Oh my gosh.
So you know 30 miles per hour.
No way.
No way.
But if he had done all this and done his job and had properly marked the scene to the
best of his ability, that would have given the third party expert more information to
more accurately determine how fast Cory Foster was going that day.
But again, systematic failure from day one, since DPS didn't do their job that pretty
much set the tone for this entire case moving forward.
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Babel, language for life. Now we have all at this point mentioned some body camera footage that came out.
In Officer Alcathebe's body camera footage, a lot of joking can be heard.
It's just not appropriate.
No, it's not warranted that.
And this kind of joking that is happening here and this kind of like very light attitude
towards it is honestly like really, it of like very light attitude towards it,
is honestly like really,
it's like a little scary to watch
because it's right in their faces.
This scene is right there,
Katie is right there, John is right there.
I mean, at one point John was crawling towards his wife
while he was like critically injured.
And they can stand there with that energy
and that scene in front of them
and kind of just like shoot the shit.
And that's the thing watching that,
you think of your loved one
and how you would feel
watching the body camera footage.
It's just, this is not, this is not right, it's not right.
And instead of taking Corey Foster somewhere
for a blood test to show just how intoxicated he truly was.
Officer Elkateeb can be heard again on that body cam footage, offering Cory a ride home,
says it ain't no problem, just like a good old friend would.
Because as it turns out, Cory Foster and Officer Elkateeb, they knew each other quite
well actually.
We'll let John explain that piece of the puzzle, and also it should be noted that Cori Todd
Foster is remarkably calm on that body camera footage, especially being someone who has
just hit two people with their truck and didn't even realize that they had killed somebody.
And after having to sit through hearing all the jokes made on body camera footage, Katie's
family still had more to go through
other than just dealing with the loss of their family member.
Katie's family reached out to literally every level
to try to find justice and they came up empty handed,
more than empty handed at each turn.
The doors were slammed in their face essentially.
Yeah.
There's a lot of lies, there's broken promises,
and there's a whole bunch of people
protecting their own instead of doing what it was right and what they were elected to do.
That's a big thing in this whole story. What they were elected or given the job to do.
And decided to take on themselves as humans. Yes. Now this family's case really is a perfect example
of our justice system failing at a systematic
level in such a huge way.
Massim.
But honestly, little did they know who they were dealing with.
John Palmer and Katie's mother, Ronda, are two forces to be reckoned with.
They have no idea. was, we're staying with my life. And one statement that always goes through my head.
My wife's body is being flown to Plano and I say her body because, you know, her, she
was declared dead on the 22nd.
So we were hit on the 21st.
She was declared on the 22nd because that was the earliest available time that they could
perform that test.
She died out there on Glenwood.
They were keeping her alive. They were hand pumping oxygen into her body to keep her alive.
The EMTs in the fire department did everything that they possibly could.
But her brain had swelled too much and snapped her brain, brainstem.
My last body is being flown to a trauma center in Plano, Texas.
Approximately 60, 70 miles away. I'm loaded up in an ambulance
being driven to the ICU at our local hospital and
I
Was trying to get somebody when I was being loaded up to make sure that they could get a hold of my mother-in-law
Check on my my kids, of course
get a hold of my mother-in-law to check on my kids. Of course.
I couldn't remember her number.
I mean, if you'd asked me any other day,
absolutely, you could have rattled that off.
You know, I gave him her address.
I just couldn't remember the number
and got to the hospital and I had asked there was a
Denison police officer there who was outstanding and asked him to you know
make sure my kids are okay please send somebody by so and in Jack Hill's body and Jack kills body camera. He is driving. He'd already crossed the highway. He was probably
minutes away from our house. He got a call from the Grayson County Sheriff's Office asking that
one of the officers that Ron Seane go back and do a welfare check on our kids.
They were saying that the husband is distraught, obviously wanting to make sure that his kids are fine.
Because in all this chaos that's going on, I don't want my kids to wake up at 8.30 or 9 in no one's home.
one's home. Jack Hill calls Tareef Alcatim on the radio asked him to do a welfare check. And Tareef was so put out by having to go back. His response was they probably won't even even come to the fucking door. That's the professionalism that that officer for DPS has.
When I heard that, as a parent, you just want to make sure your your your kids are okay,
that they're fine, that someone has them.
You know, I was concerned about Katie,
I was concerned about my kids.
And to hear an officer say that,
an officer that
supposed to protect us,
supposed to, you know,
I was always brought up in a family
that we respected officers.
If there was, and I still do do I absolutely 100% still do because I mean if there's anything wrong, I'm gonna down 911.
I'm gonna call law enforcement there. I mean, they're protectors.
That's not what treef out alcatitas.
There's no excuse for him saying that there should never be a time when an officer
Is put out by having to go check on
two kids who
Lost one parent and the other ones in the eye the ICU
and
that to me
just And that to me just reiterates the fact that Alcatheap should not be an officer.
Absolutely not with the way that he conducted himself.
Again, you got a woman who is just being flown to a trauma center and you're making jokes about how much body spray she used that day.
I don't know if you guys saw that clip or not, but there was one officer that had her
bag and said, Hey, if you guys take her clothes and he was laughing the whole time, you guys
need to make sure to put it in the back.
I think she put on too much body spray this morning, man, all this is stout.
Are you hitting me?
No, and that's all on body camera footage.
And that was said by, I believe it was Jack Hill.
That's so sorry that you had to hear that.
Yeah, no one should ever have heard that.
