Happy Friday Crime Genki's.
There has been an arrest. Now, if any of the details of this case are fuzzy to you, I've attached the whole episode to this update.
And at the end, I'm going to pop back in to tell you who they've arrested, what we know about the guy, and what investigators are asking you to still help with.
“Now, if you remember the case well, check the show notes for a timecode, and then you can jump right to the update.”
[Music] When 19-year-old Shane Henry pulls up to give her older sister Cheryl a ride to work on the morning of August 23, 1990, she does what most teenagers do in the pre-selled arguages. She lays on the horn and waits. Shane's got to get to work herself, so she's like a little peed when she has to go inside.
More peed when she realizes that Cheryl isn't even there. If she's going to like catch a ride or not go or not be there, like a heads up would have been nice.
But now Shane is running late, so she kind of just like scoots without giving it much more thought. At least not until she gets a call at work that morning at around 10 a.m. in it's a friend and a coworker of Cheryl's, and she wants to know where Cheryl is, because she just hasn't shown. And that's when Shane's stomach drops, although she's not quite sure why.
“Because she knows that Cheryl was out the night before with her new boyfriend Andy Akinson, like Shane had actually been out with them too.”
She dipped around 11 to give the lovebirds some like time alone in space, so in her mind the most likely scenario is that her sister just overslept or something. But still, Shane can't kick this uneasy feeling, so she actually asks for permission to leave work early. She's told no, though, which I feel like is pretty messed up, like if you think your sister is missing. And before long, like the whole family knows what's going on, the whole family is worried. And Shane just wants to join Cheryl's friends and family who are already out there looking for her.
So girl is out the door. The second her shift is a racing to the family home where her mom Barbara and her stepped out Dan are waiting anxiously.
Now by now, hours have passed since everyone has realized that Cheryl was missing. There's Andy. Well, so that's the thing, no one can find Andy either.
“And by the time Shane gets home, she is ready to break glass, like look guys, we need to call the cops something is wrong.”
And Barbara doesn't need convincing, so the police are called and a missing person's report is filed. And then Shane is like right back out the door, ready to hit the city streets with Cheryl's friends, searching for the couple and for Andy's white Honda, which they were in the night before. But nearly four hours later, they are no closer to finding them. So Shane's hard skips a beat when she walks back in and sees her mom on the phone looking worried. And she can only hear one side of the conversation, but it feels bad.
It's like, yes, yes, that's my daughter. Where are you? We'll come right now. After what feels like an eternity, Barbara hangs up and announces that it was a security guard on the phone. And I guess this guy works for a local food distributor, and he called because he found Cheryl's purse with her number inside. And it was on the floor board of an abandoned white Honda. So this place that they go to, it's this really undeveloped area near the Cisco office.
The Cisco is the building, the security guard worked out. And it's on this dark, desolate street, which is known to people because it's known as lovers lane. And it also runs along this big, open field leading into a big wooded area. And it's popular with young locals for obvious in the name reasons. And Shane says that it doesn't strike her as super weird that the couple would have gone there.
I mean, they're both living with family, 22 year old Cheryl with her mom, her stepdad, and her little, Brady Bunch, like kind of family, and 21 year old Andy, who is new to Houston. He's living with his grandmother. So in less than two weeks, Cheryl was actually planning on moving in with Shane, like they were going to move in together. But until then, privacy was a hot commodity, so heading out to lovers lane checks out for the couple.
But what the guard hadn't found anywhere near the car was Cheryl or Andy. So the security guy is like, what's runging through a random car he found, like that feels weird to me. I thought the same thing, but Shane actually gave us a rundown of the day, and it makes a little more sense the way that she explains that I guess
The guard had found the car for the first time, like way earlier in the day o...
but he wasn't concerned until it was still there hours later, right?
And so that's when he decided to check it out, and the windows were rolled down, the seats were reclined,
“and the key was in the ignition in the idle position.”
Those are all very bad songs. Right, red flags, which is why he called them. So that's the scene when Cheryl's family and friends start showing up, desperate to find some sign of the missing couple. And right away, they zero in on some cigarette butts, staying with lipstick on the ground near the car.
