Murder With My Husband - 171. Suzanne Collins - Innocent or Guilty?
Episode Date: July 3, 2023On this episode of Murder With My Husband, Payton and Garrett dive into the murder of Suzanne Collins and conviction of Sedley Alley. Social Links and More: https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband Ca...se Sources: the Tennessee State Courts, Arlingtoncemetery.net, Dailymail.co.uk, the New York Times, medium.com, KMOV4, murderpedia.org, commercialappeal.com, Military-history.fandom.com, google maps, Daytondailynews.com, Yahoo.com, Actionnews5.com, law.justia.com, the Tennessee Bar Association, and the innocenceproject.org Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody welcome back to our podcast. This is murder with my husband. I'm
Peyton Moreland. I'm Garrett Moreland. He's the husband. I'm the husband. Okay
before we get into Garrett's 10 seconds I did want to remind everyone about our
other show Rising Crime hosted by my mom. She uploads twice a week and it's
true crime news. So it keeps you updated. So literally you do not have to go
scroll your TikTok for you page anymore for all of the updated true crime news.
She covers everything mysterious true crime
over on that podcast and all the updates that you would want.
And that's called rise and crime.
So go check it out if you haven't.
And then of course we have binge,
that's my solo podcast.
And it's very similar to this one,
but just me, I think you'll really like it
if you enjoy murder with my husband. So just me, I think you'll really like it if you enjoy
murder with my husband. So also, please, I feel weird plugging myself, but go check that one out too.
And as well, if you subscribe on Apple or you're a Patreon to those, I mean, you get ad for
your content for one price to all of those in bonus episodes, so it's a win-win.
Yep, all of O'No Media's content.
Well, I think by the time that this comes out,
everyone will be probably off of work, depending on what your job is and celebrating Fourth of July,
so I hope everyone has a good week and a good weekend. You know, growing up Fourth of July was my
favorite holiday. Oh, unless you're listening and you're not from the US, though. That's true.
So there's actually a lot of people who aren't celebrating it. Here in America we just do a bunch of like barbecue and fire
works and less fireworks are outlawed where you are because of fires and we
just celebrate. It's about it actually. Now that I think about it, it's just a
bunch of barbares. There's a lot of parade. We're like it's parades, food. Yeah. It
was just always like such a fun thing for me in the summer.
As a kid, you know, like writing,
did you do for like, decorate your bike
and then ride around and have a different parade?
Yeah, and then you did like, sparklers.
What do you mean?
Oh, yeah, like, for a fire, yeah, sparklers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Poppits.
I remember only the older kids got to play with poppits,
and so then the year that I finally was old enough
to play with poppits, I was like, oh.
Or like throw poppets or like bottle rockets
that people, you were shoe bottle rockets that people?
No.
That's just big.
My block party wasn't that fun.
It wasn't that fun.
Don't do it.
I don't advise to do that.
Dangerous activity.
It's sad though, because a lot of pets don't like fireworks.
Last 4th of July, was that 4th of July?
Or was it at 4th July?
Anyways, I burnt myself with the fireworks,
just bringing that beauty around again,
as well to picture up somewhere.
I'm alive as well.
You burned yourself.
Fireworks burned you.
Yeah, fireworks for me.
They literally shot at me.
Yeah.
That was crazy.
That was crazy.
That was insane, actually.
Did you kind of like lost an eye?
I know.
They're dangerous.
And it shot right at me.
I mean, I would like to say that I jumped on top of Peyton.
She probably would say, I fell on top of her
all running away, but come on.
I jumped.
Whatever you did, it saved me.
I jumped on top of her, saved my wife.
I am now a superhero, and I have a little scarmaback.
Also, if you're listening to this, a superhero and I have a little scarmaback Also if you're listening to this Peyton and I are not even in America
For the Fourth of July. We're in America right now actually no, I correct that we are in America still
We're not in in the United States
What?
baby part of North America
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. You can tell who studied geography.
No, I just just confused.
I just started thinking, wait, am I really this dumb right now?
No, no, no, it's part of North America, but yeah, we won't be in the United States of
America.
No.
Peyton and I are going on a little vacation just trying to decompress
and disconnect for a second. For a couple days. We're excited about that. Yeah, parent life has been
tough. Yeah. Exactly, babe. Alright, let's get into it. Okay, our case sources this week are the
Tennessee State Courts, Arlington Cemetery.net, Daily Mail, The New York Times, Medium. Okay, our case sources this week are the Tennessee State Courts, ArlingtonSemitary.net,
Daily Mail, the New York Times, medium.com, Murderpedia, commercial appeal, Dayton Daily News,
Yahoo Action News 5, the Tennessee Bar Association, and the Innocence Project.
I love when Murderpedia comes up as a source. Oh, I know me too.
Like the original, the OG.
The OG. So I'm sorry to say that this first sentence, we are just going to dive in here
pretty heavily. Most people have pretty strong views about the death penalty. You're
either for it or against it. I will I'll say I don't know if a lot of people are wishy
washi about their opinion. There are arguments for the death penalty and definitely arguments
against the death penalty. It still continues to be the ultimate punishment in multiple states across the
United States.
And although Americans may not be in agreement on whether the death penalty
should be imposed in our country, just about everyone can agree on one thing.
The death penalty once imposed is permanent.
There's no turning back once you go through with the death penalty.
And today we're going to talk about that. There's no turning back once you go through with the death penalty.
And today we're going to talk about that.
True, but there has been a lot of people who've gotten the death penalty and then it's
been like outlawed correct and then they just got jailed on life or prison on life.
