Current:Home > FinanceMurder trial opens in death of Detroit-area teen whose disappearance led to grueling landfill search -Infinite Edge Learning
Murder trial opens in death of Detroit-area teen whose disappearance led to grueling landfill search
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 23:54:12
DETROIT (AP) — A man who dropped a Detroit-area teenager’s body in a dumpster “left behind a trail of digital evidence” implicating him in her death, despite a fruitless, extraordinary search to find the remains in a landfill, a prosecutor told jurors Tuesday.
Jaylin Brazier, 25, is on trial for second-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Zion Foster, whose body hasn’t been found.
Detroit police in 2022 raked through tons of rotting trash at a suburban landfill to try to find any trace, a rare step by a law enforcement agency. The search, sometimes in 90-degree heat and humidity, was called off after five months.
“Was she choked? Was she raped? Did she die somehow of some inexplicable natural cause?” assistant prosecutor Ryan Elsey said in his opening remarks to a jury. “The search for Zion’s body became paramount to the investigation.”
Brazier and Foster were cousins. He has denied killing her and insists Foster suddenly died while they were using marijuana at his Detroit home.
Brazier told police that he panicked, stashed the body in a car trunk and drove it to a dumpster after midnight, disclosures that led to the landfill search, according to investigators.
Defense attorney Brian Brown said it’s a case of “fear and bad decisions.”
“Jaylin was scared,” Brown said. “He might have not made the right decision, but at the end of the day that does not make him a murderer.”
Elsey told jurors that experts would rule out the possibility of a marijuana-related death. He said Brazier “left behind a trail of digital evidence that is damning.”
Brazier searched the internet for information about whether garbage trucks crush trash and the possibility of criminal charges when a body can’t be found, the prosecutor said.
While in prison for lying to police, Brazier told a girlfriend “there was nothing to worry about,” Elsey said. “He was wrong. You don’t get away with murder just by getting rid of the body.”
___
Follow Ed White at https://twitter.com/edwritez
veryGood! (1)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Emergency crew trying to rescue man trapped in deep trench in Los Angeles
- North Carolina judge rejects RFK Jr.'s request to remove his name from state ballots
- Taylor Swift spotted at first Chiefs game of season to support Travis Kelce
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- A Legionnaire’s disease outbreak has killed 3 at an assisted living facility
- A Christian school appeals its ban on competing after it objected to a transgender player
- Would Dolly Parton Ever Host a Cooking Show? She Says...
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Markey and Warren condemn Steward’s CEO for refusing to comply with a Senate subpoena
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Get a student discount for NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV: Here's how to save $280 or more
- Caitlin Clark returns to action: How to watch Fever vs. Lynx on Friday
- 'Joker 2' is 'startlingly dull' and Lady Gaga is 'drastically underused,' critics say
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- An ex-Mafia hitman is set for sentencing in the prison killing of gangster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger
- The Toronto International Film Festival is kicking off. Here are 5 things to look for this year
- As obsession grows with UFOs on Earth, one group instead looks for aliens across galaxies
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Mexican drug cartel leader agrees to be transferred from Texas to New York
Billie Jean King moves closer to breaking another barrier and earning the Congressional Gold Medal
Husband of missing Virginia woman to head to trial in early 2025
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Suspect charged with murder in the fatal shooting of a deputy in Houston
Linkin Park reunite 7 years after Chester Bennington’s death, with new music
Markey and Warren condemn Steward’s CEO for refusing to comply with a Senate subpoena