Noble - The Pastor | Chapter 8
Episode Date: September 11, 2024Years later, Shaun meets a man who knows all of Brent Marsh’s secrets, and travels to Noble, where it all started. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This podcast contains graphic descriptions of death and decay.
Please listen with care.
Roughly five seconds after the news about Tri-State hit the airwaves back in 2002,
every lawyer within spitting distance of Noble began recruiting clients.
Some attorneys put out newspaper ads,
and one law firm creates a website just to lure in families who were victims of Tri-State crematory.
A flurry of lawsuits follows, against the funeral homes and Brent Marsh and his family.
Luckily, the Marshes have a homeowner's policy
with Georgia Farm Bureau Insurance,
and the company ends up providing them
with representation for the civil cases.
That's how a tall and lanky lawyer
named Stuart James gets involved.
A guy from the insurance company calls Stuart
to ask if he'll help defend the family.
And he said, I got a bunch of lawsuits for you. And I said, really? He said, I got about,
I think it was like 115. And I said, what are you talking about? He said, well, you know about that guy who had the dead bodies on the property? And I said, yeah. And he said, well, we insure him.
And I said, really? So I went down to Georgia and I picked up 115 lawsuits.
In total, the Marshes and the funeral homes Brent worked with
face more than 250 civil suits in three states.
Combined, they're looking at more than $100 million in potential damages.
Most of the remaining cases are consolidated into a single class action suit
seeking millions of dollars, and some of the funeral homes settle on their own.
Amidst all this litigation, Stewart meets with Brent.
This isn't one of their regular lawyer-client visits.
Stewart wants to get the full story from Brent,
to learn exactly what happened at Tri-State.
The civil suits could go on a long time, and people get old and die.
He wants to make sure the story exists somewhere on paper,
even if that paper is then put into a safe and locked away.
So I went to the jail, and I went in there, exists somewhere on paper, even if that paper is then put into a safe and locked away.
So I went to the jail and I went in there and I sat in a little visiting room with him for a couple of hours and went over everything detail by detail. And he understood that I
was making a record and I made a record of it that I could use at a later time.
You wrote it all down, in other words.
I did write it all down.
Was it an important moment for Brent then? Was it like
a final confession getting off his
chest or was it already off his chest? No, no. He and I were sitting there talking about what
happened. And he knew, you know, Brent's a smart guy. He knew I was doing it because I'm a lawyer,
not his friend, it was his lawyer. I said, this is because I'm preserving the record. He understood
that. He understood exactly what was going on. And he just told me everything. I know why it
happened, when it happened. I know exactly where all the bodies were. I know why it happened, when it happened.
I know exactly where all the bodies were.
I know exactly what he did.
I know everything that he did, and I know the reasons why.
When I speak with Stuart, I'm hoping he'll connect me to Brent,
who has never gone on the record with any reporter.
I want to interview Brent because I want to know what was going on in his head when he ran the crematory.
I want to know why he did all this.
Why this all happened in the first place.
And I know the families do too.
And after a year of working on this story, and learning everything I can about him,
except what it's like to be in the same room,
I will finally meet Brent Marsh.
From Waveland and Campside Media, this is Noble.
I'm Sean Raviv.
Episode 8.
The Pastor.
As part of his plea deal in the criminal case,
Brenton has to send a handwritten letter of apology to a designated relative of each body that was found and identified at Tri-State.
He writes more than 200 versions of this.
Dear Mrs. Smith, I am so sorry for your loss.
I wish I had the answers to give you that would put your mind at ease, but I do not.
I can only offer you my deepest apology.
Someday, I pray that you will be able to forgive me
for my failure to properly perform my job.
Also, I pray you will be able to put an end
to this chapter of your life.
Please accept my sincerest apologies
and my prayers for you.
Prayerfully yours, Brent Marsh.
To start serving his 12 years, Brent is taken to a prison close to the Georgia coast,
a five-and-a-half-hour drive from the Appalachian Hills of Noble.
