The Holly Bobo Kidnapping

Extra security planned for hearing in Holly Bobo case
Posted: Dec 16, 2014 1:38 PM PST
Updated: Dec 17, 2014 4:07 AM PST

DECATURVILLE, TN (WSMV) -

There will be extra security at a key court hearing in the Holly Bobo case Wednesday.

Decatur County is bringing in help from another sheriff's department as three men charged in the case will stand before a judge.

Zach Adams and Jason Autry are the two men charged with Bobo's kidnapping and murder. Dylan Adams, Zach Adams' brother, is charged with rape in the case.

Deputies from Perry County will be on hand to assist court security.

Although there's no known threats against the courthouse or any of the suspects, deputies will keep an eye on any suspicious activity.

Each suspect will also have an officer by his side.

The hearing is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday. You will be able to watch proceedings live at this link on WSMV.com.

Extra security planned for hearing in Holly Bobo case - WRCBtv.com | Chattanooga News, Weather & Sports
 
Investigators, District Attorney Feud Over Holly Bobo Case

The investigation into the three-year-old murder of Holly Bobo may have hit a snag amid an ugly public spat between the district attorney and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, and on Wednesday the law enforcement agency said it was suspending its probe into her death.

The TBI blamed District Attorney General Matthew Stone for these "unprecedented circumstances" and said the prosecutor accused the bureau of misconduct. As a result, the TBI said it was suspending its investigation into the death of the 20-year-old nursing student, who disappeared from her western Tennessee home on April 13, 2011, and whose body was found Sept. 7.

"Stowe made allegations of misconduct by TBI and other law enforcement agencies, both local and federal. He also repeatedly stated he wanted our Agency to suspend all activities in his district," TBI director Mark Gwyn said in a statement Wednesday. He added that the agency "has discontinued its investigation into the Holly Bobo case" until further notice.

Stowe told NBC affiliate WSMV in Nashville that the matter was a misunderstanding, but admitted to being involved in a heated argument with Gwyn at the private meeting with law enforcement officials last week. The argument was over the Bobo case but neither side said exactly what the fight was about, and it is unclear how the dispute might affect the prosecution of the case.

Zachary Rye Adams and Jason Wayne Autry are charged with kidnapping and murder in the case. Adams' brother, John Dylan Adams has been charged with rape. All three have pleaded not guilty. Earlier Wednesday, a judge expressed frustration over how slowly the case has moved since Zachary Rye Adams first pleaded not guilty in March.

Investigators, District Attorney Feud Over Holly Bobo Case - NBC News
 
Investigators, District Attorney Feud Over Holly Bobo Case

The investigation into the three-year-old murder of Holly Bobo may have hit a snag amid an ugly public spat between the district attorney and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, and on Wednesday the law enforcement agency said it was suspending its probe into her death.

The TBI blamed District Attorney General Matthew Stone for these "unprecedented circumstances" and said the prosecutor accused the bureau of misconduct. As a result, the TBI said it was suspending its investigation into the death of the 20-year-old nursing student, who disappeared from her western Tennessee home on April 13, 2011, and whose body was found Sept. 7.

"Stowe made allegations of misconduct by TBI and other law enforcement agencies, both local and federal. He also repeatedly stated he wanted our Agency to suspend all activities in his district," TBI director Mark Gwyn said in a statement Wednesday. He added that the agency "has discontinued its investigation into the Holly Bobo case" until further notice.

Stowe told NBC affiliate WSMV in Nashville that the matter was a misunderstanding, but admitted to being involved in a heated argument with Gwyn at the private meeting with law enforcement officials last week. The argument was over the Bobo case but neither side said exactly what the fight was about, and it is unclear how the dispute might affect the prosecution of the case.

Zachary Rye Adams and Jason Wayne Autry are charged with kidnapping and murder in the case. Adams' brother, John Dylan Adams has been charged with rape. All three have pleaded not guilty. Earlier Wednesday, a judge expressed frustration over how slowly the case has moved since Zachary Rye Adams first pleaded not guilty in March.

Investigators, District Attorney Feud Over Holly Bobo Case - NBC News

I'm guessing it's going to turn out that 0 evidence against the suspects has been uncovered. This will turn out to be a botched investigation and these guys will walk.
 
