
In 2006, Bryan Pata – a football star at the University of Miami – was shot and killed outside his apartment.
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Preeti Varathan
Hi, I'm Preeti Varathan and I run 30 for 30 podcasts.
Paula Levine
You're about to listen to season 16
Preeti Varathan
of our show, Murder at the U.
Paula Levine
This season we're doing something a little different. We're telling the story of how a
Preeti Varathan
20 year old murder investigation that seemed unsolvable finally made its way to trial. And why a team of ESPN reporters refused to let it go. Because at the center of this story
Paula Levine
are two college football players from one
Preeti Varathan
of the most legendary and notorious schools, the University of Miami. One of them is dead. One was prosecuted for killing him. So here's episode one of Murder at the U. Thank you for listening.
Paula Levine
It's 2006. Two guys in their 20s are driving down us one in Miami in a black Infiniti SUV. The AC is blasting, the music is blasting.
Preeti Varathan
Who the fuck you think you're fucking with? I'm the fucking boss. 7:45, white on white. That's fucking Ross. We on our way to my crib driving to that Rick Ross, you know, US one going south.
Paula Levine
The driver is a football player at the University of Miami. Brian Pata. The guy next to him in the passenger seat is a sports writer from the Miami Herald. His name is Manny Navarro. Manny has his camera trained on Brian.
Preeti Varathan
I was a young reporter who wanted to do something cool. MTV Cribs was sort of big back then.
Paula Levine
MTV Cribs was a show where celebrities led camera crews through tours of their houses. Manny wanted to make something similar for the Miami Herald. But in Manny's version, the celebrities would be University of Miami football players, the Hurricanes.
Preeti Varathan
So my idea was just make these guys personable, tell a story that is unique in Miami. These are Miami guys playing for Miami football program. Brian was really the first guy I threw the idea across. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm down, I'm down. Let's do it. Let's do it. And you know, I got the camera on him because I want to make sure I get the audio and the video, you know, the whole thing.
Paula Levine
The two guys head to Brian's apartment complex. It's called the Colony, where several other University of Miami players live. It's classic Florida, with corridors on the outside of the building like a motel.
Preeti Varathan
We get to his apartment, he's like runs in there. He starts picking stuff up, moving stuff around. He's like, don't record yet. And he says, how do you want me to. Where do you want to start? I said, well, why don't you open the door? This is what they do on MTV Cribs, right? They open the door, they welcome you in. What up, y'? All? This is my crib. I'm Brian Patter. University of Miami Divas. A tiger if you walk in. This is a townhouse. Two bedroom, two and a half bathroom. You know, he's kind of like giving me the tour, opening cabinets up and showing me stuff. This is my cabinet right here. I love pudding. He was just. He was so happy to kind of be the star of the show, you know, I think in his mind, I think he started to think, like, yeah, it's only the Miami Herald right now, but I could do this for mtv. Like, this is like a nice little practice run, you know? Here's my family during the Florida State game. My two sisters, my cousin. This is my mom right here. And this is my girlfriend, Jada. I just remember the feeling of this kid is so happy with his life. He knows that the best is yet to come. Like, this is good. Life is good. I got a girlfriend. I got a dog. Other than that, this is me, Ryan Potter. All right, thanks a lot. We'll go downstairs real quick. All right. But it was sort of this feeling of, things are gonna get better.
Paula Levine
It seems that way. Listening to the recording, hearing Brian's enthusiasm, his giddiness. Except for one thing. A few weeks later, Brian Pata would be dead.
Preeti Varathan
We do have a breaking story. A University of Miami football player has been shot and killed. Amara Sones live in Kringle with the very latest. Michael Jackie.
Paula Levine
Miami Dade police confirming Tonight Brian Pata, UN's defensive lineman, was shot and killed tonight.
Preeti Varathan
We are told his body was found in the park.
Paula Levine
From the outside looking in, it was the kind of case that police should have been motivated to solve quickly. A star player on a major college football team murdered near campus just a few months shy of the NFL draft. But that is not what happened. Instead, weeks turned into months, which eventually turned into years. And Brian's murder remained unsolved. But almost 20 years later, someone is finally set to stand trial for the murder of Brian Pata. I'm Paula Levine from 30 for 30 podcast. This is Murder at the U. The story of how two University of Miami teammates found themselves on opposite ends of a murder investigation. And what happened when a team of ESPN reporters brought that investigation into the light? Episode 1 Chillin with the canes.
