Suspected killer committed suicide

Austin police have a suspect in the murder of Esme Barrera

esme kiler Austin police have a suspect in the murder of Esme Barrera

The suspect James Loren Brown and the composite sketch.

esme barrera 05 300x284 Austin police have a suspect in the murder of Esme Barrera

Esme Barrera

Read more: The James Loren Brown timeline of crime

The Austin Police Department has announced that they have a suspect in the murder of 29-year-old Esme Barrera. He is James Loren Brown, a Navy veteran who had lived in Austin for a year-and-a-half.

“We’ve got a predator that is no longer among us,” said Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo.

The 25-year-old will never be brought to justice. Brown committed suicide earlier in the month. He was found dead on January 12 by a roommate. Police were able to link him to Barrera’s murder and several other sexual attacks going back to last summer.

Brown is also connected to the two other attacks on women on New Year’s Eve near Barrera’s home. Police say they used DNA evidence to tie him in to all the cases, except Barrera’s. For that reason, the investigation into her death continues.

All of Brown’s other victims survived and few of those cases made news. But Esme Barrera’s murder on New Year’s Day had a deep impact on the community, especially among those who knew her.

Barerra’s murder also had many in Central Austin and Hyde Park fearful. There were other incidents near campus, including a case where a man exposed himself. APD put out two different composite sketches at the time and it appears they may be the same man: James Brown.

James Brown sketches Austin police have a suspect in the murder of Esme Barrera

Brown, Barrera's killer sketch and the sketch of man who broke into a home and exposed himself to woman on Christmas Day.

Police are asking anyone who knows anything about James Brown to come forward.

Austin Police Department press release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                           
January 26, 2012

Update on January 1, 2012 E. 31st Street Burglary with Intent to Commit a Felony
 
On January 1, 2012 at about 5 a.m. in the 300 block of E. 31st Street, a woman was attacked by an unknown male suspect in her home. The Austin Police Department DNA Laboratory conducted a thorough examination of all the evidence recovered from the crime scene. During the examination, DNA scientists were able to locate a male DNA profile from evidence at the scene. Sex Crimes detectives recognized similarities between one of the events that occurred during the early morning hours of January 1, 2012 and a series of attacks that occurred in South Austin last summer. Detectives requested DNA comparisons from APD’s DNA laboratory using the evidence in the E. 31st Street case. DNA scientists manually compared the DNA profile that they obtained from E. 31st Street and were able to link that (unknown) suspect profile to four assaults that occurred in South Austin:
 
1.      Assault with Injury that occurred July 1, 2011 at about 3:43 a.m. in the 4300 block of S. Congress Avenue
2.      Attempted Sexual Assault that occurred July 8, 2011 at about 5:37 a.m. in the 1400 block of S. Congress Avenue
3.      Assault with Injury that occurred July 8, 2011 at about 6:41 a.m. at S. 1st Street and Barton Springs Road
4.      Assault with Injury that occurred September 11, 2011 at about 8:30 a.m. at Comal and Haskell Streets
 
The suspect description in each of the four earlier unsolved cases involved a Black male suspect with a similar physical build described in each.
 
On January 12, 2012, Homicide detectives responded to the 3000 block of Guadalupe on a deceased person call. The decedent’s roommate returned home after a holiday break and found his roommate James Loren Brown, Black male, 11/20/1986, deceased from an apparent suicide. During the investigation, the Homicide detective and a Crime Scene Unit (CSU) specialist noted that the residence was a short distance from the 3100 block of King Street, which is where Esmeralda Barrera was murdered on January 1, 2012. There had also been an assault with injury about 30 minutes before the murder in the same block. The victim in that assault described her assailant as a Black male and provided information for a composite sketch. The Homicide detective and CSU specialist observed that a photograph of Brown at the scene resembled the composite sketch and Brown had a similar physical build. No apparent reason for the suicide was found during the preliminary investigation.
 
On January 13, 2012, Homicide detectives returned to Brown’s residence and seized several items. APD DNA scientists were able to isolate a DNA profile from one of the seized items and compared it to the unknown male profile from the E. 31st Street case. On January 25, 2012, DNA scientists were able to confirm that the tests results linked Brown to the E. 31st Street case. Therefore, Brown is also a suspect in the four other unsolved cases that have been connected through DNA evidence. The circumstances of the four unsolved cases are similar to the circumstances of the assault with injury that occurred about 30 minutes before Esmeralda Barrera’s murder and in the same block.
 
The Austin Police Department Homicide Unit is investigating James Loren Brown as a suspect in the two other cases that occurred on King Street during the early morning hours of January 1, 2012. This includes Esmeralda Barrera’s murder. We consider Brown a suspect, but there is a considerable amount of investigative work to be completed. The DNA scientists are examining a significant amount of items that were seized from Brown’s residence. APD’s Digital Analysis Response Team is also examining electronic items seized from Brown’s residence. Homicide detectives are conducting interviews to learn more about Brown, and Sex Crimes detectives are re-interviewing and presenting photograph lineups to victims in possible other cases where no DNA evidence was present.
 
Homicide detectives will maintain all investigative efforts to either continue to include Brown as a viable suspect in Esmeralda Barrera’s murder or exclude Brown from further consideration.
 
We are still very early in the investigation into this new lead, and we are asking for assistance from the public. First and foremost, we are asking anyone who saw or had contact with James Loren Brown on New Year’s Eve or during the early part of January 2012 to contact the Homicide Tip Line at (512) 477-3588. Homicide detectives are also seeking information from anyone who knew James Loren Brown, especially anyone who may have received or bought property from Brown.
 
The Austin Police Department wishes to express its gratitude to the Austin community for all the help and support received over the last few weeks. We will continue to work diligently to identify who murdered Esmeralda Barrera and hopefully bring some closure to her family, many friends, and those in the community who have grown to know Esmeralda and embrace her memory.
 
 

 

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About Jack Hambrick

Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, The Digital Texan
Jack is Editor-in-Chief at The Digital Texan and writes about news, gossip and lifestyles in Austin. Jack is a former television reporter and digital journalist with KPRC TV Houston, WFTV TV Orlando, WFOR TV Miami, and WSFL TV /Sun-Sentinel Fort Lauderdale.
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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1031105952 David Williams

    This press release does NOT say he’s been linked to Esme’s murder– it says there is considerable work to include or exclude him.

  • Anonymous

    “The Austin Police Department Homicide Unit is investigating James Loren Brown as a suspect in the two other cases that occurred on King Street during the early morning hours of January 1, 2012. This includes Esmeralda Barrera’s murder. “