Small Town Murder - #1 - A Quadruple Murder in Mississippi

Episode Date: January 18, 2017

For our first episode, we look at a quadruple murder in the small town of Sarah, Mississippi.A young, rural Mississippi man does the unthinkable, and pays the ultimate price. Along the way, w...e learn that kerosene can fuel a town, and to never trust a guy who keeps a moving truck for extra days.Hosted by James Pietragallo & Jimmie WhismanNew episodes every Thursday!!Please subscribe, rate, and review!Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts!Head to shutupandgivememurder.com for all things Small Town Murder!For merchandise: crimeinsports.threadless.comCheck out James and Jimmie's other show: Crime in Sports Follow us on social media!Facebook: facebook.com/smalltownpodInstagram: instagram.com/smalltownmurderTwitter: twitter.com/MurderSmall Contact the show: crimeinsports@gmail.com See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening early and ad-free on Wondery Plus. What if you married the love of your life and then stood by them as they developed 21 new identities? What would you do? This Is Actually Happening is a weekly podcast that features extraordinary true stories of life-changing events told by the people who lived them. Listen to the newest season of This Is Actually Happening on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you for joining us on our inaugural episode of Small Town Murder. This week we head to Sarah, Mississippi, an unincorporated municipality in northwestern Mississippi that was the scene of a brutal quadruple murder in 2001.
Starting point is 00:00:37 Welcome to Small Town Murder. Yay! Yay, indeed, Jimmy. I'm here. My name is James Petrigallo. I'm here with my co-host. I am Jimmy Wissman. Thank you guys so much for joining us on our inaugural voyage. This is fun. Our inaugural voyage into a complete mess of human disaster. I fucking hope so.
Starting point is 00:01:13 We have some twisted mess of human disaster for you guys today. A story today coming from Mississippi, coming from the deep south of the United States. Let's get right into it. What do you say? I love it. It comes from Tate County, Mississippi. It's a town called Sarah, Mississippi. Like I said before, it's an unincorporated municipality, which is defined as a region of land that isn't governed by its own municipal corporation, but rather administered as part of larger administrative
Starting point is 00:01:41 divisions. So basically what that means is nobody cares about this place and some larger far away county seat is supposed to care, but they don't really care. They don't even have their own government. They haven't even formed their own government, these people. So yes, it's the Tate County, Mississippi was formed in 1873. The county, it's in the far Northwest portion of Mississippi. This is a humid, swampy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:07 It's weird, too, because it's hot and sticky, yet in the winter it's still cold as shit and snows all the time. It's a terrible place to be, basically, based on geography. The worst of both worlds. The worst of both worlds. It's terrible. It's also a dry county. Oh, no. So overseas, if you don't know what that is, a dry county means—
Starting point is 00:02:23 You can't even get fucked up to forget about it. You can't buy alcohol there. So that's what that is. And through the south, there's a lot of dry counties. There's places where the religious folk still have that height of a rain on everything. And there's no local government to overturn it anyway. So what are you going to do? Sarah is a very small town. It does have a post office, though.
Starting point is 00:02:43 It's zip code 38665. Elevation, 187 feet. So it's pretty close to sea level. It's flat down there. The post office is on Sarah Road in Sarah. So it tells you what a large town this is. And how they've really expanded their horizons on naming shit. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:03:01 I guarantee you it's named after the founder's daughter. You know it is. There's like Sarah Road and Highway 3. Those are the roads and numbered highways. There's one stoplight if they've got that and it's powered by a generator because they got no power. That's it, man. That's it. Just somebody has to come pour gasoline
Starting point is 00:03:17 in it every once in a while. Or crank it. Let's say it's kerosene probably. Somebody comes out with some kerosene. I don't even know where to buy kerosene. That's hysterical. No, they have it down there, though, I have a feeling. Oh, yeah. To give you an idea of where this place is, it's 183 miles from Jackson, Mississippi,
Starting point is 00:03:33 which is kind of in the center of the state, about two hours, 45 minutes. It is very close to Memphis, Tennessee. All right. You just take the three north, about 57 miles, and you hit Memphis. So it's less than an hour away from Memphis. Why the fuck are you there? So yeah, people are going to Memphis. They all go to Memphis to party.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Oh, I'm sure. Yeah. Population of Sarah is 2,775, which is not a lot. Population density show you how spread out it is. 2,000 people with no car apparently. No, none. It's only an hour drive north. Yeah, just walk it.
Starting point is 00:04:00 The fuck out. Walk it. Yeah. Get out of there. It's not dry up there. Throw your shit on your back and leave. You can get booze. The population density is 43 people per square mile.
Starting point is 00:04:11 The average United States population density is 91. Wow. So it's like half as. You have twice the livable space. Twice as rural as the rest of the national average. A little couple of stats here that I find interesting. Three percent more. There's three percent more zero to four-year-olds in the national average. Really?
Starting point is 00:04:30 So there's more kids than more. So they are fucking like crazy. Yeah. There's nothing to do. But not many old people, I hear. There's a lot of old people like 60s and 50s. In the population breakdown, it lists as over age 85, 0.00%. Wow.
Starting point is 00:04:45 So let's say the health care there is probably not great. Let's just say that. 1.85% is the national average. So you're supposed to have about 2% of the elderly, and they don't have any. So they killed them all off. It's ridiculous. Why don't they just ship them all out? As far as racial breakdown goes, because when we're dealing with the South, that is ever
Starting point is 00:05:04 important. And we apologize if you're from the South and you're offended by any of this. Tough shit. You have a history. You're going to have to live up to it now. Sorry. That's great. We're going to talk about everything that happens.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Do you like the Eskimos where they just put them on a piece of land and just shove them off? I think so. With the elderly, I think they are. Get rid of them. They drive down to the Gulf. You're going to die soon. They take them up to Memphis and they push them off that pyramid they built up there. That's what they do.
Starting point is 00:05:27 They shove them right off. It says the racial breakdown is 89.59% white and 10.41% black. Now, you may notice something about those two numbers. They don't add to 100. They add exactly to 100. Wait, say that again. 89.59% and 10.41%. There is nobody else there.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Zero percent anything else. Literally. It says on the thing, quote, 100 percent non-Hispanic. You can't get a burrito within 30 miles. You can't get booze or a burrito anywhere in that county. It's horrible. It's a burrito, but it's made by some guy named Hank. Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:01 National average, just to show you how it contrasts here, 62% white, 12% black, 17% Hispanic is the national average. So they are way askew on that. Way the fuck off. Way off. But the only claim to fame they have is that James Earl Jones was born in Arca, Butler, and Tate County. So they have James Earl Jones. So somewhere else.
Starting point is 00:06:22 Yeah. It's in that county in the middle of nowhere. Some other unincorporated shithole with no booze. Very religious around there as the United States, the southern portion of the United States is very religious in general if you're from overseas. Here we have about 60 percent of the people classifying themselves as religious as opposed to about a 49 percent national average so it's you know and the religions down there they're a little strict they have it is about 34 percent baptist yeah and southern baptist is a motherfucker these people do not fuck around this is some fire and brimstone uh very very very authoritarian preach at you. They don't curse much.
Starting point is 00:07:07 And if they're listening to this podcast, they've already turned it off. They've already turned it off. So we cannot offend the Baptists. And if you are a Baptist and you're listening to this, what the fuck are you doing? You're the hypocrite. You are a Baptist. Don't tell me because you don't believe in that shit either. You wouldn't be listening to this. Also, 16.7% Methodist.
Starting point is 00:07:22 These are well above the national average for these two religions. 0.0% Jewish. Surprising. Jews do not like northwestern Mississippi. Also, 0.0% Muslim. So that tells you right there what we're dealing with. It gives you an idea. Very close-minded people.
Starting point is 00:07:41 Absolutely. There's some tornadoes hit around there, including an F4 that hit December 23, 2015, a few miles away in Tyro. Yeah, I remember that one. It destroyed a trailer and the kerosene generator that operates the light, and then that was it because there's nobody else there. So nobody cared. Awesome. They barely noticed, we'll put it that way. Was there a trailer there yesterday?
