Beyond All Repair - Beyond All Repair Ch. 3: Bad Blood
Episode Date: March 14, 2024Sean Correia's credibility is called into question as Sophia Johnson and Shane Correia tell Amory about his role in their upbringing. Amory learns how these three siblings ended up in Washington state... after being raised in New York, and how Sophia became estranged from Shane and their mother, with whom she’d been incredibly close. Sophia finds a new family in the Johnsons — Brad, her husband, and Marlyne and Richard Johnson, Brad’s parents. At the time of the murder, Sophia is newly wedded to Brad and six months pregnant. Marlyne is supposed to go over to Sophia’s house for lunch that day. She doesn’t show, leading Sophia and Brad to check on her, and, ultimately, to her lifeless, nearly unrecognizable body. Sophia denies murdering Marlyne, but suspects Sean’s involvement. If you have questions about the case, the real people at the center of this story, or anything else about this series, we want to hear them. Email beyondallrepairpod@gmail.com with a voice message or written message. Listener note: This episode has descriptions of violence, strong language, and allegations of sexual assault. *** Consider becoming a "BEYOND" member today: This show is made at WBUR, a public radio station, which means we cannot make shows like this without public support. Join our membership program, "BEYOND" here: wbur.org/beyond
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Previously on Beyond All Repair.
Life's in a lot of crimes in my, you know, years as a detective.
But to see this one where this woman was just beaten beyond recognition.
It turned out to be my sister.
I wanted to tear his head off, his body.
Just the blatant lies. Even if she committed murder, I know that I love my sister.
But she needs to also be held accountable if she committed murder.
she needs to also be held accountable if she committed murder.
And I never want my son to ever think that.
Mom, I love you anyway.
That is not the right answer.
That's not the right answer. This is Shane. I am just getting ready to read the psychology report.
Shane Correa is once again recording a voice memo for me.
He's the lawyer in New York City, remember.
And like you'd hope a lawyer would be, Shane is organized.
He's been a thorough record keeper
for pretty much his whole life. It's kept him safe, he says, like a fortress against gaslighting,
helping him believe a life full of unbelievable family events. And Shane has in front of him
right now a document that I'm not sure anyone in his family even knows still exists.
I've read this so many times over the past,
I guess, almost two and a half decades.
Shane is about to reread
a court-ordered psychological evaluation
of the Correa family, his family.
It was done in 1997,
five years before Marlene Johnson was murdered.
Shane was nine years old at the time of this report.
Sophia was 18, twice his age. Sean, his brother Johnson was murdered. Shane was nine years old at the time of this report. Sophia was 18, twice his age.
Sean, his brother, was 14, so in the middle, more or less.
None of the Corayas were in Washington state where the murder occurred yet.
They were all still living in the Bronx, but they were not all living together.
This psyche vow explains a lot.
All right, so I'll just read the reason for referral.
This is in the matter of Coria v. Coria.
Shane's parents, referred to as Mr. and Ms. Coria throughout the report, were getting a divorce.
They had already been separated for a few years.
The kids were separated, too.
The couple's only daughter, Sophia, lives with her mother and Shane.
Mr. Coria expressed hostility toward the two women.
Hostility that, like father, like son, Ms. Correa says was passed down to Sean.
Ms. Correa blames Mr. Correa for Sean's delinquent behavior.
She and Sean got into a battle, and Sean called the police, who sided with the mother.
At that time, Sean went to live with the father and stopped going to school.
According to Ms. Correa, Sean was dealing with drugs.
In relating the story about her son, there was an icy cold quality,
particularly when she stated that Sean cannot come back to her, that he steals from her.
Sean steals, his mother says, but also that he's gotten physical.
Eventually, Sean struck her and she filed for a PINS petition.
A PINS petition, by the way, is in the state of Newark, a person in need of supervision.
If law enforcement hasn't come to intercept your kids, then you try to go to family court and get the court's help.
