Snapped: Women Who Murder - Connie Brown
Episode Date: June 1, 2025After two men are killed, a witness comes forward with information implicating her own family.Season 32, Episode 5Originally aired: March 19, 2023Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on th...e Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Lamont Jones is shattered when his cousin dies just weeks after entering prison.
The official report says natural causes, but bruises and missing teeth tell a different
story.
Wondery presents Death County PA, a chilling true story of corruption and coverups.
Follow Death County PA on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
A double murder leaves a family shattered.
The oldest child told me that he woke up to screaming and two big men came in to rob daddy.
There was blood all over the place.
I would describe it as overkill.
As investigators dig, they learn that this family's bond is hard to break.
This is a family that isn't going to take crap from you.
And each family member covers for the next.
The statements were inconsistent.
Someone lying to the police.
She was trying to push the blame outside the family.
At the center of it all, investigators
find a woman willing to leverage loyalty
for her own twisted desire.
Ultimately, she wanted to run around and have fun.
I never would have thought that she was capable of allowing that to happen to the magnitude that it did. Music
Almost an hour from popular Myrtle Beach sits the much quieter community of Green Sea, South Carolina.
Green Sea is in Horry County, which is maybe maybe 20, 30 minutes from North Myrtle Beach.
It's always been kind of rural agricultural.
You'll see corn fields and tobacco fields and people out there farming and working hard
for a living. It's just before 11 p.m. on June 21st, 2000, when a cryptic 911 call comes into the Horry
County Police Department. How did the person get killed? I had as light as I did. The man just came to my door just now, driving, saying,
please call the police.
Would you please her?
You don't know who that person is?
No, ma'am, I don't know.
Officers race to the scene, unsure of what they'll find.
As they approach the address, they are met by 55-year-old Johnny Neely and his daughter,
Connie Brown.
Johnny Neely advised the responding officers that two men had just broken into his daughter's
residence on Olive Drive and attacked and assaulted her husband, Billy Ray Brown. Johnny's trailer is next door to their trailer.
Connie tells officers that Billy Ray's friend, Ronnie McDowell,
had been crashing on their couch for the night.
Concerned that the attackers may still be inside,
officers cautiously approach Connie's trailer.
What they saw when they went in
was a very bloody crime scene.
There was blood all over the place.
There were trails of blood throughout the house.
So they knew something was terribly wrong.
As they make their way toward the master bedroom,
officers spot a male body,
who they believe to be Connie's husband, 46-year-old Billy Ray Brown.
He was on the floor next to the bed. You could visibly see a lot of blood and trauma to his body.
The officers continue their sweep when they stumble upon a second body in the hallway bathroom.
Once the responding officers have the crime scene secured, that's when they make contact with dispatch to go ahead and have crime scene and violent crimes respond.
While officers wait for homicide detectives to arrive, they head over to Johnny's home
to break the news to Connie and her young children.
Connie and Billy Ray had three children, two young men and then a baby in arms.
Billy Ray, he didn't have much of a record, if any.
He was just a hardworking guy.
Certainly we'd had no reason to believe some of that they wanted to kill him.
Billy Ray Brown was born on May 25, 1954 and raised in Green Sea, South Carolina.
Billy was a hard worker and he was a really good friend.
Billy could often be found helping out at a local bar
owned by his aunt and uncle.
It was just this little old country store kind of place
that they hadn't made at the bar.
I want to say he was like the flower of the family
because he took care of all of them.
I know he helped them out a lot,
especially around the bar,
because that was a family business for them.
He drove cement mixers as well with my dad.
They worked for the same company.
In the spring of 1991,
Billy Ray was already once divorced when Johnny Neely introduced
him to his daughter, Connie.
There was about 22 or 23 years age difference between Connie and Billy.
I remember saying to myself, God, he's old.
He was about 38, I think, when they met.
And her being 16 made me think, wow, what are you doing here?
But they got along good, and I liked that.
He respected Connie a lot.
Wasn't very long after they met, they got together.
