48 Hours - False Identity
Episode Date: January 11, 2026In 1983, Patrick Welsh disappeared and left behind a suicide note. Five years later, his wife, Elizabeth, officially had him declared dead. In 1997, Elizabeth received a letter from the Social Securit...y Administration, demanding that she pay back $56,000 in death benefits. She then discovered that Patrick was still alive and living in Texas under the name Tim Kingsbury. “48 Hours" Correspondent Harold Dow reports. This classic "48 Hours" episode last aired on 8/24/2001. Watch all-new episodes of “48 Hours” on Saturdays, and stream on demand on Paramount+. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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48 hours, we take you there.
We planned a life together forever.
Pat and Elizabeth were high school sweethearts.
We very much wanted to be married.
They had two children, Ted and Chris.
It's a devoted husband and certainly a devoted father.
Their lives seemed picture perfect, until dad suddenly banished.
The last thing I remember is waiting for him to come home at night.
Then they found his suicide note.
Please tell the boys, I will watch over them from heaven.
His family was sure he was dead.
If he was alive, he would never be able to leave my brother and I behind.
Now, after 15 hard years on their own...
My first thought was, could this possibly be true?
A stunning discovery.
She called me and said, Elizabeth, sit down.
Russ Mitchell and Harold Dow investigate.
I think that may be alive.
be alive.
Dad's double life.
You're leading a perfectly normal life with a good job at a wonderful family.
Things seem to be going along just fine, but then comes a problem.
It hangs on, you can't solve it.
Truth is, after a while, you can't even face it.
Then one day, suddenly, and with no warning, you vanish.
What if someone you thought you knew well, someone you
penned on, someone you love, just disappears. That is precisely what happened to a devoted
husband and father who became desperate for a way out, leaving those closest to him to wonder what
really happened. Russ Mitchell begins to unravel the mystery of a dad's double life, a life
that was once picture perfect.
The spirit of the times was long blonde hair and beach boy music.
music and the future is all yours to take and everything good is going to happen.
In 1964, Elizabeth Shank, a 16-year-old schoolgirl, began dating a boy who would change
her life forever, Patrick Hennessy Welch.
Pat was the kind of person that would be characterized by anyone as a really good catch.
And so Elizabeth Schenck became Elizabeth Welsh.
Elizabeth, whose nickname is Peachy and Pat had two sons.
They are...
Ted...
The kind of sons...
And Chris.
...that a mother would pray for it, let alone be proud of.
Tell me about those early days of your marriage.
How would you describe them?
My characterization would be they were very, very happy.
And by all appearances, the Welshers were happy.
I would have to characterize him, too, as a devoted husband
and certainly a devoted father.
I mean, he was close with those boys.
But after a few years of marriage, there were money problems.
I was totally blindsided by it.
Problems, which Pat had kept secret.
from Pitchie. We had been on a vacation and he was very distraught and it was hard to get him to
stand still to tell me what the problem was. The problem was Pat had stolen $23,000 from Ohio State
University. That was out of the blue. Where he worked as a fundraiser. And out of character,
as far as I was concerned. And as far as everyone that knew Pat Welsh was concerned. He was the
fair-haired boy. In 1980, Welsh was convicted of embezzlement, sentenced to 30 days in jail,
and ordered to pay restitution.
It had been difficult to try to explain to the boys.
They had to understand that their dad had done something that wasn't right,
and he was making that better.
For over two years, Pat did try to make things better.
In a wedding anniversary card that he gave me, slipped a note,
which said things will be better,
we'll be Pat and Peachy again, just relax and trust me.
And I believe that.
Until January 21, 1983.
We had made an agreement to meet up at my father's house that evening for dinner.
Pat owed my father some money and he was going to repay it that night.
But during dinner, Pat called from his office to say he wasn't going to make it.
And if it was all right with my father, he would repay him the money the next day
and that I should go ahead and go home.
The last thing I remember is waiting for him to come home at 9th,
night and watching the snowfall and just waiting for his car.
