This is outstanding!!! Once the sentencing is complete I wonder if the details of the timeline will come out.
Justice finally caught up with the former Mrs. Williams!
If she had not pushed the kidnapping issue with Brian, I don’t think he would have turned on her. She pushed for him to get a lengthy prison sentence - and it but her in the bootay.
^^snipThe hole in the story that is not filled in for me yet is that Mike's truck was left at the boat launch. I can see Brian undoing the boat trailer and leaving it at the boat launch and coming back with Mike's truck and hitching the trailer back up to the truck. But if it happened like that, how did Brian get back from the boat launch?
Did Brian Winchester say anything about the waders, flashlight, and vest containing Mike Williams hunting license that were found in the lake 6 months after he vanished? Wondering who planted those since their discovery was used by Denise to have Mike declared legally dead.
Mother a driving force in finding answers to son's 2000 disappearanceDid Brian Winchester say anything about the waders, flashlight, and vest containing Mike Williams hunting license that were found in the lake 6 months after he vanished? Wondering who planted those since their discovery was used by Denise to have Mike declared legally dead.
Mother a driving force in finding answers to son's 2000 disappearance
Oct 20, 2018
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Six months after he went missing, a local fisherman found a pair of waders in Lake Seminole. And two days later, Williams' fishing jacket, hunting license and a flashlight were found at the same spot.
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Six months after Mike Williams disappeared investigators had no new leads and no real hope of finding him. And then, what could be a break bubbled up from the muck of Lake Seminole.
Alton Ranew [on an airboat]: That pole is markin' a spot where the waders had popped up.
A local fisherman found a pair of waders -- waterproof pants with attached boots -- which were believed to have belonged to Williams.
Richard Schlesinger [on an airboat]: Did it makes sense to you that they popped up here? I mean ...you had searched that area, right?
Alton Ranew: We had searched it many times.
Richard Schlesinger Well?
Alton Ranew: Very well.
Then, two days after that, Mike's fishing jacket and his hunting license were found at the same spot, along with a flashlight.
But Williams was still missing. His wife Denise was raising their 2-year-old daughter, alone.
Clay Ketcham: Denise was a doting mother. … the pride and joy of her life.
But Scott Dungey says now that Denise was a single mom, money was getting tight.
Scott Dungey: I was helping her with some of the items that needed to be sold and to generate some cash until the insurance money came.
And there was a lot of insurance money involved. Williams had three policies worth more than $1.75 million.
Patti Ketcham: Mike wanted to make sure his family was taken care of because Mike hunted and fished and did some pretty high risk activity … And Clay really encouraged him to load up.
With her expenses reportedly mounting, Denise went after the insurance money quickly.
Jennifer Portman: While the search, itself, is still going on, while he is still actively missing, they're still actively searching for him -- she is going and filing a claim against his life insurance.
Jennifer Portman has covered this case for the Tallahassee Democrat and is a "48 Hours" consultant.
Jennifer Portman: She was really ready to accept the fact that he was missing and presumed dead very early on.
But the State of Florida was not. According to Florida law, since there was no proof Williams had died, he would not be declared dead for five years. Denise did not want to wait that long to collect on Mike's life insurance.
Richard Schlesinger: And how much time did it take in this case?
Jennifer Portman: It took six months. It was very fast-- abnormally fast.
That's because Denise's attorney argued to a judge that the waders, the vest and the hunting license were proof enough that Williams was dead. The judge agreed and issued a death certificate. Cause of death: "Accidental drowning while duck hunting on Lake Seminole -- body has not yet been recovered."
Jennifer Portman: Based on that and that alone was what got him declared dead.
Richard Schlesinger: A pair of waders and a fishing license and some other stuff.
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Richard Schlesinger: How many days before the court hearing these waders popped up?
Jennifer Portman: Less than a month. I mean, it was really close.
They had supposedly been submerged in the lake for six months.
Alton Ranew | Florida Fish and Wildlife Officer: These waders was -- in very good shape. They were also not slimy.
Richard Schlesinger: And what did that mean?
Alton Ranew: That they had not been in the water very long.
And there was something about that flashlight they also found: it still worked.
Scott Dungey: I went to turn it on thinking there's no way it's gonna turn on, and lo and behold, it worked [laughs]. And so I was like, "Man, I need to get me one of these."
Richard Schlesinger: So you looked at that stuff and you thought to yourself what?
Derrick Wester: Planted.
Richard Schlesinger: It was planted?
Derrick Wester: Uh-huh [affirms].
No one could say for sure who planted it but, as time passed, Denise Williams and Brian Winchester started attracting attention and some suspicion, because years after Mike disappeared, Winchester divorced his wife Kathy. He began dating Denise. And then he married her.
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Were the waders, jacket, flashlight and hunting license planted?Thanks for those links SeesSeas! Still wondering if Brian Winchester was ever directly asked about planting evidence. Seems odd the waders and jacket weren't found during the extensive initial search only to be found months later in plain sight and surprisingly good condition. He seemed to be honest in his confession, so if he answered No to planting evidence, then maybe those really were the waders Mike wiggled out of and perhaps Denise stopped by and tossed just the jacket with license into the lake after the waders were found.
Were the waders, jacket, flashlight and hunting license planted?
I don't recall Brian being asked or testifying that those items were planted.
I recall Brian testifying that he planted the hat during the initial search DEC 2000.
I watched most of the trial testimony, but not all of it.
I don't have several hours of spare time to re-watch Brian Winchester's horrifying yet fascinating testimony.
Here is the 12/14/2018 news report about that testimony. . . . indicating that all of the evidence was planted by Winchester:
Denise Williams murder trial updates: Jurors have reached a verdict
Published 9:18 a.m. ET Dec. 14, 2018 | Updated 7:30 p.m. ET Dec. 14, 2018
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Over four days, witnesses recounted the search for Williams that lasted for months and the finding of pieces of evidence - a hunting jacket, hat, waders and Williams' hunting license and boat - which had been planted at Lake Seminole by Winchester.
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