Prime Crime: Solved Murders - Life360 Uncovers Teen Girl's Horrifying Disappearance

Episode Date: April 11, 2026

A Georgia teen seemingly vanished after hanging out with her friends at an apartment in Gwinnett County. Susana Morales texted her mom when she left the complex but never came home, leaving family and... friends terrified. The 16-year-old’s Life360 app indicated her phone may have been "in a wreck." Months later, Morales’ body was found in a wooded area by a man off-roading in the area, where a firearm that was reported stolen was discovered. Find out what happened to Susana Morales on this episode of “Prime Crime with Jesse Weber.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:35 She was there. Everything was fine. A young teen gone without a trace. They could not find a single thing that pointed to anyone in her life. As her family desperately seeks answers. No, this is bad. I really get, you know, I say purrvised. He's been like, like suspect my eyes.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Why? The way you're talking about that. They're just pumpkin. They're left grappling with the unmasable. knowns of what happened and who may be responsible. This is not just an effect on you. This is an effect on all officers ever. I know.
Starting point is 00:01:08 It's not me. If I killed somebody, I ever know that. If he was smart and he obviously wasn't, he would have K-Y-D-B-MS. He would have kept his damn big mouth shut. Hey there, everybody. I'm Jesse Weber, and welcome to Prime Crime, where we break down some of the most compelling and memorable true crime cases from across the country. The disappearance of a young teenager sets off a months-long investigation with friends, family, law enforcement,
Starting point is 00:01:46 clinging to the hope of finding anything that could bring her home. But as time passes, it becomes clear that may not be possible. And the evidence soon points to an unexpected suspect. On July 26th of 2022, Susanna Morales was walking home from a friend's house back to her. her mother's home where she lived. And she was just a couple hundred feet from her house. She had told her mom that she was going to one friend's house and ultimately she went to a different friend's house, which I think anyone that's been a teenager before or has a teenager, it's not unusual. But the family of 16-year-old Susanna Morales, who live just outside Atlanta,
Starting point is 00:02:34 Georgia start to panic when she doesn't come home. Her phone was equipped with an application called Life 360, which is an application where friends and family members can monitor real live location. What the Life 360 application showed was that she had gotten back to the road where she lived at, but then almost immediately upon arriving at that road, her phone began to travel in the opposite direction. She was out front. There was there. Everything was fine. And then there was a text, apparently from her, but at least from her phone, that said,
Starting point is 00:03:11 I'm on my way home. Never arrived. According to her phone, she's walking. But then all of a sudden, she's no longer walking, but she's traveling at a speed at her about 40 miles an hour. Obviously, she's now in a vehicle of some sort that doesn't make sense. not drive, she did not have a vehicle, and from all of her friends and family, nobody was expecting to pick her up. A search was conducted by her family that night. Around 10.30 at night, one of her
Starting point is 00:03:48 friends received a crash alert from the Life 360 application. Subsequently, her phone record showed her phone never moved from that location. The phone died there the next morning, and we never were able to recover it. contacts authorities. Over the coming days, it seems like police really didn't have many leads as to where she was. They had created a tip line for information related to returning her safely. Her family's hunt for answers leads them to a nearby community center where a key
Starting point is 00:04:22 piece of evidence surfaces. It's literally not 46. That is her. That's her. Wow. Thank God. Oh, my God. There was one video camera that captured her as she was walking back to her home on Singleton Road,
Starting point is 00:04:44 showed her unharmed walking. There were traffic cameras around Gwinnett County, but certainly not at every intersection. Without knowing what vehicle to look for, it's looking for a needle and a needle stack. Unfortunately, that's where the trail ends. A lone video of Susanna walking. by herself along the side of the road. On July 26, at approximately 6 p.m., we know that Susanna Morales left her home and walked a short distance to the Sterling Glen apartment complex, and at about 10 o'clock, she began her
Starting point is 00:05:20 trek back to her house. Susanna was not seen or heard from again. Well, poof, she's not where she needs to be, so it's now thrown in my lap as law enforcement. What is it I need to do? There's a magic word. It's called everything. Where was she? Who did she interact with?