I'm guessing it's going to turn out that 0 evidence against the suspects has been uncovered. This will turn out to be a botched investigation and these guys will walk.

That is what I am thinking. And the family will have to relive a lot of this all over again
 
Not a good situation if the DA is telling the TBI to suspend it's investigation and activities

The Defense attorneys have to be loving this
 
Not a good situation if the DA is telling the TBI to suspend it's investigation and activities

The Defense attorneys have to be loving this

I know the defense attorneys have been complaining for months that they haven't been getting any of the evidence that the DA allegedly has so they can work on their defense. TBI must be grasping at straws. Now, I'm starting to think maybe this is a West Memphis 3 type situation all over, and that these guys are extremely shady but that they aren't the ones that committed the crime. If they had, surely there would be something now that would have come out such as phone records or DNA evidence.
 
I know the defense attorneys have been complaining for months that they haven't been getting any of the evidence that the DA allegedly has so they can work on their defense. TBI must be grasping at straws. Now, I'm starting to think maybe this is a West Memphis 3 type situation all over, and that these guys are extremely shady but that they aren't the ones that committed the crime. If they had, surely there would be something now that would have come out such as phone records or DNA evidence.

Yea
What happened to the recorded evidence on one of there phones
 
TBI resumes involvement in 24th Judicial District and Holly Bobo case
Posted: Thu 9:23 PM, Dec 18, 2014

DECATURVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation says it has resumed investigations in the five-county judicial district where the high-profile death of a 20-year-old nursing student is being prosecuted.

The TBI announced Wednesday it was suspending investigations there as the result of a disagreement with District Attorney General Matt Stowe.

But Thursday night, the agency issued a release saying it was resuming work in the district and that Stowe has requested a special prosecutor to handle the nursing student's case.

TBI Director Mark Gwyn said Wednesday that Stowe alleged misconduct by the TBI and other law enforcement agencies.

Stowe denied he asked the TBI to suspend investigations in the district, which includes Benton, Carroll, Decatur, Hardin and Henry counties.

A message left at Stowe's office was not immediately returned Thursday evening.

TBI resumes involvement in 24th Judicial District and Holly Bobo case | UPDATE
 
I don't think it has anything to do with lack of evidence. But, some forensic evidence was collected by the TBI and those reports still have not been completed or made available to the DA's office and the defense and Judge are requesting disclosure before they can set a trial date. I think that more of it has to do with the bureaucracy of TBI.
 
Suspects in Holly Bobo case ask judge to drop charges
WBIR Staff, WBIR 5:20 a.m. EST January 2, 2015

DECATURVILLE, Tenn. – Attorneys for two men charged with kidnapping and murdering Holly Bobo are asking for those charges to be dismissed, citing lack of evidence.

The motion filed by the attorneys for Zach Adams and Jason Autry states that they have yet to receive "dental records analysis and forensic studies" of a skull that law enforcement says is Bobo's.

"It would appear to me if they had a skull with a dental match they would have given that to us right away. It's a little suspicious why we don't have that forensic information," Autry's attorney Fletcher Long told the station.

Adams has been in jail since March and Autry has been in jail since April. At a court hearing on Dec. 17, Decatur County Circuit Judge Creed McGinley expressed concern that prosecutors had not yet provided key evidence to defense attorneys. He ordered the state to begin turning it over by Dec. 24.

Long says the state has missed that deadline.

He says he has received nothing linking the suspects to a homicide.

"It would seem to me in a murder case the first thing they would want to give us is proof that someone has been killed," Long said.

The motion filed by the attorneys accuses the state of "silence or stonewalling." It asks that the charges be dismissed. Short of that, it asks the judge to sanction the state and order it to pay the defense team's fees for being forced to file and argue the motion.

McGinley said at the December hearing that he had been patient with the prosecution because a new district attorney general, Matt Stowe, had just been elected in September. However, McGinley warned that he would not stand for more delays in the case.

But later that same day, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Director Mark Gwyn announced that he was suspending all work on the Bobo case after Stowe accused TBI agents of misconduct. The dispute was only resolved after Stowe agreed to request a special prosecutor be appointed.

