Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch - Friendly Fire | 4. Marty's Side
Episode Date: June 27, 2022Marty tells his version of events leading to what officials have deemed a tragic accident. However, some key details don’t add up. The former prosecutor and TBI supervisor confront the inconsistenci...es and say the investigation was thorough. Does Lori have this all wrong? Do we? A Campside Media & Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Camp site media.
One day, years ago, I was walking through the woods in East Tennessee and I saw a bear.
What that means, neurologically, is that my eyes collected data that one part of my brain
processed into an image that other parts of my brain recognized as a bear.
At that point, a primitive part of my brain called the amygdala got involved.
It's like a threat detector.
It controls the fight or flight response, and is there to keep us from getting eaten by
bears, or otherwise killed.
This particular bear was some distance away, mining its own business.
So my brain gave me a drop of adrenaline, just enough to make me a little more alert and aware, and then I walked the
other way.
But what if I'd surprised that bear?
What if it had been startled, and angry, and charging at me?
That would be terrified.
Anyone would.
The charging bear is an immediate lethal threat.
Its fight or flight, liver die.
Your brain is going to take that information.
All the data that says a bear is coming to kill you and routed to your amygdala. And then your amygdala, your primitive lizard brain, is going to take over.
It will tell your glands to release gushers of adrenaline and cortisol. Your airways will
expand so more oxygen can get into your blood and your heart will be harder and faster
to get that oxygen-rich blood to the muscles you'll need to run away or stand and fight.
Your pupils will die late so they can take in more light, gather more information about
the threat, but you'll also have tunnel vision.
Your brain will focus so intently on the bear in front of you that you won't notice there's
an even bigger bear behind you.
Your mouth will go dry because bodily functions you don't need to survive
right then, like saliva production, will slow down or even stop for a bit. And if all that isn't
enough, there's one more thing that happens. You're amygdala when it's overloaded like this.
It shuts down your frontal cortex, the thinking part of your brain.
Your amygdala doesn't want you to think, because thinking takes time.
It's trying to keep you alive,
which means that for those seconds,
you're just a sack of stress hormones and reflexes.
And your amygdala is going to keep you in that state
until that immediate life or death threat,
that bear, or that man in the bedroom with a shotgun,
is terminated.
I'm Campside Media and Sony Music Entertainment. This is season two of Witnessed Friendly Fire.
Episode four. I'm Sean Flanagan. Marty Carson isn't alive.
He died of natural causes in the spring of 2021, so we can't
ask him about any of this. But we have a lot of interview tape from him. As with Nikki,
we have his written statements from the night of the shooting, an interview at the Tennessee
Bureau of Investigation, and an interview from a couple of years after that.
Okay, Mr. Carson, we're on the record. You were sworn yesterday, is that correct? Yes. You understand you're under oath today? Yes. years after that. That's from the later interview. The rougher one you'll hear is from his TBI
interview a few months after he shot John John. In both interviews he wears his uniform,
khaki on top with dark pants, a baseball cap, and he always has this thick mustache that
stops at the corners of his mouth.
Marty said he and John John got along fine.
They each had their own way of doing things, but they worked well together, complemented
each other.
John John, for instance, could be better at talking his way into a house they wanted to
search.
Sometimes they was better than knocking dogs than I was.
The night John John was killed, Marty did the knocking.
Here's how he told the story, the whole thing, of how he ended up shooting his partner.
On Thanksgiving, which was the night before John-John died, they were already trying to track
down this guy who was supposedly on the FBI's 10 most wanted list.
Marty said the tip was from an informant
that the fugitive was at a meth lab on Williams Creek Road.
They only knew that his first name was Mark.
And Thanksgiving night, Marty and John John, in separate cars,
staked out the main road, watching for a yellow truck
this Mark guy was supposed to be driving.
That's what the informant told them,
that he was bringing ingredients to make meth. They never saw a yellow truck.
Later that evening, Marty drove the length of Williams Creek Road in case the yellow truck
had slipped by them.