Starting point is 00:08:03 It was windy last night. Was there a trailer there? I don't know. Never mind. Whatever. Sorry if we're offending with the Southern accents, but I'm going to keep it to a minimum with this because everything will be said in that otherwise as we get into the crime part of this, the murder part of this. The cost of living there, not very expensive. I would guess free. The general cost of living is 10% less than the national average, but the housing is about 40% less than the national average. Wow. Let's do a new segment here on Small Town Murder.
Starting point is 00:08:33 New segment number one, the Sarah Mississippi housing report. In case you're looking for a home, you're perusing for a new place to live, and you're like, where am I going to move? I know, Sarah Mississippi. I don't want to drink. Well, and I'm feeling Baptist, and I don't want any booze. So you can move there. You can get a three-bedroom, two-bathroom house, 1,506 square feet. It's a good-sized house, $120,000.
Starting point is 00:08:56 Wow. That is cheap. I don't know where you live in the rest of the country, the rest of the world, but in Phoenix, that would be a cheap home. I know where we live. You can get, this house is beautiful too. I saw the picture of it here. A four bedroom, five bath, 3,500 square foot house.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Wow. It's brick. It's beautiful. The landscaping, picturesque. Four bed, five bath? Yeah. That's bizarre. No, that's what rich people do.
Starting point is 00:09:19 Yeah. Whenever you see like really crazy houses, you're like, that's beautiful. It's always like five bedroom, eight bathroom because every bedroom has a bathroom. And then there's extra ones around. Yeah. That's what they do. It's 350 grand for this house. Wow.
Starting point is 00:09:33 That would be a million dollars. That's crazy. Or you can get a little house if you're a two bedroom, two bath, 1250 square foot house for only $63,000. Holy shit. And it is down the scariest driveway I've ever seen in my life. It looks like, have you ever seen Evil Dead?
Starting point is 00:09:50 Where it's the path to the cabin through the woods. That's what it looks like. It's a dirt road completely covered in trees leading to just darkness. It looks terrifying. Their pickup truck is the same price as their house. That's the thing, absolutely. Or you can get a 41 and a half acre lot for $117,000. Why would you buy a house? That's the thing, absolutely. Or you can get a 41 and a half acre lot for 117 grand.
Starting point is 00:10:06 Why would you buy a house? So big. Just buy that and build it. Well, I was going to say, if you want to get a tent and get three quarters of an acre, you can get that for 12,500 bucks. Jeez Louise, that's cheap. Yeah, this is as far as- You can't buy a car for that anymore.
Starting point is 00:10:19 No, that's what I mean. You can't do anything for that. Education in this whole thing here, they spend a little bit more than half the money per student as the national average. A little less than half? A little less than half per student. Not great. 79%. They don't want them getting smart and moving out.
Starting point is 00:10:38 They need the tax money. They need something. Well, shit, they're not going to be working well. He's going to fill the kerosene tank, and then we're going to go back into the coffers. The other one, his best friend's going to change the bulbs on the traffic light when they go out. So 79% only are high school, or there's the high school graduation rate there. That's about 87% is the national average. So it's not great.
Starting point is 00:10:59 Four-year, this is insane here. Okay. The four-year college graduates, 4.71 there. National average is 29.2. Four percent go four years in college. National average is 29 percent. Well, they don't like being talked down to down there. They don't like – and this isn't just the general south because there's cool places in the south.
Starting point is 00:11:20 There's a lot of cool places in the south, even smaller places that are cool in the south. But this is not one of them. This is a place that you would not want to be quote down shithole it's an epitome of it this is a place where you know a singer moved out of and then tell stories about how their dad was an alcoholic and they were young and stuff like that uh 1.26 percent have a master's degree. Wow. It's interesting. Now, they do have one decent high school here.
Starting point is 00:11:50 It's called Strayhorn High School. Real quickly. Yeah. The population was a little over 2,000. Yes. 1% of that is 20 people? That's what I mean. That's crazy. It's like 20 people.
Starting point is 00:11:59 20 people in that whole town have a master's. They meet once a month for lunch, but not a drink because they can't have one. No drinking. Their Strayhorn High School on 86 Mustang Drive in Sarah here earned a bronze medal rating actually in the national school ratings here. There is 20 full-time teachers there. So it's a small school. They have a 22 to one student to teacher ratio, which is pretty small. They have 68% of the students are economically disadvantaged that go to the school. So that tells you a lot. That's a lot of free lunches.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Yeah, it's a lot. 82% white in this school. It's a very white school. The rest is black and 0.5% Asian. What? There's one kid. Where's that guy at? He's just one kid sitting there.
Starting point is 00:12:40 He's lost. I feel super – no, his family owns the restaurant in town. He's like, my family owns Cheng Wong's down there that everybody goes to every friday my dad owns the buffet he's like fuck me they all just make fun of me wind up here this school has an 84 graduation rate so it's better than the average of these of this county here um 10 higher proficiency there also um but there's racial issues, as there always is in Mississippi. Apparently, they have kind of started to resegregate schools now. What?
Starting point is 00:13:12 Well, they struck down Civil Rights Act, portions of the Civil Rights Act in the Supreme Court over here in the United States. And that included certain education provisions where you don't have to provide equal things for equal whatever. So bullshit. What they end up doing is reverting back to what they're doing, whereas the black kids in the poor schools, they let them go to shit. And then the white kids in the nice schools. That's where they get the nice stuff.
Starting point is 00:13:39 That's where they get the nice stuff, basically. So it's it's one of these apparent from there said, quote, that movie, Mississippi Burning, you know, we joke around about how Mississippi's still burning and the match was lit in Tate County. Because that's where we're coming from here. About two minutes ago, I almost referenced Mississippi Burning, and that's so hysterical. They had separate proms there. There's documentaries about separate proms down south. Separate proms.
Starting point is 00:14:03 It's happening. Yeah. They have the whites got their own prom at the elementary school that the black kids weren't involved with. They had separate black homecoming queen, white homecoming queen. Wow. Like everything in the school that they have, they have a black version and a white version, which I feel like is exactly the opposite of what we're going for here. The black schools are performing way worse. They have less teachers, worse facilities, not great at all.
Starting point is 00:14:27 I hope the white school for their Christmas concert do like the Wizard of Oz and then the black school does the Wiz. That would just be amazing. That would be amazing. I bet the black version would be way better too. Even though they have a way shittier story because the Wiz is terrible, they'd be better performers I feel like than a bunch of white kids. They had some problems on Martin Luther King Day, January 2015.
Starting point is 00:14:52 Of course they did. A bunch of flyers went into driveways all around Tate County, and they had the KKK logo on it, and they were calling Martin Luther King a communist pervert. It said, quote, on Martin Luther King Day, you are celebrating a communist pervert. So I'm like, all right. It's a friendly town down there. Sounds super friendly. Holy shit. It's insane.
Starting point is 00:15:12 Violent crime down there. Violent crime is higher than the national average by a good chunk. Real quick, why is the KKK? I want to research that. Why do they call them a communist pervert? What are their facts that support that shit? There's a certain portion of people on the right wing and I won't even say regular.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Probably not anybody listening. Extremist nutbags that basically any... Jeff Sessions. They think public schools are communist. Everything's communist. Really? Paved roads are communist. Because we make them with your tax money. We collectively put into it.
Starting point is 00:15:45 It's like, I want to pay for my own road. Okay, well, go for it. Fucking drive on dirt, dickhead. And then come back to the paved road and talk about how nice it is. That might be taking it to the extreme a bit with your, you know. I get in America we have a real, like, you know, stick to it and make it on my own type of thing. But that's a little extreme, I think. That's crazy.
Starting point is 00:16:02 Communist pervert, but whatever. I don't know his perversions. He might have been a per a pervert i have no idea but i'm pretty sure he wasn't a communist i'll call him a fucking hero i don't care exactly that too there's a lot of people that are perverts that's not an insult to martin luther king whatever he does behind closed doors it was his fucking business i don't really care to be honest with you i can't argue that point. I'm getting the other breakdown here is they are 51.75 percent of the people are married in Sarah and Sarah. It's weird. Six point one two percent are married but separated, which is like three times the national average. There's people just too lazy to get a fucking divorce down there or they can't afford.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Yeah, that's the other thing here. And like I said, violent crime is higher down there than the national average by far. Yeah, because it's poor. I think that's it here. And how they deal with violent crime is different than a lot of other places in the world and even places in the U.S. We'll get into the executions and how they work it down there in Mississippi. Mississippi joined the union in 1817.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Against their fucking – Against – well, they got out again in the 1860s and then rejoined again. So they've been in and out a couple of times here. Since their inception, they've been executing people immediately because it's the South and that's what they do. They used to do it by hanging, obviously. They hung people until 1940 when they started using the electric chair. 1940 they were still hanging the electric chair. 1940? They were still hanging people.
