MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Jackpot (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: August 28, 2023In April of 2009, 42-year-old Florida lottery winner Abraham Shakespeare seemed to disappear off the face of the earth. But a series of text messages from Abraham – and a phone call he... made to his mother – would lead police to make a gruesome discovery. And what they found would expose months of lies, and help lead to a new law in Florida.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In April of 2009, 42-year-old Florida lottery winner Abraham Shakespeare seemed to just disappear off the face of the earth.
But a series of text messages from Abraham and a phone call he made to his mother would eventually lead police to make a gruesome discovery about his disappearance.
And what they found would expose months of lies and help lead to a groundbreaking new law in Florida.
months of lies and help lead to a groundbreaking new law in Florida. But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format, then you've
come to the right podcast because that's all we do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and
once on Thursday. So if that's of interest to you, please tell the Amazon Music Follow button that
they have a bit of ketchup on their shirt and then when they look down to see, wind up and uppercut them right in the nose as hard as you can. Okay, let's get into
today's story. The End and sexy. Okay, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks, you know who I'm talking about. No? Short shorts? Free cocktails? Careless whispers? Okay, last one. It's not
Andrew Ridgely. Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael. From teen pop sensation to
one of the biggest solo artists on the planet, join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all. But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man
in turmoil. George is trapped in a lie of his own making, with a secret he feels would ruin him if
the truth ever came out. Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wanderie Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wanderie app.
I'm Peter Frankopan.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me. Nina Simone, one of my
favourite artists of all time, somebody who's had a huge impact on me, who I think objectively
stands apart for the level of her talent, the audacity of her message. If I was a first year
at university, the first time I sat down and really listened to her and engaged with her message, it totally floored me.
And the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle, that's all captured in unforgettable music that has stood the test of time.
Do you think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
On April 9th, 2009,
42-year-old Abraham Shakespeare
drove his fancy black BMW 750i car
towards an upscaled gated community in Lakeland,
Florida. Abraham stopped his car, hit a remote control on his sun visor, and waited for the
large gate that kept his neighborhood separated from the rest of the city to open. Then Abraham
drove through the gate and glanced in his rearview mirror. His friend, Dee Dee Moore, was following
right behind him in her black Hummer.
Abraham led Dee Dee through the neighborhood's winding roads that were dotted with large
two-story homes with huge front yards and swimming pools in back. Then he pulled into
the driveway of his own house that looked a lot like the others in the neighborhood.
Abraham parked his car and stepped outside. He was six foot four inches tall with long skinny arms and
legs. He had a beard and a black spandex cap that covered his dreadlocks. He wore a white t-shirt
and jeans. Dee Dee's huge Hummer pulled into the driveway behind the BMW. Dee Dee got out and
smiled at Abraham. She was 36 years old and she was tall with dyed blonde hair and she laughed and
talked a lot.
Didi went around to the passenger side of the Hummer, opened the door, and took out a video camera and a tripod to put the camera on.
She closed the door and then followed Abraham into his house.
And Abraham led her through his living room that had high ceilings, large leather couches, and a state-of-the-art TV.
The furniture, and most of the decorations inside
had come with the house when Abraham bought it. Abraham asked Didi how her day at work had been
as they walked up the staircase to the second floor, and Didi told him that things were going
really well. She owned and operated a successful medical staffing agency, and she said business
just kept getting better. Then they walked down a hallway on the second floor into a room that Abraham used as an office
and as a place to relax and watch TV.
And when they walked into the room,
Dee Dee set up the tripod, put the camera on it,
and turned the camera on.
Then she asked Abraham if he was ready for her to film him.
Abraham looked at the camera, he grinned,
and said, yep, he was ready.
Since Dee Dee's medical staffing agency
had taken off, she had spent a lot of time and energy following her dream of becoming a writer.
She wanted to write books and movies. And when Didi and Abraham had met through a mutual friend
about six months earlier, she was fascinated by his life story. And she thought he would be the
perfect subject for a biography or a documentary, or maybe even a Hollywood blockbuster movie.
