20/20 - Unlucky Numbers
Episode Date: April 19, 2025When a $30 million dollar lottery winner vanishes under mysterious circumstances, police begin an investigation and there is no shortage of suspects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastcho...ices.com/adchoices
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An all-new 2020 starts right now.
So this case is such a mess that in the beginning you don't even have a starting point.
Except for Abraham Shakespeare winning the lottery.
I said you won $30 million.
Do not show this to anybody. What everybody's there saying,
give me, let me, let me have.
Women with car full of kids will pull up and say,
oh, the Lord led me to you.
And I'll be like, no, that would be Google Maps, honey.
One of the things that people talk about
when they talk about winning the lottery is that it's cursed.
I really would like my old life back where I could walk the streets like a normal person.
But then all of a sudden things go silent.
And nobody knows where Abraham Shakespeare is.
Hey, have you heard from Aiden? No, I haven't heard from him.
Have you seen him? No, I haven't seen him either.
Hey, have you heard from Abe? No, I haven't heard from him.
Have you seen him?
No, I haven't seen him either.
A lot of people said, well, I think he took his money
and wants to get away from all this.
So how many people in Polk County owed Abe Shakespeare
money?
Over 20, maybe close to 40.
There are all these people with this web of connections
to Abraham Shakespeare, and any one of them
might be someone who has a motive to see him dead.
We all dream of a moment in life that will instantly change everything. A stroke of luck
and nothing will ever be the same again.
That's exactly what happened to a man with the name
you will never forget, Abraham Shakespeare.
While Abraham Shakespeare was on a trucking route
with his colleague, Michael Ford,
they stopped at a convenience store.
Mike Ford, who's the driver, says,
Canadian thing, Abraham, who's staying in the truck, says,
yeah, you know, give me two quick picks.
Right here at this gas station in a town with a name
you just can't make up, frost-proof Florida,
one stop, two quick pick lottery tickets, one of which would change
his life forever. A jackpot worth 30 million dollars.
Hello Florida, it's Wednesday November 15th. New York tonight's winning numbers. 12.
When Abe realized he'd won the lottery, he wasn't even sure it was real. So he brought the ticket to his cousin Ashley McMillan.
I looked up at him and I looked at the ticket again
and I looked up at him.
I said, you've won $30 million.
He said, okay, I just wasn't sure.
I needed somebody I could trust to tell me that.
And I was like, do not show this to anybody else.
You go to Tallahassee and cash this in immediately.
News of Abe's win quickly spread across the state of Florida.
It was at this convenience store that Abraham Shakespeare bought the Lotto ticket that changed his life.
A Lakeland man is waking up a millionaire this morning, 40-year-old Abraham Shakespeare.
He had the winning numbers and Mr. Shakespeare, I'd like to give you my phone number.
He opted to take home the lump sum of $17 million, but then after taxes, he ended up
with $12 million.
Still, you know, $12 million is a huge chunk of change for a man with a pretty humble background
who came from the central Florida town of Lakeland.
Lakeland is small town feel with a little bit of city in it,
beautiful lakes, areas are quiet, some parts are rural,
and it's in between Orlando and Tampa.
And here in Lakeland, Abe lived in a modest neighborhood
where many folks struggled to
make ends meet.
This is the famous Abraham Shakespeare's ex-home where he rented and lived.
This is where they lived before he won the lottery.
It was set up just like this.
Nothing's changed besides painting.
Pretty modest place.
Pretty modest.
Abraham's life has been hard to scrabble for its duration.
Abraham dropped out of school.
He had been in a little bit of trouble as a youth.
Nothing major, just little petty theft kind of things.
And as he grows older, he takes on a series of odd jobs.
Riding a garbage truck for the city of Lakeland, sweeping
up in somebody's barber shop.
Abraham had a strong friendship with Greg Smith, who owned a barber shop.
He was working at my barber shop as a cleanup guy, sweeping up and mopping floors.
He was a less fortunate person, so let him work, get paid, or buy him something to eat.
Abraham was an easygoing person.
He took life just as it came.
What kind of guy was he?
He was a humble guy.
Humble, respectful.
You know, he wasn't a hard ass.
He was a good dude.
He didn't smoke.
He didn't drink.
He didn't do dope.
He was just trying to survive, trying to make it in the world
as most people do, but without being in the lam light
of problems and trouble.
Even though he didn't have a whole lot,
he was very content.
Abraham has all of this money.
He can move anywhere he wants to, but instead he stays home.
He stays in Lakeland.
I think to a lot of people's surprise Abraham did not go buck wild as they say when he got his money.
He didn't overindulge.
Abraham says, I want to buy a car. So, off me and Abraham went to the car dealership.
Abraham walks up on this particular car and he liked it.
And I'm like, yeah, Abraham, that's nice,
but it's a used car.
Used or whatever, it was a gem to him.
He said he would go to Denny's to eat breakfast.
He bought a Rolex watch from a pawn shop. He come to the shop
every day. Millionaire come to the shop, sweep the floor. You
better not drop a penny on the floor. First thing you're gonna
say, you're gonna pick it up. You're gonna say pennies make
dollars. Abraham doesn't spend much money on himself. But the
one thing that he really wants is a new house. So he buys a 5,000 square foot million dollar mansion.
Prior to winning the lottery,
he would walk around this exclusive neighborhood
and he would dream about living in one of those homes.
He was able to buy his dream home
for a million dollars in the gated community.
And Abe quickly opened his doors to friends
and even strangers.
And one of those strangers was Centoria Butler,
who was at the time down on her luck
when she met Abe at a party he threw at his new house.
At the end of the night, he was like, where are you going?
I was like, I might be staying in my car tonight.
He was like, well, you know,
you can stay here until you get on your feet.
He literally let me as a stranger move into his house.
A friendship blossomed.
Centuria and Abe grew close,
and eventually they welcomed a son named Jeremiah.
When the baby is out and they bring him over to the bed,
Abraham with his long arms, he swoops in
and he takes the baby right out of her hands.
He's holding him, and he's like,
yeah, I got my snookin' pooka.
But for Abe, it wasn't enough just
to provide for his own family.
Abe seemingly wanted to help everyone.
And pretty soon, his generosity spread throughout Lakeland.
When Abraham won the lottery, all of Lakeland and Polk County
won the lottery.
People did not hesitate to come to Abraham and say,
I need money for my mortgage.
They've got a foreclose of a house.
They're going to repossess my car.
I've got to bury my mother.
Everything you can think of that someone needed.
Now you're dealing with all kind of people
you want to look out for and people
you don't want to look out for, but everybody's there saying,
give me, let me, let me have.
Abraham wins this huge lottery.
And then within a day, everyone wants a piece. but everybody's there saying, give me, let me, let me have. Abraham wins this huge lottery,
and then within a day, everyone wants a piece.
I couldn't even talk with him.
In 10 minutes, his phone was ringing.
By the time he'd get off the phone with that one,
another one would call him.
There were days that random women
with cars full of kids would pull up and say,
oh, the Lord led me to you,
and I would be like, no, that would be Google Maps, honey.
He got tiresome, too.
He got fed up with it a lot.
I really would like my old life back
where I could walk the streets like a normal person,
but got people coming up asking for money.
And Abe's fortunes might be about to take
an even more serious turn for the worse.
His friend comes forward and says, hey, that's my ticket. And Abe's fortunes might be about to take an even more serious turn for the worse.
His friend comes forward and says, hey, that's my ticket.
All those multimillion dollars, they're mine.
Abraham Shakespeare was on the verge of losing his entire fortune. When Abe Shakespeare moved into that gated community, he was stepping into his life of
luxury as a recent lottery winner.