Born on April 9th, 1975,
Connie was the second of Melba
and Johnny Neely's five children.
Growing up with four younger siblings,
it was a challenge, but it wasn't anything
that we didn't do together.
We had some really good times, but we had rough times, too.
There was a bad alcohol problem my mom and dad
developed over the years.
Connie was often left to mother her younger siblings. Connie took it personally to a degree because she kind of felt like,
why am I not good enough for mom and dad to not drink?
I am the one who called social services.
Connie and myself, we couldn't do anymore.
We ended up in children's homes in foster care for two years,
and that's where they split us all up.
Losing the kids eventually inspired Johnny and Melba to get their act together.
Two years later, the family reunited.
The reuniting of us coming back home to Mom and dad and all being a family again was great.
But truth is, it didn't last long enough because I had to leave and go to the military and
Connie ultimately met Billy and moved out from home.
At first, Connie's family balked at the 22-year age difference.
As far as the family being protective of one another, it was solid as steel.
You couldn't get through.
It was obvious that Connie was over the mom life that she led early in her teens helping
me with the other kids because once she met Billy, she changed completely.
Billy was a great provider.
She fell in love, and when that was mattered,
it was all about him.
Billy Ray was taking care of not only Connie,
but Johnny and her brother, Andy, as well.
Billy Ray and Andy were close.
They would go fishing together and just hang out, you know, as boys do.
Billy Ray's family embraced Connie, even offering the teenager shifts at the family business.
She was bartending for them at such a young age, too.
It was allowed because it was just this little country store.
And it's not like the authorities were there watching.
When they spoke of marriage at her at 16, my dad kind of stepped out of it because he
thought it was just mom's decision.
But that's ultimately what it ended up being was mama's decision.
In the end, Connie's mother signed off on the marriage.
I lived in an old trailer that Billy Ray had bought and fixed up.
Over the next nine years, the couple had three kids, Billy Ray Jr., Tanner, and Matthew.
She was a wonderful mother.
She didn't go anywhere without her boys.
Billy Ray was a very hard worker. He provided for his family.
In 1999, Connie's parents, Melba and Johnny, split up.
He had started partying again, and she had had it.
When they separated, Dad went and lived in a mobile home that was on the same property
as Connie and Billy's property.
So they were living really close.
When I'd go to visit, it was a happy life.
Kids were happy, playing with their toys in the floor.
It was just a normal life, it seemed. Until the night of June 21st, 2000, when a violent attack inside the family's trailer
leaves Billy Ray and his good friend Ronnie McDowell dead.
There were two blood trails.
One that led from the door to the back bedroom, where we found Billy Ray Brown.
There's a second trail that started at the door
and went to the bathroom.
That's where we found Ronnie.
This was a stabbing, and stabbing are bloody.
And there were bruises consistent with being hit by a stick.
The two men were beaten, stabbed,
and their throats were cut.
A little before 1 a.m., detectives head to Johnny Neely's home, where officers are waiting
with the family.
Before talking to Connie, investigators check on her three young sons.
Seven-year-old Billy Ray Jr. tells them he was asleep in the living room when the attack began.
He told me that he woke up to screaming.
Billy said his mama told him that two men had come in.
Billy said he didn't see the men.
Five-year-old Tanner adds to the story.
He stated that his mama told him that two big men came in to rob daddy.
He also said that mama told him they had knives.
Both boys are physically unharmed, but investigators aren't sold on their stories just yet.
It was a little odd that both children were telling me
information that their mother had told them.
Detectives have to wonder, did Connie coach her kids
about what to tell police?
The oldest had blood on his foot,
and the middle child, Tanner,
had blood on his hands and feet,
which tells me they were in close proximity
when this occurred, if not right there when it occurred.
Coming up...
an entire town on edge.
When somebody comes out of the blue from nowhere and kills someone, that causes fear in the
community.
And investigators look for answers close to home.
She did say that he had his face covered, but she knew who he was. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
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Yes.
Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
Yes.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. after Billy Ray and his friend Ronnie McDowell are found dead.