Dee Dee pressed record on the camera
and asked Abraham just to talk about himself a little bit
and to tell her about his life.
Dee Dee thought getting Abraham to tell his story in his own words
would be a great resource for her
for when she started writing a book or movie about him.
So Abraham started talking into the camera
and pacing a little back and forth,
and as he talked about his life,
it seemed like he was almost reliving certain moments from when he was younger.
And that made Dee Dee smile, and as she listened,
she thought even his last name, Shakespeare, was perfect for a storyteller like Abraham.
Abraham had grown up poor, and he had dropped out of school when he was about 12 years old
to go work in the citrus fields that thrived in that part of Florida.
And Abraham had left school without really learning how to read or write beyond the most basic level.
And as he got older, he started to understand that his employment options would always be limited.
And so he had spent the majority of his life moving from one odd job to another, trying to make ends meet.
In the room upstairs in his house, Abraham one odd job to another, trying to make ends meet. In the room upstairs in
his house, Abraham stopped pacing for a second, and he thought back to some of the low-paying
jobs he'd had. And he said going from job to job and struggling to survive had made it clear to
him just how much the city of Lakeland was divided. Lakeland was part of the Tampa Bay area, and in
Lakeland, some of the wealthiest people in Florida lived
just miles away from some of the poorest people. And Abraham said when he was younger, he would
pass by the gated communities where the rich people lived, and he would tell himself that someday
he would figure out a way to move behind those gates. But it was a dream that most people in
his poor neighborhood laughed at, and for most of Abraham's life, that dream he had seemed like it was impossible to achieve.
But even though Abraham had spent decades living in his mom's house and working low-paying jobs,
he had refused to let that bring him down.
And everybody who knew Abraham said he was one of the kindest, most positive people they had ever met.
Then, three years earlier, on November 15th of 2006,
Abraham had been working as a delivery man for a food distribution company. Abraham's co-worker,
Michael Ford, had been driving the delivery truck that day, and he pulled into a convenience store
to get cigarettes and a drink. But before Michael got out of the truck, Abraham had reached into
his pocket and taken out two dollars.
Abraham was pretty broke at the time and he knew he shouldn't just throw money away,
but he stared at the dollar bills in his hand and then gave them to Michael and asked him to buy two quick pick lottery tickets. And Michael laughed, grabbed the money and went inside.
A few minutes later, Michael had gotten back in the truck and given Abraham the two lottery tickets.
Then, the following evening, Abraham had been sitting on the couch at his mother's house,
watching the winning lottery numbers get announced on the local news.
And he had just stared at the TV, stunned,
because each winning lottery number that just got announced
matched a number on a lottery ticket he was holding.
At first, as the numbers kept matching
over and over again, Abraham had kind of laughed it off and thought, you know, this is not going
to happen. But when they were about to announce the final number, he could feel his heart beating
faster because all he needed was one more match. He leaned in close to the TV and watched as the
newscaster called out the final winning lottery number. And when Abraham had heard that number, he checked his ticket,
then he checked it again and again.
And then Abraham jumped off the couch and started shouting to his mother
that he had just won the lottery.
Abraham's mom came into the room and she thought he was playing a prank.
But when he showed her the numbers on the TV and the matching numbers on his ticket,
she started screaming and crying because Abraham had hit the 30 million dollar jackpot. Fast forward back to the present
and Abraham smiled into the camera and Dee Dee smiled too. Just hearing Abraham tell that story
about winning the lottery was like listening to somebody describe a miracle, like something that
never really actually happens in real life.
But then Abraham stared down at the floor, and a look of total exhaustion came across his face.
So Didi asked him if he was okay, and Abraham told Didi about what had happened almost immediately after he was shown on the TV collecting his big lottery winnings. Even after a huge amount of taxes and a reduced payout for taking his
lottery money immediately instead of over several years, Abraham walked away with about 12 million
dollars, more money than he'd ever imagined having in his whole life. And with that money, Abraham
had bought his dream house in one of Lakeland's beautiful gated communities for the rich,
and he had gotten himself a very fancy car, that BMW.