Yes, but I'm talking about when they die.
Yes, once it's done.
Okay.
And before we hop into it, we won't talk about opinions very much on the death penalty.
But Peyton and I have differing opinions on it.
Yes, this is one of the things that I think we've talked about this before.
A second, yeah.
Like, you know, there's some things that Garrett and I definitely agree to disagree on.
And this is one of those subjects when it comes to true crime.
But we still love each other.
So, our case this week involves a very driven teenager
named Suzanne Marie Collins.
She was born on June 8th, 1966,
and she has an older brother named Steven Collins.
They are both adopted.
Her adoptive father is an attorney and a US diplomat,
John A Collins, who goes by Jack,
and her adoptive mother, John A. Collins, who goes by Jack, and her
adoptive mother is Trudy Collins. So the family moves around while the kids are
growing up and in 1972 they're living in Greece where their father is stationed.
They also live in Madison, Wisconsin and they move again to Springfield, Virginia.
That's where they're living while Suzanne is a teenager and she
graduates from Robert E. Lee High School in Springfield.
A popular high school athlete, Suzanne doesn't follow the traditional path that most of her
friends from high school are taking.
She surprises many people by enlisting in the Marine Corps in June 1984 right out of high
school.
And Suzanne does extremely well at basic training.
Then on October 20th, 1984, at just 18 years old,
Suzanne reports as a private first class
to the Naval Air Station in Memphis,
where she'll be living and training
for the next several months.
The Memphis Naval Air Station,
which today is called the Naval Support Activity Midsouth,
is a large training center for both the Navy and the Marines.
It encompasses about 4,000 acres.
The base is located in the small city of Millington and Shelby County, Tennessee, which is less
than 10 miles outside of Memphis.
Suzanne aspires to go on to the Naval Academy and hopes that the ban on women in aerial combat
will be lifted soon.
She wants to be the first woman to fly jets for the
Marines. On her way to her goal of becoming a female fighter pilot, Susanne and Liss in
the Marines Aveon Extraining Program.
I have to say real quick, this is all super impressive because just the other day I told
a pain, I think I want to get my pilot's license. I don't know why that's funny. I was being 100% serious. I know.
I do.
I think I want to get my pilot's license.
I don't want to distract too much from the case, but we'll see.
I'll keep everyone updated if I end up doing it.
Not my commercial or anything, just a private pilot's license.
Just wants to be the next Tom Cruise.
Yeah, I'm going to do it.
So avionics refers to the electronic equipment fitted in an aircraft
and it also refers to the ground training on how to use that equipment. Needless to say,
her family is incredibly proud of her. By the spring of 1985, after several months of service,
Susanna is promoted to the rank of Lance Corporal. She is also the first female marine at air station
Memphis to be named to the Honor Deck,
an accolade reserved for the very top students.
So this is a really big deal.
She's scheduled to graduate from the 9-month avionics program on Friday, July 12, 1985.
She's going to report for her next duty at Cherry Point, North Carolina, but ultimately,
she's hoping to get assigned to duty in California
because that's where her boyfriend and her best friend are being transferred.
It's Thursday, July 11, 1985, the day before Suzanne's graduation ceremony and she's now
19 years old.
And the day is pretty much a normal one for Suzanne.
It's a hot one in Memphis, which is typical for July.
Suzanne has plans to go out to dinner that evening with friends,
but she gets to sign that day on what's called NCO duty,
which on this base is fairly routine duty
that involves checking the building
and keeping records of people who are coming and going.
So she tells her friend that she can't make dinner
and that she'll see her instead tomorrow at graduation.
It finally rains and cools off a bit, which provides some relief from the muggy weather,
so Suzanne decides to go for her daily run that night after work.
She's in the habit of running several miles a day at this point.
She's wearing red, white and blue, red shorts, a red marine t-shirt, white socks, running
shoes, and a white bandana.
To complete the patriotic look, she's got a blue sweat belt around her waist. Suzanne leaves for her run that evening at around
10 or 10.30 pm. She's got a roommate and she tells her friend that she's going
for a run and that she'll be gone for maybe half an hour. It's nighttime and she's
smart and runs on the base ground so it's not like she's going somewhere she
doesn't know. It's dark out, but it's safe.
This is the naval air station Memphis after all. It's in the small town of Millington, Tennessee.
At about 11 p.m., two other Marines, both male, private first-class Michael Howard and private first-class
Mark Schottwell, are jogging in the same area on the base. They can't help but notice the pretty
young woman jogging past them in the opposite
direction. She's tall and blonde and they notice that she's wearing a Marine Court T-shirt.
Then just a few moments after the pretty girl jogs past them, the two guys notice a car
driving by and it's going in the same direction as the girl. It's got its high beams on,
which is annoying when you're trying to jog and it's also got a loud muffler. So it sticks out to them.
They see that it's a dark colored Ford station wagon and that it's got wood grain paneling
on the sides.
According to one source, the two marines actually have to dodge out of the way of the station
wagon as it's swarving in the road.
So they definitely notice the car, they definitely pay attention to it.
Then a very short time after the station wagon with the high beams goes by, in just a matter
of seconds actually, the two men hear screams in the night.
It's a woman's voice coming from behind them and she's screaming, don't touch me, leave
me alone.
The screams are coming from the direction of where the pretty girl and the car had both
just been headed.
The two marines turn around and immediately rush in the direction of the screams.
However, a car's headlights blind them and they can't see where they're going.
They search around, but it's night, and they can't find anyone, and they can't find
the source of the screams.
What they do see though, is the same station wagon that almost hit them, stopped on the
side of the road, and they see it speed away.