But those gates still couldn't keep people out.
Friends, neighbors, even strangers still visited, asking for a favor, a loan, or a handout.
I think it caused him more harm than good.
I don't think he enjoyed that money.
It was like, I wish I didn't even have no money.
He was dead serious.
There's something called the lottery curse.
Lottery winners go bankrupt.
They are killed, robbed, kidnapped,
and scammed till the end of days.
Most people work and struggle to get millions when it's handed to you.
It's an easy come, easy go, and you're open game.
And if you're not prepared for it, you're screwed with it.
Ape tried to manage that flood of requests, turning some of those handouts into loans,
but this was far from a perfect system.
One of the things that Abraham did was he set up a business venture in which he became
the Hood's bank.
But that also meant that he had to make arrangements with them for when they would pay back
and how much they would pay back.
This was becoming overwhelming.
Abe was giving out money faster than he could keep track of.
And then things took an unexpected turn
with that coworker on the trucking route,
the guy who bought the winning lottery ticket for him, Mike Ford.
Suddenly there's a lawsuit against Abraham, filed by Mike Ford, who is claiming
that Abraham stole the tickets.
I was able to immediately get in contact with him.
He was upset because he thought that Michael Ford was a friend.
To defend himself, Aide brought in a high-profile attorney named Willie Gary.
Willie Gary is a force.
Very self-confident.
Willie has a private jet.
He drives around and rolls Royces.
He wears, of course, custom-made suits.
Please be seated, ladies and gentlemen.
Mike Ford's claim was that Abraham had gone into his wallet,
had taken the lottery ticket.
Abraham denies that he ever stole that ticket.
In response to the lawsuit, Abe alleged it was never about a stolen ticket.
It was about a demand for a million dollars.
Abe's claim was that Mike basically went to him saying, hey, I want a million dollars.
And Abraham said, I'm not giving you any money.
And that's when Mike said, well, I'm going to sue you.
Ford has a different account.
He says that when he asked Abraham about the ticket,
Abe offered him a million dollars,
but later refused to pay, saying Ford couldn't prove
the ticket was his.
Ford versus Shakespeare was a five-day trial.
Michael Ford did his best to present his case,
but the jury only took an hour to find against him.
It was a battle over millions in that courthouse,
but in the end, he got to keep all of his money.
And then he met someone.
He met someone who promised to help him,
who promised to protect his fortune, to secure his future.
Is Abe's luck finally turning around?
A woman named Doris Moore, they call her Dee Dee.
Florida born, very ambitious, pretty smart.
She comes along.
In fall of 2008, Dee Dee goes to this
small business conference where she meets the realtor
who sold Abraham his $1 million mansion.
And she thought it would be cool to write a book about his life.
Dee Dee is introduced to Abraham and he agrees to let her profile him.
She wanted to sit down and interview us for her book. Dee Dee Moore seemed like
she was a very professional woman. She was in a suit and heels and hose and
everything and said that she owned a company, American Medical Professionals.
Dee Dee Moore is a self-made businesswoman, a very successful businesswoman
with a medical staffing company.
And the more time Dee Dee spent around Abe,
the more involved she became, not just as an author,
but also as an advisor.
She learns that he has all this money out there in the community.
She said, you need a financial advisor, you need some financial help.
I am an expert at that.
The next thing you know,
Dee Dee is Abraham Shakespeare's sidekick
and his emissary who goes around to collect money.
She had her own money.
She didn't need his money.
And that became a trust factor for him.
He's like, you know, she has her own business.
She, you know, know how to run things.
She gonna help me with my LLCs.
Dady wasn't just helping Abe with his money.
She also started recording their conversations,
capturing these behind the scene moments
where even with her help, he still appeared to be fed up.
Do you get tired of people asking you
for money all the time, Abe?
Give me your opinion on it.
I've been tired.
Are you okay?
All of a sudden, things go silent, and nobody knows where Abraham Shakespeare is.
None of his children had heard from him.
His mother hadn't heard from him.
Nobody had heard from him. His mother hadn't heard from him. Nobody had heard from him.
And just like that, Abraham Shakespeare disappeared.
No calls, no goodbyes,
not a word to the people he loved.
It was like he vanished into thin air.
Abraham Shakespeare seems determined to shake that lottery curse, especially after his generosity
cost him almost all of his jackpot millions.
Now he's fighting to get his finances back under control.
Everything was well, and then it got quiet all of a sudden. In April of 2009, there's a stir going on in the community
about nobody having seen Abraham Shakespeare in a while. A little buzz at
first and then it gets louder and louder and louder and becomes a thing. People
start to talk, hey have you heard from him? No, I haven't heard from him. Have you seen
him? No, I haven't seen from him. Have you seen him?
No, I haven't seen him either.
And that kind of started to snowball
when everybody started to realize,
you know, I haven't heard from him either.
And so at what point did you notice
that Abe might've gone missing?
When I would call,
he would always answer me or respond back.
And when I didn't get that,
then it began to make, you know what I mean,
somewhat of a red flag.
There was this widespread speculation around Lakeland that it finally just got fed up with
all these people thinking that he should share his fortune with everyone. And as a result,
he decided to skip town.
It was common knowledge that Abraham said that he got tired of people asking him for money.
I really would like my old life back
where I could walk the streets like a normal person.
When nobody's seen him, for the first couple months,
we were like, okay, you know, he did say
that he was gonna go away for a while
and just let things, you know, kind of die down and chill.
And then he was gonna come back.
And friends say Abe had a very good reason
not to skip town for good.
Even though Abe and Centoria at this point
were no longer living together,
Centoria says Abe was still a devoted father
to their son, Jeremiah.
He was just like so excited about being a father and he would take a picture every day.
Finally in November of 2009, almost six months since Abe disappeared, Abe's cousin Cedric
Edam decides to file a missing persons report at the Polk County Sheriff's Office.
Abraham's cousin Cedric Edam reported him missing to our missing persons unit and that's where the
whole investigation started. But the investigation gets off to a slow start. Lots of people are
still convinced that there's an innocent explanation for Abe's disappearance.
A lot of people said, well, I mean, I don't think he's missing. I think he took his money and wants
to get away from all this. One of Abe's friends, Judy Hagins, even told the police Abe had mentioned
leaving the country. Did he ever discuss any intricate plans with you that, hey, I'm gonna
disappear and nobody's ever gonna see me again?
Yeah, he did.
What was that about? Tell me.
He really wanted to move to Jamaica.
Still, there was an aspect of Abe's disappearance
that puzzled some of his friends and family members.
All of a sudden, they started receiving
these random text messages from him.
All of these people that Abraham would normally just pick up a phone and talk to or stop by to see were getting text messages.
So at this point, there are a bunch of people coming out of the woodwork who are saying that they've heard from Abe.
Right. I got a text at one point.
And what did that text say?
He was just, he was
out and just didn't want to be bothered. And the mother of his child. Centoria, she received
a text message saying he was going on vacation and leaving her for another woman. I'm texting
Abraham and I'm getting texts back, oh I'm leaving you for this one man, and we're going to the Bahamas. I got a reply from his number.
And the reply was, don't.
I don't need nobody filing no missing persons report on me.
I'm fine.
But Ashley and others close to Abe
say they had some serious doubts about whether he was actually
the person sending those texts texts even though they were coming
from his phone.
I knew that was my cousin this is not Abraham takes me.