Starting point is 00:05:40 Who was she with? And what was her interaction with whoever she might have been with? But the investigation grinds to a halt with no new evidence nor leads. There were concerns that perhaps she had been abducted and brought into the sex trafficking world. The Gwinnett County Police Department conducted an entire... undercover investigation, they deploy drones, aerial surveillance, thermal imaging to look for her in wooded areas and on the roadways around the area. Probably one of the toughest things that the family had to go through here was the months of unknown and not knowing where their child was,
Starting point is 00:06:24 not knowing whether their child was safe, whether she had run a... Zootopia 2 has come home to Disney Plus. Let's go! Get ready for a new case. We're going to crack this case and prove for a decoranist partners of all time. New friends. You are Gary Desnake. And your last name? The snake. Dream team.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Good new habitats. Zootopia has a secret reptile population. You can watch the record-breaking phenomenon at home. You're clearly working at. Zootopia 2. Now available on Disney Plus rated PG. Wait. For the next weeks and months, her family and the police,
Starting point is 00:07:02 got reports of sightings of her across the country. And there were hundreds, if not thousands, of tips where people would claim they saw her in Detroit or in Nashville or in Gatlinburg and across the state of Georgia. The police followed up on all of those. There were some tips that came in that probably gave that family some hope, and then ultimately that hope was unfortunately dashed away. Six months after Susanna's disappearance,
Starting point is 00:07:34 and miles away, a grim discovery. February 6th of 2020, at about 6 o'clock in the evening, the Gwinnett County Police Department received an emergency call from a concerned citizen. He had been off-roading in a remote area when he stumbled across human remains. They were completely skeletal. At that time, we had no idea who this person was. It is the worst possible thing to not have closure. I think my daughter may be alive.
Starting point is 00:08:16 I hope my daughter is alive, but I don't know. Emotionally debilitating is not the right two words to use. It's worse than that. February the 6th, a citizen who was walking in the area of drowning Creek Road and Highway 316 happened upon skeletal remains. and they were positively identified as having belonged to Susanna Morales. These scenes are a lot different than a normal homicide because there's no flesh, there's no body to find forensic evidence on. There were no traces of any fibers, clothing, flesh, or skin, muscle.
Starting point is 00:08:58 It appeared that this person was unclothed. There were no traces of any fibers whatsoever. We also found that the body had been disturbed by apparent animal activity. Because there were no clothes at the scene, law enforcement had to immediately treat it as though there was some type of foul play. When you have someone dropped off in a secluded area but not far away from a very highly trafficked area, it shows some haste in the crime, some level probably of panic. It made it pretty evident that they had a crime on their hands not just a runaway. Susanna was your typical 16-year-old girl.
Starting point is 00:09:32 16-year-old girl, she was very kind, had a reputation of being very friendly. Everybody described her as an extremely outgoing, extremely loving, and kind individual. She loved to spend time with her friends. She loved to sing. Her mother would talk about her singing in the house, and she loved music. She had recently picked up playing the ukulele. Like many teenage girls, she spent a lot of time doing her makeup and would spend a lot of time in her room with makeup tutorials.
Starting point is 00:10:06 She was the baby of the family, and everybody adored her. A promising life cut tragically short, and while Susanna Morales' family finally has some answers, this investigation is far from over. I know that your gun was stolen. We did find your gun, actually, yeah. So that just raises suspicion even more. Now we'll just go up there.
Starting point is 00:10:36 You got any guns or anything on me? No, I don't. You don't? Okay, can I patch you down just to make sure? What's going on, man? You're good. It's our policy, man. We know how it is.
Starting point is 00:10:45 As Georgia detectives continue their investigation into the death of 16-year-old Susanna Morales, when her remains are discovered more than 20 miles away from where she was last reportedly seen six months earlier, what started as a missing person's case becomes a homicide investigation. They investigated every single person. person in her life to see if they had anything to do with it. They could not find a single thing that pointed to anyone. The only remaining theory was that this was a stranger. Somebody took her from the street as she was walking, and that's every parent's worst nightmare. Investigators get a major break when a key piece of evidence is located near her remains,
Starting point is 00:11:33 sparking new questions and possibilities. We located a firearm that had been reported stolen on July 27th. This is the same day that Susanna was reported missing. This is a heavily wooded area with a lot of foliage on the ground, leaves and sticks and debris. About 100 feet away from Susanna's body, an officer found a Glock 19 pistol
Starting point is 00:12:02 that was abandoned on the ground. It wasn't buried or hidden. It looked like it had been dropped. Because law enforcement was so thorough and going over it piece by piece, inch by inch, they came across a handgun. Now, what does that tell you?
