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Austin police explain how they identified a suspect in the 1991 yogurt shop murders cold case
Four teenage girls were killed at an Austin yogurt shop in 1991, a crime that has haunted the city for decades.
Christa Gail Pike, 49, will become the first woman put to death in Tennessee in more than 200 years if her execution proceeds next September.
If you want to play quarterback in the NFL, consider moving to Cleveland. Odds are the Browns will give you a shot.
Four teenagers were found tied up and shot to death inside a Texas I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt! store in 1991. Police now believe serial killer Robert Eugene Brashers was behind the cold case.
A woman is accused of trying to help the suspect in the 1999 murder of a Durham teenager avoid capture, warrants show.
More than three decades after four teenage girls were murdered in an Austin, Texas, yogurt shop in 1991, one original investigator from the case confirmed that a suspect has been identified. Retired ...
For more than two decades, Sean “Diddy” Combs was one of hip-hop’s most nimble entrepreneurs, spinning his hitmaking talents into a broad business empire that included a record label, a fashion brand, ...
Jan. 2017: Travis County DA Margaret Moore formed a trial team and partnership with APD’s Cold Case Unit to continue investigating the case. The DA’s Office set aside office space for the newly formed ...
Shaquille Leonard, who rose from FCS star to NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year and perennial All Pro with the Colts, will retire as a member of the Colts this weekend, the team announced. Leonard, 30, ...
After nearly 34 years since four teenage girls were murdered at a north Austin yogurt shop, some family members are returning to Austin to attend Monday’s news conference at Austin City Hall.
The Colorado Rockies announced Wednesday that general manager Bill Schmidt stepped down after one of the worst seasons in baseball history. A search is underway for his replacement.
A suspect has been identified in the 1991 murders of four teenage girls at an Texas yogurt shop, according to police. CBS Austin first heard the news from CBS News' "48 Hours" correspondent Erin ...
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