Anne-Marie Green
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And, of course, the witness identified Jimmy. So when I saw that in the hour, I thought this is where the twist is going to come in to tell you the truth, because I knew with identical twins, they have the same DNA, and that could be quite complicated.
Mm hmm. So then was Billy Ray Barnes ever suspect in this case?
Mm hmm. So then was Billy Ray Barnes ever suspect in this case?
Mm hmm. So then was Billy Ray Barnes ever suspect in this case?
What is really kind of unique, I think, about this 48 Hours episode is that so much of it is told through the lens of Reggie Jr., who was a child, a small child. He was only six years old. And watching him in the police video is just heartbreaking.
What is really kind of unique, I think, about this 48 Hours episode is that so much of it is told through the lens of Reggie Jr., who was a child, a small child. He was only six years old. And watching him in the police video is just heartbreaking.
What is really kind of unique, I think, about this 48 Hours episode is that so much of it is told through the lens of Reggie Jr., who was a child, a small child. He was only six years old. And watching him in the police video is just heartbreaking.
He is leaning on his father, right, to show him some sort of tenderness because that's his safe island. And I just found myself sort of reading everything into his father's body language, internally yelling at the screen, saying, hug him, hold him, protect him, do something.
He is leaning on his father, right, to show him some sort of tenderness because that's his safe island. And I just found myself sort of reading everything into his father's body language, internally yelling at the screen, saying, hug him, hold him, protect him, do something.
He is leaning on his father, right, to show him some sort of tenderness because that's his safe island. And I just found myself sort of reading everything into his father's body language, internally yelling at the screen, saying, hug him, hold him, protect him, do something.
So you fast forward to 2012, right? And Reggie Jr., he's 31 years old. He's living in Texas. Out of the blue, Texas Rangers come to his door and they tell him something he has never considered in his life. That his father is a suspect, the main suspect in his mother's murder. They're from a small town. We know, I mean, people talk. Reggie Jr. had never heard this at all?
So you fast forward to 2012, right? And Reggie Jr., he's 31 years old. He's living in Texas. Out of the blue, Texas Rangers come to his door and they tell him something he has never considered in his life. That his father is a suspect, the main suspect in his mother's murder. They're from a small town. We know, I mean, people talk. Reggie Jr. had never heard this at all?
So you fast forward to 2012, right? And Reggie Jr., he's 31 years old. He's living in Texas. Out of the blue, Texas Rangers come to his door and they tell him something he has never considered in his life. That his father is a suspect, the main suspect in his mother's murder. They're from a small town. We know, I mean, people talk. Reggie Jr. had never heard this at all?
And his father actually sort of, in a way, kind of rearranged his life. Like, he moved into another school and everything, right?
And his father actually sort of, in a way, kind of rearranged his life. Like, he moved into another school and everything, right?
And his father actually sort of, in a way, kind of rearranged his life. Like, he moved into another school and everything, right?
So we'll talk a little bit about Hammond, right? It's a town in the South.
So we'll talk a little bit about Hammond, right? It's a town in the South.
So we'll talk a little bit about Hammond, right? It's a town in the South.
Right. Sort of the pros and cons of kind of a small town community, right? You love that familiarity. And then sort of on the flip side, though, here you have the situation where this... insurance agent probably risked his own license. I mean, because you're not supposed to do that. People are supposed to know when someone's taken out a life insurance policy on them.