That PINS petition didn't go anywhere, Shane says. Sean went to go live with
his dad. But Shane, the youngest, he was staying with their mom. And she was there talking to a
psychologist for the state of New York to make sure of it. George Correa, the father of Shane
Correa, me, is petitioning for visitation rights. He states that the mother is pressuring the boy not to visit with him.
This pressure, if that is in fact the right word here,
seems clearly out of concern.
Because, as Sophia told this psychologist,
She believes that the father is responsible
for Sean's antisocial behavior
and that given Shane, the father would accomplish the same.
Thank you, Sophia.
The gratitude Shane feels is because in Coria versus Coria 1997, Mr. Coria wasn't granted visitation rights. Shane credits Sophia and his
mom for that, for protecting him from his dad. Because as he himself told the psychologist,
he stated that he is afraid that he would become like his brother, Sean.
Who is the Sean that Sophia was afraid of Shane becoming?
That Shane was afraid of becoming?
So much so that the Coria family remains divided today.
Physically, emotionally, intentionally.
How do Sean and Sophia, siblings at odds since childhood,
end up accusing each other of murder? I was starting to get an idea.
I'm Anne-Marie Sievertson from WBUR and ZSP Media.
This is Beyond All Repair.
Chapter 3, Bad Blood.
Bad Blood.
Missile Valley?
Thank you, Your Honor.
I stand here on behalf of Sophia Johnson to deliver this opening statement.
You know, at least in part, how this sibling he said she said turned out.
With Sophia on trial in 2003, a year after her mother-in-law's brutal murder.
In her opening statement, Sophia's lawyer, Therese LaVallee, made the point
that Sean and Sophia had been estranged up until just one week before Marlene Johnson was killed.
Sophia and Sean had not spoken to one another for months.
Just because we have the same two parents does not mean we like each other.
does not mean we like each other.
Those same two parents who didn't like each other either,
and who also had a history of he-said-she-saids,
according to the family psych evaluation.
Regarding visitation, Mr. Correa stated that he sees both Sophia and Shane regularly, while the mother, Sophia and Shane, insists that there have been no visitation for more than three years.
Thus, there are many indications of contradictory data.
The case against Sophia rested on Sean's word,
that he saw his sister standing over Marlene with fireplace tongs.
This is a story that was concocted by Coria
to save himself from the charge of murder in the first degree.
He would do anything to save his own skin,
so I definitely don't trust his testimony at all.
According to Shane and Sophia,
if you want to understand why Sean said what he did on the stand,
you need to know who he was to them growing up.
There's a reason this little
son of a bitch who I happen to be related to is up here lying.
In some ways, Sofia and Sean have been through a lot together. They were both born in Guyana.
It's the only South American country where English is the official language,
sandwiched between Venezuela and Suriname.
The Karayas have a rich ethnic background, as many Guyanese people do.
There's Chinese heritage, Indian, Portuguese.
You'd never be able to visually pinpoint the Karaya siblings to a particular nationality.
But you'd connect them to each other.
Light brown skin, dark brown eyes, jet black hair.
An attractive bunch with a deeply complicated history.
And maybe an even more complicated present?
Little teaser for you.
Sean ran for president of Guyana at one point.
And he's contemplating another run right now.
He's made his presence known down there.
And on YouTube.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. The Correa family
came to the U.S. from Guyana when Sophia and Sean were pretty young. Six and two years old,
maybe, Sophia thinks. They eventually settled into a brownstone in the South Bronx with other
relatives. There was constant screaming in the house. This is Sophia in our very first conversation back in 2021.
Remember her analogy for her life up to this point? A house full of boxes, not knowing where
to start unpacking. How about your parents, I suggested. They created, the two of them,
a very toxic environment for all of us.
a very toxic environment for all of us.
Both Sophia and Shane attribute much of this toxicity to their father specifically.
Nine-year-old Shane described violence in the home to the psychologist conducting the family evaluation in 1997.
He also stated that the last time he saw his father,
Mr. Correa slapped his sister and called his mother a whore.
