Chapter 1: The Unwitting Suspect
Roughly 24 hours before Larry Driskill confessed to a murder he claimed he couldnât remember, a stranger in sharply creased cowboy clothes approached him at the barn where he was working. The metal star above the manâs left shirt pocket indicated he was a Texas Ranger.
âAm I in trouble or what?â Driskill asked.
âNo, we think you might be able to help us,â Ranger James Holland replied, inviting Driskill to chat at the sheriffâs office in Parker County, Texas. As they cruised the rural back roads west of Fort Worth on that afternoon in January 2015, Holland made small talk, drawing out that Driskill, a 52-year-old grandfather with a salt-and-pepper mustache and good-ol-boy twang, had served in the Air Force. Now, he oversaw county maintenance work performed by jail trustees. His worst brush with the law, he said, was a DWI in his 20s.
Holland, who was secretly (and legally) recording this exchange, occasionally teased at his intentions: He said he was part of a small crew of Rangers who focused on unsolved murders. âThey put us together ⊠and tell us that we can do whatever we want, as long as we solve cases,â he says to Driskill on the recording, which I obtained through a records request to the Parker County district attorney.
Once they arrived at the sheriffâs office, Holland offered Driskill coffee and reiterated that he wasnât under arrest. The Ranger pulled out an image of a petite woman with dirty blonde hair.
âShe donât look familiar to me, period,â Driskill said. âI ainât never seen her.â
The woman was Bobbie Sue Hill. Nearly a decade before this conversation, kids had stumbled upon her body in a creek bed under a bridge, less than a mile from Driskillâs home. Investigators pieced together that she was a 29-year-old mother of five whose husband had died in a car accident. She had been struggling with drug addiction and subsisting in a series of squalid motels near downtown Fort Worth. Hillâs boyfriend told investigators that he had seen a man drive off with her in a white van.
In their reports, the police signaled this could be the work of a serial killer. Fort Worth officers were already looking into the death of another sex worker, who entered a white van seven months prior and was also found in a creek bed. A third woman had accepted a ride from a man in a white van, and narrowly escaped after he fondled her at knifepoint. But despite these promising parallels, the leads dried up. âThe lack of physical evidence in this case is frustrating,â one investigator wrote in a 2006 report.
In the small, fluorescent-lit room, Holland told Driskill that police had recorded his license plate near where Hill was taken and put his name on a list of men who âtroll prostitutes.â But perhaps Driskill was just a good Samaritan who had given Hill a ride the night she was killed.
âI donât ever remember giving someone a ride,â Driskill replied, âbut that donât mean I didnât give someone a ride, either.â
Holland was lying about the license plate and the police list. This was perfectly legal â and effective, since Driskill rummaged through his memories and recalled driving through the area to visit his father, make car payments, and â perhaps â to bid on some home renovation work. He also remembered giving a woman he didnât know a ride once, but not to Fort Worth. Eventually, he produced a hazy recollection of dropping someone off at a dollar store about a mile from where Hill was abducted.
In a recent interview at a prison in east Texas, Driskill told me that he didnât believe he had witnessed a crime, but kept talking to the Ranger because he wanted to be helpful. Given his own work with jail detainees, he saw Holland as a fellow lawman.
But Holland interpreted the trickle of memories as a sign that Driskill was withholding information. In his genial drawl, the Ranger pointed out Driskillâs tendency to say, âNot that I knowâ and âNot that I can remember,â rather than just, âNo.â He pulled out a picture of Hillâs corpse. âI think youâre afraid that youâre gonna get caught up in this deal,â he said, adding that if the DNA results he was awaiting matched Driskill, heâd be in trouble. âI donât want you to be afraid,â the Ranger continued. âI want you to help me get the son of a [expletive] that did this.â But, he also said, âYouâve got to be honest with us, âcause if youâre not, then all of a sudden, I start looking at you as maybe the person who did this crime.â
That night, over barbecue, Driskill told his wife he was just a potential witness and had nothing to worry about. The next morning, he took a polygraph test. Many courts have deemed such tests unreliable, but police still use them in interrogations. His results indicated âdeception,â and Holland dropped the previous dayâs pretenses. âWe already know itâs you,â he said.
