Tag Archives: Rebecca Beard investigation

Inside Paul Taylor Jr.’s Prison Letters About the Rebecca Beard Investigation

Newly obtained prison messages from Paul Taylor Jr. discuss the Rebecca Beard investigation, prison life and his perspective decades after the case.

Nearly four decades after Rebecca Beard disappeared, new prison messages from convicted killer Paul Taylor Jr. are offering another glimpse into how he views the investigation today.

The messages, shared with Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose by a longtime correspondent who asked to remain anonymous, cover much more than the Rebecca Beard case. Taylor discusses prison life, his health, his faith, investigators, and why he believes renewed attention is being focused on his case.

While many of his statements reflect his personal opinions and allegations, they provide insight into his current mindset as interest in the Rebecca Beard investigation continues.

Taylor questions renewed interest in the Rebecca Beard case

In several messages, Taylor repeatedly asks why people are suddenly interested in his case after so many years.

He questions why the victim’s family has continued speaking publicly and wonders what new information investigators may have uncovered.

Taylor also asks whether new evidence has surfaced and repeatedly requests updates from outside prison.

His questions come as the Rebecca Beard investigation has received renewed attention following exclusive interviews, court records, and additional reporting into the 1986 disappearance.

Paul Taylor Jr. comments on investigators

Throughout the messages, Taylor criticizes investigators and the criminal justice system.

He claims authorities mishandled evidence and writes that people should question official accounts of the investigation.

These statements represent Taylor’s personal opinions and have not been independently verified.

Despite his criticism, Taylor continues asking for information about developments in the case.

Faith remains a central theme

Religion appears throughout nearly every message.

Taylor writes about reading the Bible each morning, praying daily, and believing God has guided him throughout his years in prison.

He frequently ends his messages with blessings and encourages others to pray.

The repeated references suggest his Christian faith continues to play a significant role in his daily life behind bars.

Life inside a Texas prison

The letters also describe Taylor’s daily routine inside prison.

He discusses prison conditions, medical treatment following the removal of basal cell carcinoma, communication through the Securus messaging system, and the challenges of staying connected with the outside world.

Taylor says receiving letters helps him remain informed about events beyond prison walls.

Taylor notices new reporting

One of the more interesting portions of the correspondence comes when Taylor references recent reporting.

He asks whether Tammy Rose is writing articles and later questions why her name briefly appeared in his contact list before disappearing.

The messages suggest Taylor is aware that new reporting and renewed public interest continue surrounding the Rebecca Beard investigation.

Investigation continues

Rebecca Beard disappeared in 1986 and her body has never been found.

Although Paul Taylor Jr. pleaded guilty in connection with her death, questions remain about where Rebecca’s remains may be located.

Investigators have conducted multiple searches over the years, while Rebecca’s family continues asking authorities to pursue additional leads.

The newly shared prison messages do not establish new evidence in the case. Instead, they provide additional insight into Taylor’s thoughts as the investigation continues decades later.

Editor’s Note: The prison messages contain Taylor’s personal opinions and allegations regarding investigators and the criminal justice system. Those statements have not been independently verified and are presented to accurately reflect the contents of the correspondence.

Recommended Reading

If you’re interested in the Rebecca Beard investigation and other Texas cold cases, these books provide additional background and context. Purchasing through the links below helps support my independent reporting at no additional cost to you.

Recommended Reading: Rebecca Beard & Texas True Crime

The Killing Fields

Deliver Us by Kathryn Casey

Let’s Kill Mom: Four Texas Teens and a Horrifying Murder

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Rebecca Beard Investigation: New Documents and Paul Taylor Jr.’s Interview Raise Unanswered Questions

Rebecca Beard investigation thumbnail showing Linda Barnes, Paul Taylor Jr. and police evidence documents reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose.

Rebecca Beard Investigation: New Documents and Paul Taylor Jr.’s Interview Raise Unanswered Questions

Nearly 40 years after 22-year-old Rebecca “Becky” Beard disappeared after leaving a Freeport nightclub with Paul Taylor Jr., questions about the case remain.

Paul Taylor Jr. later pleaded guilty, but Becky’s body has never been officially recovered.

Now, Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose has reviewed court records, police photographs and a recorded interview between Taylor and Becky’s mother, Linda Barnes. Together, those records raise new questions about the evidence, the murder weapon and other details of the Rebecca Beard investigation.

Signed promotional photo of Rebecca “Becky” Beard inscribed, “To John, Love Always, Becky, 1985.”
A signed 1985 promotional photograph of Rebecca “Becky” Beard addressed “To John.” The image is among personal items reviewed during Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose’s ongoing Rebecca Beard investigation.