But soon after that, a lot of people had seemed to take advantage of Abraham's kindness.
And he was lending money to friends, family, and people he had never met before.
And he was paying for their mortgages, health care bills, college tuition fees, startup expenses for businesses,
and just about anything else people could think of.
And Abraham said that he loved helping people, he really did.
But over time, it had just gotten more out of control.
And now, two and a half years after he had won the lottery,
he said there were days where he would get hundreds of text messages from people asking for money.
And he just felt like he couldn't say no to any of them.
In fact, Abraham had a
cousin named Cedric Edom who owed him thousands of dollars in mortgage payments on a house that
Abraham had bought and let Cedric live in. And now Abraham could barely even get Cedric to talk to
him, let alone get Cedric to pay back any of the money he owed. And Abraham hated that he felt like
his lottery money was coming between him and his friends and family.
From behind the camera, Didi asked Abraham if he was tired
and he turned away from the lens then glanced back and said he'd been tired for a whole year
and he said sometimes he dreamed of running away to a beach in some other country and just disappearing forever.
Not long after that, Didi stopped recording.
She could tell Abraham was getting upset, and she felt for him.
She hadn't won millions of dollars, but she said when her business had taken off,
she had her share of people coming out of the woodwork asking her for money.
And she knew that even for someone who was as good of a person as Abraham,
that pressure could take its toll.
And so Abraham and Didi had talked for a little while longer,
but not for the camera.
And then at some point, Abraham looked around the room and then stared out the window at his sprawling yard.
Abraham lived in a place he'd once dreamed about.
And now all he wanted to do was get as far away from that house as possible.
And after this day, April 9th, 2009,
when Abraham and Didi chatted and Abraham spoke for the camera, Abraham just kind of disappeared.
And in the days and weeks following this day, Didi, Abraham's mom, and some of his other close friends and family did get occasional text messages from Abraham, but nobody saw him or talked to him on the phone.
saw him or talked to him on the phone, and in the text messages he sent, Abraham always said that he was doing fine and he just wanted to be left alone, but he never said where he actually was.
And so Abraham's apparent decision to just leave without telling anyone really upset his mom. They
had always been really close, and she had talked to Abraham almost every day for his entire life.
So now only getting a few text messages from him
every now and again with kind of sparse information
about what he was doing and where he was
was very difficult for her to deal with.
But like Didi, Abraham's mom had seen up close
how people constantly came to Abraham for money
and how that really weighed on him.
And she knew Abraham had started to imagine himself
walking on a beach where nobody knew who he was and where nobody would bother him. And so Abraham's mom and his other family and
friends didn't try to find him. They just kind of respected that he really just wanted space.
But then, fast forward to November 9th, 2009, seven months after Abraham was last seen by anybody
close to him. And on that day, Detective Dave
Clark of the Polk County Sheriff's Department was sitting at his desk looking at a report that
didn't make sense to him. The Sheriff's Department had gotten a call from Cedric Edom, Abraham's
cousin who owed him thousands of dollars. And Cedric had said that his cousin had been missing
since April and he wanted to file an official missing persons report. Detective Clark,
who had short blonde hair and a goatee, looked really young, but in reality, he had been in law
enforcement for years and he had experience with almost every kind of case. And Clark had a
reputation for being one of the best listeners and one of the most objective officers in the entire
department. In fact, during interrogations,
Clark was known to give suspects every chance to tell their side of a story because he genuinely
believed in the assumption that people were innocent until proven guilty. But as much as
Clark had seen over the years, and as much as he tried to give people the benefit of the doubt,
something about this missing persons report felt really strange to him. If this man was missing, why had his friends and family waited seven months to tell the police?