But Pat Welch never came back.
I imagine that he probably ended up in Iraq or he was doing something else.
Ted Welch was only 10 years old.
But he was going to be right back.
He didn't appear on Friday night and Saturday morning and Sunday.
Everybody had always told me that he has to be dead.
Chris Welsh, 23, was only seven.
If he was alive, he would never be able to leave my brother and I behind.
Elizabeth, can you tell me what your reaction was when you got this letter?
No.
15 years ago.
I was devastated.
Five days after Pat disappeared.
It was horrible.
Elizabeth received a letter.
I know you don't believe this now, but what you needed was freedom from my shadow, from my past and disgrace.
The only way to give you that.
is through my death. Overwhelmed with debt and humiliated by his past crime.
I wish I could kiss you goodbye. Pat Welsh told his wife of 14 years,
Please have my body cremated and not buried. That he had gone to San Francisco
to commit suicide. Please tell the boys I will watch over them from heaven
that I love them very much and have the greatest hope for them. It was
bad enough that Pat suddenly was gone but then to receive this. And despite an exhaustive
search by the FBI, local police, and the Welsh family, Pat's body was never found.
With two young sons and a mortgage, Pat had left Elizabeth with few options.
She didn't sleep.
She didn't eat.
Claire Bailey is Elizabeth's sister.
The anxiety that I saw in my sister's eyes, the fear that I saw in their little boy's
eyes, the unnecessary and unjust guilt that my sister carried with her.
her thinking that there's something that she should have done to keep this from happening.
It was probably one of the hardest things for me to deal with.
A wash in Pat's bad debts.
I found out that he hadn't been paying bills for a long time.
And with only $250 in a savings account.
I could not afford the house.
Elizabeth had to move her sons into this apartment.
I had to give away their dog because I couldn't afford to keep the dog.
And five years later, Pat was declared dead.
If it would just have been me, I don't know where I would be today.
I really don't.
But because of Ted and Chris, I had no choice.
There was nowhere to go but on.
And that's exactly what Elizabeth Welsh did.
She worked her way up really fast.
Today, she is president of the Chamber of Commerce in Licking County, Ohio.
She had to excel, and she had to push herself in that envelope to be everything
that she could be so that life would go on for her and for the boy.
But 15 years after Elizabeth first read Pat's suicide note,
a shocking revelation arrived in the mail.
Zipped open the envelope and pulled out the form and read it
and stood there in the middle of my living room and read it again.
My first thought was, could this possibly be true?
When we come back?
I think Pat may be alive.
I was the one who had to provide the explanations for what was happening.
Five years after Pat Walsh disappeared without a trace.
As far as you were concerned, there was no reason for you to think that he was still alive.
Elizabeth divorced her husband and had him declared dead.
It doesn't seem like a lot to have when you think you're closing a chapter on someone's life, does it?
She was then able to collect a small amount of life insurance.
I couldn't replace a father in their lives so easily.
And some Social Security survivor benefits for her son.
benefits for her sons.
But I could try to make a life for them that meant something.
Little did she know those benefits would later provide the first clue to 15 years of lies
and deception.
My first thought was, could this possibly be true?
Elizabeth received a shocking letter in the mail.
The boys' survivor benefits, partial survivor benefits that they had received would have
to be paid back within 30 days because the number holder was alive.
Actually, the terminology was not deceased.
According to the government, Pat Welsh was still alive.
I was thinking, no, wait, Elizabeth.
And they were demanding back their $56,000.
Basically, I called Social Security and said, you know, what are you guys trying to do here?
Sally Testa was an aide to Elizabeth's congressman at the time, John Casey.
I mean, we did what we could. How could you not?
With Sally's help.
I called a friend I have at the FBI.
