Murdaugh Murders Podcast - TSP #9 - What Happened to Grant and Gracie Solomon? Part One

Episode Date: July 27, 2023

True Sunlight co-hosts Mandy Matney and Liz Farrell and Beth Braden dive into the Grant and Gracie Solomon case out of Nashville, Tennessee. This horrifying, complex story is similar to the Murdaugh s...tory in so many ways. It is a case of crime and corruption with systemic failures and social media efforts standing up against the Good Ole Boys. This is the first of many episodes on this case.  Want to look at the documents referenced in this episode and others? Consider joining our Luna Shark Premium Membership community to help us SHINE THE SUNLIGHT! CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3BdUtOE. Through lunasharkmedia.com, Premium Members get access to searchable case files, written articles with documents, case photos, episode videos and exclusive live experiences with our hosts - all in one place.  We all want to drink from the same Cup Of Justice — and it starts with learning about our legal system. By popular demand, Cup of Justice has launched as its own weekly show. Go to cupofjusticepod.com to learn more or click the link in the episode description to get a hot cup of justice wherever you get your podcasts! Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cup-of-justice/id1668668400 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Itp67SQTZEHQGgrX0TYTl?si=39ff6a0cc34140f3 SUNscribe to our free email list to get alerts on bonus episodes, calls to action, new shows and updates. CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3KBMJcP And a special thank you to our sponsors: Microdose.com, PELOTON, Simplisafe, and others. Use promo code "MANDY" for a special offer! Find us on social media: facebook.com/TrueSunlightPodcast/ Instagram.com/murdaughmurderspod/ Twitter.com/mandymatney Twitter.com/elizfarrell youtube.com/@LunaSharkMedia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From the creative team behind the Brutalist and starring Academy Award nominee Amanda Seifred in a career best performance, Searchlight Pictures presents The Testament of Anne Lee. With rave reviews from the Venice Film Festival, this bold and magnetic musical epic tells the story inspired by a true legend. Anne Lee, founder of the radical religious movement, The Shakers, The Testament of Anne Lee. Exclusive Toronto engagement January 16th in theaters everywhere January 23rd. I don't know what it will take for Gracie and Grant Solomon to get justice. But we're going to take you through the many rabbit holes as we find out exactly what happened to Grant and his sister Gracie. I believe that the entire system, from the media to the church to the government, failed these kids.
Starting point is 00:00:56 And it is far past time to shed sunlight on this case. My name is Mandy Matney. This is True Sunlight, a podcast exposing crime and corruption previously known as the Murdoch Murder's podcast. True Sunlight is a Luna Shark production and is written with journalist Liz Farrell. Well, we have big news. We are officially entering a new era in the True Sunlight podcast, the Grant and Gracie Solomon case. This has been a long time coming, but after four years, finally feeling rested and ready to take on another beast of a case, we are opening up that box that I have set in the corner for a long time. It's here, it's now, and it is time to unpack it. The case, in the most simplest ways I can summarize, goes like this. In 2020, 18-year-old Grant
Starting point is 00:02:12 Solomon, was killed mysteriously in an incident that police labeled an accident where his father, Aaron was the only witness present. In the years leading up to his death, it is well documented that Grant, his mother Angie, and his sister Gracie, tried to report their father Aaron's alleged abusive behavior to authorities, including church, school, and court officials. No one listened. Even after Grant's death, they didn't listen. So finally, in May 2021, Gracie, made her voice heard. After filing a restraining order against her father, then 14-year-old Gracie Solomon published a heartbreaking video on YouTube, detailing horrific allegations of her father sexually abusing her. In the video, she explained why she was terrified of him, and she questioned the
Starting point is 00:03:09 details of her brother's death. That video was seen by over a hundred thousand people, and it was sent to me over a hundred times. But even with more than 100,000 people hearing her story, authorities still didn't seem to care to listen to her, which is why we are talking about it today. We talked about this case a little bit in a previous episode of Cup of Justice. But for starters, I want to tell you exactly why we took this case on. It is a story where crime meets corruption, a story that deserves to be in headlines around the world, but isn't being covered much at all by mainstream media. It is a story that has so many attached rabbit holes that desperately needs sunlight,
Starting point is 00:04:01 sunlight that could help an entire region of people, not just the victims. It is a story about a woman and her two children who repeatedly warned the system about a man they believed was dangerous, And now one of those children is dead, and the other two live in fear for their lives. It is a story about a woman going to the ends of the earth to protect her children, no matter how many times they called her crazy, told her no and refused to believe her. It is a story about a system protecting, enabling, and believing a man over and over again, despite all of the horrific allegations against him.
Starting point is 00:04:47 As I've said before, y'all have sent us hundreds of cases in the last few years, but this one quickly rose to the top. As you tell me all of the time in my DMs, South Carolina is not the only state rife with good old boy corruption. Now we are looking at you, Tennessee. Specifically, Franklin, Tennessee, a wealthy suburb just south of Nashville. Franklin is in Williamson County,
Starting point is 00:05:19 one of the wealthiest counties in the United States. I have to mention wealth here because while the Solomon case shares a lot of similarities with the Murdoch case, especially when it comes to good old boy power, per capita wealth is where these two locations differed the most. For example, the median household income in Williamson County was $11,000.