Connie advised that she had went to bed around 10, 15 p.m. that night.
About 10, 30, she heard a knock at the back door and a commotion,
and that's when she came out to see what was going on.
She said two people came in and assaulted her husband and that she didn't realize who was coming in.
One was striking Billy with a stick.
He was wearing all dark colors and a face covering.
She said, with the commotion going on and going onowell, at that point in time, tries to intervene.
And that's when she gathered up her three children
and went to her dad, Johnny's, house next door.
Johnny Neely didn't have a residential phone,
so he went down the road to call 911.
so he went down the road to call 911.
When investigators ask if Connie knows the men who attacked Billy Ray and Ronnie,
they are stunned by her response.
Connie had said that Andy Neely was striking Billy with a stick.
Andy Neely was Connie Brown's brother.
Connie also said that there was a blackmail with Andy
that she believed was a friend of Andy's.
When Andy was in the trailer attacking Billy Ray,
she asked him what he was doing, and he said that was none of her concern.
Connie's revelation is shocking, but for detectives, her story isn't quite adding up.
She's still the first officer with the same version
she had with her father.
She said nothing about Andy being involved, but they told a different version when she
was interviewed by the detectives.
Sometimes you never know with people that they don't want their kids to know that their
uncle was involved in something like that, a crime against their dad.
They also had a question why he had his face covered.
She knew who he was.
Certainly, Connie would have recognized her brother, even with a mask on.
The only reason I can think that they would have hidden their faces was just in case one
of the children woke up or somebody saw them from the outside.
While Connie's interview raises a lot of questions, It does give detectives their first lead.
When somebody comes out of the blue from nowhere
and kills someone, that causes fear in the community,
but it wasn't a random event.
This was a family affair.
It did strike me as odd because Connie had indicated
that Andy and Billy Ray were the best of friends.
that Andy and Billy Ray were the best of friends.
Finding Andy becomes investigators' top priority.
I spoke to Johnny Neely. He advised that he hadn't seen Andy Neely, his son, since 8.30 p.m.
In speaking with Johnny, it did not appear
that he had any knowledge of what had occurred
at his daughter's trailer next door.
Johnny tells them that his son
doesn't have a permanent address.
Johnny said Andy bounced around.
He would stay with Billy and Connie at times.
Johnny said he'd also stay over in Green Acres at times.
At Jotis' home, Jotis Washington was Mel Bonnili's boyfriend.
Johnny said Andy was driving an 86 Burgundy Honda Civic,
four door with Tennessee tags.
Police immediately put out a bolo on the vehicle. And only a few hours later, they get a call that Andy's car has been spotted just over the border
in Greenacres, North Carolina.
Columbus County Sheriff's Office
located the vehicle at Jotis' home.
My mom started dating Jotis Washington,
friend of mine from school.
They dated off and on.
They were on for a good month,
heavy dating, living together.
Eager to catch Andy before he takes off again, investigators rush to the home.
Inside, they find Andy and Jotis, as well as Connie's mother Melba and Connie's sister Renee.
Andy and Melba voluntarily went with detectives back to the Louris Magistrate's office to
be interviewed.
I stayed and interviewed Jotis and Renee.
Investigators inform Renee of Connie's account of the murder.
We told her that Connie had indicated that Andy was the attacker the previous evening.
But Renee advised that she had been with Andy since 8 o'clock the previous evening and that
she begged Andy also to stay with her because she hadn't seen him much lately.
It appears that Renee is trying to give Andy an alibi.
Next, authorities turn to Mel Benili's boyfriend, 29-year-old Jotis Washington.
When I interviewed Jotis Washington,
he said that he was asleep at 9 p.m. the previous evening
until this morning,
and that Andy's car is parked near his window,
so he would have heard it if it moved.
The statements were inconsistent with the statements that Connie herself made to the
police. Someone was lying to the police.
Detective DeBerry heads back to the station where Andy and his mother Melba are being
questioned.
Melba advised that she was over at her husband's Johnny's trailer, which is next door to Connie's,
from about 1.30 to 3.30 p.m.
with Connie and the kids over there.