Linda Barnes Refused to Let the Case Go Cold

Rebecca disappeared after leaving the Excalibur nightclub with Paul Taylor Jr. in March 1986.

For years, Becky’s mother, Linda Barnes, refused to give up. She searched for answers, gathered records and pushed investigators to keep working the case.

Her persistence paid off. A Brazoria County grand jury indicted Paul Taylor Jr. in 1994—eight years after Becky’s disappearance.

Taylor later pleaded guilty, but Becky’s body has never been officially recovered.

Taylor Describes the Night Becky Disappeared

In a recorded interview with Linda Barnes, Taylor claimed Becky voluntarily left the nightclub with him and went to his home.

He said they argued after he failed to obtain cocaine.

Taylor claimed he tried to scare Becky with a firearm before shooting her.

He told Barnes he wrapped Becky in orange sheets secured with duct tape before disposing of her body.

He also claimed he threw the weapon into a bayou. However, a Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office evidence sheet reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose lists a Remington Model 1100 shotgun and a brown gun case as evidence in the case.

Because Taylor described the firearm only as “the weapon” during the interview, the apparent difference between his account and the evidence sheet raises additional questions.

A Shotgun Appears on the Evidence List

One document reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose is a Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office evidence sheet.

Among the listed evidence is a Remington Model 1100 shotgun and a brown gun case.

During his interview with Barnes, Taylor never identified the firearm by type. Instead, he repeatedly referred only to “the weapon.”

The records reviewed do not explain when the shotgun was recovered, where it was recovered or whether it was ultimately identified as the murder weapon.

Police Photographs Show Two Holes in the Bedroom Wall

Police crime scene photograph showing two holes in a bedroom wall inside Paul Taylor Jr.’s Clute home during the Rebecca Beard investigation.
A police crime scene photograph documents two holes in a bedroom wall inside Paul Taylor Jr.’s home. During his recorded interview with Linda Barnes, Taylor described firing a single fatal shot. The records reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose do not explain the presence of the second hole.

Crime scene photographs reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose document two holes in a bedroom wall inside Taylor’s home.

During the interview, Taylor described firing a single fatal shot.

The available records reviewed do not explain whether investigators determined how the two holes were created or whether either hole was connected to the homicide.

The records also do not explain whether ballistic testing linked the recovered shotgun to the wall damage.

The Tow Truck Driver Taylor Could Not Remember

One of the most revealing exchanges involves a tow truck driver.

Barnes confronted Taylor with information that a tow truck operator reportedly pulled his vehicle from a ditch after Becky’s disappearance.

Taylor repeatedly responded that he did not remember the incident.

Barnes described details including a neighbor who reportedly witnessed the vehicle in the ditch and the driver’s recollection of the call.

The conversation highlights a pattern throughout the interview. Taylor remembered specific details such as orange sheets, duct tape and burying Becky, yet repeatedly claimed he could not remember other significant events from that same period.

Court Notes Reference Possible Remains

Handwritten court notes reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose appear to show prosecutors requested additional time to determine whether recovered remains belonged to Rebecca Beard.

The handwriting is difficult to read in places, but the notes appear to reference delaying proceedings while investigators sought positive identification of possible remains.

The records reviewed do not explain what became of those reported remains or whether they were ultimately determined to belong to someone else.

A Confidential Court Record

Confidential pre-sentence investigation file from the Paul Taylor Jr. case reviewed during Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose’s Rebecca Beard investigation.
A confidential pre-sentence investigation file prepared before Paul Taylor Jr.‘s sentencing. The court record was reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose as part of the ongoing Rebecca Beard investigation and provides additional context to the case decades after Becky’s disappearance.

Also among the records is a pre-sentence investigation stamped:

“Confidential Judicial Document — Not Open to Public Inspection.”

The document was prepared before Taylor’s sentencing and demonstrates that confidential records existed during the criminal proceedings.

Questions That Still Remain

The records reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose answer some questions but leave many others unresolved.

Among them:

When was the Remington Model 1100 shotgun recovered?
Was it ever identified as the murder weapon?
Were the two holes in the bedroom wall forensically examined?
What became of the possible remains referenced in court notes?
Why do some details in Taylor’s interview differ from other investigative records?

Nearly four decades after Rebecca Beard disappeared, Linda Barnes’ determination continues to inspire efforts to better understand what happened to her daughter.

Editor’s Note

This report is based on court records, law enforcement documents, police photographs and a recorded interview reviewed by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose. Where records are incomplete or unclear, this article presents unanswered questions rather than conclusions.