Clark leaned back in his chair and read over the report again. And this time, when he read the
missing person's name, his eyes went wide. He grabbed a piece of paper and pen and started
writing down some notes. Because Clark remembered something that he hadn't thought of in years. Clark knew who Abraham Shakespeare was because after Abraham had hit the lottery jackpot
back in 2006, news stations in the area covered what they called Abraham's rags to riches story
over and over for weeks. So Clark now knew he was dealing with a potentially missing person
who was worth millions and millions of dollars.
And when that much money was involved, there was always the possibility of foul play.
And so Clark wanted to get to work on this case right away.
And he wanted to start his investigation with the man who had filed the missing persons report.
Because Clark was interested in finding out why, after all this time, Cedric had now decided to come forward and track down his cousin.
A few hours later, Detective Clark led Abraham's cousin, Cedric,
into an interrogation room at the Sheriff's Department.
And Cedric was combative almost from the moment he walked in.
He told Clark he didn't understand why he was being questioned,
and he said he was
the only one who seemed concerned at all about Abraham. But Clark just smiled and asked Cedric
to sit down with him at a small table in the cramped bright room. And then Clark said that
they had contacted Cedric and asked him to come in because he was the one who had contacted them.
And the police really just wanted to know what was going on with Abraham that had concerned Cedric enough to get in touch with authorities. Cedric took a breath and tried to
calm down, but it didn't work. And in a very angry voice, he launched into an attack against a bunch
of Abraham's friends, including Dee Dee Moore. And he said they were all really greedy people
who took advantage of Abraham. And then Cedric said he was almost positive that one of
them had killed Abraham and taken off with his money. Clark listened and let Cedric talk for
as long as he wanted. And Clark thought it was a little weird how quickly Cedric had jumped to the
conclusion that Abraham had been murdered. But Clark didn't mention that. And when Cedric finally
stopped talking, Clark smiled and talked to Cedric
almost like they'd been friends for years. Clark said he'd done some research right after getting
the missing persons report, and so he knew that Cedric owed Abraham thousands of dollars in
mortgage payments on a house that Abraham had bought for him. Cedric shook his head, and the
anger in his voice came right back, and he said he loved his cousin, and he reiterated that he was
the only one doing anything to find him. By the end of the interview, Clark was even more surprised than
he had been by the missing persons report. He didn't have enough evidence to hold Cedric,
but he thought if something really had happened to Abraham, Cedric had to be at the top of the
suspect list. Here was a guy who hadn't said anything for seven months, who owed Abraham
thousands of dollars, talked about a potential murder, and then immediately tried to put the
blame on other people. So Clark couldn't shake the feeling that Cedric might have contacted police
in an attempt to cover his own tracks in some way. But Clark was going to remain objective like he
always did, and even if he was potentially connected to Abraham's disappearance,
there was also a chance that he was telling the truth. And so maybe there really were friends of
Abraham who were out to get his money in any way possible. So later that day, the sheriff's
department subpoenaed the cell phone company in order to get a detailed account of Abraham's cell
phone records. But Clark knew that could take a while, so he dug further into some of Abraham's financial records, and the list of people who owed him money was astonishing. In the three years since
Abraham won the lottery, he had loaned millions of dollars to people. And this was just in the form
of property expenses, medical bills, educational costs, and other loans that had a clear paper
trail. But Clark figured Abraham must have also been
handing out money to people in his everyday life that he had not kept records of. So,
tracking down all the people who owed Abraham money would take time and resources. Clark was
willing to do whatever it took, but he still had no evidence, other than Cedric's word,
that Abraham was actually missing. Clark needed to get a better idea of what was happening,
so he decided to talk directly to one of the people that Cedric had been eager to blame
for Abraham's disappearance, Dee Dee Moore.
Hello, I am Alice Levine and I am one of the hosts of Wondery's podcast British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin, we tell the story of a British man who took part in the first ever round the world sailing race.
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On November 10th, the day after the missing persons report had been filed,
Detective Clark found himself back in the interrogation room.
This time, he was seated across the table from Dee Dee Moore,
Abraham's friend who wanted to write a book and make a movie about his life.