Here's a civil defense attorney, Stuart James.
Brent was considered a high-risk prisoner because he was so high profile.
When he was originally in prison, he was in a facility where cops and high-risk prisoners would be in there.
He was a really good prisoner, and he wanted to go work and be a volunteer member at the fire department up the street.
Normally, they would have allowed him to do that, but because of who he was, they did not.
But Brent finds a lot of other things to do.
He got more education in prison than anybody I know.
That's Brent's criminal defense attorney, McCracken Poston.
But I guess if you're doing 12 years, you do that.
I think he learned how to be a barber.
He finished a theological degree.
I was quite proud of him because he didn't sit idly.
He was very well-liked.
He did a lot of work in prison.
He was very reliable.
No disciplinary record, that kind of thing, which is remarkable.
In Georgia, it's common for an offender to be released early if they don't cause any problems.
And Brent is a model prisoner, according to McCracken.
But he's never granted parole.
Later in his sentence, Brent is transferred to a facility a bit closer to Noble,
so it's easier for his family to visit.
That family includes a daughter.
Incredibly, she was born two weeks before the bodies were discovered.
As this little girl was first encountering the world,
her father was being arrested
and put on the cover of newspapers across the country.
Stuart James again.
I think the most painful aspect for him
going to prison was that he couldn't be a daily part of the raising his daughter, but he was even
dedicated from prison to make sure that everything was done for her benefit. Make sure that she was
visited him, made sure he wrote her letters, make sure that he supported any decision his wife was
making in terms of her education, make sure that his mother was involved with her life, and make sure that, I think the most important thing is that regardless of what
he did or did not do, he loved her, and that love was unconditional. He's a great father.
Brent's daughter is a teenager when he gets out of prison in June of 2016,
14 years after the bodies were first discovered. McCracken picks him up. Local news reporters
are there, and they follow McCracken's black pickup all the way to Noble. They want to get
Brent to say a few words, but he stands silent as McCracken speaks on his behalf.
McCracken tells the reporters that it's time to forgive Brent Marsh,
to welcome him back to the community. He says, I just want people to leave him alone
and give him a chance.
I'm as guilty as anyone of not leaving Brent Marsh alone.
I suspect that if he was given the choice,
he'd prefer I never make this podcast.
That tri-state crematory
and everything he did and didn't do
was forgotten forever.
And I've wondered myself,
is it wrong to put more attention on Brent,
someone who has been portrayed as a sicko and a monster,
but who has done his time and is now trying to get past it?
But I also know that his actions affected a lot of other people, not just Brent.
And I don't think he's monstrous. Far from it.
So I stay in touch with Brent's lawyers,
Stewart and McCracken,
and repeatedly, nicely, ask for an interview.
The idea is to present Brent as a human being,
whatever kind of human he is.
I tell Stewart and McCracken that if listeners can hear Brent's voice,
they'll hear the goodness so many people say is there.
And maybe along the way,
Brent can tell me what really happened.
But for months, there's no sign that I'll get an interview.
After Brent gets out of prison, he gets a job at a warehouse and is quickly promoted.
He also gets a commercial driver's license and runs a transportation company for a while.
He again starts giving back to the community.
He works for the United Way
and a Baptist Pastors Association. And Brent Marsh actually volunteers for FEMA,
one of the agencies that came to Noble to help with cleanup at Tri-State.
By the time I first reach out to him, he seems to have worked his way back to a pretty normal life.
I can only hope that McCracken will somehow convince Brent to talk to me,
even though I'm not sure McCracken wants him to.
In the meantime, I investigate the question of why without Brent,
why he did what he did,
and I return to a familiar source,
someone who's spent more time in this case than anybody.
Even after everyone else leaves Noble and returns to the regular beats,
Special Agent Greg Ramey
of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation,
the GBI,
keeps working the crematory case.
There are still bodies lingering,
unidentified,
and Greg doesn't like leaving cases unresolved.
