Fort Worth, Texas 1974 Cold Case Solved — Her K!ller Hid in Plain Sight for 47 Years

How did you kill her? I just choked her. Just after midnight on February 17th, 1974, a man forced open the passenger door of a parked car in a Fort Worth bowling alley parking lot. He hit the teenage boy driving until blood ran into his eyes. Then he dragged the boy’s girlfriend into the dark. She was 17.
Her last words were not a scream. They were a command. Go get my dad. This is not a story about a stranger in a parking lot. It is a true crime documentary about a man who would drive past that girl’s family home for the next 46 years on his way to church and the grocery store.
While the town he lived in thought he was a good man. This is the cold case of Carla Walker. For almost 50 years, the people who loved her believed it would never be solved. Carla Jan Walker was born in Tarrant County on the last day of January, 1957. Her brother Jim remembers three things first. Her blue eyes, her smile, and the way she walked.
She had a quick, short walk, he says. The kind that made it seem like she was always heading towards something good. She was a junior at Western Hills High School. A cheerleader who played tennis and wrote for her journalism class. She was popular in a way that cost nothing, but meant a lot. She said hello to everyone in the hallway.
Every group, every kid, whether they were popular or not. Classmates used an old word to describe her. Bubbly. She had been dating Rodney McCoy for about a year. He was the captain of the football team. He gave her a promise ring, and she told her closest friends she was sure she would marry him. She wore the ring every day. Remember the ring.
It will matter again in a way no one in this story could have guessed. The Walkers were a religious, disciplined family in West Fort Worth. Carla’s father, Layton Walker, was a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force who had served in World War II. The house was built on respect and care for each other. She had an older sister, Cindy, and a younger brother, Jim, who was 12.
On Saturday, February 16th, the high school held its Valentine’s dance. The theme was love is a kaleidoscope. The cafeteria had a live band and paper hearts on the walls. Carla got ready at home with her mother, Doris. She wore a floor-length powder blue dress with white ruffles. Rodney pinned a corsage on her. Her parents took photos in the doorway and wished them well.
The two of them left for the dance. Inside the house, the adults stayed up late. Carla’s parents and her aunt and uncle played dominoes, drank coffee, and waited to hear how the night went. There were no warnings. That is the hard truth of this case. Nothing in the days before pointed to what was coming because the man who was coming did not know Carla, and Carla did not know him.
The night changed because of small, normal choices. After the dance, Carla, Rodney, and another couple went cruising as teenagers in Fort Worth did then, driving up and down a street. Near midnight, the other girl had a curfew, so Rodney dropped the couple back at the school. He took Carla to get food.
Then she needed a bathroom. The closest one open was at a bowling alley near Ridgely. A boy pulled into a parking lot so his girlfriend could use the bathroom. That was all. That was the turning point. By 1:00 in the morning, Doris Walker felt uneasy. Carla liked to be home, but she was not there. Then the night breaks.
Around 1:30, a car speeds down the street and crashes into the curb. 12-year-old Jim hears it from inside the house. He hears a voice. It is Rodney’s, and Rodney is screaming. “Mr. Walker, Mr. Walker, help me. They’ve got her. They’re going to hurt her badly. I know they are.
” There is pounding on the screen door. Jim looks up and sees Rodney’s face through the screen, his lips split, blood on them, his eyes wide. Layton Walker takes one look and tells his son to come with him. Jim shakes his head and stays frozen because he knows that if his father finds the man, his father will kill him.
Layton drove around the streets for 30 minutes, but found nothing. When he returned, the police had started to arrive. In those first hours in the bowling alley parking lot, Carla’s father found a small metal object on the ground near her purse. He did not know what it was. It was the magazine from a .
22 caliber Ruger pistol. For 3 days, the county searched. Volunteers, high school students, neighbors, anyone who could walk through fields. The Walker house became the center for the search efforts. On Wednesday, February 20th, around 6:30 in the evening, officers were checking drainage tunnels along Benbrook Lake.
