4.4 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 13 December 2023
⏱️ 36 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
On January 13, 1972, 9-year-old Debbie Randall was abducted and murdered after leaving a laundromat in Marietta, Georgia.
In this episode of Zone 7, Crime Scene Investigator, Sheryl McCollum, talks with Detective Morris Nix about solving the 1972 cold case murder of 9-year-old Debbie Randall. They discuss the crime, investigation, DNA technology, and finally bringing justice after five decades.
Show Notes:
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Sheryl “Mac” McCollum is an Emmy Award winning CSI, a writer for CrimeOnLine, Forensic and Crime Scene Expert for Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, and a CSI for a metro Atlanta Police Department. She is the co-author of the textbook., Cold Case: Pathways to Justice. Sheryl is also the founder and director of the Cold Case Investigative Research Institute, a collaboration between universities and colleges that brings researchers, practitioners, students and the criminal justice community together to advance techniques in solving cold cases and assist families and law enforcement with solvability factors for unsolved homicides, missing persons, and kidnapping cases.
You can connect and learn more about Sheryl’s work by visiting the CCIRI website https://coldcasecrimes.org
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0:00.0 | I was a tomboy growing up. |
0:11.0 | I did not play with dolls, but Barbie was not a doll. |
0:18.0 | Barbie was a grown woman, and Barbie was the only toy that I can remember my sisters, our mother, |
0:28.9 | our grandmothers, and our friends all participated in playing. |
0:34.6 | She came with a travel case, which I loved, because then we could take her. We could take her to our |
0:40.5 | grandparents, our friends, on vacation. Barbie brought us all together. We were able to pick out |
0:48.4 | clothes that we wanted for our individual Barbie doll, and then our mom and our grandmothers would make her clothes. |
0:56.5 | Then we'd get to try them on the doll and then have like a little fashion show. |
1:01.7 | It was just an amazing experience that all of us, all three generations, could participate in. |
1:10.8 | When I had a daughter of my own, we would spend hours playing with Barbie. |
1:16.3 | Some of my clothes, some of her clothes, her aunts, her cousins, her friends, all loved it. |
1:23.4 | And I was comforted in a kind of sentimental way that Caroline's Barbie was playing with clothes that my mama and my grandmama made. |
1:35.4 | Two people, she never got a chance to meet. |
1:38.4 | Barbie connected all of us. |
1:41.4 | Sometimes Caroline would even rope her brother Huck-in to play Ken. So again, |
1:47.0 | Barbie connected all of us. It was January 13, 1972, when Debbie Lynn Randall, age 9, was abducted |
1:58.0 | while walking home from a laundromat in Marietta, Georgia. |
2:02.3 | Debbie was a third grader at Pine Forest Elementary School. |
2:06.0 | She loved her brothers, her Barbies, and dancing. |
2:10.1 | She loved to play with other children, |
2:12.3 | and she would often take toys with her to the laundromat |
2:15.5 | so that when other children were there, they had |
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