Elizabeth was starting to grasp a difficult.
reality. She called me and said, Elizabeth, sit down. Someone named Tim Kingsbury. And I said,
well, Sally, I'm sitting. Who fit Pat Walsh's description. And she said, I think this could be your
husband, was using his social security number. And you're thinking what? Timothy Kingsbury,
who's this? In the winter of 1983, Patrick Welsh left his name and his past behind and pulled into Galveston, Texas, on a bus
with just a few dollars in his pocket.
Residents say Galveston is a friendly and forgiving city,
just the kind of place you might go if you wanted to reinvent your life.
He was just a tenant at my mom's house here,
and he worked for my mom at Schlotsky's restaurant.
Kevin Doherty was just a teenager
when a stranger named Tim Kingsbury moved into his mother's boarding house.
What did you think of, Tim?
Nicest guy ever met my life.
Kingsbury told Doherty and others that he was a student.
here at the Galveston branch of the University of Texas Medical School.
Would it surprise you to know that we checked with the folks at the medical school
and they said he was never enrolled there?
Very much, though, because I know his books were all there,
and he always seemed to be studying very diligently.
It was the first of many deceptions as Tim Kingsbury slowly established himself
in Galveston society.
In his early years, he developed a reputation as a local character,
writing for a small newspaper.
He wrote about learning to scuba dive,
to sail, and running a marathon, complete with photos of himself.
Responding to a feature on Galveston's eligible bachelors,
the man who had abandoned his wife and two sons wrote,
quote,
Can you imagine my surprise to find out I was not mentioned?
For a man on the run, Kingsbury didn't act like a man with much to hide.
Six months after his arrival,
he was hired as a part-time publicist for the prestigious,
Galveston Historical Foundation, referred to as GHF.
He was eventually appointed president.
This is a recording of his acceptance speech.
GHF is where I learned and grew professionally.
It's through GHF that I fell in love in every sense of the word.
While working at the foundation, he met Ann Anderson,
a woman from a prominent Galveston family.
He moved into her waterfront home,
where they lived together for 10 years.
Kingsbury eventually made his way into the inner
circle of Galveston society, known as B-O-I, born on the island.
He just was a standout and helping the community and helping people.
He became close with Anne's brother, Vandy.
Another beautiful sunrise on Galveston Island this morning.
Part owner of the local radio station.
Vandy Anderson reporting KGBC News.
Kingsbury later worked for him as general manager and reporter.
This was Tim Kingsbury's office.
He's done what I think a radio station manager should do, and that is to get involved in the
community.
These are various civic groups that he worked on
and just some symbols of their appreciation for what he'd done.
Kingsbury made other close friends, all prominent Galvestonians.
The passion that he poured into getting the schools improved in our community,
you know, matched my own, and I have little children.
Sheila Lidstone works for the local school district.
He didn't come in with a lot of flash and I'm going to be in charge.
He just gradually built his way into our hearts.
Dr. Brent Maysell says,
Kingsbury was his best friend.
I only know Tim Kingsbury.
Don't know Patrick Welch.
Gerald Sullivan, a businessman and cattle rancher.
I can truthfully put my hand on a Bible and swear that I know of nothing bad about
Tim Kingsbury.
But even his friends had some suspicions along the way.
I wondered when we were having the school bond election, what would make a young man with no
children who's not married get so involved?
He never really talked about his family.
I thought obviously something very onerous had happened in his life that was so horrible that there was no way he could discuss it.
And again, I was one of his closest friends.
But they didn't ask, and Kingsbury didn't tell.
In Texas, there's an old saying, you don't ask a man how many cattle he has.
He wants you to know, he'll tell you.
For 13 years, he lived in Galveston, a pillar of the community.
Then one day, late in the winter of 1996, everything started to unravel.
We had a citizen who came to us.
Mike Guarino, Galveston County District Attorney.
He had seen certain things at the radio station in the office of Tim Kingsbury that looked funny.
A coworker had come across forgeries.
Some partially filled out social security cards, a birth certificate or two.
Now, just after you had seized those fraudulent documents, did you have suspicions about him?
Certainly.
Did you think that maybe he wasn't Tim Kingsbury?
Oh, absolutely.
