[music playing]
NARRATOR: In the midst of
a promising dance career,
Tracy Jo Shine suddenly
dropped out of school
and shortly afterward
disappeared.
from an old refrigerator
would warm up what had
become a very cold case.
[theme music]
Tracy Jo Shine grew
up in Houston, Texas.
She was a good student, a
Girl Scout, and played sports.
But her real interest,
her passion was dance.
[dramatic music]
At the age of 13, she
auditioned and was
accepted at the
prestigious High School
for Performing Arts in Houston.
It was a dream come true.
And while away at
school, Tracy Jo
began to experiment with dr*gs.
That's when she started
having the problems.
She started meeting
the wrong people
and started getting
involved in taking dr*gs.
And I, at that time, just
really didn't understand it,
or didn't know what to do.
NARRATOR: She started
skipping classes.
Her grades began to slip.
And she became
romantically involved
with 31-year-old Michael
Neal, who had recently
been released from prison.
VIRGINIA SHINE: The
first time I had met him
and she had brought him
over to my apartment,
he seemed to be polite enough
and seemed to be nice enough.
NARRATOR: Eventually, Tracy
Jo abandoned her dreams
of a career in dance,
dropped out of school,
and, at the age of 18,
moved in with her boyfriend,
Michael, and his mother.
Tracy Jo's mother didn't
know what to do next.
VIRGINIA SHINE: Tracy
was not the Tracy she
was before she did the dr*gs.
Tracy had become someone else
that was controlled by dr*gs.
And I just kept
praying that, you know,
she'd just live through this
and get out of all of it.
And then we could have our
lives together again and go on.
NARRATOR: Michael
Neal had recently
been implicated in
a racially-motivated
drive-by sh**ting.
Detective Marcel Dionne went
to Neal's home to question him.
Neal wasn't home,
but Tracy Jo was.
How long have you known him?
Tracy had just taken a shot.
The syringe was still there on
the couch right there with her.
At first, you couldn't
make heads or tails
out of anything she was saying.
NARRATOR: So he arrested
Tracy Jo for using dr*gs.
She'd been arrested
two other times,
I believe, for the--
for a drug problem.
She said she had tried to stop.
I had attempted
to see if there was
some way that I could get Tracy
committed to a drug program.
And I was finding
that there was waiting
lists at different places.
And there really wasn't a
whole lot I could do, since she
wasn't a child anymore.
NARRATOR: At police
headquarters,
Tracy Jo offered to make a deal.
She said her boyfriend, Michael,
was the one who committed
the drive-by sh**ting.
And she agreed to
testify against him
in return for a lighter
sentence for her drug charge.
Detective Dionne
agreed to the deal.
Early the next
morning, Michael Neal
walked into police
headquarters and put up
the bail for Tracy Jo.
She was never seen again.
DETECTIVE DIONNE: Nobody
had seen or heard from her.
So at that point,
you start calling
her friends and start
calling anybody that she'd
been associated with.
Well, nobody had seen her.
And nobody had heard from her.
NARRATOR: Marcel Dionne
discovered that Michael Neal
was a member of the
Aryan Brotherhood,
a violent white
supremacist group.
This explained Neal's
alleged involvement
in the drive-by
sh**ting which occurred
in a black neighborhood.
When Dionne asked Michael Neal
about Tracy Jo's whereabouts,
he said that Tracy Jo left
home shortly after her arrest
and that he hadn't
seen her since.
Dionne wasn't so sure.
The day after Tracy
Jo Shine was released
from prison on drug charges,
she visited her mother
to borrow some money.
Although Tracy Jo had always
stayed in touch with her mother
and brother, that visit was the
last time her family saw her.
Tracy Jo had simply
dropped out of sight.
Something was the matter.
I, for some reason, just
felt something was wrong.
NARRATOR: Virginia
contacted Tracy
Jo's boyfriend, Michael Neal.
I called over there to find out
about Tracy, because I hadn't
heard from her in
a couple of weeks
and to see what was happening.
And they told me she
wasn't there anymore.