Holland offered Driskill possible explanations: Perhaps he strangled Hill accidentally during sex. Or, had Hill and her boyfriend tried to rob the Air Force veteran, sending him into violent âmilitary modeâ? âYouâre on the edge of the Grand Canyon,â Holland continued. âIâm asking you to take a jump off the edge. ⊠Iâm going to hand you a parachute.â Then he asked Driskill to utter two words: âIâm sorry.â
âIâm sorry if I took somebodyâs life, but I donât think I did,â Driskill said as he began to cry.
But slowly, Driskill accepted Hollandâs theories, confessing even as he repeated that he couldnât remember any of it. Sheriffâs deputies arrested him at his home that evening.
In jail, having traded in his denim work clothes for black and white stripes, Driskill came to believe that his admissions made little sense. Still, fearing a skeptical jury, he pleaded no contest. He was sentenced to 15 years at a state prison, where he soon made contact with lawyers at the Innocence Project of Texas. Holland, for his part, would go on to become one of Americaâs most celebrated homicide detectives.
When officers pull off jaw-dropping successes in cold cases, their tactics are seldom questioned. But over the next year, as lawyers go to court on Driskillâs behalf, Hollandâs work will likely face more public scrutiny than ever before.
Over the last year, I identified a dozen of Hollandâs best-known cases. I used public record requests to gather more than 30 hours of audio and thousands of pages of reports and court testimony, and I shared excerpts with detectives, psychologists and other scholars. I sent findings and scholarly analysis by email and certified mail to both Holland and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which declined to authorize an interview, as did the Parker County Sheriffâs Office. As I finished reporting, a state spokesperson said that Holland, who is in his early 50s, retired from the agency at the end of last year. I sent Holland a final request in late December to interview him post-retirement, and he did not agree to an on-record interview.
One of Hollandâs key tactics â lying to suspects â remains common and protected by the courts. But in the search for Bobbie Sue Hillâs killer, the Ranger also used more contested methods, including hypnosis and hypothetical narrations of the crime. Altogether, his tactics demonstrate how far a detective can go without breaking the law, and how easy it is for the legal system to rely on a questionable confession. Even after years of high-profile exonerations, academic research on why innocent people are convicted, and attempts by judges and lawmakers to fix the problems, detectives continue to use techniques that are known to produce false confessions.
Across the country, fewer murders are getting solved year by year, and a growing backlog of cold cases â especially those without strong physical evidence like the Hill case â may incentivize detectives to take similar risks.
CHAPTER 2: The âSerial Killer Whispererâ
An elite class of state officers, the Texas Rangers are probably best known for inspiring a long-running TV series and the name of a professional baseball team. But they have been on the frontlines in the battle to resolve cold murder cases, working more than 160 of them since 2015, and closing more than 30. The Rangers â 166 strong as of last year â also police the Texas/Mexico border, uncover public corruption and investigate deaths involving local law enforcement.
The Rangersâ two-century history is marred by episodes of hunting Black people who escaped slavery, massacring Tejano villagers, and harassing civil rights leaders. When the Rangers have faced scandal more recently, itâs usually about their homicide investigations. In the 1980s, they fed a man named Henry Lee Lucas details that allowed him to claim killings he could not have committed. Rangers also played roles in the wrongful convictions of two Black men, Clarence Brandley and Anthony Graves, who were exonerated from death row in 1990 and 2010, respectively.
Their current image blends ruggedness and sophistication. Doug Swanson, author of âCult of Glory: The Bold and Brutal History of the Texas Rangers,â described it to me as âScotland Yard in cowboy hats.â
In recent years, James Holland has come to embody this mystique. He rose to prominence in 2019 after obtaining 93 murder confessions from a California prisoner named Samuel Little. Over 700 hours, the pair shared grits and milkshakes while addressing each other as âJimmyâ and âSammy.â The Los Angeles Times christened Holland âa serial killer whisperer of sorts,â while â60 Minutesâ observed a âswagger that would make John Wayne envious.â
His journey from state highway patrol to pursuing serial killers is documented in a personnel file full of words like âflawlessâ and âgifted.â He grew up in suburban Chicago, according to the Los Angeles Times, and ended up in Texas for graduate school in criminal justice. He made his mark using traffic stops to search for drugs and guns. âAs a trooper, I was extremely successful in criminal interdiction,â he once testified. âI found behaviors and language that indicated that someone was lying.â
Holland became a Ranger in 2008 and began working out of Decatur, a small town north of Fort Worth. According to department records, he has been involved in more than 200 investigations, showing a rare gift for talking to murder suspects. âThis is kind of my calling, dealing with these really strange cases, the serial killers, the ritualistic killings,â he told â48 Hoursâ last year.
