The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Inmate’s bid for parole splits two families anew

Kin want ailing killer to die at home; victim’s daughter in turmoil.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

Almost 23 years have passed since Patricia Dowell’s father was beaten to death, and she thought his killer would die in prison.

Robert Carey Seymour, 55, was sentenced to life in prison and has already been denied parole three times. But now he has advanced cancer.

Recently, Dowell received a letter from the State Board of Pardons and Paroles that her father’s killer was being considered for a halfway house and eventual parole.

“I never thought in 20 years I would ever have to deal with this again,” said Dowell, Donald Luke Bratcher’s daughter. “I thought he was in prison forever ... And here it is. I don’t know how to deal with it. My heart is beating 90 miles a minute just talking about it.”

The decision will rest with the five members of the state’s Board of Pardons and Paroles. The board, appointed by the governor, must choose between the dying prisoner and the family

who long ago suffered their own loss.

Will the board heed her family’s pleas to keep Seymour in prison for life, she wonders?

Yet on the other side of the issue is Seymour’s family. His mother and sister want him paroled so he can die at home.

Seymour’s sister has told the Bratcher family that they are sorry, Seymour is sorry.

But “sorry” isn’t enough for the Bratcher family.

“All we can do is just pray they don’t let him out,” said Dowell, a 49-year-old grandmothe­r who lives in Royston.

The circumstan­ces of many cases are simple. But the decision of whether to grant clemency is not. To make the decision, the parole board will pore over a file that includes investigat­ions of the inmate’s history, his crime, his experience in prison and the recommenda­tions of the agency’s staff. Three of the five members must agree to grant or deny parole. A decision on Seymour’s request is expected sometime after mid-July.

The case received little public attention. Only local papers covered Bratcher’s murder in Elbert County in October 1995 and his guilty plea for murder.

The story seemed straightfo­rward enough: One man killed the other, supposedly for money. Nothing sensationa­l. The two men met at the motel in Elberton where Bratcher had rented a room for a week while he looked for work in Elberton, the “granite capital of the world” and the source for about two-thirds of headstones produced in the U.S.

On the same day they met, Seymour agreed to drive Bratcher to his daughter’s house 20 miles away in Hart County so he could give her money for her light bill, if she needed it.

On the drive back to Elberton, they stopped so Bratcher could relieve himself on the side of the road, and that was when Seymour pounded him with his fists and a piece of cement for the $80 in his pocket.

Seymour left Bratcher’s body in the woods and drove on to Elberton, where he was soon arrested for stealing items from the motel where he was staying.

Worried because she could not reach her father for three days, Dowell pestered local law enforcemen­t, checked area hospitals and even confronted Seymour at the Elbert County Jail.

Even after police agreed to take a missing person’s report, another 10 days passed before Bratcher’s decomposin­g body was found. The elements and animals had left him unrecogniz­able.

“His whole face was gone,” Dowell said. “All that was there was his skull and a circle around his skull was his hair laying there.”

That is Dowell’s memory.

Seymour’s family declined to be interviewe­d for this story. But Bratcher’s granddaugh­ter, Jessica Christian, said she has talked to Seymour’s sister a few times via personal message on the Elberton Rants and Raves Facebook page.

“I talked to his sister and she feels our pain,” Christian said, describing their exchange. “She wanted to let me know how sorry he is and what he’s done in prison and what led him to drugs and why he was in the hotel room.”

Christian put a petition on Change.org that detailed what happened to her grandfathe­r and asked people to sign it to show support for keeping Seymour in prison. Almost 1,200 people have signed, with some also posting nasty comments. The petition was sent to the board, along with letters to be placed in Seymour’s file, which includes a report from staff interviews with the inmate and the findings of an extensive investigat­ion of his history, his crime and his years in the Georgia prison system.

The board members will make their decision based on the contents of that file; there is no hearing or inmate meeting with a board member.

“Restoring both the victim and offender is important,” board Chairman James Mills wrote in the agency’s annual report. “It’s a balancing act between the two. Striking that balance of compassion­ate mercy for the victims while seeking justice and appropriat­e mercy for the offender is truly a challenge.”

In almost all the cases they consider, there is little if any public attention unless an inmate is released and commits a violent crime that draws media coverage.

But for the Bratcher and Seymour families, as in the cases of others, the decision by the Parole Board means everything to them.

Christian, 4 years old when her “Papa” was murdered, told Seymour’s sister she “was sorry for some of the nasty comments — that I wanted to find closure.”

“If he gets out, we have to be OK with that. We also have to be able to come to peace with it if he’s out,” Christian said. “We don’t know if he meant to kill him or not. He dragged him into the woods and left him.”

Christian said in their exchanges that Seymour’s sister has been kind. “She didn’t do it. I feel bad for her. He (Seymour) was on drugs then.”

But Christian’s mother, Dowell, said for now she wants no part of Seymour’s family, though her feelings about them have mellowed some.

But, Dowell adds that Seymour’s sister “can go see her brother. She can love her brother . ... Because she has told Jessica she loves her brother and her brother is very sorry for what he did, that her brother is not that person. Drugs caused it ... Good for you. If I go see my dad, it’s in a graveyard.”

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