At that point, Kingsbury confessed everything to the DA and to his friends.
It's devastating to hear that someone that you talk to just about every day
has a whole other life that you didn't know about.
It's an incredible feeling.
And maybe just as incredible, no one seemed to hold it against him.
I don't blame Patrick Welsh.
I don't know Patrick Welsh.
We know Tim Kingsbury.
We're not talking about a rapist, a mugger, a murderer.
he wasn't that awful a person.
I don't think that I've been deceived.
I have many emotions, but being deceived is not one of them.
What about Patrick Welsh's wife and children?
I'm only in a position to judge what he's done here,
and that's been remarkable.
They should have had those 15 years, they'll say.
And they're right.
I mean, they missed out.
Kids missed out, family, community.
I guess I really don't blame his wife for being angry.
Gerald Sullivan's wife, Suzanne.
But he has suffered.
I mean, he's had his own hell these 15 years.
Why are you so willing to forgive?
I guess that's the question.
You all here in this room are willing to forgive him for the deception.
He didn't hurt us.
How did he hurt us?
I mean, all he ever did here was good.
There's no reason not to forgive him.
Would you accept him back here?
In a heartbeat.
In a heartbeat.
No question about it.
He faked his own death to his wife and his children for 15 years.
They thought he was dead.
To do that kind of thing, to leave every single thing you ever, ever had behind, everybody you knew behind,
and get on a bus penniless and just ride to the end of the line is an act either of incredible cowardice
or incredible bravery born out of desperation.
Which do you think it was?
I think it was bravery born out of desperation.
Kingsbury pleaded guilty to forgery and got four years probation, along with,
with a $2,000 fine.
But word of his false identity never got out into the community,
never made the newspapers, never made the local news.
I think it is out of respect for Tim that people didn't gossip,
and didn't talk.
People in the courthouse knew, people in the probation office knew,
lots of people knew, but they saw no need to rub Tim's nose in the dirt.
And Patrick Welsh was allowed to continue his life in
Galveston as Tim Kingsbury.
But because of the forgery conviction,
he had to use his old Social Security number,
triggering a chain of events in Ohio that
would ultimately lead to his arrest.
And the model citizen left Galveston in handcuffs.
Coming up.
It's too simple to say, why did you do it?
Patrick Welch faces his family.
I had questions for him.
All right.
For the first time in 15.
15 years.
It really is like someone coming back from the dead.
And Elizabeth seeks justice.
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I don't have a sense of anger in this, but I do have a very strong sense of justice.
Mr. Welsh, why did you fake your own death?
I know that if this were any other person.
Mr. Welsh, is it really good to be bad?
I'm even Patrick Welsh.
You're glad to be maybe getting this thing behind you?
A charming, articulate, handsome man.
Do you have anything to say to your ex-wife and your two sons who haven't seen you in the last 15 years?
But that person already would have been behind bars.
When Elizabeth Walsh discovered her ex-husband was alive and well, she had a difficult decision to make.
How far was I willing to make another exception for Pat?
It's too simple to say, why did you do it?
And can I turn to my sons and say, you were disposable people?
I wanted to know who I was.
It's okay because look at all the good he's done in Galveston.
I had questions for him.
This is wrong.
Where did he go wrong?
For the sake of her children.
Where could I go right?
Elizabeth pursued the man who had faked his own death and abandoned them 15 years early.
I sent him an email to the attention of Tim Kingsbury.
I know.
Call me.
When that didn't work.
Did you hear back from him?
No.
She went to Galveston without Pat knowing.
What did you say?
A very comfortable lifestyle.
A very visible person.
With a Ford Explorer and a conveyor.
and a convertible in the driveway of his waterfront home.
Certainly a better style of life than he had provided for Ted and Chris.
She came home from her Galveston trip and said, you know what?
Elizabeth's sister, Claire.
While the boys and I ate macaroni and cheese, Pat's been drinking margaritas.
Did that make you angry?
It amazed me.
It absolutely amazed me.