One of his first murder cases involved Jose Sarmiento, a suspect in a 2005 killing who moved to Mexico before police could arrest him. Holland got his phone number from his sister and persuaded him to fly back to Texas and confess. Sarmiento later claimed that the Ranger threatened to âput up some money to drug dealersâ who would target his family. But in court, Holland denied threatening Sarmiento: âDid I appeal to him emotionally, mentally? Absolutely. Was that coercive? No.â
Murder victimsâ families have praised Holland for the way he seems personally moved by their pain. Gay Smither, whose daughter Laura was murdered by a serial killer named William Lewis Reece, told me, âJimmy Holland is my hero.â After speaking with Holland, Reece agreed to help investigators find the remains of his victims.
âIâve worked hundreds of murders, put people on death row, done all kinds of things. I have seen people get probation, seen people get a couple years. And Iâve seen the other end of the spectrum,â Holland told Larry Driskill at one point. âPeople always ask me, âHow do you sleep at night, knowing what you do?â I always tell them this: I go to bed with a clear conscience ⊠I give people the opportunity to tell the truth and to help themselves out ⊠Iâm not just throwing people in jail for the hell of it.â
Some of Hollandâs biggest successes involved convincing serial killers already behind bars to give up their secrets. But when a suspect is free, Holland has used a different set of skills. Sometimes, he begins with a lie.
CHAPTER 3: The Weapon of Deception
The Supreme Court paved the way for lying to suspects in a 1969 decision, but researchers are increasingly concerned about the practice. The National Registry of Exonerations has recorded more than 350 false confession cases since 1989, finding that police were accused of deception in a quarter of them. âThe suspect comes to question their own sense of reality,â said Saul Kassin, a John Jay College of Criminal Justice psychologist who has studied confessions for decades. âThis isnât about being a bleeding heart. Usually, the real perp got away and killed others. Thatâs on your shoulders if you obtained a false confession.â
Last year, lawmakers in Illinois and Oregon banned the deception of juvenile suspects, based on the idea that they are especially vulnerable. The Innocence Project (which is not related to the group representing Driskill) said lawmakers in a half dozen other states have expressed interest in pursuing similar bans, and some may cover adult suspects.
Lying is one of several tactics that Hollandâs approach shares with the Reid Technique, an interrogation method that has dominated the field since it emerged 70 years ago, replacing beatings and torture. The technique is so influential it has shaped a generation of television and movies â think claustrophobic rooms and smooth-talking detectives. But even without violence, researchers believe that itâs still too easy to manipulate an innocent person into confessing.
John E. Reid and Associates, the company that pioneered the technique, insists that false confessions arise when detectives violate their training. Lying âshould probably be a last resort,â the companyâs president, Joseph Buckley, told me in a recent interview. Still, he says it would be wrong to ban the practice entirely, arguing that false confessions usually involve additional coercive tactics. Of the 12 cases I reviewed with the help of forensic experts, Holland has attempted to deceive at least seven suspects.
Back in 2005, investigators combed the area around Bobbie Sue Hillâs body and collected four fresh cigarette butts. One of them carried human DNA, and eight years later, a crime lab matched it to a Dallas woman. She denied knowing about the murder, but described a man she dated in 2005 who had choked her during sex. The Parker County Sheriffâs Office enlisted Holland to interview this man, who flatly denied any knowledge of the crime. (Given their limited role in the case, we have chosen not to name the woman and man. The man did not respond to a letter sent to prison, where he is serving time for drug possession.)
Now that Holland was involved, he decided to interview Timothy Dawson, an organic chemist who became a suspect in 2005, after reporting his motherâs white van stolen. He had a record of violent crime and had spent time with people on the margins, including sex workers. According to prosecutorsâ records, Dawsonâs wife told a detective heâd been âextremely paranoidâ around the time of Hillâs death.
Holland showed Dawson a picture of Hill, and he admitted she looked familiar. Then the Ranger said the victimâs brand of hair dye was found in his van. There is no indication in Hollandâs report that this was true.
