Unseen - The Girl No One Believed: The Sleepover Slayer Murder | The Case of Brooke Sutton & Clarence Elkins | UNSEEN
Episode Date: April 21, 2026https://shopify.com/unseen - "I took the butt and put it into my bible" - On June 7th, 1998 at 6:50am, a little girl, badly injured and covered in blood, knocks frantically on her neighbor’s doo...r in Barberton, Ohio. 6-year-old Brooke Sutton has just found her grandmother, Judith, dead on the living room floor, and even more chillingly, she saw the man who did it. Within hours, cops pin the crime on Brooke’s uncle, Clarence Elkins, and—despite his airtight alibi—he’s sentenced to life in prison for the crime. But, with an innocent man in prison, the real killer is getting away. It’s now up to Melinda Elkins, Clarence’s wife and Judith’s daughter, to go up against the prosecutors, police, and even her own family to help Brooke find the truth and prove Clarence’s innocence, once and for all. - Writer, director & editor: Alexandre Gendron Researcher: Amanda Hein Voiceover: Will Akana Producer: Salim Sader Assistant editor: Hannah Alicbusan Distribution coordinator: Kat Gardilcic - Getty Images “Conviction: The True Story of Clarence Elkins”: Kurtis Productions, 2008. “What the Girl Saw” American Justice: A&E Networks, 2003. “All Butt Certain” Forensic Files: Content Partners, LLC, 2008. “Never a Doubt” Murder She Solved: True Crime: Force Four Entertainment, 2013. “Star Witness” 48 Hours: CBS News, 2003. “Friends and Neighbors” Cold Blood: ITV Studios, 2009. “Shadow of Doubt” I Didn’t Do It: Lively Crime 2 Inc. for Crime & Investigation Network, 2012. “Melinda Elkins” I Solved a Murder: A&E Television Networks, 2013 “Wrongly convicted man snags inmate's cigarette butt to clear his name” True Crime News, 2019. “6 Year Old Daughter Solves The Grandma's Horrifying Murder” M7 Crime Storytime, 2025. “Clarence Elkins undergoes PTSD procedure” FOX 8 News Cleveland, 2017. “Decades-old secret adoptions solved by modern DNA for Akron area families” WKYC Studios, 2018. “Georgia’s “Hicks Babies” adoptees search for answers” CBS News, 2014. “The Maury Povich Show” NBC Universal Syndication Studios, 1998. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Do you think it was Uncle Clarence?
At first, yeah.
At first, yeah.
But do you think so today?
No.
This is 10-year-old Brooke Sutton.
Four years before this footage was recorded,
Brooke was sleeping at her grandmother's house
when she witnessed something she should have never seen.
Do you recognize that picture?
Who's in that picture?
A guy.
On June 7, 1998, Brooke's young life takes a turn for the worse
when an ordinary night at her grandmother's house turns into a living nightmare.
Okay. Can you tell us what happened that night?
I woke up in the middle of the night because I heard someone screaming.
Barely awake, the little girl rushes to help her grandmother,
only to end up face to face with a killer.
I was like, I was scared because she was a guy and I was little.
Okay.
He hit me with something.
or take me or something.
Havily injured and traumatized, Brooke is then manipulated into accusing her own uncle of the attack.
I know this isn't coming from her.
This child is like one of my own children.
Do you think today that Uncle Clarence was the same man you saw in the kitchen that night with your grandma?
No.
But it's a little late to reveal the truth.
Brooke's uncle has already spent three years in prison at this point.
And even if his wife, Melinda, can prove he's innocent, the police refuse to listen to her.
Yes, I am his wife. And yes, I know that some women do stand up for their man and lie for them.
But you're missing the biggest point here. That was my mother. And I want the person who did this
to pay. While Clarence sits behind bars, the real killer is still out there. To set things right,
Brooke and Melinda will have to retrace what happened that night, build up their own investigation,
and uncover the truth themselves.
What do you want to happen next?
I want my Uncle Clarence to get out of jail,
and I want the man who killed my grandma to be punished.