Melba tells detectives that Renee and Andy were also there
and that Connie was very upset.
Renee was with them over Johnny's trailer,
and Connie was telling her how Billy Ray
had been beating her and throwing the kids around.
Coming up, did a loyal brother decide to take the law into his own hands?
There were allegations of domestic violence and violence against kids.
Or is there something bigger at play?
This is a family that isn't going to take crap from you.
They're going to fight back.
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Spoiler alert, it was not an accident.
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In this four-part series, I'm going to tell you why the internet sucks now, whose fault
it is, and my plan to fix it.
Find Who Broke the Internet on whatever terrible app you get your podcasts.
Lamont Jones's world is shattered when his cousin dies in custody just weeks after entering
prison.
The official report says natural causes but bruises and missing teeth tell a different
story.
From Wondery comes Death County PA, a chilling true story of corruption and cover-ups that
begins as one man's search for answers, but soon reveals a disturbing pattern.
Lamont's cousin's death is just one of many, and powerful forces are working to
keep the truth buried.
With never-before-heard interviews and shocking revelations, Death County PA pulls back the
curtain on one of America's darkest institutional secrets.
This isn't just another true crime story.
It's happening right now.
Follow Death County PA on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Death County PA early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of Death County PA early and ad free right now by joining
Wondery Plus.
Less than 24 hours have passed since the brutal murders of Connie Brown's husband Billy Ray
and his friend Ronnie McDowell.
When investigators uncover a potential motive for the killings.
There had been prior instances of abuse that Melba was aware of between Billy Ray and Connie.
But when Melba found out that one of the children was being abused, she was very upset.
She said it was bad enough that Connie was being abused,
but now you've put an innocent child into it.
But the revelations don't stop there.
Melba says Andy wasn't the only one
who wanted to teach Billy Ray a lesson.
Melba advised that upon learning this information
that Andy and Renee said that Billy Ray needed an ass-whippin'.
This is a family that isn't gonna take crap from you.
They're gonna fight back.
Melba says the alleged abuse against his child
was the last straw.
And the family decided to pay Billy Ray a visit that same night.
Belba advised that when they drove over there they parked on the side of the
road. She went and knocked on the door and Connie answered the door. Billy Ray came out and started cussing her.
And that's when Andy struck Billy Ray with the stick.
She also told us she saw Jotis cut Billy's throat
when he was on the porch.
Melba helps Connie get the children over She also told us she saw Jotis cut Billy's throat when he was on the porch.
Melba helps Connie get the children over to Johnny's house,
and then she leaves with Jotis, Renee, and Andy,
and the vehicle goes back to Greenacres.
She said that she went to bed around 11.30 p.m. and she didn't get up till 9 AM.
Renee and Andy had went back to Connie's that morning, and when they came back,
they told her that Billy Ray was dead.
With Melba's statement,
investigators now have three different versions
of what took place the night of the murders.
Renee stated she had been with Andy the previous evening and hadn't seen Billy Ray all day.
Connie told us she was in the bedroom asleep and that Billy Ray had answered the door,
when in fact her mother Melba now states that Connie answered the door at
1030 at night. Detective Merritt and I both believed that Connie had some type
of involvement in this incident. While Melba is being questioned, Andy's
interview is taking place in another room. Andy waives his rights and wishes to speak to us.
Andy Neely was a very kind of laid-back kid.
He didn't have a record of assaulting people
or anything like that.
Andy tells them that after listening to Connie's
tales of abuse earlier in the day,
he went to her trailer with his mom, Jotis and Renee around 10.30 that night
to deliver a beatdown on Billy Ray.
Andy brought a special weapon along, one he had made himself.
Andy said that there are two weapons. There was a large kitchen knife and a stick that was, I would say, four feet long.
It was carved with Neely power. It's something that Andy had made when he was younger.
Andy advised that when they got there, that Melba and Renee knocked on the door while him and Jodas kind of hid in the shadows.