Walker County is his home.
This all happened just a quick drive from his house,
and Greg is continually reminded that not all the families can move on.
There was a little old lady that, bless her heart, she called up.
It seemed like every day, you know. They didn't have any children. There was no other
folks in their family, just these two little folks, just a sweetheart little couple. The
gentleman died, and this little lady called every day. If I didn't hear from her every day,
I heard from her once a week. Hon, this is so-and-so. Have you found my husband? I said,
no, ma'am. Sorry, we haven't. Eventually, after a couple years, the old woman
stops calling, and Greg just assumes she died. Her husband's body is never found.
The final body count that the newspapers use is 339, but that's really just an estimate,
probably an overcount, according to Greg. A lot of the remains in the Marsh
family's property are so decayed, mangled, and co-mingled that the number of bodies found just
can't be exact. Parts of one body get mixed with parts of another, especially smaller bones,
like from the hands and feet. Two bodies even get switched altogether, given to the wrong families. But Greg eventually sorts it out.
The number of bodies identified is a bit more precise.
With all the millions of dollars spent in Walker County by all the different agencies who got involved,
to this day, only 226 of the bodies have been identified.
And some people think even that number is off by one or two.
Overall, Greg is proud of his work on the case.
But he still has regrets.
I felt like we did a phenomenal job other than, in my heart, I wish we could have identified all of those bodies.
That would have been my ultimate goal in it.
It didn't happen.
Once they stop IDing bodies, there's another thing to deal with.
There are roughly 100 unidentified and unclaimed sets of human remains.
What do you do with 100 bodies with no names?
In March 2004, they're buried in separate unmarked graves
at a cemetery on a hill in Walker County.
The state later spends tens of thousands of dollars to put a memorial in that same spot.
The engraved marker includes a passage from Ecclesiastes and a poem about healing.
And at the edge of the same cemetery, there are a few unlabeled mausoleums.
They're filled with 178 sets of ashes that families abandoned.
They sent them in to be tested and never picked them up.
I guess those families didn't deem every individual bit of cremains essential to preserving memories.
Which I found a bit ironic after so much energy and money and emotion had been spent.
Mostly directed at one man for doing something not totally dissimilar.
Abandoning remains unceremoniously.
I guess what the living owe the dead, like so much else in this world, depends on the person
and their feelings at any given moment. And maybe if enough time goes by, or enough healing,
we owe the dead very little. In this case, the coroner didn't know what else to do with the 178 sets of deserted ashes,
so they will probably stay in those unmarked mausoleums forever.
The identities of the 100 bodies buried at this cemetery will probably remain unknown.
Many years ago, the GBI put up notices on their website with descriptions of the unclaimed remains,
and when I last checked, they were still up.
So Greg still has unanswered questions about Tri-State.
But when it comes to the question of why,
he's formed a pretty coherent theory.
When Ray Marsh became too sick to run the crematory,
Brent was in college.
You may remember how it was going to
school. First time away from home, becoming your own person. It's a big deal, especially when you
live in a small, entangled community where everyone knows your family. That can be smothering,
and it comes with expectations. Maybe Brent didn't want to come home.
I think he got thrust into a business that he didn't want to be a part of.
He was kind of like a lay coach here locally, you know, for football teams and stuff like that.
He loved being out in the community doing that.
I think that was his passion, his love, not being involved with dead bodies and stuff.
So I think it was kind of getting forced into a business that he didn't want to be in.
I think part of that influence may have come from his mother.
During his time as head of the crematory, Ray Marsh employed his nephew,
who helped mostly with the grave digging service.
He was Brent's cousin, but 30 years older.
And when he found out Brent was taking over the business, he quit.
He said he didn't want to work for Brent, a guy so much younger than him. So it was more than one guy could handle.