Starting point is 00:17:27 Absolutely. Wow. Shit, they're probably still hanging people now, just not in an official capacity, if you know what I mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 1940, they started using the electric chair. Between 1940 and 1952, 75 prisoners died in the electric chair. So they really got it cranking. The guy with the kerosene was out there every five minutes pouring it in. Old Sparky's was out there every five minutes. It was an old oak electric chair. It was crazy. Run by a generator, no doubt.
Starting point is 00:17:55 That probably, that's what I mean. The kerosene man, he's a busy man. He has a lot of shit to do. All the tax money collected in that county is from him. 1954, the gas chamber was involved. It was introduced. 1954? Installed, yes, 1954. it was used until 1989 the gas chamber they only executed 35 people in the gas chamber no longer there was some there was a big backlash against they couldn't afford to get that's probably what it was too they're like we can't shut it off yeah they should we they missed a couple of bills. They shut it off. They now switched to lethal. They could have just run it on the generator's fumes. Yeah, definitely.
Starting point is 00:18:29 Definitely. Just pipe that shit in there. Just go. It's fine. Get the traffic light, hook it up, and we can just kill a guy with that. Get the hose going. Not surprised they didn't just back up their El Camino. Somebody just put a hose in the room.
Starting point is 00:18:39 You know there's a ton of El Caminos in this town. Somebody brought it up. They're like, my pickup is just the exhaust is terrible. I can just back it on up. We can put a hose. I got a diesel. It shoots black shit all over the place. That's how my wife killed herself, and it seemed to work fine.
Starting point is 00:18:53 So 52 inmates currently on death row in Mississippi. Wow. They're waiting for the lethal injection, which is now their current method of execution. There's 50 males and two females on it. 22 whites, 29 blacks, and that one Asian. They have one Asian in everything. I swear to God. Are you serious?
Starting point is 00:19:11 I swear to God, one Asian. Hilarious. 22 whites, 29 blacks, one Asian. I swear to God, there's a quota there where we don't care about whites and blacks, and we don't want any Mexicans, obviously. 0.1, 100% non-Hispanic. But we need one Asian everywhere, in the schools, in the jails, in the prisons. On death row, fucking everywhere.
Starting point is 00:19:30 So let's introduce ourselves here to a man who ends up dealing with this system later on, our perpetrator this week. He's not a poor, unfortunate soul. He's an asshole. Let's talk about him. He had a terrible upbringing, but that is no excuse for what he did, and we'll talk about it here. It's Jan Michael Brewer is his name, Jr. Now, I have to tell you folks, why Jimmy is laughing, we do another podcast called Crime
Starting point is 00:19:59 and Sports. Please tune into Crime and Sports, by the way. You do not have to like sports. It doesn't matter at all about sports. It's the crime and just happens to be the people were athletes that we cover right that's it so please tune into that but we have found we are we've done 50 episodes of that show and we have i think 15 out of 50 of our criminals are juniors crazy at first it was funny the first couple times and then after a, by the time we got to like episode 40, we were like, okay, this is an actual thing. It's an epidemic.
Starting point is 00:20:28 It's a problem. This is real. Like if you name your kid Junior, you are asking for trouble. And it continues here. And this guy's not even an athlete at all. Jan Michael Browner is born June 10th, 1970. Browner? Browner.
Starting point is 00:20:41 Brawner. Brawner. Like Brawny with an E-R. Brawner. Born June 10 10, 1977. Grows up in South Haven in Tate County. His divorced parents had a stepfather. Horrible, horrible upbringing, too.
Starting point is 00:20:54 Of course. His father's a terrible person, and we'll get into that in a second here. He had a learning disability growing up. Family frequently moved due to financial problems brought on by his parents and their drug and alcohol abuse and everything else. Father beat him and his sister terribly. He would receive beatings from his father to ensure his silence about his father repeatedly raping his sister. Oh, that's a good way to do it. That's a good way.
Starting point is 00:21:17 This is how these this family. I didn't even tell you. And you're already beating me. I'm telling you, man. This is where I wish that F4 tornado would have came a little earlier and just wiped this crew right off the earth. Because it's a mess here. By 1991, the father's abuse worsens. He's 14 at this point. His school grades go in the toilet.
Starting point is 00:21:38 He drops out of school in the ninth grade, which is terrific. He's part of their low graduation rate. That's what I mean. He fits into everything we just talked about. He is the, that's what this is. Quintessential Sarah, Mississippi resident. This is what it produces, basically, if you have a system that's not operating well for everybody here.
Starting point is 00:22:00 He drops out of school in the ninth grade. He fails in his one attempt to get a GED and then just says, fuck it, I don't need a GED. And by the way, the South, let this be a lesson to you. Your dry counties don't do fuck because this guy found alcohol and beat the shit out of his family either way. Well, yeah. And the son here, Jan, at age 14, because there's less alcohol around the normal, what he starts doing is huffing gasoline. That'll do it. This is what this is what Native Americans do on reservations.
Starting point is 00:22:25 It's a problem there. Wherever there's no alcohol, people are going to get wasted in some way, shape, or form. They're going to get fucked up one way or another. So whether it's drinking hairspray, like they've heard on reservations they do a lot, or huffing gold paint. Like if you go to a site, I know like in small towns in Canada, it's an epidemic. Gas is still? Gas and paint huffing.
Starting point is 00:22:44 Wow. It's an epidemic up there because that's what they get. They're bored. You know what I mean? So anyway, he has such a bad huffing problem here that he's admitted to the Parkwood Hospital for huffing gasoline, and he's diagnosed with polysubstance abuse, which didn't really need a diagnosis if you have to be hospitalized because you huff so much gasoline. You're abusing that.
Starting point is 00:23:03 Let's just say that right now. because you cuff so much gasoline, you're abusing that. Let's just say that right now. In December 3, 1991, his father, Jan Sr., is convicted of sexual battery of his sister. So that's interesting there. So now he's got a stigma. So Junior took all these beatings for nothing because he got caught anyway. Got caught anywhere.
Starting point is 00:23:22 Father served seven and a half years in state prison over this. Wow. So he's gone from the time he's 14, which is good for everybody. Get that asshole out of there. He – Jan works mainly in a warehouse – as a warehouse forklift operator through this whole time. That's a pretty good gig. It's OK for Sarah. I mean I looked at the – I actually looked at job listings there to see what – it's literally there was like – every job was like $8.25 an hour. It's not great down there for that.
Starting point is 00:23:46 So he meets Barbara Craft. She's born October 3rd, 1977. They're the same age. He meets her around this time in the mid-'90s, and they get together. They become a couple. By late 1997, Barbara is pregnant with his child, which perfect. That's the clan you want to hook yourself into here. In December 1997, the two get married.
Starting point is 00:24:09 Jan marries Barbara Craft because March 1998, about three months later, their daughter Paige is born. So we understand the cause of that wedding. We definitely hastened it if it wasn't the cause. Why are two 20-year-olds getting married? Oh, okay, I get it there. It's that six-month belly right there. That makes sense. Now I understand.
Starting point is 00:24:28 Wow. Through the next couple of years, the couple live with Barbara's parents, Carl and Jane, on and off in Sarah, Mississippi. That's where their parents are from. They're on and off. Sometimes they're on their own. Sometimes they're with them. He's not a good provider, but he's not a good anything.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Yeah. He's just bad for the family. He's a 20-year-old. He doesn't know fuck. No, and he's, in 1998, he's convicted of several counts of burglary and grand larceny. 21 years old, he's already breaking into places. Yeah, and he's got a wife and a young daughter, and this is what he's doing. He's given probation and must report to a guy named Kenneth Fox, who's his PO, and he'll
Starting point is 00:25:03 come up later on. Correct. We'll talk about him a little bit more. 1999, they split up. Okay. A shocker. 22-year-old with a two-year-old and- Don't see that one coming from a mile away.