NARRATOR: When Michael
Neal wasn't forthcoming,
Virginia had no other
choice but to file
a missing person's report.
Detective Marcel
Dionne immediately
suspected foul play.
Then a few weeks
later, Dionne received
an anonymous telephone call.
Yes, I'd like to
report a m*rder that I--
DETECTIVE DIONNE: She was
telling me about this girl that
was apparently k*lled
by her boyfriend,
stuffed in a refrigerator,
and taken out to a car lot.
NARRATOR: The informant
eventually revealed
the identity of the dead girl.
It was Tracy Jo Shine.
The informant also said
that the refrigerator used
to store Tracy
Jo's body was still
at the used car lot
owned by Michael
Neal and his brother, Robert.
Armed with a search warrant,
detectives went to the car lot,
found the refrigerator, but
discovered it had recently
been cleaned with bleach.
DETECTIVE DIONNE: We took
the refrigerator apart.
We collected a piece of human
tissue from the freezer unit.
And it had some hair
follicles on it.
NARRATOR: Forensic
scientists attempted
an RFLP DNA enzyme
analysis on that tissue,
but were unsuccessful.
The hair was compared
visually to hair taken
from Tracy Jo's hairbrush.
But that comparison
was inconclusive.
With no other leads,
Detective Dionne
spent the next few months
looking all over Houston
anywhere he suspected a
body might have been buried.
DETECTIVE DIONNE: I
took a lot of heat.
Everybody thought I was crazy
because I was digging up half
of Harris County.
I was draining ponds.
We used horses.
We used four-wheelers.
I was given the
nickname of "Digger,"
because every time I
received a phone call,
I was digging someone.
NARRATOR: But none of
the leads were fruitful.
DETECTIVE DIONNE:
I knew that she
had to be out there somewhere.
I just wouldn't give up.
NARRATOR: Dionne also questioned
Michael Neal's mother, Barbara,
at her consignment shop.
There, Dionne noticed
something suspicious.
In the display case
was some women's
jewelry which was
identical to jewelry
owned by Tracy Jo Shine.
I just couldn't believe the
way they had taken Tracy Jo's
jewelry and placed
it in a glass case
at the business they
were running and selling
it over the counter.
NARRATOR: Barbara
McAllister told police
that after Tracy Jo
moved out of her home,
she simply took the jewelry
Tracy Jo left behind
and was trying to sell it.
Although it may have
been in poor taste,
it still didn't prove foul play.
But with nowhere else to turn,
the investigation faltered.
Dionne had no choice but
to attend to other cases.
DETECTIVE DIONNE: I
ordered all the evidence,
plus the refrigerator,
stored in our property room.
And basically, just about
every year, almost to the day,
they would call me-- I want to
get rid of the refrigerator.
And I kept telling them,
no, this is an open case.
I'm still working it.
NARRATOR: Michael Neal
was later arrested
for another sh**ting
incident and was convicted.
He was sentenced
to life in prison.
His brother, Robert
Neal, was arrested
on a methamphetamine charge.
He, too, was convicted
and sent to prison.
Despite their convictions,
the Neal brothers
continued to insist
they knew nothing
about Tracy Jo's disappearance.
It would take another 10
years before a cold case
unit took a fresh look
at the disappearance
of Tracy Jo Shine.
Nothing was heard from Tracy
Jo Shine for over a decade.
And police could find no
solid evidence of what
might have happened to her.
During those years, there had
been no credit card activity,
no applications for
driver's licenses,
no history of
employment, nothing.
Tracy Jo's ex-boyfriend, Michael
Neal, and his brother, Robert,
were serving time
in prison for crimes
unrelated to her disappearance.
Then, in 1999, the Harris
County Sheriff's Department
formed a new cold case unit
headed by Detective Roger
Wedgeworth and Harry Fikaris.
The Tracy Jo Shine case
was one of the first
to cross their desk.
Tracy's like a
lot of young girls.
If you look at her
upbringing, she
was a Girl Scout, very
much loved by her mother,
just a normal kid who goes
up, goes to high school,
goes to proms and everything.