Dee Dee had on jeans, a t-shirt, and leather sandals,
and Clark thought she was almost the exact opposite of Cedric when it came to interviewing her.
She smiled a bunch and seemed very easygoing
and she said she would tell him anything she could, but that she didn't really understand
why she was there. So Clark asked her, you know, when was the last time you spoke to Abraham?
And she said she had gotten a text from him somewhat recently and that he messaged her from
time to time just to see how things were going in her life and to tell her that he was okay
and enjoying his time away. Then Clark took a breath and got a serious look on his face. He looked right at Dee Dee and
told her that Abraham's cousin, Cedric, had said he was worried Abraham might be dead. Dee Dee
immediately looked confused and said she didn't understand because as far as she knew, she was
texting somewhat regularly with Abraham. And as far as she knew, Abraham had done exactly what he said he was going to do,
take off to maybe a beach somewhere and never look back.
So Clark asked her why Cedric would have filed
the missing persons report in the first place
and why he might have pointed the finger at her
as someone who might have wanted to hurt Abraham.
Dee Dee just shook her head
and then she looked at Clark and said
she had an idea why
Cedric might come after her. Clark smiled and in his friendly voice, he asked Didi to fill him in.
And Didi said that she and Abraham's mom were two of the only people in his life who had pushed
Abraham to follow up with everyone who owed him money and make them pay him back. They said it
was one thing to be a kind person, but it was another to get taken advantage of.
And they told Abraham that just because someone was family,
it didn't mean they were entitled to get anything they wanted from him.
Clark nodded and asked if that had caused problems in Abraham's life,
having people like Cedric around.
And Dee Dee's voice got a little louder and rougher,
and she said Cedric prayed on good-hearted people.
And she knew that as much as Abraham wanted to see the best in others, Cedric would never pay him back a dime. Detective Clark
and Dee Dee spoke for a little while longer, and then Clark thanked her for her time, and after she
left, he went back to his desk to look at his notes from both of the interviews he'd conducted
over the past couple of days. And as he did that, all he could think about was how badly he wanted to see Abraham's cell phone records.
Because Clark still didn't know
if Abraham was dead in a ditch somewhere
like Cedric wanted him to believe,
or if Abraham was just sipping piña coladas on a beach
without a care in the world.
In the days following his interview with Didi,
Clark kept digging into Abraham's financial records,
and he and other members of the investigative team met with Abraham's friends, family,
and as many people who owed him money as possible.
But Clark also discovered something new that caught his interest.
Michael Ford, Abraham's co-worker who had used Abraham's money to buy the winning lottery tickets,
had filed a lawsuit about a year after Abraham had
won the lottery. In that lawsuit, Michael had argued that because he was the one who actually
bought the tickets for Abraham, he was entitled to at least a cut of the winnings. But Michael
had lost his case in court, and Clark wanted to know if maybe Michael held a grudge against Abraham.
So Clark pursued this new potential lead, but he discovered that Michael
and Abraham had pretty much lost touch once the trial started, and Abraham had even stated publicly
that he didn't blame Michael for doing what he did, and he said he would have been willing to
give Michael hundreds of thousands of dollars if Michael had just asked him instead of going
directly to the courts. Now, none of this ruled out Michael as a suspect in Clark's mind,
but there was no evidence putting Michael anywhere near Abraham in the days and weeks before Abraham
had apparently disappeared. So, Clark knew he needed to keep looking elsewhere. And Clark still
felt like he was in the middle of one of the most bizarre cases he'd ever dealt with, because no
evidence had surfaced that suggested anything violent or against the law had even happened to
Abraham. There was no body, there was no signs of distress at his house, and friends and family
kept getting text messages from him. So, Clark kept reminding himself that Abraham was a guy
with the financial means to truly just disappear if he wanted to. But then, at the end of the month,
something happened that would turn Detective Clark's attention back to one suspect in particular. On a day in late November, Abraham's mom contacted Detective
Clark and said she had something to show him. So Clark drove out to her house and Abraham's mom
met him at the door and invited him inside. The house was warm and comfortable and being there,
Clark felt even more of an urge to discover where Abraham was,
just so he could put Abraham's mom's mind at ease.