Sophia and Shane have separately told me many of the same stories about their father's aggression.
Thrown fists, thrown plates.
Shane told me about a time his dad threatened him with a knife, which his dad denies.
But Shane did call the police on him at the time.
And he's kept that report, too.
Still, it's clear the emotional scars of the
Coria kids' collective childhood run deeper. There was name-calling by their dad, Sophia and Shane
Say, often of a misogynistic or denigrating nature. Once Shane came out to his dad...
I was cocksucker or faggot or, like, that was my name like from 13 to 18 and that really
that really does something to a child
the coria parents worked long hours so sophia took on the role of guardian. Not legally, but literally. Mostly to
Shane. As for Sean... Sean is dad's kid. Like, 100%. If Sophia was the protector, Shane says,
Sean was the instigator. He was selfish, advantageous, and didn't give a shit about the
impacts.
And as their mother claimed in the psychological evaluation,
Sean could get physical, like his dad.
Shane told me about a time that he went after Sophia.
I remember him picking up the bat,
and he took it to my sister to the point where my sister is screaming,
Shane, call the police.
And I run downstairs, call 911.
They're like, what's your address? Shane was young enough at the time that he didn't actually know their address.
And I'm screaming to Sophia while she's like fighting off Sean with a baseball bat.
Sophia, what's our address? I called the cops before I knew where I lived because of Sean.
When I was growing up, my sister raised me. My sister made sure to get me to school.
She took me an hour out of her way to take me to my special school so that I didn't miss it and I
could keep going. But Sophia couldn't do it alone. And when help came literally knocking,
Jehovah's Witnesses going door to door. She answered.
And so I made the decision, I made the decision to go to the Kingdom Hall with them three times
a week and take shame with me so that we would be safe while my mother was at work. It was safe and at times boring as hell.
But it taught me to be a little bit more confident.
Eventually, Sophia met her first husband through the religion.
This guy wasn't the love of her life, Sophia says.
But marriage was an opportunity to get out of the Bronx and further from her father and Sean, much further.
Her husband's family was from Washington State, and she agreed to move there if her mom and Shane could come with them.
And we made this agreement and moved across the country. It was 1998, a year after that family psych evaluation was done.
Sophia was now 19 years old and newly married, and she, Shane, and her mom felt like they'd been given a fresh start.
Things seemed hopeful for the first time in a long time.
But within six months,
one of their problems would follow them to Washington.
So it was my grandmother who called and she said,
you guys are so far away and Sean really needs help.
Can you please help your brother?
Sean was getting into a lot of trouble in New York, Sophia says
And he had either dropped out of school or gotten kicked out
He needed a chance at a fresh start too, their grandmother pleaded
I know that if he just got away from his father
And all of this stuff in New York, the influence
That maybe he can have a shot at a life
As much as Sophia disliked Sean, she loved her grandmother,
her dad's mom. She lived with them when they were all in the Bronx brownstone. It was for her
grandmother that Sophia says she got Sean enrolled in high school out in Washington and convinced her
mother to take him in, give him a second chance. It was for her grandmother that she brought Sean
to the Kingdom Hall with her to try to give him more of a community and moral foundation.
And Sophia thought it was working until one day, Sean came to her in the middle of a school day
and he wasn't alone. And he said, this is my girlfriend, Cynthia. We're in trouble.
He said, this is my girlfriend, Cynthia.
We're in trouble.
And I'm like, okay, what is it?
He said, I think she's pregnant.
It was like head over heels for this boy at 16.
This is Cynthia.
He would walk me to class.
He would carry my books.
And he used to say that he used to sing.
So he started singing something.
Don't ask me what it was because I did not understand it. And I was like, oh, he sang to me. That's how Cynthia remembers Sean in the
beginning of their young love. This is how she talks about him today. He's somebody that's A pathological liar. Somebody that is abusive.
Somebody that doesn't take no for an answer.
It took starry-eyed Cynthia a little while to see what her parents seemed to pick up on right away about Sean.
