A Colorado man, 79, has been indicted in the decades-old killing of a Texas flight attendant after authorities say DNA collected from his discarded trash was matched to blood evidence found on the victim’s clothing.
Larry Dean Brown was arrested in Colorado on June 8 and indicted June 29 by a Tarrant County grand jury on a murder charge. He was subsequently extradited to North Texas and booked into the Tarrant County Jail.
Brown is charged in the death of Beverly “Casey” Bruneau, a 35-year-old Braniff Airlines flight attendant who was discovered dead inside her Grapevine apartment on Feb. 13, 1981.
A 79-year-old Colorado man has been arrested in connection with the 1981 strangulation death of a woman in Grapevine, Texas. (Tarrant County Jail)
An arrest warrant affidavit obtained by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram said Bruneau’s boyfriend found her on the living room floor around 3 p.m. after she did not respond to his phone calls.
Investigators found an electrical cord wrapped around Bruneau’s neck, with blood visible on her face and nightgown, the newspaper reported. The affidavit also described signs inside the apartment indicating she had fought with her attacker.
The Tarrant County medical examiner concluded Bruneau had been strangled sometime during the midmorning hours.
Brown first surfaced in the investigation the same day Bruneau was killed, when detectives went to interview his wife, who was Bruneau’s best friend and former roommate. The two women both worked as Braniff flight attendants and co-owned a house in Dallas, according to the outlet.
Brown’s wife was working an international flight when detectives arrived so Brown instead spoke with the investigators.
One detective described Brown as evasive and noted that he repeatedly gave similar answers. Detectives also documented a fresh injury beneath Brown’s right thumbnail, where the top layer of skin appeared to have been torn away.
Brown later told investigators that he had injured his thumb while working. The detective did not believe the explanation was consistent with the wound, according to the affidavit.
GRAPEVINE, TX – DECEMBER 25: Police line tape surrounds an apartment building where seven people were found dead at Lincoln Vineyard Apartment Homes on December 25, 2011 in Grapevine, Texas. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) ( )
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Investigators also examined financial disputes involving the Dallas house owned by Bruneau and Brown’s wife.
The property had been badly damaged by fires in November 1980. Investigators believed at least one of the fires was arson.
Brown, who had been laid off from his job as a Braniff pilot and flight engineer, held a partial interest in a construction company, the newspaper reported. After the fires, he allegedly obtained repair estimates through that company that exceeded the insurance carrier’s appraisals.
Brown allegedly attempted to pressure Bruneau to sign fraudulent insurance documents with inflated repair costs, according to the outlet.
The case remained unresolved for decades.
In 2010, investigators submitted Bruneau’s bloodstained nightgown and other preserved evidence to a University of North Texas laboratory for additional testing. The examination produced the DNA profile of an unidentified man, according to the affidavit. The profile was entered into the national Combined DNA Index System, known as CODIS, but did not produce a match.
A Grapevine detective began reviewing the investigation again in 2025.
In 2026, Grapevine police asked the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office in Colorado to help collect what the affidavit called a “covert DNA sample” from Brown.
Investigators retrieved two discarded soda bottles from trash placed outside Brown’s home and sent swabs from the bottles to the University of North Texas laboratory, the Star-Telegram reported.
Generic stock image of police car lights shot September 8, 2020. (Stephen M. Katz/South Florida Sun-Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
On May 28, investigators received results indicating that the DNA profile recovered from one bottle could not exclude Brown as the contributor of male blood found on Bruneau’s nightgown, according to the affidavit.
Grapevine police said in a statement that additional forensic testing, including confirmatory DNA analysis, remained pending.