Suspects in Holly Bobo case ask judge to drop charges
 
Suspects in Holly Bobo case ask judge to drop charges
WBIR Staff, WBIR 5:20 a.m. EST January 2, 2015

DECATURVILLE, Tenn. – Attorneys for two men charged with kidnapping and murdering Holly Bobo are asking for those charges to be dismissed, citing lack of evidence.

The motion filed by the attorneys for Zach Adams and Jason Autry states that they have yet to receive "dental records analysis and forensic studies" of a skull that law enforcement says is Bobo's.

"It would appear to me if they had a skull with a dental match they would have given that to us right away. It's a little suspicious why we don't have that forensic information," Autry's attorney Fletcher Long told the station.

Adams has been in jail since March and Autry has been in jail since April. At a court hearing on Dec. 17, Decatur County Circuit Judge Creed McGinley expressed concern that prosecutors had not yet provided key evidence to defense attorneys. He ordered the state to begin turning it over by Dec. 24.

Long says the state has missed that deadline.

He says he has received nothing linking the suspects to a homicide.

"It would seem to me in a murder case the first thing they would want to give us is proof that someone has been killed," Long said.

The motion filed by the attorneys accuses the state of "silence or stonewalling." It asks that the charges be dismissed. Short of that, it asks the judge to sanction the state and order it to pay the defense team's fees for being forced to file and argue the motion.

McGinley said at the December hearing that he had been patient with the prosecution because a new district attorney general, Matt Stowe, had just been elected in September. However, McGinley warned that he would not stand for more delays in the case.

But later that same day, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Director Mark Gwyn announced that he was suspending all work on the Bobo case after Stowe accused TBI agents of misconduct. The dispute was only resolved after Stowe agreed to request a special prosecutor be appointed.

Suspects in Holly Bobo case ask judge to drop charges

Yep, it sounds like the state doesn't have squat on these guys. They will walk and probably become rich as well because they will sue the state for the right to a speedy trail.
 
Judge: Bobo case can't move forward until new prosecutor appointed
By WBBJ 7 Eyewitness News Staff
By news@wbbjtv.com

HARDIN COUNTY, Tenn. -- Officials with Judge Creed McGinley's office say the Holly Bobo case cannot move forward until the new special prosecutor is appointed.

That means no new motions or requests can be granted until the new prosecutor presides over the case.

District Attorney Matt Stowe requested last month to be replaced by a special prosecutor in the Bobo case.

Earlier this week, defense attorneys representing Zach Adams and Jason Autry filed a request asking for the charges to be dropped in light of a reported lack of evidence being presented.

WBBJ 7 Eyewitness News will have the newest in the case as it becomes available.

Judge: Bobo case can't move forward until new prosecutor appointed | WBBJTV West Tennessee's News Channel | Local News
 
Special prosecutor in Holly Bobo case expected to be named any day

DECATUR COUNTY, Tenn. (WKRN) – District Attorney Matt Stowe’s office said the announcement of who will be the special prosecutor for the Holly Bobo murder case could come any day.

Stowe recused himself from the case after a very public falling out with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation over the Bobo investigation.

The TBI was the lead investigating agency.

The new prosecutor will take over the case amid a motion filed asking the presiding Judge Creed McGinley to dismiss the kidnapping and murder indictments against Jason Autry and Zach Adams.

Attorneys for the men said in a motion the prosecution missed a Christmas Eve deadline to file a bill of particulars and has failed to turn over essential evidence in the case. A bill of particulars is a filing by prosecutors that explains exactly what a defendant is being accused of.

“The defense has attempted more than once to be provided this information and has met with either silence or stonewalling,” Autry’s defense attorney Fletcher Long wrote.

Judge McGinley ordered the state to provide the document after a December 17 hearing where he voiced frustration with lack of progress in the case.

In talking about the remains of Bobo, Long said defense attorneys had not seen definitive proof that the skull found in September is that of Bobo.

“Obviously, if the results of the skull came back unknown or to someone other than Holly Bobo, that seriously impacts the government’s investigative integrity and credibility going forward,” Long wrote.

Autry and Adams are due back in court January 14.

At that time, Judge McGinley had asked prosecutors to say whether they would seek the death penalty.

It’s unclear how the appointment of a special prosecutor will impact that decision and when it will be reached.

