The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-doraville officer indicted in teen’s abduction, killing

Susana Morales, 16, vanished walking home last July.

- By Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

A former Doraville police officer accused of kidnapping and killing a 16-year-old Gwinnett County student was indicted Wednesday on murder and other charges, court records show.

Miles Bryant, 22, faces four charges in the disappeara­nce and death of Susana Morales, who vanished last July walking home from a friend’s house.

The skeletal remains of the missing Meadowcree­k High School student were discovered in February in a wooded area near Dacula, some 20 miles from her home. Investigat­ors believe Bryant, a former Berkmar High School football player, killed the teen before hiding her naked body in a secluded area off Ga. 316.

He was quickly fired and charged with concealing the teen’s death and falsely reporting a crime. Those chargers were later upgraded to include kidnapping and murder.

According to Gwinnett investigat­ors, Bryant reported his personal gun had been stolen just hours after Morales’ disappeara­nce.

Bryant’s weapon was found near Morales’ body during a search of the woods, authoritie­s said. Wednesday, a grand jury returned an indictment formally charging the ex-cop with murder, felony murder, kidnapping and falsely reporting a crime, records show.

He remains held in the Gwinnett jail without bond.

The exact cause of Morales’ death is still unknown, even to the Gwinnett grand jury, records show. Gwinnett police recently said Morales’ bones were sent to an anthropolo­gist for further analysis.

Records show Bryant received relatively minor reprimands during his 21-month stint with the Doraville Police Department. A supervisor wrote in a 2021 performanc­e review that Bryant was wellliked by his peers and had the potential to become “an exemplary officer.”

In an email to the city manager, Doraville police Chief Chuck Atkinson said he made the decision to fire Bryant after meeting with Gwinnett detectives and discussing some of the evidence that led them to bring the initial charges in the Morales case. At the time, Bryant hadn’t been charged with the teen’s killing.

“Although the evidence they described to me was troubling, I have no idea whether Bryant actually did the things he’s accused of doing,” the police chief said, explaining his rationale for firing Bryant that day.

Had the officer been charged with driving under the influence or some type of domestic violence where the facts weren’t exactly clear, Atkinson said he might have put Bryant on administra­tive leave until completion of that investigat­ion.

“Although Bryant’s innocence is presumed, his arrest puts the department under too much of a cloud to justify keeping him on leave while all this runs its course,” Atkinson wrote. “Due to the seriousnes­s of the charges and the amount of time that’s passed since the child’s body was discovered, I’m convinced that public trust and confidence in the department was at stake and that immediate steps had to be taken to protect it.”

The Gwinnett Police Department has come under scrutiny for its handling of the case, mainly because officers first believed the teen may have run away.

Investigat­ors first turned to the public for help in August. At the time, they wrote there was “no indication that Morales is in any specific danger, and it is not believed that she is being held against her will.”

Morales’ heartbroke­n family has said they knew she didn’t run away, and that things may have ended differentl­y had police taken the case more seriously from the beginning.

 ?? ?? Ex-doraville police Officer Miles Bryant is charged in the death of Meadowcree­k High teen Susana Morales.
Ex-doraville police Officer Miles Bryant is charged in the death of Meadowcree­k High teen Susana Morales.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States