June 7, 1998, Brooke and her grandmother Judith are on their way home from a cousin's
birthday party. Brooke is Judith's only granddaughter, so the 58-year-old is especially fond of her.
My name is Brooke Sutton. On June 7, 1998, I was 6, and I just finished
kindergarten. That night, I ended up staying the night at my grandma's house. My grandma Judy
was like my best friend. The pair has dinner, watches some cartoons, and soon enough,
it's time for Brooke to go to bed. Judith gives her bedroom to her granddaughter. She will sleep
on the living room couch. I took a bath and I got dressed in her nightgown and then she
tucked me into bed and then I went to sleep. A few hours later, in the middle of the night,
Brooke wakes up to the sound of screams.
She follows them to the kitchen and walks straight into a scene she should have never witnessed.
So I ran back to my grandma's room because I was scared.
He heard me, run back to her room and hit me or knocks me out.
Someone has broken into the house and violently assaulted Judith.
After knocking Judith unconscious, the man does the same to the six-year-old.
When Brooke regains consciousness, she doesn't understand what has happened.
There's blood everywhere, and she can only see out of one eye.
She stumbles out of bed and returns to the living room where she finds Judith lying face down.
Brooke tries to wake her up to no avail.
She then starts looking for the phone to call for help.
After what feels like forever, she finally finds it outside, discarded in the bushes,
panicked and disoriented.
She can't remember the police's number.
Instead, she leaves a voicemail at her friend's house, the only number she knows.
When Brooke puts the phone down, she notices it's covered in blood.
Confused, she reaches for the side of her face and is shocked to realize she's bleeding.
Panicked, the six-year-old runs down the street to look for help until she reaches a neighbor's house.
25-year-old single mother of three, Tanya Brazil, answers the door.
She recognizes the little girl immediately.
Her own daughters are some of Brooke's best friends.
She was crying, like, I don't know, she just was a mess.
She definitely looked like she was in pain.
My mom's like, oh, yes, yes, it was him, it was him.
Like, kind of like putting that in her mind, that it was her uncle.
Brooks came to my door, she said, please help me.
My grandma was dead.
My uncle Clarence killed my grandma.
My uncle clearance killed my grandma.
I don't have no reason to lie about it.
And Tanya's behavior with Brooke only gets stranger from there.
The six-year-old is clearly terrified.
Yet Tanya refuses to call the police.
She doesn't even tend to the child's injuries.
Instead, she tells Brooke to wait outside while she gets her own children ready for school.
And so, the little girl waits, alone, for nearly an hour.
Eventually, Tanya drives her back to her mother's house, but when they arrive, the woman
starts speaking on Brooke's behalf.
And suddenly, the story of a traumatized child who only ever saw a shadow in the dark
turns into a full-blown accusation.
The neighbor, she kind of told everybody that I told her that it was my uncle.
and everyone was questioning me and I guess I kind of was agreeing with it.
While this was happening, no investigator ever took the time to question any of Tanya's
daughters about what they witnessed that morning.
I just feel like if someone would have came to us first, stuff would have been different with
the Elkins case. Minutes after Brooke arrives at the hospital, investigators burst into the
intensive care unit. She tells them she didn't see who did it, but this isn't enough for them.
They press her further, and in Brooke's young, exhausted mind, the only way to make them stop
is seemingly to repeat what she heard from her neighbor. But even then, the six-year-old is careful
with her words. She doesn't outright say it was Clarence, but that the man might look like her
uncle, but that's all the police need. Less than an hour after Brooke arrives at the hospital,
officers raid her uncle's house. And I remember Clarence going out the back door, and I seen him cross
the window and he kind of had his hands up like, you know, like what's going on?
They were telling me to put my hands in air and turn around and walk slowly backwards.
Clarence, shocked and confused, doesn't carry out the order and things quickly escalate.
And then I've seen two or three police officers running down the hill of our backyard
in like helmets and vests and guns and of course, you know, I'm, what the heck is going on here?
Melinda runs outside, but the police intercept her before she can reach Clarence.
They inform her that he's under arrest for the murder of Judith Johnson, Melinda's own mother.