Starting point is 00:25:13 And he's a burglar and he's on parole or probation. Yeah. Let's stay with him. That's not going to stay together long. And I'm sure he's still huffing gasoline on his side, too. In the year 2000, Jan meets June Filliard. That's his future girlfriend through a local- It's a very southern name, June. Jan meets June Filliard. That's a future girlfriend through a local... It's a very
Starting point is 00:25:27 southern name, June. It's June Filliard. Yeah. Yeah, it does. Filliard. Is her middle name Beauregard? It probably should be. Beauregard. I like that. I like that a lot of Devereaux or something like that. Some almost French bullshit that makes him sound fucking hoity-toity. Louisiana's
Starting point is 00:25:43 pretty close by. Why not? You sound very hoity-toity. Louisiana's pretty close by. Why not? You sound very hoity-toity in that fucking Little House on the Prairie dress. What are you doing? Jesus. Fancy. These two meet through a local radio station's dateline. So this is the time. We're dealing 2000.
Starting point is 00:25:57 This is no, there's no Tinder. There's no way to meet anybody. Like you literally call a radio station where someone else called a radio station. You're like, is your girl there? Yeah, okay. Hi. Is there a girl there? That's literally what it is. Are you a girl? Okay. And then you talk to them. It's the weirdest thing. I'd never heard of anyone actually meeting on this sort
Starting point is 00:26:16 of thing, so this is interesting. They soon move into an apartment together because they're white trash. They have to move in immediately. It's in South Haven, which is where he is kind of born and bred. Barbara and Paige, his wife and his ex-wife now and his daughter, are staying with Carl and June, her parents, and Sarah at this point. She's going to stay with them. Whatever.
Starting point is 00:26:35 It's a support system for the child and everything else. The year 2000, Jan is in several car accidents. I don't know what the hell he's doing. I don't know why he can't keep the car on the road, but he's in. He's trying to huff the gas from the gas tank at the same time he's driving. He's got a hose, too. There's a lot of hoses in this town. He later says that these caused brain damage, these car accidents.
Starting point is 00:26:56 No, the huffing the gas caused the brain damage. You dipshit. Or the years of huffing, possibly. I'm not disputing he has brain damage. I'm sure he does, but the cause is definitely up for debate. You didn't graduate high school. You dropped out in ninth grade, man. Let everybody else determine where the brain damage came from.
Starting point is 00:27:13 You can drive a forklift high on gasoline, apparently. So March of 2001, they officially divorced Jan and Barbara. Barbara is awarded full custody of Paige. Thank God. Yeah, exactly. Thank God, although it facil custody of Paige. Thank God. Yeah, exactly. Thank God. Although it facilitates something worse. Of course.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Barbara moves in with her parents, Carl and Jane Craft and Sarah. She's full time now. She's going to live with them. Tells Jan that she doesn't want him around Paige. Gets a restraining order against him. Uh-oh. So she's telling him she does not want him around the daughter. You just told a man with brain damage that he can't see his daughter.
Starting point is 00:27:46 Yeah, and legally filed paperwork as such. So he's not going to be happy about this. But I'm glad she did this. You've got to protect yourself. It's the best thing to do. Who wants this guy around the kid at this point? March of 2001, he's still living with June, Phil Yaw. They're having financial difficulties at the problem.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Brawner later says- What year was this? This is June, Phil Yaw. They're having financial difficulties at the problem. Brawner later says – What year was this? This is 2001, March of 2001. And gas is about to go through the roof, too. It's about to get worse for him. Wait till you hear what he's driving to. You're going to go, wow, he's going to have to trade that in for a Pinto or a four-cylinder El Camino or whatever they're driving. Some sort of Suzuki Swift or Geo Metro.
Starting point is 00:28:25 A nice Suzuki Samurai. Yeah, one of those. Look like a toy. They tip over all the time. So Browner later says that the pressure was building on him because, quote, nothing was going right. No. Just nothing's going right.
Starting point is 00:28:37 Well, maybe when you're a ninth grade dropout with a huffing problem and brain damage, do you expect things to go your way? You're 23 and your best experience in life is being a forklift operator. Do you expect to be a master of the stock market or, you know, what are you expecting out of the world at this point from this guy? It is not your oyster. I'll tell you that right now. Definitely the world is far from your oyster. I'm telling you. So April 24th, 2001. Okay. Jan leaves his apartment in South Haven at 3 o'clock in the morning. That's either a go-getter or a cracker.
Starting point is 00:29:08 One of the two. I'm either really impressed or really worried. One of the two. He's driving a U-Haul truck for some reason. Why is he driving a U-Haul truck around? Did he rent this or did he steal it? Most people rent the U-Haul truck and they drop their shit off and they bring the U-Haul truck back. Get the fuck out of that thing.
Starting point is 00:29:25 It is not impressive. He hasn't moved. That's not a truck to go cruising for chicks in. You can't go over 50 in the thing. Without the whole truck shaking. He hasn't moved recently, so I have no idea why he's doing this. He's heading to the craft home to see his wife and his parents and ex-in-laws and his daughter at 3 o'clock in the morning in Sarah. It's about an hour away.
Starting point is 00:29:47 So he says that he thought he might be able to borrow some money from Barbara's father, Carl. To pay for this U-Haul. I got a U-Haul bill mounting. I've had this thing for days. I can't get rid of it. It keeps going up every day. Later, he admits that he was going to rob them. He wasn't going to borrow anything.
Starting point is 00:30:03 He arrives at the Kraft home at 4444 Highway 3 in Sarah. That's their address. They have a highway address. They have a highway address. Terrible. At about 4 o'clock in the morning, he pulls up in his U-Haul truck, parks the U-Haul a safe distance from the house, doesn't want to alert anybody. Doesn't want to wake anybody up at 4 a.m. And he approaches the house.
Starting point is 00:30:23 He sits on the steps, the front steps of the house from 4 a.m. to 7 a.m. What? Once again, go-getter or really cracky behavior to sit on the steps. You've got three hours to figure out what you're really going to do. And this is 2001. He couldn't, like, play on his phone. No. He just literally sat there staring at the crickets.
Starting point is 00:30:40 The best game he had was Snake. Remember that one on the Nokia phone? Yeah, you could put Tetris on at some point. That shit lasts 10 minutes. In about 2004. And in 2001, I don't even think, and this guy, I don't think he had any phone. No. No less one capable of playing any game.
Starting point is 00:30:54 No. He would have a phone that was the, you know, like a brick phone from the 80s still. He'd be like, I got this. He kicked a can around their front yard. Yeah, that's what he did. So he had to sit there. A little Pinto beans can. So at some point, he goes into Carl's truck, the father-in-law's truck here, and takes out a rifle that he has in there.
Starting point is 00:31:09 Oh, shit. He removes the bullets from the rifle because, quote, he didn't want to get shot is what he says. He didn't want to get shot? He didn't want to get shot by Carl. So he removes Carl's bullets from his rifle. Oh, I get it. Around 7 a.m., he hears Carl coming out of the house. Uh-oh.
Starting point is 00:31:25 He runs and hides behind Carl's truck. A nearby neighbor's dog starts barking at him. So Carl starts looking around for the cause of the barking and what's going on out here in the yard. He ends up going back inside. Carl does. So Brawner here, Brawner gets scared and runs away thinking Carl might be going in to get a gun. Right. To check out the yard.
Starting point is 00:31:44 He doesn't want to get shot once again. So he drives back home. So he left the house at 3 a.m., drove an hour, sat on the steps for three hours, got back in the U-Haul truck, drove an hour home. He just put in five hours of work for nothing. Absolutely nothing. Wow. If he had that kind of aptitude and go-getter sense to it.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Go get a job in those five hours. Sleep for a few hours and then go find a job. Wake up at a normal hour and go find a job. Don't wake up at three in the morning. I assume he's still awake. He's not waking up at three a.m. Now, April 25th. That was April 24th. April 25th, the next day, he gets again in his
Starting point is 00:32:20 U-Haul truck in his apartment in South Haven, drives to the crafts again. This is around noon this time. So he's like, maybe I'll check him in the middle of the day. Stops sometime in the morning to buy rubber gloves, which is not a good sign. He knocks on the door. No one's home. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:35 He goes back to his truck. He puts on a pair of rubber gloves. He heads to the back of the house and he says he, quote, took the slats out of the back door. So it's probably one of those. Down south, they have those slatted, seamed Florida in Florida all the time, and they go open and shut. So he removes a couple of those, breaks in the house, finds a.22 rifle, and steals that, takes it, leaves, closes the back door, puts the slats in so it looks good and everything, takes the rifle, puts it in his U-Haul truck. Oh, shit. He ends up going to Carl's work.