The two Marines run as fast as they can to the barracks gate,
and they notify a guard on duty about what had just happened.
They're afraid that that car had just abducted
the pretty girl who ran past them.
And one of the guards tells security that he himself
also saw that very same station wagon earlier that night.
The same car that the two Marines have now just described to him.
He tells security that the car had Kentucky plates and that a man was driving
and that he had his arm around a woman in the front seat.
This was earlier in the evening before the Marines even saw the car.
An alert of a possible abduction goes out to the naval base as well as for the local law enforcement,
which here is the Millington Police Department and the Shelby County Sheriff's Department. The two
Marines and others continue searching around the base for the car they've just seen, but
they're unsuccessful. Having no luck locating the car, the two Marines eventually returned
to their own barracks. At 12-10am, on what's now July 12, 1985, about an hour after the two marines reported the
screams. The chief of watch for the military base, who's heard the alert about a possible
abduction, spots a car matching the description and pulls it over.
So I assume they couldn't find her as well. What did they look for her? Did they not look
for her? They are looking for her, but they don't know who she is. So right now their biggest
lead is the car. The car gets pulled over and the driver is a man
named Sedley Ali and he's alone in the car.
He's driving a 1970s dark green station wagon
with wood paneling on the sides.
The chief of watch brings Sedley Ali back
to the security office for questioning.
They find out that Ali is married to a woman
named Lynn Ali so they go locate
his wife and they bring her into the security office as well. Now Ali and his wife live
together on the naval base. Lynn his wife is in the Navy and she works on the base. The
guard on duty who previously saw the man and woman in the car identifies them and says
that Lynn matches the woman he'd seen in the car earlier
that evening. So basically the guard says yeah I saw him and his wife driving in this car earlier.
Again to be clear this was some time earlier in the evening well before the screams that the
Marines heard. The two Marines are also brought to the security office and they positively
identify the station wagon as the one they saw an hour or so ago.
In addition to the look of the car, they can also identify the loud sound that the car's
muffler makes.
Also, I'm not sure if they brought it up, but I mean, he was driving crazy as high beams
were on, you know.
The authorities questioned both sadly Ali and his wife Lynn.
It's not clear from the sources whether they're questioned separately or together, but they both say that the screaming that the two Marines heard was just them having a big argument.
They say they both were in the car. That was them. It was just a domestic dispute and that they've
since resolved their differences and that everything is just fine. Oh, of course it's all fine and
dandy. Lynn backs up her husband that this is what happened. They give consistent
statements as to their whereabouts and as to the source of the screams. Based on their
matching statements and the fact that no one has been reported missing still, the police
let Ali and his wife go. The couple returns to their housing on the base and no one
knows yet whether a crime has actually been committed, whether that girl who was jogging
was even actually taking it is she sources say though
that the police aren't taking any
chances and they station a guard at
the alleys home to keep an eye on
both of them.
The two Marines meanwhile dispute
alley and his wife's claims.
They say that what they heard that
the screams they heard were not the sounds
of an ordinary domestic dispute.
They were the sounds of someone
who was screaming for her life.
That's good.
I'm glad they're standing up for what they heard.
They also say that they heard the loud muffler on the car that went past right after the
pretty girl jogged by, and they also heard the muffler while the screaming was happening.
Sadly, and Lynn, Ali's story isn't sitting right with them, and probably isn't sitting
right with the authoritiesidades, pero con no
uno de los que se pide y con no evidencia una abducción o la crea en el base, no hay El metro hasta Tachadia y Trana va a bajar. No te lees. Este venano viaja de puerta a puerta y sin complicaciones con Bláblacá.
Siempre encontrarás una cerca, incluso a última hora.
De la serba tu próximo viaje, ya.
Bláblacá, bláblacá.
Lesson 5 hours later,
a around 5 a.m. Susanne's roommate wakes up.
She sees that Suzanne isn't there in their room.
And she can see that Suzanne's bed hasn't been slept in.
She realizes that Suzanne never came back
from her jog that night. So she notifies base security that Suzanne, her roommate, is missing.
The police go fanning out in the surrounding area around the base looking for Suzanne.
Obviously, they've connected the woman's screams with the fact that they now have a female marine
that's reported missing. At about 6am, just an hour after Susanna's reported missing, Sheriff's deputies who are
out looking for her find a female body.
They had tried to think of where someone might be taken if abducted, and they thought
of the nearby public park, Edmund Orgel Park.
This park is about an 8 mile drive from the base, and it has 440 acres of meadows, paths,
and a fishing pier and a lake. It seems a likely place. And they were right.
They find the woman's body in the park about 150 feet off of the road. She is naked and is lying
mostly face down. Her clothing is scattered out all around her body. They see that the woman
had been wearing jogging clothes. The sheriff can also see that this woman had been savagely beaten all around
her head and her face. One of her eyes is swollen shut and her face in her head are just covered
in blood. This woman has many other visible injuries as well, including bite marks on
her breasts, long scratches from her shoulders all the way down to her waist and bruises
on her shoulder blades.
She also has bruising around her neck.
How did he do this so fast?
Right.
Because there's only like an hour gap between the time that they got into the police station, right?
Yes, exactly.
It was about an hour and 15 minutes from the time that the Marines heard the screams to when, sadly,
I guess it's quite a bit
of time.
It just, I don't know, not really the same time.
I feel like time go by really fast to do all of that.
Right.
So her injuries are so severe that photos of the dead woman's face can't be used to identify
who she is.
Like, that's how badly she has been.
Oh my gosh.