Related Rebecca Beard Coverage

Read Part One: 

Read Part Two: 

More Rebecca Beard coverage:
https://www.chopperrose.com/tag/rebecca-beard/

Recommended 

True Crime Books

If you’re interested in cold cases, unsolved mysteries, and investigative reporting, these books provide insight into how complex cases are investigated and solved

 I’ll Be Gone in the Dark by Michelle McNamara
A bestselling investigation into the Golden State Killer case.

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Exclusive: I Traveled to Arizona to Ask Arch Aplin About Rebecca Beard

Arch Aplin stands with his daughter during the grand opening ceremony for Arizona’s first Buc-ee’s location in Goodyear, Arizona.
Arch Aplin and Daughter at Arizona Buc-ee’s Opening

While thousands of people lined up for the grand opening of Arizona’s first Buc-ee’s, I traveled across the country for a different reason.

For months, Rebecca Beard’s family has been searching for answers in a case that remains one of the most talked-about unsolved mysteries along the Texas Gulf Coast. As part of my ongoing investigation, I wanted to ask Buc-ee’s founder Arch Aplin about his connection to Rebecca Beard and references to him in historical police records.

The challenge? Arch Aplin rarely gives interviews outside of Buc-ee’s business matters, and he has never publicly addressed Rebecca Beard on camera.

So I went to Arizona.

A Crowd Waiting For Buc-ee’s

Fans camp out overnight outside Arizona’s first Buc-ee’s location ahead of the grand opening in Goodyear, Arizona.
Some Buc-ee’s fans arrived hours before opening day, setting up chairs and waiting overnight to be among the first customers inside Arizona’s first Buc-ee’s.

Long before the doors opened, thousands of fans were already lined up outside the massive new Buc-ee’s location. Some had traveled hours for the grand opening.

Most reporters were focused on the store, the crowds, and the ribbon-cutting ceremony.

I was focused on a question that dates back nearly four decades.

Finally Getting The Chance To Ask

Arch Aplin responds to a question about Rebecca Beard during the Buc-ee’s Arizona grand opening in Goodyear, Arizona.
Buc-ee’s founder Arch Aplin speaks with Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose during the Arizona grand opening. During the exchange, Aplin briefly addressed a question about Rebecca Beard, calling the case “a sad thing” and saying his heart goes out to the family.

After waiting through the event and multiple appearances, I finally had the opportunity to ask Arch Aplin about Rebecca Beard.

At first, he appeared unable to hear my question over the noise and activity surrounding the grand opening. After repeating the question, he stopped and responded.

His answer was brief.

“It’s just a sad thing. I don’t know what to even say. My heart goes out to them.”

The comment marks one of the few known public responses from Aplin regarding Rebecca Beard and her family.

Why The Question Matters

Rebecca Beard disappeared in 1986. Decades later, questions continue to surround the circumstances of her death and what may have happened to her remains.

Members of Beard’s family have publicly stated they still want answers. In recent interviews with me, family members raised questions about individuals named in historical police records and expressed a desire to hear from people connected to the case.

That is why I asked the question.

The Response Is Now Public

Whether viewers believe the response answered anything or not, the moment is now part of the public record.

As a journalist, my job is not to decide what people should think. My job is to ask questions and let viewers hear the answers for themselves.

Watch the full video interview below and decide for yourself.

Read my exclusive interview with Rebecca Beard’s daughter Brittany Pipkin

 Read Part 2: No Body, No Weapon, Sealed Documents

Interested in true crime and cold cases?

Readers who follow the Rebecca Beard investigation may also be interested in these books on criminal investigations, missing persons cases, and unsolved mysteries:

I’ll Be Gone in the Dark

American Predator

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Exclusive: Rebecca Beard Family Says Police Records Raised New Questions

Stack of police reports, court records, and investigative documents marked with colorful tabs reviewed by Rebecca Beard’s family as they search for answers in the decades-old cold case.
Rebecca Beard’s family reviewed hundreds of pages of police reports and court records, saying the documents raised new questions about the investigation into her 1986 murder.

Exclusive: Rebecca Beard Family Says Police Records Raised New Questions

BEAUMONT, Texas — For decades, Rebecca Beard’s family believed they understood the basic facts surrounding her disappearance and murder.

That changed when they began reviewing police records.

According to Rebecca’s daughter, Brittany Pipkin, a tip received in 2021 led the family to take a deeper look into the case file.

Rebecca Beard’s daughter, Brittany Pipkin, and her father review police records and case documents while discussing new questions they say emerged from the investigation into Rebecca Beard’s 1986 murder.
Brittany Pipkin and her father examine police records and case files connected to the Rebecca Beard case, searching for answers more than 40 years after Rebecca disappeared.