Judge McGinley also said he anticipates approving a motion for a change of venue for the murder trials if the defense attorneys make the request.

Lawyers for both men said they plan to ask for a change of venue.

A Bobo family spokesman said the latest developments have been extremely rough on the family and they would not comment further.

Special prosecutor in Holly Bobo case expected to be named any day | WKRN News 2
 
Shelby County Deputy DA Jennifer Nichols appointed as special prosecutor in Holly Bobo case

SHELBY COUNTY, TN (WMC) - A judge appointed Shelby County Deputy District Attorney Jennifer Nichols to take over as the special prosecutor in the Holly Bobo murder case. The order was signed Tuesday.

This decision comes days after defense attorneys filed motions with the court to drop charges against Zach Adams and Jason Autry.

Holly Bobo went missing in April 2011. Her skull was found in September 2014.

Investigators charged Zach Adams and Jason Autry with kidnapping and murder in March. Zach Adams' brother, Dylan, was charged with tampering with evidence in connection with the case.

However, attorneys said they had not received evidence from prosecutors linking Adams and Autry to Bobo's murder.

Nichols was assisting prosecutor Matt Stowe with the case, but the Shelby County DA was pulled back after a conflict developed between Prosecutor Matt Stowe and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Shelby County Deputy DA Jennifer Nichols appointed as special pr - WMC Action News 5 - Memphis, Tennessee
 
Former jailer reports threats related to Zach Adams
9:02 p.m. CST January 13, 2015

A former Chester County Jail employee filed police reports saying he has received two threatening phone calls regarding a plot to kill Zach Adams, a suspect in the Holly Bobo murder case.

One of the calls was made in April, when Adams was being held in the Chester County Jail, and the second call was made this past Sunday, according to the reports filed by former jail employee Tommy Joe Austin.

Austin told investigators that the anonymous caller on Sunday morning said Austin will "pay the price" if Adams is not convicted because Austin had the chance to "take care" of Adams when he was in Chester County.

"(Austin) received an harassing phone call," Madison County Sheriff John Mehr said on Tuesday. "We let the TBI know about it, and we turned it over to them."

A Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman said the agency had not yet received a formal request to investigate.

Mehr said he was not certain if Austin lives in Madison County.

"I can't say for sure if he is living in the county," Mehr said. "I saw the address, a city address, but that does not mean it is his physical address."

Austin also reported to the Chester County Sheriff's Office that he received a call in April from an unknown man who wanted to try to kill Adams while he was being transported between the jail and court.

Adams is no longer being held in Chester County.

Adams and Jason Autry are charged with the murder and kidnapping of Bobo, who was 20 when she disappeared from outside her home in Decatur County in April 2011. Her partial remains, including her skull, were found in the woods in September, according to the TBI.

Trial dates for Adams and Autry have not been set.

Former jailer reports threats related to Zach Adams
 
Ex-jailer recruited to help assassinate Zach Adams
Posted: Jan 14, 2015 9:19 AM PST
Updated: Jan 14, 2015 1:50 PM PST

HENDERSON, TN (WSMV) -

A former jailer at the Chester County jail was approached to help in the assassination of Zach Adams, accused of kidnapping and murdering Holly Bobo in 2011, and threatened after not helping, according to police reports.

The jailer, who asked not to be identified, told Chester County authorities that he was contacted by an unknown man about 7-10 days after Adams was transferred to the Chester County jail from Decatur County.

Adams was transferred from Decatur County after his arrest for safety reasons. He was later transferred to the Williamson County Jail in Franklin, TN.

The jailer said the caller propositioned him to “provide assistance or information that would be used in an attempt to assassinate” Adams during transportation to or from court. He said the call came from a blocked number.

On Sunday, the jailer reported to Madison County authorities that he received a call from an unknown person stating that “you had an opportunity to take care of Zach Adams and if he gets off this you will pay the price,” according to the police report.

The jailer told Channel 4 that he was outraged that his name has been spread online.

After the threat, he said he fears for his family's safety. He feels that he has been victimized again by his name getting out.

The jailer told Channel 4 he has two sons, ages 6 and 8. When he received the most recent threatening phone call, the caller specially mentioned the rainy weather at the time of the call.