In a recent phone interview, Dawson unequivocally denied involvement and said he was put off by Hollandâs swagger. âHe came in big dogginâ it. I had the âaha!â reaction. ⊠He wasnât trying to solve this crime. He was trying to hang me!â He remembers telling the Ranger, âIf you want to solve the case so bad, you take the [expletive] charge.â
According to Hollandâs later court testimony, the Parker County Sheriffâs Office thought Dawson was a âvery good suspect,â but the Ranger said they had the wrong man. Holland had already begun searching for a new suspect, by less common means.
CHAPTER 4: Two Sketches, a Hypnotist, and a Disappearing Mustache
In October 2014, James Holland tracked down the only person who reported seeing the man who drove off with Bobbie Sue Hill: her boyfriend, Michael Harden. Tall and languorous, he was known to meander with a cane down the streets of Fort Worthâs skid row. Holland found him at the cityâs downtown jail, where he was facing drug charges.
Harden had met Hill roughly a year before her death. They lived in motels, supporting their drug habits through her sex work and his odd maintenance jobs. One night, they stood outside a gas station, pretending to use a pay phone so she could advertise to johns. Harden saw a white van drive up and down the street numerous times. He felt suspicious, and when the van finally pulled up, he told Hill not to go.
âThatâs OK,â he recalled her saying. âIâve got it.â
Harden told Hill to bring the man to a side street. When he walked over to check on them, Harden saw through a foggy window that the man had removed his shirt. âHis eyes got big,â Harden told me during an interview. âHe put his glasses on, he realized it was me, and then he threw that [van] into gear.â After Hillâs body was found, Harden blamed himself for letting her go. He also wondered if it was a hate crime, since she was a White woman and Harden was a Black man.
The police produced a sketch of the driver based on Hardenâs description, which showed a wide, boxy face, prominent eyebrows and a thin mustache. Records do not indicate that it led to any suspects.
Nine years later, Holland asked Harden to try again, with some âweirdâ memory exercises. Holland turned off the lights, and asked Harden to close his eyes, picture details like the victimâs hair, and summon the sounds of their friendsâ voices. He then directed him to replay his memories in reverse chronology, and to imagine himself at the top of a telephone pole, looking down at the van.
âDid you see a mustache?â Holland asked about the driver.
âNo, he didnât have a mustache,â Harden said.
Holland was using elements of the âcognitive interview,â which was developed several decades ago by American psychologists who wanted to help police get more useful information from crime witnesses and victims. (One of these psychologists, Ronald Fisher, read Holland and Hardenâs exchange and said the Ranger did a generally good job.) When detectives use this method â which has not faced the same criticisms as the Reid Technique â they ask witnesses to revisit the entire context of the events, including smells and sounds.
When Harden opened his eyes, another investigator showed him photographs of faces. Harden pointed to one and said he was 70% certain it was the driver. The Ranger then showed him pictures of vans. Hardenâs description of the vehicle changed as well, from a minivan with side windows to a windowless work van.
It is impossible to know precisely why Hardenâs memories changed, although Christian Meissner, who studies cognitive interviewing, said it was possible Holland had contaminated his memory by showing him pictures of faces and vans.
Cognitive interviewing emerged at a time when judges and scientists were increasingly skeptical of another new and popular police technique: investigative hypnosis. Detectives argued that hypnosis improved recall, but psychologists were concerned it could make a witness overly confident about a mistaken memory. Throughout the 1980s, many courts banned testimony from witnesses who had been hypnotized, meaning police could no longer use it in numerous states.
But Texas remained a hub for investigative hypnosis. In 2020, The Dallas Morning News found that the Texas Rangers were among the last detectives nationwide to regularly use the method. Last year, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed a bill to ban testimony following hypnosis, even as the Texas Department of Public Safety formally ended its hypnosis program. The department did not, however, express doubt about previous cases solved with the practice.
And the program was still in full swing in 2014, when Harden agreed to be hypnotized. A week later, he had a session at the jail with another Ranger, Victor Patton, who told Harden to count backwards from 100, imagine grains of sand on top of his head and describe the abductorâs face.
In a recent interview, Patton told me hypnosis was usually a last resort, and only useful if new claims could be corroborated. âItâs almost permission for people to tell you something they suppressed, or donât want to talk about,â he said.
After the session, a forensic artist interviewed Harden and produced a strikingly different sketch, featuring wire-rimmed glasses, a flat-top haircut with shaved sides, and a darkened area above the lip that could suggest a faint mustache.
Then, to account for the passage of time, the sketch artist produced an âagedâ version, with a few more wrinkles and more pronounced jowls and smile lines.