Preeti Varathan
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Paula Levine
Grab a green juice, quick change and head to work. Meetings, workshops One more Celsius.
Preeti Varathan
No slowing down.
Paula Levine
Working late, but obviously still meeting the girls for a little dancing.
Preeti Varathan
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Paula Levine
Go grab a cold refreshing Celsius at your local retailer or locate now@celsius.com As a reporter, I try to stay out of the story, but sometimes the work you do to get the story and what you uncover changes it. That's exactly what happened here. And that story starts in 2017 in the office of Ben Weber.
Preeti Varathan
I was a feature producer at espn.
Paula Levine
One of the shows Ben worked on at the time was College Game Day, ESPN's weekly show about college football.
Preeti Varathan
Glad to have you with us. How great is it to have college football back on a full Saturday?
Paula Levine
College game day rolling in August 2017, Ben received an email from an odd source.
Preeti Varathan
I got an email that said the Miami Police Department was interested in helping us tell this story in an effort to try to find new leads.
Paula Levine
The story was more than 10 years old, and it was about the unsolved murder of a University of Miami football player, Brian Pata. Is it unusual for police departments to pitch stories to ESPN?
Preeti Varathan
I'll say in my 25 years here, that's the first and only time that that has happened.
Paula Levine
But Ben looked up the case, and as he was scrolling through the results, he found a video of a press conference about this murder. It had happened only three months earlier.
Preeti Varathan
It started a pretty regular press conference.
Paula Levine
Ben would be the first of us to watch this press conference, but we'd all come back to it over and over again. In many ways, it was the reason we all got pulled into this case. The press conference was at the Miami Dade Police Headquarters. In a nondescript fluorescent lit room, detectives in ties and police officers wearing tan uniforms stood in rows. In front of them at a table sat A family, Brian Pata's family.
Preeti Varathan
Any reporter wants to start. Ms. Pata, your first name is Jeanette J E A N E T T E yes.
Paula Levine
Brian's mom, Jeanette Pata, wore a colorful striped blouse. In her hands, she gripped a magazine with Brian, her youngest son, on the COVID The photo showed a young man with locks squinting in the Miami sun. He wore a bright white Miami Hurricanes Football uniform with a number 95 on the shoulder.
Preeti Varathan
It's been 10 and a half years. How much easier is it for you to cope ten and a half years later? This is not easy for me because 10 years and a half, we never. We don't hear nothing. You know, we waited so long to find the answer. Who killed my son? Nobody know how I feeling. Jeanette was answering a question and then I think she just was overcome with emotion and thought, about 10 and a half years have gone by and we still don't have answers. My heart, you know, I cry. Cry and cry don't help. But sometimes before I go to bed or whatever, I have to pray. I said, God, I'm in your hand. One day you're going to find me the answer for my son. And then the tone and tenor shifted pretty quickly. I don't think even they work in the case anymore. The case is closed. Nothing.
Paula Levine
The room went silent. Jeanette Pata had just accused the Miami Dade police of ignoring her son's case.
Preeti Varathan
She insinuated that the Miami PD had done nothing. And it became a little bit more accusatory and ramped up the uncomfortable nature of that press conference. I don't know what the police officers expected to get from that press conference, but I can almost guarantee that it wasn't this
Paula Levine
next. A reporter addressed the lead detective in the case, Miguel Dominguez.
Preeti Varathan
And within the 10 years, have there been any leads? Yes, yes, we've followed a multitude of leads. Obviously we don't have anything solid enough to make an arrest at this time.
Paula Levine
Dominguez stood directly behind the family. His head was shaved clean and he had a long horseshoe mustache. So what are you asking from the public?
Preeti Varathan
We believe that there's somebody out there with first hand knowledge, whoever's responsible for this. We believe that either somebody close to them, a friend, a family member, somebody has to know who was involved in this. And we're hoping that we get a phone call.
Paula Levine
Is it fair to say that after that press conference, after that plea, that Dominguez didn't get the phone call with the new evidence or the new witness or new information that he was waiting for?