The lipstick looks a whole lot like it was Cheryl's. And when they peek inside the car, they see something that the security guard hadn't mentioned. Something more ominous than lipstick stains on cigarette butts. They see deep, dark stains on the inside of the driver's door. Blood?
They're not sure, but it looks an awful lot like blood.
So much so that they do a kind of like back away slowly kind of thing. Like the last thing they want to do is contaminate what could be evidence. But how did the security guard miss that? It wasn't he in the car?
“Well, in this area, there are no street lights,”
and it's dark by now, so my guess is that the headlights from all the cars that are now they are from everyone who came. Maybe he's making it easier to see. They also probably are like bringing lights, and I don't know. Whatever they have is definitely more light than like a lone patrol car would have provided. And Andy's car battery is dead from the car being left in idle,
so there probably were no overhead lights, like at the time. Now in 1990, no one has a cell to call 911. And by the time they see all of this, the security guard is like on the other side of that big field, walking the tree line with one of Cheryl's friends, they're just like searching over there. So Shane races to the Cisco building with Cheryl's best friend,
where they ask the front desk person to call 911. And then they wait, and wait, and wait for like 30 or 40 minutes. But no one shows up. What?
No cops, no first responders, no fire trucks, nada.
So the girls have to actually go back and have them call 911 a second time, and this time the response is immediate and overwhelming. Oh, response like, oh, there are two missing kids in a bloody car like that. Yeah, so this army of cops and first responders get to work. They search with helicopters up in the sky.
They have sent tracking canines on the ground, like the works. And a little after 11 pm, Shane watches a scene unfold. And she told us that to this day, it like plays out in her mind. It is pure chaos. There's just so many people bustling around.
She was like walking up to her dad in a days when out of the corner of her eye. She sees an officer say something to her mom. And then she just hears this blood curdling scream. And to Shane, it looks like the officer like catches her mom from falling when she owls. And it's like there are no words.
It's just he's like gutterl, primal, shrieks. And Barbara actually says later in reporting for KHOU11, that the officer holding her up is also holding her back from running towards the area across the field, where there's just this sudden flurry of activity. And Shane can't even process it all.
She turns to ask her dad what's wrong. Like what happened? Why is everyone so upset all of a sudden? And I don't know if he's been briefed or if he's just like putting two into together, but he responds with the last two words that Shane is prepared to hear. She's gone.
And in the blink of an eye, investigators surround them, like crowing them towards their car, saying, "Listen, we're so sorry,
“but like you have to leave now. This is a crime scene."”
And the entire family is thinking like, "How? How can they leave Cheryl out there?" But they don't have a choice, so they go and investigators have to get to work. Jill Tyre reported for Wilmington Morningstar that Cheryl's body had been found by a scent tracking dog about 200 yards from Andy's car, just barely into the wooded area past the field.
When she's found, she's naked, lying face down on the ground, and her hands are actually bound behind her back with rope. And she has what looks like jagged wounds to her head and her neck, and her throat has been slashed. And her killer, it seems, made a half-hearted attempt to conceal her body
under some pieces of wood from this rotting fence, and then they find her clothes nearby, a single $20 bill as well. Her pretty turquoise summer dress with red accents had actually been cut from her body, and Shane thinks maybe her underwear had been too, she told us, which suggests to investigators that whatever horrors Cheryl had been met with
probably involved a sexual assault. Now at this time that they find Cheryl, there's still no sign of Andy, though as they secure the scene and get Cheryl to the morgue, searching for him does continue.
By the wee hours of the morning, they decide they need to break till sunrise.
This is all absolute torture for Andy's dad, Garland. He got to the scene not long before Cheryl's body was found, and he'd like set out walking the tree line too, only to be hustled away, almost without explanation. Garland passed away, actually recently in October of 2024,
but I found this interview he did with Linda Sheldon fell for a series that she hosts called Moments of Hope, and when he's talking to her, he gets choked up, because he talks about this HPD officer who actually asked to stay at the scene until the search could pick back up at sunrise.