They make jokes about collecting insurance money,
about, you know, hey, if it was me,
and I was walking, you know, my wife would want me
closer to the roadside that way if I get hit she can collect all the insurance money that was a big big joke there
Again, they all laughed that we were neighbors
And they all were pretty much enamored with
Cory Foster's wealth, you know, Tareef Alcathebe
Instead of driving Cory Foster to the hospital for a blood test,
which he should have done. He loaded Cory Foster up in his own vehicle with his loaded handguns
and turned off his body camera and drove him home and came back. And the topic of discussion wasn't about reckless driving, wasn't about, you know, how is this report going to be written up?
Nothing of that nature, it was, Corey's got a big ass house.
Guys, real successful. He sells medical equipment.
Man, he's got a big ass house dude.
That's exactly what Drief Alcatip said.
Which again,
just puts that level of distrust in my head
and anybody else's head that sees
that full body camera footage
because you just got an officer that after he was asked by another officer if they're gonna get blood declines and then
Corey Foster is gonna walk home roughly again about three tenths of a mile.
This is gonna walk home he said he wanted to clear his head he could see his mailbox. And Tareef basically told
him that he was going to take him home. Cory said, no, I'm going to walk. No, no, no,
no, no, let's just go ahead and get my car. And then turns off his body, camera footage,
and then it comes back, um, bragging about how large this, this man's house was. What
was the conversation on the way home. Exactly. Yeah. You know, yeah. There's it, it puts a big shroud on
any type of integrity that that officer has. Absolutely. And it continues to do so to this day
because again, no one's been held accountable. Done. We had a meeting with DPS this last Thursday.
The chief of the highway patrol actually came up
in North Texas to speak to our family.
And they stated that the language that Teref used
was unacceptable and that he was reprimanded for it, but they couldn't tell me how he was reprimanded.
Of course, and he gave him a promotion after this, didn't they?
Oh, two. Two promotion. He's been promoted twice.
Yeah. And in fact,
because I've requested his personal file,
Because I've requested his personal file, his direct superior Sergeant Jim Bob Walters, put in his personal file, basically a commendation stating that he's done such a very good job
of not reacting to how critical our family has been
against him on social media.
So not only did he fail that day,
but he's being lauded by Sergeant Jim Bob Walters
on how well he's handled.
Jim Bob Walters on how well he's handled.
I'm trying to state this right way. He's been lauded on how well he has handled
this community speaking out against him and his failures.
What kind of sense does that make?
Wow, you're bad at your job,
but you're good at taking a shift.
Exactly.
Yeah, which, you know, in basically, he's shown leadership that junior officers can look
up to.
I've had numerous current Texas State troopers reach out to me and have seen the body camera footage and
have wanted to make sure that me and my family are aware that Tareef did not act in accordance
with DPS policy.
Of course.
That he absolutely failed, yet DPS will not admit to it.
And this whole cycle that we've gone through,
this exercise of frustration that we've gone through
with DPS, we put a complaint together
against free faculty back in November of last year.
DPS reviews it, then DPS investigates it, right?
They investigate it in February.
Then DPS basically sends it to Terees, chain of command.
And then they look at it,
and then it's sent to, I guess, an executive committee that then looks at it and then it sent to I guess an executive committee
That then looks at it and then decides what kind of punishment truth is is going to get so
DPS and investigates DPS which seems legit
Right right for sure. I don't know what to say. I see nothing and
Because he wasn't given a reprimand that cost him a day of work, they don't have
to release anything.
So DPS investigates DPS.
We don't know what evidence DPS has because they can't release it.
We don't know what the findings were from their review of the evidence because D can't release it. We don't know what the findings were from their
review of the evidence because DPS cannot release it. And we don't know what type of
reprimand or punishment Tareef Alcattee received because DPS can't release that. If that
is just the most untransparent thing.
That's unreal.
It's it's crazy.
I don't even know when you wrap your brain around that. You just I mean you can't.
There's just a complete lack of transparency.
And it's not only with the DPS.
I mean, we've we've been facing that with our with our local
the Abrez myth.
I'd like to bring that up real quick if you don't mind. Absolutely. So one thing during this whole investigation against
TREF, DPS, and a letter they sent us stated that they found, and I'm paraphrasing this, no misconduct
by Corporal Therif Alcathebe
that basically hindered the prosecution
or subsequent prosecutions of Cory Foster.
Our family met with Brett Smith in June of 2020,
roughly gosh, two months after Katie was run over by Cory Foster and our district attorney
Brett Smith told us that missteps were made in this investigation that tree falconty
did a horrible job did a very bad job should have gotten blood. They don't know why he didn't get blood
and then said that his report was very lacking. It was a bad report that got submitted multiple times,
just a bad, bad report. And then Brett Smith went off to basically throw mud at a lot of smaller
police departments and letting us know how hard
his job is because a lot of these smaller police departments were horrible at writing
reports and this is what they're stuck with.
So our district attorney pointed the finger at DPS stating that DPS did a horrible job. DPS interviewed Brett Smith and that letter that we got back basically
tells us that Brett Smith lied to DPS and told DPS that tree balcony did a fine job.
Wow. We're waiting to see if we can get any type of documents.
I have requested that our district attorney,
in the month of July, I sent five emails to Brett Smith.
Wow.
And our carbon, carbon copied our state representative
and state senator on those emails.
And I asked him five times for him to put his words
that he said to our family in June of 2020
on his letterhead so we could present that to DPS.
Of course, we haven't heard anything from Brett
because I caught him alive.
Wow, you, too.
I'm not sure.
Which is, would say, very damning for a district attorney to be caught lying
in an official investigation conducted by a state entity on another state employee.
So we'll see how that turns out.