Starting point is 00:33:03 What? He shows up at Carl's job, asks him if it's okay to go to the house to wait for Barbara and Paige to come home so he could see his daughter. He's still got the rubber gloves on. Yeah, at this point. Why you got rubber gloves on, huh? What?
Starting point is 00:33:14 Oh, nothing. I was painting something. I mean, Jesus Christ. Now, first of all, restraining order. Yeah. Carl agrees. What? He says to go ahead.
Starting point is 00:33:23 Now, there's a restraining order that your daughter put on this man because she's afraid of him, and now you're going to say, yeah, go wait at my home for them. Carl, you're no protector. All I can think is that he put on a sob story, and he went to him, and he said he played the father calling to him, and he said, look, I just miss my little girl so much. I just really want to see her. And he says he has something for her, too, which is a thing where it's like, yeah, he might have played on his heartstrings i'm not sure here uh brauner agrees uh brauner says okay fine and he
Starting point is 00:33:49 goes back to the house and he sits in the driveway and he waits he's there about an hour and he's about to leave because they don't come home yeah he's about to leave he takes out he starts writing a note because back then you couldn't just text someone and be like i was at your house dickhead where were you right you had to write a note and put it on the door like open the screen door and close it and hope it so that it sticks hope it doesnhead. Where were you? You had to write a note and put it on the door, like open the screen door and close it in it. And pin it so that it sticks. Hope it doesn't blow away. That's what you had to do back then.
Starting point is 00:34:08 So he does that. Just about to leave. And the car pulls in the driveway. Oh, no. Yes. They wish they would have stayed longer. You almost made it. As he started.
Starting point is 00:34:19 Although, even if they hadn't shown up, shit's going to go down. Shit's going to go down eventually. He's already got five hours invested in this and now at least another three. Yeah, but he's got rubber gloves now. Maybe in the future he wouldn't have rubber gloves. Now he's got gloves and everything. So they pull into the driveway and it's the mother, Jane, and Barbara and Paige, the ex-wife and the daughter, and her mother, Jane.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Jane immediately asks him, asks Bronner, if he was there the day before. Yeah. She's like, were you the one here the day before in the morning? And he says, no, I don't know what you're talking about. Of course not. Lies to her. I'm not going to tell you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:54 I was stalking your house for three hours. I'm a fucking weirdo. I drove for an hour each direction and sat here for three. Yes, I was here. What? Yeah. Meanwhile, they were probably looking out the window going, why is there a U-Haul truck two houses down? You know what I mean? And then he why is there a U-Haul truck two houses down?
Starting point is 00:35:05 You know what I mean? Then he pulls in with a U-Haul truck. No, it's the same one. It's got a big picture of Alaska on the side. I know that U-Haul truck. I saw it yesterday. So Barbara tells him that he's got to go. He's not supposed to be there.
Starting point is 00:35:15 She has a restraining order against him, and she's going to call the cops if he doesn't leave, which seems reasonable. She's a thinking, clear mother. Reasonable. Protecting your child, right? Jan says that he has a book for his daughter, Paige, and he just wants to give her the book, and he goes back to his truck and he gets a book. It's cheaper to mail it, bro. Yeah, it's an hour away.
Starting point is 00:35:31 So they're like, well, you know, whatever. He's here. The daughter's like, daddy, daddy, he's got a book, so what are you going to do? Say no, you can't see your father. So whatever. They all go into the house. They invite him into the house to give her the book, and I don't know what else. Jane again asks him if he was there the previous day. At this point, Bronner gets irritated. He gets mad at Jane because she asked twice a question that he lied about. So obviously,
Starting point is 00:35:54 you're going to get angry at someone for that. In the South, you don't ask twice. No, apparently not. He goes to the truck and gets his rifle that he stole earlier, the.22 that he broke into the house and stole. He comes back into the house with the rifle. So now he's got the rifle locked and loaded. Barbara asks him, what's that? Which is a dumb question. But I mean, I think she's like, why? Probably more like, why?
Starting point is 00:36:15 Yeah. I would assume. He says it's her dad's gun. So she's, I think, confused would be the best way to put this. And he tells Barbara at this point, Brunner tells Barbara, that he's not going to let her take Paige away from him, which is bad because he's got a gun and he's saying this. I don't know what you do to try to reason with a person like this, but I can imagine this is as scary of a situation. And who knows what he's on? I mean, honestly, who knows what he's on?
Starting point is 00:36:40 He's got substance problems. Who knows if he's been huffing gas out in the U-Haul. You have no idea what he's doing. That U-Haul holds a lot of gas. It holds a lot. He's got substance problems. Who knows if he's been huffing gas out in the U-Haul. You have no idea what he's doing. That U-Haul holds a lot of gas. It holds a lot. He's got a whole tank. He's got everything out there. Everything. Who knows here? He later says that he saw Barbara coming at him
Starting point is 00:36:55 so he shot her. He shoots Barbara. Jane makes a run for the bedroom. He shoots Jane too, the mother. Shoots her. He went over to Jane. He said, too, the mother. Shoots her. He went over to Jane. He said, quote, to put her out of her misery and shoots the mother-in-law again. Shoots Jane again, Jane Craft.
Starting point is 00:37:17 So at this point, Barbara has fallen onto the couch in the living room. He comes over and shoots her again. And she was conscious and had it together because she has defensive wounds on her hands. So she was trying to block this. And he's as heartless as a person can be and as remorseless as a person can be, fires at her again. So at this point, you're wondering, where's the kid? Yeah. Right? The kid is right there.
Starting point is 00:37:37 She saw the whole thing. Little three-year-old girl is right there, a four-year-old girl at this point. is right there, her four-year-old girl at this point. She holds her arm up, which is covered in blood spatter from her mother and her grandmother, insane, and says, Daddy, you hurt me. Right? I don't know how she got hurt. I don't know if she just saw the blood
Starting point is 00:37:54 and thought that it was hers or whatever. She's a child. I mean, she's a small child. She doesn't even know what's going on. He picks her up. Bronner takes Paige to her bedroom and gives her a cookie and tells her to watch TV. Deckhead.
Starting point is 00:38:08 That's his response to this. That's a hell of a way to heal this. Yeah. That's terrific. She's already fucked, sir. Yeah. This complete piece of shit. So then he goes back into the living room, paces around, because, I mean, what do you do at this point?
Starting point is 00:38:20 You got two dead bodies. I can't even put myself in this scenario. No. You just killed a couple people and now you're like, oh, shit, what do I do? And you just ruined put myself in this scenario. I just killed a couple of people. And now you're like, oh, shit, what do I do? And you just ruined your daughter's life. And you just ruined your daughter's life. So he thinks about it for a little bit and decides that Page can identify him as the killer.
Starting point is 00:38:35 And said he said, quote, I was, quote, just bent on killing. Oh, my God. At that point goes into the bedroom. Yourself, sir. Yourself. Thank you. Damn it. Turn the gun around on yourself.
Starting point is 00:38:48 That's the thing I'm thinking this whole time when I'm doing this. You're bent on killing. Just end it all. End it all. But he can't because he's a piece of shit. Yeah, he's a selfish asshole. He doesn't have the balls to even shoot himself. Instead, he goes in and he shoots his four-year-old daughter, Paige, twice in the head.
Starting point is 00:39:04 Oh, God. Twice. Once in the Paige, twice in the head. Twice. Once in the chin, once in the head. So she dies right there, obviously. He goes back into the living room now and sits and waits. He is so horrible. First of all, how would you not kill yourself after you've done that? Especially if you sit around and stew in it for a couple hours. How do you not just go, I'm a horrible, I need to not be on earth anymore at this point?