Preeti Varathan
Yeah, I think that's really fair and I think that's what led them to reach out to us at espn.
Paula Levine
Like Ben said, this was an unusual pitch for college game day, but he was intrigued, so he set up a call with the detectives on the case to find out more.
Preeti Varathan
So the case is still open on your end, right? Right, correct. It's still in an open status and we're still working on it. So what's going on right now on your end to advance it? Is there anything, or is it kind of in a lullaby, like, as far as any fresh new leads that came in? No, no, nothing. You know, we're kind of at a standstill. So this is a hypothetical. So you don't, you know, if you can't answer it, that's fine. But how ultimately do you guys think this case is going to get solved? By somebody coming forward and having firsthand knowledge of whoever the perpetrator is or the guy, you know, told somebody what he did. We believe there's somebody out there that knows.
Paula Levine
Here's what Ben knew. The case had gone unsolved for more than a decade, and at the same time, Miami Dade Police were convinced that someone somewhere knew something.
Preeti Varathan
So in September and October, really started to dig in and do a lot more research on Brian on the murder, and then went down towards the end of 2017. So I was making a quick trip down to Miami and started to do initial interviews and then realized this could turn into something big.
Paula Levine
So he began to build a team.
Preeti Varathan
We have a feature producer that lives in Miami. Let me see if he has a willingness to help out or be involved in this project. My name is Dan Arruda. I'm a feature producer with ESPN, and I've been living in South Florida since 2015.
Paula Levine
When you got the call about working on this project, what did you remember of Brian's story?
Preeti Varathan
I clearly remember it being a national sports story, and it led SportsCenter for several days. Brian Pata, senior defensive lineman for Miami, gunned down yesterday at the age of 22.
Paula Levine
So take me back to that at the beginning. Like, how did you start off with this? And you get this call. What do you do next?
Preeti Varathan
I literally just began to pile up interview after interview and just try to gain a stronger kind of understanding of who Brian was and how big, for lack of a better word, his life was and how complicated and layered it was. Brian was the youngest of nine siblings. In the spring of 2018, I interviewed several family members, including Brian's mother, Jeanette, and his twin older brothers, Edric and Edwin. They were the closest in age to Brian, only two years older. We would walk to school together, we would play football together. We would do everything together.
Paula Levine
Tell me about Edwin and Edric.
Preeti Varathan
I think the first thing you notice about Edwin and Edric is their size. These are two guys who played collegiate football, and they carry a certain swagger and confidence with them. I think the second thing you'll notice is just how kind they are. Here I am, I'm coming into their lives asking about the worst memory of their life. There's every chance they'll be guarded and wary about sharing their thoughts with me. But they were as open and as honest as anyone could have hoped for. So for the weeks and months after the shooting, police really tight lipped. Tight lipped. Not telling you much. Not telling you much until this goddamn day. Tight lipped. At what point do you and the family start getting frustrated with the lack of progress three years later down the road, giving us false hope? What do you mean by false hope? Pumping us up. We got it. We're gonna do everything we can. We're gonna do it, and we know who did it. And it was, you know, I think that's just a freaking method that they use to kind of, you know, console the family, you know, kind of get them home, still have hope. They used that for many years until they got silent. So we started calling. The officers weren't answering. So many different damn detectives were assigned to the case. It was just, now, who was this sergeant? Now, God damn, who was this that? Now who was this? Oh, we don't know such and such is assigned to that case. I'm like, wow, what the hell is going on? Confusion.
Paula Levine
What do you remember about meeting Brian Pata's mom?
Preeti Varathan
We met for the first time in 2018. Jeanette was in her 60s at the time and spoke with a thick Haitian accent. She was incredibly warm and kind. What was Brian like when he was a little boy? Brian was funny boy and like to laugh and make a joke, making people, you know, happy, even you, sad. He try to make you happy. Anytime he come into the house, see me laying on in the bed. Mommy, move, move. Mommy, can I get a place to sleep, please? I said go sleep in the couch. No, Mommy, I want to sleep with you. Eventually, our conversation shifted over to the investigation Miami police and her feelings about them.
Paula Levine
What were her feelings about the police?