There's no way that he could have constructed those text
messages because Abraham Shakespeare could barely read
and write in fact his cousin Ashley McMillan used to read
him the greeting cards here at this Walgreens where she used to work. Before he won the lottery
he was always buying Hallmark cards. He was like, hey can you come read this card
to me? I need something that conveys like empathy or sympathy. I asked him one
time, why can't you just read the card? And he looked at me dead square in the
face. It was like, I cannot read.
It was so suspicious as people were getting text messages
because he couldn't read or write.
And if it wasn't Abraham,
who were the text messages coming from?
That was one of the biggest hurdles we had
in the beginning of the case,
was nailing down when the last time not
only was Abraham seen, but when someone physically and actually talked to him on the phone.
So this case is such a mess that in the beginning you don't even have a starting point.
Every time we would talk to someone, they had heard something different.
It just seemed like every story was leading back to Dee Dee Moore.
And so we're just like, OK, we've got to talk to Dee Dee Moore,
because this lady Dee Dee is associated to every story
that we're being told.
For Abe's friends and family, it makes sense
that if anyone knows where he is, it would be DeeDee.
I mean, after all, she has been working closely with him to get his finances in order.
As their friendship began to blossom, Abraham and DeeDee Moore hung out quite a bit.
She became a major asset to him by helping Abraham collect on money that was owed to him.
Everybody was very uncertain.
Dee Dee had an answer.
When police interview Dee Dee about Abraham's whereabouts,
she says, nothing's wrong.
In fact, I'm in constant contact with him.
Her statement was that she talks to him all the time.
If we wanted to see him, she would make sure
that she brought him to us.
So she sends him a text message in front of us
and it's like, Abraham, call me, please call me.
We wait a little bit and nothing, and she's like,
well, I'll call you in the morning
soon as we hear from him.
We'll set up a meeting.
So we left.
Although Dee Dee can't actually connect police
with Abe on the phone, she is able to show them
that video that she'd taken of Abe
where he says he wants to skip town.
So where you wanna go to?
It don't matter to me. I'm not a picky person.
Are you gonna miss your home?
Yep, I miss it, but life goes on.
Weeks go by and there's no word from him and suspicion begins to mount.
go by and there's no word from him and suspicion begins to mount. But then this startling development.
Out of the blue, Abe's mother, Elizabeth Walker, is having dinner at a cracker barrel
and Elizabeth's phone rings and she opens her phone and sees, it's Abraham calling.
And she said, oh my God, it's Abraham.
Abraham Shakespeare is reported missing on November 9.
Most of his friends and family say they have not seen him or heard his voice since April.
Is there a chance at this point in the investigation that Abe Shakespeare might just turn up somewhere?
I think we thought that was a real true possibility.
Once we put him in the national databases missing, we got calls from all over the United
States and some of them were super confident that
it was Abraham.
It wasn't him, but we had to deal with a lot of that.
With all of these empty leads, investigators are now looking at other angles.
So there's a whole pool of potential individuals that you could look at with some sort of motive if his disappearance
did result in foul play.
We certainly hope Abraham's alive and well, and he has successfully hidden himself away.
But our investigation doesn't lead us to believe that at this time.
At this point, detectives are not only concerned that lottery winner Abe Shakespeare might be missing,
they're concerned he might be dead.
So how many people in Polk County
owed Abe Shakespeare money?
Over 20, maybe close to 40.
And so some of them would probably not be so upset
if he never appeared again.
That was the problem, is that there was a lot of people that owed him money.
But investigators are particularly interested in a man who had claimed that Abe owed him something.
Michael Ford lost the lawsuit to him, claimed that the winning lottery ticket was his, went all the way to a trial.
He's probably pissed off.
$30 million of upset.
Michael, we're up here talking to you about Abraham Shakespeare. How do you know that name?
Because I went to trial with him for a lotto ticket.
Okay.
And at no time did you see Abraham Shakespeare while you were in?
No, sir.
Florida.
And just for the record, you didn't in any way harm, hurt or cause Mr. Shakespeare to
be missing at this time, did you?
No, sir.
We actually pulled his phone records to confirm where he was, and he was in Georgia.
I mean, we looked at him that hard, but it was more of an elimination thing.
While detectives have a long list of possible suspects to go through,
Marissa Green at the ledger in Lakeland is focused on one person,
Dee Dee Moore.
I felt like I had a vested interest in finding Abraham Shakespeare
just like the detectives.
A couple of weeks before it was officially announced that Abraham Shakespeare was missing,
I met Dee Dee Moore over the phone for the first time.
She promised that she could produce him and I could interview him, but that never happened.
And it went silent.
And so that's when my red flag started to raise about this woman and who she was.
Then in December 2009, Marissa is able to convince Dee Dee to come down to the Ledger
Newsroom for an interview with her and her editor, Lyle McBride.
Dee Dee tells them that at the time Abe disappeared, most of his lottery jackpot was long gone.
He didn't have any money left really.
Right, except for what he was collecting, little, you know, the regular little ones.
The few that were paying him back.
The few that were paying him back, that's what he was living off of.
Because everything else was froze.
Because all his other money was tied up.
She said everybody else was taking advantage of her, you know, but not her because she had her own money.
That's the kind of person I am.
If you've asked my family and my friends,
I've been that way my whole life.
I always helped people.
During that three hour interview,
Dee Dee now tells a different story.
Now she insists that Abe left town
to avoid having to pay money in the child support fight
he is supposedly having with the mother of his son,
Centoria Butler.
There was never a plan to go to court to get child support. I never attempted to go to court
to get child support. That never attempted to go to court to get child support.
That was the end of the story.
So during the interview, we played good cop, bad cop.
And I was the bad cop.
I was the one asking the hard questions of Dee Dee Moore.
Where is Abraham?
Well, Abraham knows he was supposed to go for
Contempt of Child Support, okay?
And we...
That's the question I asked.
Where is Abraham?
I do not know.
And I told the cops this.
I do not know his address.
I didn't want to know because of the fact that
we knew he would have a warrant out for his arrest.
That interview with Dee Dee Moore at the ledger,
it ends without any new information
regarding Abe's whereabouts.
But then a month and a half after he was reported missing,
there's a surprising turn of events involving
Abe's mother, Elizabeth Walker.
Dee Dee befriended her.
And they're having dinner together one night. The phone rings and it's Abraham.
Hi mom, I love you. Oh baby, I miss you. Where are you? I can't hear you. It's so
loud. I can't really hear you, but I'll be home soon. I love you. I love you too.
And that's the end of the call. Dee Dee says, oh my God, you know, he called you.
See, he's okay.
And Miss Walker appears to feel, be relieved,
but not quite sure,
because Abraham sounded different.
Ava's mom is suspicious.
She was suspicious, didn't think it sounded like her son,
but in the back like her son, but
in the back of her mind, maybe he really does have a cold, maybe he's really sick. Turns
out the police are able to trace that phone call, and it leads them, not to Abraham Shakespeare,
alive and well, but to a very different person. We had that 30-day location tracker on the
phone, so we pulled it up, and it's at the Lakeland Mall.
Will that phone call help cops unravel the mystery
of what really happened to Abe Shakespeare?
The missing child is Lucia Blix, 9 years old.
Please let her come back home safely.
Wednesdays.
The kidnappers plundered meticulously.
If money is what it takes to get her back,
we're gonna pay it.
The secrets they hide.
You can't talk about this.
You can't write about it.
Are the clues.
The mother's hiding something, I know it.
To find her.
Tell me where she is.
The Stolen Girl, Wednesdays at 10 on Freeform
and Stream on Hulu.
Critics call the first season of Andor thrilling
and sophisticated.
The Empire cannot win.