Starting point is 00:39:25 How does that guilt not just overtake everything inside you? You're a father. I'm a father. I can't even imagine. I spank my kids and I sit in the living room and sob. He has no guilt because what he's doing when he's sitting there, he's not thinking, contemplating, what am I going to do with my life? Should I end it all?
Starting point is 00:39:40 He's waiting for Carl to get home. Of course he is. Waiting for Carl to get home. He walks in the door. Because Carl just told him it's okay to go there.. Of course he is. He walks in the door. He just told him it's okay to go there. Carl knows he was there. Carl walks in the door. He kills Carl, too. Shoots Carl. Now he's there. Now he starts doing what he really
Starting point is 00:39:53 came for, which is stealing from him. He takes $300 in cash from Carl's wallet. I hope it was worth it. Takes the food stamps out of Barbara's purse. Which, I mean, you killed for food stamps. That's as scummy as it gets. And then takes the food stamps out of Barbara's purse. Wow. Which, I mean, you killed for food stamps. That's as scummy as it gets. And then takes the wedding ring off of Jane's finger.
Starting point is 00:40:10 Wow. Yeah. At this point, he's trying to figure out what to do. He grabs Windex from the kitchen, starts running around trying to get rid of his fingerprints all around the house. Windex does that? That's apparently. South Windex fixes everything.
Starting point is 00:40:22 I got Windex. He probably didn't have any paper towels. He was just wiping it on with his shirt. He thinks there's bleach in it. It's terrible. He was huffing it while he was doing it, too. Probably. Is this going to do anything?
Starting point is 00:40:32 She's spraying it in his face. Oh, Christ. I wish he would have sprayed Windex in his face. Maybe that would have killed him. Who knows? So he drives back to his apartment in South Haven. And that night he arrives. He proposes to his girlfriend, June,
Starting point is 00:40:48 using his dad's mother-in-law's wedding ring. Oh, what a piece of shit. That is the shittiest, most awful. That's a serial killer move. That's what serial killers do. They kill people. They take souvenirs and trinkets and they bring them back to their wife or girlfriend and give them to them as a way to have power.
Starting point is 00:41:01 Like, I know that that, it's insane. He can look at her hand every day and know what he did and relive it. He tells her that he got the ring at a pawn shop. She's like, how did you afford this nice ring? He said, I got it at a pawn shop. She says that he did not act strangely that night at all. He just said he was tired. You killed your daughter.
Starting point is 00:41:20 Not acting strangely at all. He can cover that up because he's got 300 bucks in his pocket. That makes him happy. He can cover that up because he's got 300 bucks in his pocket and that makes him happy. He's a ninth grade dropout. He has the moral complexity and the shallow soul. He has nothing. And he comes from someone who's saying that's showing him that it's all right to abuse and rape your daughter. Rape your daughter.
Starting point is 00:41:41 And beat your kids to cover it up. So gross. His moral compass is not great. It's really not. It's spinning. It's just, North, I don't know. It doesn't matter. It's like a rotisserie chicken.
Starting point is 00:41:53 Yeah, so the next morning, David Kraft, who is Barbara's brother and Carl and Jane's son, arrives at the home and finds the bodies. Obviously, he calls the police. Police say, do you know anyone who would have done this? He said, yes. I do. Jan Michael Browner, as a matter of fact. Here's his address. Go get him because this is probably him, I would assume.
Starting point is 00:42:14 You might find him at a Circle K or a 7-Eleven. It's a Piggly Wiggly, Jimmy. It's the South. You missed a Piggly Wiggly reference. Come on. Come on, Jimmy. A Piggly Wiggly reference. Come on. Come on, Jimmy. A Piggly Wiggly. That's hysterical.
Starting point is 00:42:26 So police arrive at Jan's apartment and they arrest him, obviously. Yeah. Because he's an idiot. And, you know, I'm sure his fingerprint. He's as good enough a suspect as it gets. Something tells me the Windex didn't quite clear away all the physical evidence, I'm going to say, too. He's just a Windex and shit.
Starting point is 00:42:43 How long has he been there? Somebody that's seen Law and Order. Yeah. That's the other thing.'m going to say too. He's just, you know, Windex and shit. How long has he been there? Somebody that's seen Law and Order. Yeah, that's the other thing. It doesn't broadcast there. That's why. Yeah, the antenna doesn't
Starting point is 00:42:51 pick that up. My antenna doesn't get USA. Or TNT. No, so the police search the U-Haul that he had.
Starting point is 00:43:01 How fucking long does he have this U-Haul for? Still has the U-Haul. Still didn't return. It's the next day. At least three days we know of he's had this U-Haul that he had. How fucking long does he have this U-Haul for? Still has the U-Haul. Still didn't return. It's the next days. At least three days we know of he's had this U-Haul for. And they find the.22 rifle that he used to murder them that belongs to Carl.
Starting point is 00:43:14 He's so stupid to do what he did in the first place and he doesn't even get rid of the gun. And he is literally driving home from this through an hour of rural wilderness. At any point he could have pulled over and threw that thing into the woods 100 feet and no one would have ever found it. Covered in moss and shit, eaten by moccasins, water moccasins in three seconds.
Starting point is 00:43:34 Eaten by moccasins? Those are shoes, Jim. Yes, water moccasins I'm going for. Whatever the hell they have down there. They have poisonous snakes down there. Everything's a swamp. Just throw it. It'll sink.
Starting point is 00:43:44 Who cares? So he admits to the shootings when they arrest him. Really? He admits to the shootings. He doesn't have the moral, he doesn't have the brain power to even make up an excuse. That's the thing. He's an idiot. They're like, we got four dead bodies and we think you did it.
Starting point is 00:43:58 And he's like, yeah, I did. Yeah, yeah. Absolutely. That's it. He gets him in. He gives kind of a half-assed statement there. He says he shot them, whatever. They take him in. A couple kind of a half-assed statement there. He says he shot them, whatever. They take him in.
Starting point is 00:44:05 A couple months later in July, he meets. I just see him like congratulating, because he's so dumb. He's just congratulating the police on excellent police work. They're like, you were our first guest, actually. Well, that's a great guest, y'all. You guys did some good. That's some police work right there. We just asked a guy.
Starting point is 00:44:24 We asked one guy, and he was like, yeah, totally you. And then we went and you had the murder weapon in your U-Haul. And then you said, yes, I shot them. Not to mention, if you're going to go murder people, pick a less conspicuous vehicle than a giant box truck with a huge portrait of a state on the side of it. Like that's pretty identifiable as much as they come. of it. Like that's pretty identifiable as much as they come. Now, in July 2001, he meets with Kenneth Fox,
Starting point is 00:44:48 his old parole officer that we talked about, a probation officer, and he tells Fox that he's probably going to get the death penalty, and he's worried about the lethal injection drugs making him unable to donate organs. This is his concern for some reason. I don't know. Jan is worried about this? Yes, Brawner is very
Starting point is 00:45:03 concerned. He really wants to donate his organs. He don't know. Jan is very good. Brawner is very concerned. He really wants to donate his organs. He writes a letter. Now, this is also writing a letter, putting his guilt in writing again because the parole officer said, well, write a letter. And so he said, sure. So the parole officer, Kenneth Fox, here ended up giving this over to the police. Obviously, you know, he reluctantly he's just like, I'm sorry. Read this. Just read it. I know you have plenty of evidence, but you might want more. I don't know. So he writes a letter asking for death and that he requests that he be killed while donating his heart.
Starting point is 00:45:32 Like, is he six years old? Does he know how things work in the world? Like, they're going to go, yeah, just take him in and rip his heart out of his live body. I don't think doctors are allowed to do that. Okay. So he missed that, too. Can you? So that's two shows he's never seen is ER and Law and Order.
Starting point is 00:45:48 He missed that. He is a dummy. He missed everything NBC had to offer in the 90s. He just had no, didn't care at all. He doesn't even know who George Clooney is. Never saw him in his life. I don't know, man. I have no clue.
Starting point is 00:46:00 You mean? Holy shit. So September 18th, 2001, Bronner meets with a law clerk and rejects. The law clerk says you should plead guilty and they'll give you life in prison instead of the death penalty. And he rejects that saying he wants the death penalty because he can't sit in there his whole life. He said he said he won't do it. He writes a letter stating, quote, I did say I do not want to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence.
