0:00 [SPEAKER_08]: We first received information from a confidential source and confirmed it through some family members that by the way, no one seen Abraham since April the 7th. 0:10 [SPEAKER_08]: We initially thought maybe he left because he was tired of people tugging at him all the time. 0:17 [SPEAKER_08]: But as the investigation goes on, we've been through Christmas in New Years. 0:23 [SPEAKER_08]: He's had absolutely no contact with his mother and his eight-year-old son, which we understand he loves dearly. 0:30 [SPEAKER_08]: we suspect the worst. 0:32 [SPEAKER_08]: If Abraham's alive and well someplace and sees this broadcast simply let us know that you're alive and well and confirm that, we won't tell anyone where you are if you want to remain anonymous. 0:45 [SPEAKER_08]: We just want to close our investigation and go on to something else. 0:49 [SPEAKER_06]: Listener, what is the lottery represent to most people? 0:54 [SPEAKER_06]: Isn't a line at the convenience store? 0:56 [SPEAKER_06]: A few crumpled bills, a moment of fantasy where an ordinary life might suddenly become something else. 1:03 [SPEAKER_06]: A chance to escape dead, stress, the crushing wheel of life, a chance to be free. 1:10 [SPEAKER_06]: For a few seconds, when the numbers line up, 1:13 [SPEAKER_06]: It can feel like destiny has intervened. 1:15 [SPEAKER_06]: Like luck has finally chosen your name. 1:18 [SPEAKER_06]: But money does not arrive in a vacuum. 1:21 [SPEAKER_06]: It brings attention, sometimes unwanted. 1:24 [SPEAKER_06]: It brings expectations that are sometimes hard to meet. 1:28 [SPEAKER_06]: It brings people who see opportunity. 1:30 [SPEAKER_06]: It turns private lives into public stories. 1:34 [SPEAKER_06]: It can transform generosity into vulnerability. 1:37 [SPEAKER_06]: and it can quietly reshape a person's world until nothing feels familiar. 1:42 [SPEAKER_06]: Tonight's story begins with a winning ticket, and a man never asked to become wealthy. 1:47 [SPEAKER_06]: It follows the slow unseen consequences of sudden fortune. 1:52 [SPEAKER_06]: The pressure, the isolation, the promises that sound like protection, the trust placed in the wrong hands. 1:59 [SPEAKER_06]: This is nice story about glamour or celebration. 2:03 [SPEAKER_06]: It is about what happens after the camera's leave and the novelty fades about how a dream can become a nightmare and how luck left unguarded can become something dangerous. 2:15 [SPEAKER_06]: This is a story about money, trust, and the quiet road from hope to tragedy. 2:20 [SPEAKER_06]: Alright, let's get on with it. 2:24 [SPEAKER_01]: Welcome, listener. 2:26 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm glad you're here. 2:28 [SPEAKER_01]: Take a seat. 2:29 [SPEAKER_01]: Next to the fire. 2:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Welcome to Obscura, where we shine a light on the dark. 3:02 [SPEAKER_11]: Thank you. 3:03 [SPEAKER_05]: You know that? 3:04 [SPEAKER_11]: Me for perfect, but you don't protect me. 3:07 [SPEAKER_11]: You don't do something. 3:08 [SPEAKER_11]: You don't care about kills. 3:09 [SPEAKER_11]: You don't care. 3:10 [SPEAKER_11]: You don't think the big deal. 3:11 [SPEAKER_11]: You think I'm done this. 3:13 [SPEAKER_11]: You think I'm done this? 3:14 [SPEAKER_11]: You think I'm done this? 3:15 [SPEAKER_13]: You think I'm done this? 3:16 [SPEAKER_13]: You think I'm done this? 3:17 [SPEAKER_13]: You think I'm done this? 3:18 [SPEAKER_13]: You think I'm done this? 3:18 [SPEAKER_13]: I don't think I'm going to get shot. 3:20 [SPEAKER_13]: And we're up here. 3:21 [SPEAKER_13]: If you can come to Bangalore, you can come to visit anyone. 3:24 [SPEAKER_03]: I'll let it on. 3:24 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm not going to yell in that show. 3:25 [SPEAKER_03]: I haven't. 3:26 [SPEAKER_03]: I haven't met you yet. 3:27 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 3:28 [SPEAKER_03]: Other than meeting on the parking lot. 3:30 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 3:30 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's not get off to the baddest though. 3:32 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 3:33 [SPEAKER_03]: I think we got some things to talk about. 3:36 [SPEAKER_03]: Obviously, I've only been involved with the information and telling this whole thing for about five days now. 3:44 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 3:45 [SPEAKER_03]: I don't have 10 months of knowledge like protective walls and detective Clark, okay. 3:51 [SPEAKER_03]: When you're talking about two agencies involved with each other, we have unlimited resources. 3:56 [SPEAKER_03]: We can find out and accomplish anything we want to do as a collective agency together. 4:01 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, now I rely on them because this pretty much has been their investigation. 4:10 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, I have lied to them because I've been scared of this man and they don't believe me as representation. 4:16 [SPEAKER_12]: I thought they kept asking me, they knew I was keeping something from them, they knew I kept I'm something. 4:22 [SPEAKER_12]: They're not telling them everything because I'm really scared, they don't believe me as if they think you're 4:28 [SPEAKER_12]: protection and I tell them after last night I didn't care what I found out and I didn't even really die and quit in here. 4:36 [SPEAKER_11]: I know the red dead myself. 4:38 [SPEAKER_11]: I don't care, I don't want him in jail. 4:42 [SPEAKER_13]: All right, time out, time out, time out. 4:45 [SPEAKER_06]: The Reese, Emma Dunnigan Moore, commonly known as DD Moore, was born on July 25, 1972, at St. Joseph's Hospital. 4:55 [SPEAKER_06]: She's spent her early childhood in Riverview, Florida, on Happy Acres Lane. 5:00 [SPEAKER_06]: Her mother, Lynda Dunnigan, described her as a gleeful and outgoing child who participated enthusiastically in Brownies, Girl Scouts, cheerleading, and Missionette's Bible studies. 5:12 [SPEAKER_06]: The family attended church on Wednesdays and Sundays, when Dorees was seven years old. 5:17 [SPEAKER_06]: The Dunnigan family moved to a modest rural home, on Turkey Creek Road in Plant City, Florida. 5:23 [SPEAKER_06]: She fell embarrassed by the family's limited means, and their older vehicles during her school years in the plant city area. 5:30 [SPEAKER_06]: Her mother, Linda Dunnigan, 5:32 [SPEAKER_06]: Worked as a certified nursing assistant, Dorees, followed in her footsteps, became a certified nursing assistant herself on August 12, 1991. 5:42 [SPEAKER_06]: Her license remained active as late as 2010. 5:46 [SPEAKER_06]: She worked with developmentally disabled clients, and was remembered by some as generous, often providing extra money, food and attention to those she served. 6:01 [SPEAKER_12]: The guy names the Ronald who got all the things in. 6:04 [SPEAKER_12]: He even threatened. 