Starting point is 00:05:43 in 2022. Compare that to Hampton County, South Carolina's median household income of just $38,000. But don't get me wrong, money and the pressure to keep up is a big factor in this story, just like the Murdoch story. In a lot of ways, the first week of investigating the Solomon case has reminded us of those first few weeks we were investigating the Murdoch family back in 2019. With both cases, there was an overwhelming amount of information online in an endless amount of social media chatter and rumors.
Starting point is 00:06:22 But despite all of that chatter, our reporter Beth Braden immediately picked up on the hush-hush nature among locals while making calls to authorities about this case. Those long, breathy pauses on the other end of the line after saying the word Solomon. And like the Murdoch case in 2019, there are few mainstream reports piecing all of the horrific details of the Solomon case together. In fact, I could only find a couple stories from the Williamson Herald and the Williamson homepage that begin to cover the sprawling details of this tragedy.
Starting point is 00:07:01 No ABC, CBS, or NBC news stories, no Nancy Grace, no court TV. I want to say for the record that if you pop up to you. Podcasts and YouTubers have covered this case in great detail, and I want to give them credit. Specifically, the Lauren Interviews podcast, which was very extensive, Kendall Ray and Southern Girl Crime Stories. We aren't the first to the scene here by any means. But we believe this story is so important. It needs every bit of sunlight and support from our army of pesky people. We do not believe that it is a coincidence that maybe.
Starting point is 00:07:40 mainstream media, a system very much dominated by the rules of the patriarchy, has seemed to overlook this incredibly important story. In fact, the main person at the center of these allegations in this story is a former media man himself. Aaron Solomon was a TV news anchor for over a decade at WSMV Channel 4 in Nashville. That station published a memorial piece after 18-year-old Grant Solomon's death in 2020. But that piece was mysteriously taken down sometime between 2021
Starting point is 00:08:19 when Gracie published her video alleging her father's sexual abuse in January 2023 when the case started gaining momentum online. Writer Shannon Ashley First pointed that out, and her story published to Medium, a site where independent writers and creators published their work. Shannon Ashley is one of many independent writers, bloggers, and content creators who have covered this story in great detail. Making up for where Legacy News seemed to have dropped the ball.
Starting point is 00:08:53 And that is where the tables are turning. Here at the crux of this story is a woman in her two children in the question of, whether or not to believe them or believe their father and the powerful systems that support him. You don't have to read many details in this case for the entire thing to seem unbelievable. How could the justice system repeatedly belittle, discredit, and reduce a woman like Angie Solomon, who is a licensed pharmacist, by the way? A woman who was armed with evidence, documents, and testimony, accusing her ex-executive. husband of abuse. How could the system possibly choose him over her that many times?
Starting point is 00:09:41 That's the scariest part of all of this. The more I dig, the more I think that if it could happen to Angie Solomon, it could happen to anyone. You know, we heard the word unbelievable a lot when exposing the many layers of the Murdoch story. Unbelievable. How could one man get away with so much. Maybe. Before the age of social media and independent content creators, these unbelievable stories of systemic corruption and abuse were swept under the rug because maybe there were too many members of the good old boy club in Legacy Media playing gatekeeper. Whatever you believe, those days are over. And we're going to cover every inch of this case and you can decide what you believe for yourself. Just like we did with the Murdoch case, in the Solomon story, we will be putting
Starting point is 00:10:36 victims first. And by the way, we have contacted the victims and they fully support our investigation. We will also be calling out corruption and questioning absolutely everything. This will be the first of many true sunlight episodes covering the Solomon case. We are reporting this in real time, and we expect there to be lots of twisting turns, just like the Murdoch story. Let's start with Grant's death. Grant Solomon was killed on the morning of July 20th, 2020, just one month after his 18th birthday. From the start, police considered his death an accident. Why?
Starting point is 00:11:20 Because that is what Grant's father told them. I'm coming. I'm trying. Where is an emergency? It's 1357 South Water Street. It's all .09. Please hurry. He said 57?
Starting point is 00:11:41 Please hurry. Okay, what's going on? Fifty-seven. My son's truck backed over him and he's rolled over him and drug him into the ditch and it's on top of him. He's trapped under the truck and I, I, yeah, he, somehow it drugged him underneath it. it. Yes, my son is under it. I'm trying to, no, I'm trying to call 911. Okay. What's your night? Oh my God. My name is Aaron Solomon. And you said, Oh my gosh. 13 57 Southwater Avenue, right? Yes. How is it the mail? He's 18. He just turned 18
Starting point is 00:12:25 a couple weeks about a month ago. It's my son. Oh my God. Oh my God. This is not good. Is he awake? Oh, please, hurry. I don't, no, I don't think so. He's not alert, right? No, he's out. And he's trapped. I got three guys here, and he's trapped under the truck.