I screamed, you know, because I just couldn't believe what they were telling me.
My uncle was on the phone and he said, yes, she's dead, and Brooke is saying that it was Clarence.
And so I went to the police station. They tried to put words at my mind.
saying, why I did this and why I done that?
And I just could not answer one question they had.
The police then ransack Melinda and Clarence's home.
They're looking for evidence, but leave empty-handed.
In the days following the arrest, they never interview anyone except Brooke and totally dismiss Melinda,
assuming that whatever Clarence might have done, she had to be in on it.
Clarence was at home with me and our sons at the time of the murder.
Not even one time did I ever, ever feel that Clarence could have done it.
And I said to them, yes, I am his wife.
And yes, I know that some women do stand up for their man and lie for them.
But you're missing the biggest point here.
That was my mother.
And I want the person who did this to pay.
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Following the botched investigation, authorities quickly brought Clarence before a judge.
During Clarence's arraignment, they brought him in in handcuffs and leg shackles.
He was formally charged with aggravated murder for the murder of my mother, three counts of
one count against my mother, two counts against my niece, aggravated assault for the
brutal attack on my niece.
He was going to be facing the death penalty.
The proceedings would last 11 months.
In that time, Melinda would lose everything, her job, her house, but worst of all, her family.
Even her young sons, Clarence Jr. and Brandon notice it.
At the funeral home, I remember walking in and it was just my brother, myself, and my mom,
you know, and we're all, we were just alone.
and everybody was staring at us.
The tension you could have cut it with a knife.
This isn't the first time Melinda has felt estranged from her own family.
Years ago, her mother revealed a secret that completely shifted their perspective towards her.
My mom took me for a car ride and just stopped and proceeded to tell me that even though she loved me,
she was not my real mom and that I had come from a clinic in Georgia.
Not just any clinic.
run by infamous baby smuggler, Dr. Thomas Hicks. He would tell mothers that their baby died
during delivery, when in reality the child had already been sold to someone else without the mother's
knowledge. Melinda was one of these babies, and Judith adopted her unaware of what was really
going on. Years later, when the truth finally resurfaced, the two went on a mission to find
Melinda's biological parents, even appearing together on the Mari show mere weeks before
Judas' murder.
Give us a picture of exactly what happened.
So you went down to this clinic in Georgia.
Yes.
And what happened?
We walked in and they, we paid, like I said, $1,000 for the mother's key.
That's what we were told.
So then they wrote out the birth certificate.
They did not write it out in the mother's name.
They wrote it out in my name.
If anything, the truth about Melinda's past only strengthens her resolve.
This may not have been her biological mother, but she was her mother in every way that mattered,
and Melinda is determined to get justice for her, even if it means turning against her own family.
My mother was buried on June 12th. I remember sitting at her graveside with my sons and making
that vow to her that I would find out who did it. If it took me the rest of my life, I was going to
find out who did that to her. And I didn't take that vow lightly.
I meant what I said.
Justice for Judith is Melinda's ultimate goal, and to get there, she'll first need to prove
her husband's innocence and uncover what really happened to Brooke that night.
But at this point, putting her faith in the system feels like her only option, although it's
a decision she quickly comes to regret.
We hired what we thought were, you know, good attorneys.
The trial was a joke.
There was no DNA testing done.
There's no forensic evidence that links him to this crime.
The attorneys have kept Melinda in the dark.
By the time she realizes how unprepared they really are, it's too late.
The prosecution is calling Brooke to the stand.
They asked me to point out the killer and I turned around and I pointed at my Uncle Clarence.
It wasn't really me saying it.
It was just everybody assuming it.
Clarence is powerless.
He can only look up at his niece in disbelief.
You know, the only thing I could think of was mistaken identity or persuaded by someone or coached.
I know this isn't coming from her.
This child is like one of my own children.
The jury hears Brooke's desperate call for help, recorded on her friend's answering machine
and sees the horrific pictures of the aftermath of the attack.
The final blow comes from a familiar face, Judith's not so helpful neighbor, Tanya Brazil.