And she got mixed up in dr*gs.
And of course, one of the
worst mistakes of her life
was meeting our suspect in
this case, Michael Neal.
NARRATOR: As a first step, they
decided to retest the tissue
sample found in Michael
Neal's refrigerator
with the new, more
sophisticated PCR DNA test.
But after more than
was too badly degraded.
Then there was another setback.
The hair found with the tissue
sample could not be located.
But Fikaris and
Wedgeworth were astonished
to learn that the refrigerator
was still in the Sheriff's
Department property room.
In a long shot,
investigators decided
to take a look at the
refrigerator one more time.
We opened it up.
And it looked fairly clean.
But we knew that it had
been laid down on its back.
And we thought if there
was any kind of body fluids
or any kind of evidence, it may
have drained into the wiring
harness on the backside of it.
NARRATOR: Forensic scientists
swabbed every square inch
of the refrigerator, and
this time included the wiring
and harness areas for
any biological material
that might be present.
There are so many nooks and
crannies in a refrigerator,
or any other machine like that,
that if body fluid, things
like that, is going
to seep through,
it would be impossible,
probably, to clean it all.
NARRATOR: The swabs were
sent to the forensic lab.
I was skeptical that
we would find anything
of any value in the refrigerator
simply because of the amount
of time that it had been stored
and the fact that, like so
many other evidence
storage areas,
the environment was not ideal
for preserving the evidence.
NARRATOR: When Watson
looked closer at the swabs,
he discovered what appeared
to be a piece of human skin.
Watson tested that skin
sample using a PCR DNA test.
PCR testing essentially
takes minute traces of DNA,
then amplifies or makes
enough copies of it
so that it can be analyzed.
The analysis was
long and arduous
and, unfortunately,
was unsuccessful.
After months of frustration,
Watson heard about a new test
the FBI laboratory had
been experimenting with,
a test using mitochondrial DNA.
Traditional DNA testing uses
DNA from the cell's nucleus.
Mitochondrial DNA is taken from
the mitochondria, which exists
outside the cell's nucleus.
It's not as precise as
traditional DNA testing,
but in some cases, it's
all scientists can get.
And this time, Watson
was successful.
The next step was to find
a known sample of Tracy
Jo Shine's DNA for comparison.
Bill Watson took letters
written by Tracy Jo
over a decade earlier
to see if her DNA
could be identified in the
saliva from the envelope flaps.
But the DNA from the saliva
was too badly degraded.
Mitochondrial DNA is passed
from generation to generation
maternally, meaning that
Tracy Jo's mitochondrial
DNA profile would be
identical to her mother's.
Even though we didn't
have a sample from Tracy Jo
to compare to the tissue that
was inside the refrigerator,
we did have her mother.
And we were able to get
a mitochondrial profile
from her mother.
NARRATOR: When the mitochondrial
DNA from the refrigerator
was compared to Virginia
Shine, it matched.
The biological
material most likely
was that of Tracy Jo Shine.
Had Tracy Jo's DNA
been discovered
on the handle of
the refrigerator,
that might not
have been unusual.
But skin found on the
wiring on the back harness
was a completely
different matter.
It's a wonderful,
wonderful feeling.
It's a-- you know, you finally
felt like all that hard work
is finally coming together.
But even whenever
we got that, we
knew that this guy would
never do the right thing
and step up to the plate
and tell the truth.
NARRATOR: With this
discovery, Michael Neal
was charged with m*rder.
His brother, Robert,
hoping to gain
an early release from prison
for his drug conviction,
offered to make a deal.
After all these years
that he'd spent in prison,
I guess he finally
realized he would
never be getting out of prison,
unless he did something.
We know you have something
to tell us, Robert.
DETECTIVE FIKARIS: And we
sat down, worked out a deal.
And he gave us his
honest testimony,
which we felt, mostly,
was honest testimony,
and told us what he
knew about the case.
NARRATOR: Robert not only
revealed his brother's
involvement in the m*rder, he
also implicated his mother,
his sister, and himself.