Starting point is 00:12:21 Possibly she was shot by that weapon, but you don't know unless and until you can perform ballistics. It creates more questions than answers. We had a really difficult time trying to figure out what happened to Susanna. The medical examiner did perform an autopsy of Susanna. There were no obvious signs of a bullet defect where a bullet would have struck one of her bones or knife wounds. A majority of Susanna's body was recovered, about 95% or so, but there were several bones that were missing. Because of that, cause of death was unknown.
Starting point is 00:12:57 The chances that a firearm would be found that close to her remains, was just very unlikely that it wouldn't be related in some way. And that really was the very first significant lead that we had. And strangely enough, wait to you here who reported the gun stolen. Yesterday, I don't know what time, man. I went running around here. I did a bunch of stuff yesterday. And I came back and went to the store and everything.
Starting point is 00:13:27 I had it at the store. And I came back, I can't find my wallet. And then this morning, I looked on my floorboard and my Black 19 holster is on the floorboard. The gun has been reported stolen. Who was the owner of the gun? Oh, it's Miles Bryant. Wait a minute. He is a sworn police officer.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Oh, I hate to say, I think I look at me. They didn't smash the window or nothing. My fucking I left my door on lot. So that's definitely missing. I get kids going to the pool all the time. That cut back there leads to like behind that little grocery store right there. Oh yeah. We've had people actually rob the grocery store and come run through here.
Starting point is 00:14:08 Finding the gun immediately tied Mr. Bryant to the case, whether he was the one responsible or somebody took his gun. That gave us a name very quickly, which was critical. Police need to track down 22-year-old Miles Bryant. They locate him at his apartment and immediately ask if he knows anything about Susanna. about Susanna. When she first was talking to them, like, maybe in her things, stuff like that. They didn't really know anything.
Starting point is 00:14:35 What are the neighborhood kids saying? I haven't talked to them in a minute, but when she first was missing, it was like, it was just with her. I haven't heard anything, actually, like, you know, my girl was talking about it, so like, it's just weird. They said she was walking home, and she just...
Starting point is 00:14:49 Mr. Bryant was a courtesy officer. Now, what a courtesy officer means is that essentially you are living in an apartment complex and in exchange for some type of either reduced rent, or payment, you agree to help patrol that apartment complex. So he was likely very familiar with the folks that live there and the regular things that were happening. You got some time for us to come up to our headquarters
Starting point is 00:15:14 and just talk about, you know, what you see on the daily basis and stuff like that? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Now? We're literally talking to everyone here. So we're just trying to document every, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:26 we got no leaves, man. Hopefully with your end of know, with everything with going on in top of that kind of and maybe put some pieces together. They take Bryant into the station and before the lead detective arrives, a few investigators start asking questions.
Starting point is 00:15:45 My gosh, this one is sad, though. It's terrible. What department you went to? Seed a door to the police room? Okay. You're just a courtesy officer. How long have you been loving it?
Starting point is 00:15:56 Maybe a year. Mr. Bryant was an, active duty police officer with the Doraville Police Department, just one county over from Gwinnett County, where Susanna lived. We also learned that Mr. Bryant lived at the apartment complex that Susanna went missing from, the Sterling Glen Apartments. I know you're the courtesy officer for the leasing office and all that. Anyone come up to you, approach you, did you get caught contacted by the police? Like, you know, this has been with this incident? Yeah, like I live with this missing girl. Not at all. I'm sitting on the news. I hear about our news, people talking about it,
Starting point is 00:16:35 stuff like that. She was a frequent visitor there. She walked from the Sterling Glen Apartments back to her home, which was a very short trip, maybe about half a mile or so, which was a common thing for her. You said earlier that like some of the neighborhood kids or like the other teenagers, like talk to you about it. They always at the pool. I remember that day, man. It was Hey, you're about to miss a girl, but nothing, fresh incident. Do you remember anything, like any context of what they were saying about how she was missing? Like, did they have any speculation? No, they didn't have any of that.
