In a gut-wrenching moment that left jurors visibly shaken and family members fleeing the courtroom, newly released audio and video evidence from inside Tanner Horner’s FedEx van has exposed the cold, methodical actions of the killer in the immediate aftermath of murdering little Athena Strand — and his bizarre, almost casual reaction when he learned authorities were hunting for the missing 7-year-old.
The disturbing recordings, played during the punishment phase of Horner’s capital murder trial in Fort Worth, paint a horrifying picture of a 250-pound man who had just taken the life of a trusting 67-pound child, then went about cleaning up the gruesome mess in his delivery truck as if it were just another routine stop on his route.
On November 30, 2022, Horner pulled up to the Strand family home in rural Wise County, Texas, to deliver a Christmas package. What should have been an ordinary moment turned deadly. Surveillance and in-van footage captured Athena approaching the van. Moments later, the door closed behind her. Horner told her not to scream or he would hurt her. The camera was then deliberately covered, but the audio kept rolling — capturing more than an hour of the unimaginable struggle as the little girl fought for her life with what prosecutors described as “the strength of 100 men.”
Jurors heard the sounds no parent should ever imagine: cries, screams, banging, and the final, desperate fight of a 7-year-old facing certain death. The audio was so graphic that some local news livestreams briefly went dark, and Athena’s family left the courtroom before it played. One prosecutor had warned earlier: “You’re going to hear what a 250-pound man can do to a 67-pound child.” The warning proved chillingly accurate.
But the horror didn’t end with the killing.

After dumping Athena’s body in the Trinity River several miles away, Horner made a calculated stop at a Love’s truck stop. Video shown to the jury captured the former delivery driver, still wearing his FedEx shirt, stepping out of the van, returning with a spray bottle and a roll of paper towels, and then methodically scrubbing the floor in the rear of the vehicle.
On the audio, Horner can be heard casually telling someone on the phone, “It kind of smells like barf in here.” He lied smoothly, claiming he had thrown up after eating something that didn’t agree with him. In reality, according to his own later statements to investigators, he was cleaning up his own vomit mixed with Athena’s feces — evidence of the terror and trauma the child endured in her final moments.
The cold efficiency with which Horner tidied the crime scene — wiping away physical traces of the abduction and murder — has stunned observers and strengthened the prosecution’s push for the death penalty. It was not the panicked reaction of a man who claimed he “accidentally” hit the girl with his van and then strangled her in a fit of fear. It was the calculated behavior of someone determined to cover his tracks.
Even more jaw-dropping was Horner’s reaction when he received a radio call or dispatch alert about a child reported missing in the exact area where he had just committed the crime.
Instead of panic, evasion, or silence, Horner sounded genuinely surprised — almost casually interested — as he responded to the report. His tone suggested shock that authorities were already searching, as if he hadn’t fully anticipated the swift response or the community-wide alarm that would follow his actions. The contrast between the methodical cleanup just minutes earlier and this seemingly startled reaction has left many in the courtroom questioning the depth of his remorse and the truth behind his shifting stories.
Horner initially told investigators he accidentally struck Athena with the van, panicked when she threatened to tell her father, and then kidnapped and strangled her inside the truck to keep her quiet. He later admitted more details, including leading police to the body. But the audio and video evidence have dismantled any notion of a simple “meltdown.” They reveal a man who covered the camera, carried out the killing, disposed of the body, cleaned the van, and then reacted with surprise when the world started looking for the little girl he had just erased.
The timing makes it even more devastating. Just days before the murder, Horner had delivered another package to the Strand home — a “You Can Be Anything” Barbie doll set that Athena had excitedly anticipated for Christmas. The irony is sickening: the man who delivered a symbol of limitless potential to a joyful child later returned to snuff out that potential forever.
Athena’s father, Jacob Strand, took the stand earlier in the day, describing his overwhelming guilt, the 50-pound weight loss, battles with alcohol and sleepless nights, and the simple joy of his daughter’s laugh. “She loved everybody,” he said softly, his words cutting through the courtroom like a knife. Athena’s mother, Maitlyn Gandy, had testified the day before, expressing her deep sorrow for not being there to protect her daughter and vowing to be the child’s voice.
The new evidence comes as the prosecution has rested its case in the sentencing phase. Jurors must now decide whether Horner deserves death by lethal injection or life without parole. The defense is expected to argue mitigating factors, including Horner’s mental state, but the visual and auditory proof of his post-murder actions — the calm scrubbing of the van floor, the casual lie about vomit, and the surprised reaction to the missing-child alert — may prove insurmountable.
For the Strand family and the North Texas community, these recordings are more than evidence. They are a brutal window into the final chapter of Athena’s short life and the calculated steps her killer took to try to escape justice. The pear tree Athena once climbed still stands as a quiet memorial for her father. Holidays remain haunted by the unopened gifts and the laughter that will never return.
Horner’s guilty plea came just hours before the trial was set to begin, but the punishment phase has forced the full, unfiltered truth into the open. The audio of the struggle, the video of the cleanup at the truck stop, and the killer’s own words have transformed a tragic headline into an unforgettable portrait of evil.
As the jury deliberates Horner’s fate, one thing is painfully clear: the man who delivered death to a 7-year-old girl didn’t just kill her. He methodically tried to erase every trace — until the audio kept rolling and the cameras kept watching. His surprised reaction when the world began searching for Athena may have been the only genuine emotion he showed that day.
The little girl who loved everybody is gone. The pain her family carries remains. And the recordings released in that Fort Worth courtroom have ensured that Tanner Horner’s attempt to clean up his crime will be remembered as one of the coldest, most damning moments in a trial already filled with unimaginable horror.
Justice for Athena Strand now rests in the hands of twelve jurors who have heard and seen what no one should ever have to. The cleanup is over. The evidence is in. The only question left is whether the man who scrubbed away the evidence of his evil will ever walk free again.
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