Preeti Varathan
Frustration. You could just tell she was angry and had lost all her patience with them. Now I'm waiting for an answer. This is over too long. Why did it take so long to find out who killed my son? 11 years. 11 years. Have you kept in touch with the police all these years? What have they told you? Nothing. Sometimes we call, they not answer. They ain't do nothing in the case.
Paula Levine
Jeanette raised Brian and his siblings in Little Haiti, a community in northern Miami with one of the largest concentrations of Haitian Americans in the country. In the 80s and 90s, if there was a headline from Little Haiti, chances are it was a story about crime. The truth is, the family had always feared one of them would die young. They just never thought it would be Brian.
Preeti Varathan
So many people died around us. We were lucky. I expected one of us to get killed. And I remember saying to myself when I got to college, my goodness, thank God that nobody got killed. They said all the time, like, man, nine of us and nobody got killed. Especially with our older brothers, man, you would never think that the last chance child in college his senior year, he'd get killed.
Paula Levine
You would never think it. Especially because Brian had been on track to be a football star for the Patas. Football was supposed to be a way out of Little Haiti. So Edwin played at Florida International University and Florida State. Edric played two seasons at a junior college in San Jose before transferring to Virginia Union University. And Brian, of course, chose the University of Miami. Brian would join the University of Miami at a high point for that school's football program, a program that took kids like Brian from Miami's neighborhoods and turned them into NFL stars, a program known simply as the U.
Preeti Varathan
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Paula Levine
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Paula Levine
a priority, they're committed to being your
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partner in protecting both your people and your facilities. Call 1-800-GRAINGER. Click grainger.com or just stop by. Take a look at Coral Gables. It's a place of doing, of recreation and cultural activity in many forms. It's learning at the University of Miami, where young people of every age study everything from the best of fine arts.
Paula Levine
When you drive from downtown Miami to Coral Gables, it's like you've traveled to a different, more affluent world. Luxury cars fill up parking lots, there are fountains in the middle of the roundabouts, and well manicured lawns surround giant Mediterranean style houses. Coral Gables is its own city, a city built around a medium sized private university, the University of Miami.
Preeti Varathan
The second you drove around this town and you saw how beautiful the place was and you saw the lifestyle that college students have when they're here, it's why it got the reputation as Suntan
Paula Levine
U. Billy Corbin is a lifelong Miamian. He's also the director of 2:30 for 30 films about the University of Miami. He's a little obsessed with the place.
Preeti Varathan
My grandfather graduated from the University of Miami School of law about 70 years ago, before the current campus even existed. He has had season tickets to the Miami Hurricanes since he was a student there 70 years ago. I am also a graduate of the University of Miami. I'm profoundly in debt, not indebted to, but in debt as a result of my attendance at the University of Miami.
Paula Levine
Today, the University of Miami carries the legacy of being a hard hitting, trash talking football program with a chip on its shoulder. Billy says that story began in 1979 when Miami hired Howard Schnellenberger to be their head coach.
Preeti Varathan
It's going to be our objective to move the program forward in such a manner that we can rank with the very best in the country. Howard came in with no resources, with not a lot of money, with not an opportunity to send assistant coaches on the road buying plane tickets so they could go scout players in other states. And then the creative solution was, why don't we recruit Miami and plant our flag here? Well, we recruit heavily in state and heavily in South Florida. The bulk of our talent comes from this area. And that became a real point of pride for a lot of people in Miami.
Paula Levine
And Schnellenberger's strategy, it worked.
Preeti Varathan
Miami's played a great football game. They certainly deserve to be national champions.
Paula Levine
By the end of the 1983 season, Miami's football team won its first national championship ever.
Preeti Varathan
Winning is obviously the best, best pitch you can make to a kid in Liberty City or in Little Haiti just to say, like, come and be a part of this winning Tradition and create an opportunity for yourself, not only from high school to college, but from college to the NFL.
Paula Levine
As the team won, they became notorious for their antics on and off the field. Antics that earned them their national bad boy reputation. Take one incident from 1987 when the Hurricanes played against Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl. The team walked off their plane wearing, top to bottom, military fatigues and sunglasses.