Starting point is 00:12:46 Okay. Oh, my God. I understand, sir. Say on the phone. Meanwhile, we get somebody out there. What's your name? Aaron Solomon. All right, Aaron.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Huh? What kind of vehicle is it? It's a Toyota car. It's a Toyota Tacoma, Tacoma, and the vehicle has to, he's underneath the vehicle. Okay, I've got that. Okay, I've got that. What color is it? It's a white truck.
Starting point is 00:13:17 That's my son. It's somehow it backed up. Yeah. Yeah, I'm on 9-1-1 right now. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Was your son working on it?
Starting point is 00:13:39 No, no, he was just getting out of it. We're on an incline, and I guess he didn't have it in park or something, or it wasn't engaged, or... Oh, my God. Oh, my God, I can't believe this. No, no. And he's still under truck. No one can get from under it. No, no.
Starting point is 00:14:04 We saw units in rounds to you. just asking you questions for we can update him, okay? Can you check and breathe? Somebody's telling me that he's coming too. Okay, he is waking up, kind of keeping still. So he is, he can't move.
Starting point is 00:14:26 I don't think he can move. I don't know. Okay. No, he can't move. He's crap. Okay, we got somebody in route. Now, would he wake back? He might be scared.
Starting point is 00:14:35 I'm telling him, there. I'm telling him. I'm telling him. talk to him. Yeah, if somebody talked to him, there's, yeah, there's
Starting point is 00:14:45 blood, is he facing up or down? He's facing up. They said he may aspirate. We need to hurry. Oh, my God. So does he have blood coming out of his mouth?
Starting point is 00:14:57 Yeah, there's blood coming up. Yeah, somehow it's rugging him down, I think. I don't know whether it wasn't in part or blood or if it didn't engage, debris or it drugging underneath somehow. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:13 They said he's facing up. Okay. But he's bleeding from his mouth. So, Grant, turn your face to the side if you can, barely. But be careful. Don't move him, okay? We can't move him. We can't, we can't move in.
Starting point is 00:15:30 I'm going to let you go, okay? Yeah, okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:43 Uh-huh. Bye-bye. Aaron was the only witness to this alleged accident, which occurred sometime before 8.45 a.m., outside of the Ward Performance Institute in Gallatin, Tennessee. This is where Grant, a rising senior in high school and a promising baseball player, had been scheduled to train at 9 when the gym opened. The windowless warehouse-style gym is located between traffic lights on Tennessee Highway 109, which you might recognize from Goodbye Earl, by the Dixie Chicks, a song about two best friends, Marianne and Wanda, who took matters into their own hands when the law couldn't stop O'Ull Earl from abusing his wife. The lyrics go, so the girls bought some land at a roadside stand out on Highway 109.
Starting point is 00:16:30 They sell Tennessee ham and strawberry jam, and they don't lose any sleep at night because Earl had to die. Aaron and Grant drove to the gym separately. It is not clear who arrived first or what time they got there. According to a recording, Aaron says he was parked right next to Grant on the left. At the time of the alleged accident, Grant's two trainers, Tyler Mark and Drew Hall, were in the back of the building preparing for the gym to open. According to statements, they later made to a private investigator,
Starting point is 00:17:01 they saw nothing until Aaron was on the phone with 911. It is unclear whether either man is who Aaron appeared to reference and even talked to during the call. The alleged accident occurred on a Monday morning, in July 2020, which was still at the very beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic when people were working from home, places were still closed, and fewer people were out and about. Drone footage shows fenced-in storage units to the north of the gym. Across from it is a large and hilly field or yard, and to the gym south is a vacant lot. As you heard on the call, Aaron reported that Grant's truck had rolled backward onto Grant and
Starting point is 00:17:42 dragged him into a ditch. And that was that. Gallatin police filled out a traffic crash report and took some photos. Grant was taken to Sumner Medical Center where he died shortly after at 928 a.m. Then Vince Gill sang at Grant's funeral. Don't worry, we'll be getting to that. According to doctors' notes, medical personnel were told that Grant had gone to the back of his truck to retrieve his baseball gear and, quote, Dad thinks the truck was not in park. The notes also indicate that. that Grant had tried to stop the truck from rolling and had somehow gotten dragged under. Later, as questions began to emerge about the feasibility of that scenario, and as it was learned that Grant never stored his equipment in the bed of his truck,
Starting point is 00:18:25 but rather in the back seat of the driver's side, this story appeared to change. Doctors noted that Grant had major head trauma to the back of his skull, including a severe laceration and suspected skull fracture. He had blood coming from his mouth, nose, and ears. bruising on his left cheek and right hip, but no other injury to his body or skin was noted. No scratches or tears or marks. No debris stuck to his body. The doctor noted Grant had no abnormalities to his legs, no bruising to his abdomen, and his neck was not injured. Grant died of cardiac rest and blunt force trauma, and Aaron declined an autopsy.