That's outrageous.
That's really nice.
Yeah, well, I truly can't, that's wow. Which, you know, again, if you go back to Brett'sness
involvement, oh, and just to go back on that.
So he made those statements in June.
He was interviewed in February, and then in a phone call
to Katie's mom, Ron DeNale, just hammered down the fact
that DPS quote messed up, and there should have been a blood test
and because there wasn't, there's nothing that he could do.
So he tells victims and their families one thing,
tells DPS something completely different
and then goes back and tells the victim and their families
something that again contradicts what he told DPS during
their investigation.
And then things that will never cross.
Do you really think that's never going to overlap ever?
Yeah.
And do you think that us finding this out, you think that we're going to stop, you think
that we're going to go, well there's nothing we can do?
No, that's not who we are.
That's not who we are at all. And just to, there's a great triangle in all this.
So Brett Smith represented Cory Foster's family
in a DWI prior to becoming DA.
Cory Foster and his wife were driving a vehicle.
She was driving the vehicle.
Cory was sitting shot, he was riding in the passenger seat.
And they were pulled over.
Wife was arrested for DWI.
Cory was a, I guess, decided for public intoxication. And the wife, well, the
family hired Brett Smith is her attorney for the DWI and really liked to know what kind
of advice he gave Cory Foster on that PI. So Brett Smith has represented this generally
before in an alcohol-related matter.
Fail to disclose that to us,
but he was very active in meeting with us
and contacting us about this case.
I'd love to go into that later with you guys as well.
And then Brett Smith is related to
Tareef Alcatim through marriage.
So the plot.
There's just a whole triangle.
And then we also uncovered.
I'm sure you guys have seen the pictures of Tareef and Cory months before.
Well, Tareef's wife and Cory Foster, pretty much arm and arm at a Halloween party.
Both wives got together hours before the party,
dressed up together, put makeup on together. They're friends. And they all went to this party together
on Halloween, months before Katie was killed. And then again, they were at another Christmas party
together. Picture says a thousand words. And there's only one word that comes to mind when I look at those pictures
and that's friendship.
And that's exactly what I believe cost Tareeve to do.
His buddy is solid.
Absolutely, good old boy system.
Absolutely, absolutely.
And that actually leads me into another question that we have for you.
Brett Smith was called when Judge Bill Majors
was involved in an alcohol-induced incident as well.
Can you tell us about that?
I absolutely can.
All right.
So a little background on Bill.
I had gone to go speak with Bill.
Back in, I believe it was 2021,
I went to go speak with Bill.
And Bill Majors is the county judge.
He's not an actual judge. He is de facto mayor of Grayson County, okay? So almost
a year after Katie was killed, nothing had been done. I went to Bill Majors to ask for help. I met with him in his office and he played K to me.
You know, I'll do everything I can.
You know, if you got anything, come back to me.
He just took the meeting, okay?
Left that meeting and just, you know,
it was what it was.
You know, Bill was politically tied to everybody else in the county and vice versa, but went with my son to go get his birth certificate from
the County Courthouse and Judge Majors stops me right by the County Courthouse steps. And we got to a conversation about our our meeting and Bill majors was
Defending
DPS defending
Brett Smith defending Kerry Ashmore and
Basically just stating that you know
I don't see the political gain for for them doing this and
Bill and I got into, I don't want to say a heated exchange, but a very loud exchange to where I told my son to go walk away. And the exchange
ended up with Bill Majors telling me that if I don't like what's going on in this county,
that's why we have elections.
And that if you don't like the job that someone's doing,
then maybe you should get somebody to run against them.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
I mean, that's our county judge.
Why?
Okay.
I'm not gonna fix it.
You can just vote someone else.
No, you can fix it. Yeah. Why? I mean, we we had a good old boy system here in Grayson County, and I'll tell you why why I say had.
So. Maybe two weeks later, I get my hands on Bill Majors.
I get my hands on Bill Majors, the body camera footage from when Bill Majors was arrested. It was sent over to me and I reviewed it.
And that's when I noticed that as they were arresting bill for DWI,
his fourth DWI rest, okay, fourth.
The first one he had, he caused serious bodily injury
in that DWI that got one soon after,
and that I believe also got one
what he was the mayor of Sherman
Where he was arrested in Florida and then just got got one now where he was three
Who is three?
Three and a half times over the legal limit hit a light pole and then drove across the highway and was
But basically was run down by
Sherman police officer and a state trooper.
Okay.
Oh my God.
A lot of people he could have killed.
And how does this absolutely license outrageous?
Well, I mean, again, I think we've all kind of kind of found out.
It's all about who you know and who you are.
Absolutely.
So as they were arresting Bill and putting him into the DPS unit to be
taken to a hospital for blood work, one of the troopers, or the trooper on scene, went
to go retrieve his phone and saw that he missed a call from Brett Smith, which tells me I am assuming that
Bill placed that call to Brett prior to
stepping out of his car as a last-age effort,
that's when I'm assuming.
And when they went to go retrieve his phone,
he missed a call from Brett Smith.
Brett Smith was calling him back.
So absolutely, we got that and I released that out on our Justice for Katie Palmer page.
And before I did that, I sent an email to Bill and I let him know that
that I had this this video and it angered me that
This is the guy that I that I went to for help and it turns out that
He absolutely put all these people at risk and then he reaches out to the same guy that
I am fighting against for justice from for my wife.
Bill is trying to obstruct justice and go around and not be accountable for what he did.
And I just told him that this is the type of system we have here in Grayson County
and I'm going to fight for change in Grayson County
and I think that needs to start at the top with you.