Preeti Varathan
The Miami squad made noise the moment it reached Phoenix.
Paula Levine
They looked like extras in a Rambo movie. The image is iconic. Media coverage at the time tilted strongly against the Hurricanes. Are these guys really thugs, or did
Preeti Varathan
they just put on this kind of
Paula Levine
image for the Fiesta Bowl? Because Miami recruited locally, their team was largely made up of players from Miami's black neighborhoods. Once they were Hurricanes, these players became celebrities almost overnight. When sports reporters would moralize about the team, they'd use code words like inner city, but you could tell they meant black.
Preeti Varathan
Well, they have that reputation because they've had a lot of problems with police. They've had fights with fellow students. They've had. One player was arrested for allegedly hitting his girlfriend.
Paula Levine
Any idea why? I mean, are they just some problem players? They give the excuse to have to
Preeti Varathan
live in a big city, but that doesn't condone anything. We had this college team on the rise, and it was a college team made up predominantly of Miami kids. And it was a major point of pride for everybody in this town, particularly when the team played with an us against the world mentality. And Miami had this us against the world mentality.
Paula Levine
This us against the world mentality would only grow stronger after an NCAA corruption scandal hit the football program in 1995. University of Miami players reportedly took cash prizes for big plays in violation of NCAA rules. The accusations became part of Miami's lore. There were out of control football dorms, run ins with the police, trips to strip clubs on official visits, money, sex, drugs, you name it. The NCAA banned the Canes from playing in a bowl game for one season and hit the team with other sanctions.
Preeti Varathan
The NCAA put the school on three years probation for handing out unauthorized financial aid to football players.
Paula Levine
Their probation undermined the team's standing and performance for a while, but the talent pool of recruits was still strong. By the end of the decade, the Canes were back.
Preeti Varathan
Dorsey play fake, wants it all going to the end zone. Touchdown. Right in stride to Andre Johnson. Great call. These are years in which the Miami Hurricanes should have won three national championships in a row.
Paula Levine
By 2001, Miami fielded what many consider to be the best college football team of all Time.
Preeti Varathan
Well, Miami has erased all doubts about the national champion. They are clearly the national champions of college football in the year 2001.
Paula Levine
Those early 2000s Miami teams had guys like Ed Reed, Jeremy Shockey, Santana Moss, Willis Bugahee, Devin Hester. The list goes on. These were the teams Brian was watching as an elite recruit at Miami Central high school. In 2003, when Brian was a high school senior, he and his brother Edric watched Miami play Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl.
Preeti Varathan
Yeah, we watched the championship game. When they lost, he started to cry. It is fourth down, the final play. Unless they can stick it in the end zone, Darcy, under pressure, throws it incomplete. The Buckeyes win.
Paula Levine
That game cemented Brian's decision to become a Hurricane.
Preeti Varathan
I'm going to that school. That's who I want to play for. I'm going to Miami. I said, all right, make a decision. Yeah, I'm going to Miami. Why was it important for him to go to Miami? He go to Miami because I'm here. That's why. Maybe he don't want to leave me, because sometimes he say, mom, I want you to cook food for me. Anywhere I go, you have to cook for me because I love the food. So that's why.
Paula Levine
From the players and coaches all the way down to the athletic trainers and equipment managers, there are a lot of people who make up a powerhouse college football team. Easily 200. You can feel that when a game is about to start, weighing waves and waves of people pack onto the field. It's part of what makes college football so different from other sports, the sheer numbers. And so within this giant team, you have position groups within defense and offense. Brian played defensive end, and the guys on the defensive line were among his closest friends.
Preeti Varathan
Ladies and gentlemen, this is number 93. Called him Catfish.
Paula Levine
Dwayne Hendricks, aka Catfish, went on to play for the New York Giants. But back in college, Dwayne was on the defensive line with Brian. Eventually, they became roommates.
Preeti Varathan
How did you spend your free time after games? I remember this. Obviously, we would go to, like, small little bars to get wings. Between me and him, we're trying to pound back 50 to 100 wings on average. In the off season, you know, we trained and then, yeah, we went out a little bit to some clubs and things like that. Nothing too extreme.
Paula Levine
As their friendship grew, Brian started inviting Duane to his family's house for dinner.