Clark thanked Abraham's mom for calling him and for welcoming him into her house.
Then she led him into the living room and picked up an envelope from the coffee table.
She opened it and showed Clark a greeting card with a Christian cross on the front.
And she said when
she'd gotten this card, there had been a $100 bill inside of it. She handed the card to Clark and he
opened it and he saw a scribbled note that said, I'll be home soon and Abraham's signature underneath.
And Abraham's mom said that even though her son had trouble writing, he had always made sure he
could sign his name. And she recognized that was definitely his
signature on the card. Abraham's mom told Clark that she had gotten the letter about two months
earlier, but she had forgotten about it. She said she was sorry she had not shown it to him sooner.
Clark said that was totally fine, and that he was grateful that she was showing it to him now,
and he picked up the envelope that the card had come in, and he squinted his eyes,
almost like he was trying to look for something that wasn't there.
Because there was no stamp or address on the envelope
and it didn't look like it had been mailed from anywhere.
So Clark asked Abraham's mom how she'd actually gotten the letter.
And she told him her nephew, Abraham's cousin, Cedric, had hand-delivered it.
Just hearing that made Clark feel like his investigation had gone right back to where it started. Then, without Clark saying anything, Abraham's mom said that even though Cedric was
her nephew, she didn't always trust him. And she didn't necessarily believe he was just trying to
do right by Abraham by filing the missing persons report. And then she looked Clark in the eyes and
told him all she really wanted was to hear from her son. If she could just hear his
voice, she would know he was okay and everything would be fine. Clark said he understood and he
thanked Abraham's mom for all her help and told her he would keep her informed if he learned anything
new. Then Clark went back to the station and he told other members of the investigative team that
he wanted to keep looking into Abraham's cousin C Cedric, because giving Abraham's mom a card with a hundred bucks and Abraham's signature in it
seemed like one more way Cedric could be trying to cover something up.
And then Clark got some information that he was confident would break the case wide open.
The phone company had come back and they provided police
with a detailed history of text messages sent from Abraham's number.
And something in those text
messages stood out to Clark right away. And by December, Clark believed he was closer than ever
to finding Abraham. On December 26th, 2009, so a month and a half after the missing persons report
was filed, Abraham's mother was relaxing on the couch at her house. Christmas had been a mixed
blessing that year. She loved seeing friends and family for the holidays, but not having Abraham
around just hadn't felt right. They had always spent Christmas together and so the house kind
of felt empty without him. But then her phone rang, she leaned over, grabbed it off the coffee table,
and almost started crying tears of joy because Abraham was calling. The connection
wasn't great, but she could hear her son on the other line and that was all that mattered. Abraham
wished her a Merry Christmas and said he was sorry he hadn't called the day before. And Abraham's mom
said that was okay and that she just wanted to know how he was doing. And he said other than
dealing with a little winter cold, he'd been great. And he knew him leaving had been very
hard on people, especially her, but he felt like he'd made the right choice. And he promised he'd
be home soon, and when he did, he'd be much happier than when he left. Abraham's mom hung up the phone
and she felt better than she had in months. And she wanted to call everyone she knew to let them
know the good news. She had finally heard from Abraham. She had heard his voice. But first, she thought she needed to tell the police.
So she took a deep breath, collected herself,
and called the sheriff's department.
On December 26th, right after Abraham's mom had gotten this call from her son,
Detective Clark was sitting at his desk.
His phone rang, and he picked it up,
and he could hear Abraham's mom almost shouting at him on the other line.
She told him about the phone call she'd just received from Abraham and how happy she was.
And so Clark thanked her for letting him know.
He wished her a Merry Christmas and then hung up.
But then he immediately made a call to the cell phone company so he could get a location on where Abraham's phone had been when he placed this call to his mother.