Watch the Full Video Report

Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose spoke with Brittany Pipkin about the documents that she says changed the family’s understanding of the case.

A Tip That Changed Everything

Pipkin says a former law enforcement officer encouraged the family to reexamine the investigation.

The family obtained records through open records requests and began reviewing decades of reports.

As they worked through the documents, one item immediately caught their attention.

The Sealed Document

According to Pipkin, the family discovered a copy of a sealed document inside the records.

The document referenced a body that investigators were reportedly waiting to identify.

“We were given a copy of a sealed document,” Pipkin said. “That document said there was a body they were waiting to identify and make sure it was my mother’s body.”

The discovery shocked the family.

For years, they believed there had never been any indication that Rebecca’s remains had been found.

“That right there was kind of a shocker to us,” Pipkin said.

New Witnesses Come Forward

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.
The Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge has been mentioned in witness statements and investigative leads related to the Rebecca Beard case. Family members continue to seek answers about whether additional searches should be conducted in the area.

The records review also prompted additional people to contact the family.

Pipkin says several witnesses have provided information that she believes deserves further investigation.

The family has shared information with law enforcement and continues to seek updates on the status of the investigation.

“We have had new witnesses come forward,” Pipkin said. “There have been very specific details on what happened that night.”

At this time, authorities have not publicly announced any new criminal charges connected to the case.

Searching for Answers

Brittany Pipkin in her police officer uniform. Rebecca Beard’s daughter says her law enforcement experience helped her analyze records and investigative documents tied to her mother’s unsolved murder.
Rebecca Beard’s daughter, Brittany Pipkin, became a police officer after losing her mo

Pipkin says she understands the challenges investigators face in a case that is now more than 40 years old.

However, she believes additional work remains.

“I would love them to search all the locations,” Pipkin said.

The family says it has even offered to help locate resources for future searches if needed.

Their goal remains the same as it was decades ago.

They want answers.

Most importantly, they want to bring Rebecca Beard home.

“We just want the truth,” Pipkin said. “We want to bring her home.”

Related Coverage

Read Part One:
Read more Rebecca Beard coverage.

Learn more about missing persons investigations through the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children:
https://www.missingkids.org

Coming Next

In Part Three, Brittany Pipkin discusses questions surrounding people named in police reports, including businessman Arch Aplin and witness John Cohn, and why the family believes additional answers may still exist.

Editor’s Note: This story is Part Two of a three-part series examining Rebecca Beard’s disappearance, the unanswered questions that remain and her family’s search for answers.

AMAZON AFFILIATE PLACEMENT

Gear Used By Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose

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Rebecca Beard tag page:
https://www.chopperrose.com/tag/rebecca-beard/

National Center for Missing & Exploited Children:
https://www.missingkids.org

Exclusive: A Career Inspired by Loss, Rebecca Beard’s Daughter Searches for Answers

Entrance to the Beaumont-area ranch where Brittany Pipkin discussed the disappearance of her mother, Rebecca Beard, during an interview with Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose.
Brittany Pipkin lives on a multi-generation ranch near Beaumont, Texas. During an exclusive interview, she shared memories of her mother, Rebecca Beard, and discussed her family’s continuing search for answers. Photo by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose.

Exclusive: A Career Inspired by Loss

BEAUMONT, Texas — The sprawling ranch stretches across thousands of acres near Beaumont. Cattle roam the fields, horses graze beneath towering oak trees and generations of family history remain rooted in the land.

“This ranch has been in the family since 1885,” Brittany Pipkin said.

However, the peaceful setting hides a lifetime of unanswered questions for Pipkin.

In March 1986, her mother, Rebecca Beard, disappeared while Pipkin was still a baby.

As a result, she grew up searching for answers about the tragedy that changed her family forever.

Watch the Full Video Report

Before Brittany Pipkin became a police officer, she was a daughter growing up without answers. Family photos and memories helped her piece together who Rebecca Beard was before her disappearance in 1986.

Rebecca Beard and Darrell Beard pose together in a family photograph taken before Rebecca’s disappearance in 1986.
Rebecca Beard and Darrell Beard in an undated family photograph. Family members say Rebecca was devoted to her daughter and dreamed of building a family

Growing Up Without Rebecca Beard

Before Brittany Pipkin began searching for answers, she first had to learn who her mother was.

To do that, she relied on family stories, old photographs and memories shared by her father, Darrell Beard.

According to Darrell, Rebecca was full of life and always made people laugh.

“She was fun loving,” Darrell recalled. “She loved to have fun. It was laughter, you know, a lot. Just having fun.”

Years before Rebecca’s disappearance, the couple met as teenagers and quickly fell in love.