She became Tanya Brazel, the woman two doors down.
the key witness against Clarence Elkins in addition to the little girl because her
testimony at trial was when the little girl knocked at my door she was screaming over and
over again it was my uncle Clarence it was my uncle Clarence I'm positive as my Uncle Clarence
and so you actually had an adult sort of corroborating and backing up this weak testimony
from the six-year-old girl. I just kept going back to that and I kept why would somebody do that
what would be the reason what are they is there something they're trying to hide.
After deliberation the jury returns with the verdict Clarence is acquitted of aggravated murder and
cleared of the death penalty. Heavy sighs of relief resonate from Melinda and their sons,
but the judge isn't done yet. For the remaining charges, the and murder of Judith,
plus two counts of assault involving Brooke, Clarence, is found guilty. Melinda breaks down crying
as he sentenced to two life sentences without parole. And it was the most excruciating
feeling when he looked at me and I looked at him and he put his head down on the table.
I thought it was going to die.
I couldn't believe it.
And they stood him up, and they removed him from the courtroom, and I told him that I loved him.
And he looked back at me and he said, I love you.
And I think there was a picture of that, what I was feeling, because I just couldn't believe it.
Absolutely couldn't believe it.
Clarence is sent to one of Ohio's most notorious maximum security prisons, Malice
Linda knows her husband is innocent, but nobody's listening.
It becomes increasingly clear to her that if she wants the case solved,
she'll have to take matters into her own hands.
After that, my whole thought process changed.
I no longer trusted the justice system.
I no longer trusted the police.
And I said to myself, I am going to figure this out.
I had to figure this out.
I had no experience investigating a homicide, obviously, but anyone could have done a lot better than what Barberton Police Department did.
Melinda starts watching true crime shows and learns more about forensic science and how DNA can help pinpoint a suspect.
For the first time, she sees a path forward.
Using her local library and the early internet, she begins building a list of potential suspects in the area who have committed crimes similar to the attack on Judith.
The list quickly grows past 100 names, and one by one, she sets out to collect each of these
suspects' DNA, no matter how.
I would show up where they were frequenting and strike up a conversation.
I would flirt, talk, seem interested in them, just so that I could gather their DNA.
I had cigarette butts.
I had hair.
I had beer bottle.
Ultimately, my freezer looked like a laboratory.
Now, for over three years, Melinda has lived a double life.
By day, she works two jobs to support her family.
By night, she becomes an investigator, quietly collecting evidence.
But her efforts don't go unnoticed.
Barberton is small, and Word travels fast.
Before long, people start recognizing her.
The closer she gets to the truth, the more noticeable she becomes.
Eventually, the attention forces her to make a choice.
For the safety of her sons, Melinda is forced to pause her investigation.
I was afraid that the person that had murdered my grandmother was going to catch on to what
she was trying to do and hurt her as well.
My brother and I, we always slept with knives under our pillows.
We were just in fear of somebody coming to harm us because we were trying to find them.
Not only is the investigation becoming dangerous, but it's also draining what little money
Melinda has. In the early 2000s, a single DNA test could cost up to $800, and with nearly 100
samples on her list, she needs a different strategy. So, she goes back to the beginning.
The facts are that only one person was actually there that night, Brooke. But meeting the now 10-year-old
would also mean confronting someone Melinda has long avoided. She has not spoken to her sister,
April, Brooke's mother, in almost four years.
After Clarence got convicted, we just tried to go on with our lives.
but it was hard. My mom wasn't there. Brooke had nightmares and I didn't talk to my sister
anymore. I couldn't see my nephews. Just our entire family was ripped apart.
Melinda drives up to April's place in Barberton, but once at her door, she freezes.
A rush of emotion hits her, but she knows she has to do this. Gathering up her courage,
she knocks. April's husband opens the door. Melinda sees her sister at the other end of the room
with her back turned.
For a moment,
she's convinced April
won't even look at her.
Melinda wants to leave.
Just as she's about to step away,
April turns around.
She's crying.
Slowly,
she walks toward her sister,
arms outstretched.