And if something's got to, you know, if you've got a funeral service that's due this afternoon,
you get those chairs out there, you got to get that tent up, you got to get that whole dug,
you got to get that vault set. What do you not have to do this afternoon you don't have to burn that body so he puts that off
well then tomorrow you got one you've got a funeral service to do tomorrow you've got to
dig that hole you got to set that stuff you got to move it from over here get it over here
i don't have time to start that thing and be there and run that. So I put it off.
Well, wait a minute now.
I've got to get this done.
I've got to get something back to them.
Hmm.
I'll just send them this, and they'll never know.
Brent's civil defense attorney, Stuart James,
worked closely for years with McCracken Poston,
the ringleader of the Marsh's legal affairs.
While McCracken stands by his own theory that Brent was in a fog because of mercury poisoning, that he wasn't
thinking clearly and he wasn't himself, Stewart seems to have a different theory on Brent.
He agrees with Greg that Brent probably didn't want to take over his dad's crematory.
I mean, would you want to burn a body for a living? I wouldn't.
But it was a family business, so it wasn't like he was not aware of what was going on in the
business. Now, it is true that dad got sick. And I can say generally, I don't know that he didn't
want to come home. Was it a choice that he would make? No. He did it out of duty for family. It fell on him because he was the son, and dad was sick,
and he had to do what was best for his family.
Stewart and Greg both believe that family played a central role in what Brent did.
My producer Johnny Kaufman asked Stewart whether Brent ran into any problems
or obstacles when he was put in charge of running the crematory.
Maybe things his dad didn't have to deal with.
I can't answer that question.
It's just confidential.
And here, Stewart brings up a statement from a different attorney,
a guy who represented more than a thousand families in the lawsuits.
He suggested that what Brent did was not any ill will toward anybody,
but it's sort of like being in your office.
And he didn't quite say it this
way, but I will paraphrase it in the way I understand it. You have your inbox, you have
your outbox. And what happens is you fall behind and the inbox gets too full and you can't fill
the outbox. And I will leave it at that. The way I interpret what Stuart is saying
is that running a crematory, maybe to someone who grew up with one on his property,
can be a job just like any other.
I've had jobs.
Hell, everyone has had jobs where you fall behind.
Where you fall so far behind that you just can't catch up.
And if burning bodies is your job, and you get backed up,
well maybe, to you, it's just a full inbox.
It's not the same as falling behind on your TPS
reports, but it might feel that way to you. But just because you can twist and contort yourself
into believing a scenario where what happened is somewhat understandable, that doesn't mean it's
right. And Greg Ramey, for one, doesn't condone what Brent did by any stretch. That said, Greg's
more sympathetic to Brent than I would have expected,
considering all he put him through,
as the central investigator on the case.
Greg retired from the GBI in 2019.
He still lives in Walker County.
He spends his time building houses for his two sons.
During his career, Greg worked sex crimes, murders, and child abuse cases.
But the tri-state crematory case
is probably the one he'll be remembered for.
Was his the crime of the century?
Was this just well thought out scheme
that took a mastermind to figure out?
No.
I mean, he just didn't do his job
at the end of the day.
Did he need to go to jail? Absolutely.
Did he do some horrible, terrible things?
Absolutely.
Did he hurt and affect thousands of lives?
Yes.
Absolutely.
But at the end of the day, this guy wasn't a criminal mastermind set out to say,
oh, I've got this devious mind.
Let me show you how I'm going to screw Walker County and the rest of the
southeastern United States and make a name for myself. That wasn't that guy. And that's probably
why, even though Greg knows all the pain Brent caused, he isn't disturbed or angry when he sees
him around town, which he does. I have no hard feelings. You know, there do my job. I did it well, and I never made anything personal
out of the cases. It was me doing my job. And unfortunately here, living in a community where
you live and grow up at, sometimes you put friends in jail. Sometimes you put relatives in jail.
When you've seen Brent Marsh, do you guys say hello to each other?
If we're close enough to speak, we may.
I mean, it's not, oh, hey, how you been?
It's just, hi, how are you?
Just like anybody else from the community?
Just like, yeah, just friendly to anybody.
