Tag Archives: evidence log

Rebecca Beard Meeting: Family Questions Evidence and Investigators

Rebecca Beard article thumbnail featuring a sealed case file, Rebecca Beard with her infant daughter, a present-day image of her sister Carol Mize, and text highlighting the family’s questions about sealed records and evidence in the 1986 murder case.
 Rebecca Beard’s family continues to question evidence, sealed records, and investigative conclusions nearly four decades after her 1986 disappearance and murder.

Rebecca Beard Meeting: Family Presses Investigators on Evidence While Authorities Defend Their Conclusions

CLUTE, Texas — A recorded meeting between Rebecca “Becky” Beard’s family and Brazoria County officials reveals sharp questions about court records, physical evidence, witness statements and the continuing search for her remains.

Becky disappeared after leaving the Excalibur Club in Freeport in March 1986. Paul Taylor later pleaded guilty to her murder, but investigators have never recovered Rebecca Beard’s body.

During the meeting, Becky’s sister, Carol Mize, and mother, Linda Barnes, questioned Brazoria County District Attorney Tom Selleck, former DA investigator John Blankenship, investigator Tommy Hansen and others involved in reviewing the case.

Selleck prosecuted Taylor in the original case and now serves as Brazoria County district attorney. Blankenship is a former investigator with the DA’s Office who came out of retirement to help review the Beard case.

According to a professional biography presented for Hansen, he worked for the Galveston County Sheriff’s Office from 1973 until 2024. The biography states that he transferred his law-enforcement license to the Brazoria County District Attorney’s Office in January 2025 and remained assigned to an FBI task force.

Rebecca Beard’s Family Questions Court Records

Handwritten court notes and docket records from the Paul Taylor case displayed with color-coded tabs highlighting key sections discussed during the Rebecca Beard family meeting.
Handwritten court notes and docket records became a major focus during the meeting as Rebecca Beard’s family questioned language, timelines, and evidence referenced in the original case.

A significant portion of the meeting centered on handwritten court notes and docket records from Taylor’s case.

Mize questioned language indicating that Larry Bullard planned to testify about “finding” Rebecca Beard’s body. She asked why the document appeared to reference a body when authorities have repeatedly said they never recovered Becky’s remains.

Officials disputed that interpretation. They said Bullard’s appearance concerned efforts to locate Becky’s body and the prosecution’s request for additional time to continue searching.

According to officials, the court had already selected a jury when Paul Taylor changed his plea before opening statements and testimony began. The court later released the jurors.

The family continued to challenge the wording in the court record. They argued the written language appeared more definitive than the explanation officials provided during the meeting.

Pre-Sentence Document Marked Not for Public Inspection

The family also questioned an envelope marked “Pre-Sentence Investigation,” “Judicial Document” and “Not for Public Inspection.”

Officials explained that judges use a pre-sentence investigation, commonly called a PSI, to review a standard report before sentencing. They said the restriction applied only to the PSI and did not mean anyone had secretly sealed evidence about Becky’s body.

Mize said she received the document among additional pages included with the records she purchased. She questioned why those pages were not part of the original page count.

The group also discussed the roles of the district clerk, deputy district clerk and judge in preparing, filing and maintaining court documents.

Family Raises Questions About the Shotgun

Paul Taylor Jr confession released from 2002 family mediation discussing the Rebecca Beard case

The possible murder weapon became another major point of discussion.

Taylor’s account has reportedly included a handgun. However, the family questioned why a shotgun appeared in the case evidence records.

Mize questioned why the evidence records appeared to show someone entered the shotgun into evidence after Taylor entered his plea. Officials disputed that timeline. They said investigators collected the firearm earlier and later returned it after the case concluded.

The conversation included references to two officers signing the weapon into evidence and to a man associated with the shotgun. The exact spelling of several names mentioned in the audio remains unclear.

The disagreement highlights a central concern for the family: whether the dates and descriptions in the evidence records fully match the official explanation of the case.

Officials Continue to Believe Paul Taylor Acted Alone

Paul Taylor Jr. booking photo taken during the investigation into the Rebecca Beard case.
Paul Taylor Jr.‘s booking photograph from the Rebecca Beard murder investigation. During the meeting, officials defended the original prosecution and said they continue to believe Taylor acted alone in Becky’s murder.

Selleck and the investigators defended the original prosecution and said the available evidence continues to point to Taylor as the sole person responsible for Becky’s murder.