Starting point is 00:17:07 They did, like, a walk and look for her. I remember that. They did what they said they was looking for and didn't see anything. Do you know when she went missing? I know it was your last one. So I don't know what's your last piece. So I'm a little nurse. The detectors are asking him, since he was this go-getter courtesy officer,
Starting point is 00:17:25 about anybody in that community, anyone else that maybe they should be paying attention to for this disappearance? Was there anyone else there that they should be targeting? Are there any suspicious people that are commonly going through? Because I know we got a couple of Parmo Complex that have like the same homeless dude,
Starting point is 00:17:42 walk around and hang around. You got anybody like that? Yeah. So I don't know if he'd been at, I mean, I haven't seen him, but it's a couple. Him and his girlfriend, he's a little more property, but he's a gangbanger, he costs a lot. issues on property like drug deals just on property apparently I think he's Crip
Starting point is 00:18:00 mm-hmm that's what I heard he's on neighbor name oh god I'm listening he kind of went through and gave a few kind of broad base well there's people that walk through the community there's some rough people there's traffic that comes in out of here but not really any direct specifics that area of Norcross you know that there are gangs present there are places nearby and that apartment that have lots of reports of crime and vehicle break-ins and knowing that there's no connection whatsoever between that person and Susanna. He was just throwing anything he could at the wall to see what would stick.
Starting point is 00:18:39 There's a lot of foot traffic, a lot of foot traffic at night. They probably use it as a cut through, right? Isn't it like a side gig? Yes. He was a gung-ho courtesy officer, as he was self-described, but seemed to have very little knowledge about a missing child that had been in its community. The first red flags for these detectives that were going to interview him was, yeah, he knows more than he's telling us already.
Starting point is 00:19:05 With limited clues, investigators pursue any possible leads, but the case soon narrows with a potential suspect in their sights and in their interrogation room. All right. I found my gun out there. Yeah. And you said you've never seen her. Are you familiar with her at all? That sounds like, you know, a part of like, hey, hey, what do you know, you know?
Starting point is 00:19:40 Like suspect, Bob's here. Why? The way, you know, we're just talking. We're just talking. I know. As Georgia law enforcement investigate the possible kidnapping and murder of teenager Susanna Morales, local police officer Miles Bryan finds himself in an interrogation room and that's when
Starting point is 00:19:59 detectives drop a bombshell. I actually saw the next day like someone broke into your car. Yeah. We're thinking it's probably going to be related because it was kind of the same night. Like the person who probably did that to you made you know something. I looked everywhere. I looked in the house. My girlfriend would be making jokes.
Starting point is 00:20:14 Non-stops. I somebody took their gun. Do you know if it was located or anything yet? No, I've already been. I haven't run it yet. I want to check that really quick. Let's see it was found. We as viewers, we watch the news, and a lot of times we go, man, why aren't the police telling
Starting point is 00:20:29 us more? This is an example of why, because there's certain elements to a crime that they don't want to be public so that when they have the opportunity to interrogate or interview someone about it, they're going to be able to go in with information that the suspect doesn't know that they know. And his gun was a key component to this. They didn't let him know that they had it. We did find your gun.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Actually, yeah. So that's just like raises suspicion even more. Not with you, but like, I think it's the same person. You watch the news. You know we found Savannah. But there was actually a gun found out there too. Really? Yeah. And it's the same serial number. He just verified it. It's crazy. I know. I think that was probably one of the first moments for him to realize they know a lot more than I know they know. detectives focus on Bryant, pressing him about the night of July 26, 2022. I need you to think really hard, though, with me. I'm dependent on you right now.
Starting point is 00:21:31 Look, I want to be like Doraville police officer, help us solve the Susanna-Moraleigh. Think of anybody that was out there that night, because I know you were out there patrolling that night. Think of anything. That's all I can be to think of. Me and my girlfriend is actually arguing that night. So I think I just was driving around. What are you arguing about? I got caught up with my side piece.