Even though he might not show it at the grocery store or wherever he might run into Brent,
Greg still shares some of the frustration of the families.
He's unhappy with Brent because he hasn't explained why he didn't burn the bodies
and why he passed out fake cremains.
To Greg, it means Brent hasn't fully atoned.
I think if Brent had come forward and said,
I was trying to do my dad's business, but it was overwhelming.
I didn't want to be in this business.
This wasn't what I was interested in.
I got forced into it, and it was just more than I could do,
and I didn't know what to do.
I was trying to preserve my family name, and I'm sorry.
Let me tell you, folks will forgive you in a heartbeat down here in the South.
I think the community still kind of
looks and says, well, you did it.
We know you did it. You served time for it,
but you never owned up.
You never manned up, you know.
Greg told me
that there's a lesson from his grandfather that he
carries with him.
That you go to hell the same for lying as you do
stealing and killing.
To Greg, a Christian,
it means that you might be able to get away with concealing the truth when you're on earth,
but when you die, God will judge you.
Brent Marsh is probably familiar with that same lesson.
He's also a staunch Christian,
and a pastor,
at the tiny church in Noble founded by his ancestors.
And that's where, one Sunday morning,
I finally spoke with him.
Somewhere in the archives of Stuart James, the civil defense attorney for Brent Marsh,
there's a secret document. And in that document
is the story, the full story, of what happened at Tri-State Crematory, which Brent told Stewart
when he visited him in jail many years ago. It went over the method and the madness of all of
it with him, what his feelings were, why he did what he did, why he didn't do what he did,
what happened, where the bodies were, you know, where were they located. I asked for specific factual stuff and I confirmed
everything that I knew. But even though Stewart told me about this document, he wouldn't give me
a copy or even tell me what's written on it. Part of me would love to be able to tell his story.
And I don't know what Brent would want to do if I asked him. And I said, do you want to tell your
story? And we told him it was safe to do so. I don't know what he would want to do. I've never asked him that story.
The only thing I can tell you is that I said,
Brent, you know, if your story has to be told,
what are we going to do?
And Brent would say, I have to rely on my lawyers
to give me advice on that.
Stewart has a professional obligation
to look out for Brent's best interests.
And his on-the-record opinion
is that what's best for his client
is to keep secret the story on that document,
the story of why it happened.
Brent got out of prison in 2016,
but his punishment hasn't ended.
As part of the plea deal,
he agreed to never profit in any way off of the crematory story.
If he does do something like sell the movie rights
or write a book and make money off it,
he would have to pay the state of Georgia $8 million.
That kind of penalty could make anyone a bit tight-lipped.
Brent also agreed to serve 63 years probation,
making for a total sentence of 75 years,
essentially the rest of his life.
In April 2023, Brent went before a judge
who had the discretion to end Brent's probation.
But despite his violation-free life since getting out of prison,
the judge rejected Brent's request to end his probation
due to the, quote,
particular, heinous, gruesome nature of this crime
that has affected hundreds of people here in Walker County.
McCracken plans to continue arguing for the end of Brent's probation every year
until it's granted.
I thought I might meet Brent the day of his probation hearing,
but when it didn't go their way,
McCracken decided it wasn't a good idea to introduce me to his client.
And when it seemed like meeting Brent wasn't going to ever happen,
in my last formal interview with McCracken,
I asked him, straight up, on the record, why Brent had not agreed to it.
He has been an absolute perfect citizen since his arrest.
And I think he just doesn't want to stir it up. And just for the record, the answers to any
question to ask you is not going to make us angry or anything like that. But I'm just curious,
did you advise him not to talk to us? I actually told him because we had just experienced
what we experienced in trying to get his probation early terminated. I said, you know, at this point, maybe it wouldn't hurt
for people to know your story.
And he was pretty resolute.
And so I had to tell him I respect that.
Do you think that it would do good for Brent
to tell his story, to talk about what happened? I don't know that it would do good for Brent to tell his story, to talk about what happened?