We hugged for like 10 minutes,
I think.
I never thought
that my sister and I
would ever talk again.
When we hugged,
it was like all that pain
had just, you know,
melted away.
I knew that that was
the moment
that we could
actually sit down and talk. It was a hard moment for Brooke because she didn't know how to react.
The reunion is emotional. Melinda, April, and Brooke have a lot of catching up to do. But Melinda
remains focused. She needs to ask Brooke a few questions. She starts with the most important one.
Is she still certain it was Uncle Clarence she saw that night? Without hesitation, the 10-year-old
answers that she was never certain, shattering both women's entire understanding.
understanding of the case.
April is speechless.
For the first time, she is forced to reconsider her daughter's testimony, and this is all
Melinda needs to get started.
She pulls an inch thick folder from her bag and lays it out on April's kitchen table.
In a single afternoon, she sums up three and a half years of investigation to her sister.
Gradually, April realizes she may have made a terrible mistake.
At first I thought she was just insane, but then I stopped and
I listened to her and some things really made me think maybe we were wrong because there really wasn't any physical evidence against Clarence.
A few weeks later, Brooke decides to recant her testimony.
Now that she's a little older, she understands she had been influenced by the prosecutor, the police, and her neighbor.
At only 10 years old, she takes it upon herself to clear her uncle's name in the hopes that her recantation would allow him a second chance at a trial.
Why did you say it was Uncle Clarence?
Because it looked like him.
It looked like him.
Do you think it was Uncle Clarence?
At first, yeah.
At first, yeah.
But do you think so today?
No.
The reason I'm here today is to support my Uncle Clarence and my grandma.
I want everyone to understand that I was not told to say that it was someone else.
Another year passes, and in a cruel twist of fate, the prosecutor now claims,
the adults around Brooke have influenced her recantation. However, he never applied that same logic
to her original testimony during the trial five years earlier. The other side would intend that
she's now being coached. Oh, absolutely. It is outrageous what they have done to this child.
Trust me, based on the evidence and based on everything I know, he did it.
A strange argument to make in a case without any physical evidence, the entire thing
arrested on a fragile testimony of an impressionable six-year-old, but by chance, that shaky
foundation catches the attention of a non-profit organization dedicated to defending the wrongly
convicted.
I'm Mark Godsey.
I'm a law professor here at the University of Cincinnati College of Law and director of the
Ohio Innocence Project.
Our mission is to look at old cases where the inmates have steadfastly maintained their
innocence from the beginning to the end and see if there's some sort of evidence, new
evidence that might be able to shed light on it.
I was in my office when Melinda called the first time.
She was calm and rational and she knew the facts.
She was immediately talking about DNA.
So it was more like talking to a lawyer or an investigator.
Between 1998 and 2004, DNA testing had evolved from a technology in its infancy into a proper science.
Godzi believes modern testing could yield usable results from the original swabs.
He also agrees to test several of the samples Melinda has
collected during her investigation. If they can produce a match, the prosecutor would be forced to
grant Clarence a new trial. When the results come back, none of the samples linked Clarence or
any of Melinda's suspects to the crime. This is good news. It further confirms that Clarence had
nothing to do with the attack, but it also means Melinda's entire investigation has led to nowhere.
For years, she had tracked down dozens of potential suspects, sometimes putting her own life on the
line, all for nothing, and her failure does not go and noticed.
The driving force behind all this is Melinda Elkins, who just likes to be the center
of attention.
Prosecutors, you know, they were kind of validating their thoughts of me in the media.
It's like, see, we told you, she's crazy.
But Melinda refuses to back down.
With the help of Ganzi and her sister April, she files a motion for a new trial.
Citing Brooks' recantation and the DNA results, they argue that Clarence's conviction cannot
stand when nothing ties him to the crime. Yet, to the surprise of everyone involved, the motion is
denied. I just couldn't believe this. The DNA doesn't match Clarence. Then that means it had to
have been someone else. What more do they want? Do they want us to serve them who did this
on a silver platter to them? Well, okay then, that's what we'll do. By now, Clarence has spent
nearly seven years behind bars. And if the man who killed Judith is truly as dangerous as Melinda
Believes there's a real chance he has already been arrested for some other crime.