6:08 [SPEAKER_12]: James Shakespeare, I talk to him. 6:11 [SPEAKER_12]: He threatened him. 6:14 [SPEAKER_12]: James called me because he got a threat from Ronald too. 6:17 [SPEAKER_12]: He threatened so bad that he had the chance to part it. 6:20 [SPEAKER_12]: And follow a father. 6:21 [SPEAKER_03]: Five days of catching up with this stuff. 6:23 [SPEAKER_03]: I've seen a lot of the interviews. 6:26 [SPEAKER_03]: I saw your interview from Monday night. 6:28 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 6:28 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm going to send you a right from the start. 6:31 [SPEAKER_03]: And let you know, I'm not going to sit here and listen to more twists and turns. 6:36 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, we're not going to go down different roads and have some. 6:39 [SPEAKER_03]: Because I don't need to write that. 6:40 [SPEAKER_03]: I think I'll layer me up. 6:42 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, I'm going to, I'm going to sit here and listen to you. 6:45 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, I want to hear from you, but I want to promise it by telling you, I'm not going to be let down the roll path, I'm not going to be let astray because I'm not going to spend my wills and waste my time and I'm not going to waste full county's time because you know a lot we don't need to, a lot of our questions have been answered now and now it's time to lay everything out on the table and get to the bottom of it. 7:09 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, and I have my opinion a lot of detective Wallace and we're pretty much on the same date No, he doesn't touch off the mint, didn't they like to come down? 7:18 [SPEAKER_03]: Did you hear the part that he said we're on the same page? 7:21 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, huh? 7:22 [SPEAKER_03]: He put some stuff. 7:23 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 7:23 [SPEAKER_03]: And we're on the same page. 7:24 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, so let's just get that clear. 7:26 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 7:27 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:27 [SPEAKER_11]: Let's just get that clear. 7:29 [SPEAKER_11]: All right? 7:29 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's just get that clear. 7:30 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:31 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's just get that clear. 7:31 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's just get that clear. 7:33 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:33 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's just get that clear. 7:36 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:36 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's just get that clear. 7:38 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:39 [SPEAKER_03]: We're going to cut it off right there. 7:42 [SPEAKER_03]: All right? 7:42 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's not waste our time anymore. 7:44 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's not waste this time. 7:45 [SPEAKER_03]: Let's not waste my time. 7:47 [SPEAKER_03]: All right. 7:47 [SPEAKER_06]: On May 1st, 1992, the Reese married James Drowmore in Hillsborough County, Florida. 7:54 [SPEAKER_06]: The couple had a son, Robert James Moore, known as RJ, born on January 13, 1995. 8:02 [SPEAKER_06]: The marriage faced ongoing financial strain, records show a mortgage of $48,000 on a mobile home in plant city, dated January 10, 2000, in an eviction from a rented home, in Dover, in July 2001. 8:17 [SPEAKER_06]: Dorees worked various sales jobs during this period, including as an external regional sales 8:24 [SPEAKER_06]: claiming $10,000 for month and earnings, and as a Mary K. Cosmetic seller, claiming $30,000 annually, she also ran small businesses selling pre-paid next-door phones. 8:36 [SPEAKER_06]: Her criminal record began before the major 2001 incident. 8:40 [SPEAKER_11]: We're being monocidized, right? 8:42 [SPEAKER_11]: You think I did it, baby? 8:43 [SPEAKER_11]: I'll be an innocent person who's got to go to jail. 8:48 [SPEAKER_03]: You need to stop. 8:51 [SPEAKER_03]: For what I didn't listen to me. 8:53 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 8:53 [SPEAKER_03]: That alone. 8:54 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 8:54 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, James came back two hours late when you he met you there. 8:58 [SPEAKER_03]: He dug the hole listen to me don't say no the word April 17 that you there you all the moment there. 9:04 [SPEAKER_03]: He dug the hole. 9:05 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, you you were there alone nobody else was around He called you called him back at 5.52. 9:11 [SPEAKER_03]: I have a little bit of the phone records. 9:14 [SPEAKER_03]: You know this Okay, I know exactly where you were at. 9:17 [SPEAKER_03]: I know where he was at. 9:18 [SPEAKER_03]: I know where everybody was at 9:19 [SPEAKER_03]: It's 5.52, you call them back, teaching me back over to the house. 9:23 [SPEAKER_03]: He built a little back in. 9:24 [SPEAKER_03]: He was only one there. 9:25 [SPEAKER_03]: You were hot and sweaty. 9:27 [SPEAKER_03]: The whole word Abraham was found in yesterday. 9:29 [SPEAKER_03]: There were no other rules done there. 9:31 [SPEAKER_03]: We've got anthropologists out there. 9:33 [SPEAKER_03]: The color of the soil changes. 9:35 [SPEAKER_03]: When you fill back in holes, they don't... 9:37 [SPEAKER_03]: The one line, one stalk. 9:39 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay. 9:40 [SPEAKER_03]: We had pictures. 9:41 [SPEAKER_03]: We had video. 9:42 [SPEAKER_03]: Listen to me. 9:43 [SPEAKER_03]: We had pictures. 9:44 [SPEAKER_03]: We had video. 9:45 [SPEAKER_03]: there's no down, there was only a blindfold, don't get in that area. 9:48 [SPEAKER_03]: That's the little word Abraham Shakespeare's body was found yesterday, no one at, okay. 9:52 [SPEAKER_03]: The, I don't hate you, I hate you, okay. 9:55 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm telling you right now, I like your family, I like RJ, because the sake of your son, okay. 10:02 [SPEAKER_03]: You made him a steak. 10:04 [SPEAKER_06]: In 1999, she faced a shoplifting arrest in Polk County, with a judication with home. 10:14 [SPEAKER_06]: In 2001, she was sentenced to 12 months probation, paid $498.60 in restitution, and $100 in court costs for writing a worthless check, a $418.16 10:29 [SPEAKER_06]: Hit the Hillsborough County Tax Collector. 10:32 [SPEAKER_06]: The most notable early crime occurred in 2001, Doris purchased a $50,000-$2,000 leak in Navigator. 