Starting point is 00:19:04 According to a recording of Aaron in the days after Grant's death, The last Aaron had seen of Grant was when Grant had just gotten out of the truck, closed his door, and was making moves to open his back door on the driver's side. Quote, I'm thinking, oh, he's just going to get his gear, and I'm going to check this email to make sure it's not important, and then I'm going to get out and we're going to go in, Aaron said on the recording. Meaning, according to Aaron, he was looking down at his cell phone when this happened, and he didn't see the how of it.
Starting point is 00:19:36 He didn't see how his son ended up face. up with his head near the driver's side wheel and his body pointed toward the back end of the truck. He didn't see how his son was dragged by a truck that had a two-foot clearance off the ground, according to a private forensics report that was done nine months later. And as he later sat in Grant's Tacoma and tried to demonstrate his theories about how the truck might have slipped out of gear, he was unable to explain why the truck didn't move. He called it a, quote, God thing. Grant's mother and Grant's sister believed something else altogether.
Starting point is 00:20:08 They believe Aaron killed Grant. They believe Aaron did this because of what they say Grant knew at the time of his death and what Grant had been planning to do now that he was 18 years old. And they believe Grant's death has continued to be overlooked by law enforcement because of who Aaron Solomon is and maybe even because of who Aaron Solomon knows. We'll be right back. When it comes to unhealthy relationships, almost everyone has a version of themselves. that they can't really explain outside of that diseased dynamic because they don't really
Starting point is 00:20:51 understand it themselves. It is a version of yourself that's usually scared, deeply wounded, highly insecure, in pain, and stuck in a rut. It's a version that comes out when you're living off of emotional breadcrumbs, where the reward of being in an otherwise broken relationship, meaning the moments when it's good and you don't feel so pitiful or alone in life, are enough to sustain you for the time being. It's the version that stays with a person, even though you know you should be running from them or that situation. And despite having your feet firmly planted in reality, this version of yourself can also say and do things that when viewed by someone outside of the dynamic, including a future, healthier version of yourself, are mortifying to consider.
Starting point is 00:21:34 And though your words and actions do have reasons behind them, they don't always present as the most logical. I'm not talking about anything immoral or criminal, just, you know, maybe a little ragey, tragic, or dramatic, or maybe a little flip-floppy and inconsistent. If you don't know what I'm talking about, count yourself lucky and be proud of yourself for having solid boundaries and strong criteria for who you allow into your life romantically. For the rest of us, I'm going to ask that you think about the times you might have been called crazy by someone you love. And though you know you're not, you know you're not crazy, whatever that word means anyway. You also know that the version we just talked about might look that way to others, especially when you're asked to answer the question, why? Now, throw in abuse, be it narcissistic abuse, emotional abuse, or even physical violence.
Starting point is 00:22:27 Now throw in the normal stressors in life like money and bills and mounting debt. Now throw in children. Okay, answer the question, why? Well, where to start? Also, how to start? How do I explain that, yes, I said something that sounds bananas, but that I am not in fact bananas? How do I explain that this other person is my tormentor, but also my safe space? That I stayed even though, even though, even though.
Starting point is 00:22:53 How do I explain it when another narrative is already set in motion? It's the stuff of Russian literature, quite honestly, and it can get dystopian and dark. If you're a woman, the thought of it can set your teeth on edge, even just reading about it happening to another person. The idea that you can exist one way in public, one way in your unhealthy relationship, and a third way in the eyes of the other isn't the terrifying part. The terrifying part is when the other is not a person, but a system. And God help you if that system includes family court. Because how do you explain to someone that doesn't have a brain, something that exists in absolutes and is influenced by the narrowest and most certain of world views, that two opposing things can be true at once?
Starting point is 00:23:35 It's a heavy thought, I know, but I want you to keep all of this. in mind as we start at the very beginning. When Aaron Lauren Solomon met Angelina Huffeines for the second time, here's David reading from the November 13th, 2001 issue of the Tennessean newspaper in Nashville, from a column by Brad Schmidt called, and I am not kidding, Brad about you. Headline reads, The internet claims yet another innocent man. Channel 4 Sports Pretty Boy Aaron Solomon was quote,
Starting point is 00:24:08 quite the ladies' man. You could catch him hanging out with the Nashville Cats cheerleaders after the game. Aaron also loved to work Second Avenue on the weekends. No matter where he went, he was surrounded by young lovelies. I say was because that boy up and got married last week. Seems Aaron, 32, got an email three months ago from a young lady he knew back in high school. That young lady, Angie Huffines, went to a rival high school and Aaron just loved the way she played basketball for Jackson County High School. The two went out once, kissed, and never went out again. Seems young Angie blew him off. Fast forward 14 years.
Starting point is 00:24:55 Angie started seeing Aaron on TV, and she started feeling guilty about doing Aaron wrong more than a decade earlier. So she emailed him. He emailed back, Whirlwind Romance. Next thing, you know, the two are at a wedding chapel in Las Vegas, the kind of place where the official photographer takes pictures and hands you the role of film on the way out the door. Aaron leaves for his honeymoon in Cancun this morning. Mazel Tov.