Starting point is 00:46:25 I will take what the jury says and nothing less. Wow. So he says, I'm going to go to trial, admitting the whole thing and get whatever the jury gives me. He continually says, I want to die. Please kill me. I deserve it. Continually in writing, in court, continually.
Starting point is 00:46:41 OK, that's going to come back. So we'll hit that note. On November 15, 2001, he finally makes a full taped statement to the chief deputy of the Tate County Sheriff Department, Brad Lance, which sounds like he's a gay porn actor by night. Brad Lance. Largest cock in the South. Brad Lance, Tate County's largest steel man. Brad Lance. Brad Lance. So he admits to all the
Starting point is 00:47:11 murders. So shaven. He has no chest hair. Nothing. All of his shirts, they rip off like a stripper. Everything is tear away. There's buttons down the sides. And they're gone. Everything. He can be in his Speedo in half a second flat whenever it calls for it. You never know.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Oh, that's hysterical. So anyway, he admits all of the murders to this gay porn actor. Even the prisoners were outraged at this. This is a Mississippi prison where people do a lot of shitty things. But he killed his three-year-old daughter. That is especially in the hierarchy of crime. That makes me quiver. It really does.
Starting point is 00:47:50 As bad as you get, especially your daughter. Right. You didn't break in and rob a family and kill everybody. You killed your own fucking daughter. The fact that he wouldn't sacrifice himself for her tells you a lot about him right there. Everything you need to know, as a matter of fact. Most fathers, if someone had a gun and said, I'm going to shoot you or your daughter, you'd say, shoot me.
Starting point is 00:48:09 He said, no, I'm going to shoot my daughter. He told the guy, give me that gun and I'll shoot her for you. I'll take care of that. That's fine. No, no, no. You've had a long day. You've had a long day. You look so tired.
Starting point is 00:48:19 You look beat. I'm going to take care of that piece of shit. So the deputy of the sheriff's department here, Brad Lance, again, received letters from prison, multiple letters from prison saying that they can't wait to kill Browner when he gets there and detailing horrible things they're going to do to him. The prisoners are literally
Starting point is 00:48:35 telling the cops, bring that motherfucker here and we'll take care of him. We can't wait. That's what a piece of shit this guy is. We want to meet him so bad. He writes a letter to his lawyer. This Walker guy is his lawyer. Walker's his last name. And he says, quote, I am guilty of a crime and I need to be put to death, exclamation point. Jesus.
Starting point is 00:48:54 I mean, he is clear. He's not. There's no. He knows what he wants. He's unequivocal about this. Then he tries to claim insanity at the trial out of nowhere. That's his first thing. That's his second thought.
Starting point is 00:49:05 I don't know if that was his attorney saying, trust me, we just have to. Maybe I think you're crazy. You might not think you are. They have a psychologist, a psychiatrist that the defense counsel picked out that said, oh, he's fine. He's sane. He's competent. He's fine.
Starting point is 00:49:17 He's an idiot, but he's sane and competent. He's dumb as fuck. Dumb as fuck, but competent as all hell. Yeah. He knows what he did. He says he knows what he did, and he does. Now, Browner's lawyer here, Walker, again, asks Jan if he wants him to put on, this is during the trial, he says, do you want me to put on a mitigation case? This would be to go out there and tell them all the shitty things that have happened to you in your life and try to beg for leniency and get life instead of death.
Starting point is 00:49:42 And Lance, is it Lance that's doing this? No, no, no. This is his lawyer. Lance was a policeman. He's a deputy. He wants to put him to death. His lawyer absolutely said identical words to what you just said. Because when he said, would you like me to put on a mitigation case?
Starting point is 00:49:54 Yes. He probably went, what the fuck is that? Yeah, he said, let me explain to you what mitigation is. Listen, I don't want to use too many big words. Also ask him if he wants to try, you know, he wants, do you want me to try to get you life or life without, with parole or life without parole or whatever? Do we do this? Ask him if he wants him to, the lawyer asks
Starting point is 00:50:09 Brawner if he wants him to call his mother, his sister, a psychiatrist that will all present background and testify to his horrible upbringing and also what they feel is his good character, which I don't think you can even put in the sentence at that point. Anyway, during the trial here, they have a meeting with the prosecutor, the defense, Brawner, and the judge. I
Starting point is 00:50:30 think it's a closed door chambers type meeting. They asked Brawner if he wants to put on a mitigating case again. Do you want to call your mother? Do you want to get all these people on there? And he said, he says he didn't understand. He said, well, why would I call my mother? She doesn't know anything about the case. But it's in these documents. It is explained to him a million times why you would call your mother, not for guilt or innocence, but to mitigate your guilt. He was like, I thought you'd do that later. Like he didn't have any. He was just a moron.
Starting point is 00:50:56 But he knew. He was just, I don't know if he was blowing it off. Like, I have no idea. He's a slacker. Right. Trying to claim insanity still that he doesn't know what he's doing. He instead says, quote, as far as life, I don't feel that I deserve a life to live. So that's pretty clear at that point.
Starting point is 00:51:13 He's got two people in agreement right here. Yeah. Go ahead, buddy. Yeah. I'm a volunteer. That might be the smartest thing he said. I'll pour the kerosene in. Okay.
Starting point is 00:51:22 I got it. No problem with this. And I'm not a big death penalty guy because they fuck it up a lot. Yeah. And I don't feel like, you know, I don't want anybody innocent getting executed. So I'm not one of these people that's like, oh, he did something to execute. Who cares? I'm not that at all.
Starting point is 00:51:35 Most of the time, I want a free Adnan Syed and all that shit. I'm all with that stuff. But when you have someone who is saying, no, no, no, I shot them all. I totally did it. Here's all the physical evidence. Nobody else could have possibly done it. And I'm telling you I did it. And you shot your kid.
Starting point is 00:51:50 I'll fucking kill this guy. I don't care. I don't give a shit. I mean, whatever. Give me the 22. I'll fucking kill this guy. I don't care at this point. Fuck this guy.
Starting point is 00:51:58 I mean, he's an asshole. You kill a kid, that's it. I don't even, even your wife or adults and all that, that's all horrible and you should go to prison forever. kid. That's it. I don't even, even your wife or adults and all that, that's all horrible and you should go to prison forever. But that's at least an adult disagreement that went a certain way because you're crazy. This is a child that has nothing to do with anything. Unforgivable. So he says that. They ask him if he understands what he's doing. He says, yes, I understand what I'm doing. The jury returns death penalty on all four counts. Yay. Win. That's for this guy. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:52:25 He's convicted of April 11, 2002, all four counts of capital murder and sentenced to death on all four counts. Does Lance at least get to fuck him to death? That would be the perfect thing. Brad Lance just bursts into his cell and rips away his clothes. I'm here to Lance you. I'm here to Lance you. You're going to be lanced.
Starting point is 00:52:46 This is going all over the internet, too, buddy. This is going to hurt. This is buckle up. I'm going to stab you in the heart through your rectum. So he has to appeal, obviously, because it's a death penalty case. There's appeals that need to be exhausted. Brawner argues that there were less gruesome and, quote, less inflammatory photos that could have been shown to the jury. He said the ones you showed him were terrible.
Starting point is 00:53:08 There was ones where they didn't look nearly as much like they had holes in their fucking head that I caused. Who cares what picture it is? They're irrelevant. It's a picture of a dead child, period. I don't give a shit. You showed both holes. I only wanted him to see one. Also, this is ballsy here and a move that
Starting point is 00:53:25 makes me want to punch him in the fucking throat here also argued that the underlying charge of child abuse because it's the death penalty is murder and commission of another felony yeah they're saying that the commit the other felony he would the other three were robbery yeah and with this one they're saying the other felony is child support as child abuse yeah so they're saying it's child abuse and then he killed. His argument is that either gunshot would have killed her. So it wasn't like he abused her and then killed her. How about, yes,
Starting point is 00:53:51 you did because you shot her mother in front of her. That's as abuse as it gets. Thank you. Exactly. There was plenty there. Ruined that kid already. Yes. So they,
Starting point is 00:54:02 they also argued that the murder of the daughter page should be severed from the other cases because of that. The state argues that all the murders occurred at the same location as part of the same act. It would be impossible to sever the killings, especially because the killings were part of a scheme to rob Carl and eliminate the witnesses.