Robert Neal told police that
his brother, Michael, feared
Tracy Jo Shine would
testify against him
for the drive-by sh**ting
in exchange for a lighter
sentence for her drug arrest.
So when Michael went to
bail Tracy Jo out of jail,
he did so to eliminate
a potential witness.
The most important thing
that Robert told us was he
actually showed us how
Michael Neal k*lled her.
And Robert made this motion like
this, like a choking motion.
So we knew that
she'd been strangled.
NARRATOR: Robert said Michael
k*lled Tracy Jo in his bedroom
and left her body
there for three days.
The smell of
decomposition prompted
Michael's mother to look
into the couple's bedroom,
where she saw the body.
She goes into the bedroom.
She sees that she's
turning purple.
I mean, that's a
clue right there
that something is not right.
NARRATOR: Neal's
mother never reported
Tracy Jo's death to police.
After the body was
removed, Robert
said his mother and sister
cleaned the bedroom and burned
incense to remove the odor.
Robert admitted helping
Michael transport
the refrigerator with the
body inside to the used car
lot the brothers owned.
Robert told us that
he never saw the body.
He said his brother
just told him,
help him move the refrigerator.
Basically, don't ask
me any questions,
and I won't tell you anything.
We'll just move this
refrigerator out
to the car lot.
He said, I can assume that
Tracy Jo Shine was in there,
but I never saw her in there,
I never saw her in there.
NARRATOR: Robert said he sat
outside while Michael placed
the body in a 55-gallon drum.
Where Michael later took
the barrel is unknown.
But Michael Neal didn't
realize that tissue
invisible to the naked eye
would lead to his downfall
over a dozen years later.
Michael made a lot of
mistakes at the very beginning
by leaving the body in
there for several days,
by his mother finding
out that Tracy was dead.
Instead of immediately
disposing of the body,
it allowed us to get evidence
out of the refrigerator.
The fact is science
always progresses,
always moves forward.
And as it has, we've been able
to develop the type of testing
that could let us test those
smaller and smaller samples
and match it up.
So his biggest mistake was in
thinking he'd get away with it.
NARRATOR: Although
prosecutors had no body,
Michael Neal was convicted
of Tracy Jo Shine's m*rder
and was sentenced to an
additional 45 years in prison.
He won't be eligible
for parole until 2017,
when he'll be 60 years old.
Michael Neal can look
you straight in the eye.
And there's no doubt in my
mind that he could catch you,
he could sh**t you, he
could do anything humanly
possible to you--
it would not change
his impression in any way.
NARRATOR: His brother,
Robert, is still
serving time for his earlier
conviction for manufacturing
methamphetamine.
Michael's mother, Barbara,
denied any knowledge
of the m*rder, saying
she thought Tracy
Jo had died of a drug overdose.
Neither Barbara nor
her daughter, Jeanie,
were ever prosecuted for
their alleged involvement
in concealing evidence
or abuse of a corpse,
since the statute of limitations
for those crimes had expired.
Virginia Shine
says she will never
stop looking for her
daughter's grave,
even though Michael
Neal stubbornly
refuses to say where it is.
The sad part of it is is if
he's just trying to just keep
on being the one in control,
is that he won't let us know
where she really is So that I
could have some kind of peace
there.
Because it's-- I
mean, it's not going
to be any worse for him to tell
me, to tell us the real truth.
And-- and so I can't ever
forgive him for that.
NARRATOR: Marcel
Dionne's insistence
on preserving the refrigerator
for all those years
provided the crucial
forensic evidence
necessary for a conviction.
I just couldn't believe it.
To me, it was just a
huge weight off my back.
I've never been so happy
over anything in my life.
The amount of effort that
went into the sample processing
on the front end was as much
as you would put in any case,
any very difficult case.
I mean, it was just--
on a scale of 1 to 10,
I would say it was an 8 or a 9.
[theme music]
07x21 - Ghost in the Machine
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Documentary that reveals how forensic science is used to solve violent crimes, mysterious accidents, and outbreaks of illness.
Documentary that reveals how forensic science is used to solve violent crimes, mysterious accidents, and outbreaks of illness.