Starting point is 00:21:55 You've built a rapport with him and you've become essentially kind of like a colleague buddy. That's your baseline of his behavior when he is comfortable. The detective would then start to try to determine when he breaks that comfort level. Did you work that night? That night? Were you off that night? I don't know. Whatever day that was arguing with girlfriend or something like that, I wasn't working.
Starting point is 00:22:17 When you just run around, is it caught up for you to live? Is it common for your lead North Cross? I mean, I would think you would just drive around. Yeah, I was right around. I go to North Carolina, everywhere. I remember a little bit. Yeah, before that, man, was with my girlfriend. Actually, that night I was right around.
Starting point is 00:22:33 I don't know what night is, if this night, particularly. It was the night before you made the report with us. That should be memorable. Yeah, I was trying to think about it down. God, I mean, that part. She tried to chase, I'm going to try to chase me for her car.
Starting point is 00:22:45 Oh, I like that Jerry Spratt episode. I don't know if this would help, but she chased me into apartment complex. There were several times where questions were asked that he failed to give an answer. They wanted to get his story out there, and they're gonna ask the same question multiple times in different ways,
Starting point is 00:23:01 just to see if they're gonna get a different answer. Susanna didn't live in your complex, but do you know kind of where she lived? From what I've seen, she lived nearby. Like where? I have no clue. She said she was walking home, and she said, she said nearby.
Starting point is 00:23:18 So I guess it's, be in the area. I don't think, I don't think she lived in that apartment complex, though. I remember driving around the night, getting chased by my girlfriend. She's blocking my car right now and was hitting her car. Because, this is, wow, I guess, got me doing patrols on video or something like that. Yeah. They had a lot of information that he was not aware that they had. Notice they were on their phones a lot while they were in the room. That's likely because they were texting with detectives who were outside of the room watching the video and we're feeding them information. As he begins to answer the questions and they're not answered the way they should be, there's a
Starting point is 00:24:02 difference, there's a little change here, a little change there. So piece by piece in a very casual way, they try to come to a conclusion. And they also have to give credit to the fact it's been six months. So if possibly he's not the person who murdered her, then maybe his memory, like all of our memories, is not perfect. Did you ever go out there where she, do you know where she was found? Three 16 somewhere in the woods and stuff out there? Yeah, do you ever go in the woods and stuff out there? Is there any reason why you would have dropped it out there maybe? No, no. Do y'all do any training out there or anything? No, I'm over there at least. Okay. So, I'm just scared. That's so crazy. That was crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:47 Carter then chose to obtain phone records for Mr. Bryant, just to exclude him as a suspect and prove that he had nothing to do with Susanna's disappearance. He had two phones. He had a phone issued by the city of Doraville that was for work, and he also had a personal phone. Those phone records are able to help the police triangulate to a degree where somebody's phone is located at any given time. Detective Carter then started to analyze that data, figure out where Mr. Bryant's phone was at the night of July 26th and to the morning hours of July 27th. And what they found was fairly shocking. You didn't go over where her body was found that night, right, to like in the woods or anything? Okay. All right. All right. I don't do everybody
Starting point is 00:25:36 was home. Off 316. No, I just drove around. You didn't go in the woodline contemplating life or anything, did you? I'm just joking with you. I'm just joking. That's a creepy-ass. place to walk to. I just drove everywhere. I'm not sure where I drove. Y'all just played Chase and booed until you went home? No. Who went home first?
Starting point is 00:26:00 I don't know, but I know I lost there and I just drove around. Where did I drop to? I went toward, God, this sounds bad. It sounds terrible, because I remember getting on the exit going that way trying to lose her. I remember going up 85. Oh, man, that sounds bad. It is over there about first.
Starting point is 00:26:17 He's starting to feel pressure, and he's also hopefully going to feel, in their eyes, relief if he'll actually admit to what he did. Just a few hours after Susanna disappeared, Mr. Bryant's phone was used to make several phone calls between 1 and 2 o'clock in the morning on the morning of July 27th. And the phone towers that his phone communicated with were located out in DeKula, Georgia on the side of Highway 316. Mr. Bryant's phone was in the woods exactly where Susanna's body was located. I'm be honest, I'm really sorry, okay? So my gun was found in that area, you know, technically was in that area, stuff like that, you know. I mean, it sounds bad, but I, man. I don't think you got anything behind.