Connie answered when Connie called Billy Ray to the door. The two men jumped out
and went after him and all that was part of the plan.
Andy advised that he struck Billy Ray in the head with the large stick that he had.
After Billy Ray dropped to the porch, Andy advised that Jotis jumped up and cut Billy Ray's throat.
Andy claims the plan had only been to beat up Billy Ray,
and Jotis' escalation came as a surprise to everyone.
But investigators aren't buying it.
We don't know when it switched over from beating him up to killing him,
but the knife, which was a large kitchen knife, very long, they brought with them.
So it seems all that was part of the plan.
What Andy is telling us is matching up with what Melba said and the physical evidence.
What we saw based on the blood spatter and where the blood pooling and all took place. As for Ronnie McDowell, Andy says he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Ronnie McDowell wasn't supposed to be there.
He had just been forced from his own home because of a domestic violence investigation,
and he couldn't stay there.
So he went to stay with his friend, Billy Ray.
With the commotion going and on, Ronnie McDowell
awakens from the couch and goes to the door
to see what's going on.
And he tells him, this doesn't concern you.
And Ronnie tries to intervene.
They had to deal with a witness that they hadn't expected.
An altercation starts to occur.
Ronnie turns around and runs and goes to the right, down to the bathroom.
Jotis and Andy give chase and proceed to beat and stab Ronnie. Meanwhile, Andy tells them even with his throat cut, Billy Ray was still alive and trying
to get to a gun he kept in his bedroom.
Billy Ray is able to drag himself into the living room where he is bleeding profusely, somehow gets to the bedroom and Andy alleged
him and Jodis beaten staff Billy Ray in the bedroom. enough to place both Andy and his mother Melba under arrest.
And based on their statements, investigators also obtain arrest warrants for Renee Young and Jotis
Washington.
But when authorities return to Jotis' house, they find it empty.
Jotis and Renee, they were not at the residence.
They were on the run.
While the search is underway for Renee and Jotis,
detectives take another look at Connie.
First she tells Johnny the false story
that was passed on to 911.
Then she told us it was her brother.
She didn't tell us that she answered the door.
She was looking like a liar.
We just didn't have enough to charge her
because none of them had really stated that Connie was in on it.
Just hours later, investigators get a break. Renee is located at a house in Tabor City
and placed under arrest.
Investigators are eager to hear if Renee has changed her tune
in light of her mother and brother's arrests.
Renee was interviewed again
after she was given her Miranda rights,
where she waived her rights and decided to speak with us.
At that point, Renee really wanted to look at saving herself.
She pretty much gave up the whole plot.
Coming up, a stark confession leads detectives to a crude murder weapon.
The Neely power stick was thrown out
by the side of the road.
And will Connie's dark secrets finally be exposed?
Billy Ray and Connie did have a volatile relationship.
On July 23, 2000, two days after the vicious attack that killed Billy Ray Brown and his friend Ronnie McDowell, Melba Neely, her son Andy and daughter Renee are in police custody.
Melba's boyfriend, Jotis Washington, is still at large.
According to Melba and Andy, the plan was just to beat him up,
but Jotis Washington got in there
and it switched over from beating him up to killing him.
However, when investigators sit down with Renee following
her arrest, she changes her story again.
But this time, investigators suspect they're getting
a little closer to the truth.
Renee advised that all four of them, Melba, her, Jodis,
and Andy,
all went to the residence because Billy needed to be killed.
She said they had a basic plan, which was that they would go over to the house
and kill him there.
We found Renee's story to be the most forthcoming because you can't help but know
that a murder's gonna happen when one of the people has a knife.
That gives us the premeditation involved for all four to drive all the way over there after that statement, knowing exactly what was going to happen.
The results of forensic testing at the crime scene roll in, and they're damning.
We found fingerprints in the getaway vehicle that was used for Melba, Renee, Jotis, and
Andy to come to the house.
But the only complete match was Jodis Washington. Hours after Renee's statement, Jodis Washington walks into the Columbus County Sheriff's
Station and turns himself in.