On April 22, the Emmy nominated series
returns to Disney+.
Resistance is upside.
We must stand together.
We will be crushed.
There's a future here
for those who dare.
You're right here
and you're ready to fight.
Welcome to the rebellion.
Endor, season 2, streaming April 22nd
only on Disney+.
Three weeks after Abe Shakespeare's disappearance is reported to police, the full attention of investigators is now undidi more.
She was supposed to have been his financial savior, but they've discovered that she has
taken over his lottery fortune.
What did you see when you looked into his finances?
Abraham didn't have access to a penny of his money.
Deedee had not only taken over all of his banking accounts,
she had transferred money out of the banking accounts.
Deedee tells Abraham that for his benefit,
he needs to sign over his assets and so that she can have
control of those assets. That's the way she can protect him from anybody coming
after him for any money. She was now living in his house. I couldn't believe it. I'm like, what would make her wanna live
in this man's house?
Once we were going deep into the investigation,
we tried to find out everything we could about Dee Dee.
And we found out, you know,
she wasn't who she portrayed herself to be.
Dee Dee Moore's got a checkered past.
She's been in trouble with the law before.
She's no angel.
After graduating from Plant City High School in Florida,
Didi was eventually able to start up
that medical staffing company.
But she had her share of run-ins with the law,
a no contest plea for petty theft in 1999,
and a guilty plea for check fraud back in 2002.
There was also one incident where she falsely claimed she was carjacked after falling behind on her vehicle payments.
So she drives the SUV down a dark country road one night and two Latino men, this is her story, hijack her
SUV, tie her up, rape her, beat her and throw her on the side of the road and take off with
the SUV. Long story short, she had hired these guys to take the car
and hide the vehicle from everybody.
Dee Dee was convicted of insurance fraud.
And that background raises a lot of eyebrows among detectives
investigating Abe Shakespeare's disappearance.
She definitely has the ability to manipulate,
to lie, to concoct stories and so forth, yeah.
We were really convinced that Dee Dee
definitely had more information.
And we wanted to push some buttons with Dee Dee.
So police press Dee Dee for answers about how she's taken over Apes finances.
You are in essence Abraham, correct?
Yes.
But my point in all of this is all of these people plus all of the real estate comes up
to how much?
But you've got to...
No, no, no.
It comes up to how much, Dee Dee?
No, no.
It comes up to how much?
So, okay.
You have to ask.
I've done the rough map.
OK, it comes up to almost $3 and 1 half million.
If I'm guilty of anything, I'm guilty of helping
him avoid child support.
I'm not worried about any of that.
Investigators may have their suspicions about Dee Dee,
but what they don't have is any hard evidence tying her
to Abe's disappearance.
Meanwhile, Dee Dee turns to the media to plead her side of the story.
Because of these people, my life has been turned up in the last two weeks.
All my house has been looked over twice.
They looked through all my papers.
They took my computers and downloaded their hard drives.
I want this out of my life.
And I feel sorry for Abraham.
But I, I, I, it has hardened my heart.
I don't know if I'll ever help anybody out anymore.
Then eight and a half months after Abe's disappearance,
and just a couple of days after Christmas,
there's a development that sends this case in a dramatic new direction.
The thing that really turns the case was when Elizabeth Walker
got that call from her long-missing son.
Deanie Moore was at dinner with Elizabeth Walker when Abraham called.
Abraham's mother called me and she's like, Detective Clark, Abraham called me and told
me Merry Christmas and that he's okay.
But she said, it didn't really sound like my son.
And I said, what number did that call come from?
And she's like, it said private.
It didn't take long for them to look at phone records.
Investigators quickly learned
two very critical pieces of information.
First, that number is not Abraham Shakespeare's.
Second, someone with that phone itself
is located very close by a local mall.
So they rush to that local mall to figure out who it is.
And incredibly, at almost the same moment they drive in, so does Dee Dee Moore.
And then in drives Dee Dee.
It's like a gift from God dropped to us.
Crazy.
We watch her get out, meet with this guy,
hand him a wad of cash.
And this was just, you know,
stinkin' the high heavens.
They talk for a minute, she gets in her car,
and she drives away to the north,
and this car with this gentleman in it
drives away to the south.
So we get behind the car, we're following it, and we're like, let's stop it.
We go to stop the car.
So I just jump out, I go to the guy and I go, you can either park your car, get in our car and come with us,
or we're going to try to put you in prison the rest of your life.
And he goes, well, I guess I'm coming with you.
Well, we're gonna try to put you in prison the rest of your life.
And he goes, well, guess I'm coming with you.
The man in the car, the man who got the cash from Dee Dee
and who owns the phone that made the call to Abe's mom,
he is none other than the friend of Abe's
who ran the local barber shop, Greg Smith.
Do you know Dee Dee more?
That's what they ask me.
Now I'm thinking to myself, Lord, Jesus, what is going on?
Did he make a phone call to Abraham's mother?
I said, yeah.
Well, I make the phone call to his mother,
pertaining to be Abraham.
I'm supposed to mimic his voice and the way he talk,
best I can, and tell his mom that I'm OK.
He said, she's going to pay me $350.
I didn't feel right about it, but I thought I was helping
Miss Walker feel better
Because she's been worried about her son Greg told them then I think that Abraham is dead
they said we think so too and
They said, you know, we need you to keep meeting with DD because she we think she has something to do with this.
And we need you to work for us.
And I'm thinking to myself, man, when I needed this man, this man stepped in and helped me.
And the reality of what's at stake sinks in for Greg Smith.
The light click on, okay, she actually is under investigation for killing Abraham Shakespeare.
I was like, you know, I'll do what I can.
And so begins an elaborate plot to take down Dee Dee Moore and prove her involvement in
Abraham Shakespeare's disappearance.
Now, this is going to involve not only an undercover sting, a can of Red Bull, but also
a discovery made right in this yard.
For Abraham Shakespeare, the good news is you've won the lottery.
That's also the bad news.
As of this time, we don't know the whereabouts of Abraham Shakespeare.
Detectives are not only concerned that Abe Shakespeare might be missing, they're concerned
he might be dead.
We've got to talk to Dee Dee Moore because everybody is bringing her name up.
Whatever story they had, everything just kept circling back.
They're saying that I took a gun and killed another human being.
What they need, they need the evidence.
I guarantee you Ronald has killed her.
We're like, Ronald? We've never heard of a Ronald.
She kept saying Ronald killed him. Ronald shot him.
Why are you laughing?
Because...
A man is dead. He's been murdered.
I liked Mickey Mouse in Donald Duck.
There are so many things that proves my innocence.
Do you understand how listening to you is bewildering?
Well, do you understand how listening to you is just...
it sounds like a bunch of stupidity?
Hello, Florida. It's Wednesday, November 15th.
New York N Knights winning numbers.
Abraham Shakespeare won $31 million in the Florida lottery going from rags to riches.
But as happens to so many lottery winners,
Abe is besieged by people asking him for some of that cash.
I really would like my old life back
where I could walk the streets like a normal person, but got people
coming up asking for money.
Everybody feel that's their opportunity to get paid.
But then he suddenly disappears.
But no one has seen Shakespeare, including his mother, who's beginning to think the
Lotto Prize may have been a curse.
Yeah, I'm just hoping to hear something.
There is contact.
Family and friends receive text messages from Abraham.
In fact, his own mother gets a phone call from Abraham.
I answered the phone.
I said, hello?
Upon further investigation,
detectives learned that the voice was Greg Smith,
the owner of the barbershop where Abraham would work.
I was like, Mom, how you doing this Abraham?