And he explains that at the first hint of daylight,
that officer starts walking the same tree line that Garland walked multiple times the night before, taking things in, looking for anything that might have been missed in the dark, looking for Andy. And out there, all alone,
it's that officer who stumbles on this grizzly scene. Because there, Andy is sitting at the base of this enormous tree, tied to the tree with rope. His legs like stretch out in front of him, and he's facing the woods. And like Cheryl, his throat was slit so deeply, though,
he was nearly decapitated. When I hear all of that, my mind instantly goes to the lake wake of it all, right? I thought this same thing, and listen, for anyone who hasn't listened to our lake wake of episode, so it was like a two-parter that we did recently,
I'll try and link out to it in the notes, whatever. But I agree, it's got some like eerie similarities to this case.
“Like the second I heard about Andy, that's what I thought about.”
But you got to think about this, no one at the time is thinking there's a possibility of a connection, because by the time Cheryl and Andy were murdered, they already had people in prison for the lake wake of it.
I always ask about the time, and he's right.
Now knowing what I know now to me, that means nothing. But back then, no one is screaming serial killer. But to go back to Andy, and we can touch on this, the wake of stuff maybe later, Andy's fully clothed. His hands are bound behind his back,
and where the injuries to Cheryl's neck were kind of like jagged and imprecise. I guess Andy's throat had just like one queen slash. And how far is he from where Cheryl was found? I don't know exactly. I've seen like everything from like 75 yards to 150 yards. I don't know for sure.
What I do know is that Jill Tire's report says there aren't any obvious defensive wounds on Andy. It says the same about Cheryl actually, but we actually reviewed both autopsy reports, and I don't think that's actually accurate for her. Like girl went down fighting.
And there's this weird thing about the crime scene that I haven't mentioned. I'm not sure when investigators notice it, like before after Andy's body is found, I mean, but reporting for KHOU11 says that a golf club and golf balls from Andy's car had been like laid out in the field,
and like this line that was pointing to Cheryl's body, which to me is just like extremely weird, and clearly like someone wanted them to be found.
“Now, I think it's helpful at this point if we talk through the scene,”
in terms of like likely series of events, because spoiler alert answers are hard to come by in the coming years, and there's not a ton of reporting on how it all would have unfolded. The broad strokes are this. The thinking is that there's some kind of blitz attack
when the two are in the car, and somehow they're then taken to the tree that Andy was tied to. So theoretically it could have just been one guy, but my money is on two. That's something that investigators are going to debate for years. It could be either, I think.
Again, I think the thing that's clear is that it started with the attack on Andy in the car, because of all the blood that's on the door. Either they would have had to hurt him enough to like prove a point. Like I'm not messing around, follow me cooperate.
I have a weapon like I'm gonna walk you out, or maybe Andy was fully incapacitated by whatever happened to him in the car, which to me, that definitely means you would need multiple people to get him out to the tree and keep Cheryl cooperate. Right.
One way or another, their hands get tied behind their back.
“Remember, Andy doesn't have defensive wounds.”
So either he's cooperating because again, there's a threat to her, Cheryl or him, or he's incapacitated and can't even fight back. And then Cheryl either makes a run for it, and they catch up to her,
or they walk her to a different area. But when they get her over there, they cut off her clothes, a soldier and kill her there where she was found. According to reporting for a cage, you will have an investigators tell Garland that they do think,
for some reason that she was killed first. I don't know their reasoning,
that's never fully explained, but that's the theory.
Did they get any biologics from the autopsy? Is like anything that they can get DNA from? Yes, and yes. Even though 1990 is super early for DNA science, the detective who works this case, the longest,
That's guiding detective Billy Belth.
He knows what a powerful tool DNA is shaping up to be.
So from day one, he asks the higher-ups to have evidence processed at this special lab that has the tech to detect DNA.
“Which has to be a long shot and super expensive, right?”