And then two days later, I put that video out there and
this county had had enough of build majors in those just like Bill.
Got tired of the lack of accountability
in this county and people were angry. People were angry. Right, police. And there was another
man that like the last day, I believe it was the last day or the last two or three days before you could announce that you were going to run, decided to run his name was Bruce Dossie and he was the assistant police chief in Sherman.
Great guy. I believe he's a scout master. Again, he's assistant chief of police in Sherman,
which is the county seat.
He serves on a city council and serves on a school board.
Just a good man, very good man.
And this great guy, Bruce, ran against this incumbent,
Bill Majors, who had every single political endorsement,
because he had been campaigning for so long.
Everybody figured that Bruce was a long shot and Bruce ended up beating Bill 13,000
votes to about 6,000 votes.
Completely demolished Bill majors and it just shows that this county was fed up with it in this county was ripe for change. And the slogan that was coined was major change.
And so Bill majors is now, well, soon to be now the former
county judge of Grayson County.
Amazing.
And we are going to do the same thing with Brett Smith and
Facts. Yeah, he were. In fact, about three months ago, we put up billboards in Sherman, Texas,
that had a big help wanted sign for a new Grayson County district attorney. Yeah. And the best.
I saw Brett about four months ago in the Grayson County Justice Center.
I was going to go get, I've been requesting information for the last two years from the
DA's office, whether it be on my case or similar cases.
And Saul Brett Smith, and we had a run run in and I let him know.
I looked him right in the eyes and told him that we're gonna
get him out of that office.
That's awesome.
And I know that this county wants change in the DA's office
and we will get somebody to run against Brett Smith
and Brett Smith will have something in common with Bill
Mayter's and they both can be to former elected officials.
And that was some really good advice that Bill Majors gave me.
If you don't like the job that elected officials doing, then you get somebody else to run,
and you absolutely change it.
And that's what we got with Bill, and that's what we're going to get with with with Brett also.
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and type in morbid ship station, make ship happen. Now, with all of the contributing factors in this case, you would think that when it was
brought before a grand jury, that they'd be ready to go forward and decide that Cory should
be charged with something, some kind of offense, like anything, reckless driving, maybe,
vehicular manslaughter, anything.
That's not at all what happened here.
Here's John on that matter.
To go into the grand jury,
I wanna first talk about our relationship with Brett Smith.
So after Katie was killed, it had been a couple weeks
and I reached out to the DA's office
and got a hold of Brett Smith
and asked him about the status of our case.
Brett told me that DPS has not finalized the report yet that he was aware of it, but couldn't
speak on it because he didn't have the case in front of him and didn't have time to review
it.
And I probably knew more than he did at that point and then I would have to just call
back. I was fine with that. Well, more time had passed on and Ron DeNale, who's Katie's mother,
had reached out to Brett Smith, I believe at his office. Brett was not there, so she got a number that
she found on Facebook. So she she called it.
Turns out that was Brett's personal cell phone. Well, if you don't want somebody calling your your cell phone number,
don't make it public on social media, especially if you're an elected official. Yeah, seems pretty simple.
Yeah. So, Rhonda reached out to Brett and started talking to Brett about the case and he was angry that Rhonda called him on his personal cell phone told her that you should never reach out to an elected official on their cell phone, which sidebar is
funny to me because I've got our state rep and state senators personal cell phones.
They gave those to me when we got that House Bill 558 passed.
So that just goes to show you that Brett Smith
is absolutely not up to the job of being a DA
and not being accessible as well as accountable.
Anyway, I digress, I'm sorry.
So you can only imagine as a parent
that your daughter's been killed and the person that is going to get her justice basically tells you, oh, and he did tell her that he had no clue about this case at all, which contradicts what he told me.
Wow. Wow. You can imagine the anger that somebody would have
going, I just called you to ask what the case was and you chewed me out for calling you on
your personal cell phone, which was public. And now you're telling me, you know, nothing about
our case and basically ended the phone call. Well, again, we don't have a platform like you all have the platform
or like the DA or anybody else has a platform. So our platform is social media. So Rhonda
took to social media and told everybody what her experience was with Brett, how rude
he was, how he did know what was going on with this case, and something
didn't seem right. Well, our family loved and still loves Katie. This community loved
and still loves Katie. There was outrage. There was anger.
Of course.
So everybody else started to call up there, and everybody else started to put their feelings, their raw emotions on Facebook.
And then I get a call from Brett Smith. And it wasn't about the case, it wasn't about,
hey, we've finally got the files here, we're going to look at it, we're going to sit down,
have a meeting. Brett was angry about how he was being perceived on social media.
Called me again.
I just lost my wife six, seven weeks ago.
I'm trying to figure out how I'm going to keep going on.
We're still adjusting.
The honest with you, I was still in shock.
I was still trying to figure out what was going on.
You know, and me and the kids are trying to adjust to life without a rock. Life without
Katie was our glue. And so, I apologize to Brett. Looking back on it now, probably would have had
some other words for him. But I apologize to him and
I said, you know, I'll see what I can do. And you know, called family and friends that,
hey, this, I guess this guy's working on it like, you know, what's, you know, please, I understand
that everybody is angry and wants answers, but we just can't do it now.
I don't know.
I mean, to be honest with you, I had no clue about who Brett Smith really was at that time.
And we're going gonna back off right well then
More weeks come by and people start getting more angry that nothing's been done that nothing's been done
And so they take take back on to social media and I get another call to Brett Smith and it's the same thing
Brett Smith is more worried about his
About how he appears on social media, then actually doing his job. So basically,
two out of the first three conversations I had with Brett over the phone were about social
media. Okay. Yeah. And, you know, if this is probably not the job for you. So, so we finally have a meeting with Brett
and have a meeting over at the Grayson County Justice Center.