Starting point is 00:54:19 Take some food stamps. What a piece of shit. Food stamps. Jesus. Food stamps he's taken. And then a gate. Unbelievable. A wedding ring that he fucking proposed to a girl. That can't be traced back. That's not something that's in pictures for the last 30 years.
Starting point is 00:54:33 I mean, come on, man. Think for two seconds. It's Sarah, Mississippi. God damn it. And your gas-addled brain. Carl has an insurance policy on that fucking ring. I guarantee it. Absolutely. If it cost him more than 20 bucks, he's insuring it. You know it, man'll bring. Carl has an insurance policy on that fucking ring. I guarantee you. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:54:45 If it cost him more than 20 bucks, he's insuring it. You know it, man. God. So Bronner files a petition for post-conviction relief on May 18, 2005, and that's kind of a later thing. It's based on ineffective assistance of counsel, is what he says, for failing to request a change of venue, failing to provide him a full transcript, which the court said, what the hell were you going to do with it? You sat there the whole time. You didn't need a transcript, jackass.
Starting point is 00:55:09 And for failing to present mitigating evidence. That's his main argument. Meanwhile, they asked him 400 times, do you want to present mitigating evidence? He said, uh-uh. Do you understand what you're doing? Yes, I do. Yes, I do. No, I don't.
Starting point is 00:55:18 So that's what happened there. And they bring that up in the court documents over and over, like, no, no, you had plenty. there and they bring that up in the court documents over and over like, no, no, you had plenty. He claims his lawyer, Brunner claims his lawyer needed to present the abuse that he suffered as a child, his substance abuse background, possible brain damage from the car accidents. And he said he refused to present the defense because it was not anything that would work. You're gas huffing when you're 14, doesn't matter. So he is on death row.
Starting point is 00:55:44 He's sitting, well, not now, but he was sitting on death row and awaiting execution in the in the for lethal injection in Mississippi. Yeah. And his final meal is let's I got his final meal here. You know what he deserves. I'm going to tell you right now. One fucking cookie. One. Well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:01 One cookie. The same fucking one. His daughter. Yeah. That's what he deserves. Well, this is what he had. And basically, this is a white trash execution kit. Macaroni and cheese?
Starting point is 00:56:10 If you were going to put together a white trash execution kit, it would be like a hose to hook up to the pipe of your car and this meal as your last meal. I can't wait to hear it. It is one DiGiorno Italian-style favorites chicken Parmesan pizza. One DiGiorno Italian-style favorites meat trio pizza. what one DiGiorno Italian style favorites meat trio pizza what DiGiorno sucks to be a shitty frozen pizza he ordered DiGiorno a small salad with
Starting point is 00:56:34 lettuce pickles black olives tomatoes shredded cheddar cheese the sign of white trash and ranch dressing small bottle of Tabasco sauce half a gallon of brewed sweet tea, one pint of Breyers Blast Reese's peanut butter cup ice cream. And he ate everything but some of the salad. Of course, he left the green thing behind.
Starting point is 00:56:56 That is a white trash. None of it gets time to digest. I hope somebody in another cell screamed, is that delivery? And he's like, no, man, it's DiGiorno. hope somebody in another cell screamed was that delivery and he's like no man it's then a guy in a suit popped up and said this final meal is part of your white trash execution your complete white trash execution dinner unbelievable what a fucking idiot he refuses a shower yeah this is three hours before he refuses a shower what's the point yeah ask for a sedative got a diazepam for five milligrams of that.
Starting point is 00:57:26 They give him a sedative so he won't freak out and you have to pin him down to the thing anyway. He makes four phone calls. He's going to need that diazepam as that shit's digesting through him and running through his veins. He's going to shit his pants. That's the thing. He's like, well, fuck it. I'm not going to be here when this
Starting point is 00:57:41 settles later, this DiGiorno. Yeah, it would mess me up, but I'm not going to be here anyway. He makes four phone calls to attorney Lulin Williams, has no family I'm not going to be here when this settles later, this DiGiorno. Yeah, it would mess me up, but I'm not going to be here anyway. Well, this explodes. He makes four phone calls to attorney Lulin Williams. Has no family visit him whatsoever, so that says a lot there. Two attorneys came for 25 minutes to visit him and two spiritual advisors, a priest or a pastor or whatever, came for 45 minutes. To pray over his DiGiorno. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:08 On his visitation list, he had one friend, a guy named Brian Payton, who never visited. Nice. So he had one friend that he put on his visit. Way to go, Brian. It was like lawyers and the chaplain, you know, the spiritual advisors, and this one guy, and he never came. Brian. That's pretty sad. Now, so they take him in to be injected, and in case you're looking to make your own, well,
Starting point is 00:58:24 we already gave you the white trash execution meal, the white trash execution lethal injection kit here. It's the cocktail is a pentobarbital 2GM. I don't know what the grams are. I don't know what that is exactly. That's the anesthetic. You got normal saline, 10 to 15 cc's. I've always wondered what was in the lethal injection mix.
Starting point is 00:58:42 to 15 cc's. I've always wondered what was in the lethal injection mix. Pavulon, which is 50 milligrams per 50 cc's and potassium chloride, which I think is the one there. That's the one. That is 50 milliquiv per 50 cc's. I don't know what that is, but if you're a
Starting point is 00:58:58 home chemist and you're looking to make an execution kit, get your DiGiorno, your ranch dressing, your cheddar cheese, and potassium chloride. So, on June 12, 2012, he's put to death by lethal injection in the Mississippi Penitentiary in Parchman, pronounced dead at 6.18 p.m. at 34 years old. His last words were, and it's funny, too, because he wrote a bunch of letters, and I had all this shit, and I'm like, I'm not fucking putting him.
Starting point is 00:59:23 Fuck this guy. This is about the kid he killed in the family. Fuck him. So the only thing I'm going to say is his last words, because it was toward the family. So that's fine. Its last words are, quote, I can't bring anything back. I can't change what I've done. Maybe this will bring you a little peace.
Starting point is 00:59:37 And that was it. And the only person there from the crafts was David Craft. He's the brother who found the bodies and tipped the police off to him and that's that he may he may as well have said david may this bring you peace because nobody else was there to give a fuck about you he's dead and gone and no one gives a shit fuck him yeah so i mean it's so sad too because the daughter would have been 20 this year she would have been 20 in march and instead it's not 20 in march but at least he's dead, too, so fuck this guy. There you go.
Starting point is 01:00:06 That's Jan Michael Brawner, and that is Sarah, Mississippi, and that is small-town murder as it gets right there, guys. That was fun. That is fun. It's horrible and sickening, but, yeah, at the same time, interesting. It's fun to bring to light a scumbag like that so that everybody knows about him. He deserves it. And honestly, guys, what we're going to be doing here, we're going to be doing this. We're going to tell you about a town and kind of how the crime
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Starting point is 01:02:09 Rate and review on iTunes and come back and see us next week. What do you think, guys? I love it. I love it. All right. Well, thank you guys so much for joining us on this first episode of Small Town Murder. It's been our pleasure. Thank you so much, guys.
Starting point is 01:02:18 Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye.
Starting point is 01:02:20 Bye. Hey, Prime members, you can listen to Small Town Murder early and ad-free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today. Or you can listen early and ad-free with W Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery Plus and Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey. Welcome to the small town of Chinook, where faith runs deep and secrets run deeper. In this new thriller, available exclusively on Wondery Plus, religion and crime collide when a gruesome murder rocks the isolated Montana community. Everyone is quick to point their fingers at a drug-addicted teenager, but local deputy Ruth Vogel isn't convinced.
Starting point is 01:03:16 She suspects connections to a powerful religious group. Enter federal agent V.B. Loro, who has been investigating a local church for possible criminal activity. The pair form an unlikely partnership to catch the killer, unearthing secrets that leave Ruth torn between her duty to the law, her religious convictions, and her very own family.
Starting point is 01:03:36 But something more sinister than murder is afoot, and someone is watching Ruth. With an all-star cast led by Emmy nominee Sanaa Lathan and Star Wars' Kelly Marie Tran, Chinook is available exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.

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