He didn't see it.
Laurie remembers John John came home and told her about it.
I do remember asking him that and he said no, that they didn't find anything.
I didn't know really where they had been. According to Marty, John John took lead on the investigation. The informant Marty said was John
John's, a man named Anthony. Laurie doesn't believe that. She says Marty had been calling the house,
saying he had information on this most wanted guy. But the call logs in the TBI file. They show John-John and the informant calling each other, and John-John calling Marty and
Thanksgiving.
Marty also called the informant, which is what he told the TBI.
John, when the mate Cowan safety told me the same story about this mark, and I did it.
Either way, the next night, about 7 o'clock, Marty and John-John meet up with two other
officers, Sergeant Donnie Phillips and Deputy Carl Newport, to make a plan. They drive to the Scott County
Food Court. It's a little plaza with a convenience store and arbise and a long John Silver's.
Marty grabs a coffee. John just like that in the Jeep and talked to Donnie. They blowed
up a grain out of Mark Hague. Donnie told investigators that he searched the name Mark because that's all they had to go on.
The results were for all the marks ever arrested in the county. And this guy, Mark, knew
comes up on William's Creek Road. But Marty said he was ruled out immediately. Wait, in terms of the description, the informant had gagged John that this was not the guy we was looking for.
Height was different, white was different, higher length was different.
Just to reiterate, the man all those cops were looking for the night of the shooting
is ruled out before Marty and John John ever got to the mobile home.
So Marty and the others don't have a last name for this Mark Fella but they're thinking he's at Ryan Clark's place
based on the informants information. Marty said he actually didn't want to go
that night. It was getting late. He said John John was the one pushing to go. He said, no, we, the beings will forever time.
We can use the money.
So I said, well, whatever you want to do.
So they go.
I pulled him front of the window with the trailer
at the end.
John got out and started to the back of the trailer,
working with Ryan Clark in the yard.
A few seconds later, Donnie and Carl pull up. The time is right around 8 o'clock.
I told them to type my apposition.
Donnie went and stood at the end of the mobile home to cover the bedroom windows to make sure no one comes leaping out.
Carl went out front to keep an eye on the door and Marty approached John John and Ryan outside. I asked him if there was anyone else in the trailer
and he stated no. Marty knocked on the back door anyway and that's when Nikki
answered. She opened the door. It was co-snoblin. I asked her if I could stay
inside. At first she was hastin but she gave him the acro- come on. I shed the door
behind me. She sat down me. I shed the door behind me.
She sat down in the floor beside the door.
He asked about her kids.
She said they were with her mom.
And then Marty started looking around.
And he noticed his coffee filters, a jug of purified water,
and a big soda bottle.
All pretty normal things to have in a kitchen,
but also useful for manufacturing
methamphetamine. The back bedroom was to his right. Its door was closed. Marty asked if there
was anyone else inside. Nikki said no. But she kept looking at the bedroom door, and just
like Nikki said, Marty could see shadows moving through gaps around the door.
He said it's because his jeeps headlights were shining through the bedroom window,
sort of backlighting everything.
Then he nudged Nikki toward the kitchen and told her to stay there.
I start coloring for the suspect to come out.
Sheriff's Department come out.
Sheriff's Department come out and we handle it.
At this point in time, the female,
that I didn't know who she was, starts screaming.
That's Penny in the bedroom.
He's got again, he's got again.
He's gonna kill you, he's gonna kill me.
He said he then thinks he hears a shotgun being looted.
I pushed the back door open, hollered after the door.
To the other three officers.
They're not coming in, he's got again.
Marty starts walking down the tiny hallway toward the bedroom door.
The work came open, approximately three quarters of the way.
For my headlapse, I could see a shadow
of what looked to be a human person holding a weapon
on his board to the other way.
He ducks into the bathroom on his left.
It's the working herd, that's trying to fail around. Finds something to get behind. He thinks he sees the bathroom on his left. It was the working area. That's trying to fill it round.