And it's Brett Smith, Don Hoover, Laura Wheeler,
and those other two names, they are prosecutors.
And then it's myself, Katie's mom, Katie's dad, and one of Katie's brothers.
And start the meeting out. I brought pictures of Katie, and I wanted to introduce Katie to
Brett and Donna Laura. They've never met her. So I had these pictures, and I was going
to describe each picture. You know, one was a picture of Katie and the kids. One was with her and,
and, and me, one was with her mom and dad,
her mom, one was with her dad,
one was with her family.
And I wanted them to get to know her,
because I wanted them to know
who they were going to be fighting for.
Of course.
You should have wanted to know her.
Yeah.
So,
Don and Laura looked at the pictures, listen, everything I had to say,
Brett Smith with his arms folded,
leaning against a wall,
wouldn't sit at the table.
And when I asked when one of the prosecutors
handed him a picture,
he said he didn't want to see it
that he's seen enough on Facebook.
Again, so I told him that that's fine.
I'm going to keep on introducing her to you guys,
and then we'll just see what you have to say.
Wow, how deep.
And then when I got,
well, so when I got through,
well, when I got through with that,
Brett looked at Ronda Nail, again, Katie's mom Ronda,
and said, again, gave her an election on social media.
Again, again.
And everyone's just sitting there letting him do it like his coworkers.
And he had just been pictures of Katie laid out.
And our mother is sitting and you're like, well, let me lecture you about social media.
The other two prosecutors, I mean, that's their boss. And they seem to, they, they seem very engaged. Okay, the whole time they were very professional. After Brett made that comment,
pardon me, after Brett commented on social media again, we all got to talking. And
the other two prosecutors engaged us again in a very professional manner. And it seemed
like things were going well, then Brett turns to Katie's mom and goes, well, you just your G-Hod. Wow. And that fell flat. He left about it. The other two prosecutors tried
very hard not to show any kind of emotion at that comment. And yeah, let that just roll off. You know, to be honest with you, had I had known then what I what I know now and knew that there
wasn't a chance that he was going to give us a fair shot. I don't know if I would have let that
comment just kind of die the way it did, but this guy, this guy, this guy was our only chance at getting justice for Katie. So at that
point, I had two meetings with Kerry Ashmore, who was the first assistant district attorney
who was going to try this. He was going to present this case in front of Grand Jury. Now, again, at that meeting that we had just had with Brett,
that's when Brett makes the comments about the missteps.
So, Matt with Carrie two or three times,
at which time I was told that they were going to get
cell phone records on one of the two meetings that I met
with Carrie, that they were going to get cell phone records
and review those and obviously before the first
Grangerie they did not they failed at that and we had a Grangerie on August
19th 2020. I testified to ref alcatheed, testified, and DPS never recreated this crash.
That was wild.
Well, and their excuse from last Thursday was basically, you know, too much stuff had
been disturbed.
They're really wanting to point at doing it,
which is, again, a bullshit excuse.
It is.
Because they just overdo.
They dropped the ball.
Just overdo.
No one's gonna get mad at you
for going above and beyond.
Exactly.
And I mean, that's what DPS does.
That's what they do.
Their whole job is to collect the evidence.
Exactly.
And they failed at doing that.
I mean, you know, and I had meetings with the third party
that Grayson County hired and they were saying
that there was just, there wasn't,
DPS did do a good job.
You know, there was enough pictures.
They went off everything they had and they just said,
you know, there wasn't, they didn't really collect a whole lot.
You know, the bodies weren't marked where they were supposed to be.
And, you know, just it was a very poor effort on Taree's part.
It's your job.
It's your job.
It's your job.
And this is what it's crucial.
And this is what you wanted to do.
Yeah.
So we all three testify and Jerry Ashmore comes out, it's about three hours and tells me
that the jury has no billed this case.
That was hollow and I just, you know, we lost Katie four months before and I just don't see how this is possible.
That, well, here's how it is possible.
The grand jury in Texas is comprised of 12.
Okay.
Only 10 people were on the jury that day.
You have to have nine people for, I guess, a vote to move forward
to true bill it in order for there to be a true bill.
So already we were down to, we had to have nine out of 10.
Brett Samantha Kerry asked more failed at getting the cell phone records for Cory Foster.
And there was a third party report that was done that you guys
have referenced, right?
That wasn't dated until I believe August 25th.
So the grand jury was on the 19th and the final report
was done on the 25th. So the grand jury was on the 19th and the final report was done on the 25th.
So the grand jury didn't have that and that report is damning to Cory Foster. So, um,
so Carrie asked more failed at properly executing his duties and failed at preparation.
For this presentation and failed in general, uh, failed my family for the presentation, and failed in general.
Failed my family for the first time.
Yeah.
So through civil discovery, okay,
through our civil suit that we have on ongoing,
because again, we followed that soon after the no bill.
And that's, this has been a very long process.
Our depositions have been rescheduled numerous times because of the Cory Foster and his attorneys.
So hopefully, I believe we're scheduled for those again in September and October.
So hopefully this time, nothing just at the spur of the moment comes up.
And we can finally start to get some answers and start to get Cory Foster on record as to what happened that day. So through our civil discovery process,
my attorney, Britain Brooks, got the cell phone records.
And those cell phone records,
if you base those upon what Corey Foster told DPS
when asked,
what did you do as soon as that you realize
that you hit the paulmers?