10:41 [SPEAKER_06]: After falling behind on payments totaling nearly $6,500, she totaled on Officer Quote, you're not taking my car. 10:49 [SPEAKER_06]: I'll do anything I have to to keep it. 10:51 [SPEAKER_06]: In June 2001, she reported a fake kidnapping and rape. 10:56 [SPEAKER_06]: She claimed two Mexican men abducted her from a post office, bound her with tape, raped her, stole her jewelry, and dumped her in a ditch, while advising her to die her hair blonde. 11:08 [SPEAKER_06]: She saw hospital treatment and investigators collected her clothing and fingernail scrapings. 11:13 [SPEAKER_06]: The story unraveled through inconsistencies and witness statements, 11:17 [SPEAKER_06]: She had been banned from selling next-to-products due to fraud and accomplice, Clement Bonilla, admitted driving her to the location where she taped her own wrists and threw herself from the vehicle. 11:30 [SPEAKER_06]: Another person was paid to hide in the navigator. 11:32 [SPEAKER_06]: She had tried to frame a former employee. 11:35 [SPEAKER_06]: She pled no contest to a misdemeanor charge, related to false rapport and insurance fraud, receiving one year probation. 11:43 [SPEAKER_06]: She filed for chapter seven bankruptcy with James Moore on December 17th, 2002, which was discharged on July 7th, 2003. 11:51 [SPEAKER_03]: I think I wanted jail for a long time, and I'd take the round and say they did something to Abraham Shakespeare. 11:59 [SPEAKER_03]: For a great day, he knows somebody. 12:00 [SPEAKER_03]: He knows underdiver off certain lake rails, Mike Smith, you know. 12:04 [SPEAKER_03]: I guess we'll meet at the Carlos, that is my car. 12:07 [SPEAKER_03]: I don't want to go wrong, sir. 12:08 [SPEAKER_03]: Well, you know, that's the same guy that you tried to say was one of the people who called the other night, who was about to shout out. 12:14 [SPEAKER_03]: So anyway, give me with him. 12:16 [SPEAKER_03]: You're going to pay in $10,000 now, $40,000 over the rest of the year, to say that he killed Abraham Shakespeare, but there's only one problem. 12:24 [SPEAKER_03]: And it comes time for him to confess to this man, or to me, just what he's going to have to do, he's going to introduce some body. 12:31 [SPEAKER_03]: More importantly, he might even have freaks to go. 12:34 [SPEAKER_03]: So you need to write on Monday morning. 12:36 [SPEAKER_03]: Right over there in place, India turned to creek. 12:38 [SPEAKER_03]: What you mean is the mile we get with, then you need to move our church to creek. 12:43 [SPEAKER_03]: And then you go down to your mom's house, you go a few places, I watch it all the time. 12:47 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, I'm found right behind me, and I'm very good, you don't pay attention. 12:51 [SPEAKER_03]: Whatever you don't think, you try to kill a bunch of volunteers, stop the land, or part of the land, you get 10 minutes before you go down the stizzle, or on the set, you roll the loader that night, I said, right across the street and watch it. 13:02 [SPEAKER_03]: Anyway, you don't have to go in. 13:06 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, the gun that you brought it with, that, that, that, that, that, the, uh, joint shell and handle, you know, those records and all that. 13:12 [SPEAKER_03]: I mean, you know, you thought that it was going to fire off all the serial numbers and buried somewhere else. 13:17 [SPEAKER_03]: And his body, D, he was going to carry it somewhere else and say the gun's over here and listen that. 13:23 [SPEAKER_03]: But that's not enough. 13:23 [SPEAKER_03]: It's going to leave the body. 13:25 [SPEAKER_03]: So about two hours later, he's meeting there again. 13:27 [SPEAKER_03]: He can send a show to the people right down the property. 13:30 [SPEAKER_03]: And what do you do? 13:31 [SPEAKER_03]: You'll watch it right now. 13:34 [SPEAKER_03]: I don't even know where you're going to be so tired. 13:37 [SPEAKER_10]: Damn. 13:38 [SPEAKER_10]: I'm going to have my mother and mother. 13:39 [SPEAKER_03]: And she's not going to have dinner with us. 13:41 [SPEAKER_03]: And I'm not going to be here. 13:43 [SPEAKER_03]: And I got her old husband out. 13:44 [SPEAKER_03]: I got the trailer and everything in it. 13:47 [SPEAKER_03]: Supply. 13:48 [SPEAKER_03]: I guess it's a nice time. 13:49 [UNKNOWN]: Gavin, I had to bleach gloves. 13:51 [UNKNOWN]: Follow there. 13:52 [UNKNOWN]: And you know what? 13:53 [UNKNOWN]: Then you go over the James house. 13:56 [SPEAKER_03]: Oh, shit, yes, well, there's another reason that it looks pretty bad for James, now you got the world now and you really thought out of this thing You come up with this concrete story about having a cover made or something You know, all this stuff, see you again, just sit up, you want to see eyes on all of you 14:12 [SPEAKER_06]: Despite these setbacks, Doris built a career in medical staffing on December 20th, 2004. 14:19 [SPEAKER_06]: She formed American Medical Professionals LLC, a nurse staffing agency and professional employer organization. 14:26 [SPEAKER_06]: The business operated from addresses and plant city in Dover with later changes to locations tied to her properties. 14:34 [SPEAKER_06]: She formed her managed several related LLCs over the years, including accurate professional staffing in 2006, a statin supplies in 2007 with her boyfriend, char Anthony, SEO, American medical professionals, peoing in 2007, and others. 14:52 [SPEAKER_06]: She presented herself publicly as a successful businessman. 14:56 [SPEAKER_06]: running legitimate staffing companies that placed nurses and medical professionals her marriage to James Moore and in divorce to filed an April 2009 in the case closed in June 2009 by then she had become involved with Shah Krasniki who appeared on corporate filings for some of her businesses. 15:16 [SPEAKER_06]: She lived in various homes in Planned City, Dover, and the Lakeland areas in maintained ties to Planned City, where all of this in key properties were located on Highway 60. 15:27 [SPEAKER_06]: In early 2010, during the police investigation into Abraham's Shakespeare's disappearance, Doris turned to her parents, Patrick Dunigan, and Linda Dunigan, a couple living in Planned City. 15:39 [SPEAKER_06]: She asked them to hide three guns, 15:45 [SPEAKER_06]: Along with gold jewelry, rings, watches, cameras, cell phones, and iPod, legal papers, and cash. 15:54 [SPEAKER_06]: Her parents described her as having a lifelong habit of wanting, and noted her pattern of lavish spending on trips, vehicles, and expensive items like $10,000 watches, often with shifting explanations for the source of the funds, and conversations with them. 16:10 [SPEAKER_06]: Chauffered conflicting stories about what was wrong. 16:13 [SPEAKER_06]: Her father told her he wished he could take her place in jail, and she replied that she was innocent, and just wanted everything to go away. 16:21 [SPEAKER_06]: The parents expressed love for their daughter, but said the situation had gone too far. 16:27 [SPEAKER_12]: All right, Deity, it's okay. 16:31 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm not gonna do it anymore. 