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Latest News on Rhonda Sue Coleman Unsolved Murder

John Strickland, Greg Newham, Trice Thompson : Why are they not talking?

Trice Thompson, Rhonda Sue Coleman Greg Newham,John Strickland Fox Hunter has just been named #17 on Podtrac’s Best New Podcasts of 2021 in the world. Millions of people have now downloaded and listened to the tragedy, the lies, and the coverup surrounding the abduction and murder of Rhonda Sue Coleman. You won’t believe what’s coming next. foxhunterpodcast.com

Promoting Victims' Rights in Georgia Through "Rhonda's Law"

Rhonda Sue Coleman Podcast


Rhonda Sue Coleman Foxhunter Podcast Cold Case

Sign the Petition for "Rhonda's Law"

Small towns like Hazlehurst, GA are the backbone of America. They are the places of unsung heroes, of hard-working middle-class men and women. But sometimes, these very same small towns hide the deepest and darkest of secrets.

Such is the case of 18-year-old Rhonda Sue Coleman, who was abducted in May of 1990 after a senior class party and found three days later in a neighboring county. She had been murdered, her body dumped in a wooded area and burned in an attempt to conceal any evidence.

There were dozens of suspects - classmates, ex-boyfriends, and even members of the police force. Despite many people in the community still claiming to know who really killed Rhonda, the lack of hard evidence has caused the case to remain open.

Now, more than 30 years later the Coleman family and the community of Hazlehurst, GA still want answers as to who is responsible for Rhonda Sue Coleman's death. The family worked with Sean Kipe and Imperative Entertainment to produce the "Foxhunter" podcast to re-examine the evidence, unearth new leads, and investigate the role that Law Enforcement may have played in the death of Rhonda.

This investigation has revealed damning evidence that the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) has failed to follow up on significant leads in the investigation, refused to allow the new District Attorney to review the case file, allowed former DA Jackie Johnson (Ahmaud Arbury case) unfettered access to the case file along with her investigators, privately admitted to making mistakes in the case, and have actively refused to provide Rhonda's parents with any substantial information regarding their daughter's murder. It was only when Sean Kipe was able to obtain confidential internal emails through open records that the truth was revealed.

Significant questions remain as to why the GBI does not want anyone to know, including the new District Attorney, what is in that case file. What are they hiding?

The biggest travesty of the case was discovered by the family in 2017 when it learned that the Jeff Davis County Sheriff's Department was in possession of fingernail clippings that had never been processed for DNA. Because of the substantial failures of law enforcement, the family was forced to hire their own private investigator who learned of the fingernail clippings through interviews with former agents and investigators. It wasn't until the family began making "significant waves" in the community that the clippings were retrieved by the GBI and submitted for analysis. The family later learned that, circa 2010, a former Sheriff and his investigator had requested that the clippings be processed by the GBI. No action was taken until the family learned about the unprocessed evidence.

While Rhonda's death may never be solved, we don't want her death to have been in vain nor have another family suffer the indignity of not knowing what happened to their loved one. 

The family is calling on the Georgia General Assembly and its legislators to protect the rights of victim's families and to hold the GBI and other law enforcement accountable for their failure to follow up on significant leads that could lead to the successful prosecution of those responsible for the death of a loved one.

The family is asking for the public to join them in asking the Georgia General Assembly to amend Georgia's law and provide for the following:

An independent review board composed of law enforcement agents be empaneled to review homicide investigation case files that have remained unsolved for a period of more than 20 years to ensure that the GBI and/or Law Enforcement have taken any and all measures available to solve said case and to ensure that all evidence has been processed for forensic evidence. To also ensure that no GBI or Law Enforcement official has violated their oath of office by failing to follow up on leads or process relevant evidence.

When a homicide case remains unsolved for a period of 20 year or more, the immediate family of the victim shall have the right to review the entire case file with no redactions to learn about the death of their loved one. There shall also be an agent or investigator present during the review who is familiar with the case to answer any questions that the family may have about their loved one's case.

That Georgia law provide that a District Attorney shall be granted unfettered access to any and all active homicide investigation case files to ensure that no lesser and included charge becomes time barred due to a statute of limitation and to ensure that the GBI and local law enforcement are not impeding an investigation by their failure to follow up on any and all leads in a case or process relevant evidence.

TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE FAMILY'S FIGHT FOR JUSTICE FOR RHONDA, LISTEN TO "FOXHUNTER" ON YOUR FAVORITE PODCAST APP

Comments

  1. Why won't Trice Thompson go on the podcast? For years now, we've all heard rumors that she either knows something or was involved (with John Strickland) in Rhonda's death. Doesn't she want to set the record straight? Her silence is deafening.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She won't go in the podcast because she has too much guilt inside of her. I'm certain that Trice Thompson knows exactly what happened that night. Her boyfriend, John Strickland, was the one who most likely killed Rhonda Coleman. She was either there at the same, or she helps him dispose of the body later. Or maybe he told her later on. In any event, her silence clearly indicates some level of knowledge or participation in the murder.

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The murder of 18-year-old Rhonda Sue Coleman in Hazlehurst has remained unsolved for over 30 years despite leads, eyewitness accounts and evidence. There are several main suspects who police and investigators believe could have acted alone or together in the murder - all of which still live in the general area. Police feel strongly that there are people still in the area who know exactly what happened, but are not talking for various reasons, be it fear of retaliation or perhaps guilt for holding this information for so long without coming forward.

Rhonda Sue Coleman was two weeks away from graduating high school in Hazlehurst, Georgia on May 17, 1990. That night, as a part of a Jeff Davis High School tradition, she and fellow seniors gathered at a student’s house to decorate a graduation banner to put up at school. She never returned home that night. Rhonda's burned body was discovered several days later in a remote area of a neighboring county.

The murder of 18-year-old Rhonda Sue Coleman in 1990 has been a thorn in the side of the small community of Hazlehurst, GA for over 30 years. No arrests, no answers, and no justice. The family, friends and townspeople have never let go of the hope of finally getting the answers they so desperately seek.

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Marky Hall with Rhonda Sue Coleman on night of murder says classmate

Mitchell Wood (Facebook) In a recent episode of Fox Hunter, Sean Kipe interviews Mitchell Wood of Hazlehurst Georgia. Mitchell Wood, a lifelong friend of Rhonda's, grew up in Hazlehurst and was also a member of the Jeff Davis High School Class of 1990.  According to statements given by Mitchell Wood to law enforcement, he claimed to have seen Rhonda Sue Coleman and Marky Hall together on the side of the road the night she was abducted and murdered. According to Wood, when he drove up on the pair Marky Hall threatened him and said: "You better turn around and get out of here unless you want something bad to happen" Mitchell Wood agreed to a polygraph test given by a retired GBI expert polygraph examiner. After the polygraph, the retired GBI agent said that Mitchell Wood was being truthful in his account of what happened the night Rhonda Coleman was abducted. What does Marky Hall know about Rhonda Sue Coleman's murder?

John Strickland, Greg Newham, Trice Thompson : Why are they not talking?

Trice Thompson, Rhonda Sue Coleman Greg Newham,John Strickland Fox Hunter has just been named #17 on Podtrac’s Best New Podcasts of 2021 in the world. Millions of people have now downloaded and listened to the tragedy, the lies, and the coverup surrounding the abduction and murder of Rhonda Sue Coleman. You won’t believe what’s coming next. foxhunterpodcast.com