My family did not accept Sean whatsoever. My family basically disowned me because of him for,
you know, a while. Even Sean's mom took Cynthia's parents' side. She told me, she goes,
your mom's right. Your mom's right not to like Sean. He's not doing anything good with his life. One example of this?
Pretty soon after moving out to Washington State when he was 16,
Sean was found guilty of a hit-and-run,
which he'd gotten into using his mom's car,
taken without permission and without a driver's license.
So yeah, a bad boy.
In a long, black leather jacket, talking smooth to Cynthia.
There was times where he kind of spoke in like a different accent.
And half the time I was like, I don't know what you're saying, but it sounds so good.
What kind of an accent?
Kind of like the people that sing reggae.
That type of accent.
There's this one picture of Cynthia and Sean from around this time
that may as well be captioned, Rebels in Romance.
They both have these satisfied, closed-mouth smiles.
Sean has one arm around her, the other clasped in her hand.
The epitome of teenage toughness.
Except for one little dimple that gives Cynthia away.
But she really did get disowned by her parents when she got pregnant, Cynthia says, or at least kicked out of their house.
The young couple hopped around. They stayed with some of Cynthia's friends, who sent them packing
when they suspected Sean was stealing from them, she says. They spent some time in a shelter.
Sean had trouble holding down a job. Still, they got married.
Cynthia says Sophia let her wear her wedding dress and planned a baby shower for her.
But things got even worse between Sean and Cynthia after their daughter was born.
Cynthia says he would force himself on her sexually, punch holes in the walls.
When she'd confront him, Sean would have a seizure in the heat of an argument,
Cynthia says. One time, it seemed like he'd hit the ground hard. And one of the paramedics actually
pulled me aside and he goes, I need to tell you this, but he's faking it. And that's the first moment where I was just like, what?
Sean's own mother has claimed that he would fake seizures, by the way.
But real or not, Cynthia was starting to worry about safety.
Sophia took her and her infant daughter in for a period of time.
She treated me like a sister.
She never, ever, like, looked down on me. I do remember when I first met her, she said, why are you with my brother?
When Sean found out Cynthia was staying with Sophia, he was livid.
Sophia says he'd call her house, accusing her of trying to keep him from his daughter.
It got to the point where Sophia ended up changing her home phone number. It was the beginning of a months-long estrangement in a
sibling relationship that had been strained practically their whole lives. But it was not
the end for Cynthia and Sean, and she says his aggression escalated. One incident in particular
led her to try to get a restraining order.
She dates it in her petition for an order of protection to July 29, 2001.
Their daughter was 10 months old.
Cynthia says she was holding her when an argument with Sean turned violent.
He picked me up. He pulled me up by the hair.
And then he slams me to the wall.
And he picked me up by the neck and slammed me over and over
with my daughter in arms.
Cynthia says she feared for her life in that moment.
She details another incident a couple months earlier
when she says Sean punched her and threatened to kill her, saying he was going to take their daughter.
Cynthia's restraining order was denied.
Quote, insufficient evidence of imminent danger of physical harm, the report concludes.
It was another he said, she said.
But she was done.
But she was done.
Fast forward six months to January of 2002.
Cynthia and Sean are separated, but still technically married.
Sean is eager to get a divorce because he has a girlfriend, Susie, who's five months pregnant.
He doesn't have the money for the divorce, though.
Sean is 19 at this point.
He's making minimum wage at Wendy's.
He's living with Susie in her mom's apartment.
He's soon to become a father of two.
And he's upwards of $40,000 in debt from unpaid medical bills.
Seizure-related, he claims.
Cynthia says she gets a call from a friend one day around this time who tells her to sit down and turn on the news.
Clark County Sheriff deputies believe Sophia Johnson
and her brother, Sean Correa, murdered a Brush Prairie woman.
But the DNA evidence is held up.
And my first reaction was like, wow, like he almost killed me.
was like, wow, like he almost killed me.
And then I have to like face my parents to be like, you were right.
I could have been his first victim.