Soon afterward, they began building a life together and dreamed of raising a family.

“She wanted a family,” Darrell said. “She wanted the same things I did.”

One memory stands out more than most.

After long days at work, Darrell would come home and spend time with his young daughter.

“When I came in from work, I’d take a shower and lay her on my bare chest,” he said. “That’s really what calmed her down.”

Although Brittany has few memories of her mother, those stories helped her understand the woman Rebecca was before her life was cut short.

Years later, Darrell wrote down memories of Rebecca for Brittany. As a result, she gained a deeper connection to the mother she never had the chance to know.

Today, those memories remain an important part of the family’s search for answers and their effort to keep Rebecca’s story alive.

Growing Up Without Rebecca Beard

Pipkin says she grew up hearing different stories about what happened to her mother.

For years, she believed Rebecca had been kidnapped.

As a result, she became determined to find answers.

“I wanted to hunt them down. I wanted to go find my mom,” Pipkin said.

Whenever she visited family, she asked questions about Rebecca and what happened to her.

Meanwhile, the mystery surrounding her mother’s disappearance continued to grow.

“I always asked all the questions,” she said. “I just had this need to know. I still have this need to know because we don’t have all the details yet.”

Over time, that need for answers became part of who she was.

Eventually, those unanswered questions followed her into adulthood and helped shape her future career.

A Career Inspired by Loss

Because of those unanswered questions, Pipkin chose a career in law enforcement.

Brittany Pipkin and her father, Darrell Beard, review family records and memories of Rebecca Beard during an interview about the unsolved case.
Brittany Pipkin and Darrell Beard look through memories and documents related to Rebecca Beard’s disappearance. Photo by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose.

The loss of her mother ultimately inspired Pipkin to pursue a career in law enforcement.

“My goal is I want to work murders,” she recalled telling a police chief during an early job interview. “I want to work crimes against women and children.”

Pipkin spent two years on patrol before moving into investigations.

While she helped other families find answers, she never stopped searching for answers in her own mother’s case.

That professional experience would later prove valuable as her family began reviewing decades of records connected to Rebecca Beard’s disappearance.

A Family Still Searching

Darrell Beard speaks about Rebecca Beard and the family’s ongoing search for answers more than 40 years after her disappearance.
More than four decades after Rebecca Beard disappeared, Darrell Beard remains hopeful the family will find answers. Photo by Investigative Reporter Tammy Rose.

More than four decades later, the family’s goal remains simple.

They want to bring Rebecca home.

“We just want to bring my mom home,” Pipkin said. “We want to have a place where we can visit, bring her flowers and honor her memory.”

Rebecca’s disappearance continues to affect multiple generations of her family.

Pipkin says she often thinks about the moments she missed growing up without her mother.

Shopping trips.

Boyfriends.

Mother’s Day celebrations.

The ordinary experiences many daughters take for granted.

“I still have this need to know,” she said.

Related Coverage

Read our previous coverage of the Rebecca Beard investigation:
https://www.chopperrose.com/tag/rebecca-beard/

Learn more about missing persons investigations through the
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children

Coming Next

In Part Two, Brittany Pipkin explains how police records, evidence photographs and court documents uncovered new questions in the Rebecca Beard case.

Editor’s Note: This story is Part One of a three-part series examining Rebecca Beard’s disappearance, the unanswered questions that remain and her family’s continuing search for answers.

Rebecca Beard Case: Family Believes Others May Know Where Her Remains Were Buried

More than 40 years after Rebecca Beard disappeared, new interviews and witness accounts are raising fresh questions about what really happened the night the young mother vanished in Texas.

Family members now believe additional people may have knowledge about where Rebecca’s remains were buried after her disappearance in March 1986. The case has haunted loved ones for decades after Rebecca vanished following a night out in Clute, Texas. Although Paul Taylor pleaded guilty in connection to her murder, Rebecca’s body has never been found.

In my latest investigation for Tammy Rose Reports, I retrace Rebecca Beard’s final known movements while speaking with family members who say new witness information could help investigators finally uncover the truth.

The emotional interviews reveal why Rebecca’s family has never stopped searching for answers — and why they believe this case may involve more people than previously known.

Watch the Full Rebecca Beard Investigation

Key Questions Still Surrounding The Rebecca Beard Case

Where are Rebecca Beard’s remains?

Could new witnesses help solve the decades-old mystery?

Did more people know what happened the night Rebecca disappeared?

Will investigators conduct additional searches connected to the case?

The Rebecca Beard case continues to generate interest across Texas true crime communities as family members push for answers more than four decades later.

Rebecca Beard pictured before her disappearance in Texas in 1986.

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