Greg claims he faked that call at the request of a woman named Dee Dee Moore,
who was helping Abe with his finances, and the police start
investigating her.
Despite running a legitimate business, Dee Dee Moore has a checkered past.
She's been in trouble with the law before.
Greg decides he does not want to go to jail, so he helps investigators with their case.
And one way that he does it is by becoming a
confidential informant.
I didn't set a plan out to go catch her. I just told him I'll see what I can do.
I'm talking to getting ready to talk to Dee Dee. She's getting in the car now.
When I interviewed Greg Smith back in 2012, he showed me how he secretly recorded conversations
with her using something he called a catch can, which he invented himself.
It's a red bull can.
Look at that thing.
I couldn't even figure out how it opens even.
It actually separates in between.
Oh yeah.
Wow.
That's brilliant.
That's the Dee DD Moore catch can.
I worked undercover narcotics for eight years and I wouldn't have came up with this.
Almost all of the meetings were in a car.
Here it is sitting in front of her. She doesn't even know it's there.
Well they'll never know about you anyway. I'll never give you up. You know what I'm saying?
Ever.
Man, I'm so deep in the s*** with you right now. If you go down, I go down right now.
It was ingenious, but he even took it a step further.
He would be smoking small cigars as they talked
so that she wouldn't get suspicious.
He would make the point to flick ashes on or into the can
as they were talking.
Pretty simple trick, but it worked good.
And it gave us a good recording of the car.
I just need some time to get freaking Abraham back.
Dee Dee is recorded telling Greg that Abe is alive.
After she had asked Greg to make that fake call to Abe's mom, Dee Dee now asks him to call someone else to continue spreading the news that Abe is okay.
Should I say that he talked to his mom? Yeah. to continue spreading the news that Abe is okay. Say that if she tells anybody, Abraham told her he would never call back.
What's up, Dee Dee?
Greg later reports back to her that the call went well.
Are you telling him, yeah, he's still living?
I said, yeah, he's still living.
I said, if anybody want to know if he's still living, yeah, he's still living.
At one point, the investigation moves to a local hotel where Dee Dee Moore and Greg Smith meet.
So Dee Dee and Greg go to the hotel
to follow up that fake phone call with a fake letter?
Yes, they did.
Dee, the rooms is expensive.
We're listening as they're in the hotel.
That's not the same laptop you had as...
You wouldn't bought that today.
Here comes a brand new laptop and a brand new printer.
But she is very paranoid now about leaving any traces
that can be taken back to her.
So she's dressed in full hospital gown, gloves,
face mask, hair, so that while she's typing,
that none of her DNA gets on the paper or gets on the envelope or anything.
She is determined you will not find any D.D. Moore DNA here.
The shot's clicked.
The shot's clicked.
I don't want me to show this to the cops.
I just want them to tell this letter to the cops. I just want them to know that it was me.
They spent about two hours composing this letter to Abe's mother,
with Greg offering suggestions to Dee Dee about how Abe would actually talk.
And we're down there laughing because Greg's like,
no, maybe you should say bro instead of brother.
If I had to take this letter here, and I had to read this letter, and I had to understand this letter,
the letter is condensing to me.
It couldn't have came from you.
How do you do it to anybody, but how do you do it to a 70 plus year old woman who hasn't seen her son in months?
I mean, devious, manipulative, evil. 70 plus year old woman who hasn't seen her son in months.
I mean, devious, manipulative, evil.
He puts it in the mailbox, he leaves, I take the letter out of the mailbox and put it in evidence.
Remember, those close to Abe knew
that he could barely read or write.
I mean, this is a copy of the letter.
Yeah.
And for a guy who, even though his name was Shakespeare,
I mean, he didn't write.
This is like six or seven pages.
Exactly.
I only wrote you just in case you really worried,
just in case you can't keep this to yourself
and you're really worried about me.
Here's a Christmas present to you.
The letter is more like a treatise about everything
that Abraham would be trying to explain to his mother about why he went
away and what hassle he went through once he got all the money and how sometimes he
wishes he didn't have all this money but that he's doing okay and he's trying to stay away
and get his life together. I mean it went on and on and on for pages.
But what Dee Dee Moore does next will remove all doubt. Abraham Shakespeare is not okay at all.
With a body, I can do a P.D.O. with it.
What do you want?
50 grand.
If you do this, you're gonna be a very popular person.
You're gonna be a legend.
very popular person, you're going to be a legend.
By this point, all of the law enforcement officers' instincts are firing on Code Red.
They feel that Diddy Moore knew what happened to Abraham Shakespeare, what they need, they need the evidence.
So at one point you ask the sheriff to hold a press conference. As of this time, we don't know the whereabouts of Abraham Shakespeare.
And at that point the sheriff says, hey, we think that Abe Shakespeare may have been
met with foul play.
We suspect that he's met an untimely death.
He also names Dee Dee Moore as a person of interest.
I must tell you folks that certainly it is fair to call Dee Dee Moore a person of interest.
After that press conference, I believe she felt the walls closing in on her.
So immediately she calls Greg Smith, we've got to do something.
Did you see what the sheriff judge is saying about me?
And that's when the next phase of the case begins,
convincing Dee Dee that if Abe is actually dead, to admit what really happened.
They come up with this idea that they will get a fall guy who will say, you know, I'll
take the blame and say that I killed Abraham Shakespeare.
We call a guy named Mike Smith.
I mean, he's just a very large, intimidating fella and one of the best undercover guys
I've ever worked with.
And his last name happened to be Smith, the same as Greg Smith, and they pretended to be cousins.
So we tell Greg, we just want you to tell her that you have a cousin that's going to prison.
If there happens to be something wrong with Abe, I bet for a right amount of money he'll take a murder rap. I said I know somebody. I know
somebody. I got a cousin that's gonna do 25 years that'll take that rap. Yeah, I got
somebody. Here's the deal. I went and talked to him. He said, okay, I'll do this.
When can I talk to him? She reacted way more than we expected. She immediately says, I want a meeting.
I want a meeting as soon as possible.
So soon after, they arrange a face-to-face meeting
in another parking lot in Lakeland.
I pulled in right about this area here.
OK.
And parked.
She comes over, he jumps in the back seat,
she jumps in the front.
Hello. Hello.
Hello.
Alright, this is my baby right here, you gotta take care of her.
He introduces us, we talk small, talk briefly for a couple minutes.
Who does she think that you are at this point?
At that point, Greg had told a story to her that I was a drug dealer, I was just a drug dealer, he knew I was just a drug dealer.
They got busted by the feds that was going away that was willing to take the rap.
Yeah, I'm in over my head.
I've never been through nothing like this in my life.
The meeting is taking place in a undercover vehicle
that we had equipped with listening devices
and recording devices.
And what was Dee Dee's demeanor like in the car?
Was she twitchy?
She was all chipper, just normal.
I believe the question was, why would you take the rap?
Why would you do that though for me?
I'm going anyhow.
I'm going anyhow.
Well I can tell you, if you do this you're going to be a very popular person.
You're going to be a legend and probably on the Oprah show.
When I told her, I said, I got busted by the feds,
man, I'm gonna do 25 years.
I need the money to leave to my baby mom
so she can take care of my child.
What do you want?
50 grand.
Okay, can I do it in payments?
Because I don't have that kind of cash.
I'm gonna have to sell some.
I'm gonna need 10 up front.
Once I do this, make sure my boy get the money.
OK.
But that's not enough.
You feel like you need more out of her.
I felt like I needed more out of her.
I felt like we needed a body.
Like I said, I'm going to need a body.