It finds out to be at the high.
He thinks he sees the barrel of a shotgun
easing into the doorway of the bathroom.
I feel what I was being overtaken by the system.
I feel he was fixed to come around there
and was blowing me tongue back through the back there.
And that's what I think.
Penny was still screaming.
It was noisy, chaotic.
I was terrified, scared from a lie.
I see what I believed to be a viral litigant.
Coming down the doorway, and that's when I farted my wig.
Two, three seconds later, I hear John Holler.
I've been shot, please hit.
Marty walked out of the bathroom. He said he saw John John's eyes roll back in his head.
Marty put his gun back in his holster and tried to drag John John out of the trailer.
But he later said he was too heavy.
I flayed the reds' names to get some assistance.
Marty said he believed John John was already dead. He ran outside, took cover behind a tree, and yelled for Donnie to call on ambulance,
and get him his shotgun.
More officers started to arrive.
Did you hear Nicole screaming from the trailer?
John John needed assistance.
He remembered Nikki's screaming, but not what the words were.
At some point, Penny and Mark managed to run out the back door.
Somehow none of the three officers outside fearing for their lives managed to see them.
Marty says it was too dark.
You could hear rustling and twigs breaking in the woods, but they didn't even know these
possible cop killers were gone until Marty and the first backup officer on scene went
into secure the place.
They did CPR and John-John until the ambulance got there.
It didn't matter.
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clientes en 2020-22. In this story, there are several areas where memories differ, or where what people claim
are their memories differ.
We need to talk about those things.
One is the lighting, which matters a lot, because Marty said it was really dark. Pitch black in that bathroom.
And all you could see was the silhouette of a gun barrel when he fired the shot that killed John-John.
Nikki, on the other hand, says the place was pretty well lit.
The porch slot was on and the door was out there, and the bathroom slot was on.
That's right next to the bedroom, less than eight feet from where she was standing. The kitchen
lot wasn't on but the stove lot was
So you could see the whole hallway
When Marty later talks to TBI, he's not sure what lights were on.
I don't remember how light was on or the light off the kitchen was shining back to the light.
There was some light in the hallway.
Some light in the hallway.
But he also said,
Pitch dark, scared crapless, that's what Marty's saying.
The first officer to arrive on scene, the one who helped Marty do CPR, he says the
hall light was on.
Of course, there was a period of time when Nikki was in their loan with John John.
She could have turned it on while he was dying.
But after John John is shot, Marty describes seeing his eyes roll back in his head,
which would require some light to see.
But even if there was light in that tiny hallway, in interviews, Marty swore it was pitched dark
in the bathroom, where he was standing.
Another thing we need to talk about is the direction Marty fired his gun.
In his version, he was standing in the bathroom looking out the door.
The bedroom where he thought he saw a man with a shotgun was to his left.
But his bullet hit John John who was to his right, in the hallway, with apparently some light.
This seems to be a sticking point for the TBI.
He has Marty get up, go over to a whiteboard and an easel, and draw it out.
The bathroom, the bedroom on the left, John John to the right. What he's saying is that Marty fired in the wrong direction away from the threat.
Not to be missed, but that his gun was pointed away from what he thought was going to kill him.
And then the TBI agent asks,
How can we clarify that?
How can we clarify that?
I don't know. I was scared.
I know I was scared. I have no doubts.
And I know we were scared, we were scared.
Right.
And stay.
He says he would have been scared too.
And then he sort of tries to help Marty figure it out.
Is it possible that when you saw that motion come from blind?
Is it possible he's asking that Marty actually saw motion coming from the right, from John
John's side?
Perhaps with Webber, he thought that was the threat. And maybe he thought that was the threat.
He tells Marty he knows it was a mistake. Then he asks, are you sure this is true?
What do I have to say, or not? I don't want to think.
But if...
I guess, boy, I'm especially...
To be certain in your heart, in your heart.
If you're telling me, the accurate story,
the major act in recovery,
about how this happened.