16:33 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm gonna tell you everything. 16:34 [SPEAKER_12]: It's gonna start. 16:35 [SPEAKER_03]: Um, and again, before you say anything, yeah. 16:39 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, last night, you were going to tell us. 16:42 [SPEAKER_12]: I know, but you were threatening me with... No, no, no, no, I'm not. 16:45 [SPEAKER_03]: We weren't throwing you with anything. 16:46 [SPEAKER_03]: We were saying fact, okay. 16:49 [SPEAKER_03]: And whatever you tell us, you got to understand, you're going to have to prove what is the truth to us. 16:54 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah. 16:54 [SPEAKER_03]: And like I said, from our investigation, we know what the truth is going to be. 16:58 [SPEAKER_02]: Right. 16:58 [SPEAKER_02]: Another lie. 16:59 [SPEAKER_02]: Tell me about it. 17:00 [SPEAKER_02]: Come on. 17:01 [SPEAKER_02]: I grant so many bullshit lies. 17:03 [SPEAKER_02]: And little things, rabbit holes, 17:10 [SPEAKER_02]: It is getting pathetic. 17:12 [SPEAKER_12]: Because you want to write some James in your blackmailing me to give you a name. 17:18 [SPEAKER_04]: Stop blackmailing me. 17:19 [SPEAKER_04]: I'm not the person that killed Abraham and buried. 17:24 [SPEAKER_04]: Okay. 17:25 [SPEAKER_04]: And so far all this shit you've given us isn't paying it out. 17:28 [SPEAKER_12]: There's like, you know, their name and I kept telling you all that. 17:32 [SPEAKER_04]: There's a lot of, you know, plural, their name is a one person, two people, twelve people. 17:36 [SPEAKER_03]: I mean, I think tomorrow we're probably going to get a phone call about 10 o'clock in the morning saying, you know, actually. 17:40 [SPEAKER_03]: Guys, I really want to come in and talk to you this time. 17:43 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm going to tell you the truth. 17:44 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm telling you, we're out of our meeting and you were just waiting people right into my office. 17:48 [SPEAKER_02]: You need the way to capital and you're on the way. 17:51 [SPEAKER_12]: And the evening we told the security threatened to go on. 17:54 [SPEAKER_13]: Let's go back to the beginning. 17:55 [SPEAKER_13]: Abraham's alive and I talked to him all the time and I took too many coffee there. 17:59 [SPEAKER_03]: There's the beginning. 18:00 [SPEAKER_03]: That was the beginning for two goddamn months. 18:02 [SPEAKER_12]: He threatened to arrest James and James. 18:05 [SPEAKER_02]: No, no, no, no, no stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it all, stop it 18:23 [SPEAKER_13]: Shot with your gun, add your property, underneath that slide. 18:27 [SPEAKER_13]: I was told, no, no, stop it. 18:29 [SPEAKER_13]: Without you, then you put the exact spot. 18:31 [SPEAKER_13]: You put a damn piece of metal right there. 18:33 [SPEAKER_13]: OK. 18:33 [SPEAKER_13]: The hole is done by your instance. 18:36 [SPEAKER_02]: OK. 18:37 [SPEAKER_02]: Play it now. 18:37 [SPEAKER_02]: There's the facts. 18:38 [SPEAKER_02]: There's the facts. 18:39 [SPEAKER_02]: Undisputable at this point. 18:41 [SPEAKER_02]: OK. 18:42 [SPEAKER_02]: With those flags, the only few people that can be in trouble for this right now are D.D. 18:46 [SPEAKER_02]: Moore and James Moore. 18:48 [SPEAKER_02]: There's the flag. 18:49 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm not threatening. 18:50 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm not blackmailing. 18:51 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm not doing anything. 18:52 [SPEAKER_12]: If I didn't come up with a name, then I don't know. 18:54 [SPEAKER_12]: You are going to roll. 18:55 [SPEAKER_04]: I know. 18:56 [SPEAKER_04]: You never said that. 18:57 [SPEAKER_04]: Isn't it? 18:57 [SPEAKER_04]: No, we didn't know. 18:57 [SPEAKER_12]: No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, 19:04 [SPEAKER_13]: He admitted to digging and he said if I didn't tell you who did it, then you would arrest him and he said, When I say, I said, come on, I said, come on, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, 19:29 [SPEAKER_13]: We can down here voluntarily, because guess what? 19:31 [SPEAKER_13]: He has to offer it away. 19:33 [SPEAKER_13]: He's cooperative so far. 19:35 [SPEAKER_13]: But he's cooperative. 19:36 [SPEAKER_03]: I knew he wanted to name it all in a minute. 19:38 [SPEAKER_03]: What the heck? 19:39 [SPEAKER_03]: I knew we were not being cooperative these days. 19:41 [SPEAKER_03]: He wanted me to make you hugged his ears. 19:43 [SPEAKER_03]: Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, 19:55 [SPEAKER_06]: Abraham Shakespeare was born on April 24, 1996, in Lakeland, Florida. 20:01 [SPEAKER_06]: He grew up in a modest working class neighborhood, and spent most of his adult life working as a truck driver assistant, he lived simply, raised two sons, and maintained close ties with family and friends in Central Florida, people who knew him. 20:15 [SPEAKER_06]: described him as generous to a fall, always willing to help others, even when he had little to himself. 20:22 [SPEAKER_06]: He was functionally illiterate, which made him vulnerable, and he had no formal training and managing large sums of money. 20:29 [SPEAKER_06]: In 2006, he had an infant son named Jeremiah. 20:33 [SPEAKER_06]: In that relationship, we later lead to child support proceedings in November 15, 2006, everything changed for Shakespeare. 20:41 [SPEAKER_06]: While at a convenience store, his coworker, Michael Ford, bought two quick pick tickets for the Florida Wano. 20:48 [SPEAKER_06]: Shakespeare handed over two dollars to claim half of one ticket. 20:51 [SPEAKER_06]: One of those tickets, won the jackpot, advertised at $31 million, Shakespeare chose the Wumpsum Payout, and received approximately $12.7 million after taxes. 21:05 [SPEAKER_06]: The windfall brought a media attention. 21:08 [SPEAKER_06]: Ford sued him, claiming Shakespeare had stolen the winning ticket. 21:12 [SPEAKER_06]: The case went to trial in October 2007, and after only brief deliberation, the jury ruled on Shakespeare's favor. 21:19 [SPEAKER_06]: He was officially declared the sole winner. 21:23 [SPEAKER_02]: That's not in the, okay, let's do with your logic here. 21:27 [SPEAKER_03]: You're lack of logic. 21:29 [SPEAKER_03]: You set up a little thing to go to the hard rock cat of our rock casino. 21:33 [SPEAKER_03]: You pick up Abraham. 21:35 [SPEAKER_02]: You go to your office and there's two people, you don't know when you're office. 21:39 [SPEAKER_02]: Are you kidding me? 21:41 [SPEAKER_02]: How in the hell is anybody going to believe that? 21:44 [SPEAKER_02]: They're all. 21:45 [SPEAKER_02]: I don't believe anybody. 