One of them climbed down into a cattle tunnel that ran under a road, and there she was, about halfway along it. The cold February weather had preserved her body. Her clothes were torn. There were bruises on her face and neck. A crime scene officer filmed the scene, footage that rarely exists for a case this old.
The investigators in 1974 did one thing that mattered more than they could imagine. They collected everything, clumps of dirt, hair, fibers, every piece of clothing she wore. In the dirt near her body, they found Rodney’s promise ring. They put it with the rest and stored it all, where most would stay untested for decades.
She did not come home. What investigators pieced together in the days after is the hardest part of this account, and it will be told plainly and briefly because Carla deserves that much. Evidence showed she was not killed that first night. She had been taken somewhere private and kept alive for 2 days.
During that time, she was raped and given morphine to keep her quiet. In the end, she was strangled. Her body was taken to the culvert at Benbrook Lake and left there. Investigators thought the careful planning was proof. The morphine, the 2 days, choosing a remote culvert was not something a casual person would do. This was not the work of someone acting on a sudden impulse in a parking lot.
Whoever did this had practiced the steps before somewhere, on someone, already. They did not have a way to prove it yet. They did not even have a name to hold on to. Here is something about Carla that the crime tends to erase. She was eager to grow up in the best way. She wrote. She took journalism as an extra class and was good enough at school to have already planned to graduate early.
The summer courses were planned. She was building a way out of high school and toward whatever came next, and she was doing it on purpose. And there is one more thing, the kind of detail that stays with a family for 50 years. On the night of the dance, when Rodney was late, Carla called a friend and said she was thinking about not going at all.
The friend told her to wait. He was coming, the friend said, and the night would be worth it. So, she waited. She put on the dress. She went. She was the one who almost stayed home. The first suspect was the boy with the split face. In 1974, it was common to suspect the boyfriend first, and the Fort Worth police focused on Rodney McCoy.
There was a gap in his timeline that worried them. The attack happened around 12:20. Rodney did not get to the Walker home until about 1:45, and it was only minutes away. Detectives kept asking him if the masked stranger was real or just a story to cover a fight that got out of hand. He was a 17-year-old who had just been beaten badly and watched his girlfriend being taken away, and for a while, the system treated him as the attacker instead of the second victim.
That suspicion stayed with him for the rest of his life. He described a man he thought was in his mid-20s with what he called a cowboy accent. Beyond that, he could not bring the face into focus. They cleared him before long. The injuries were real, the account held, and the Walker family, who knew his character, never doubted him for a day.
Then there was the magazine. Carla’s father had found it in the lot, and tests linked it to a Ruger Mark I. Detectives did something careful and tiring. They made a list of every registered Ruger owner in the area and interviewed each one, asking each man to show his gun. Every owner showed their gun except one.
The one was a man who said his Ruger had been stolen from his truck a few weeks before the abduction. He had not reported the theft because he was an ex-convict and was not allowed to own a gun. Detectives found he had bought a replacement magazine for that model shortly after the murder. He was arrested on suspicion of murder.
He took a lie detector test and passed. Without a way to prove the stolen gun story was false, they let him go. He stayed just a name on paper and nothing more. Remember that man. The case will come back to him in 46 years. The leads that followed went nowhere. In May of 1974, a man named Tommy Ray Nealand, who had abducted and assaulted another woman across town, was put in a voice lineup.
Each man in the line spoke a phrase the attacker had used, and Rodney listened and picked out Neelands voice. It felt like a break. Then Neelands produced an alibi the detectives could not break, and he could not be charged. In 1977, a man named Jimmy Dean Sasser, sitting in a Tennessee jail, confessed to killing Carla.
He was extradited to Texas and charged. Then the details of his confession collided with the facts of the case, and investigators came to believe he had invented the whole thing for a free ride home. The charges were dropped. Every road ended at a wall. There was no one they could build a warrant around.