Preeti Varathan
I remember him bringing me to his mom's house. Haitian people cook the same thing that Jamaicans cook because we had rice and peas. I remember that. And it Tasted the same way. So it brought me back to my high school days. With his family being Haitian and my family being Jamaican, I think we have some of the same values. Work hard, you know, keep your head down. And you get things that you want out of life is because of them the patters. That I didn't get homesick because that was my home. It was my second home. And quite honestly, I didn't call my mom as much as I should have because I already had people. I looked at his mom as my mom. I looked at his brothers as my brothers. Everybody used to think that we were related or we were brothers or something like that.
Paula Levine
That's Eric Bancour. Eric and Brian were actually rivals back when they played for different high schools in Miami.
Preeti Varathan
I thought that I was the number one defensive end in Dade County. And then all of a sudden this dudes ranked ahead of me. And you know, I was mad about it. I was pissed. I used to say his name wrong on purpose. Who was this Payta kid? Like who was Payta? Brian Peda.
Paula Levine
But they became friends when they started playing together on the Hurricanes. Brian gave Eric his nickname.
Preeti Varathan
He was like, edie, this. This is your Haitian name. I was like, all right, man, whatever. So there. Ever, ever since then, everybody been calling me Edie.
Paula Levine
In his junior year, Brian got a camcorder.
Preeti Varathan
University of Miami at night. The dorms over there. And this is the front entrance of this field.
Paula Levine
And started making videos of his time in college.
Preeti Varathan
Get out. Check your boy out good. You know what I mean? Feel me? Check my biceps out.
Paula Levine
He carried that camcorder around everywhere. These tapes capture Brian as a football player hanging out with his teammates before early morning workouts.
Preeti Varathan
What's up, dog? Wake up. We got a long day today, dog. What fucking. We got practice in the morning, class, study hall, practice in the afternoon.
Paula Levine
They capture Brian's love of cars.
Preeti Varathan
But you know, this your boy entertainer, big battle, you know what I'm saying? Just showing y' all my cars and whatnot.
Paula Levine
They capture him joking around on campus.
Preeti Varathan
No bullshit. Don't torn his face. Come here, boy.
Paula Levine
And. And catcalling women on the streets of Miami.
Preeti Varathan
What's up, man? Shake something for the camera. Ain't gonna shake nothing. We ain't got nothing to shake anyway.
Paula Levine
They're a perfect time capsule of Brian's life and that mid 2000s pre smartphone era.
Preeti Varathan
Anything in here. He had that smile though, like that laugh.
Paula Levine
Chris Zellner played tight end and was also one of Brian's friends.
Preeti Varathan
And I'm telling you that shit lit up the room. He made everybody laugh. He was just one of those guys that you wanted to be around, smiling
Paula Levine
and goofy and kind of annoying. That's how a lot of people at the U remembered him. Like Carol Walker, his academic advisor, Brian was a jokester.
Preeti Varathan
If he knew it was something, little thing that annoyed you, but you couldn't be mad at him, he would do it. So for me, it was the gold chain, and it was kind of whatever the charms were. They clanked all the freaking time, and I couldn't stand it. And I was like, put it in your shirt. I'm so tired. But then again, that's how I knew he was coming down the hallway. Brian would go, Ms. Walker. Ms. Walker. And then he would just keep saying it, and I'd be like, do you want anything? And he would just laugh because he knew that got on my nerves.
Paula Levine
Brian's mischievous sense of humor stood out on the team. That and his love for his mom. He'd put his daily phone calls with her on speaker so his teammates could hear. Here's his teammate, Dave Howell.
Preeti Varathan
And you would hear her talking, and I was like, oh, she sounds so sweet. You know, she would. She'd always be asking him, did you eat? You know, how are you doing? How was your day? You know? And just the level of affection he showed to his mom, and he demonstrated it to everybody. He didn't just kind of hide in a corner like, oh, hey, mom, just calling you real quick. He showed. And anybody who you speak to knew, you know, his mom.
Paula Levine
On the outside, Brian seemed carefree. He could make anyone laugh. His family and teammates loved him. He was about to celebrate his first anniversary with his girlfriend, Jada Brody. He had every expectation of going to the NFL, but there was also this. In the months before his death, something had been troubling Brian.