21:47 [SPEAKER_12]: I've learned it's going to jail. 21:48 [SPEAKER_12]: That's what your own family doesn't believe. 21:50 [SPEAKER_12]: I know that. 21:51 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't care all. 21:52 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm going to jail for it. 21:53 [SPEAKER_12]: I know we're not here. 21:55 [SPEAKER_12]: What's the thing in my life? 21:57 [SPEAKER_13]: I don't have to go away. 21:58 [SPEAKER_13]: You're protected somebody. 22:00 [SPEAKER_13]: You're trying to contract yourself because you know what we talked to the real person who was in the hood there. 22:05 [SPEAKER_13]: It's been all well. 22:06 [SPEAKER_13]: It's going to still roll out. 22:08 [SPEAKER_13]: It's going to make it look worse than ever. 22:09 [SPEAKER_04]: They're waiting for the knock in the door. 22:11 [SPEAKER_04]: They have a really fun, the body's been uncovered, it's gone, we haven't checked the body for a single breath. 22:18 [SPEAKER_04]: We're going to tell you what we checked that body for. 22:20 [SPEAKER_04]: This body had his medical examination done. 22:25 [SPEAKER_04]: You don't need to know any further than that. 22:27 [SPEAKER_03]: I can tell you right now, it's a hell of a lot better to stand in front of that judge and be able to say here's what happened and I told him what happened There's a stand up there, so I mean it's a leniency because I've been truthful It's not going to happen now I mean in the stories, you're on or I've mentioned the same story over and over and over and over Yeah, right, just don't go with you, you told us a lot of stuff Alright, we got a look at tonight, there's a remedy to kill him and leave for him I'll leave her alive to be a like the key witness 22:57 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll even do one better, come back a very moderate property. 23:00 [SPEAKER_03]: Yay. 23:00 [SPEAKER_03]: I don't know, we'll make a fair burial because she's scared and then we can get money off the portion and make a move. 23:11 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't want anything I'm letting was, you can, I'll find it over now. 23:15 [SPEAKER_12]: You can have what he gave me, that I will find it over. 23:19 [SPEAKER_03]: I just leave the game for it. 23:22 [SPEAKER_03]: I'll just, just leave that. 23:24 [SPEAKER_03]: I'll kill the man. 23:26 [SPEAKER_03]: If you didn't do a DD, how does a 37-year-old light woman from Plans City end up in this predicament? 23:36 [SPEAKER_03]: This is silly. 23:37 [SPEAKER_03]: And you're adding your sitting there adding like a complete idiot. 23:41 [SPEAKER_10]: I'm 19, I can, I can't, I can't insert it. 23:46 [SPEAKER_10]: I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't 24:00 [SPEAKER_10]: I can't tell you, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I 24:17 [SPEAKER_06]: With his newfound wealth, Shakespeare bought a luxury home for $1.07 million in a gated Lakeland community. 24:25 [SPEAKER_06]: He purchased a BMW for about $100,000, and a Ford 500. 24:30 [SPEAKER_06]: He paid off mortgages for relatives and friends, loan large sums to help people buy homes. 24:36 [SPEAKER_06]: and gave away cash freely to anyone who asked, between 2006 and late 2008, he spent gave away or loaned the vast majority of his fortune. 24:47 [SPEAKER_06]: By the end of 2008, he had roughly $1.5 million in cash remaining, and assets worth about $3 million. 24:56 [SPEAKER_06]: He grew increasingly frustrated with the constant stream of requests for money. 25:01 [SPEAKER_06]: From people he once considered friends. 25:03 [SPEAKER_06]: He told relatives he sometimes wished he had never won the lottery. 25:07 [SPEAKER_06]: Because the money had brought him nothing but trauma. 25:10 [SPEAKER_12]: I want to go and print them for something I didn't even do and sit on a mattress with no pillow. 25:15 [SPEAKER_03]: No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, 25:30 [SPEAKER_12]: I told you that you didn't get him to tell him. 25:32 [SPEAKER_03]: I'll come back and tell his great-nose, or he'll run over and ask great-nose. 25:36 [SPEAKER_12]: Oh, that's how he did. 25:36 [SPEAKER_12]: That's a lot of heat. 25:37 [SPEAKER_03]: The lobby runs right over here. 25:39 [SPEAKER_03]: All right, yeah. 25:40 [SPEAKER_03]: I see that every morning, I kind of work. 25:41 [SPEAKER_03]: They're out there, clean the sheets, and you're out of all your hands. 25:44 [SPEAKER_03]: He'll be a job. 25:45 [SPEAKER_03]: So, they can give you a work while you're there. 25:47 [SPEAKER_03]: You can clean them. 25:48 [SPEAKER_03]: I'll show you the book. 25:50 [SPEAKER_03]: Do you know what was your life? 25:52 [SPEAKER_12]: Not fine, I guess not at all. 25:54 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, I mean, you have like culinary skills and stuff. 25:58 [SPEAKER_12]: Um, yeah, I don't know. 26:01 [SPEAKER_03]: Can you tell me your job? 26:02 [SPEAKER_03]: That could be valuable over there. 26:04 [SPEAKER_12]: Yeah. 26:05 [SPEAKER_12]: I can do that. 26:06 [SPEAKER_03]: Maybe you do that. 26:07 [SPEAKER_03]: You can go up and store the beans. 26:09 [SPEAKER_03]: To tell your own business stuff. 26:11 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah. 26:13 [SPEAKER_03]: I mean, there's different, there's different trustee positions that different state prisons around the right mode of the other region. 26:19 [SPEAKER_03]: You got to blow through a million dollars, so you will never get to do that. 26:22 [SPEAKER_06]: Yeah. 26:23 [SPEAKER_06]: He began pulling money out of enneudies and moving it between banks on the advice of various people, searching for someone he could trust, DD Moore, met Shakespeare in October 2008. 26:35 [SPEAKER_06]: She introduced herself as someone interested in writing a book about his life as a lottery winner. 26:41 [SPEAKER_06]: who had overcome hardship, Shakespeare, who had long dreamed of telling his story, welcome the idea, within weeks, more offered to help organize his chaotic finances. 26:52 [SPEAKER_06]: She claims she saw how others were taking advantage of him, and wanted to protect him out of the goodness of her heart. 26:58 [SPEAKER_06]: Shakespeare, tired of the endless demands on his money, and exploitation, trusted her completely. 27:05 [SPEAKER_06]: He began handing over control of accounts and documents directly to her, the financial takeover unfolded rapidly. 27:12 [SPEAKER_06]: between January and February 2009. 27:14 [SPEAKER_06]: On January 9th, 2009, Shakespeare signed a quick claim deed, transferring his primary residence to American medical professionals LLC, the company more owned. 27:26 [SPEAKER_06]: The home had cost him $1.07 million. 27:31 [SPEAKER_06]: More later, Gabe conflicting explanations to police about payment. 