But the police are quickly able to identify her as Suzanne. Like, they're like, okay, she's missing this pretty obvious.
In addition to the victim's own clothing, the police find many other pieces of evidence at the crime scene.
Near Suzanne's body is a pair of men's red underwear.
Police also find a screwdriver that was left behind at the scene, and they also discover near her body a tree branch. It's been
beveled or sharpened into a weapon and whoever fashioned and used this tree
branch also stripped the branch of all its leaves and twigs turning it into a
homemade spear basically. The tree branch is large over 31 inches long and
about an inch and a half in diameter. Paper napkins from a chain restaurant are
also found near her body.
The chief of watch back at the base quickly learns that Suzanne's body has been found at the nearby
park. And now with a body to go along with the stories of screaming, the chief orders the arrest
of saidly Ali. This is easy as he's right on the base and two military police arrest Ali. They also impound his station wagon and search it.
Inside Ali's car police find the same paper napkins from the same restaurant that were
found near Suzanne's box.
Oh, well, this seems like it's going to be an easy case.
They also find an air conditioner pump that they determined had been stolen the night before
from a house close to where Suzanne had been jogging when she was abducted.
They also find blood stains on the inside
and outside of the station wagon.
What a loser.
The police interrogate Ali again,
this time harder than last time
and this time from many more hours.
And at first Ali denies knowing anything about Suzanne.
He says he had nothing to do with her abduction and murder.
He asks for a lawyer to be present
and the interrogation ends at least temporarily.
Then Ali changes his mind and says that actually
he does want to talk and he agrees to talk to the police
and he agrees to have the interrogation captured on tape.
And this is all being done by the military police, correct?
Yes, yes.
In conjunction, though, with the county
Yeah, correct.
In the sheriff's office.
This is what he says on that taped interrogation.
He claims that his wife Lynn went to a Tupperware party
with some of her friends the night before
and she left him home alone.
He says he felt lonely and depressed.
He missed Lynn and he missed his kids
who were living in Kentucky without him.
He admits to doing some heavy drinking.
He says he drank a bottle of wine
along with two six packs of beer.
He wanted even more alcohol, so he
decided to drive, this would be drunken driving, to the local liquor store. However, when confronted
by the police with the fact that the spot where he was pulled over the night before, isn't
on the route between his home and the liquor store, he's unable to explain the deviation
from the route. Rather, he's driven out of the way to the north side of the military
base. Then he claims that he parked his car in the way to the north side of the military base.
Then he claims that he parked his car in a parking lot near a golf course off the base
and that he got out of his car, and that's where he admits to seeing Suzanne.
He says that he saw a run-by toward Navy Lake.
This location he mentions, Navy Lake, is now permanently closed.
Ali then claims that Suzanne saw him standing there and that she stopped and talked to him.
He says that they had a short conversation and that they then jogged together to his car.
Just to insert a brief comment here, the police are likely having a lot of trouble believing
that Suzanne would be jogging around by herself at 11 p.m. off the base considering that
she told her friend she'd stay on.
And then even more so hard to believe
that she would stop and chit chat with some guy who's out in the dark by himself drunk
near lake. I mean, and you already have the two witnesses that say this was the car. This
was the car. And he heard a girl screaming and now he admitted that he was alone. So I
mean, it's just like it's, it's all falling into place. In any event, the police keep listening to Ali's story. He says that he
in Suzanne then parted ways with Suzanne jogging toward a narrow gate on Navy
road. He says that he got back in his car and started driving again. He says
that because where he was driving was a narrow road with no sidewalk, that he
accidentally hit Suzanne with his car. He says that Suzanne then screamed and
rolled on the ground. He says he picked her up and put her in his car to bring her someplace
where he could get her help but that on the way Suzanne started screaming to him
that he was a drunken bastard and said that she would get him in trouble.
Come on man. Ali then says to police that he drove her to Edmund Orgel Park
held her down and grabbed a screwdriver that he had handy in his car. He says
that he hit her with the screwdriver and that he didn't stab her in the head with it. He says he wanted
to cover up his involvement in the attack so he staged her body to look like she'd been
sexually assaulted but he denies actually sexually assaulting her. He says that in order
to complete this phony scene, he took our clothes off, dragged over to a tree, did more things
to the body based on the things that I told you earlier about what was found.
I'm not going to go into detail, but you can probably guess.
So he mits to it in a way, in a weird way.
At this point, the police have him lead them to the scene of the crime.
And according to medium.com, he accurately identified multiple things, including the tree
from which he had broken the limb that he used in the assault on Suzanne.
Even though the police don't believe all of his story and believe that he was trying to
minimize his actual actions, they do know that he's just confessed to murder.
With a suspect quickly in custody, the police look into said Lee Alley's background.
He was born on August 16, 1955, and is 29 years old at the time.
The police find out that Alley had served in the military, but he was discharged for abusing
drugs and alcohol, which he's clearly continuing to do.
The police also find out that Lynn is actually his second wife.
You see his first wife, Deborah Ali, died under suspicious circumstances when she was only
20 years old right after filing for divorce, which she did five years ago on February 25th, 1980. Then just three days later on February 28th, she's found dead in a
bathtub. Ali can't explain to police why he waited several hours from the time
of finding her body, his first wife's body, until the time that he called
police. His story is that she was out drinking with other men that night and
then she came home drunk. According to Ali, he says it's clear that she then drowned in their bathtub.
However, the medical examiner finds strangulation bruising around Deborah's neck,
and the autopsy also reveals that Deborah has a french fry stuck down her throat.