Elizabeth felt she had no choice but to call the authorities and have him brought back to Ohio.
It really is like someone coming back from the dead and bringing mystery with them.
On January 31st, 1998, this is state of Ohio versus Patrick Kennedy Walsh.
Almost 15 years to the day he left his home and family.
A motion was filed for a reduction in bond.
Patrick Walsh was arrested and charged with insurance fraud and non-support of his two sons.
This is not a situation where people have been hard.
where anybody has been killed.
His defense attorney, Sam Winer, is trying to get his $300,000 bond reduced.
This man is really no threat to society and certainly no threat to leave the jurisdiction.
So he can be released to his girlfriend, Ann Anderson, and wait out his trial back in Galveston.
When he asked to be released from Bond, what he's saying is, trust me.
Bob Becker is the Licking County District Attorney.
I understand this is not a murder case, but I do take strong exception to Mr. Wider's characterization of this case as one without victim.
There are, in fact, real victims in this case who have suffered real harm.
The motion for reduction in bond is denied.
Clear the hallway, please.
When this whole thing's over, I may never see him again.
I will never know that until it's over.
So even though you see him now in shackles and in prison gear, at least to get to see him.
That's great. I have a father for this brief moment.
With Pat Walsh sitting in jail.
I'm not angry. I'm not nervous.
Unable to run from his problems this time.
problems this time.
I'm here to see what he has in terms of plans for his future.
Elizabeth and her sons finally had a chance to confront it face to face for the first time
in 15 years.
Not our future, but his future, as it still affects something that for him became a liability
and for me became the greatest assets of our kids.
What do you think he wants?
Out.
Out of jail.
Out of jail.
Out of jail.
30 minutes later.
That was different.
He said right off the top.
He was sorry.
I didn't believe him.
Just like pressing charges, I had to press him to think about the reality of what he's facing now
and that he can't just fantasize about returning to Galveston.
What was it like the moment you walked into that jail and saw him?
It was a lot like looking into him here.
We mimicked each other almost.
He said, I love you.
And I said, take care of yourself.
I'm going to go hide.
I brought up the boys.
It was clearly painful for him.
I expressed to him that he really needs
to show some sort of admission to his family,
to my mother, to my brother, and to me,
that he has indeed done us wrong.
When he told you that he loved you, did you believe it?
I don't know.
I wanted to, but I don't know.
I don't know if I can trust him.
More important than words are the actions.
He can say he's sorry, but he has to show me he's sorry.
And he has yet to do that.
Pat Welsh pleads no context to eight felony and four misdemeanor counts of fraud and non-support.
So he not only needs his family's forgiveness.
Mr. Wells, do you agree with the facts as has been stated by the prosecutor?
Yes, Your Honor.
He's also at the mercy of the court.
Are you entering the pleas or changing your pleas, freely and voluntarily knowing what your rights are?
Yes, Your Honor.
Coming up.
You have no conscience.
Your acts were cowardly, and they were criminal.
Judgment Day for Patrick Welsh.
And for that, you will be punished.
But first, you'd have to lift up a low rock in a wet place to find anybody as sorry as he is.
The tide turns in Galveston.
How did Patrick Welch, a father who disappeared, managed to outrun his past for so.
long. Maybe it's because some of the people who got to know him in his new life, alias Tim Kingsbury,
simply wanted to believe the best about people. Or maybe they just didn't want to know the
worst. However, it happened now after 15 years, a dad's double life is finally catching up with
him. Here again is Harold Dow in Galveston, where they are changing their tune.
While Patrick Welsh sits in an Ohio jail, back in Galveston, the tide of public support has begun to turn against him.
I think he's probably one of the great con men of all times.
A.R. Schwartz is known to everyone here as Babe.
I think embezzlers, con men, foragers, liars, cheats and thieves ought to do hard time when they're caught.