When I found Harden at a motel in Fort Worth this past April, he did not clearly remember the hypnosis session. But he was skeptical. âWhatever the [expletive] I saw when I wasnât hypnotized is going to be what the [expletive] I saw when I [was] hypnotized,â he said. When I showed him the two sketches â produced in 2005 and 2014 by two different artists â he said the latter more closely reflected his memory.
And yet now â seven years after the hypnosis session, and 16 years after he actually saw the face â Harden told me he did remember a mustache, after all.
I described the disappearance and reappearance of the mustache to Gary Wells, an Iowa State University psychologist who has studied composite sketches since the 1980s. Although sketches have helped solve numerous crimes, Wells said that even in ideal conditions, itâs difficult for people to accurately describe faces because we remember them holistically and not feature-by-feature. And âmemory doesnât get better with time,â Wells said of the nine-year period between Hardenâs sketches. He also noted that the witnessâs recall could have been contaminated by the thousands of faces heâd seen since the crime. âAny change is a big flag.â
Then, to account for the passage of time, the sketch artist produced an âagedâ version, with a few more wrinkles and more pronounced jowls and smile lines.
When I found Harden at a motel in Fort Worth this past April, he did not clearly remember the hypnosis session. But he was skeptical. âWhatever the [expletive] I saw when I wasnât hypnotized is going to be what the [expletive] I saw when I [was] hypnotized,â he said. When I showed him the two sketches â produced in 2005 and 2014 by two different artists â he said the latter more closely reflected his memory.
And yet now â seven years after the hypnosis session, and 16 years after he actually saw the face â Harden told me he did remember a mustache, after all.
I described the disappearance and reappearance of the mustache to Gary Wells, an Iowa State University psychologist who has studied composite sketches since the 1980s. Although sketches have helped solve numerous crimes, Wells said that even in ideal conditions, itâs difficult for people to accurately describe faces because we remember them holistically and not feature-by-feature. And âmemory doesnât get better with time,â Wells said of the nine-year period between Hardenâs sketches. He also noted that the witnessâs recall could have been contaminated by the thousands of faces heâd seen since the crime. âAny change is a big flag.â
Without more evidence, it is impossible to know whether Driskill gave a false confession, lied to Holland about his inability to remember, or lied to me about his innocence. But several researchers who examined excerpts from Driskillâs interrogation transcript identified red flags.
Itâs well known that false confessions can arise from stress. âI was hungry, tired, scared, nervous, and just wanted to do whatever it took so I could go home,â Driskill wrote in a July letter. âI was pretty desperate to get out of that room, but the Ranger was always between me and the door.â
But Driskill also describes a momentary belief in his guilt. âIâm sitting there thinking, Could I really do this?,â he told me. âSubconsciously, he had me thinking that I did it.â
His temporary belief in his guilt also squares with academic findings on just how easy it can be to implant memories, especially when hypotheticals are involved. In a 2015 study, Canadian researchers used suggestive memory exercises to convince college students that they had committed fictional thefts and assaults. The researchers concluded, âWhat something could have been like can turn into elements of what it would have been like, which can become elements of what it was like.â
After reading interrogation excerpts, University of San Francisco law professor Richard Leo noted the moments when Holland pushed Driskill to claim self-defense. Some scholars call this âminimization,â while some detectives call it finding âthe out.â The problem, experts say, is that minimization can skirt dangerously close to a promise of a lighter sentence, which can further convince innocent people that confessing is their only way out.
In a recent email, Parker County District Attorney Jeffrey Swain said Driskillâs confession was credible, despite the factual errors. He was struck by how Driskill correctly described how the victimâs body was found, even when the Ranger pressed him with alternative possibilities. The prosecutor praised Hollandâs patience and skill, but acknowledged that prosecutors faced an uphill battle without physical evidence. âWhile we are confident that Mr. Driskill murdered Bobbie Sue Hill,â he wrote, âthat doesnât mean that the case was an ideal or easy one for a jury.â
CHAPTER 6: The Power of Fatigue
Two weeks after Driskillâs arrest, Holland traveled north to Gainesville, a town of 16,000 where deputies had reopened the unsolved 1997 murder of Shebaniah Sarah Dougherty. The 20-year-old had disappeared after working her shift at a video store, and people found her body while walking in a wooded area. A key suspect had died in a car accident before detectives could find enough evidence to arrest him.