He said, I'm slowed down, I stopped, I got out,
and then I immediately called 911.
Well, before that call to 911 was placed,
approximately 31 seconds before he called 911,
he called the 903 number. 903 is our
local area code. He called a friend's mom because he was going to go pick up some guys
to go help him do some work that day. Okay. So assuming that he was off to go pick up some
workers to help him with something he had to do with work. I go deliver medical supplies, go deliver a large bed.
I don't know.
So, the timeline we put together shows that Cory Foster,
because again, it was 31 seconds before,
and we know that it takes 38 seconds to go from his mailbox
to the point of impact going 32 miles an hour. Okay. So he
couldn't have called this number as he was leaving his driveway. He called this number
as he was crossing over the roadway and hit us. So, you know, a second or two before he
hit us, he hit send on his phone because he was manually dialing and I'll tell you how I know that he was manually
dialing the number hit us slow down got out and then about that time he heard me yelling
for somebody to call the cops and he goes oh my god oh my god John I didn't know was
y'all I couldn't see I was trying to clear my windshield and I'm crawling over to Katie because I can't walk
Yelling for somebody to call the police to call the cops
He had his phone in his hand
He ended the call and then two seconds later dialed 911 it hits him and then we have a witness that said that as she came up
And stopped she was got there about a minute or two after he hit us, Cory was already on the phone
with 911.
And so we presented that timeline
to the district attorney's office and they said, yeah,
we'll look at it.
Okay, well, thanks.
They finally called me. I want to say on
a Monday, about 430. And said that they were going to take these phone records to the
Grand jury. And it was Kerry Ashmore that called me and said we're going to take them to
the Grand jury. We're just going to see we're gonna take him to the grand jury.
We're just gonna see what the grand jury wants to do with them.
And then if they want any other evidence,
we'll provide that to him.
I said, do I need to be there?
I mean, because this is a brand new grand jury.
Grand jury has no clue about anything that happened
at the first grand jury.
And he said, now we'll be all right.
You know, we're just gonna see if they want to move forward.
And we ended the conversation pretty quickly. Well, I got to think of this, this'll be all right. You know, we're just going to see if they want to move forward. And we ended the conversation pretty quickly.
Well, I got to think of this.
This doesn't sound right.
You know, you call me 430 the day before you're going to
present this to a grand jury the next morning.
What's what's what's going on?
I tried to call him.
He wouldn't take my call.
I had a cell phone.
I texted him and asked him what was going on.
And he basically said, hey, everything I told you on the phone is how this is going to
go down.
We're going to get, you know, we're going to get the fun records if they want any other
information, then, you know, we'll, we'll provide that to him.
And I asked him not to go forward with his injury
until he could assure me that I would be able
to testify again in front of this injury
that the third party report was gonna be presented
to the grand jury unlike how it was last time.
A full presentation was gonna be given,
not some bastardized, abridged version
of what he presented
at the first grand jury, and that, you know,
these cell phone records and all the other footage
that they haven't seen was going to be presented
to the grand jury wouldn't respond back to me.
So, about 6 a.m., I called up to the disc attorney's office
and left a message for Brett Smith saying
that Ronda Nail and Gett's mother and I would be up there and that we absolutely
would like to speak with them and know what's going on prior to them
presenting anything to this grand jury at all. So we left at about 7.30, got there at 7.45 in the morning, got there before the grand jury
and asked to speak to Brett Smith and Kerry Ashmore.
And I think we asked two or three times.
Nothing.
Kerry Ashmore comes walking out of the grand jury room and says, what's in the grand jury's
hands now.
And I said, what do you know, it was, they tried to rail, rail roadists, which they, they,
they successfully did.
When we questioned him on why he was doing it this way, he looked at Katie's mom in
the face and told her that he didn't have to explain anything to her and that he was
damn good at his job and he walked back into the green dream room. They comes out 20, 30
minutes later and says they decided to not move forward with the phone records. I don't believe that
Kerry Ashmore presented anything other than phone records and hell he might
have not even presented the phone records because in Texas you know whatever
happens in a grand jury has to stay stay stay behind closed doors and as soon as Kerry Arshmore told me that I unloaded
on that man. Good. And deserved it.
Yeah. You know, the 18 months that
have been built up the
anger that I've had the
hollowness that I felt from him not doing his job from Kory I'm not sure if I'm going to get a job. I'm not sure if I'm going to be
a good worker.
That I've had the.
Holiness that I felt.
From him not doing his job from
Corey Foster still being able to.
Drink and drive all over Grayson
County putting everybody else at
risk.
You know, having to explain to my
kids that.
I don't have the answer why that man still drives up and down our road. I don't know what to tell you. You know, it's a failure. I'm sorry, which sorry's don't cut it.
Of course, you're coming from you, the sorry. No, the people who are supposed to be protecting
and investigating are not doing their jobs.
I'll say this, everything that I told Kerry Ashmore that they absolutely minute.
And my only regret is that I didn't yell it louder.
So good for you.
That's unbelievable.
To me, I just, I can't understand this. like you were saying like the systematic just layer by layer failure to do your job. Like beyond a failure,
there's not even a word for what they did. So wild at every single turn.
Well, and and I think that, um, well, I think that Egos came in a play as well.
I think after, again, after they failed the first time that we became hypercritical of
the district attorney's office, I don't think we became hypercritical.
We became hypercritical of the district attorney's office
in DPS and who wouldn't?
Right, I was gonna say.
Of course.
And so you've got these guys that have this God complex
that whatever they say goes,
you know, they're so knowledgeable on everything
that how dare you question,
how dare you question them at all?