Starting point is 00:25:24 Aaron Solomon is an Emmy-winning, but now former, news anchor and TV and radio sports commentator in the Nashville market. His was a face that everyone knew. and a voice that was easily recognized. He was the MC at all sorts of charity events. He judged beauty contests. He was a longtime volunteer at a center for child sex abuse victims, and he was treated like a local celebrity by the press.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Here's a little brat again on December 17, 2001, but in David's voice. Headline reads, Aaron learns new skills as a new husband. Channel 4 Sportscaster Aaron Solomon reports that he is enjoying Mary life, with one exception. You might recall Aaron reunited less than a year ago with a high school sweetie, and now he and Angie went and got married on us. Aaron, formerly a committed bachelor, says married life agrees with him. He has no problem putting the toilet seat back down. But, he said, she does make me make the bed. Oh, come on, surely you've made your bed before.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Hell no, he said, I've never done that in my life. Are you, you? Are you serious? My parents didn't make me make my bed. That's been the biggest adjustment. Boy. That was the headlighting news bit in Brad about you that week. Under it, like way under it, was a tiny headline about Cheryl Crowe, receiving an honorary doctorate degree at Southeast Missouri State University. That is how beloved it seems Aaron was in those parts. Aaron, a grown man learns to do a house chore beat out a story about a talented woman achieving something extraordinary in her chis and field. Now, Angie, Aaron's new wife, was also a doctor in pharmacology. And she was doing great. She owned a home. She owned a car. And now she was going to be a mother. Just seven months after
Starting point is 00:27:25 she married Aaron, Angie gave birth to Grant. In four years later, along came a daughter, Gracie. In 2011, Aaron left his job with the television station. It appears abruptly. Here is a tweet from his co-worker Holly Thompson from April 20, 2011. Dear friends, you may have noticed my longtime friend Aaron Solomon hasn't been by my side at the news desk. I wanted to let you know Aaron has decided to resign. Some changes were coming, and although he was asked to stay with Channel 4, Aaron decided to leave and concentrate on he and his wife's business.
Starting point is 00:28:07 I will miss my friend as I'm sure you will too. I appreciate your concern and loyalty to Channel 4. Blessings, Holly. Now, it is not clear what business Holly was referring to here. In October 2010, it appears that Aaron filed papers with the state of Tennessee for Aaron Solomon Enterprises LLC. Nevertheless, Aaron went on to work for a sports radio station and then did a six-month stint at Morgan Stanley before getting let go for unknown reasons, according to court transcripts.
Starting point is 00:28:43 In 2012, Aaron's great-aunt died, and as the sole beneficiary of her estate, he inherited hundreds of thousands of dollars, according to court transcripts. Angie says that this money seemed to change their marriage, and their marriage was far from perfect. But we'll let Angie tell you about that in a future episode. Even with the new inheritance, the couple was still in a lot of debt. Angie's suspected Aaron of multiple infidelities, which again we will get into later. But from the outside, the Solomons looked like an all-American dream family, keeping up with the Joneses in one of America's richest suburbs, where their church sat at the center of their universe.
Starting point is 00:29:30 The influential Grace Chapel in Franklin, Tennessee, is a megachurch previously run by a controversial figure named Pastor Steve Berger. According to multiple reports, members of Grace Chapel include the Tennessee governor himself, Bill Lee, also State Senator Jack Johnson, and O, the state senator's wife, Deanna Johnson, who was also a judge, and plays a significant role in this story. later on. When we talk about power structures in Tennessee and systems protecting their own, churches seem to be at the heart. Make no mistake, Grace Chapel's power circle is strong, and it's hard to ignore when telling this story. Not only were the Solomon's members of that church,
Starting point is 00:30:23 but Grant and Gracie went to Grace Chapel Academy. The church-affiliated private school that we will also talk about more in a future episode. So from the outside, I'm sure the Solomon family looked perfect. But how many date-light episodes do we have to watch to know that appearances, like Dad's coaching Little League games, families attending church together, big homes, nice cars, etc., that none of that really matters. Which brings us to May 2013, when everything changed for the couple and they could no longer appear like the perfect family, the moment when Angie's worst nightmare as a mother was
Starting point is 00:31:07 laid out for her. We'll be right back. We are now in He Said She Said Territory, a land that generally speaking favors the he. We don't usually offer trigger warnings, but after reading hundreds of pages of the Solomon's divorce documents, including transcripts from multiple hearings, We feel obligated to tell you to take cover for all of the reasons one might want to emotionally duck. There's accusations of self-harm. There's a stubborn old father who thinks it is his sperm right to threaten a life of his adult daughter. There are attorneys with stacks of old text messages used as weapons. There's vague testimony interpreted as credible fact by a judge who loves his Tennessee sports team.
