The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

DNA leads to arrests in 2 cold-case sexual assaults from 1986

Brothers indicted on multiple charges in nearly 40-year-old cases.

- By Jozsef Papp jozsef.papp-chang@ajc.com

Almost 40 years after a spate of sexual assaults, DNA testing has led to the arrests of two men now facing dozens of charges.

Jeffrey Briney, 59, was indicted by a DeKalb County grand jury on multiple counts of rape, kidnapping and aggravated assault. His brother, David Briney, 62, was indicted on similar charges and also is linked to decades-old sexual assault cases in Cobb and Fulton counties.

“New DNA testing completed in 2023 linked these defendants to seven sexual cold-case assaults dating back nearly 40 years,” DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston said Wednesday.

The defendants were arrested Feb. 27 and have been denied bond.

Boston said the brothers were linked to a March 28, 1986, sexual assault case in what is now Brookhaven. Investigat­ors say four men pushed their way into an apartment on Briarwood Road, where five college students were held at gunpoint and two women raped.

Sexual assault kits collected following the incident led to the recent arrests of Jeffrey Briney and David Briney, Boston said.

Months after the Brookhaven incident, two men forced their way into an apartment on Buford Highway, where two women were raped and tied up. DNA testing linked Jeffrey Briney to that case, and linked David Briney to cases in Cobb and Fulton, Boston said.

“These matches are a result of an ongoing effort to process previously untested sexual assault evidence,” said Boston, noting there is more work to be done.

In 2016, the Georgia Legislatur­e passed a law requiring all Georgia law enforcemen­t agencies to send stored rape kits to the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion for testing. The GBI is working through more than 7,000 kits dating to before 1999.

Through a federal grant secured by the Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Council, the GBI was able to send about 2,500 untested kits, 74 from DeKalb cases, to private labs for processing in 2023.

“Our team has identified nearly a dozen additional cases that fit the same fact patterns, and we know there were others involved in some of these crimes who have not yet been identified,” Boston said. “While we still have a way to go in the criminal justice process, we hope this brings (the victims) some comfort and a measure of closure.”

Anyone with informatio­n on past cases can call the DeKalb County Cold Case Hotline at 404371-2444.

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