Rather than calling it a drowning death, the medical examiner rules that she was as fixated
and she choked on her own vomit. Despite the questions swirling around his
first wife's death, sadly Ali isn't charged with any crimes.
So you got away with it.
Then just five years later, he's now being investigated for another young woman's death,
although there's no question that this one was murder and he's just confessed to it.
And his wife also covered for him?
Well she said she was in the car around the times of the screams that they was them fighting.
Yeah, but was she?
Because he just said that she was at a party.
Yep.
So I think she obviously lied and said that she was in the car when she wasn't.
Right.
And by the way, before, like, sadly, Ali is a very big man.
He's six foot four and 220 pounds. So like that is a scary
man to come at you while you're jogging. Meanwhile, on July 12, 1985, the very day the Ali is confessing to
Suzanne's murder and leading police to the crime scene at the park, the graduation ceremony is taking
place that Suzanne was supposed to be a part of. It's a heart-wrenching ceremony with Suzanne's empty chair extremely noticeable and the flags flying at half-staff because of death on the base.
The autopsy on Suzanne's body, which is performed by medical examiner Dr. James Bell, shows that Suzanne suffered many horrors before her death.
Killer had strangled her as evidenced by the bruises on her neck, however,
strangulation was not the cause of death. The killer had strangled her as evidenced by the bruises on her neck, however, strangulation was not the cause of death. There were actually two other horrible
types of injuries, either one of which would have been fatal. The first, like I said, she
was so badly beaten, she was unrecognizable, and the autopsy reveal she was struck over 100
times during this beating. Her school was fractured.
What is going on? Why did he do this? Like, what was he angry about?
Is he just a serial killer?
Like, what's happening?
And this beating happened with a screwdriver.
Yeah.
The savagery of the beating alone
was enough to cause her death.
And the second, I won't dwell on this part,
but again, there was some extremely upsetting sexual injury
that had to do with the other weapons.
And this could have been fatal as well,
causing internal bleeding. According to most of the sources, Suzanne was still alive when all
of this was happening. Dr. Bell will later say that this is the worst case he'd ever seen.
What Dr. Bell does not find is any evidence that Suzanne had been hit in by a car, nor had she
been stabbed in the head with a screwdriver. So his story that he hit her and then stabbed her in the head with a screwdriver,
no evidence of that at autopsy. The blood that was found on the inside and outside of the station
wagon is tested and it turns out to be type O blood which matches both Suzanne and sadly Ali's
blood types. Sadly Ali is charged with first degree murder. He's given court appointed attorneys.
Ali tells his attorneys as the later tell the court that Ali doesn't remember anything
from that night. Also, I'm pretty sure I could be wrong with. I'm sure there are some
listeners that can help correct that are a live on military bases and have our knowledge
about this, that it's going to be looked upon in a harsher way
because it's in military court and everything, correct?
Yes, but I've heard that it's usually looked upon
in a harsher, I mean, I don't know how much harsher it can get.
I mean, he obviously killed someone
and he's either gonna die or get the death penalty.
I just know it's not good.
But I also think it does depend on the crime.
True.
You know, I'm not saying obviously.
I mean, he killed someone.
So I mean, you can't really go harsher than it is.
Right.
So he tells his lawyers.
He doesn't remember anything from the night.
He's like, I have no recollection of killing her.
I have no recollection.
I remember leaving the house and that's it.
He claims he doesn't remember giving any statements to the police.
He's like, I know that I confess to the police. I don't remember doing that. He claims he doesn't remember giving any statements to the police. He's like, I know that I confess to the police.
I don't remember doing that.
He says he doesn't remember the murder.
He doesn't remember having anything to do with Suzanne.
He claims he was drinking too much and he wasn't able to remember anything.
He also gives another reason for not remembering.
And it's not clear when the notion of multiple personalities first enters this case, but
at some point that's another reason given by the defense for why Ali doesn't remember that night.
A different personality came forward as what he's claiming.
Convenient.
Now based on the evidence, prosecutors believe that what happened is that Suzanne was
jogging on the base, not any place off the base, and that she was then grabbed, taken
in the car, and kidnapped to the nearby public park where she was beaten, tortured, sexually
assaulted and murdered. If this is the case, his story besides the place of the actual murder that he took them
to, none of it matches.
He says he met her off base.
He says that he hit her with a car like none of the story matches.
He's lying, obviously.
It's also hard because he's saying, the defense is saying that he has split personality disorder, which is hard because there's people out there that actually do
How do you know if he's not just trying to take advantage of it?
Exactly exactly so on July 17th a memorial service is held for Suzanne with a closed casket on July 18th 1985
Suzanne is buried at Arlington National Cemetery with military honors and safe to say
is buried at Arlington National Cemetery with military honors. And it's safe to say Suzanne's devastated parents join a support group for family members
of murder victims because how do you go on?
How do you?
On November 7, 1985, four months after the murder, Allie's lawyers are preparing their
defense of Allie.
And this is a death penalty case.
They arranged to have Allie examined by Dr. Wyatt Nichols, a clinical psychologist from
Middle Tennessee Health Institute, who thinks that Allie actually may be suffering from
multiple personality disorder and refers him to another specialist just to be sure.
Dr. Nichols can't come to an expert opinion as to whether the insanity defense would apply
here because Allie claims to have amnesia.
He doesn't remember anything.
Based on psychiatric, at least that's what he's saying.
Based on psychiatric examinations and defense claims
of multiple personalities and insanity,
Ali is held at the Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute
from April to July 1986.
He's examined multiple times by Dr. Battle
and by another doctor, Dr. Willis Marshall.