Cynthia went to her parents, but that's about it, she says.
She's really only talking to me now because her daughter's an adult.
I've never told her everything.
Never told her about her dad,
which at the time I thought it was my duty
because I was his wife.
Never told her that her dad raped
me time and time again.
I never told her that
he hurt me.
Sean has denied this allegation, and others of a similar nature.
And you will get to hear from him in his own words down the line.
But you know who else never heard about the Sean Cynthia says she knew?
The jury in Sophia's trial. Despite Sophia pleading with her attorney, she says, to put Cynthia on the stand. I don't know why Cynthia did not testify,
why she was never called by the defense. I do, or I at least have an idea. Sophia's lawyer,
Therese LaVallee, hasn't wanted to talk on the record.
But I do have a window into her strategy with regards to Sean, Sophia's trial footage, which
includes the pre-trial hearings where decisions were made about what evidence and testimony the
judge would and would not allow the jury to hear. Your Honor, to reiterate, our argument is that
this all goes to his motive to lie and
to commit this crime. That's Therese in a particular hearing that her opponent, the prosecutor,
referred to as a character impeachment of Sean. It's an attempt by the defense to besmirch and
portray Sean Corriere as this bad character. Sean, remember, was the key witness testifying
against Sophia. The prosecution needed him to appear credible, reliable, a victim in this whole mess.
But Therese, a.k.a. the defense,
The evidence we can show directly contradicts that.
She had information suggesting that Sean was none of those things leading up to Marlene Johnson's murder.
She'd heard the stories of impulsive violence.
She knew about
accusations and recent charges against him for theft, about the debt hanging over Sean's head,
about the bad blood between the siblings turned worse. And Therese had spoken to Cynthia and her
mother, who told her about a time when Sean tried to extort her for $50,000, saying,
If you write me a check for that amount of money,
I'll divorce your daughter and not ever fight for custody of the child.
Therese was ready to share the many shades of Sean with the jury,
all of which she said potentially motivated him to burglarize the Johnsons' home,
made him capable of killing Marlene,
and blaming it on the sister who'd betrayed him by taking in the wife who'd fled
him in fear. And Therese wanted Cynthia to be able to share her experience with Sean on the witness
stand, an opportunity that Cynthia says she would have taken, especially given whose character Sean
was about to impeach at trial. There's no way. There's no way Sophia was a part of that.
But the prosecutor argued that all of this was prejudicial.
Our courts have defined unfair prejudice as, quote,
more likely to arouse an emotional response than a rational decision by a jury.
I should be entitled to explore Sean Correa's motivation,
his own personal motivations for committing this crime.
Because if I'm not allowed to do that, then essentially what we're dealing with is a kid who says, I was just tagging along with my sister.
You see, Your Honor? And once he gets caught, once he gets caught, then he starts pointing
the finger at my client. Ultimately, Her Honor sided with the prosecutor. Sean's history,
irrelevant. He wasn't on trial for murder.
His sister was.
Granted, he's not necessarily a very nice person, but what does that have to do with the particular facts of this case,
other than his admissions to the behaviors and the crimes that he's committed?
Then my client is being denied a fair trial.
being denied a fair trial. This story, in large part, is about which of these two siblings you believe. And after learning more about Sean's backstory, I did find myself questioning his
version of events. But the jury wouldn't know any of it. They'd just hear Sean telling his side of the story. They wouldn't get that for Sophia.
Not in her words, anyway.
But you will.
In a minute.
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It's all a lighthearted nightmare on our podcast, Morbid.
We're your hosts.
I'm Alina Urquhart.
And I'm Ash Kelly.
And our show is part true crime, part spooky, and part comedy.
The stories we cover are well-researched. He claimed and confessed to officially killing up to 28 people.
With a touch of humor.
I'd just like to go ahead and say that if there's no band called Malevolent Deity, that is pretty great.
A dash of sarcasm and just garnished a bit with a little bit of cursing.
This mother f***er lied.
Like a liar.
Like a liar.