You're not wrong, but you know the saying, you miss a hundred percent of the shots you don't take, so detective Belth decides to shoot his, and it works. He gets the okay, the lab hits Pader, they're able to build a suspect profile from the semen in Cheryl,
but downside of early days DNA, no database. There's nothing to compare it to, right? No amount of evidence is going to replace the grueling work of boots on the ground investigating. So detective start interviewing family and friends,
and they start working their way out from there. Now neither family knows if anyone who would want to hurt Cheryl or Andy, they're both really good kids, they weren't wrapped up in anything shady, and everyone loved them. But Cheryl's loved ones do offer up a couple of names
that peaked detectives interest. Let's call them Lance and Aaron. So Lance is the boyfriend of a friend that Cheryl had been kind of on the outs with recently. Dude, like, I guess skip town the morning after Cheryl was found.
More than the town he skipped the whole country, like took off for St. Lucia. And it seems like this was no plant holiday either. Lance's girlfriend tells him that she didn't even know anything about this trip, but he didn't even mention that he was going to go to St. Lucia.
What? Yeah, so when detectives end up reaching him on the island, he agrees to come back to Houston. He sits down for an interview and when they ask him for a DNA sample, he's cool with that too.
When the comparison gets run, Lance is rolled out. He's not their guy. Which leads me to Aaron, who ironically enough is the kid of a cop, or maybe a former cop, not totally sure.
He is Cheryl's ex from like middle school in high school, and he doesn't share Lance's cooperative spirit. I'm not sure if he officially lawyers up, or if he talks to investigators or any of that. All I know is that when they ask him for a DNA sample, he refuses.
Doesn't give a reason, just no. Shane told us that the cop dad is straight up offended that they even would ask. So there's that. She also told us this weird story about Aaron showing up at their house,
like the day after Cheryl died and kind of just standing there, like at the end of their driveway, like didn't say a word, didn't come any closer, just stood there. That's so weird and kind of creepy. Detectives think so too, so does Barbara.
Shane said she actually kind of got it.
She told us she always liked Aaron.
He'd always been decent to her sister.
“And she's like, I think he was in shock.”
Like kind of like the rest of us. This standoff between detectives and Aaron over as DNA, this goes on for years. And like on the one hand, totally his right. But on the other hand, like, you got to know this is going to look bad.
And what are you hiding? Why not give your DNA, right? Because of all the male friends and acquaintances that they approach during their investigation in these years. And there are a lot. He is the only one who won't give a sample.
And they're not getting hits on anyone else at their testing. And so for years, everyone is siding this guy. But you can't hide forever. Though in a lot of cases, we've covered actually, you can't. But it's very frustrating.
But not here, not with this case. Detectives again years later, finally get a warrant for Aaron's DNA. Hopes are high that they're about to solve this case that is haunted the city once and for all. When the results come back, everyone is probably holding their breath. But Aaron is not a match.
Okay, but if there was more than one killer, that's a big if, isn't it? And to state the obvious, that same logic applies then to all the men who have been ruled out. So far through DNA comparison. Unless you've got an airtight alibi or something, which I'm sure some of them do. But I don't have insight into any of that.
Who was ruled out through alibi who had an alibi when their DNA was ruled out? I don't know. All I know is at some point in the '90s. The suspect profile does get entered into codis when codis becomes a thing. But there are no hits in codis.
And then activity on the case. It kind of just, like, ebbs and flows then throughout the years. Like, it picks up a little bit in the mid '90s when a reward is announced. But, like, nothing happens. It's just, like, dead end after dead end.
And in all this time, there are no, like, really viable suspects.
“No, like, that's what makes this case so challenging.”
It truly felt completely random. Like, this killer blew into town committed one of the most heinous crimes these officers would see in their careers.
And then was gone before the sun came up, never to return again.
Or at least, that's how it's seen for many years.
But one day, in early 2001, detectives get this very strange letter in the mail. And it's addressed to HPD, but the return address says, Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson. No address, but I'm not going to read it for us because, I mean, this is wild.
“The letter says, HPD, if you want to know who killed C Henry and A Atkinson,”
it will cost $100,000. Reply, hue, chronicle, personal column, 1, 3, 12, 01, only. A lawyer will be hired to make sure you play straight, a non. And hue, chronicle, used in chronicle.
