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  • 2 News Oklahoma KJRH Tulsa

    Oklahoma’s Cold Case Files: Who Killed Veda (Susie) Woodson?

    By Sharon Phillips,

    19 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1NcKhV_0udmAvdr00

    It’s one of the oldest cold cases in the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office files.
    On July 26th, 1973, Veda Woodson, known as Susie to her friends and family, is discovered brutally raped and murdered near Sperry.

    “My dad nicknamed her Susie when she was just a baby and all of the family and all of the friends and everybody she knew, knew her as Susie,” said her brother, Jack Barnes.

    Barnes will never forget the phone call he received telling him his beloved, sister Susie was missing.

    “I received a call in the morning and it was from my brother and he said Jack, Orville just called me and said they can’t find Susie, she is missing. They were forming a search party and one of the detectives there was organizing the search, and we got together with him and everybody spread out and started searching,” said Barnes.

    Barnes said his family began desperately scanning the field trying to find any clues as to what may have happened to her. My brother James says I see something up ahead. I said let’s get closer. It was Susie. That’s how we found her and so the three of us brothers actually found the body,” said Barnes.

    Detectives say Susie’s driver’s side door was found open and the window was shattered. They found her body in a field not far away from her car. She had been raped and strangled.

    Years later, investigators with the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office took a closer look at the evidence in this case.
    “There was a suspect that surfaced early on in the investigation and a couple of years ago we got a DNA match linking it to him but it wasn’t enough to get charges filed,” said Roebuck.

    That DNA linked Woodson’s murder to a man named Stanley Clabough.
    “Mr. Clabough actually passed away a few years ago, but we can’t close it by death of offender because charges were never filed in this case so our hope is that at some point, he spoke of this to someone else or anyone else that was involved,” said Roebuck.

    Investigators say they potentially lose more witnesses who might come forward with every day that passes.
    For Barnes, finding his sister’s body that fateful day is a hard image to forget.

    “The only satisfaction that I can get out of that he is having the flames of hell lick him right now and he’s burning in hell,” he said.
    Despite the case being more than 50 years old, the sheriff’s office is asking anyone with information about Woodson’s murder to come forward or Stanley Clabough’s possible involvement in the crime.

    “We would love to finally give this family a definitive answer on what happened to their mom,” said Roebuck.

    More Cold Cases

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