Starting point is 00:32:06 and knows a man in love when he sees one. At the center of it all is a charming, calm, god-fearing, and awe-shucks of a former husband who doesn't want to have to do it, Judge. But he's left with no choice, because, as you can see, sir, she's crazy. On May 9th, 2013, something happened in the master bathroom
Starting point is 00:32:35 of the Solomon's five-bedroom home, which they had not made a mortgage payment on in years. Aaron was out of work, and so was Angie. On this night, the two were arguing. What happens next is in dispute. Aaron's account is that Angie said to him, quote, I'm going to end it. I've been thinking about this.
Starting point is 00:32:57 I know how to do it. I know what I'm going to do. He says, she then went to their master bathroom, With the kids asleep in the master bed, locked the doors, took her hair dryer, and wrapped the cord around her neck, quote, three or four times, attached it to the showerhead in their tub and attempted to hang herself. He said it took him a couple minutes to unlock the doors, and when he finally found her, she was unconscious and slumped at the bottom of the tub
Starting point is 00:33:31 still attached to the showerhead by the cord. He said he undid this, what seems like an impossibly long cord, and then attempted to wake her by putting cold water on her face, and that he did all of this quietly so as to not disturb the children. Protecting the children, he told the judge, was always at the forefront of his mind. He said Angie awakened and became violent,
Starting point is 00:33:59 kicking at him, telling him to leave her be. He said she told him that she would spend the next two and a half hours beating the hell out of him. So he fled at 3 something in the morning to the parking lot of a nearby Kroger and called Angie's father to tell him that she had tried to kill herself. Angie's version is much different. Angie says that Aaron wrapped the cord around her neck trying to strangle her. and she says that she was not trying to kill herself. Now, according to court records,
Starting point is 00:34:35 Angie was being treated for depression at the time this occurred. Was errands called to her family out of concern because of ongoing health concerns, or was he planting the seed in her father's mind because he knew a line had been crossed that night? That morning, according to testimony from Angie's father, Angie's parents prayed on it and went to church services.
Starting point is 00:35:00 Later that week, they helped Aaron convince Angie to go to a psychiatric hospital. In the meantime, Aaron had taken Grant and Gracie to stay elsewhere, and Angie was distraught at this, and the story being spun. Andy told the court that she didn't want to go to the hospital, nor did she trust Aaron or her parents at the time to actually take her to one. But she did not want to be apart from her kids, And this was the one thing that she had to do.
Starting point is 00:35:31 So she insisted that a third party drive her there, and Aaron arranged for an ambulance. Angie was admitted to the hospital, but discharged in less than 24 hours. According to a filing from Angie's attorney at the time, the psychiatrist, who examined Angie that day, had determined that there was no evidence that she tried to harm herself, nor did he believe that she had to harm herself, nor did he believe that she was.
Starting point is 00:35:57 She was in an, quote, acute mood state that would lead to suicide. This would be a theme, by the way. According to psychiatric reports included in the divorce filings, Angie's doctors, including the one the judge insisted she used, reported that she was not a danger to herself or others. And yet, here we are. So after Angie got home from the hospital the next day, Aaron brought the kids home and the family ate dinner that night.
Starting point is 00:36:33 The next morning, Aaron told the kids he was taking them to a donut shop, but he didn't return with them. And the very next day, he filed for divorce and sole custody of the kids. Angie would spend the next few years, not just trying to get her kids back, but fighting to spend any second she could with them. Along the way, she would have to subject herself to whatever terms were thrown at her to prove that she was not who her ex-husband said she was. Her children would repeatedly make their preference to live with her known. Third parties who supervised her visits with the kids swore to her capable nature as a parent and her children's desire for more time with her. But still, the court would try to silence her from raising concerns about Aaron's parenting,
Starting point is 00:37:17 including barring her from reporting anything to the Department of Children's Services. According to our read on the transcripts, Angie Solomon generally seemed like a mother willing to say yes to anything. the court wanted from her, anything Aaron wanted, just for an extra hour with Grant and Gracie. But there was one little problem, and that problem's name was Judge Philippi Smith. Now, poor Judge Smith has since passed away. He died last September at age 62, just three days after being re-elected to the bench. He was heralded as a fair and knowledgeable family court judge. In fact, in 2015, two years after his rulings in the Solomon case began, the women's political collaborative of Tennessee honored him with a Good Guy's Award for his work in domestic
Starting point is 00:38:04 violence. So there's that. This isn't to take away from his achievements, but if we aren't just going off the transcripts in the Solomon case, well, that's a hard disagree about the Good Guy Award. To us, it seemed like Judge Smith, who, remember, was a huge Tennessee sports fan, wanted to believe the story he was being told by former sportscaster Aaron Solomon and his legal team, and that he really struggled to understand not only where Angie was coming from, but what she was saying. Let's just put it this way. He did not seem like the type of guy who would understand that idea about the different versions of ourselves when we're in unhealthy relationships. The core problem for him was that in the days after the bathroom incident, Angie seemed to text Aaron to take responsibility
Starting point is 00:38:51 for staging the incident. I say seemed to because the texts were retyped by Aaron's team and as such, Angie said she would not testify to them being texts she had sent. According to court records, Aaron had texted Angie to tell her that he had taken a photo of her in the tub with the cord around her neck. She purportedly responded, Oh, Aaron, you took a picture before you tried to help me? That shows me where this has gone. Just go find another. I staged that anyway, but who cares?
