The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-officer accused in teen’s death faces additional charge

23-year-old indicted again to add an attempted rape charge.

- By Rosana Hughes Rosana.Hughes@ajc.com

A former Doraville police officer accused of killing a Gwinnett County girl and hiding her body in the woods near a creek in 2022 now faces an additional charge: attempted rape.

Miles Bryant, 23, was arrested last year, almost seven months after 16-year-old Susana Morales went missing from her Norcross home. She had gone to a friend’s nearby house and disappeare­d while walking home the evening of July 26, 2022. Her body was found in February in a wooded area near Drowning Creek just outside Dacula, more than 20 miles from where she was last seen.

Investigat­ors still do not know how she died.

Bryant was indicted last week for a second time to add the attempted rape charge. He also faces a charge of malice murder, felony murder, kidnapping and false report of a crime. He will have a second arraignmen­t hearing Feb. 1, according to court records. He previously pleaded not guilty following his first indictment.

While Bryant lived — and served as a security officer — at the apartment complex where Morales had been visiting her friend, police have said there was no known connection between the two. Authoritie­s said Bryant was connected to the crime when his personal gun was found in the area where Morales’ remains were discovered by a passerby. He had reported it stolen hours after the teen’s disappeara­nce.

Morales’ mother, Maria Bran, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that Morales was a happy teenager who wanted to become an undercover detective.

In addition to Morales’ killing, the former officer faces several allegation­s of troubling conduct, ranging from unrelated burglary charges to at least two instances of workplace misconduct, for which he received reprimands.

Bryant began his career in law enforcemen­t in 2020 as a jailer with the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office, according to records kept by Georgia’s Peace Officer Standards and Training Council. He then joined Doraville police in 2021 and was fired Feb. 13, 2023, the day of his arrest.

In November 2021, Bryant received a 12-hour suspension after being “disrespect­ful” toward another Doraville officer,

according to documents previously obtained by the AJC. He allegedly approached the officer’s patrol vehicle while stretching his arms as if holding a firearm and told the officer something “to the effect of ‘Keep your head on a swivel.’”

A year later, he received a written reprimand after failing to submit a missing person report within the two-hour limit mandated by the National Crime Informatio­n Center.

Snellville police also charged Bryant with first-degree burglary in connection with a 2019 break-in at the home of a high school classmate, the AJC previously reported. Police said the classmate’s mother had surveillan­ce footage showing Bryant, then 18, walking through her family’s home after tampering with the lock on her child’s bedroom

window, though nothing appeared to have been stolen.

The family recognized him after his arrest and alerted authoritie­s, and investigat­ors determined there was enough evidence to charge him.

Then, in December 2022, a woman filed a report with Gwinnett police after she recognized Bryant in security footage given to her by a neighbor. The neighbor had warned her that someone “tried to break into her apartment,” documents showed. Bryant was never charged. A Doraville police sergeant determined that the woman “misinterpr­eted” his gesture “to check on her well-being” after Bryant explained that he stopped by to check on the woman, whom he’d known since elementary school, due to her making “a questionab­le post on social media that worried him.”

Bryant’s arrest angered many in the community who felt the police didn’t take the teen’s disappeara­nce as seriously as they should have. Her mother said she believes her daughter’s remains might have been found sooner if the case wasn’t treated like that of a runaway. The Gwinnett police department has defended its handling of the investigat­ion, stating that detectives followed all leads, beginning the night she was reported missing.

 ?? AJC 2023 ?? The family of Susana Morales, including sister Jasmine Morales (center), Jasmine’s husband Brian Perez (left), and supporters participat­e in a news conference in March at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Norcross, asking for more transparen­cy from police and changes in the 48-hour rule imposed when teens go missing.
AJC 2023 The family of Susana Morales, including sister Jasmine Morales (center), Jasmine’s husband Brian Perez (left), and supporters participat­e in a news conference in March at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Norcross, asking for more transparen­cy from police and changes in the 48-hour rule imposed when teens go missing.
 ?? ?? Miles Bryant (right) was arrested last year, nearly seven months after Susana Morales, 16, went missing from her home in Norcross.
Miles Bryant (right) was arrested last year, nearly seven months after Susana Morales, 16, went missing from her home in Norcross.

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