I don't know that it would.
You know, it'd be kind of nice for closure for him to do,
but he's still on 75 years of probation.
He's still working that off. And I would not want to bring the scrutiny and
ire of somebody that's going to pop off and try to, oh, he failed to check in. Let's nail him.
Let's give him, he's got 50 more years left. Let's bring him in. But I don't think it's time quite yet.
It's hard to tell if the Walker County community has moved on, but it's not like you drive through
the county and see billboards about Tri-State. It's still the sleepy, not quite Mayberry it was
back at the turn of the millennium. And with the abundant space and relatively cool temperatures in the foothills, it still seems like a nice place to live. After all is said and done,
I don't think Brent has had a big long-term effect on the place.
McCracken has maintained a relationship with the Marshes, even today. But lately,
he's turned his attention to that other big case of his, to the client who was accused of
kidnapping his wife and murdering her, the Zenith Man. His book on that case came out in February,
and it's a hell of a true crime story. Without a chance to interview Brent,
there will always be gaps in the story of Tri-State Crematory. But with everything I've
learned, I have a somewhat clear picture, in my, at least, of how it started.
It's a rainy day in Noble in spring 1997.
Brent's been running Tri-State for a few months.
He's in the cramped crematory office, a body sitting nearby waiting to be burned.
But Brent doesn't have time for that now.
He's getting ready to head north for a funeral in Chattanooga,
where he'll spend an hour in the rain setting up chairs and tents. As he's getting ready to leave, he gets a
call from a funeral home. They've got another body for him to cremate, and all he can think is,
shit. So he goes and sets up the funeral, getting soaked in the process. It takes longer than he
expects because the ground is rocky and cold.
Then he hops in his van, filthy,
and picks up the new body,
thinking all the way about how he misses school,
playing football, going to classes,
hanging out with friends,
how he never really wanted this job, this life.
When he gets back to the crematory building,
he sits down alone, as usual.
He's frustrated, holds his head in his hands, it's so bad.
But when he lifts his head up, he sees a bag of concrete mix that he's using to build a little staircase at the house.
And he thinks the same thing I've thought, and the same thing everyone has thought about some job at some point in their life.
If they never know, then what's the difference?
And that's how it starts. Or at least that's how I imagine it. And when he's arrested five years later, people want to know why.
But he never tells them.
The only explanation that ever makes sense to me has little to do with mercury poisoning.
It has to do with family and legacy,
protecting the ones you love.
Brent couldn't do the crematory job on his own,
and he didn't want to,
but he kept putting on a show like he did
so the family business wouldn't die.
And when he's caught, there's still family to protect.
His sick father, his beloved mother,
his sister, his wife, and now his two-week
old baby girl. Maybe keeping his mouth shut is the best way to protect them. Maybe that's what
allows his daughter to grow and thrive, to even attend an Ivy League school, despite being born
into the crematory mess. I think the most likely explanation is that Brent is keeping his mouth shut for them.
After a few years, the lawsuits mostly wrap up.
It's a little complicated, but without admitting wrongdoing,
the funeral homes settle with the families
for a combined $36.5 million.
For the families involved, there are tiers of payment.
If your body is found and identified,
you get more than someone whose body is never found.
The part of the marsh property where the crematory sits is put under a conservation easement.
That means it's still private property belonging to the marshes, but nothing can be built there.
A crew comes out one day to demolish the crematory building and haul away the furnace.
Stuart James is there.
It was the central symbol for why everything happened
at the property.
Everything
about the whole thing was there. Did it work?
Did it not work?
Was it maintained?
Was it not maintained?
What was put in there? What was not put in there?
If that retort hadn't been there, none of this would have happened.
The crew brings a backhoe,
uses it to tear the building apart piece by piece.
And as they work, Brent's mother, Clara Marsh,
comes out of the house to see it happen.
She walked out and stood right by me watching it go down.