Starting point is 00:39:21 Use it against me. Now I'm a complete wreck. But she also reportedly texted him, sending out my picture you made before helping me. you tried to hang me. Later, she allegedly emailed Aaron, I am not suicidal, I made a bad choice for attention, but accept responsibility for that choice and learned why I did it and won't repeat it. Now, it's understandable why Judge Smith would be confused about this, right? He needed the facts of this argument to be in black and white, and this was a hell of messy gray area. His job in that moment was to protect the kids, and what he was seeing in front of him was hard to make sense of.
Starting point is 00:39:56 Aaron's attorney showed Angie the email and asked her, what are you talking about in this email? Angie said, in order for Aaron to stay at home with me, I had to take ownership of what has happened. Now, I'm going to read Angie's lines from the transcript while David reads Judge Smith's words because it's important to see exactly what's going on here. Mrs. Solomon, the question is a very important question, and it could be key to this case. I want you to explain to me why you would put that language, quote, I made a bad choice for attention in this correspondence. And again, this is a watershed moment in this case. Why did you put that in there? Because in our marriage, when anything went awry or there was any violence, as long as I took ownership of it, Aaron would come home and I would still have a marriage. And this is a man who you said put a cord from a hair dryer around your neck?
Starting point is 00:40:59 Yes. Why would you want that man back? That's a watershed moment, Your Honor. I wanted him back because I love him. I loved him then. When he came back Memorial Day, everything had so-called worked. When he took the kids out on Thursday and I got up Friday morning and they were gone. At that point, I was done.
Starting point is 00:41:19 But what you're saying doesn't make sense. sense to me. Which part? Well, the part that you say if you take ownership, he'll come back home. What happened during this June 2013 hearing, which, by the way, was just a month after Aaron had taken the kids from her initially, seemed to end up coloring Judge Smith's opinion of Angie moving forward. In this and subsequent hearings, it seems like he refused to see her as anything but unstable and suicidal, rather than a potential victim of abuse. who was temporarily blinded by the drama of her toxic relationship. Could it have been that Aaron put the court around Angie's neck at one point and then left her?
Starting point is 00:42:01 And instead of getting up, Angie decided to play dead to teach him a lesson. And as a professional woman who wanted her kids back, she was embarrassed to put that on the record. Or could it have been that Angie was so trained to play along with Aaron's version of a story just to keep the piece and move past it? But she thought nothing of reading from that script until she realized he was going to use it against her. Who knows? Those questions were never considered, but it probably wouldn't have mattered anyway. Judge Smith was convinced that Aaron was a loving husband who only wanted the best for Angie and to protect his children. That's not us supposing this. He literally said that.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And though Judge Smith rightfully noted that Angie's father's testimony against her was vague, he somehow also found it credible. At no point, though, did anyone offer evidence of Angie being an action? danger to herself. Aaron seemed to have just this bathtub example. And the only unspecific examples Angie's father could muster for the judge were things he insinuated that Aaron had told him about Angie. He told the court that he was worried about Angie. Any particular thing that worried him about her? The judge asked. Nope. Just things he had heard from Aaron about, quote, irregularities at their home that have, quote, not been what a father or a grandfather would like to know of. The judge asked for examples.
Starting point is 00:43:24 Mr. Huffin's answer was that he's a type A personality. The judge responded, Don't take that as a bad thing. And then Mr. Huffines gave his examples of what worried him about Angie. His example read by David. I've told her that I've thought that there was changes that need to be made. The way she was raising her children, I thought she was more of a friend than a mother figure.
Starting point is 00:43:50 Angie's attorney pressed Mr. Huffin. finds on cross-examination. What can you direct us that links her behavior to putting the children in fear or harm's way? Well, you know, I can't give you anything definitive along that line. Ultimately, he said they were afraid that she would take the kids away from them. He mentioned that he didn't agree with how Angie kept house or prepared their dishes, and he noted that his daughter had a very jealous heart toward her husband, feeling that he was always involved with other women,
Starting point is 00:44:21 and that he simply didn't believe any of that, but worried she'd say something in front of her kids that they didn't need to hear. A few years earlier, Angie had taken out a protective order against her father, after he threatened that he would show up when she least expected it to, quote, address a dispute they were having. I felt that I had a right as a father to say that, he told the judge. At the end of this first hearing, Judge Smith ordered that Angie should get no parental time with the kits.