If that's the case, Clarence might be closer to the truth than anyone else.
From that point on, he becomes Melinda's inside man, quietly observing the inmates around
him while she continues her investigation on the outside.
This is not about myself.
It's for my mother-in-law and my niece.
I want justice for everyone and a person.
that committed this crime, be held accountable.
As part of her new approach, Melinda starts looking for recent convictions
that fit the profile she had established at the beginning of her investigation.
One day, on the front page of a local paper,
she reads about the arrest of another violent predator.
But what throws her off is a name she recognizes at the bottom of the article,
Tanya Brazil.
Although Melinda hasn't seen that name in many years,
she could never forget the woman who refused to help her injured.
niece after the attack and who had testified against her innocent husband back in 1999.
She was the person that my niece went to that morning for help and had always been a red flag
for me because this particular woman did not call the police, did not call an ambulance
for my niece, did not even let my niece in the house, but proceeded to leave her on the porch
for 45 minutes before she put her in her car to take her to my sister's house.
The offender named Earl Mann happens to be Tanya Brazil's long-term boyfriend and was
just found guilty of molesting their children, Selena, Tasha, and Misty. When Melinda starts digging
deeper, she makes another discovery. Earl Mann is a repeat offender who had been arrested
at different points in time for breaking into houses and violently assaulting both women and children,
the same kind of crimes committed the night Judith was murdered.
On top of that, Earl Mann had been released from jail on June 5th, 1998,
two days before the attack.
He had been seen with Tanya later that same day, following Clarence's arrest.
Well, I don't care what they say, I know that I'm telling the truth, so I don't care what
anybody thinks.
Brooks came to my door, she said, please help me.
I was not protecting Earl. I don't have no reason to lie about it.
God was there with me and God knows that I did right.
In another strange set of coincidences, out of 33 prisons across Ohio and 21 pods split
between three blocks at Mansfield Correctional Facility, Earl Mann and Clarence had less than
a 1% chance of being incarcerated together, and yet the two end up three cells apart.
Yeah, Earl Mann was a really bad person, and lo and behold he was in the same block as I was.
had committed these terrible crimes against these children. He fit the profile. And now I started
to wonder, why is this guy following me?
If Earl Mann is the culprit, he would have certainly heard of Clarence's case, which has made
headlines multiple times over the years. Melinda and her sons can't help but fear for him,
just as they once feared for themselves.
I was nervous for my dad's sake. You know, I didn't know. I didn't know.
know what Earl Mann knew that we did, was concerned for my dad's safety.
And Clarence Jr. has every reason to be afraid.
One afternoon, as the inmates are out in the yard, his father is cornered by Earl Mann and
another prisoner.
We're sitting on a little table.
Earl Man started to make small talk with me.
Man struck another inmate with a lock and a sock right in front of me.
I couldn't believe what I seen.
In shock, Clarence immediately walks away and keeps
his distance from Earl Mann after that, but Melinda makes him understand that there's no way around
it. He's the only one with access to the suspect, and gathering a DNA sample from him is the only
way they can ever prove his involvement. Earl Mann is a skinhead and keeps his head shaven,
so Clarence's only option is to steal something from him. For months, he stalks him from afar,
waiting for an opportunity. Just one day in the summer of 2005, I've seen Earl Mann putting a cigarette
but down on makeshift ash tree.
I got some clean tissue paper and picked the cigarette butt out of the makeshift ash trade.
Then he put that evidence into his Bible in order to flatten it and hide it
so that he could send it out at some point for DNA testing.
What's that even more amazing is that a couple of days after Earl Mann dropped his cigarette butt
and Clarence Elkins picked it up, Earl Mann was transferred to another prison.
So if Clarence had not been able to pick up that cigarette butt on that day, that would have been the end of it.
Clarence gets the sample to Melinda, who then sends it to the lab.
Godzi makes sure the tests are run as soon as possible.