Yeah, of course.
Well, our family did.
And I think that came in to play.
I really think that came into play.
And they were angry that, again, they were asked to be accountable for what they didn't
do.
And they feel like they're above that.
And I don't believe that there was anything that we could have provided that DA's office.
We probably could have had
Cory Foster on tape admitting to everything.
And I think it still would have been no bill.
But what gets me is that you've got
these prosecutors that work for Brett Smith
in the district attorney's office
that their whole job is to hold people accountable.
Their whole job is to hold people accountable and they take away the one thing that's most valuable
to people which is time. So they take away time from people every day, two years, three years,
30 years, 50 years for various crimes, okay?
They hold people accountable, but yet when they're asked to be held accountable themselves,
they can't do it.
That is exactly what you said, Egos.
Egos, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Because it's like, it's just asking for you to be held accountable to do your job.
That's all anybody's asking for you.
For justice and serve.
No one would fault you for saying,
you know what, everyone messed up at a systematic level
and it needs to be taken care of and like,
we're gonna do this.
No one would fault anybody for just admitting
something bad happened here and things weren't fine.
And things weren't done, but we need to do it now.
Which I guess we'll just have to go back and rely on
the great advice that Bill Majors gave us
if we don't like the way that an elected official
is doing their job.
We'll find somebody else to run.
Absolutely.
That's what we're gonna do.
Because if this has happened to my family, then
it's happened to other families as well.
So yeah.
With all the frustration and miscarriages of justice that this family has faced, somehow
they managed to keep pushing forward.
And at the same time, they've worked on getting new laws set so that this doesn't have
to be anybody else's experience.
We're going to have John talk to us a little bit about one of those laws, Colton's Law.
We were contacted that there was a family that was trying to get a law passed
because of something similar that happened to their son, Colton Carney.
So, we heard about Colton's story. Colton's truck broke down
early one morning and he had to walk to work and he got hit by a driver and was
instantly killed. His mother, Michelle Carney, had asked law enforcement,
you know, well, did you guys get a blood test?
And they said, no, she goes to a breathalyzer, nothing
because no one is drunk at, you know,
730 in the morning, that was there.
There's a lot of air.
Wow.
Well, yeah, I mean, we, I know that firsthand.
Yeah.
And, you know, again, just the nonchalant, well,
too early in the morning, that never happens.
That's just somebody being lazy and not doing their job.
So she had reached out to every single member of the Texas House.
And I believe there's, you know, 152, 154 members.
And one representative, Terry Mesa, returned her email.
And they started, and Terry Mesa was not even her rep.
And they started working on this.
And we heard about it.
And I've met Michelle Carney now numerous times.
I consider her very good friend.
She is such a strong person.
It took her years to get this done.
And so she finally got it ready.
And our family and our community
and our friends heard about this. And we assisted her in the lobbying for this. Drove down
to Austin numerous times. Got our state rep and a state center involved. And got a past in one session.
So the spirit of this law would require that any motorist that hits a pedestrian and causes either serious bodily
injury or death, shall be given a blood test
for drugs or alcohol.
That's what the spirit of the law is, and had bipartisan support and passed.
And that's one thing that we can look back at and say that we made positive change.
You know, I was telling, I've told Katie's brother
and I've talked to Rhonda about this.
And I mean, it just,
it appears that the justice that we want,
which is to have Cory Foster
have to go through criminal trial
and stand in front of a jury and answer for what he did.
That's our justice. Our justice is for there to be a criminal trial.
Now, the outcome of that is up to the jury.
We can't control that, but at least that all that is out out in the open.
All that is out in public.
And it's not behind closed doors to where prosecutor can say or do whatever he or she wants
to.
We want a public criminal trial to hold Cory Foster accountable. I'm always optimistic, but at some point pessimism just kind of overtakes you.
And you start to realize that, hey, maybe, maybe Corey never could sell the cannibal in a criminal court and I told
Katie's brother and and mom I said, you know the the justice that we want
we might not get
But the justice we get we might not see and
I
think that is going to be very evident in
Colton's law
that if something like this happens again,
then the person that took somebody's love one away
will be held accountable that families like ours
will have answers.
You just won't have question after question after question.
It'll be another disc attorney that sees a case like this and
instead of letting ego get in the way instead of not giving every single case their 100% attention.
not giving every single case their 100% attention. Maybe they look and see
how this community reacted to Brett Smith and his incompetence,
and they actually give a damn.
Yeah.
Maybe it's another officer.
And again, 99.99% of law enforcement,
fantastic. It's that 0.99% of law enforcement, fantastic.
It's that 0.01 that paints law enforcement
with a broad brush.
Maybe it's that officer that comes upon a scene
and sees a family friend. maybe he recuses himself, maybe he or she is not so complacent on
scene and does their job and does an actual investigation and maybe they treat that scene with the professionalism in the respect that that scene deserves because, again, that's somebody's worst day.
And to see the body camera footage that we saw in a lack of respect for Katie's life and what our family was going through, I'm never gonna be able to unsee that.
So maybe everything that our family has done
and our community has done,
maybe the justice we get is a justice that we don't see
and those that are in the power to do the right thing,
do the right damn thing.
In addition to Colton's law,
another amazing thing that came out of this horrific tragedy
is the creation of the Katie Palmer project, which aims to spread Katie's light as far
as humanly possible.
Dustin Bortzfield, and when he listens to this, he's going to be angry because he never
wants his name to be mentioned.
But Dustin is such a great guy.
I mean, there's no words for a guy like Dustin.
Dustin's a firefighter out in Great Vine.
I played football with Dustin in high school.
