Hold My Sweet Tea
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2444974/fan_mail/new] A car doesn’t just “sit there” for two days without someone noticing, especially not a white Jaguar in a busy Austin hotel parking lot. When police finally open the trunk, they find 45-year-old Betty Thomas bound with duct tape, blindfolded, gagged, wrapped in bedding from her own home, and killed with an execution-style shot to the back of the head. That single discovery turns a quiet April week in 1988 into one of the most unsettling unsolved murders tied to Lakeway, Texas. We trace Betty’s last known timeline, from an ordinary night alone at home to the evidence investigators find inside the house: signs of a struggle, blood evidence, and a scene that doesn’t look like a burglary gone wrong. We also talk about the uncomfortable realities of homicide investigations, including why a spouse is often looked at early as standard procedure, and how internet speculation grows louder when law enforcement can’t name a suspect. Then there’s the eerie family echo: years earlier, another Thomas family member is shot and never gets justice either. Coincidence, connection, or something no one has pieced together yet? The story shifts when forensics catches up. Preserved evidence allows investigators to develop a partial male DNA profile, but it still doesn’t hit in CODIS. That’s where modern tools like forensic genealogy can change the game, using DNA matches to build family trees, narrow leads, and confirm identities the old way. If you’re fascinated by cold cases, forensic DNA, and the question of why someone would move a victim to a hotel lot, you’ll have plenty to think about here. Subscribe, share the episode with a true crime friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. If you have tips, updates, or a “Sweet Tea After Dark” story, email us at hold my sweet tea podcast at gmail.com or message us on social media. Special Note: This case remains unsolved. If you have information related to the murder of Elizabeth "Betty" Thomas, please contact the appropriate law enforcement agency. Even decades later, new information can help bring answers to a victim's family. Sources & Further Reading: Courthouse News Service – Historical coverage and court records research courthousenews.com Texas Department of Public Safety – Cold Case Program dps.texas.gov Travis County historical records and public archives countyclerk.traviscountytx.gov Austin History Center Collections library.austintexas.gov Newspapers.com archival newspaper database newspapers.com NewspaperArchive historical newspaper database newspaperarchive.com
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