Starting point is 00:27:07 I think you're a good person. I mean, you're a police officer. Nobody wants to be a police officer that's... As they begin to narrow down and see... and see the discrepancies between what he says and what actually happened, they begin to focus in and they realize that he's not telling the truth. At that point, it was obvious to myself
Starting point is 00:27:33 and to the Gwinnett County Police Department that Mr. Bryant was involved. Listen to me, your device was the only one out there. She went missing. She died there. Your gun is there. Your phone is there. Okay, this is your moment to talk about it.
Starting point is 00:27:51 All right, so bad. Maybe we're a monster. Oh, Hilda. Proof it wrong. I don't believe you. Right now is the only thing I'm thinking of. Then that's what everyone else is going to think too. She's a baby. Look at her.
Starting point is 00:28:14 A little baby. Yeah, I'm sure this is a big weight. Look at her. I have nothing to do with this, though. I know, but she's so tiny. She's a little baby. Yeah, I know. All eyes are now. Now on Georgia police officer and National Guard member Miles Bryant, the primary suspect in the kidnapping and murder of Susanna Morales.
Starting point is 00:28:33 The pressure mounts in the interrogation room, but Brian maintains his innocence. It's not a question about if it's you or not, because we already know that. No. But listen, it's a question about what happened, okay? It's a question about if you are a cold-blooded killer or if you made a mistake. No, you're involved. No, we're not involved. No.
Starting point is 00:28:58 I would not do that and say, well, maybe I messed up. No, none of that. You could tell there was a drastic shift in that interrogation when they confronted him. And that's when all of his explanations began to just be, no, I didn't do that. No, I didn't do that. I would never do that. If he was smart and he obviously wasn't, he would have K-Y-D-B-MS. What does that mean?
Starting point is 00:29:24 He would have kept it. his damn big mouth shut. Instead, his story unraveled, and it unraveled rather quickly. Do you black out sometimes when you get angry? No, I really. You said not really, what does that mean? No, I don't black out where I can't remember
Starting point is 00:29:41 what I do and stuff like that. If I killed somebody, I don't know that. Did you kill her? No. Were you with her when she died? No. Why did you dump her body there? I didn't dump her body here.
Starting point is 00:29:53 Were you trying to help her, she was already done when you found her? No. I wasn't nowhere in woods. I would not lie about that. Because you are. Not. You are.
Starting point is 00:30:07 Along the way, one crucial detail emerges that confirms investigator's suspicions. You also tried to get into a girl's apartment off Anna's town. You did? Oh, your phone was just casually there too? No, I had a whole investigation about that. there but I didn't try to break in an apartment. She lied. Mr. Bryant for years, dating back to
Starting point is 00:30:33 2018 that we were able to document, began preying upon women in high school. He started burglarizing homes belonging to classmates of his. This escalated even after Susanna's murder with him trying to break into a young woman's apartment. He would just show up at her apartment, knocking on the doors, attempting to break in. We had him on video trying to break open her door while he was wearing his National Guard fatigues. Why was you hiding your head? It was raining.
Starting point is 00:31:07 Oh, it was raining because you didn't want anyone to see your hat because it has your name on the back of your head. She knows that's where I was. I took, she knew what I was. She didn't want you there. She didn't ever tell me that. You're just a victim in all this.
Starting point is 00:31:18 You just casually being in all these, like, victim were situations where you're just casually in the wrong place at the wrong time. uncovered things on his phone where he had been sending some inappropriate things from other females phones to himself he had an instance of a breaking and entering he'd taken some women's undergarments he certainly had a history that would raise some red flags investigators have enough to charge miles bryant with concealing the death of another and false report of a crime for allegedly
Starting point is 00:31:46 lying about the theft of his firearm found near susanna's remains he's arrested and held without bond. But now the real work begins as prosecutors seek a murder charge. They can go back and see how he became emboldened piece by piece, step by step, doing all of the things that he should not have been doing, but they're important because they're building blocks to where he ended up. Through interviews, cell phone records, and circumstantial evidence, Miles Bryant's charge charges are upgraded to include kidnapping, malice murder, felony murder, and criminal attempt to commit rape for the abduction and death of Susanna Morales.