Probably can get a plea deal with them,
because they're definitely going to want the fucking body.
And then Mike tells her, wherever the body is, I want to move it because if I'm gonna
confess to this, I'm gonna make it my own.
And she brings up, there's a guy named Ronald, a drug dealer.
If you take the rap, he is not gonna show up.
But I guarantee you, Ronald has killed him.
I just know it.
We're like, Ronald?
We've never heard of a Ronald.
And Ronald's the one he owed the money to? Yeah, they were doing a drug deal. No, I think Ronald
killed him for the money Abraham had on him. Abraham had a ton of cash on him, like the
tune of 800,000 dollars. This is a huge development. Whoever Ronald is, Deedee has just admitted for the first time that she knows that Abe is dead.
That's the biggest moment of the case. That's where we know 100% he's dead. I mean for us, couldn't have been a bigger moment than that right there.
She kept saying Ronald killed him. Ronald shot him. I said, well, where's the body, D?
You get with Ronald, and Ronald can tell me,
tell us where the body is.
That way when I'm competing, I'm competing.
I can tell them the body is right here,
and they will dig him up.
Okay.
And they'll have a body.
Okay.
Get with Ronald, find the body we need to know.
Okay.
I'll look back at my boy.
Okay.
I'll do it.
All right.
Thank you.
All right.
It was nice meeting you.
The next morning, Dee Dee calls Greg and says,
we need to meet and make it quick.
Dee Dee wants Mike Smith to be able to confess
as soon as possible so that the investigators will
stop looking at her.
What do you think that they're watching all the properties and all the friends' properties they have? stop looking at her.
He goes and meets Dee Dee, and Dee Dee hands him a towel. There's something wrapped in the towel,
and she tells him this is the gun
that was used to kill Abraham.
So she handed over her gun to you.
Exactly.
She trusted you that much that she handed you the murder weapon.
Exactly.
She asked him to meet him back at the same spot later in the night.
She would show him exactly where the body was.
This is the perfect time.
We'll call me in Plant City.
Yeah.
Alright. We're gonna go to Plant City. We'll go, we'll call me in Plant City. Yeah. All right. Well.
We set it up for her to take me to the body now.
Just like I think the body's still on that property.
We're moving the body tonight.
Dee Dee thinks that once Greg and his cousin
dig up the body, she's gonna be home free.
But she has no idea what is actually about to happen next.
Rapper Sean Diddy Combs was a kingmaker.
He had wealth, fame, and power.
What's up, welcome to New York!
Until it all came crashing down.
Federal investigators raiding two homes owned by hip-hop mogul Sean Diddy Combs.
I'm Brian Buckmire, an ABC News legal contributor.
As Diddy heads to trial, we trace his remarkable rise and fall.
And what could be next?
Listen to Bad Rap, the case against Diddy, a new series from ABC Audio.
Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. George, Michael, GMA, America's favorite number one morning show.
The morning's first breaking news, exclusive interviews,
what everyone will be talking about that day.
Put some good in your morning and start your day with GMA.
Good morning America!
Put the good in your morning. GMA 7A on ABC.
on ABC.
Not long after Dee Dee meets with the man who she believes will take the rap for killing Abe Shakespeare, she's driving along this road with Greg Smith heading to a property she owns on the outskirts of Lakeland.
So Highway 60, it's considered a rural area of Hillsborough County.
There's a lot of tomato fields, strawberry farms, and so forth.
You feel like you're in the country.
D.D.'s property has two ranch style houses that are several yards apart. They parked over in this house.
We were just kind of on the side of the road with our lights off.
She walks Greg right here. There was a
30 foot by 30 foot concrete slab. Concrete slab in the middle of a field.
Yep. She takes a piece of angle iron
and sticks it in the corner of angle iron and sticks it
in the corner of the slab and sticks it down in there
and says, dig.
Abraham's body is right there.
And you're listening to this.
You guys must be just going nuts at this point.
I think once we heard that, we both look at each other and go,
wow, let's just hope this isn't another Dee Dee spin
or scam on things.
We didn't know if we actually had the body down there or not.
As authorities begin this arduous work
to uncover what's below ground,
they simultaneously set up their next tactic for Dee Dee.
A few hours later, investigators have Greg call her again.
He says, there's a big problem.
When we went to dig up the body,
the place was swarming with cops.
Dee Dee's response?
Meet me at the mall.
Greg and Dee Dee then meet when all of a sudden Didi's response? Meet me at the mall.
Greg and Didi then meet when all of a sudden, boom, the cops pull up.
They jump out and they bust Greg.
I'm sure she's thinking that we're arresting Greg for the murder of Abraham.
So she's composed and says she wants to come back and talk to us and let us know some things.
OK, so you get her in here.
That's you.
That's me.
OK.
Who is this guy?
Greg Reisman.
Greg Reisman.
That's who I know him as.
OK.
Abraham introduced me to him.
She first says, hey, I'm glad you all got that guy, Greg.
I think that he's done something to Abraham.
Find out what he knows, because he knows where Abraham's at.
And so I let her go on for a few minutes,
and I said, look, Dee Dee, I got some bad news for you.
I think you know where I'm going with this, Dee Dee.
The gig is up.
OK?
The gig is up.
Listen, everything that you've told him,
everything you've done,
everything is recorded, Dee Dee.
Everything is recorded.
Finally see her demeanor change.
Right, right.
She puts her head on her head.
We talked to him 10 times a day.
We know every move you make.
We know everything.
Dee Dee Moore is caught pretty much red handed.
I want a deal, and I'll give you the person's name.
Dee Dee, at various times, blamed everybody
under the sign for killing Abraham.
He gave me the name of the person that did it.
And here she goes into the whole Ronald,
some random drug dealing guy.
I honestly don't know the guy's name.
I know him by Ronald.
So it's Greg Smith, it's Ronald, it's Mike Smith, the undercover.
The undercover, it's her son, it's Cedric Edam.
Everybody else.
Crazy, crazy.
Police say there is zero evidence that any of those people were actually involved.
Didi, you've said so many things you can't even keep your head straight.
Okay, well...
Listen, listen. Who shot Abraham?
You know this.
No, no, no. Who shot Abraham?
You know who shot him.
Authorities allow her to leave because without a body body they didn't have a case to arrest her.
Meantime, back at Dee Dee's property in Plant City, a team has assembled to attempt to find the evidence they need to actually arrest her.
We're talking probably 30, maybe 40 folks. This is definitely not a run-of-the-mill scene.
The concrete slab was like a 900 square foot tombstone.
We've got a 30 by 30, 9 inch thick concrete slab that we've got to bust up.
On day one, there was nothing found. They kept digging and
digging. This is a painstaking task. This is two inches at a time, sifting through
everything. This was almost an archaeological dig here. It was. I mean
every quadrant, everything just so we didn't miss anything. And at a point, once we hit about nine feet,
we started to uncover what appeared to be human remains.
You were able to look at this corpse
and you knew it was Abraham.
You didn't need DNA.
I didn't need fingerprints, I didn't need DNA.
I mean, of course we did that,
but I looked and there's Abraham.
Investigators from Polk and Hillsborough counties
announced a discovery tonight.
We have recovered human remains.
The media was doing a stakeout to try to get reaction from Dee Dee.
And she drives by in a truck, rolls her window down.
I'm only coming out because the media will not leave.
And it develops into kind of an impromptu news conference.
They're saying that I took a gun, put it up,
and killed another human being, and I would never, ever do that.
But the very next day.
Hey, Didi, they're calling you a murderer.
Are you a murderer?
No.