And the conversation was something to the effect,
well, this means this is finally over
because that symbol was gone.
And I don't think she was sad about it.
I think she was glad that she was getting closure
to everything that was going on.
And, you know, my best guess is
that she'll never talk about it, I don't think.
I don't think she would ever talk about it.
And I won't talk about her feelings in more detail
than except to say that the best thing about it is And after everything, the Marsh family ends up shockingly well off financially.
Their insurance company, Georgia Farm Bureau, is in a bind, needing to defend a client they don't want to defend.
And in order to avoid potential liabilities from all the lawsuits, they negotiate a deal with the
Marshes. The Marsh family absolves the Farm Bureau of claims from their homeowner's policy,
covering the crematory suits. And in exchange, the insurance company pays $3 million
for the Marsh's legal defense. The company also creates two separate trusts, one for Clara and
one for Brent's children. The Marsh family keeps their homes and property and ends up with $400,000
in trust. They get paid. Where the Marsh name now stands is unclear to me. They've stayed in the
land where people once rode go-karts and horses,
where rays on the lake parties were legendary,
and where teenagers danced deep into the night.
The lake's been drained for a while now,
but Clara still lives on the property, and so does Brent.
And every Sunday, they go to the church founded by Brent's great-grandfather.
Brent is now the pastor there.
Let's make a left, right?
Yeah.
It's a Sunday morning in early 2024,
and my producer Johnny Kaufman and I are driving to Noble
in the direction of New Home Baptist Church,
where we hope to meet Brent Marsh and listen to him preach.
Do I need to say something?
Say how you're feeling.
Fucking so nervous.
We've been talking about this for months, but like the whole time I knew like, oh, well,
that's something we'll do later.
But now it's something we're doing now.
They don't know we're coming. Nobody does.
We've been told by a friend of the family that the congregation of New Home is small
and mostly made up of marshes, almost like a family church.
So it feels weird and a little wrong to be going.
But we've also been told that anyone is welcome there, and it feels important to go.
Because all this time I've vowed to show Brent's humanity, and it's hard without actually meeting him.
I think this might be the only way left to do that.
On our way to the church, we drive past the company that employs Gerald Cook,
the gas man who first reported body parts on the Marsh property.
We pass a funeral home that worked with the Marshes.
We pass a cemetery. And we're in
Noble now. We pull up to the small white church. There are a handful of cars in the lot already.
Okay, we're parked in the back of the church, got the woods and some grass.
And I guess we're just gonna walk in. There's nobody outside.
We get out of the car and a woman named Joyce opens the church door. I guess we're just going to walk in. There's nobody outside. Greeting people.
They probably already started.
We get out of the car,
and a woman named Joyce opens the church door.
We say hi, but then we pause and ask to speak to someone in charge.
She gives us a questioning look, as she should,
and says she'll get the pastor.
We wait in the entry room
while she taps on the shoulder of a large man in a dark suit.
I know immediately that it's Brent. He's older, but he looks the same as he did in the entry room while she taps on the shoulder of a large man in a dark suit. I know immediately that it's Brent.
He's older, but he looks the same as he did in the pictures from countless newspapers.
Like the football player he used to be.
Shaved head, with a beard that now has some gray in it.
We say good morning and tell him our names.
He introduces himself and shakes our hands.
We explain why we're there, that we're the
journalists who he's heard about, the ones doing the podcast. He says we're welcome to attend the
service, just don't record anything. Johnny takes his microphone bag back to the car and we go into
the sanctuary. There are about seven people in the room doing Sunday school,
mostly elderly adults.
They all smile at us.
Johnny and I, both white, stick out like sore thumbs.
Clara Marsh is there.
She's 92 years old.
When she learns that we're journalists, she walks over to us,
says she used to be a teacher,
that she taught English for 40 years.
We already know about her proud past, but we don't tell her that.
The service begins a few minutes later, and more very smartly dressed people from Noble come in, until there are about 15 or 20 of us in the pews.