As majority owner of the local radio station, Swartz hired Patrick Welsh, alias Tim Kingsbury as General
manager. In his application, he said he was single. He said he had no children, and he gave
his name and he gave a fictitious social security number. Schwartz, a former state senator,
admits he's one of many people in Galveston who got duped by Welsh. He conned me pretty good,
and I don't like it. I don't like being conned. I don't like being that stupid. And Schwartz says
the Galveston County District Attorney, Mike Guarino, was also conned. I have written the district
attorney and I've told him he got conned too. Even though Guarino charged Welsh with 14, you know,
and knew that this well-known public figure was living a lie,
he never announced that accusation publicly.
This man goes before the court, goes before the district attorney.
How come nobody in the community knows about this?
I don't know.
If it had been some kid that jerked Fort Hubcaps off a car,
it'd have been in the newspaper.
Some people thought the district attorney should have called a press conference.
Right.
Should have had his picture plastered out there for the entire community to see.
What's your response to that?
The district attorney is not a publicist or the town crier, so to speak.
He's the prosecutor.
got to prosecute the case.
Which Guarino says he did, write by the book.
We really didn't handle it any differently than we would have handled,
you know, a forgery case of this nature.
He admits he knew about Welsh's abandoned family in Ohio.
Did you know he was married with children?
Yes, we did know, because he told us he had walked away from a family.
We had no current information on them or their whereabouts.
But at the court hearing to determine Welsh's sentence,
Guarino never informed the judge about Elizabeth and their two sons.
Judge Carmona, the district judge, got conned.
Never in his lifetime would he have given Patrick Welsh probation had he known that Patrick
Welsh abandoned his wife and children.
District Court Judge Frank Carmona confirmed to 48 hours that he was not told about
Welsh's family.
Warino says he never brought it up because it was not a legal issue relevant to the forgery
case.
Did you feel it was your responsibility to try to seek out and locate the wife, the children
of Patrick Welsh?
No, at the time we did not.
We did not think about it.
We had notified all the agencies that we thought were proper,
including the Ohio side of the equation.
We thought they would seek them out.
But we really didn't think about it.
Hindsight's 2020.
I'd probably do it today.
He's not admitted publicly that he was kind like the rest of us,
but he should.
But Swartz is far more upset at his partner,
Vandy Anderson, co-owner of the radio station
and brother of Kingsbury's girlfriend.
I put it all on his back,
because he knew every bit of it.
Vandy was on the air.
Vandy was on the air every day.
Swartz believes Anderson had an obligation as a news reporter to inform the public.
Vandy Anderson should have come out here and said,
Tim Kingsbury has been convicted of his second felony at the courthouse today.
You think he should have went on the air and said that?
Absolutely.
If he goes on the air and gives the news, that's news.
Because of that, Swartz fired Anderson as news broadcaster.
According to Babe, this man known as Tim Kingsbury, conned you.
Conned your sister.
Conned everybody.
Do you feel like you've been conned?
No.
Not at all.
Anderson's sister Anne remains loyal to him as well.
She supports him 100 percent.
I think they'll be together the rest of their lives.
Do you think he conned your sister?
No, I think we all knew that there was a past,
and we just didn't want to know what it was.
Ann Anderson declined our request for an interview.
If this guy had conned my sister,
my first inclination would be beat the hell out of it.
What we know him as is a good person.
If he did something years ago that was bad,
he's made up for that.
I think in his own life, I hope so.
And that's how we know him.
But as the story unfolds, others in Galveston aren't so forgiving.
The guy belongs in an orange jumpsuit.
I guarantee you, two years in the general prison population,
will make a brand new man out of it.
Doug McLeod, chairman of Moody Gardens,
a top tourist attraction, worked with Kingsbury in various civic groups.
This guy was, in fact, nicknamed the amazing Tim.
That's understandable now because he gained this trust.
Everyone felt like this guy was the most trustworthy person in the world.
McLeod believes the people of Galveston are wiser from the whole experience.
If a new person came to town tomorrow and donated a lot of time to community efforts,
do you think he'd still check him out?
I think I'll know the answer to this.