Jodis knew that we had everybody else in the family in custody and just went ahead and
turned himself in. Jotiss invoked his right to remain silent
and never spoke with us.
The rest of the Neely clan reels from news of the arrests.
I was devastated.
I didn't see how that could have came about
or how they're saying my brother is responsible for it.
I went and visited each one of them. They were all full of regret.
No matter if I asked, tell me what happened, at that point, their state of mind was protecting and defending one another.
They wouldn't give me any details or why even.
They wouldn't give me any details or why even.
Meanwhile, investigators look into Connie's allegations of abuse.
What we know about Connie and Billy's relationship, we mostly got from Connie. And for what it's worth, she said that there was abuse going on there.
The children never complained of anything.
We didn't have independent, no bruises,
no police reports or anything like that.
However, friends of the family tell investigators
that Billy Ray and Connie did have a volatile relationship.
Connie's relationship with Billy Ray,
there had been some heavy drinking.
As far as Billy Ray was concerned,
Connie knew that she had children to take care of
and that she had duties and that she couldn't completely
let herself go.
But no matter how hard they look,
they find nothing to link Connie to the murders.
As far as thinking that Connie has some involvement, sure, that's what we thought.
But we didn't have any evidence that we could actually use to prove that or to establish
probable cause because nobody else had implicated her.
Seemingly in the clear, Connie goes about her business.
I didn't believe her participating with any of it. The police, they were really pointing the finger at her.
And so I wanted to protect her.
She had the kids.
When I got my own place,
she moved in with us, her and the boys.
As prosecutors and investigators prepare for four murder trials,
Renee's attorneys and prosecutors reach a plea deal.
There were only five living adults that knew what happened that day.
There wasn't enough to prove our case without statements
from at least some of them.
We had to make a deal with someone.
Renee was most forthcoming.
She was obviously the one that was most co-authored.
Renee also agrees to help in the hunt for the murder weapon.
At the scene, we never located a stick or any knives.
On July 6th, we had signed Renee out of the detention center.
She advised that she would assist us in locating the stick
that was used in the crime and the knife.
Renee tells investigators the weapons were disposed of
on the ride home from the crime scene.
The Neely power stick was thrown out by the side of the road.
We were able to locate the stick off the side of the road.
The stick was actually broken half, and you could see with the eye blood spatter on the stick.
They are unable to locate the knife, but the discovery of the Neely stick will strengthen
the prosecution's case against the four accused.
The plea agreement with Renee was she had to testify truthfully in all the trials arising from the facts of the murder.
On August 7, 2001, over a year since Billy Ray and Ronnie McDowell's murders,
Renee finally confirms what law enforcement has suspected all along.
She told us that Connie was the reason that it happened.
She's the ones that asked him to do something
about Billy Ray.
According to Renee, Connie knew the plan
when she opened the door.
The plan was to kill Billy Ray.
The attack was planned for that night.
Renee and Jotis, at one point, did draw out
a map of Billy Ray's house, more so for planning the attack
than for anything else.
Connie knew it was coming, and she was acting
a part of it to lure Billy Ray to the door.
Even though Jotis wasn't family, Renee
alleges he was eager to help.
Renee told us that Jodis had said,
I never knife someone.
All I know is I like to knife someone,
so I'm gonna use a knife.
Renee confirms that killing Ronnie McDowell
was never part of the plan.
Ronnie McDowell was at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Connie, she didn't do anything to say, stop, no, this isn't good night,
there's somebody else here. She let it go on knowing that Ronnie was there and we
probably have to be disposed of as well. I think Renee had remorse and probably also, well, why am I paying for this?
He was your husband.
You wanted this done.
With Renee's statement, investigators finally have enough to obtain a warrant for Connie's
arrest. The next day, on August 8th, investigators inform Connie that she must turn herself in.
Her and the boys, they were all living with me.
And we signed notarized statements giving me custody to take the babies to the hospital for emergencies and everything like that.
And get them in school. Then I drove her there, and I remember the arresting officers telling her that, um,
they were charging her with double homicide.