Doris Didi Moore denied any involvement
in Abraham Shakespeare's murder as she was led into a deputy's car tonight.
It was shocking. Here's someone who was supposed to be helping this guy with his money and now she's the one charged with his murder.
By the time we presented to the grand jury, she had provided the murder weapon, the bodies behind one of her houses.
Didi Moore was indicted for first degree murder, premeditated murder of Abraham Shakespeare.
Didi pleads not guilty, and when her trial starts...
As the now dark-tressed and dressed-in yellow defendant took copious notes, lawyers from
both sides made their opening arguments to the jury of eight men and four women.
There's one big question. Will a jury believe her defense that she was actually a victim herself of the person she claims
killed Abe? Six years after Abraham Shakespeare won the Florida lottery, three and a half years after
he disappeared, the murder trial of Dee Dee Moore is set to begin in this courthouse in
Tampa.
State of Florida, Versedores, Donegan Moore.
This has been a full day packed with the opening statements this morning and then the testimony
this afternoon and what promises to be a full of drama trial
the public's interest in this case was
Incredible prosecutors claim DD Moore swindled journalists are always looking for
Something that is unprecedented of DD's diabolical scheme to steal from then kill lotto winner Abraham Shakespeare or
unusual conflict, scandal. And this had pretty much all of the elements.
Anaphylactic shock.
Of course, Dee Dee's behavior in the courtroom also helped keep the story going.
Another day, another outburst.
We're not going to go back and forth. You
need to compose yourself. The prosecution is out to convince the jury that Dee Dee
meticulously planned Abe's murder. She conducted a sophisticated campaign to
conceal his death by making up stories, by sending text messages.
Prosecutors show the jury video that Dee Dee took
of Abraham in the mansion,
and it's really the last piece of video of Abraham alive.
Are you gonna miss your home?
Yeah, but I miss it, but life goes on.
She's setting up her alibi, she was setting up her story.
She knew that Abraham was confronting her about the lack of funds and the ability to
access his money and so forth.
And it came to a point where in Dee Dee's mind she's going to have to do something about
this.
Prosecutors believe right after that recording, Dee Dee and Abe traveled to her home in rural
Plant City, Florida. And it's there that prosecutors say she shoots him
and leaves him until the next day.
The bodies on property she owns,
the murder happened in her house and with her gun.
She admitted she bought the lime that was poured over
the body of Abraham Shakespeare.
Prosecutors show video in court of Dee Dee going to Walmart
to buy cleaning supplies.
She was purchasing bleach and latex gloves
and I think some shovels to help Mike Smith and Greg Smith
dig this body out by hand and dispose of it.
Although Dee Dee has never faced formal charges
alleging she stole Abe's money, prosecutors
say it was greed that motivated her to kill him.
Centoria is Abraham's former girlfriend and she tells jurors that Dee Dee told her that
she was plotting to take his money.
She made it sound like she wanted to clean him out.
Why do you say that?
Because she wanted to know about all of his assets,
and she was like, I can help you clean him out.
It was just a level of disgust to just know that this is what
such a caring and giving person endured.
But the prosecutor's star witness is Greg Smith,
who takes the stand to deliver some of the most compelling and
devastating testimony at the trial so far.
Greg Smith had been
recruited by the sheriff's detectives to become her confidant and
the courtroom was just spellbound by his testimony.
I'm grown and don't have to come back.
When Greg Smith read the letter that Diddy Moore had composed in the motel room,
jurors were on the edge of their seat.
I've been through a lot, Mom. You know it.
You should understand more than anyone.
I just need time.
The prosecution also asks Greg Smith about that supposed drug dealer who Dee Dee claimed was the one who actually murdered Aiden.
I honestly don't know the guy's name. I know him by Ronald.
Did Ms. Moore address who to blame if you got caught?
Yes. She was addressing the guy Ronald,
the imaginary character that she made up.
Ronald is nothing but a fictional character,
a character that she created out of her imagination.
The defense, such as it was, was primarily based on that old premise
that the state's case was all circumstantial.
That there was no hard evidence, there were no eyewitnesses.
The burden of proof is on the state. It's a very high burden of proof.
Proof beyond any reasonable doubt.
Deedee's lawyer tells the jury there's plenty of reasonable doubt here and that there could
be many other possible suspects.
That the drug dealers or killers saw fit to threaten her to keep her mouth shut or else
they would harm her and her son.
The defense argues that Greg Smith could actually have been the mastermind in Abe's murder.
If you study those tapes, most of the ideas about the Fall Guy, about where's the body,
we've got to find the body, we've got to dig up the body and move it, all those things,
if you read or listen to those tapes, it is Mr. Smith making those
suggestions.
Gregory Smith has never been a suspect in this murder.
Mediti's attorney insists she is innocent, that she's a victim in fact, powerless against
the deadly whims of others.
This is a desperate, panicked, perhaps emotionally unstable
woman trying desperately to find an explanation that
can salvage her life and her son's.
By the end of their case, the defense called zero witnesses,
and Deedee herself never testified on her behalf.
Tonight, after just three hours of deliberation,
a jury handed down their verdict.
But no matter what the jury decides about her fate...
Bring the jury in.
Dee Dee's about to tell us exactly what she thinks about it.
They didn't get to hear my side.
They didn't get to see my evidence.
They didn't get to hear my witnesses.
Why didn't you take the stand then? lifelong dream of making it to the league. Each man must make a personal commitment to excellence and to victory.
Will be fulfilled on this iconic stage at Lambeau.
We'll be perfect in the NFL draft.
The 2025 NFL draft begins Thursday, April 24th
at 8 p.m. Eastern on ESPN, ABC and NFL Network.
Don't miss Good American Family.
We have a little girl here for adoption.
She has dwarfism.
Starring Ellen Pompeo and Mark Duplass.
Something is off.
She's just a little girl.
You think she's a faggot?
She has adult teeth?
There are signs of puberty?
Inspired by the shocking stories that tore a family apart.
I don't know what's going on.
How old are you?
You should get a lawyer.
You have no idea how those people hurt this girl.
The Hulu Original Series. Good American Family. New those people hurt this girl. The Hulu Original
Series. Good American Family. New episodes Wednesdays streaming on Hulu.
After almost two weeks of this roller coaster murder trial it's now up to the
jury to decide Dee Dee's fate.
Bring the jury in.
Tonight, after just three hours of deliberation, a jury handed down their verdict.
Juries do unpredictable things. Is that indeed the jury's verdict?
It was probably seven o'clock at night.
A storm was coming in.
Right as they read guilty on the first count,
the defendant is guilty of first degree murder.
A clap of lightning happens outside and just kind of lights up the courtroom.
It was kind of like, yeah, it was wild.
Abraham Shakespeare was your prey and your victim.
Money was the root of the evil that you brought to Abraham.
The judge made a brief statement about how heinous her crime was and that he would be
sentencing her to life in a Florida state prison without the possibility of parole.
I felt like he did get justice
because even though his life was cut short,
her life is just gonna be long and miserable.
I won't forgive her, I don't forgive, and I never will.
Convicted murderers rarely talk while they still have appeals left, but then again, Deedee
Moore is no ordinary murderer.
I'm not nervous.
I'm probably getting nervous.
Hi.
After Deedee was sentenced to life in prison without parole in 2012, 2020 was granted an
exclusive interview with Deedee here in her cell blocks cafeteria. Upon arrival, we quickly learned that Dee Dee wasn't
exactly camera shot.
Yeah, I've been on TV before.
OK, that's good to hear.
You're a pro.
Let me show you this.
And this is fan mail.
This is people.