They put
Allie under hypnosis and they also examine him while he's under the
influence of sodium amytol, which is known as truth serum. So basically at
this point, they're just having tons of doctors look at him to his
decide if these claims are actually true. That he does have amnesia and that he
has multiple personality disorder.
Dang, it's this is this is so hard because I mean, it wasn't proven, but
he killed in quotations someone before his first wife, right?
His first wife died.
And now he's got amnesia and he doesn't remember anything.
And I know, man.
So Dr. Marshall is of the opinion too that Ali does in fact have multiple personalities
and that he's not faking.
He says Ali has one or two alternate personalities named Billy and named Power or Death.
He can't say, though, whether either of these alternate personalities were in control at
the time, like, just because someone comes forward and says, okay, yes, I've looked at him
and I'm diagnosing him, it doesn't mean that that's who killed her.
Like it could have just been him.
Another clinical psychologist, Dr. Sam Kratok, though, has a very different take.
He will become an expert for the prosecution.
He examines Ali and he comes to the conclusion that Ali is exaggerating and basically making
it up.
Yeah, it's just hard because I feel like I have so many opinions on this that I want to say.
And that's kind of how I feel.
Which is, it's hard.
I don't want to, I'm not an expert,
but, and I'm curious to see how
where this keeps going, but that he's lying,
he's pretending, he's making all this up
because he didn't say anything about this one.
Is otherwise dyed, you know, it's just like,
all of a sudden it just comes out now.
Well, so his expert opinion is that Ali has borderline personality disorder
and he's mixing it with chronic alcohol and drug abuse.
Okay. So he's like, he doesn't have multiple personality disorder or psychosis.
He just has borderline personality disorder that he's drinking heavily and using drugs on.
Got it.
For other doctors, examine Ali and they all share doctor,
critics opinion that Ali does
not have multiple personalities.
Keep in mind here that the defense position all along is that Ali is not guilty by reason
of insanity.
They're not arguing that he didn't do it.
They're not arguing that he's factually innocent.
They're arguing that he was legally insane at the time of the crime, making him unresponsible.
The trial is postponed multiple times
by various legal motions
and by the flurry of psychiatric evaluations.
There's the wife say anything about this,
anything in the sources, I mean, maybe somewhere else,
but does she come to play?
Because I mean, she would know him more than anyone.
Right.
Not that I could find.
And same with the parents.
I mean, he grew up at some point. The parents would know at some point what's going on. Not that I could find. And same with the parents. I mean, you grew up at some point.
The parents would know at some point what's going on.
Right.
Not that I could find.
Not that anyone's come forward and said.
Which is a little suspicious as well.
So the jury trial against him starts almost two years after Suzanne's murder.
Based on the two experts, the defense calls it trial.
The defense argues to the jury that Ali has multiple personality disorder
and officially puts on an insanity defense. And obviously we know what the prosecution theory was.
There theory is that Ali faked mental illness while he was housed at the Middle Tennessee Health
Institute and that he's completely responsible for his actions. The trial lasts for 10 days,
the jury is made up of 10 women and two men. They deliberate for six hours, and on March 18, 1987, Ali is convicted by the jury of first
degree murder aggravated kidnapping and aggravated rape.
Remember, this crime is not just like a kidnap in a murder.
This was very brutal, a savage beating, torture.
They deliberate in additional two hours regarding sentencing, and they vote for sadly Ali to receive the death penalty. And a judge sets Ali's execution date
for September 11th 1987. That is just six months away. Oh wow that's quick. Death
penalty sentences rarely proceed that quickly though as we know they will be
delayed delayed delayed. It should be noted that Ali's second wife Lynn stands by
him throughout his trial. Okay. So she's's still saying no no no he's fine. However, about a year after
his conviction, she begins cutting ties with him. So she never comes out and says what she believes
happened, but she stands by him and then later kind of is like no way to do with you. So Ali
and his defense team began the appeal process.
And the court of appeals affirms Allian's conviction and the trial courts and position of the death penalty.
Now as we know, in 1985, at the time of Suzanne's murder, DNA testing of evidence wasn't yet possible.
But in 2001, now that DNA testing is possible, the state of Tennessee passes a law dealing with convicted defendants access to DNA testing.
It provides that if a defendant can show a reasonable probability that he wouldn't have been convicted
if he'd been able to get DNA results, then the courts should provide the defendant with
access to such testing.
It's a good law.
Like if you can prove it, let's test it.
Many pieces of physical evidence were collected in connection with Suzanne's murder,
including her clothing, the tree branch,
the screwdriver, and the pair of men's red underwear
that was found at the scene.
It had all been preserved.
By 2001, however, DNA testing hasn't been done
on any of this evidence.
After he's convicted, and with an execution date now set
for June 3rd, 2004, sadly, Ali changes course and claims he's no longer guilty.
Previously, he was saying not guilty
by reason of insanity.
Now he's saying, never mind, I did not do this crime.
Oh, go.
When you start changing your story and your mind
and I don't know, I'm just, come on.
So he says his confession to the police was false
that it was coerced and he now
recants it.
Remember, they still haven't even tested the blood.
Yeah.
They know that it's her type.
They don't know whether the blood on his car was from her.
I'm a little nervous with this is going.
The defense points to inconsistencies between Ali's confession and the actual evidence to
show that his confession was phony.
They're like nothing he said matched the actual crime of what happened the only thing that matched
was where it happened and that was public knowledge that was public knowledge
her body had been found there so the innocence project gets involved in
all these cases starts researching no way I'm bashing on the innocence project
right now they're not saying he's innocent.
They're investigating it.