Just ahead.
Elizabeth Walsh wishes to make a statement.
Thank you, Your Honor.
The public confrontation.
Every father's date for the past 15 years was stolen from the lives of your sons.
What will be the punishment for Patrick Welch's deception?
You're telling me you're not angry of this man.
I'm not angry with this man.
I'm not even old.
I don't believe so.
It's been seven months since Patrick Walsh was brought back from the dead.
He has chosen his course and I have chosen mine.
And today.
I feel that I have done the right thing for my sons.
Judgment Day for the charges of nine.
for the charges of non-support and insurance fraud.
Pat maintains that he believes he did the right thing
when he deserted us.
Besides facing his punishment.
This is the state of Ohio versus Patrick Kenesie Walsh.
Pat Walsh must also face his family, including his own father.
Elizabeth Walsh comes to court with a new look
and new determination that what she did was right.
Today's date is May 21, 1998.
We're here today for the purposes of sentencing.
I've made it clear for the beginning that I believe
a term in prison is appropriate in this case.
It seems to me this is this man's third felony conviction.
For that fact alone, he ought to go to prison.
Walsh has pleaded no contest.
This court finds that the defendant is guilty as charged.
And it will be sentenced by Judge Gregory Frost.
Coming now of the matter of sentence.
But first, the court has been informed that Elizabeth Welsh wishes to make a statement
and also Christopher, I believe, wishes to make a statement.
Ms. Walsh.
Thank you, Your Honor.
Pat, you started on this sad journey by stealing money from Ohio State University, from your
father and from mine.
You took our love, you took our trust, you took our innocence, our home, and any hope
we had for a normal life.
Every trip to Colorado, every South Padre Island vacation, every Christmas, every Easter,
every Fourth of July, every Father's Day for the past 15 years was stolen from the lives
of your sons, instead of being a father that they can respect and emulate, you are a 50-year-old
kept man.
And what was I to make of your last letters to me?
Do you remember what you wrote?
You are my light and my deepest love.
You know how much I treasure life.
I treasure you and your future more.
You know how much you are a part of me, so I hope you know that a part of me will live on.
Know that there was no one on earth that I cherished more.
But you did cherish someone more, Pat, and that person was you.
I'm sorry for you, Pat.
Christopher, do you wish to make a statement?
Yes.
Come forward.
How can you turn your back on a family that loves you?
How can you, in one breath, say you love somebody and then turn your back and run?
How, for 15 years, can you never call your sons and say hello?
How can you look me in the eye right now?
I hope you'd think about this and maybe give me some sort of reply.
Finally, Mr. Welch, is there anything you wish to say before the court pronounce his sentence in this matter?
Yes, Your Honor.
You may proceed.
Ted and Chris, I love you deeply.
I really do.
The great sadness of my life is that because of what I've done, you may never know how much I love you or how much I missed you.
Peachy, I'm sorry.
I did a wonderful job with the boys.
I'm sorry for what I've done.
And I'm ready to continue my punishment.
Thank you, Mr. Welsh.
And finally, with Elizabeth, Chris, and Pat's father, Richard, watching.
You have no conscience, your acts were cowardly, and they were criminal.
His sentence.
And for that, you will be punished.
You therefore have a total sentence to be served of four years at the Orient Correctional and Receiving Center.
There is restitution to be made, and you will pay every penny of that.
Four years of prison and over $92,000 in funds.
Is this ever going to be over for you?
It doesn't come to closure exactly what this part of it does.
The hurtful part of it that involved.
Deception, betrayal, hardship is done. It's done.
Now it gets settled. The debts get paid.
And we all go on.
Next.
I know I did bad things. I knew I did terrible things.
Pat Welsh tells his side of the story.
I need to explain that I never stopped being a loving father.
I know I did bad things. I knew I did terrible things.
But I tried once and for all to make something positive of my life in Galveston.
Patrick Walsh has never spoken publicly about his disappearance.
I need to explain that I never stopped being a loving father.