27:35 [SPEAKER_06]: First claiming she paid him a more than $500,000 in cash. 27:39 [SPEAKER_06]: Then saying she withheld payment because of a supposed drug problem, or, to avoid gift taxes, bank records showed no such cash withdraws, or transfers from her accounts. 27:50 [SPEAKER_12]: I know I'll never get out. 27:51 [SPEAKER_12]: You'll never get out. 27:52 [SPEAKER_06]: Why? 27:52 [SPEAKER_06]: It's done. 27:53 [SPEAKER_12]: Once you get sent into a prison, send it to a prison. 27:54 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I 28:03 [SPEAKER_03]: You were getting 25 years and a judge say up, 25 years sense, 35 years sense, 50 years sense, life or prison means when you go in, you don't come out. 28:13 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, like, what does that roach Motel thing, roaches go in, they don't come out, you know, kind of roach. 28:19 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah. 28:19 [SPEAKER_03]: You'd be the roach, you go in, you won't come out. 28:22 [SPEAKER_03]: That's life. 28:23 [SPEAKER_03]: That's life for prison. 28:24 [SPEAKER_03]: I don't know what you're thinking, but don't really have pillows, blankets, sheets, the other worry about that. 28:30 [SPEAKER_03]: And shower shoes. 28:31 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, shower shoes. 28:32 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, shower shoes. 28:34 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah. 28:34 [SPEAKER_03]: Even that hot water. 28:37 [SPEAKER_03]: And hot water. 28:40 [SPEAKER_03]: You need to shower with those people. 28:42 [SPEAKER_03]: You know, won't be like that shower that's in, in that red brick on that nice, nicely renovated bathroom. 28:48 [SPEAKER_03]: It won't be like that, you know. 28:50 [SPEAKER_03]: So you go over a room, tile, budget shower edge, pop it out, yeah, look at that. 28:56 [SPEAKER_12]: That's not fair when they come in. 28:59 [SPEAKER_03]: So you don't want them to turn on the chair? 29:03 [SPEAKER_03]: What you want us to do is say, all right, you're right, D.D.D.D. 29:07 [SPEAKER_03]: That's not fair, I mean, everything pointed to D.D.D. 29:10 [SPEAKER_03]: More so, hey, all right, not fair. 29:12 [SPEAKER_03]: But she goes all the judge, D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D.D. 29:20 [SPEAKER_12]: I mean, I tried to name all of these names because it had some sense there to do it, and you wouldn't look any of them. 29:28 [SPEAKER_03]: Some of you kind of don't do this. 29:30 [SPEAKER_03]: Somebody is, of course, I was staying in there and I buried the damn body in a part of it, the lot like it. 29:34 [SPEAKER_04]: And then I even served right where it is. 29:36 [SPEAKER_04]: And then I ate a little piece of metal and went through the way. 29:38 [SPEAKER_10]: And then I asked for the air sink on that he was killed and then the air sink on that he was killed. 29:43 [SPEAKER_03]: And then the air sink on that he was killed. 29:45 [SPEAKER_03]: And then the air sink on that he was killed. 29:46 [SPEAKER_03]: And then the air sink on that he was killed. 29:49 [SPEAKER_03]: And then the air sink on that he was killed. 29:50 [SPEAKER_03]: And the air sink on that he was killed. 29:51 [SPEAKER_03]: And the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink on that the air sink 29:59 [SPEAKER_03]: I stopped off into this morning at the circle. 30:01 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay, that's all for people who wanted to hold it down. 30:03 [SPEAKER_03]: Yes, so when we had lunch, that was a busy restaurant. 30:07 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and I know that's Vincent's April, so that person may not only be in the air anymore, now you've got to expand it to really run a lot of Western Britain with the more worth it. 30:16 [SPEAKER_03]: That's just a worldwide, I mean, as you know, there's been a people in the world, rather than maybe 6.2 of many of them. 30:22 [SPEAKER_12]: But if you're not a fair, you have a lot of them, but they're only going to work, and get to prove your innocence that even as long as I'm having one person, 30:31 [SPEAKER_06]: to have the body buried in their backyard. 30:35 [SPEAKER_06]: On January 11th, 2009, Shakespeare signed quick-leam deeds for two other properties to the same LLC. 30:42 [SPEAKER_06]: On January 15th, 2009, he signed an asset purchase agreement selling all of his remaining unlisted assets, including outstanding loans worth millions, to Moore's company for only $185,000. 30:55 [SPEAKER_06]: Attorney David Howard Stitzel 31:01 [SPEAKER_06]: including deed mortgages and an addendum that was never located more created a new entity called Abraham Shakespeare LLC on February 9, 2009, listing herself as registered agent director. 31:17 [SPEAKER_06]: She opened a bank of America account in the LLC's name with $100 cash and had herself as the only signer. 31:25 [SPEAKER_06]: She deposited more than $1 million from Shakespeare's potential annuity accounts into it. 31:31 [SPEAKER_06]: Within days, she presented fabricated meeting minutes, claiming Shakespeare had been removed as a signer because of alleged criminal activity. 31:45 [SPEAKER_06]: $250,000 to the IRS, with a handwritten note, not needed for intended purpose. 31:52 [SPEAKER_06]: An additional cashier's trek to Morris Business, Stitzle and Judith Haggins, each received about $20,000, Haggins, a longtime friend of Shakespeare who would work as a driver in a system, became deeply involved with more. 32:06 [SPEAKER_06]: and signed documents on Shakespeare's behalf. 32:09 [SPEAKER_06]: By early April, 2009, more exercise complete control over Shakespeare's remaining assets. 32:16 [SPEAKER_06]: She bought vehicles in the LLC's name, traded cars, sold the BMW and Ford 500 for cash. 32:22 [SPEAKER_06]: and purchased a Corvette for Kisniki, and a Hummer for herself, Shakespeare had received almost nothing in return, despite the massive transfers. 32:32 [SPEAKER_06]: He started asking pointed questions, about where his money had gone, he expressed concern to Hagin's about Moore's handling of his finances. 32:41 [SPEAKER_06]: His last confirmed sighting by someone outside Moore's circle was in the first week of April 2009. 32:47 [SPEAKER_06]: When a friend named Courtney Daniels saw him in Lakeland after that, he vanished. 32:53 [SPEAKER_03]: Exactly what you were saying, Jailers, the anticipation of going to jail is worse. 32:59 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm not ready, and I don't care. 33:00 [SPEAKER_12]: I already put myself mentally up, and I know that I'm going to get blamed for this. 33:05 [SPEAKER_12]: I know that I'm going to go there innocently. 33:07 [SPEAKER_12]: And if y'all can put it innocent person in jail, knowing I didn't pull the trigger and charge me with first-degree murder, you have to live with that for the rest of your life. 33:15 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't. 33:16 [SPEAKER_03]: I honestly, since about one day before and about the time you had them going on, they're going on. 33:24 [SPEAKER_12]: They're going on, y'all. 33:26 [SPEAKER_03]: Well, then you look at me and decompose corpse was dug up from your backyard. 