"I'm not worried about me. I'm a 46-year-old man," the jailer said. "But I am worried about both of my sons."

He said he didn't recognize the voices on the calls. Chester County investigators are working to subpoena phone records to try to identify who is responsible.

The jailer had already resigned from his position at the jail prior to being contacted last year.

Ex-jailer recruited to help assassinate Zach Adams - WAFF-TV: News, Weather and Sports for Huntsville, AL
 
State agency: Analysis of evidence in Bobo case finished

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Authorities say they have completed their analysis of more than 460 pieces of evidence in the case of a woman whose partial remains were found three years after her disappearance, possibly bringing defense attorneys a step closer to seeing how prosecutors have linked their clients to her.

Two men, Zachary Adams and Jason Autry, were arrested last spring and charged with murder and kidnapping in the case of Holly Bobo, a nursing student who was 20 when she disappeared from her house in April 2011. In October, John Dylan Adams was charged with raping Bobo. All have pleaded not guilty.

No trial has been set and the defendants' lawyers have filed a motion to dismiss the charges. The attorneys said they had not received any evidence linking their clients to the crime. Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokesman Josh DeVine said Thursday that some hair samples have been sent to the FBI for testing, but the TBI has analyzed all the evidence it has received.

Still, it was unclear when the defense would receive any information. District Attorney Matt Stowe told The Associated Press that they would get the evidence they're requesting "at some point."
At the time of Bobo's disappearance, her brother told police he saw a man dressed in camouflage leading her into the woods near her home in Parsons, located about 110 miles east of Memphis. Last September, more than three years later, authorities said two men searching for ginseng found Bobo's skull in a wooded area not far away.

Bobo's disappearance and the subsequent lengthy search attracted national attention as authorities distributed posters with her photograph throughout the South.

Prosecutors have not said whether they plan to seek the death penalty. Hearings scheduled for this month have been postponed to an undetermined future date.

Jennifer Lynn Thompson, Adams' attorney, says state prosecutors have not even told her who found Bobo's remains or where they were found.

"I do not understand what is happening," Thompson said. "I have never before been involved in a case where there is no information about why my client was charged."

In the motion to dismiss, Thompson and Fletcher Long, Autry's lawyer, asked the judge to force prosecutors to produce "all dental record analysis and forensic studies" performed on the skull.

Adams has been in jail since March and Autry has been in jail since April. At a court hearing Dec. 17, Decatur County Circuit Judge Creed McGinley expressed concern that prosecutors had not yet provided key evidence to defense attorneys. He ordered the state to begin turning it over by Dec. 24.

Thompson says the state missed that deadline.

Then, TBI Director Mark Gwyn — who has said the Bobo investigation has been the most exhaustive and expensive in agency history — announced he was suspending all work on the case after District Attorney Matt Stowe accused TBI agents of misconduct.

Stowe took office Sept. 1 after defeating District Attorney Hansel McCadams, who had indicted Adams and Autry.

The dispute was only resolved after Stowe stepped down from the case and Jennifer Nichols, a Shelby County attorney who was Stowe's co-counsel on the case and who had worked with death-penalty cases, was appointed as a special prosecutor. She is the third prosecutor in the case, which Stowe said is unusual.

He said the fact that multiple prosecutors have been involved, plus the complex nature of the case, have contributed to the delays.

"We're talking about terabytes and terabytes of information," he said.

Attorney Steve Farese, who represents the Bobo family, said the recent developments in the case are "different" than in other cases, and he acknowledged that the family is concerned with how the case is going.

"But they understand that this is a tedious process and they want to make sure everyone has their t's crossed and their i's dotted and to get this thing done right," Farese said.

Later, Farese added: "No one should lose focus that this is about justice."

State agency: Analysis of evidence in Bobo case finished
 
Still no court date for Holly Bobo case
Posted: Jan 23, 2015 2:06 PM PST
Updated: Jan 23, 2015 2:11 PM PST
Reported by Carley Gordon

DECATURVILLE, TN (WSMV) -

Nearly 500 pieces of evidence in the Holly Bobo case have been analyzed by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, but there is still no word on when the legal case against the suspects in her death will move forward.

Bobo vanished nearly four years ago. Investigators have arrested three people in connection with the case. The TBI has collected more than 460 pieces of evidence.