Two days later, the results are in.
And it came back and Earl Mann's DNA matched the DNA from the crime scene.
I know of no other case where the wrongfully convicted person himself is the one that participated as his own detective.
Even after everything Melinda and Clarence have uncovered, the judge rejects their motion yet again, left with no choice.
Godsey takes the case one step higher and presents their findings to Ohio's Attorney General.
Now pressured by the state, the judge is forced to reconsider.
And two months later, Melinda finally has good news for her husband.
Hey Clarence, what are you doing, honey?
You okay?
You ready to come home?
Then get your stuff packed, honey, because you're coming home today.
Don't worry, I won't get your stuff.
Hey, Clarence.
Thank God.
Thank God.
I'm very proud of everyone to step forward on my behalf for justice.
What are you going to do?
I don't know.
I don't know.
One day at a time, slow and easy, putting my life back together with my family.
The prosecution against Earl Mann lasts another three years.
During that time, the trauma shared by Melinda, Clarence, and Brooke reaches its breaking point.
The couple, finally reunited after seven years, end up getting a divorce in 2006.
All the while, Brooke faces her own predicament.
What began as chronic nightmares during childhood grew into complex PTSD during adolescence,
and she struggles to let go of the guilt she still carries over what happened to Clarence.
But as August 18, 2008 approaches, one important moment lies ahead.
For the first time, Melinda, Clarence, and Brooke will finally be able to address Earl
directly.
He destroyed my family.
And today, you're not taking no more.
It's not so kind of words.
To forgive you, this is a difficult thing.
It's mercy.
What Donton spoke about hell as being frozen ice and its
steps.
And Mr. Man, I can only say I find that there seems to be a death
of a depravity in you that is beyond.
It is beyond understanding.
I hate to say this of anyone.
That you are not fit to be in society with the rest of us and you know her.
With the case finally closed, Melinda turns the page.
She remarries and starts a new life.
Ten years later, in an effort to honor her mother,
she decides to reopen the investigation they had started together back in 1998
to reunite the stolen babies of Hicks Clinic with their biological mothers.
Melinda Dawson is considered the leader of the so-called Hicks babies.
She's also the group's top sleuth and for good reason.
Melinda garnered international acclaim more than a decade ago,
solving her adoptive mother's murder with DNA.
Proof that also exonerated her former husband, Clarence Alkins.
Once again, she's relying on DNA testing,
but this time to steer her and other Hicks babies to their birth parents.
It was a brick wall.
Nobody wanted to help us at all.
But it's not the first time I've faced something like that, and I'm confident I'll eventually solve that case too.
For Clarence, however, the story did not end there.
Adjusting to his new life proved deeply challenging, and the trauma he carried with him made the transition even harder.
Seven years in prison took a debilitating toll on Clarence Alkins.
He was 35 years old, a married father of two when he was wrongfully convicted in 1998 of raping his six-year-old niece and raking and murdering his mother-in-law.
he was confined to a maximum security prison.
It took time, but Clarence eventually got better.
He remarried in 2010 and remains close to Melinda and her family to this day.
Yet, he never forgot Brooke.
When he learned that she still felt responsible for what happened, he took it upon himself
to show her she had nothing to be forgiven for.
He never blamed me.
Clarence never blamed me.
I really would have blamed myself if I were him, because I'd be angry if someone put me in prison
for something that I didn't do.
She was the daughter that I didn't have.
She was just a sweetheart of a child,
and I've never had any resentment towards her.
In the end, Earl Mann was sentenced to 55 years to life
for Judith's murder, but not everyone involved
in the case was held accountable.
His girlfriend, Tanya Brazile,
who pushed Brooke to accuse her own uncle,
never faced any consequences before her death in 2024.
Clarence, however, was eventually able to hold the system
accountable, settling with the state of Ohio and the Barberton police for over $6 million,
even though no amount of money could ever make up for the years he lost.
It's very difficult, very sad at times. It's not like it used to be, but at the same time,
you know, I got to move on. That's our goal is to move on and try to rebuild our lives.
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