Until now.
I did this thing to make life better for my boys without having to live under the shadow of this criminal who was Pat Welsh.
We've seen pictures of you with the boys.
And you look so happy.
You look like the model dad.
What happens to a guy?
How do you go from that to doing what you did?
I mean, it was very vivid in my mind when it happened.
I had told Elizabeth that I was going to pay her father back money that I didn't have.
That was January 21st, 1983.
The day Pat Welsh disappeared.
I thought there was some way I could get that money.
And when I couldn't get that money, I knew that what was going to be.
to ensue was just the disintegration of everything. And I said, this is it. This is the moment
that I have to just go kill myself. Did you really intend to kill yourself? Absolutely.
Absolutely. I went to the edge of the pier. I was a bad person to myself. I thought they would
eventually be happy to have been rid of that bad person. In the end, I couldn't face that.
that in the last second you can't say you're sorry for killing yourself.
The person that I just saw on those tapes was acting.
48 hours showed Pat's interview.
I did a bad thing.
To Elizabeth and her sons.
My interpretation was that he was acting the part of someone who was supposed to be contrite,
who dearly loved his sons, and was really trying to do the right thing by them.
How did you come up with the name, Tim Kingsbury?
Looked in a newspaper for someone who was born about that time.
Really?
Just looked in the newspaper, saw this name, said that sounds good.
Yeah.
Why Texas?
Far away.
I've never known anyone from Ohio who'd ever gone to Texas.
Couldn't afford to go to the East Coast or to California, Texas.
You say you did this for your family.
What did you think was going to happen to them?
How did you think they were going to get by?
I knew that my family had the resources to take care of the boys.
I knew that Elizabeth was beautiful and talented,
and someone else would come into her life and become a new father for the boys.
But that's not how things worked out.
I'm lucky that I had a lot of books to read, and I had Chris and my mom and Aunt Claire around.
And we never did find another dad.
Did you like being a husband and father?
Oh, sure.
Sure, that was absolutely wonderful.
Trust.
There's no trust there whatsoever.
I mean, I cannot trust this man at all.
I do not trust anything he says.
In those 15 years, how often did you think about the boys?
Every day.
Every day.
Every day.
Every day.
Why not just pick up the phone and call?
Hi, just wanted you to know.
I'm alive. I'm here. I did this for this reason, that reason, whatever. But I'm here.
It was bothering you so much. Why couldn't you do that?
I thought about picking up the phone and calling them. That's those are the times when you would say
the price I'm paying is not knowing, and I'm going to pay that price today.
Let me just make sure I understand this. But you thought you were punishing yourself
by not picking up the phone and calling them. Exactly. I mean, it's, I certainly wouldn't have
brought them any joy. You know what they told me when I first met them?
I was so happy. I had a dad.
Oh, good.
My father is still alive.
So maybe if you picked up the phone, it wouldn't have been as bad as you thought.
Thanks for telling me that.
I keep thinking, how can he say these things and keep a straight face?
Would you like to have a relationship with Ted and Chris?
Absolutely.
I want it desperately.
I know I don't deserve it.
I know it's on their terms.
But when that day comes, I hope it does come.
When that day comes, I hope it's pure and simple that when they see me,
they're glad. But since Pat Walsh's sentencing, Ted and Chris say their father has not contacted them.
He's obviously erased my brother and I from his lives. What do you owe the boys? What do you think
you owe the boys? Game a catch. Game a catch. You can't even say he's a father. There's nothing
behind those words. Despite his four years sentence, I'll pay my debt. Pat Walsh is likely to be
released in a few months. And I'll make a contribution to this world. And plans on returning.
to Galveston. Has Tim or is Pat?
Is Pat? I mean, there's no charade anymore.
It's my name.
I gotta tell you, Elizabeth has been very gracious
when it comes to you.
She's a better person than I am.
She really is.
I don't know why I would expect anything else.
In 1999, Patrick Welsh was released from prison.
He spent a year behind bars.
Thank you.