Preeti Varathan
There was something bothering him, and he was trying to say it, you know, but he didn't know how to express it and tell us. He didn't want to burden you with it, but he kept it in. And then this was the thing that hurt us, man. It was like, man, if you just would open up, just tell us what the heck is going on. So did somebody threaten you? Don't worry about it, man.
Paula Levine
But he did tell his brother that he was having nightmares.
Preeti Varathan
I keep getting away, man, but they keep chasing me, you know, like bad nightmares. I don't really. I think his girlfriend said that at the time that she would wake up, see Brian sleeping in the closet, you know, because he's fighting These things in his dreams, in his sleep.
Paula Levine
He never told his brother who might be chasing him. But Edric knew the reason Brian might have felt safe sleeping in his closet. It was because of what he kept in there.
Preeti Varathan
He would go in the closet and just be hiding and, you know, he would go, try to go grab his gun, you know, his concealed weapons that he had.
Paula Levine
When Brian gave that tour to Manny Navarro, the Miami Herald reporter, weeks before his death, there was something in the apartment he didn't want on video.
Preeti Varathan
I gotta hide my guns, man. Well, you got licenses for him, right? Yeah, I got a license, I got a gun. That's straight. Then you know what? Oh, don't. Don't add them the gun thing on the paper or whatnot, please. No, it's not gonna be the paper. All right.
Paula Levine
The thing is, Brian Pata wasn't the only one on the team with a gun.
Preeti Varathan
Reserve safety Willie Cooper was shot and slightly wounded outside his off campus apartment by a gunman hiding in the bushes. We carried him from protection because you just never know when you need it.
Paula Levine
That's next time on Murder at the U. And later this season.
Preeti Varathan
An hour before he died, he was on the phone arguing with somebody. Well, come and get it then. You know where you can find me. I'm actually getting a little bit uncomfortable with this whole thing. He had $14,000 cash in the car. And I said, something ain't right. This is an assassination, and there's more
Paula Levine
to this than meets the eye.
Preeti Varathan
A lot of people thought we had a killer amongst us. I stopped looking into it because I was warned that these people will literally come up in your house and kill your family. Does MDPD know who killed Brian Potter?
Paula Levine
Murder at the U is based on reporting by me, Paula Levine and Dan Aruda, with support from Scott Frankel, Elizabeth Merrill, and ESPN's investigative unit. Our senior producer is Matt Fraseka. Our senior editorial producer is Preeti Varathan. Our associate producers are Megan Coyle and Gus Navarro. Story editing by Adeza Egan. Additional editing by Ben Weber and Mike Drago. Our archival producer is Matthew Fisher. Our line producer is Kath Senke. Production managers are Jason Schwartz and Sheena Williams. Fact checking by David Sabino. Original music and sound design by Ryan Ross Smith. Chris Buckle is vice president of ESPN investigative enterprise and digital journalism. Marcia Cook, Brian Lockhart, Heather Anderson and Burke Magnus are executive producers for 30 for 30,
Preeti Varathan
SA.
Release Date: February 12, 2026
Host: ESPN, with Paula Levine and Preeti Varathan
The premiere episode of “Murder at the U” introduces listeners to the 2006 murder of University of Miami football player Brian Pata, a case that remained unsolved for nearly two decades. Through immersive storytelling, the episode retraces Brian’s last weeks, his vibrant life, and the frustrations and suspicions that clouded the investigation. It also details how ESPN became involved and set out to uncover the truth, culminating in renewed attention and an impending trial.
The episode balances nostalgia, hope, and deep sorrow, mirroring the vitality and complexity of Brian Pata’s life and the deep pain left by his unsolved murder. Through candid interviews and archival sound, it evokes both the exuberance of the Miami Hurricanes star and the crushing frustration of his family. The show is intimate and reflective, drawing listeners into the world of Miami athletics, community tension, and the enduring search for justice.
The episode closes by hinting at deeper mysteries around Brian’s death—large sums of cash, tense arguments, warnings to reporters, and the sense that the real story has yet to be told. The investigation’s twists, questions about the team’s safety, and a trial nearly 20 years later set the stage for the rest of the season.