I've been completely, culturally though.
The agent still seems stuck on the point.
There's got to be a way that we can explain this.
There's got to be a way that we can explain this, he says.
He asks again, did you see a figure or a motion to your right
before you fired?
No, I don't remember seeing you.
Anything.
What did you fire at?
I thought he was going to death, though.
He figured the bad guy was going to wheel into the bathroom
and blame.
Did you have a target in sight
when you fired a large thing?
Anything over there?
He's asking if Marty had a target in sight.
Yeah.
You're short, far, in a displeasure.
You can wrap.
I'll send you to a ramp of the shotgun.
It is pleasant.
And like I say, I'm standing there wild.
Marty is saying here that he didn't have a specific target
when he pulled the trigger.
He fired at empty space.
That he shot where he thought a bad guy with a shotgun was going to be by the time his
bullet traveled less than four feet.
By the way, a bullet comes out of a 40 caliber block the gun Marty had at about a thousand
feet per second give or take. There's never a shotgun in the mobile home.
There was that sickle in the back bedroom that, given that it's a blade on a long pole,
could maybe possibly be mistaken for a shotgun, especially if a man holding it in an open doorway
is backlit by the headlights of a Jeep.
That's another spot where memories differ significantly. Nikki swears that door never opened until John John was already bleeding out on the floor.
As for how John John's gun ended up balanced against the wall behind the toilet, Marty said
he had no idea. After John John was shot, the paramedics loaded him into an ambulance and left for the hospital.
Then a detective came to talk to Marty.
Randy Luellen, the same one who questioned Nikki in the police cruiser.
I thought he might have discharged one ram from my way.
I believed that the suspect did have a shotgun and have played to the woods.
Marty said at this point he still didn't know he was the one who shot John John, but he
said he never heard another shot.
And you can probably guess this, but it would be really hard to miss a shotgun blast in
a confined space.
Detective Lualland says Marty was an emotional wreck, broken.
That's the word he'll use later, barely functioning.
Marty's dad, the sheriff, arrived and walked the scene with Randy, who says he knew within
30 minutes that Marty shot John-John.
There were no bullet holes in the walls of the mobile home.
Marty shot had to go somewhere, and the only hole was in John-John.
But he wasn't sure if the sheriff had come to the same conclusion.
That said, Marty's saying a guy with a shotgun who had just shot John John is loosening the
woods.
Every cop screaming down William's Creek road believed Marty.
He's a deputy, of course they do, and it would be foolish, perhaps fatal, not to.
Marty sat with his dad in a cruiser.
Police and deputies from all over the area were coming to help hunt down a cop killer.
One state trooper says he knocked on the cruiser's window to talk to the sheriff to come up
with a strategy to find this guy.
He says the sheriff ignored him.
Another officer says Marty and his dad were in there for an hour.
Marty said it was only a few minutes.
That night, Marty handed his gun over to the TBI and then had two tubes of blood drawn at the hospital
to screen for drugs and alcohol.
All negative.
That happened to 1030.
Right about then is when he sees Lori,
she'd just watched doctors operate on her dead husband.
Marty didn't remember exactly what he told her.
Do you recall telling her that you were looking for Mark Noon? No, I do not.
I'm telling her we were looking for Mark Noon. Do you deny that? Yes, I do.
He said he had no idea how Mark News' name got mixed up in any of this. He never told anyone it
was Mark Noon who shot John-John and he wasn't in any manhunt. It's a mystery. That's Marty's memory,
his story of what happened.
The two other officers there that night, Carl Newport, the part-timer, and Sergeant Donnie Phillips,
they both still live in Scott County. I went to Carl's house one afternoon because he initially agreed to talk.
But when he saw our producer, Lindsay, with a mic, he said we couldn't record him.
Actually, it didn't matter. Carl didn't really have much to say.
He was on the far side of the mobile home the whole time, and he's hard of hearing, too.