Jason Autry and Zach Adams face charges for allegedly kidnapping and killing Bobo. Zach Adams' brother, Dylan Adams, faces charges for rape.

So far, the state has yet to show any evidence they have against the three suspects, and their defense attorneys aren't happy about it.

"I still have very little understanding of what he's accused of doing," said Jennifer Thompson, Zach Adams' attorney. "I have no physical evidence whatsoever linking him to the kidnapping and murder of Holly Bobo."

Bobo disappeared from her home in 2011. Her remains weren't discovered until last September when two ginseng hunters found her skull in the woods.

TBI Director Mark Gwyn said the Bobo investigation has been the most exhaustive and expensive in the agency's history.

A TBI spokesperson told Channel 4 that while some hair samples have been sent to the FBI for testing, the TBI has analyzed all of the evidence it has received and turned all of it over to the state prosecutor.

What remains unclear is when the defense will receive any of the evidence and analysis. It's up to state prosecutors to hand it over.

Judge Creed McGinley has made it clear he's frustrated with the hold up.

"I've run out of patience. This case is going to move," McGinley said from the bench last month.

But McGinley has yet to set another court date.

The judge recently appointed a new special prosecutor. A spokesperson for Shelby County District Attorney Jennifer Nichols' office said she now needs time to familiarize herself with the case.

Channel 4 reached out to Nichols for comment, but she has not returned our phone calls.

This does not mean the TBI's investigation is closed. A spokesperson said if they secure more evidence, they will test it as it is submitted.

Still no court date for Holly Bobo case - WSMV Channel 4
 
Ex-jailer recruited to help assassinate Zach Adams
Posted: Jan 14, 2015 9:19 AM PST
Updated: Jan 14, 2015 1:50 PM PST

HENDERSON, TN (WSMV) -

A former jailer at the Chester County jail was approached to help in the assassination of Zach Adams, accused of kidnapping and murdering Holly Bobo in 2011, and threatened after not helping, according to police reports.

The jailer, who asked not to be identified, told Chester County authorities that he was contacted by an unknown man about 7-10 days after Adams was transferred to the Chester County jail from Decatur County.

Adams was transferred from Decatur County after his arrest for safety reasons. He was later transferred to the Williamson County Jail in Franklin, TN.

The jailer said the caller propositioned him to “provide assistance or information that would be used in an attempt to assassinate” Adams during transportation to or from court. He said the call came from a blocked number.

On Sunday, the jailer reported to Madison County authorities that he received a call from an unknown person stating that “you had an opportunity to take care of Zach Adams and if he gets off this you will pay the price,” according to the police report.

The jailer told Channel 4 that he was outraged that his name has been spread online.

After the threat, he said he fears for his family's safety. He feels that he has been victimized again by his name getting out.

The jailer told Channel 4 he has two sons, ages 6 and 8. When he received the most recent threatening phone call, the caller specially mentioned the rainy weather at the time of the call.

"I'm not worried about me. I'm a 46-year-old man," the jailer said. "But I am worried about both of my sons."

He said he didn't recognize the voices on the calls. Chester County investigators are working to subpoena phone records to try to identify who is responsible.

The jailer had already resigned from his position at the jail prior to being contacted last year.

Ex-jailer recruited to help assassinate Zach Adams - WAFF-TV: News, Weather and Sports for Huntsville, AL

that's serious
 
This whole case was predicated on a supposed video of the rape and murder of Bobo seen by a woman who went to the police. That led to the arrests of Zach Adams and Jason Autry. Not sure if the video has ever surfaced. Also, Dylan Adams the younger brother has been charged with two counts of rape in the case and they have some confessions from him. However, I suspect the hold up in the case is because the corroborating evidence that TBI has collected does not support the case, as TBI has presented it, in its entirety. They have to disclose all of the evidence against the accused, not just the evidence that supports their case. I suspect this is where the problem lies. Hopefully, the new deputy prosecutor assigned to the case, Nichols, can clean this up and get this case moving and get these convictions.
 