And we both went our separate ways.
And after he heard what happened to our family,
he reached out to me on Facebook and said,
you know, again, offered me his condolences
and just said, hey, if there's anything
that I can do for you or the kids, let me know.
And I said, man, I appreciate you reaching out.
Thank you. Context, me know. And I said, man, I appreciate you reaching out. Thank you. Um, context, you
know, a couple of months later, it was kind of getting towards Christmas time and says,
um, you know, do you, do you usually put lights up on your house for, for Christmas? And
I said, well, yeah. And he goes, uh, goes, man, I'd like to do that for you.
That's what he does in his, oh, it is. And so there's, there's a lot of firefighters that
when it comes, you know, towards Christmas time, they do that as a job on the side. You know,
they'll work one day, then they get two, two days off. And so in their spare time,
some of them have side jobs, and they'll put up lights. So he goes, hey, this is what I do.
Again, as a side job in my spare time, when I'm not saving lives and running in a burning building. I put up Christmas lights.
Can I do that?
And I was like, man, you know what?
That would be awesome.
And so he did that for us.
And he told me actually before he did that, called me and said hey, not only do I want
to do that for y'all, but I want to do this for other families.
And so he started the Katie Palmer project and we got nominations for families in Dallas and Dallas and Grace the county and some up in Oklahoma and I believe there were 10 families. We raised money and
he got some other firefighters that did that as well and they donated their time and there were families that have gone through a traumatic experience, have lost a loved one,
have had a very rough year, and again, these heroes take time out of their days, time's away
from their family family and they go
put up Christmas lights.
Um on these houses for these
families that have gone through
this hardship and um.
It.
It.
It was a big deal for us.
It's um I believe I was driving my daughter back
from something at the high school
and they had put the lights up and we were coming back
and it's already a hard time, time of year,
as you could imagine, especially it was gonna be
our first tristinist without Katie
and you just got these emotions. you know, you're just you're I've been in a motion roller coaster for two and a half years. Of course.
And so we turned the corner from highland onto Glenwood and Belicees the lights and man, her eyes went up. I love that.
It's such a great idea. It was just such a, because again,
it's something doable and something
that makes such a huge impact.
And to see her eyes light up.
And, you know, just for that second,
she wasn't thinking about anything else it was going on.
She was like, man, they did a really good job. It looks great.
Because usually I'm the one that puts up the lights and it's just a they're all
different colors and stuff. It's awful. It's awful. She was like, man, they did a
really good job. And Dustin that just shows you that, you know, they're a good job and Dustin that just shows you that you know they're a good people out out
there and Dustin is just a fantastic friend and just the type of guy where you're just
going to have somebody like that in your life, man. He's a overly positive guy.
And again, outstanding person.
Last year, we got families in the Houston area and the Austin area.
And it's spread farther throughout the state and dust and wants to get that as big as possible just because
he wants to be able to spread Katie's light.
He wants to be able to help as many people as possible.
That's just the kind of guy he is.
So it's a registered non-profit
501c I think that's what it is and
There's actually a web page for it and there is a
Facebook page for
Katy Palmer project so if anybody wants to get involved with with that you are more than welcome to
Get on either the Facebook page or the website and
there's places where you can donate or more importantly where you can
nominate families as well. We just want to take a second and thank John Palmer
for one just speaking to us and two for being like such an incredibly kind and
just really wonderful human being. Seriously.
So even though this case feels like it is full of just dead ends and frustration and injustice,
they're not going to let that happen and we're not going to let that happen, right, weirdos?
No, we're not going to do it.
We can.
Why?
Because you know what, the Palmer's are officially family now and we're going to raise up our
voices just like you can do the same and
we can help this family get justice because that's what it takes. Is a lot of people screaming
for justice. And here's how you can do some of this stuff.
We have a ton of resources for you to go to. If you want to nominate a family to spread
Katie's light or if you want to donate to that at all, you can do so at the Katie, excuse me,
KatiePolmerProject.com.
It's K-A-T-I-E-P-A-L-M-E-R project.com.
There is also a website, justiceforkadypolmer.com.
There's a Facebook page, justiceforkadypolmer.
That's a public group.
You can get all the latest updates on the case there.
You could also follow the Twitter.
If you're not on Facebook, the Twitter is at four underscore Palmer and it's at
F-O-R underscore P-A-L-M-A-R. And we'll post links to all of these in the show notes as well,
so you can just get them right there. But I think it's definitely time that justice happens in this case. It's gone on long enough.
And I think we can do it, guys.
I think we can help get this heard.
We definitely can.
And let's hand it to John Palmer for some final thoughts.
I just want to thank everybody for standing with us.
As we stand up to fight against this injustice that we've gone
through for close to two and a half years. Katie could have been your wife, your
mother, your sister, your daughter, your cousin, your friend, and this can happen to
one of us, it can happen to any of us, and injustice against one of us is an injustice
against all of us.
Truly.
And just family is so appreciative of all the support that we've received from our community
and from everybody else.
These podcasts helped tremendously.
And I would be remiss if I didn't say thank you to you both.
You guys don't know how important this is
to get her story out.
And without your platform, we couldn't do that without your platform.
We wouldn't have a voice without your platform.
Our fight for justice would be so much more of an uphill battle.
And just want to make sure that I think you both. Thank you so much more of an uphill battle and just want to make sure that I think you
both. Thank you so much. Listen we're friends now. We're here for you anything you
need you let us know anything we can do to help. I very much appreciate it
I very much appreciate your time and thank you for allowing me to tell Katie
story. Thank you for telling us Katie story. Thank you.
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