Didn't even hear the gunshot. All he knows is he went to
Ryan's home and then there was a lot of chaos. The nurse Sergeant Donnie Phillips.
Donnie was elected clerk of courts in 2006 so we knew where to find him.
This got County clerk's office.
Hey, how you doing? What are Mr. Phillips?
Might be around. Hey, what are Mr. Phillips, maybe a round? He was late in the afternoon.
Hey, here you have a good idea of Phillips.
Yes, he's a nice, honest, honest, honest, honest.
OK.
Hi, Mr. Metzy.
Hi, Mr. Metzy.
We're with the podcast company called Campside Media.
And we're doing a story on Chai Chai.
And Andrew, you wanted to ask us out that night.
There's one for you to talk to you about it.
OK. I'm going to try one. Andrew, you wanted to ask to say that night, but there's one for you to talk to you about it. Okay.
I'm trying to let the boots...
I've got a leaf here and about fat.
Sure.
We can see it all the time.
Okay.
He says he's about to leave, but to give him a call to schedule a meeting.
So I did.
Called him several times.
He'd always just stepped out or someone had just stepped into his office.
I got routed to voicemail once but it's just rang and rang. After a few weeks of
that I called them from a different number. Lindsay's phone. We'll be working on
this project for a while so I mean we can certainly do it really at any time at
your convenience. Okay. You know if we did something about it. Okay. Yeah if you just
want to call back then that'll be fine fine. Just want to call it back Wednesday or something then.
Wednesday? Okay, I'll give you a call on Wednesday.
And then it'd be easier than if you don't mind
if we can just set up a time.
Call you on Wednesday, we can schedule something
so that we're not sort of like rushed over the phone there.
If that's okay.
Okay, all right, that'll be fine then.
That'd be fantastic.
Thank you so I appreciate it.
Uh-huh, but, I'm sorry.
He has never actually talked to me. I you sir. I appreciate it. Oh, I'm a little done. He is nervous. I can talk to him.
I called him and called him again. Never heard back.
I really wanted to talk to Donnie. His story is consistent with Marty's story for the most part.
In his statements to investigators, he said the whole thing was John John's idea
that Marty wanted to hold off, get some sleep, try again in the morning.
He also said in his very first statement hours after it happened, that he heard Marty
yell something out the door right before John John ran in.
But he said he didn't understand what Marty yelled.
That's another one of those memory things, it's pretty important.
Nikki, who was standing a few feet from Marty, swears he yelled for John to come inside
and help catch the bad guy.
She said that the night had happened, then again weeks later, and she even said it years later, story never changed.
Marty, for his part and his early and very detailed statement, didn't mention yelling anything at all.
Of course, it was very late after 3am when he gave that statement, and someone else typed
it out for him.
But it was only later that he said he'd yelled out the door, except Nikki had it wrong.
He'd really told John not to come in.
That makes Donnie kind of a tiebreaker.
If Marty yelled, come in.
That blows his story about not knowing John John was there.
That matters.
But when Donnie was asked the first
time, right after it happened, he was crying, badly shaken, nervous. He didn't know until
he went home, and Donnie says, and I'm quoting here, I just prayed about it. He says,
I was praying and asking the Lord to help me through this, because I was having a hard
time and trying to just focus on what Marty was saying.
Some time later, days or weeks depending on
when he is telling of this miracle,
the good Lord refreshed his memory.
Marty, he says, definitely told everyone to stay out
and that's what he told the District Attorney General.
My name is Paul Phillips.
That guy, the former DA, the one who held the big press conference,
he agreed to talk to us.
And Donnie aren't directly related. Like Carson Phillips is also a common name in
East Tennessee.
I was the District Attorney General of this judicial judicial para más de 33 años.
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Descobrela. or And the extra self-drops on the Monday morning head to extratakes.com or subscribe on Apple podcasts to listen.
Today, Paul Phillips is the General Counsel for a Children's Foundation that helps kids
get access to anything from dental care to reading coaches.
A metamint is office on a Tuesday afternoon in Scott County.