In April 2015, Holland drove to the workplace of Doughertyâs friend Christopher Ax. The Ranger learned that their families were close, that they had once gone on a date, and that he regularly visited her at the video store. Ax explained that heâd left town after a police officer suggested that he could be a suspect.
The Ranger called Ax numerous times over five weeks and told him â falsely â that his DNA had been on Doughertyâs socks and shoes. Over the course of these conversations, Ax recalled seeing the previous suspect at the video store and said the man had hit on his friend. He also remembered eating pizza with Dougherty at her job then going to his house to hang out, but 18 years later he couldnât remember if this happened the day she was killed.
Using elements of the cognitive interview, Holland told Ax to close his eyes and focus on the flavor of the pizza theyâd shared. Eventually, Ax said that the night she died, Dougherty was at his house watching TV as he rubbed her feet.
âAlmost every fiber of me was saying, Stay the hell away from this guy,â Ax told me recently. âBut my family was saying, âYou need to go help him,â and I kind of took her death personally. I really wanted to help get closure for [her] family.â Ax also admired Hollandâs job title; as a teenager he had aspired to be a Ranger himself.
Against the advice of a lawyer, Ax agreed to take a polygraph. He failed, and Holland began to alternate between accusations (âYou were there when it happened.â) and offers to help (âI want to prove definitively that you didnât do this.â).
Ax failed the test around 9 p.m. Around 2 a.m., in response to Hollandâs questions about how, hypothetically, he would have killed the victim, Ax described accidentally choking Dougherty, but added that he didnât know if this was a memory or the âvivid imagination of a tired mind.â Holland secured an arrest warrant a few days later. At the jail, Ax repeatedly said he had no memory of killing anyone, but Holland encouraged him to believe he had done so in self-defense.
The recording of their exchange, obtained from the Cooke County district attorneyâs office, is more than eight hours long. Ax told me he remembers little beyond exhaustion and disorientation. At times, he believed he killed his friend: âHeâs a Ranger â if he says itâs true, I guess itâs true,â Ax said. But at other moments, he was certain of his innocence and seemed to feel hopeless about his ability to prove it. At one point, Ax asked Holland to shoot him.
Early in the evening, Ax suggested they visit the area where Doughertyâs body was found. When they entered the barn near the site, Ax said he remembered the walls. A story emerged, with the Ranger and the suspect each supplying connective tissue:Â Dougherty made a sexual advance in the car, Ax rejected her, and she hanged herself. âI remember the arms were down.â Ax told Holland. âI think I took her down.â
Like Driskill, Ax had served in the military, and was traumatized by a fellow soldierâs death â a suicide by hanging. He too wondered if the police interrogation revived this stress, contributing to the blur between memory and invention.
Back at the sheriffâs office, they ate pizza, which Holland suggested might jog Axâs memory. As they began discussing a green rope found around Doughertyâs neck, Ax threw up. Holland hinted this was a sign of guilt. (Ax says now he was just sick.) They talked through a scene of Dougherty attacking him with the rope. âIf she comes at you with that thing and starts trying to wrap it around your neck and youâre pushing it off and it ends up around hers…â Holland said in the recording.
Later, Ax said, âI donât remember every detail of it, but I can see it ⊠I wish like hell I couldnât.â
After 20 months in jail, Ax was released on bond. As the case crept towards trial, Cooke County prosecutors sent the victimâs clothing out for DNA testing, which had improved in the years since the crime. The results indicated a high probability that the DNA belonged to the original suspect, not Ax. In September 2018, the district attorney dropped charges, stating in a press release, âWe cannot blindly seek convictions or close our eyes to evidence that points in a different direction than we are heading.â
Eric Erlandson, a prosecutor who worked on the case, was more cautious. âI listened to every second of audio on that case and I was convinced he did it,â he told me. The DNA sample was small and left room for error.
Ax maintains his innocence and told me many people in his town are still convinced of his guilt, which makes it difficult to make friends, date or find steady work. He said several loved ones died while he was in jail. Mostly, he blames Holland.âI donât hate many people in this world, but he is one of them,â Ax said. He predicted that Holland âis going to do this to another innocent person.â
CHAPTER 7: The Jailhouse Informant and the Guilty Plea
No DNA results came back to aid Larry Driskillâs defense. From 2015 to 2017, Parker County law enforcement worked to build a case around his confession. A few days after his arrest, the sheriffâs office discovered that in 2005 he had worked for a casino party company, and sometimes drove a white cargo van. They seized the van. Inside, they found black duct tape, which they believed matched the kind of tape found with the victimâs body 10 years earlier.