I have more than fan mail.
I have a movie producer doing a big TV screen
production of my case.
Despite that jury taking less than three hours to convict her, Dee Dee vehemently maintains
her innocence.
I think people are complete idiots that think I had anything to do with it.
I really do.
When the guilty verdict was read, what went through your mind?
They murdered me by the hands of justice.
I'm murdered.
You might as well kill me, because this is no type of living in here.
Because I would never harm another human being.
I would never hurt nobody.
I liked Mickey Mouse in Donald Duck in Disney.
I liked Tinkerbell in Kind Things.
I'm not a mean person.
After a two-week trial filled with damning audio and video evidence, I wondered if Dee Dee might finally come clean about what really happened to Abraham Shakespeare.
Did you murder Abraham Shakespeare?
Absolutely not.
Did you bury him in your backyard?
Absolutely not.
Why are you laughing?
Because...
A man is dead. He's been murdered brutally.
Yes. Yes. And are you laughing? Because... A man is dead. He's been murdered brutally.
Yes.
And you're laughing.
Yeah.
Because I find it entertaining that people are that ignorant.
Because there are so many things that proves my innocence.
You ended up in his house with all the rest of his money.
Then he ended up dead in your property.
Okay.
Shot by your gun.
You don't find any of that unusual or odd.
Absolutely not, considering the people he hung around.
I only knew this man for four months
and I'm just gonna, oh my goodness, I met this man
and you know what, I'm gonna plot a murder in four months.
Do you understand how listening to you is bewildering?
Well, do you understand how listening to you is just,
it sounds like a bunch of stupidity? So if Deedee's claims are so convincing why didn't the jury
buy it? Well she blames it all on her own attorney. I personally would have
convicted myself for what they got to hear but they didn't get to hear my side
they didn't get to see my evidence they didn't get to hear my witnesses. Why
didn't you take the stand then? You had every opportunity to defend yourself.
I wanted my witnesses to take the stand for me to take the stand.
My lawyer says we didn't need it.
Your lawyer was that convinced you were going to win?
Yes.
But Dee Dee's lawyer, Byron Heilman, said the decision not to testify was Dee Dee's.
And Dee Dee's alone.
We discussed with Ms. Moore whether she wished to testify.
That discussion had gone on for quite some time,
and she made the decision not to do that.
But since she claims her case
was not properly presented in court,
Dee Dee tries with us.
People were trying to frame you.
Absolutely. Why?
Because, first of all, I was an easy target.
A target, she claims, for drug dealers.
Remember the story about Ronald, that so-called drug kingpin?
Dee Dee claims the gang he allegedly had was out to kill her.
They were going to take my son and kill him and chop him up and put him on my doorstep.
Who?
These guys that the sheriff's department says didn't exist, that we have witnesses, that
they do exist.
You give so many different versions that it's absolutely bewildering.
Why is that?
I'm threatened.
They're making me do that.
So you're lying to the police because you feel threatened?
No, I'm being told to do that.
I'm being told to just keep throwing them off.
By?
By Ronald.
Dee Dee claims she has witnesses who will back up her version
of events, but she wasn't eager to share those names with us.
Can we talk to your witnesses?
Who are they?
Do you mind if we take down their names
and maybe contact them?
I have to ask my lawyer, but I don't know if they'll.
These witnesses don't exist, and that certainly
looks like your handwriting.
What do you mean?
That looks like your handwriting.
What you said were witnesses' notes
looks like your handwriting. I don't were witnesses' notes looks like your handwriting.
I don't think that these witnesses exist.
If not, why won't we know?
Dee Dee says since she's appealing her conviction, she can actually talk about them.
And with that, our interview is over.
Okay, thank you.
Well, it was nice meeting you. Thank you. Well, it was nice meeting you.
You too.
Dee Dee may not have been willing to share her evidence of supposed witnesses with us,
but she's going to get a chance to present her claims in court.
It's going to be back in court today.
Dee Dee Moore will try to convince a judge to give her a retrial.
Will it be enough to get her murder conviction overturned. After years of filing motions to appeal her conviction, in July of 2023, Deedee finally
gets another day in court.
Deedee Moore is back in a Tampa courtroom demanding a new trial.
Didi tells the judge that she was framed by investigators who were paid off by those drug
dealers that she alleged were doing business with Abraham Shakespeare.
They're being paid under the table because cocaine dealers can afford a lot.
The investigators denied Didedee's allegations.
I have never heard of anything of this corrupt drug network involving Abraham Shakespeare
or corruption within either of our departments.
It's absurd.
That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
The judge denied Deedee's request for a new trial.
But that wasn't the last time we heard from Deedee.
More than 12 years after we first talked in Florida,
we spoke to Deedee again on a call for prison.
Tell me, how are you?
I'm fine.
I've been working on my case
and I've got my appeals out, so I'm waiting patiently.
How long have you been incarcerated in jail and in prison at this point?
14 years.
You still do not admit that you murdered Abe Shakespeare.
Absolutely not.
I didn't.
14 years is a lot of time to think.
Do you ever go back and think about Abe, about Abraham Shakespeare?
Absolutely.
It was wrong. There was no reason for him to pass away over money. But for them
to lie in public and say that it took his money, the whole situation was so stupid.
You murdered him and you've taken zero responsibility. And you're saying like in past tense that
it's so sad he had to pass away
Abraham Shakespeare did not pass away Abraham Shakespeare was shot at close range
Everything they said in jury trial was not true. I thought that you might
More than a decade after our interview have some
Yeah, some remorse some reflection about what had happened that maybe there was a little bit of softness in your heart about Abraham and about your
responsibility here.
There is plenty of softness in my heart.
She is still as adamant as she ever was that she was framed, that Abraham Shakespeare was
murdered by someone else.
She denies taking Abe's money.
She denies doing anything wrong.
Abraham Shakespeare not only lost his fortune and his life,
he lost the chance to see his children grow up.
Everyone, thank you for coming to our house.
The funeral was very emotional.
It was a celebration of his life,
but it was also very sad to learn that
he was killed for his money,
which is something that everybody could not understand.
He was a kindhearted person
who genuinely wanted to help people.
He helped tons of people in this city.
He kept people from going into foreclosure. He paid light bills, phone bills.
He honestly did that.
Imagine just spending your last $4, which is what Abraham Shakespeare did,
on those lottery tickets, putting your last money on a far-fetched dream.
Abraham did a lot of good with some of his weddings.
The favor wasn't returned to him.
He was a wonderful man.
Yeah.
He will be sorely missed.
I'll never forget, after they found him.
I remember having a dream and I remember in a dream telling Abraham,
Oh good, you can come with me now.
And he kept saying, no, no, you'll be okay.
That was enough for me to believe that I'll be okay.
I really miss him today. I really just need to hear his voice today.
I just want him, like, bring him back.
Remembering Abraham with a broken heart and missing him,
Centoria is now a traveling nurse.
And we should note that Jeremiah, their son, he is now 16 years old.
That's our program for tonight. Thank you for watching. I'm David Muir.
And I'm Deborah Roberts. From all of us here at 20-20 and ABC News, good night. Hello, it's Robin Roberts here. Hey guys, it's George Cephanopoulos here.
Hey everybody, it's Michael Strahan here.
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This is Deborah Roberts. To hear the backstory to this episode, join me for the 2020 After Show.
Every Monday, I'm going to talk with correspondents, producers, some of those folks behind the scenes
who bring you these stories.
And you're gonna hear bonus tape
that's not necessarily included in the episode.
That's 2020 The After Show, Mondays in your 2020 podcast feed.