33:30 [SPEAKER_12]: That's sick. 33:31 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I was like, do you think we enjoyed that? 33:34 [SPEAKER_03]: You think we enjoyed digging and cleaning them up in front of your body? 33:40 [SPEAKER_12]: More, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more 33:57 [SPEAKER_12]: that's treating that person on the piece of the garbage no one has exactly what you say. 34:02 [SPEAKER_03]: Well, it's not going to work. 34:03 [SPEAKER_03]: Well, we go to it. 34:05 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't even plan on going to concrete there for a second. 34:08 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm going to put it anywhere else. 34:09 [SPEAKER_03]: It's going to be right now. 34:11 [SPEAKER_03]: We're talking about what our body was getting in. 34:13 [SPEAKER_12]: No, I didn't. 34:15 [SPEAKER_03]: Well we can't let it in, you're running course in our plan to support our team. 34:22 [SPEAKER_03]: We're putting on the end, put the bow down there, maybe put a big, like Andrew Poverty. 34:28 [SPEAKER_13]: Fucking hell, dude, I'm fucking hell. 34:33 [SPEAKER_13]: Hell, James. 34:34 [SPEAKER_13]: Why don't you put it here? 34:35 [SPEAKER_13]: It's under four concrete here anymore. 34:37 [SPEAKER_03]: I'm already playing the concrete. 34:38 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll just make the most out of it. 34:40 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:41 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:43 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:44 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:45 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:46 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:47 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:48 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:49 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:50 [SPEAKER_03]: We'll get out of it. 34:51 [SPEAKER_04]: We'll get out of it. 34:51 [SPEAKER_04]: We'll get out of it. 34:52 [SPEAKER_12]: Okay, yeah, when it is very sad is uh, when you were responsible for it or not, you think because of the money I'm responsible for it I'm not that mean give me that stuff I think you're responsible for getting buried on the flat of your house I think you're responsible because it was your gun I think you're responsible because you know when every day that thing you had I think you're responsible and you've been doing this house in life 35:16 [SPEAKER_02]: You were so strong and moving in and his half a leg on didn't you have a day before? 35:20 [SPEAKER_03]: Well, he won't be using this anymore, let me just go ahead and move in to it's not gonna do this for what's going back up You're still with any couple weeks you stole his cars. 35:31 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh, hey, he's not going to be using that car anymore Sure you like that truck 35:37 [SPEAKER_12]: They don't need that thick, it's really, I am really. 35:42 [SPEAKER_13]: You didn't want to tell me anything, tell me you're thinking, okay, you think that. 35:45 [SPEAKER_13]: Abraham was buried on your property, April 7th, every gut kill they will say. 35:51 [SPEAKER_13]: April 12th, April 18th, October 18th, October 18th, October 18th, October 18th, Oh, she's just upstairs and up. 35:57 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh God, she's right, we can take this black one, I'll take that as your groom and her. 36:00 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, 36:07 [SPEAKER_02]: Is that something that's scary? 36:08 [SPEAKER_02]: So that is scary being out of fear and you've tortured the brain. 36:12 [SPEAKER_02]: It's from your point of view for it. 36:15 [SPEAKER_03]: It's scary. 36:15 [SPEAKER_03]: I mean, that's just door, right? 36:17 [SPEAKER_03]: You can't let that get believe that. 36:20 [SPEAKER_03]: That's great. 36:22 [SPEAKER_03]: Your honor, I was scared of this, so I... 36:25 [SPEAKER_06]: More launched in a vibrant campaign to convince everyone that Shakespeare had simply left town to escape money requests and child support obligations. 36:38 [SPEAKER_06]: She sent text messages from the cell phone to family and friends. 36:42 [SPEAKER_06]: She arranged for a man named Gregory Smith to call Shakespeare's mother on December 27, 2009, 36:53 [SPEAKER_06]: She tied for letters, reporting to be from Shakespeare, and had them delivered to his family. 36:58 [SPEAKER_06]: She spread rumors that he was in Miami. 37:00 [SPEAKER_06]: On a cruise, receiving medical treatment, or hiding from Warrens, she told police he had planned his own disappearance and left his phone with her, so authorities could not track him. 37:11 [SPEAKER_06]: Shakespeare's cousin, Sedrick Edum, reported him missing to the Polk County Sheriff's Office on November 9, 2009. 37:19 [SPEAKER_06]: Detectives quickly zeroed in on more because of the suspicious financial trail in her inconsistent stories. 37:26 [SPEAKER_06]: Bank records contradict to every claim she made about paying Shakespeare cash. 37:30 [SPEAKER_06]: She told detectives that the transfers were meant to shield money from child support. 37:35 [SPEAKER_06]: Yet Stitzel had represented Shakespeare on those proceedings, and filed documents claiming Shakespeare was out of the country, a controlled phone call, arranged by police, called more pressuring Stitzel to maintain the lie that he had spoken to Shakespeare months after the disappearance. 37:53 [SPEAKER_06]: As the investigation intensified in January 2010, more grew desperate, she asked Gregory Smith if he knew anyone willing to confess to killing 38:04 [SPEAKER_06]: Smith, now co-operating with police, introduced and undercover officer from the Lake Wales Police Department, posing as a career criminal facing a long prison sentence. 38:15 [SPEAKER_06]: On January 21, 2010, more agreed to pay the undercover officer $50,000 to take the blame on January 25, 2010. 38:25 [SPEAKER_06]: She handed him a 38 caliber Smith and Weston revolver, 38:28 [SPEAKER_06]: and drove him to 580 to Highway 60 in Planned City. 38:32 [SPEAKER_06]: She pointed out a fresh 30 by 30 foot concrete slab poured on April 13th, 2009 and told him the body was very beneath it. 38:42 [SPEAKER_06]: She showed him a truck and trailer loaded with fuel, bleach, gloves, and a metal tub for moving the remains. 38:49 [SPEAKER_06]: Police now had direct evidence linking her to the crime scene and the murder weapon. 38:55 [SPEAKER_06]: Search warns were executed on January 26th and 27th, 2010. 39:00 [SPEAKER_06]: Investigators found Shakespeare's body buried nine feet deep under the concrete slab at 5802 Highway 60. 