Starting point is 00:44:50 Angie soon got a job as a pharmacy supervisor, earning more than twice what Aaron was making. She was ordered to pay Aaron child support, and though psychiatrists deemed her stable, she was granted only limited time with her children. Eventually, she gained more and more time, despite heated setbacks, like Judge Smith not liking that one of her psychiatrists
Starting point is 00:45:15 had put it in writing that the court, meaning him, had been tricked and manipulated by Aaron. But custody was always at issue. So were the fears for her children's safety. And so were Aaron's attempts to stop her from talking. According to accounts from Grant's sister and friends, Grant wanted to get away from his father and more importantly wanted to get his sister away from him and his alleged abuse. As he got closer to his 18th birthday, Grant reportedly began standing up to Aaron more and more. State officials looked into claims of abuse,
Starting point is 00:45:57 and Grant had reported to his school that his sister was being molested, and nothing came of it. According to his girlfriend, soon after Grant turned 18, he planned to seek legal custody of Gracie and help in any criminal case against his father. But then, he died, so now he can't do that.
Starting point is 00:46:22 It is the timing of his death, along with the family's history and the circumstances of Grant's alleged accident that have led Grant's family and friends to suspect that something more happened here. In 2021, those suspicions prompted Grant's sister Gracie to go public with her allegations against her father in a video that would change the course of this story. We will hear more from Gracie
Starting point is 00:46:50 in a later episode of this podcast, but here is just a clip of the then 14-year-old showing the world just how serious she is. Gracie Solomon, I'm 14 years old, and I'm here to tell my story. I just want to say before we get into any of this, that it's coming straight from me. It's all me.
Starting point is 00:47:20 and no one else has told me what to do. My brother died protecting me from my father, Aaron Solomon. My father's a monster. It makes me want to moderate. I've been minimalized, but now I've found my voice to be able to tell you that my father rape me, hurt me, and I'm not going to be a victim on this monster. He's a rapist, he's a molester, he's a liar, and he's a killer.
Starting point is 00:47:48 I hate it my dad. I'm absolutely terrified with him, for everything he's done to me, my brother, and my mom. We will go back to that video and Gracie's story in a later episode. Because unfortunately, despite all of the buzz created by the Freedom for Gracie movement, the investigation appears to be in the same place it was in 2020. Beth Braden called over to the 18th Circuit District Attorney's Office in Tennessee on Wednesday to find out what was going on.
Starting point is 00:48:22 District Attorney Ray Wiley said, quote, there has been a very thorough investigation done on this, and there's just nothing here. He said that the Gallatin police did the initial investigation, and then his office later asked them to look again, and there was just, quote, nothing criminal at all we could find. In reference to the online movement to get help for Gracie
Starting point is 00:48:49 and have Grant's case reopened and properly looked at, Wiley said, quote, there are a lot of things stated in there that are not true. Beth asked for the case files to see what kind of investigation was done. As it stands, we have only seen the Gallatin Police Department's traffic report on the crash in a case file from the private detective Angie hired to look into the case. According to those records, Not only did the two trainers at the gym that day say what they were told happened didn't make any sense to them from what they saw that day.
Starting point is 00:49:27 A forensic report on Grant's truck showed that there are only two times the Tacoma had, quote, rolled over something in its history. In both times, the report said that someone was behind the wheel with their seatbelt on, possibly, indicating, that either someone was in the seat when Grant was hit or it didn't happen at all. So as you can tell, we have a lot of questions that need to be answered in this case. What happened to Grant Solomon? What happened to Gracie Solomon?
Starting point is 00:50:06 How many people did she tell about the alleged abuse? Who investigated the alleged abuse? And what did they find? Was anyone who investigated the case connected to the church. What exactly is the DA's office claiming is false? Did they investigate the sexual abuse allegations at all? The big question, is the alleged sexual abuse
Starting point is 00:50:34 related to Grant's death in any way? And what about Aaron Solomon, who filed a defamation lawsuit against two teenagers, Angie and others after Gracie's videos surfaced? because he denies all allegations. Where is he now? What was going on with his finances at the time Grant died? And what is going on now with the custody battle for Gracie?
Starting point is 00:51:02 Most importantly, what about Gracie? At the heart of this is a 16-year-old who lost her big brother, Gracie, the teenager who the system failed time and time again. Gracie, who felt like she had no other choice but to publish very horrific details about her life on YouTube. We want justice for Gracie, we want justice for Grant,
Starting point is 00:51:30 and we want answers for Angie. To get those answers, Liz Beth, and I plan on interviewing a slew of people related to this case. Not only the Solomon family, but those who knew them. We have a lot of work ahead of us. If you have any relevant information to our investigation, please email us at info at lunasharkmedia.com. Also, so-called the Sun Premium members, don't miss Happy Hour Thursday, July 27th at 6.30 p.m., with Mark Tensley, his amazing wife, Stephanie, and hosted by our journalism queen, Liz Farrell. Details will be coming your way in your email inbox.
Starting point is 00:52:15 We will be back next week after Russell Lafitte's sentencing. Stay tuned, stay pesky, and stay in the sunlight. True sunlight is created by me, Mandy Matney, co-hosted by journalist Liz Farrell and produced by my husband, David Moses. True sunlight is a Luna Shark production. Right, Luna?

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