That's what they do.
They come in, they look at all the evidence
and then they decide should we help this person out?
Oh man, you got me sweatin' now.
Renowned attorney, Barry Shek,
co-founder of the Innocence Project,
has been arguing that DNA testing should be done
on the underwear found at the scene.
He's like, before you execute this person,
let's test DNA, like why not?
Why not test it just to be sure,
especially because he's now saying this was coerced,
my story didn't even match, please test the DNA.
The state's response has been that other evidence
and criminated Ali and that the DNA alone
wouldn't be enough to overturn his guilt.
They're like, we have the eyewitnesses who said they saw his car.
We have that he first lied and said his wife was with him and then he said, never mind.
And then he said, I did it.
Like he confessed on May 14, 2004, less than a month before his scheduled execution.
Ali's team files a petition to have DNA testing done on 11 different biological samples from the case.
They have 11 different samples of DNA.
How's that possible?
She was sexually assaulted.
They have DNA.
11 different biological samples.
They have blood, all of this.
Oh, okay, I get what you're saying.
I thought you meant they had 11 different people. Oh, no, no, no, no, they haven't tested it. They just have the 11 samples and his defense team is like, please let's test this DNA, but he's getting executed in a month.
Let's test this DNA. His lawyers petition the trial court under the new law arguing that he wouldn't have been convicted if the DNA were tested and if the results showed that the DNA on the physical evidence actually
belonged to someone else.
The defense asked the courts to allow them to run these DNA tests and then be allowed
to compare the results to law enforcement databases.
Sounds like a reasonable request.
The trial court, however, rejects his request.
DNA tests are not performed.
Interesting. In 2006, the Tennessee Pearl Board recommends that then Tennessee Governor
Phil Brezdon order the DNA testing, but the governor refuses and tells Allie's lawyers
at the Innocence Project to bring a petition in the trial court in Memphis. On May 19, Allie
files another petition for DNA analysis, this time on three items that weren't previously
identified in their 2004 position. In this petition, he seeks to for DNA analysis this time on three items that weren't previously identified
in their 2004 position. In this petition, he seeks to perform DNA analysis on biological samples
found on the pair of men's underwear to prove whether that was even his underwear, on the stick
that was used to violate her and on cells found underneath her fingernails. So their skin
cells found underneath her fingernails. The defense argues that the samples should be compared to the DNA of Ali's boyfriend and
to the federal and state databases. They're like, run it, check it against her
boyfriend, and check it against your databases. The code is database has DNA
samples like we know. The defense gets a 15-day reprieve of execution, so it gets
pushed off for 15 days, however the petition is denied. According to the Innocence Projects website, the trial court ruled that and considering
whether to grant a convicted person DNA testing, the court could not consider the ability
of DNA testing to link crime scene evidence to a known individual through the code is database.
Oh, man, I'm kind of indifferent about it.
So the execution is back on on June 27th.
Sadly, Ali has moved to a death watch cell to await his execution at Riverbend
maximum security institution in West Nashville, Tennessee.
On that same day, the Tennessee Supreme Court denies an application for permission to
appeal.
The U.S. Supreme Court denies Ali's appeal for a stay of his execution and the governor
of Tennessee denies clemency. However, a federal judge issues a stay of execution at 11 p.m. on June 27, 2006, just two hours
before the execution process was set to begin.
But then at 118 on June 28, two judges from the sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals overturned
the district court's stay of execution.
It's back on again.
And at 116 a.m., sadly, Ali is brought into the execution chamber.
He says goodbye to his adult son, David, and his adult daughter, April, who are both present.
Suzanne's family is not present at the execution, but their representative, the head of a
victim's rights group, reads a statement, rest in peace, Suzanne, the jury sentence has been carried out.
Sadly, Ali is given the lethal injection, and at at 2 12 a.m. he's pronounced dead.
Ali is only the second person to be executed
in Tennessee since 1960.
According to the New York Times,
Mr. Ali went to his death based on scant physical evidence,
a confession that he claimed he had been forced to be given.
According to one source,
sometime after Ali's execution,
Lynn Ali, his second wife,
speaks to the FBI and provides
some very damaging information about him.
She says she first met Ali shortly after his first wife, Deborah died.
Lynn was only 15 at the time when he was in his mid-20s.
She says that she dropped out of school and moved away with him away from her friends
and family and that he was a heavy drinker.
She says that he tried to strangle her one night, leaving her with the telltale,
particular hemorrhaging,
purple bruises in a swollen face.
Lynn also tells the FBI that Ali admitted to her
that he killed his first wife.
He said he choked her and then held her underwater
until she stopped breathing.
He had addressed her body as he would his own,
leaving her underwear and socks,
balled up in her pants inside out
to support the theory that she had
undressed herself and gotten into the bath.
He staged the body.
That's exactly what Ali admitted he did to Suzanne's body as well.
In 2001, the Tennessee Supreme Court issues an opinion that says the lower courts were wrong.
It rules that the lower courts reasoning was flawed when it refused to allow Ali's defense
team to test the DNA.
So Ali's defense team has finally scored a victory. However, he's
now been dead for five years.
You'll they test it?
Just to make this crystal clear, according to the Tennessee Supreme Court, if Ali were
still alive today and brought his petition in court today to have the DNA testing done,
it would have been granted. But it's too late. And so ends the sadly Ali case. That's
it. That is until November 8, 2018.
Oh, my God.
She drive me in circles over here.
They discover another man who had raped multiple women
that was in the same exact aviation course as Suzanne,
but that he wasn't actually stationed in Nashville at the time.
He was supposedly in California.
