The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

14 years later, UGA student’s murder remains a mystery

Investigat­ors still have no suspects or leads in slaying of McDuffie.

- By Nancy Badertsche­r nancylbade­rtscher@gmail.com

For Kelvin McDuffie, the future seemed bright.

McDuffie had overcome early hardship — his mother was arrested and convicted of manslaught­er in the fatal shooting of another woman when he was just a teenager. But he had risen to become a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserve and was a student at the University of Georgia with dreams of opening a restaurant.

But on a cold January day in

2003, the 25-year-old’s bullet-ridden body was found in a remote area of Athens-Clarke County. Family told police they’d last heard from McDuffie the previous day, when he’d visited his grandmothe­r in his hometown of Elberton, which sits near the South Carolina border some 35 miles northeast of Athens.

Nearly 14 years later, investigat­ors with the Athens-Clarke County Police Department say they have no suspects and no serious leads in the slaying of the 25-year-old.

“As cold cases go, it’s as cold as they come,” Epifanio Rodriguez, public informatio­n officer for Athens-Clarke County Police Department, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “It’s coming up on 10 years since we’ve had anything on this case.”

As in all cold cases, investigat­ors periodical­ly reach out to family and witnesses, hoping for a new lead that will provide a break in the case, Rodriguez said.

“As of yet, when we call the

witnesses and family, we’re not getting anything that will lead us to a suspect,” the spokesman said. “There’s no statute of limitation­s on homicide, so we’ll continue to work it and try to see if we can find a suspect and get justice for this victim.”

Since 2003, family members have said they are at a loss to understand why anyone would want to harm McDuffie.

They describe him as a responsibl­e adult who overcame great difficulti­es. He was studying computers at UGA and taking an online business course, family and friends said. His goal was to return to Elberton and open a restaurant, they said.

The case has been beset with strange — and sometimes tragic — developmen­ts that have continued to intersect with the criminal justice system.

Nearly two years after

McDuffie’s body was discovered, his father was shot and killed by an employee at the Athens poultry processing plant where they both worked. Christophe­r McDuffie, 52, was siting in an office at the Pilgrims Pride Corp. plant when Nathaniel Brittain, a former Clark County sheriffs deputy, entered and fired at least seven shots from a Glock 9 mm handgun, police said. The elder McDuffie died instantly.

It appeared McDuffie and Brittain had been arguing and police do not believe there was any connection between the deaths.

The Athens-Clarke detective who had been working Kelvin McDuffie’s case, Matthew Henderson, was arrested and convicted on statutory rape charges, the Athens Banner Herald reported. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

And McDuffie’s mother, Cora, was paroled six months before her own son’s death, in June 2002.

“Me and Kelvin went to pick her up (from prison) and we just got her situated when all this happened,” Alicia McDuffie told the Athens newspaper in 2004.

After brother was shot and killed, Alicia McDuffie said “everyone was in shock for the longest time because Kelvin was the last person you’d suspect something like this would happen to.

“God,” she said, “Always seems to take His best.”

Anyone with informatio­n about the case should contact Sgt. David Norris with the Athens-Clarke County Police Department at David. norris@athensclar­kecounty.com.

 ??  ?? Kelvin McDuffie For more stories about crime and public safety, go to myAJC. com/crime/
Kelvin McDuffie For more stories about crime and public safety, go to myAJC. com/crime/
 ??  ?? Kelvin McDuffie was studying computers at UGA and taking an online business course when killed in 2003.
Kelvin McDuffie was studying computers at UGA and taking an online business course when killed in 2003.

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