It's like, the used in chronicle, a non is Monday. I think so. And a non, I think it's just supposed to be anonymous. But it's weird, right? Please tell me they play along with this though. They do.
They do exactly as their toll. They publish their reply in the Houston Chronicle. Basically, like, we hear you. We want to play ball. Tell us what to do next kind of thing.
They keep all of this on the download. Like, the public doesn't know a thing about this letter at the time. So, like, even when they publish their reply, the public doesn't even know what they're looking for, or to look for it. But when they publish this, it's just radio silence.
They never hear from that letter writer again.
They even try having the envelope process to, like, see if there's DNA or fingerprints, whatever. That's a dead end too. And the case is more than 10 years cold by this point. And once again, like, with after this letter,
when this leads nowhere, like, they're out of leads. Now, I haven't touched on this yet,
“but Detective Belk, remember he has been on this case from, like, day one.”
Over the years, he builds a super solid relationship with Cheryl's family. And what are solid relationships based on? Trust. How do you earn trust? Transparency.
And that's what he's been giving them. Like, he doesn't share anything that could jeopardize the investigation, of course. But he has been keeping them in the loop, step by grueling step, which has given them, like, all along the sense of, like, yes. Cheryl's case is actually being actively worse by one of the best.
Yes, which is, like, so many families want. And all honesty, this case is, like, his great white whale. And he really wants to solve it before he retires. And, you know, because of all this transparency that he was giving them, Shane actually shared a 2005 email chain with us.
It was between them in Detective Belk or Detective Belk and Barbara. And in this Detective Belk, lists out all of the men who have been excluded based on the DNA evidence, which, at that time, was 17 names deep.
“He even assures them that in this list, the infamous railroad killer,”
Raphael Ressendez has been ruled out. Thanks to Codas. Now, just for clarification, like, no one has placed this guy in Houston at the time of the murders, as far as I know. But, like, I know he was in the state in July of '91,
when he killed a man in San Antonio. And that's, like, three and a half hours away from Houston. But, like, duh, he's the railroad killer, right? Like, dude got around. I don't have any context about, like, how or why or when he slid on,
like, the investigations radar. So giant grain of salt here. I was just like, I was surprised to see his name on that list. I thought it was worth mentioning. But, here's his name of people who are ruled out.
They're, they're obviously trying their working hard. By 2007, though, Detective Belk has come to terms with the fact that his dreams of solving the case before he or tires actually might allude him. He's been with HPD by that point for 20 years.
And, like, it's his time. So he turns in his badge and gun admitting this kind of defeat for him, like his great white whale got away. But, to be a fly on the wall, when his phone rings the very next week, and he's told that this could be it.
They finally got a hit in Codes after all these years,
except there's always an accept, right?
The hit isn't a person that they've linked to his case. They've linked his case to another case. A brutal, like with a capital B sexual assault case, also there in Houston. So, this guy is still there.
Not so fast. The sexual assault wasn't recent. In fact, it happened two months before Cheryl and Andy were killed. I'm sorry. The backlog is that deep. I have no idea why, but the victim sexual assault
hit was never processed for 17 years. Honestly, four years. Yes. And it wasn't the only one sitting untested. Right.
I mean, far from it. Although that's like a whole-nother podcast. Now, the good news, in this though, is the victim in that sexual assault case was still alive when detectives went and tracked her down in Galveston County.
Her story is that, so basically, she got off work as a dancer
At a club at around 2 o'clock in the morning, one morning in June of 1990.
According to reporting by Lindsey Wise in the Houston Chronicle, she was staying at her pilot boyfriend's place, and he was off like flying a plane somewhere. So, she came home to an empty house apartment, whatever, or at least it should have been empty.
So, she walks in, kicks off her shoes, has a bite to eat downstairs, and then heads upstairs to go to bed. And that's when this man lunged out at her from a dark room. I mean, it is the stuff of actual nightmares.
“And here, I think the best thing to do is just have you read the count from Wise's reporting.”