Coming up, a family's once united front splinters in the courtroom.
Renee Neely is the star witness.
And Connie fights back.
She wouldn't have done this in her own home
with her children there.
MUSIC
Almost a year after the murders of Billy Ray Brown
and his friend Ronnie McDowell,
Billy Ray's wife Connie Brown is taken into custody.
Because she was present at the scene
and aiding and abetting her family and doing it,
she was charged as a principal in murder.
In October 2001, Connie's brother Andy Neely
appears before a judge.
I can write down that Andy did not want to testify
against his family, he wasn't willing to cooperate.
He ultimately pled guilty and received his life sentence.
A month later, Melba and Jodis go on trial.
Renee Neely is the star witness testifying
against both Jodis and Melba.
The jury found Melba guilty
and sentenced her to 35 years.
Jodis Washington was found not guilty
by the jury and released.
Howell, they came to that conclusion,
but all their attorney kept yelling about,
his fingerprint was there before, it was there before, he doesn't know anything about it, he was asleep.
His attorney basically said that Renee was lying.
Renee was the primary way we had to prove Jodis' involvement other than showing that they were associates.
Because they never recovered the knife, he convinced the jury that Renee lied about him being present.
She was trying to push the blame outside the family.
In the eyes of the law, Jodis is completely innocent of these crimes.
Almost a year later, on June 18, 2002, 27-year-old Connie Brown finally stands trial for murder.
We wanted the jury to know that Connie was in on this from the beginning.
That she helped plan it, she was the driving force behind it,
and that came from Renee, her sister's testimony.
Throughout the trial, Connie maintains her innocence.
Connie Brown's defense tried to argue that she wouldn't have done this in her own home with her children there,
but our argument was the plan at the beginning was that it was going to happen on the porch.
And the children were inside asleep.
I don't think it was ever meant to come back into the house like it did.
She opened the door and got Billy Ray to come to the door for the attack to take place.
So she was part of the planning and part of the execution.
Our theory of the case was that Connie just wanted to be rid of Billy Ray.
It seems mostly this is a crime to get rid of an inconvenient husband.
On September 19, 2002, the jury convenes.
That same day, they reach a verdict.
On September 2002, Connie Brown is found guilty and sentenced to life in prison for her involvement
in the deaths of her husband, Billy Ray Brown, and his friend, Ronnie McDowell.
I think it's important for people to know that this family was not your typical family.
They are extremely close-knit.
They truly thought that they could help Connie in this situation.
They thought they were doing her a favor.
Instead, they left a wave of destruction in their wake.
It destroyed that family.
There was a mother and a father and three children.
And the father was dead and the mother went off to prison.
Ronnie Porfella was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
I never would have thought that Connie was capable guiding them,
or even allowing that
to happen to the magnitude that it did.
It could have been prevented just by her leaving Billy.
Melba Neely is currently serving 35 years at Leith Correctional Institution.
She will be 77 years old by the time of her projected release.
As a result of her cooperation,
Renee Young was sentenced to 30 years and is serving out her sentence at Leith Correctional
Institution. Andy Neely is serving life without parole at Kirkland Correctional Institution.
Connie Brown is serving life without parole at Leith Correctional Institution.
In the early hours of December 4th, 2024, CEO Brian Thompson stepped out onto the streets of Midtown Manhattan.
This assailant pulls out a weapon and starts firing at him.
We're talking about the CEO of the biggest private health insurance corporation in the
world.
And the suspect has been identified as Luigi Nicholas
mangioni became one of the most divisive figures in modern
criminal history was targeted premeditated in Minnesota
terror. I'm Jesse Weber host of Luigi produced by law and
crime and twist this is more than a true crime investigation
we explore a uniquely American moment
that could change the country forever.
He's awoken the people to a true issue.
Happy Independence Day!
Finally, maybe this would lead rich and powerful people
to acknowledge the barbaric nature
of our healthcare system.
Listen to Law and Crime's Luigi exclusively on Wondery+.
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or Apple podcasts.