Some of them are younger, even a few small kids who wander around the sanctuary, occasionally getting pulled up onto a friendly lap.
New generations of marshes, presumably.
Brent is now 50 years old,
half a lifetime from the young man he was when he made a tremendous mistake.
He gets up to preach.
He asked us not to record for the podcast, and so we don't.
But one of his relatives made a recording of Brent delivering a sermon right after he got out of prison,
right in the same room we're sitting in.
Hello. Hi, how you doing, Brent?
I think I've spoken to everybody here.
I think I've hugged everybody here.
I think I had a handshake with everybody here.
But I want to talk to you for just a minute.
Brent asked everyone to turn to the second chapter of Exodus.
And it came to pass in those days when Moses was grown
that he went out unto his brethren.
He tells the congregation that today they're going to be talking about Moses.
In this story, Moses sees an Egyptian beating a Hebrew,
and Moses kills the Egyptian and buries him in the sand
to defend his people.
And when Pharaoh heard this thing,
he sought to slay Moses.
When Pharaoh finds out what Moses did,
he vows to kill him.
So Moses flees.
In this story that begins with someone committing,
I guess, arguably a crime,
and then burying the evidence,
Brent finds a lesson,
the ultimate lesson.
I just want y'all to understand
that the Lord is going to put you
in some situations.
He's going to put you in some positions
where you're not going to
know exactly what you want to do.
Sometimes God will put you in a tough spot
and it might not be clear
what the right thing is to do.
And Brent tells the New Home congregation
that that's when it's important to take a step back,
to wait for God's guidance,
so you don't do anything rash,
so you do what God would want you to do.
Is it something that God has put on your heart to do?
To do.
But if it's something he has not put on your heart to do,
don't skip ahead.
Wait on his time.
New Hope, wait on his time for everything that you do.
New Hope, whatever you think you want to do, do it in his time.
Because his time is like no one else's time.
His time is always the right time.
All right.
I suspect that Brent Marsh is being earnest when he gives this sermon.
But he may be pointing out the irony that he, of all people on this earth,
needed to take a step back
before he made that watershed decision all those years ago.
Johnny and I stay for the whole service.
Towards the end of it, Brent prays for us.
Most of the congregation approaches us after and thanks
us for coming, despite knowing that we're journalists and that we're telling a story
about their family that they don't necessarily want told. One woman grabs my hand and says
simply, tell the truth. And I think we have. And on our way out of the church, as we walk
past Brent Marsh, he tells us to come back again, anytime.
Noble is a production of Waveland and Campside Media. Thank you. Fact-checking by Kaylin Lynch. Sound design, mixing, scoring, and original music by Garrett Tiedemann.
Our theme music is La Lucha Es Una Sola by the band Esmerine.
Campside Media's operations team is Doug Slaywin, David Eichler,
Ashley Warren, Destiny Dingle, and Sabina Mara.
Jason Hoke is the executive producer at Waveland.
The executive producers at Campside Media are Josh Dean, Vanessa Gregoriatis,
Adam Hoff,
and Matt Scher.
Special thanks
to Cynthia Marsh Harvey,
author of the book
Callie's Family,
which holds invaluable information
on the history of the Marshes,
and Harold Michael Harvey
for his video
from New Home Baptist Church.
We'd also like to thank
McCracken Poston,
Emily Roberts,
Miranda Kaplan, Max Blau, Eric Jubon, Zabe Bent, Stephanie Wharton, We'd also like to thank Bill Brown, James Botterford, Elizabeth Cabrazer, Dan Ronan, Roxanne Karimi,
Rick Kennedy and Judy O'Neill of UCTV, the home of North Georgia,
and all the gracious members of New Home Baptist Church in Noble, Georgia.
Last, we'd like to acknowledge the families and memories of Ira Maness, Luther Mason,
Ross Hall, Ron Hendricks, Bobby Crawford, Ray Marsh,
and all those who were found at Tri-State Crematory, known and unknown.