Nearly two decades of not knowing had been a burden
Nearly eighteen years after two people were killed during an armed robbery at a North Carolina bottling company, the long silence of an unsolved case has finally broken. Johnny Steven Talbert, found living in Washington state, now faces the weight of charges that connect him to the 2008 deaths of Donna Barnhardt and Darrell Noles — an office manager and a job seeker whose lives ended on an ordinary morning. The arrest is a testament to the quiet persistence of investigators who refused to let the passage of time become a verdict of its own.
- For nearly two decades, the families of two victims carried the particular grief of not knowing — a wound that time alone could not close.
- Advanced DNA testing and a methodical reexamination of preserved evidence finally cracked open a case that had gone cold for eighteen years.
- Detectives traveled three thousand miles to Port Angeles, Washington, to arrest Johnny Steven Talbert, 43, bringing the investigation to a sudden and dramatic turning point.
- Talbert now sits in custody without bond, awaiting extradition to North Carolina to face two counts of first-degree murder and one count of armed robbery.
- Authorities are guarding the details of their breakthrough carefully, determined to protect the integrity of a prosecution nearly two decades in the making.
On a June morning in 2008, two people were killed at the Sun Drop Bottling Company in Concord, North Carolina. Donna Barnhardt, the office manager, and Darrell Noles, a man who had come seeking work, were both shot dead during what investigators believed was an armed robbery. The gunman took money and vanished. A composite sketch was released. Tips were followed. Evidence was preserved. The case remained open — but it did not move.
Then, late last year, detectives began reexamining the evidence with fresh eyes and newer forensic tools. The slow, methodical work eventually yielded results. By May, they had enough. Johnny Steven Talbert, 43, was arrested in Port Angeles, Washington — roughly three thousand miles from the scene of the crime. He now faces two counts of first-degree murder and one count of armed robbery, and is being held without bond pending extradition.
Barnhardt was 59 when she died. Noles was 44. Both were pronounced dead at the scene. The investigation never officially closed, but it had stalled for years as detectives continued submitting evidence for testing as forensic science advanced. Police have not disclosed what specific breakthrough led them to Talbert, citing the need to protect the prosecution.
The family of one victim released a statement thanking investigators for their unwavering commitment, acknowledging that nearly two decades of uncertainty had been a heavy burden. The resolution, they said, brought long-awaited answers and a measure of peace. The case that became known as the Sun Drop Murders is no longer cold.
On a June morning in 2008, two people were shot dead at the Sun Drop Bottling Company in Concord, North Carolina. Donna Barnhardt, who managed the office there, and Darrell Noles, a man who had come to apply for work, were both killed in what police believed was an armed robbery. The gunman took money from the front office and disappeared. For nearly eighteen years, the case went unsolved. Detectives released a composite sketch based on witness descriptions of a man seen leaving on foot. Tips came in. Evidence was preserved. But the killer remained free.
Then, in December of last year, something shifted. Concord police detectives had been methodically reexamining the evidence as new forensic technologies became available. They pursued leads that had previously gone nowhere. The work paid off. By May, they had enough to act. Johnny Steven Talbert, 43 years old, was arrested in Port Angeles, Washington—roughly three thousand miles from the bottling plant where the murders occurred. He now faces two counts of first-degree murder and one count of armed robbery. He is being held without bond in Washington, awaiting extradition back to North Carolina.
The arrest represents what Concord police called a major breakthrough in a case that had defined the department's cold case work for nearly two decades. Barnhardt had been 59 when she died. Noles was 44. Both were pronounced dead at the scene. The investigation never closed, but it had stalled. Detectives continued to submit evidence for testing as DNA analysis and other forensic methods advanced. The persistence eventually bore fruit, though police have not disclosed the specific evidence or investigative technique that led them to Talbert.
Concord detectives traveled to Port Angeles on May 18 to coordinate with local law enforcement there. The case remains active, and authorities have declined to release further details, citing the need to protect the integrity of the prosecution and the ongoing pursuit of justice. The family of one of the victims released a statement expressing gratitude for the police department's "unwavering commitment" over the years. They acknowledged that nearly two decades of not knowing had been a burden—that the resolution, while it cannot undo loss, has brought "long-awaited answers and a measure of peace."
Talbert will now face the legal process that leads either to trial or to a negotiated resolution. He remains in custody in Washington pending the extradition hearing that will send him back to North Carolina to face the charges. The case that became known as the Sun Drop Murders, named for the facility where it occurred, is no longer cold.
Citas Notables
For nearly two decades, investigators and supporting personnel demonstrated an unwavering commitment to seeking answers and pursuing justice.— Barnhardt family statement
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What made this case finally break after so long?
The detectives never stopped. They kept submitting evidence as the science improved—DNA testing got better, databases got bigger. Eventually something in that old evidence matched something new.
So it wasn't a new witness or a confession?
The police haven't said. They're being careful about what they reveal, probably because the case still has to go to trial. But the statement said they reexamined evidence and pursued "previously undeveloped leads." That suggests they found something in the old material that they couldn't have found before.
Eighteen years is a long time for a family to wait.
It is. Barnhardt's family said in their statement that the investigators never forgot about it, never let it become just another closed file. That matters to people who've lost someone.
Do we know anything about Talbert or why he was in Washington?
Not yet. Police haven't released those details. He's 43 now, so he would have been in his mid-twenties when the murders happened. But beyond that, it's unclear how he ended up three thousand miles away or how long he's been there.
What happens next?
Extradition back to North Carolina, then prosecution. Two first-degree murder charges and armed robbery. The case will move from cold to active in the courts.