The man or a fishnet stalking over his face, black gloves, and a dark shirt and pants that matched, possibly a uniform. He held a long, barreled handgun in his left hand. Where's Randy? He asked, referring to her boyfriend by name. He taunted her, putting the gun to her head and cocking it.
He bound her hands behind her back with gray duct tape before taking cash from her purse. Then he duct taped her eyes and mouth shut through her on the bed and shoved a bag or pillowcase over her head. When the whole thing was over, he forced her down onto the floor and told her that she better stayed there because he might be going in minutes.
He might not be, and it would be bad for her.
Basically, if she got up while he was still there.
So, when she finally does work up the courage to get up, she finds that her phone line had been disconnected. So, when they're piecing this together from this victim, like 17 years later, there's something like weird that pops out in her interview because they learn that she had actually worked for Andy's dad Garland.
And this is at a different club than I believe that she, like the one at the time, but guess who worked as a bouncer at Garland's club, every so often? Andy. There was also this mention in K.H.O.U, that the first victim said the purp had this quote, like, very forceful military-type stance.
So, people start to wonder if maybe, maybe this guy was a bouncer, maybe he was a security guard like Andy. Is there a reason, though? I mean, to me, it's just as likely that he was a customer at the club. Totally.
I mean, I think the reason they're coming up with this is, like, the combo of, like, the dark or uniform, like, clothes, but I mean, like, absolutely, he could have just been a customer, or maybe he wasn't part of the club scene at all. I don't know.
Except, as far as investigators are concerned, the possible connections only get stronger when they factor in that Cheryl had worked at another club for a short period of time. Like, she and a close friend had applied to be bartenders like cocktail waitresses or whatever.
Like, I think it was, like, kind of, like, a mutual dare. I'm sorry. There's no way that all of this is coincidental.
“That's what I thought too, like, the suspect pool just got,”
like, so small. Yeah. And so the media goes wild with this when they find out. However, like, all these years on, there hasn't been anyone in particular
that has popped out from that scene. And actually, Cheryl's family swears that too much has been made of this whole thing. Jane told us that Cheryl worked, like, a few shifts the summer before she was killed at a club.
So, like, this is, like, a year plus prior. And she decided really fast that, like, just wasn't for her. Wait, so that part might be coincidental. But when this guy attacked the first girl, he was looking for her boyfriend, right?
He calls him out by name. Maybe Cheryl and Andy's attack was about Andy. Possibly. Except there's something that confuses me about that. So, the dancer, the thing I haven't told you,
she got a good look at the guy, like, albeit he had, like, a smush face because of what he was wearing. She definitely hurt his voice. But she didn't recognize him, either, like, not as an employee at the club, not as, like, a regular customer.
In fact, she tells HPD that she had always assumed her attacker
was someone from a moving company that she had before. So, who knows? What we do know is she sits down with HPD's forensic artist. She has a composite sketch drawn of the man that she can still picture all these years later.
She says he's tall. He has all of skin, dark hair. And as Michelle Homer and Sherman Chow report, she thinks he was somewhere in his, like, late 20s, maybe early to mid 30s.
“Hold up, how old was that security guard that found Andy's car?”
You know, for, I'm always skeptical of security guards who are, like, the first on the scene. So, and HPD was, too, like, he was actually one of the guys who was ruled out with the end. So, probably one of the first I would assume.
So, not him. But whoever this guy is, who attacked our first victim and then Cheryl and Andy, he's a ghost. The sketch that's published in 2008 doesn't generate any promising leads.
And that, in 2008, was the last real update in this baffling case. So, when everything with Legwego basically unravel, did anyone go back to see if their, like, could have been a connection?
If they did, it never made it into reporting.
Keep in mind, like, just how much Legwego unraveled
is in the eye of the baffling holder. And if the baffling holder is the great state of Texas,
it never unraveled at all.
But sure, when you're D1 his appeal, he was acquitted at a retrial, but the convictions of the other three defendants were upheld. And the official party line is that they all died in prison guilty men,
including David Spence, who was executed in '97 for his supposed involvement.