But it's still too big of a coincidence to ignore.
Like, he's this man who's raped broken into people's houses. Yeah, he's in California, but it's still too big of a coincidence to ignore.
Like he's this man who's raped, broken into people's houses, multiple
haven't they don't know if he was in California.
He was just stationed there.
So based on this, sadly, Ali's daughter decides to go back to the
Innocence Project and try to get the DNA tested.
She wants to clear her father's name, even if he's already dead.
So she begins working on that,
and that whole process of her trying
goes all the way up until this year.
She's still trying to get the DNA tested.
Suzanne is buried at Arlington Cemetery in Virginia.
Her family has established a scholarship in her memory,
named the Suzanne Marie Collins Perpetual Scholarship, which began awarding scholarships in 1996.
A short movie on the case comes out called the other side of death row and Suzanne's parents
speak to the filmmakers. They say that they will never have closure even with the execution
of their daughter's murderer. And no wonder amid all the legal maneuverings and the lingering
questions about DNA testing, let's not forget about Suzanne Marie Collins and her life and her accomplishments and
the horror of this crime.
As her father says, as quoted in murder pdf, somebody came up from behind her, grabbed
her through her in his car, took her off base to a county park nearby where over time
he battered her against his automobile, stripped her and tortured her.
There is no closure.
To this day, the DNA evidence in Suzanne's case still has never been tested.
It has never been compared with sadly Ali's DNA, the man who was put to death for her murder.
The only way this will ever change is if the Tennessee Supreme Court overturns the court's
ruling, which is unlikely, and it's not clear whether an appeal has been made to the
Tennessee Supreme Court, or the Tennessee Legislature changes the law and
gives a defendant's estate legal standing to bring a petition for DNA testing under the
statute. Sometimes the law is extremely unsatisfactory. When the state says sorry, you don't have
standing because we already killed you, that just doesn't sit very well, but that's
what's happening right now in his daughter's petition. As written in a New York Times article, nationally, database
hits of DNA evidence have identified the actual assailant in 139 exonerations. 139 times
DNA has been tested and exonerated somebody. What it have exonerated said Lee Ali, it seems unlikely, but how do we know for sure
until the DNA is tested? So it's safe to say the death penalty is final, was the right man executed?
Unfortunately, the answer to that question lingers to this very day. So first of all, rest in peace,
Suzanne, because that is horrible, she did not deserve to die. Second of all, I do find it a little weird
that they didn't test this DNA.
Either they knew something or they were just like,
dude, F this, like we have enough evidence.
We're not gonna use these other resources.
Like, maybe it was more of just like a slap in the face.
Like we don't care about you anymore.
We know you did it.
I mean, that's kind of what I like to believe.
I mean, yeah, it's a little weird.
They didn't test it.
But then you do look at all the other evidence
and the wife comes out and goes,
he confessed to me that he did kill his other wife.
Like, you look at all this stuff and you're just like,
I think this dude, yes, killed her.
You look at the non-DNA evidence and it's strong.
It's so strong.
It's, yeah, it's a dream.
It's like, what are the chances?
I mean, yes, his first wife died.
His second wife said that he killed her.
But then I guess why not just test it?
It'd be like, look, it's you.
Mm-hmm, why not test it?
I don't know, I don't know.
It's a little weird for sure.
I don't wanna think about it too much
because that would suck if it wasn't him.
But.
139 have been, people have been exonerated.
Yeah, but that's a lot. This is
You look at everything else around this and I just see there's no way it's not him
He lied he lied about it. He lied about his wife being in the car like all this stuff the two Marines the eyewitnesses said It was his car. Yeah, you drove right past like, I don't know, I just think there's two of them.
She was obviously kidnapped.
How do we bend him?
Unless it was the other suspect who literally
is in prison now for raping women around that area.
Yeah, I'm curious.
I mean, I kind of do want them to just test it.
Oh, yeah.
Just test it now and just to make sure
that they're running into issues because the Tennessee law says we can't test it because he test it now and just to make sure they're running into issues because the
Tennessee law says we can't test it because he's already dead.
Surprise like a private party can't come and test it or something like that.
The innocence project is trying.
But at the end of the personal opinion, I don't think he's innocent.
Wow.
Yeah, no, zero died in my mind.
Okay.
No doubt. You do think he is?
I don't think he is.
I don't think he isn't.
I want to test that DNA.
I don't know.
You can't say that.
Yes.
I can't say that because no one should be put to death if there's DNA that hasn't been
tested.
Like that should just be a law.
I see your point.
If there's DNA in a case, no one should be put to death until that DNA is tested.
I see your point.
I see your point.
But also, what about the other evidence?
What do you think about it?
I think the other evidence is strong.
That's why I'm saying it.
Like when you're first researching this case,
you're like, there's absolutely no way.
There's absolutely no way he didn't do this.
But then you get to the end and it's like,
I think it was just...
Right, but his story didn't match up.
And there is DNA why won't they test it?
And there was other probable suspects.
But you look at everyone else that's ever killed anyone
and their stories never match up.
They always lie, right?
It's like this typical same pattern that happens
every single time.
They always minimize their actions.
Yeah, it's like, this is no different
than any other murder that we've covered.
So it just seems pretty...
Yeah, I mean, I think he lied about it and he was trying to get away with it.
And...
Yeah.
Plus, those Marines said that wasn't a fight.
That was someone begging for a fight.
Yeah, and you can tell the difference.
Yeah.
Alright, that is our case for this week.
We hope you all have a great week and we will see you next time with another episode.
I love it.
I hate it.
Goodbye.