39:08 [SPEAKER_06]: The adjacent house where more had her office was also searched. 39:12 [SPEAKER_06]: More was arrested and charged. 39:14 [SPEAKER_06]: In multiple interviews, she offered shifting explanations for the murder, blaming an unknown drug dealer named Ronald. 39:21 [SPEAKER_06]: Claiming self-defense, accusing Shakespeare's cousin, Cedric Adam, pointing to her own 14-year-old son, RJ, and finally naming attorney Stitzel. 39:31 [SPEAKER_06]: She consistently stated that two shots have been fired. 39:35 [SPEAKER_09]: But in an interview, right outside her home, D.D. 39:38 [SPEAKER_09]: Moore did not keep things short. 39:40 [SPEAKER_09]: She was actually very talkative. 39:43 [SPEAKER_12]: Because the media will not lead and is some precision of all my neighbors, and they don't deserve any of this. 39:50 [SPEAKER_09]: DD wore started with one message, but quickly shifted gears would ask about the murder of Abraham Shakespeare. 40:00 [SPEAKER_12]: He knows I would never put that in any way. 40:03 [SPEAKER_12]: Did you murder Abraham Shakespeare? 40:06 [SPEAKER_12]: Absolutely. 40:07 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm reading. 40:07 [SPEAKER_09]: You indicated you know who pulled the trigger. 40:11 [SPEAKER_09]: I have given all the information. 40:13 [SPEAKER_09]: to the sheriff's department. 40:15 [SPEAKER_09]: The Sheriff's Department found Shakespeare's body at her boyfriend's house buried under a concrete slab. 40:21 [SPEAKER_09]: How did Shakespeare die? 40:23 [SPEAKER_09]: Shot in the head, according to D.D. 40:25 [SPEAKER_09]: Moore. 40:26 [SPEAKER_12]: They were to discuss everything with me. 40:29 [SPEAKER_07]: What's up? 40:29 [SPEAKER_12]: They say you shot 40:35 [SPEAKER_09]: to do one of the cameras off now. 40:38 [SPEAKER_09]: Dee Dee made it clear, she knows more than she can say that she's scared and she knows why she's considered a person of interest. 40:45 [SPEAKER_12]: With the situation and how it went down, I wouldn't believe myself. 40:49 [SPEAKER_12]: I would say, lock her up. 40:51 [SPEAKER_12]: I would because, but there's always two sides to every story. 40:55 [SPEAKER_12]: There's always more to any situation. 40:58 [SPEAKER_12]: Not enough knows. 41:00 [SPEAKER_12]: I didn't shoot that man and that is the only person I have to answer to. 41:04 [SPEAKER_06]: Moore's trial began in late November, 2012, and Hillsborough County Circuit Court, prosecutors presented a mountain of circumstantial evidence, showing greed as a clear motive. 41:16 [SPEAKER_06]: They traced every dollar, every deed, every vehicle transaction, 41:20 [SPEAKER_06]: and every life she told to maintain the illusion that Shakespeare was alive. 41:25 [SPEAKER_06]: James Moore testified that he had unknowingly dug the hole days earlier at his ex-wife's request, believing it was for concrete or trash, and were turned later the same day to fill it when she called him back, Gregory Smith played the secret recordings. 41:41 [SPEAKER_06]: The defense argued that more feared real killers, 41:44 [SPEAKER_06]: possibly tied to drug activity that her actions were panic attempts to protect herself in her son, more chosen not to testify after three and a half hours of deliberation on December 10, 2012. 41:56 [SPEAKER_06]: The jury convicted her a first-degree murder. 42:00 [SPEAKER_06]: The judge sentenced her to life in prison without parole, plus 25 years for using a firearm. 42:06 [SPEAKER_06]: He described her as the most manipulative 42:13 [SPEAKER_06]: More as filed multiple appeals in motions for new trial, they've all been denied. 42:19 [SPEAKER_06]: She remains incarcerated at the well-correctional institution, and continues to maintain her innocence, claiming the case against her was one-sided, and investigators ignored a larger drug related conspiracy. 42:32 [SPEAKER_06]: Only after conviction did the full details of how Abraham Shakespeare died finally emerge through forensic evidence, witness statements, and Moore's own contradictory admissions. 42:43 [SPEAKER_06]: In the first week of April 2009, inside her office at 3732 Highway 60, in Planned City, D.D. 42:52 [SPEAKER_06]: Moore shot Abraham Shakespeare twice in the chest with a 38 caliber 42:58 [SPEAKER_06]: She then had her ex-husband dig a hole on the adjacent property on Highway 60. 43:03 [SPEAKER_06]: Later that same day, she called him back to fill the hole. 43:07 [SPEAKER_06]: On April 13th, 2009, she poured a 30 by 30 foot concrete slam directly over the grave to conceal the body forever. 43:15 [SPEAKER_06]: That single act of burial hit him beneath fresh concrete while she continued to live in Shakespeare's house and spent his money mark the final brutal end to the story of the generous laundry winner who trusted the wrong person and every turn. 43:31 [SPEAKER_07]: Abraham was good-hearted and I said, if he was here today, I would let him know. 43:37 [SPEAKER_07]: I would have to tear him how much I appreciate him for who he will. 43:43 [SPEAKER_07]: I mean, it's too late now. 43:44 [SPEAKER_06]: Listener, before we close, we're turned to where the story began. 43:49 [SPEAKER_06]: A counter-edit convenience store, a small purchase, a moment that felt meaningless at the time, $2 exchange for a possibility. 43:58 [SPEAKER_06]: For a brief while, that possibility became real. 44:01 [SPEAKER_06]: It brought comfort, it brought security. 44:04 [SPEAKER_06]: It brought the chance to help the people he loved. 44:06 [SPEAKER_06]: It offered proof that kindness and luck could exist at the same time. 44:10 [SPEAKER_06]: But it also brought noise. 44:12 [SPEAKER_06]: It brought shadows. 44:13 [SPEAKER_06]: It blur the line between helping control, between friendship and ownership, in between concern, and exploitation. 44:21 [SPEAKER_06]: While we're means now, it's not the jackpot, for sure not the headlines, or not even the core records of the bank statements. 44:29 [SPEAKER_06]: Well, remains as a man who tried to live simply, in a world that would not let him stay that way. 44:35 [SPEAKER_06]: The man who believed that good intentions were enough, the man who paid for that belief, with everything he had. 44:41 [SPEAKER_06]: Stories like this are often reduced to numbers and verdicts, to winnings and sentences. 44:47 [SPEAKER_06]: into winners and criminals. 44:49 [SPEAKER_06]: But beneath all of that, it's something quieter. 44:52 [SPEAKER_06]: A life that has served better. 44:54 [SPEAKER_06]: What can open doors? 44:55 [SPEAKER_06]: I cannot tell you who is waiting on the other side of that door, listener. 45:00 [SPEAKER_06]: Sometimes, the greatest tragedy is not losing the money. 45:03 [SPEAKER_06]: It's losing the piece you had before it ever arrived. 45:08 [SPEAKER_06]: I thank you for listening and keep the fire burning.
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