Officials said there was enough evidence to present the case to a grand jury, obtain an indictment and prepare for trial. Taylor ultimately changed his plea after the court selected a jury.

They also discussed a more recent interview with Taylor. According to officials in the meeting, that interview did not give them a reason to believe another person participated in the crime.

One official said the combined experience of those reviewing the case exceeded 100 years and that they had not developed a “gut feeling” that Taylor’s conviction was wrong.

Why Paul Taylor Led Investigators to a Search Site

Canal and grassy search area associated with the Rebecca Beard investigation, where Paul Taylor led investigators during the search for her remains.
Officials said Paul Taylor led investigators to this search area because he believed he buried Rebecca Beard there. During the meeting, they distinguished that location from what they believe may have happened to her remains afterward.

The family asked why Taylor led investigators to a location if he also claimed he did not know where Becky’s body was.

Officials drew a distinction between the location where Taylor believed he buried Becky and what may have happened to her remains afterward.

They said Taylor could identify the area where he believed the burial occurred but could not explain whether the remains had later been moved, scattered or affected by environmental conditions.

The family also discussed a tow truck driver, Jack Daniels, who reportedly pulled Taylor’s vehicle from a ditch around the time of the crime.

Investigators Say the Search Has Not Ended

Portrait of Rebecca “Becky” Beard taken before her 1986 disappearance and murder.
Rebecca “Becky” Beard disappeared after leaving the Excalibur Club in Freeport in March 1986. During the meeting, officials told her family investigators continue searching for her remains nearly four decades later.

Officials told Mize and Barnes that investigators have not stopped looking for Becky.

They described the difficulties of recovering remains after four decades in a coastal area affected by hurricanes, flooding, animals, vegetation and natural decomposition.

An investigator said other homicide cases involving remains left in similar environments have also ended without a recovery.

Officials said credible information about a new location would still be investigated.

“Nobody’s giving up,” one participant told the family.

Family DNA Available for Future Comparisons

The meeting also included questions about DNA.

Officials said DNA from Becky’s biological relatives is available for comparison if unidentified remains are discovered in the future.

They explained that unidentified remains can be entered into national databases and compared with family reference samples. No match involving Becky had been reported at the time of the meeting.

The family said having DNA available is important because remains could be uncovered years later during construction, land development or another investigation.

Officials Address Witness Rio’s Statements

Remote dirt road leading through the Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge, an area referenced in witness accounts and past searches connected to the Rebecca Beard case.
Witness Rio reportedly led investigators to this location in the Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge while describing his account of Rebecca Beard’s disappearance. During the meeting, officials addressed Rio’s statements as family members questioned his version of events.

The family also questioned claims made by a witness identified as Rio.

Rio has reportedly described multiple people participating in Becky’s assault, death and the movement of her remains. The account has included unusual claims involving an alligator and an ambulance.

Several participants said they had never previously heard that version.

Officials said numerous people named or connected to Rio’s account had been interviewed. They said investigators were unable to corroborate the substantive portions of the account concerning the crime or the people allegedly present.

They acknowledged that some general details could be confirmed, including the existence of certain locations. However, they said that did not verify the allegations about what happened to Becky.

Family Continues to Challenge the Official Account

The meeting showed a clear divide between the family’s unresolved questions and the conclusions defended by authorities.

Mize and Barnes pressed officials about the court record, the shotgun, witness accounts, search locations and the lack of Becky’s remains.

Officials maintained that Taylor acted alone, that the original prosecution was supported by sufficient evidence and that no credible information has changed that conclusion.

For Becky’s family, however, the absence of her remains and the conflicting language found in records continue to leave questions nearly 40 years after her disappearance.

Related Rebecca Beard Coverage

Read more about the conflicting information surrounding legal representation for Paul Taylor and what the Beard family says it was told:

Follow continuing coverage of the Rebecca Beard investigation and newly reviewed records:

https://www.chopperrose.com

Recommended True Crime Reading

Books examining unsolved disappearances and cold-case investigations can provide insight into how evidence, witness statements and investigative decisions are reviewed decades after a crime.

Investigative journalism books offer a closer look at court records, public-information requests, evidence logs and the challenges reporters face when examining conflicting official accounts.

Editor’s Note

This article is based on audio from a meeting involving Rebecca Beard’s family, Brazoria County officials and investigators. Statements are attributed to the people heard in the recording. Some names and portions of the conversation were difficult to understand and should be confirmed through original records before being treated as established fact.

Amazon Affiliate Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no additional cost to you.