The file got thicker, and the case went cold. Carla’s brother Jim was 12 years old when she died. He became the one who would not let Fort Worth forget her. He stayed in the city. In time, he took over the family home, the same house with the doorway where his father had photographed Carla in her gown.
He kept her name in front of anyone who would look at it, year after year, decade after decade. He gave interviews when the anniversaries came. He pressed the police. He carried the particular loneliness of the family member who is still standing and still asking, long after everyone else has been told to move on.
There is a story Jim tells about himself at 22. It was 1979. The case had not moved in years, and the rage had nowhere to land. One night, he climbed down into the cattle culvert where his sister’s body had been found. He sat there in the dark with a hammer, a flashlight, and a knife, and waited.
He hoped a car would stop, and a man would climb down into that culvert. He has said plainly that he would have killed him. No one came. He climbed out, went home, and went back to waiting. This time for the law. The hardest part of a cold case, Jim has said, is not the grief. It is the arithmetic of ordinary life.
You wake up every morning and wonder whether the man who killed your sister is standing behind you in line at the grocery store. You wonder if you passed him on a regular Tuesday. You build a whole life around a question no one can answer. And the question outlasts almost everyone who started asking it.
Before the breakthrough, there was silence, years of it. And in that silence, one person kept the file open. Count the years. 1974, 1979, the 1980s, when DNA testing was born in a laboratory in Ocean Away, and meant nothing yet to a box of evidence on a shelf in Texas. The 1990s, the 2000, the case did not move. The silence took a toll measured in funerals.
Carla’s father, Layton, the lieutenant colonel who searched the streets that first night, died without an answer. Her mother, Doris, died without one, too. Brothers and sisters passed. The family that had filled the house with dominoes and coffee thinned out one chair at a time.
And the weight of the question landed more and more on Jim alone. There was one flicker. Around 2009 and 2010, detectives sent Carla’s dress to a lab, and for the first time, a partial DNA profile came back. It belonged to an unknown male, and was enough to rule a few men out. It was not enough to point at anyone.
The case slowed again, and the detectives drifted to files that could still be worked. In 2019, the Fort Worth police tried something close to desperation. They released an anonymous letter tied to the case, hoping the public would recognize a hand or phrase and call. No name came back.
Picture the evidence in those years. It is dark in the property room. The four banker boxes sit where they have always sat. Inside one is a girl’s torn clothing, sealed, labeled, and waiting, holding a single drop of a stranger’s blood and tissue that no machine on earth can read yet.
The boxes do not move. The years go by outside the door. The man who put that drop there grows old nearby in a house with his wife and grown sons and tells anyone who asks that he is a good man. The thing that finally broke this cold case was the thing the killer could not have imagined in 1974 because it would not be invented for another 40 years.
The groundwork was Leah Wagner’s. After Jim Walker reached her in 2017, she pulled the file. When paired with homicide cold case detective Jeff Bennett in 2019, the first case she handed him was Carla’s. The two faced the same four boxes packed by careful detectives across half a century. Wagner’s method was to read every page in order from beginning to end until she rebuilt the whole investigation inside her head.
Out of that came a list of 85 names, every man who had touched Carla’s life or appeared anywhere in the file, each a possible source of DNA to be ruled in or out. For a long time, Wagner’s theory pointed back at Rodney McCoy, the gap in his timeline. The promise ring was removed and left in the dirt while every other piece of jewelry stayed on the body.
None of it felt right for a stranger. The trouble was the DNA. The partial profile belonged to an unknown male and it was not Rodney. There was another man in this story and until they named him, they could not point a finger at anyone. The phone call came from Paul Holes, the investigator known for his work on the Golden State Killer case.
He had heard about Carla at a television program and wanted to help. The biggest obstacle to a cold case like this is almost always money because laboratory work is expensive. Holes helped finance more testing. Additional clothing went to a lab in California on the logic that methods had improved since the last attempt.