“And if you remember, like, there have been a few attempts”
pushed by, like, private parties to test DNA evidence in the Legwego case, which there is DNA evidence in the Legwego case, but all of those have either been unsuccessful or have stalled for reasons
that are, like, too convoluted to get in here. Again, go listen to the episode. The long and the short of it is, as far as I can tell, no DNA profiles from Legwego have ever been entered into codice.
I don't even know if they were fully processed. 'Cause again, there was no codice when Andy and Cheryl murdered. Legwego is even years before that. I had that point, it was closed. Yeah, and to me, this is, like,
baffling, I can't even understand why they wouldn't,
but this goes back to, like, the whole first case,
where it's like, they want to be right more than they want to find the truth. But Cheryl and Andy's case, this case, is still unsolved today.
“Before you ask, yes, they have considered genetic genealogy.”
It might even be in the works, or not IGG exactly, a lot of reporting seems to conflate familial DNA with genetic genealogy. And the HPD declined to give us a comment, so, like, I couldn't get a ton of clarity.
And actually, to be exact, they told us they had to respectfully decline to comment due to the sensitivity of the investigation. They didn't elaborate on that choice of words. So, we tried regaining detective Belp2
who was retired, we couldn't get a hold of him. And in all the years, like, since Belp left, I think things have kind of broken down between HPD and Cheryl's family. So, they're not even in the inner circle at the moment,
which, to me, doesn't feel like an option. Like, you don't have to be on the inner circle, but I think they deserve a yes or no. Like, are you using this new technology to solve my family members' case or not?
That seems like it should be a basic right for a family to get it. Okay, this is 2026 actually, now. And while I still can't tell you what new technology they might have tried or were trying,
I can confirm that it was a DNA match that led to this arrest, an old school one at that. Sometime in the past year, apparently police received a tip that led them
to announce 64-year-old man named Floyd William Parrot.
Now, this guy was never on their radar for this case,
but he had an interesting past. He was a suspect in a 1996 sexual assault. And this is really chilling. He was charged multiple times with impersonating a police officer. This was in 1988, 1990,
and again, in '96. And investigators now say that he kept doing all of that through the 1990s and into the 2000s.
“So here's how I think they made the connection.”
They mentioned that it had to do with putting evidence from that 1996 sexual assault case in Dakota. So they must have still had evidence in that that had just been sitting there for all these years. Once they got it submitted to Dakota's Wala,
it matched the unidentified profile from the lover's lane case that had just been sitting there for years. Now, they had never convicted him of the '96 assault. So I'm thinking that basically they had two unidentified profiles now that matched together,
but they at least had a suspect in the '96 case. And so that probably gave them enough to do a warrant to get a direct comparison from him. And they've stated with confidence that he now is a match to the evidence from the lover's lane case.
And Floyd Parrot has now been charged with capital murder for the 1990 deaths of Cheryl Henry and Andy Akinson in Houston, Texas. Houston, PD and the FBI took Parrot into custody in Nebraska this week.
But at a press conference, investigators said Parrot spent most of his life around Houston. And they feel sure that he has more victims in the area. Maybe many more. Authorities released pictures of Parrot from around 1990
when Cheryl and Andy were killed. And this photo of the fake cop car that they say parrot was driving at the time. And now they're asking for the public's help. We're going to be posting those on social,
please if you're in the Houston area, go take a look. And if you had any contact with Floyd William Parrot over all these years or you think you might have known something about this case or other cases. Any crime that he may have committed,
please call the Harris County District Attorney's Office at 713-274-5640 and mention lovers lane.
You can ask for ADA Samantha Connect
and leave your name and contact info.
We're going to be following this case.
“So if you want more updates as they come in,”
follow us on social or in the crime junkie fan club.
Our thoughts are with Cheryl and Andy's families
who have waited so long for answers.
“You can find all the source material for this episode on our website,”
crimejunkypodcast.com. You can also follow us on Instagram at crimejunkypodcast.
“We'll be back next week with another episode.”
[music] Crime junkie is an audio check production. I think Chuck would approve.