He had a friend with him, the retired TBI agent who oversaw the investigation. This is Bob Denney, who was the head of the TBI in East Tennessee until his retirement.
Paul Phillips was the prosecutor for five rural counties with a population of about 130,000 people altogether.
I was appointed in 1979. I had to run in 80 for the rest of a term and then I ran in 82 and then eight years later
in 90 and so on.
Were you ever opposed?
I wasn't.
I was an odd opposed.
No.
The District Attorney General is the prosecutor who oversees an office of attorneys who
handle all the criminal cases in those five counties.
Everything from speeding to murder.
Phillips has worked with a lot of sheriffs and he was elected long before Jim Carson.
Their relationship, he says, was cordial, professional. I don't have any opinion that I would want to express.
I got along with them well enough.
I tried to always have an arm-slink relationship with the Sheriff's Department.
I didn't want to be their buddy.
I didn't want them to be my buddy.
So when Phillips gets a call telling him the Sheriff's son had been involved in a shooting
and that another deputy is dead, he immediately calls in the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.
That was a standing order from our office.
He had lots of leads. There was lots of work done.
I mean, the investigation went on for a considerable period of time.
And in fact, it was an open file.
For several years, Philip says that when he called that press conference days after the shooting,
he wasn't intending to make any official ruling on the case.
He says the way it was reported in the news that the killing had already been ruled
an accident was a misunderstanding.
It was the early part of the investigation, not the end, no.
What we were trying to do is to say that this deshooting was not done by the meth perpetrators
who were in the mobile home.
That was the purpose of that.
To clear Nikki and the other three of rumors
that they'd killed John John.
Unfortunately, a good journalist won't leave it at that,
and so they were asking us questions.
And our preliminary opinion at that time was
that it was a tragic accident, but we were in the
early stages of the investigation and we didn't rule that it was an accident.
We were just trying to acknowledge that the meth defendants in the mobile home
did not kill this officer. The TBI continued interviewing people for months
after the shooting. They taped an interview with Marty in February of 2004, 12 weeks after
the fact. That's the one where they asked if he was really really sure he was
telling the truth. I feel like that the TBI in their investigation was very
thorough and I think also was very open to proceeding leads.
For us to bring a criminal charge
that would have had to be in more evidence
proof beyond a reasonable doubt,
it was the TBI's assessment
that we've never had a case
beyond a reasonable doubt of a crime.
And it was a very reasonable explanation
from all the evidence that this was a tragic accident. That was a reasonable interpretation of the evidence.
I had a lot of questions about that evidence, like for instance, Donnie Phillips story about
how he prayed for his memory to come back and then shared that memory with the DA.
Do you remember anything about that conversation?
I remember Donnie, I mean, I don't have any ideal when this took place.
But I remember asking Donnie if he felt like we missed anything and I remember the response
that you said that he had. That's straight, he was odd?
What straightened his eye?
Almost two months have gone by.
And this is a pretty crucial thing.
It didn't straighten me aside, no.
This is a extremely traumatic situation.
I mean, if Donnie had said, I still don't remember what was said, there still
would have been reasonable doubt as to whether or not this was an intentional homicide.
So either way, according to Paul Phillips, whether Donnie backed up Marty's version of
the Vance or not, evidence of a crime just wasn't there. Were you concerned as an investigator with the circumstances of this?
Sure.
I mean, specifically, you know, in one of Marty's TBI interviews, you know, Steve Vincent.
One of the TBI agents.
He said, we got problems with your story. Marty wasn't able to explain why if he's got a threat over here, he shot over here and
then holstered his weapon and turned his back on where he said the threat was.
We thought it was troubling.
We also know that this happened within seconds and nanoseconds.
We know that it was a chaotic scene, but that doesn't mean that there was proof of an
intentional killing beyond a reasonable doubt.
It was clear that from all the evidence that Marty thought there was a person in the mobile home with some kind of long
firearm like a shotgun. I mean that's all I can tell you about that.
