inmyhumbleopinion
#NeverGivingUp
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2013
- Messages
- 5,346
- Reaction score
- 32,835
Welcome to the thread, @Rush4087. Great post. I hope you stay with us.To me, along with the the laptop-containing backpack and the iPhone (incl. the "where" and "when" they were each respectively found - and the phone's condition), perhaps the most significant piece of evidence in this case is the .25 cal bullet casing found in Tom's SUV. Maybe I missed something, but has it's presence ever been explained - by anyone? Was it ever checked for prints or DNA? Where is the casing now?
Unless Tom owned a .25 caliber handgun, the presence of a spent .25 cal casing in his vehicle would almost have to be explained by anyone claiming to know what might have happened to Tom that night (whether suicide or foul play) - yet as far as I know, the presence of the casing has never been explained - by anyone. And a bullet casing is not like a receipt or a phone charger, it's evidence of a weapon. Possibly the murder weapon.
And it is not a common caliber. Certainly not a common caliber owned by LE, even for off duty use or use as a back up weapon. A .25 cal handgun is actually pretty rare.
To solve the case, I think the presence of the casing must be explained/answered. It is integral. If Tom's death was a suicide (perhaps by a .25 cal handgun?) why wasn't a .25 cal gun (or any other means of self harm for that matter) discovered along with the body? If Tom's death was due to foul play, who among Tom's friends, family, associates, teachers, and LE, do we know of who owned a .25 cal handgun? Again, it's not a common caliber, and it is a small town.
While I understand that no evidence of a gunshot wound was found during the autopsy, was a gunshot wound ruled out / excluded?
In the absence of any other proposed (or evidence-suggested) weapon, one could argue that the presence of the .25 cal casing strongly suggests that a .25 cal handgun was the very weapon that was used that night - by either Tom or a perp. Who's gun was it? And who used it?
Did anyone recognize the "small caliber handgun" holster that was reportedly found during one of the searches? What brand was the holster? Where was it purchased? What manufacturer's .25 cal handgun (if any) would fit that particular holster? Were there prints or DNA found on the holster? Where is that holster now?
Again, the only weapon suggested by the evidence in this case is a .25 cal handgun. Find it, and I think you may solve the mystery of what happened to Tom Brown. Jmo.
I will try to answer your questions to the best of my ability. If anyone reading disagrees, please jump in and let me know

Lewis has provided no possible explanation for the casing’s presence that I am aware of, though Skip Hollandsworth writes:
“After getting the call [that Tom’s Durango had been found], Lewis raced to the scene. He and a deputy approached the Durango.
[...]
And there was a thin streak of blood on the inside of the front driver’s door by the handle. ‘It looked like it was probably a knuckle cut or something, or a finger cut or paper cut,’ [Lewis] said. ‘It was very dry.’
There was one other thing Lewis and his deputy discovered: a .25-caliber shell casing on the floorboard. Lewis said he was confounded, because as far as he could tell, ‘there was nothing in the car that said that there was a gunshot that went off in that car. There was no splatter. There was no gunpowder residue in the car. There was nothing.’”
Tom Brown's Body, Chapter 2: Tom's Loop – Texas Monthly
Klein:
“Allegedly, after saying goodbye to Christian Webb ... [Tom] drove to the parking lot of the high school football stadium, where Canadian kids occasionally gathered. Klein said someone who was there (he wouldn’t identify that person either) had sneaked up behind Tom, who was sitting inside his Durango with the window down. This individual pulled out a .25-caliber pistol, and, in Klein’s words, ‘started messing with him.’
Klein said the person with the pistol had no desire to shoot Tom. ... But he accidentally pulled the trigger. The bullet entered through the top of Tom’s neck and lodged in his brain. The bullet’s shell casing landed on the truck’s floorboard.”
Tom Brown’s Body, Chapter 8: The Remains
To the best of my knowledge, it has never been reported if the casing was checked for prints or DNA.
Since the investigation into the circumstances surrounding the disappearance and death of Thomas Brown has been lead by the OAG investigators since Feb., 2018 and that it was an OAG spokesman (which leads me to believe that while the grand jury will be held in Hemphill County, the case will be presented to the GJ by an OAG prosecutor and not the 31st District Attorney, who, IMO, comes across as very unprofessional in the recording of the August 2019 OAG meeting in Pampa) who confirmed to Skip to that a grand jury will be convened to hear testimony about Tom’s death early next year, all evidence collected in the investigation should be in the custody of the Attorney General’s Office.
And according to his mom, Penny Meek, Tom did not own a .25-caliber handgun:
“At some point that afternoon, Sheriff Lewis talked to Penny. He asked if anyone in her family owned a .25-caliber pistol. No, she said. ‘And then, he just said he was returning the car,’ Penny told me.”
Tom Brown's Body, Chapter 2: Tom's Loop – Texas Monthly
As to your questions about the holster, I don’t think I can answer any of them (I’m sure it’s in the OAG investigators’ custody, though) since there has been very little information made public about it.