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Cynthia, who says Sean was her high school dreamboat turned husband turned nightmare,
wasn't the only one exiting a relationship in the early aughts.
Sophia's arrangement with her husband in the Jehovah's Witness community
was starting to feel about as exciting as any relationship you might refer to as an arrangement.
And Sophia was getting attention from a guy she'd met through work.
His name was Brad Johnson. She was 21 at the time. He was 33.
And I'd never experienced that level of attraction in my life.
Sophia fell hard and fast.
She filed for divorce from her husband,
not realizing how much she'd end up divorced from.
Because adultery, in the eyes of her kingdom hall,
was grounds for expulsion from the religion.
Disfellowshipment, it's called.
And it meant that other Jehovah's Witnesses weren't allowed to maintain contact with her.
Even the two people who, up to to that point Sophia had been closest to.
1 Corinthians 15, 33, do not be misled. Bad associations spoil peaceful habits.
My mom and Shane, I couldn't understand that one because we're still family.
because we're still family.
And yet, I gave them the space because I knew that they were doing
what they were being told was the right thing to do.
I didn't hate them for it.
I was just really hurt by it.
This was the beginning of a really isolating period
in Sophia's life.
Amid all the hostility and volatility of her upbringing, she'd always,
always had her mom and Shane. So now Sophia looked to a new chosen family.
Marlene was my best friend. Marlene Johnson, Brad's mom. I started to not just love Brad,
but I really loved his family. His mom and I started playing dress-up, and she totally got into it.
She had all these wigs with all these styles, and I was like, oh, this is so great.
Brad was an only child, which meant Sophia was like the daughter Marlene never had. And Marlene was
not the mother Sophia never had, but a mother she never had. One who didn't work all day,
who let her do her makeup, who watched movies with her and gossiped, who let her feel just
like a daughter after so many years of being a mother-like figure to her kid brother.
And Marlene was the mother who
was actually talking to her, which she desperately needed as a young woman in arrested development,
playing dress-up by day with her future mother-in-law and diving deeper by night into
her relationship with her older, irresistibly attractive future husband. The not-too-distant
future, either.
Within months of separating from her first husband... We were newlyweds, and then I was pregnant.
Flip it and reverse it, but yeah.
Marlene was going to become a grandmother the following spring.
She was so excited about her first grandchild.
That's an understatement from what I've heard from some of Marlene's friends.
And this mother and daughter-in-law were about to go into business together,
an event planning business called Best Friends. For real. It was like Sophia had been given
another chance to start over. She didn't have her mom and Shane with her this time,
but she had the Johnsons. All of them were incredible to me. She was just about ready to put that other life and maybe that other family behind her
when she got a call from her grandmother again, saying her brother Sean needed her help again,
this time with his divorce paperwork.
He also wanted to start over.
And Sophia, her grandmother suggested, just might
need him too. Your mother isn't speaking to you. Shane isn't speaking to you. You have only this
new man's family. Why don't you try to cultivate something with your brother who's so willing?
And his girl is pregnant and maybe you guys can form a relationship, you need to have a support system.
But the last time Sophia had heard from Sean, she says, he was spewing vitriol by phone for
taking Cynthia and his daughter in. She and Brad had, in fact. Why should she help him out now,
after six months of Sean-free living? The same reason she did last time, Sophia says.
Grandma Karia mind tricks.
And so I did, despite my best judgment. And if there's one thing I could change in my life right
now, where I know I made the wrong choice, it was that. That decision altered the course of my life.
January 10, 2002 was a pretty typical Thursday.
Brad went to work, like usual, Sophia says.
She stayed home, like usual.
But unlike usual, Sean and his pregnant girlfriend
were expected at her house at 8.30
in the morning to go over his divorce paperwork. So the sibling stories match so far, including
the part about Sophia agreeing to give Sean the money to file his divorce papers and realizing
she didn't have it. And I thought, oh, shoot. OK, well, I'll have to give this to you tomorrow
because I left. I was over at Marlene's last night
and I left, I must have left my coat there
because I couldn't find it anywhere at my house.