Starting point is 00:32:33 To believe that a police officer would kidnap and murder somebody they did not know for sexual gratification stretches the bounds of belief to some extent, we had a big obligation to put together a case that a jury would believe and understand that. and see who Miles Bryant really was. Not the awards and the uniforms and the military service and the police badge, but who he was underneath. Here's a question. Without any direct evidence tying Miles Bryant to Susanna's murder,
Starting point is 00:33:10 is there enough to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt? The anguish and the sadness and the, um, that the mother, like, posed, I have a daughter at the same age and it really touched me that I felt that it was my duty to try to find her. The defendant doesn't get to escape justice because he's good at the crime. Because he's good at covering his tracks. Maybe, could have great suspicion is not beyond a reasonable doubt. With a suspect behind bars, prosecutors and defense attorneys build their cases.
Starting point is 00:34:02 And on June 5th, 2024, almost two years after the kidnapping and killing of 16-year-old Susanna Morales, Miles Bryant, the accused murderer, goes on trial. He was supposed to serve and protect. He is one of the people that we should trust to enforce the law. somebody which should hold to a higher sting. But he didn't do any of those things. Instead, he abused the law. And he used his badge, and he used his position
Starting point is 00:34:42 to satisfy his own sexual desires. When the police had the theory they needed, they had the defendant they knew had committed the crime, they had to be able to prove it. We spent months and months preparing to put together a cohesive trial that would tell how a police officer of all people, somebody who was meant to serve and protect, who took an oath to do that, could possibly do something like this, but it was overwhelming that he was involved in some way. He is a cop who turned into a killer. Jurors listened to emotional testimony from Susanna's family, including her mother, who tearfully illustrated the agonizing hours and days following Susanna's disappearance.
Starting point is 00:35:35 From the time that Susanna was taken, how long was it until you heard anything about finding her life? Almost seven months. What went through your mind at that month? moment when you heard. I did not want that news. I was waiting for her. I was waiting for her. And I'm still waiting for her.
Starting point is 00:36:07 And her sister, who describes searching for Susanna. Did you ever stop going out and looking for your sister? What went through your mind when you found out about the police finding her body? lot of things I couldn't believe it. I didn't want it to be true. I wanted to see her. I wanted proof that it was actually her. I didn't want to believe that it was her because up to that point we're still expecting for her to come home. And the moving statements from law enforcement showed the widespread impact of Susanna's disappearance. Jasmine called me on the daily basis. I wanted her to call me at any time. It was 2 o'clock in the morning. It didn't matter. I, I, I, I, I, I, I,
Starting point is 00:36:52 I actually neglected my family because I made sure that I went hunting for. And it meant a lot to me. So I would even do it on my own time because I just, every time I see my daughter, the first thing I thought of was Suzanne. And so I just, it was driving me to find her because I mentally was telling myself that we are going to find her. I made sure that I told Jasmine that I will give my all. Detective Cashler was communicating with me while I was at the other scene and telling me that they believed it was going to be, sorry, a Hispanic teenage girl. It all lined up.
Starting point is 00:37:38 I really was hoping it wasn't her. Have you ever heard of any case involving the workplace department was a teenager's naked body was found in the woods and it was not a homicide? No, I have not. One big question on everyone's mind is whether or not Bryant and Susanna had ever crossed paths before. At the time that Susanna was missing, one of the scenes killed. You all I've been friends for about five years? Yes, sir. What was the last time that you saw Susanna in person before she was dating?
Starting point is 00:38:12 Maybe two days prior. Had you ever met Miles Bryant with the family? I didn't know. who he was at the time, but I have met him before. I would see him around the apartments every once in a while. Did you ever have any kind of conversation? Yes. Tell us about that. There were, there was an instance where me and Susanna were walking in the Sterling Glen apartments. He had stopped in a black truck asking us if we needed a ride. We just kind of laughed it off and didn't talk about it. When Mr. Bryant was interviewed, he steadfastly denied ever having seen her, not just met her or talked to her or had any interaction with her.