They had. The lab pulled a full genetic profile, this time from a drop of male DNA on Carla’s bra, taken from the same clothing those 1974 detectives had bagged in the dirt and carried into storage. A full profile felt like the end of the road. It was uploaded to CODIS, the national criminal DNA database.
There were no hits. The man had never given a sample in his life. So, they used forensic genetic genealogy. Here is how it works in simple terms. A regular criminal database can only find a match if the criminal is already in it. Genetic genealogy does something different. It takes the unknown DNA and compares it not to criminals, but to millions of regular people who shared their DNA on public ancestry websites like GEDmatch, looking for relatives.
The unknown killer might not be in any database, but his distant cousins probably are. From those cousins, a genealogist builds a family tree step-by-step, narrowing it down until it points to one household, then one person. It did not work the first time. The sample went to a genealogy company that used almost all of it and found no results.
The investigators were crushed, and there was a bigger problem beneath the disappointment. DNA is used up when tested. Every failed try destroys part of the only evidence that exists. Wagner called the lab and asked how much was left. The answer was a few nanograms, far too little for genealogy to work. There was one more company.
Paul Holes mentioned a Texas lab called Astrium. Its scientists, David Middleman and Dr. Kristen Middleman, had created a method for exactly this kind of evidence, damaged pieces from decades-old crimes that every other lab had given up on. Wagner and Bennett went to see the lab in person before giving them the last of Carla’s DNA.
They needed to trust the place. This was their final chance and they knew it. The case was 46 years old. They sent the last few nanograms and waited. Autrum ran it through high quality genome sequencing. Within about a week, they had a profile. Then they started the family history search and the relatives they found were not close, but close enough to begin building a family tree.
On the morning of the 4th of July 2020, a Saturday, around 9:00, the work produced a family. Bennett’s phone rang. David Middleman was on the other end. The line Bennett would never forget was simple. I think we have a last name for you. The name was McCurley. Bennett told him to hold on. He had a McCurley on his list.
He went and grabbed his binder and everyone on the call could hear the pages turning. The name was the 22nd of the 85. The first McCurley the tree pointed to had died in 1972, 2 years before the murder. He had three sons. Two of them had been living outside Texas in 1974. One had not. Glenn Samuel McCurley Jr.
had been living in Fort Worth. The 22nd name on the list had been the right name for 46 years. He was the same man who owned the Ruger in 1974, who told detectives it was stolen and who had been questioned and let go. Now the detectives had his full history. He was born in Oklahoma in 1943. At 17, after a high-speed chase in a pair of stolen cars, he went to prison, which made him a felon and made it a crime for him to buy the Ruger he bought anyway.
After that, he went quiet. He married a woman named Judy, raised two sons, drove a truck for a living, and built the life of an unremarkable man roughly a mile from the Walker family home. His sons attended Western Hills High School. One was a student there at the same time as Jim Walker. There was still the matter of proof.
A family tree is a map, not a verdict. The detectives needed McCurley’s own DNA. They ran a trash pull, taking five bags he left at the curb and sent items to the California lab. The match came back on a discarded McDonald’s straw. The DNA on the straw matched the DNA from Carla’s bra strap. It still was not enough for a courtroom.
So, Wagner and Bennett knocked on his door one day unannounced, and his wife let them in. They sat with the old couple and explained they were taking another look at a case from 1974. McCurley remembered it. He told them again that his Ruger had been stolen around 6 weeks before, which lined up with the timing of the murder, and that he never reported it because, as an ex-convict, he was not supposed to have it.
He floated an alibi about visiting his father in Midland. His wife corrected him on the spot, saying, “No, she was the one out of town that week, sitting with family during a relative’s heart surgery, which meant he had been home alone.” Before they left, the detectives asked for a cheek swab to rule him out.