Now, as someone who has experienced
Washington State in winter,
it's a little hard to imagine
how you forget your coat in January.
But Sophia says there was a reason for this.
I know exactly. Oh, really? Okay.
Sophia had spent the day before at Marlene's house. This was pretty common. She was waiting for a ride home from Brad when her in-laws started arguing. Also pretty common, Sophia says.
Marlene suspected that her husband had started drinking again. Sophia says things got heated between Marlene and her father-in-law.
And when Brad arrived to pick her up from his parents' house...
I'm like, we gotta get out of here.
This is not good. We gotta get out of here. They're fighting.
And he's like, oh, great. Okay.
And so, Sophia says, in trying to get out the door quickly, her coat didn't make it with her.
No big deal. Marlene is coming over for lunch that afternoon.
And in fact, I called Marlene and she informed me that she was going to do a yoga class and that she'd come home and shower,
get ready and she'd make a note to bring my coat.
But Sean can't wait around for the cash coat.
He has to go to work.
His girlfriend has to babysit.
And this is where the sibling stories diverge.
Remember, Sean says this is when his girlfriend
drives him and Sophia to her in-law's house
to get the coat.
Sophia says Sean and his girlfriend just leave, but not totally empty-handed.
Sophia says there are bags of clothing by her door.
And I mentioned to Sean, hey, you know, these are going out for donations. They're good stuff.
It's just that it cannot fit us or we know we won't ever need it or use it.
Maybe you guys can use some of it. He took a few things, I cannot remember what, and left.
And that was it. Side note, this is an interesting detail for Sophia to remember.
Think back to Sean's version of events for a minute. Sean told the jury that after the murder,
Sophia gave him a pair of Brad's pants to change into,
which were submitted as evidence.
They didn't fit me.
I think the legs were too short.
But here, Sophia is saying that Sean took some of Brad's clothes
from a giveaway bag before he left her house that morning.
So could that be how Sean ended up with a pair of Brad's pants?
Okay, back to Sophia's version.
It's now late morning, and Sean and his girlfriend have just left Sophia's house.
Sophia says she's blasting 80s love ballads on her living room stereo
and rocking out while rocking out.
I was in a nursery in the rocking chair.
The nursery for baby boy Johnson, who's due in just a few months.
She just recently finished setting it up with Marlene,
who's due at her house for lunch
pretty soon. The music is so loud, apparently, that Sophia doesn't hear a knock on her door
sometime after one o'clock. But she knows it happened, she says, because the door knocker
comes back a little later. And it isn't her mother-in-law.
It's my mother, Sophia's mother, whom she hasn't seen much of since being disfellowshipped from
their kingdom hall a year earlier. But her mom is having a problem with her bank account,
and Sophia is listed on her account, so she needs her daughter to go to the bank with her
and get it sorted out. But Marlene is going to be at her house any minute.
So Sophia leaves a message on her cell,
saying she'll be back soon, she's left the door unlocked,
Marlene can just go right in.
That was the last call I made to her. Sophia and her mom get back from the bank sometime after 2 o'clock, she says.
And as they pull onto her street, Sophia notices something immediately.
There's no car in my driveway.
And Marlene's car should be there,
so I said to my mom, I don't understand, she's not here, because she was always on time.
Sophia calls Brad. He hasn't heard anything from his mom. Her father-in-law, nothing.
Someone needs to check on Marlene.
needs to check on Marlene. It's about 3.30 now, and Brad and Sophia are pulling up the long driveway from a dead-end street to her in-law's house in Brush Prairie, Washington, about 20
minutes from their own house. It's an A-frame made of beautiful dark wood with a big deck.
A-frame made of beautiful dark wood with a big deck.
It's surrounded by evergreens with enviable floor-to-ceiling windows.
And through those windows, Sophia sees something kind of frustrating, actually.
All of the lights are on in the house.
Sophia's like, wait a minute, she's home?