Starting point is 00:39:00 He denied ever even laying eyes on her ever before. And having people testify that that was an outright lie was very significant. Still to today, we have never uncovered a single piece of evidence that Mr. Bryant and Susan. Arizona ever spoke. They never texted. They were not friends on social media. Absolutely zero trace of any connection between the two of them. With the prosecution having laid out their case, the defense now takes center stage. You don't have to lie to my mind. And in fact, at the conclusion of this trial, you're going to think that he is the most callous, uncarrying coward that you have ever seen. However, he is not guilty. What you have from the state is speculation.
Starting point is 00:39:56 We found this, and we don't really know, but this is what we think happened. So let's just make him look really, really bad, and maybe you'll hate him enough that you will convict. And they make some major admissions. The only things we know for certain, she was in the truck. Now we do know that he lied in his statement.
Starting point is 00:40:21 He said he wasn't in the woods. We do know that Miles left her in the woods. We don't know if she was unconscious at that time or if she was dead. We don't know that he did anything to her to cause that. They had mentioned during opening that they were likely going to call the defendant to testify on his own behalf. They later changed their minds on doing that. They didn't do a whole lot other than cross-examine the prosecutor's witnesses and try to throw out other theories of how she died, but they didn't have any proof of those theories being plausible.
Starting point is 00:40:57 One of the biggest strong points for him was they ultimately did not find any DNA on her or him that linked the two of them or in his vehicles. We know that Suzanne was at least at a minimum experimenting with drugs outside a pot. Did she overdose? It was never treated as a pot. possible overdose because of the body being in the woods and not having clothes. We had to overcome the fact that Susanna wasn't a perfect human being. She had made journal entries that while she had tried meth, it made her feel horrible. And she was upset and disgusted with herself and she would never do it again.
Starting point is 00:41:38 The defense strategy in this case was to paint Susanna as a troubled youth, as a young lady who had a drug problem, who was a runaway, and maybe into risky behavior. Her friend said that Susanna was fine. While they had smoked marijuana that night, that was a common practice for them, and that this night was no different. His counsel argued that without a cause of death,
Starting point is 00:42:02 we can't prove he killed her. Unfortunately, we don't know how this young lady died. If there is another theory, it doesn't have to be more probable than something else, but any reasonable theory means you must find him not guilty. The defense calls no witnesses of their own, and following days of testimony, the case is handed off to the jury. Perhaps the most difficult part of any trial in my experience is the moment when the jury walks into the back to go deliberate, the anxiety is through the roof. The reality, the reality,
Starting point is 00:42:43 that if they don't convict him, a killer is gonna walk free. After just two hours of deliberations, the jury returns with their verdict. Count one, malice murder, we the jury found the defendant guilty. Count two, felony murder. We the jury find the defendant guilty.
Starting point is 00:43:07 Kidnapping, we the jury find the defendant guilty. Criminal attempt to commit rape. We, the jury, found the defendant not guilty. False report of a crime. We, the jury found the defendant guilty. Miles Bryant is found guilty of the kidnapping and murder of Susanna Morales. He sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. I knew at that moment that we got him, that we had done our job.
Starting point is 00:43:39 No one's above the law, and he got what he deserved. Everybody who encountered him had the same thing to say about him, that he seemed very dutiful, very conscientious of his job, loved being a police officer, but what was unseen was his dark side. Just like any profession, you could run into having a bad egg. As a law enforcement officer, your job is to protect others who cannot be protected. This is a very sad case, apparently, of an officer who was not doing it for the right reasons. They found him guilty and they certainly should have. He is someone who should never walk the streets again. But that's not the end of the story.
Starting point is 00:44:26 Now, you see, Susanna Morales' family has filed a lawsuit against the Sterling Glen apartments arguing they should have known about Miles Bryant's past and therefore not hired him as a courtesy officer. In other words, this may never have happened. So their battle for justice for Susanna is far forward. over. That's all we have for you here on this episode of Prime Crime. Everybody, thank you so much for joining us. I'm Jesse Weber, and as always, stay safe.

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