Gunned behind the toilet? Troubling?
Yes, I mean that was something that was looked into.
I mean, how did it wind up there?
That was a troubling detail.
Or how about Marty's claim that he yelled for all the officers to stay outside when he
thought one of the suspects inside had a gun?
Would anyone tactically say that that's a smart thing to do?
I think Donnie thought that he was trying to protect them.
He didn't want them.
He thought he was a dangerous situation.
If you've never been in a situation
at a shooting, everything is focused.
That's Bob Denny, the retired TBI agent.
He's been sitting quietly, listening.
But this part made him jump in.
You can't judge what people say or do.
It's training.
And if he says, don't come in, I find that the better of saying,
come on in, because he's trying to assess.
I'm just putting myself in that.
You're trying to assess what you see and what's going on.
And you don't need people coming in that you don't know
who they are at that point in time.
I mean, that's just me because I've been there,
I've seen it, and it's not a pleasant thing.
It's a very traumatic experience I can tell you.
Bob was with some other officers once,
approaching a house, and a guy inside opened fire.
The rest is a blur.
When you're trying not to die, the mind focuses very tightly on whatever's trying to kill
you.
Remember that bear from the beginning?
The amygdala takes over.
You get tunnel vision, tunnel hearing.
Everything focuses on the threat.
A lot gets filtered out. We had to go back and sit down and talk about where were you because people couldn't see
it. I didn't know where everybody was.
That's what Bob Denny is suggesting happened with Marty.
But what about Nikki? She says Marty definitely yelled for John to come inside.
We've got meth people there.
I guarantee you they don't know what was said.
Okay.
I mean, I wouldn't put anything...
They've been cut in meth for several times.
Well, I wouldn't put a bit of credibility
on what they saw or what they said.
When a police raid somewhere
and you've got meth users in there. It's chaotic. You're worried
about your own safety. You have to worry about the safety of them with their cooking math
and what can happen. So I mean, it's in your, you go back and let me just say this and
I'm going to shut up. I came here because I want you all to know that this case was rassled with, looked at,
gone over, reinvestigated.
I had people complain to me about the case.
We would follow any lead.
He would listen to us.
We would talk about it.
He makes tough decisions.
But if there would have been a case that could
have been prosecuted, I have a hundred percent confidence that we would have gone.
And I know it makes good journalism. Good, good. I mean, I'm just being honest.
But you think that somebody did something wrong.
I'm here to tell you nobody did anything wrong as far as prosecution.
If there had been any way to present a case with some proof, he would have done it.
And I mean, that's basically it.
But that wasn't it for Laurie. It was just the beginning.
I don't trust them. I don't feel safe. I feel inferior. I feel inferior for my kids."
The house and wives weren't yet cleared of Lori, but one thing was. Her husband was
dead and she thought it was because Marty Carson meant to kill him, and she was determined
to prove it. Coming up on Witnessed Friendly Fire.
I feel like I just need an attorney who is going to look at these officers.
More, there wouldn't be a fright.
What they found is a freaking hornet and I said if I come up missing, you know what I
happen to.
Scott County, you know, the rumors can run wild like wildfire. He said, why your husband was shot. He said, you've got this all wrong. 1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc
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1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc . The Wittness is a production of Campside Media and Sony Music Entertainment. Friendly Fire
was reported and hosted by me, Sean Flam Lindsay Killbride is the senior producer, and Callie Hitchcock is the associate producer.
The story editor is Daniel Riley.
The series was sound designed by Shawnee Aviram with mixing by Iwen Lytrimuant.
This episode was fact-checked by Alex Yablon.
The theme song is Booey by Shook Twins.
A special thanks to our operations team, Amanda Brown,
Doug Slaywin, Alia Pabes, and Allison Haney. Campside media's executive producers are Josh Dean,
Vanessa Grigoriatus, Adam Hoff, and Matt Cher. If you enjoyed Witness Friendly Fire,
please rate and review the show wherever you get your podcasts. you