Holly Bobo Case: Charges Filed Without Physical Evidence
Subscribe Free By Amanda Crum ·
January 23, 2015

Holly Bobo, a nursing student who disappeared four years ago when she was just 20 years old, has a family that wants answers. When her remains were found last September by a pair of hunters, three men were later arrested in connection with her murder, but despite nearly 500 pieces of evidence that just went through analysis, the state hasn’t linked the men to any of it. The wait has been hard on everyone.

Holly’s family members haven’t said much since the arrests were made, but released a statement on a Facebook page dedicated to bringing her home safely last March.

“In the recent days, it feels like everything has come against our hope and it seems that all our trust was shattered. We still have hope because of who our hope is in. Holly had that same hope and faith, because of Jesus Christ we will see her again. Jesus will provide us the strength and grace to see us through,” Holly Bobo’s family wrote.

Zachary Adams and Jason Autry were taken into custody last year and charged with the kidnapping and murder of Holly Bobo; Zachary’s brother, John Dylan, was arrested for raping her. All three have pleaded not guilty, and their defense teams say they don’t understand why they have been held so long without being charged in connection with physical evidence.

“I still have very little understanding of what he’s accused of doing. I have no physical evidence whatsoever linking him to the kidnapping and murder of Holly Bobo,” said Jennifer Thompson, who is Zach Adams’ attorney.

Holly’s brother was one of the last people to see her alive after he witnessed her walking into the woods with a man wearing a camo jacket. Believing the man was her boyfriend, he wasn’t alarmed until she failed to return home. It would take years for the family to have any sense of closure.

“The finding of her body was more of a relief than anything. They had already come to grips with the idea that she was dead,” said Sheriff Keith Byrd in an interview with ABC News.

Several pieces of evidence have been sent to the FBI for analysis, and until they come back, the case will likely be held up. Judge Creed McGinley says he’s frustrated with the delay, but hasn’t set another court date in the Holly Bobo case.

“I’ve run out of patience. This case is going to move,” McGinley said.

Holly Bobo Case: Charges Filed Without Physical Evidence | WebProNews
 
Holly Bobo Case: Charges Filed Without Physical Evidence
Subscribe Free By Amanda Crum ·
January 23, 2015

Holly Bobo, a nursing student who disappeared four years ago when she was just 20 years old, has a family that wants answers. When her remains were found last September by a pair of hunters, three men were later arrested in connection with her murder, but despite nearly 500 pieces of evidence that just went through analysis, the state hasn’t linked the men to any of it. The wait has been hard on everyone.

Holly’s family members haven’t said much since the arrests were made, but released a statement on a Facebook page dedicated to bringing her home safely last March.

“In the recent days, it feels like everything has come against our hope and it seems that all our trust was shattered. We still have hope because of who our hope is in. Holly had that same hope and faith, because of Jesus Christ we will see her again. Jesus will provide us the strength and grace to see us through,” Holly Bobo’s family wrote.

Zachary Adams and Jason Autry were taken into custody last year and charged with the kidnapping and murder of Holly Bobo; Zachary’s brother, John Dylan, was arrested for raping her. All three have pleaded not guilty, and their defense teams say they don’t understand why they have been held so long without being charged in connection with physical evidence.

“I still have very little understanding of what he’s accused of doing. I have no physical evidence whatsoever linking him to the kidnapping and murder of Holly Bobo,” said Jennifer Thompson, who is Zach Adams’ attorney.

Holly’s brother was one of the last people to see her alive after he witnessed her walking into the woods with a man wearing a camo jacket. Believing the man was her boyfriend, he wasn’t alarmed until she failed to return home. It would take years for the family to have any sense of closure.

“The finding of her body was more of a relief than anything. They had already come to grips with the idea that she was dead,” said Sheriff Keith Byrd in an interview with ABC News.

Several pieces of evidence have been sent to the FBI for analysis, and until they come back, the case will likely be held up. Judge Creed McGinley says he’s frustrated with the delay, but hasn’t set another court date in the Holly Bobo case.

“I’ve run out of patience. This case is going to move,” McGinley said.

Holly Bobo Case: Charges Filed Without Physical Evidence | WebProNews

Yes the state filed charges due to the woman who supposedly witnessed the video that hasn't apparently surfaced and Dylan's supposed confession. They supposedly took mattresses and boards out of Adam's home but it must not have turned up any evidence.
 
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