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Showing posts from February, 2025

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

New information could change course of Rhonda Sue Coleman murder investigation

Who Killed Rhonda Sue Coleman? 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. It’s a quiet spring night in 1990, and 2 men fox hunting in a secluded area of rural South Georgia stand patiently by their truck. Pulled off the side of a dirt road, they wait silently for the sound of their dogs barking to alert them to game nearby. ...

Rhonda Sue Coleman slaying in Hazlehurst is another case of delayed justice

Unsolved slaying in Hazlehurst another case of delayed justice More than 30 years have passed since the day Rhonda Sue Coleman left her home in Hazlehurst and did not return. Rhonda, 18, was a graduating senior and had attended an event at a classmate’s home on a Thursday. That night, a friend found her car still running by the side of the road, her purse in the passenger seat and her footprints leading from her 1989 Chevy Cavalier to an unidentified vehicle. Three days later, police found her partially burned body in a wooded area the next county over. Since then, her parents, Milton and Gayle Coleman, have fought valiantly to bring the killer to justice but have been frustrated by the lack of information, the poorly managed investigation and what they believe could be a cover-up by law enforcement. “Over the years, we can’t get a lot of answers,” said Milton Coleman, who spoke with me by phone as he and his wife drove through town. Whenever they have asked for information, law enforc...