What in the world?
You've been here this whole time.
You couldn't answer your phone.
You couldn't let me know you're okay.
You couldn't just say, I'm not coming.
I'm going to be late.
Nothing.
You say nothing.
Sophia says her irritation quickly subsides as they get further up the driveway.
The garage door is open,
but Marlene's van is gone.
Brad gets out of the car.
I said, wait, let's call the police.
Where are you going?
Something's wrong.
Something's wrong.
He's like, oh, no.
I was afraid that there was someone in the house and that he could get hurt.
I didn't know what we were walking into.
Brad heads for the door leading from the garage into the basement of the house and tries to open it.
But the door is stuck.
And he pushes his weight against this door.
Marlene is just on the other side of that door, on the floor.
Her son has only gotten a glimpse of the situation.
And he started screaming that his mom was on the ground and she was hurt.
I call 911 immediately.
But Sophia says she doesn't know what's actually happened.
She's lying on the floor, and I don't know what's wrong, Sophia tells the dispatcher.
Sophia eventually hands the phone over to Brad, who's now gotten a better look at the body on the basement floor.
He knows it's his mom, despite the fact that she's virtually unrecognizable. And I throw up.
I remember just throwing up.
I was sick.
It was in a state of crying and disbelief and shock.
And is this real?
Did this really happen?
Wait, what happened today?
And I felt like we kept checking ourselves to make sure we didn't lose our minds.
And that's how the night was spent.
If you're thinking back to the version of events we heard Sean tell on the stand in the last episode
and thinking, what the hell?
I'm right there with you.
Sitting in the Johnson's house while Sophia looks for money,
hearing a scream of some sort, nervously descending the steps to see his sister standing over Marlene with a stocking over her face, holding fireplace tongs.
diverge so drastically, it's like they moved through January 10th in parallel universes.
And when they returned to reality, one of them was discounted by detectives, the other believed.
Or at least believed enough, according to the lead detective, Rick Buckner.
Was he actually believable? I have no idea.
Because this just feels like such a he said, she said. And that's all we have.
But that wasn't all they had. The physical evidence in this case was thin, frustratingly so,
but it wasn't absent. And despite all the things Sophia's lawyer, Therese, couldn't tell the jury
about the person accusing her client of murder, she could absolutely tell them this. The only physical evidence that you will be presented with in the course of this trial
points to Sean Pariah.
After Sean started cooperating with law enforcement and telling them his version of January 10,
2002, they made a discovery that was inconvenient
for their leading theory of the case.
Marlene's blood was found on one of Sean's boots.
The good men and women of the law enforcement team
that investigated this case made a mistake,
and their mistake was that they fell into the arms
and embraced the story of Sean Correa on January 13th before the physical evidence had been analyzed.
Eventually, all the evidence would be analyzed, of course.
So I asked Detective Buckner, was there any physical evidence connecting Sophia to the crime scene the way that there was the drop of blood on Sean's boot?
Physical evidence, no.
To this day, 22 years later, the only person physically proven to be at the scene of Marlene's murder is Sean.
And yet...
All we know is that there was really no connection between Sean Correa and the victim Marlene.
The only connection is Sophia Johnson.
The only connection, or just the obvious one?
I know that I wasn't there.
And if Sophia wasn't with Sean, was someone else?
You know, people always think the husband did it.
And that thought came across my mind.
That's next time. Beyond All Repair is a production of WBUR, Boston's NPR, and ZSP Media.
It's written and reported by me, Anne-Marie Sievertson, and produced by Sophie Codner.
Additional reporting in this episode from Dean Russell.
Mix and sound design by production manager of WBUR podcasts, Paul Vycus.
Original scoring by Paul Vycus and Matt Reed.
Theme and credits music by me.
Our managing producers are Sama Tajoshi for WBUR and Liz Stiles of ZSP Media.
If you have questions about the case, the people at the center of this story, or really anything else about the series, we want to hear them. Email beyondallrepairpod at gmail.com.
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