He had a hard time refusing. He gave it. A week later, the result came back. The swab matched the bra strap. It matched the straw. After 46 years, the unknown male finally had a name, and it belonged to a man the original detectives had once held in a room and let walk out the door. When the detectives arrested Glenn McCurley in September of 2020 and brought him in, he held out for about an hour and a half.
Then he confessed on tape in a flat, almost casual voice. How did you kill her? I just choked her. He said he had taken advantage of her and had gotten scared she would tell on him. The next day, he took it all back. He pleaded not guilty and the case went to trial in August of 2021.
It was the first time forensic genetic genealogy had ever been used to win a conviction in a Texas courtroom, which made it fragile. Kim D’Avignon, an assistant district attorney in Tarrant County, had to teach the court the science from the ground up and prove it was sound because, as she put it, there is a difference between solving a case and proving a case.
If the method failed here, it could be thrown out of every Texas case that came after. The defense filed motion after motion to keep the DNA out. On the third day of the trial, the judge ruled it admissible. That same day, the defense attorney crossed the courtroom and asked to speak. His client wanted to plead guilty.
On August 24th, 2021, Glenn McCurley was sentenced to life without parole. There was one thing he had clung to through every interview, that the gun was stolen. He finally told the detectives where it really was. In a small space in the ceiling, behind paneling, past a laundry room, wrapped in a towel.
They served a warrant and found it exactly there. He had carried that Ruger through every move he ever made and built it a hiding place inside his own home. On the first day of the trial, before the plea, Rodney McCoy took the witness stand. He was 65 years old. For 47 years, he had carried the guilt of the boy who could not save the girl he loved and the suspicion of a town that had once wondered if he did it himself.
He told the courtroom about the parking lot, about the gun pointed at his head that clicked three times and did not fire, and about the last thing Carla ever said to him. His testimony broke the defense. The guilty plea came days later. After the trial, Leah Wagner had an idea. The promise ring, found beside Carla’s body, had sat in evidence for half a century.
With permission, she and Bennett gave it back to Rodney. His daughter told Bennett that the case had given her father back to himself. Someone asked Rodney how he felt now. He thought about it. He said one word. Healed. Jim Walker stood up at the sentencing and spoke to the man who had lived a mile from his family’s door for 46 years.
He did not scream. He said that because of his faith, he forgave him. Then he said the rest of it. That forgiving was not forgetting. That nowhere in scripture are you asked to forget. The bad guy had been in the backyard the whole time. Now he had a name. And the family that had feared a shadow for two generations could finally say it out loud.
Glen McCurley died in prison on July 15th, 2023. Less than two years into his sentence. Detectives had been two weeks from sitting down with him about other cases. Among them a girl named Becky Martin. Found in 1973 in a culvert almost identical to Carla’s. 15 minutes away. He took whatever he knew with him.
There was one more thing the investigators learned. McCurley had lost a son to a car wreck years before. And he had buried that son within sight of Carla Walker’s grave. Carla’s name did not stay buried with her case. Her family’s fight became the Carla Walker Act. A federal program that funds forensic genealogy for cold cases that could never afford it.
More than 280 laboratories now follow its model. How many other men are out there cleared by a polygraph and a good story living quiet lives a short drive from the people they destroyed. How many other boxes are sitting in the dark holding a single drop that no one has tested yet. Jim Walker was asked what he would say to his sister now.
He said he was sorry it happened to her and that he missed the great aunt she never got to be to his children. Then he said the thing the family had decided long ago. The thing they wanted the world to keep instead of the crime. That she was a girl with piercing blue eyes and a beautiful smile who walked through the world fast and bright and said hello to everyone she passed.
That is what was stolen. Not a case number. A girl who almost stayed home that night and went out instead into a kind world that had no warning for her in a powder blue gown with white ruffles. If this case stayed with you and you believe Carla deserves to be remembered as the girl and not the headline, please subscribe and hit the like button.
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