While Driskill awaited trial, a fellow detainee named Jesse Carrington came forward, claiming Driskill had confessed to him on the recreation yard. Driskill denies the encounter. Carrington, like many jailhouse informants, was not a disinterested party: In his case file I found an email from a prosecutor, who promised to reduce his sentence for theft, in exchange for testimony against Driskill. When I reached Carrington via Facebook Messenger, he stood by his story but told me he wouldnât have testified to it in court because he âdidnât know enough about his situation.â Driskill didnât know about the informantâs hesitation. As far as he was concerned, the jury would hear that he had admitted to murder not once, but twice.
Driskill and his family hired a lawyer who tried to get his confession to Holland barred from trial because he had not known he was a suspect. The lawyer also noted gaps in the interrogation recordings, caused by equipment malfunctions. But before a judge could rule, Driskill pleaded no contest to the murder charge. He is due to be released in 2030, although he will be eligible for parole this summer. âI feel like I lost everything,â he told me. He and his wife are divorcing. His adult children donât visit him. His mother used to make the four-hour drive to his prison, but eventually he told her not to bother.
When I asked him about James Holland, Driskill addressed him directly. âYouâve ruined my life. Should you be able to walk around free, screwing other peoplesâ lives up?â At other moments, he was more forgiving: âI donât hate him. Iâm upset with him â but Iâm not mad at him. I donât want revenge. Thatâs in Godâs hands.â
Lawyers from the Innocence Project of Texas, who declined to discuss the case, are still investigating. Swain, the prosecutor, said he agreed to let them send items to a lab for DNA testing. âIn our view, none of these items are the type of things that would change how a jury would have viewed the case,â he told me, expressing frustration that Driskill waited until after he âreceived the benefit of a plea agreementâ to declare his innocence.
At the same time, the Rangers have not technically closed Driskillâs case. They are still trying to solve the murder of Trina Nash, a sex worker last seen entering a white van in Fort Worth, seven months before Hillâs death. When I requested records, I learned that the Rangers consolidated the two cases under a single âreport number,â suggesting they may pursue Driskill for Nashâs death as well.
CHAPTER 8: Bobbie Sue Hill
When Driskill received his prison sentence, Bobbie Sue Hillâs family gathered in the courtroom to watch. âMy momâs short life enriched the lives of so many people,â Hillâs oldest daughter, Ashley Lor, said in an official victim impact statement. âSheâll be loved and missed forever.â
They had spent 12 years waiting for this moment, but the heartbreak had begun well before her death. They remembered a rambunctious child, who had a loving relationship with her brother and a contentious one with their single mother. She dropped out of high school and married her boyfriend. By the time she was 27, they had five children. âHer kids were her life,â said her cousin, Cindy Elmquist, during a recent phone interview. (Her children, as well as a sibling, did not respond to requests for interviews.)
In October 2003, Hillâs husband died in a car accident. His family took in the kids, and she began disappearing for days at a time. Elmquist would drive over to East Lancaster to look for her. âI saw her sitting on a curb and I barely recognized her. Her face looked so weathered,â she said. âWe would say, âGirl you need to get home, get off them streets. Something is going to happen to you.ââ
Hillâs aunt, Judy Tatum, told me she would help Hill pay for places to stay and deliver food when sheâd complain of hunger. âShe saw her flaws and didnât want to pass it on to her kids,â another cousin, Billy Day Jr., wrote to me. He remembered her crying as they used drugs together. âShe didnât believe she could be what her kids deserved. So she stayed away, seeking any means to numb her senses, memories, and dreams.â
Several weeks before Hill disappeared, she indicated to her oldest daughter that she was ready to return home. Then her mugshot flashed across the local news. âEveryone thought it was never going to get solved, and that nobody cared,â Elmquist said. When the Texas Ranger came along, they were thrilled. Still, they were bothered that Hillâs public image would be defined by her worst moments. They wanted the world to know there was so much more to her.
If Larry Driskillâs team does convince a court to free him, it may tarnish the reputation of Holland, and present a public relations problem for the Texas Rangers. But it will be Hillâs family that has to return to not knowing the identity of the person who killed her, or whether that person is still out there.