And when Clark heard what they had to say,
he shouted across the room to a fellow detective
and told him they needed to leave immediately.
Clark and this other detective ran out of the station.
They climbed into an unmarked car.
Clark sat in the passenger seat and the other detective drove.
And before long, they were peeling out of the parking lot
and heading onto the street. It was a mild winter day in Florida, about 60 degrees
Fahrenheit, but the sun was bright and Clark could feel himself sweating a little from the adrenaline
rush. Minutes later, they pulled off the road and into a parking lot of a huge shopping mall,
and when they arrived, Clark and the other
detective saw the man they were looking for sitting in a parked car nearby. But before the detectives
could get out of their car, the man they were looking for drove off. And so Clark looked over
at the other detective and just said, chase him. So the detective peeled out of the mall parking
lot and raced down the street after this man in the car.
But the detectives realized they didn't have police sirens in their unmarked vehicle,
so they couldn't signal to the driver that they were cops and they wanted to pull him over.
So the detective just tried to stay as close to the man they were chasing as possible.
Then finally they came to a red light and the man they were after stopped.
And so without even thinking, Detective Clark threw open his door.
He ran in front of this car.
He held up his badge and he yelled at the driver to get out and come with them.
The man in this car just stared up at Clark.
And then he slumped his shoulders and put his head down. And later that day, after they had all talked back at the sheriff's station,
Detective Clark knew where Abraham Shakespeare had been all this time. Based on interviews and cell phone data collected
throughout the missing persons investigation, here is a reconstruction of what police believe
happened on April 9th, 2009 when Abraham first disappeared.
On that night, Abraham drove his car down a road in an upscale neighborhood in a town
about 20 minutes away from his house in Lakeland. Abraham had spent much of the day talking to Didi
on camera, and he was still thinking about getting away from Florida and kind of dropping off the map
for a while. But before he did anything drastic, he wanted to make sure he had enough cash on hand to just disappear.
And he hoped to avoid leaving a paper trail as much as possible so it would be harder for people to track him down.
So Abraham was on his way to the house of someone who owed him money
and who had told Abraham that they had thousands of dollars in cash that they could give him.
While Abraham wound his way through the neighborhood,
the person he
was going to see sat inside their house and waited for Abraham to arrive. And a few minutes later,
they saw the headlights from Abraham's BMW outside. So they went to the front door,
stood in the doorway, and waved to Abraham as he stepped out of his car.
When Abraham got to the door, the person he was meeting with could tell that Abraham seemed down.
But they said hopefully getting some cash would cheer him up.
Abraham smiled and walked inside and followed this person through their living room and into a small home office.
Abraham stood in the middle of the office and the person he was meeting with walked across the room to a floor safe standing in the corner.
Then that person crouched down, they entered the combination for the lock to a floor safe standing in the corner. Then that person crouched
down, they entered the combination for the lock, and opened the safe. And then they just waited
there for a second. Abraham asked if everything was okay, and this person said, yep, everything's
fine, I just need to make sure I grab the right amount of money. Then this person reached into
the safe, slowly stood up, turned around, and aimed a gun right at Abraham. A look of fear came across
Abraham's face, but before he could turn to run, the person shot him right in the chest and blood
began to stain his white t-shirt. Then the person fired again and this bullet grazed Abraham's heart
and perforated his lung. The shooter casually walked across the room and stood over Abraham, and they watched and
listened as Abraham slowly died. Then the killer put the gun back in the safe, then they went back
to Abraham's body, crouched down, took his phone out of his pocket, and slipped it into their own
pocket. Then they grabbed Abraham's legs and dragged him out of the room. Abraham was skinny,
but he was very tall, so dragging him through the house was not easy.
But eventually, they managed to pull Abraham to the back door,
and then they dragged him out into the backyard.
A fence surrounded the yard, and it was totally dark out there except for some moonlight,
so the killer did not feel like anyone could see them, so they didn't rush.
They bent over, caught their breath, and then picked up a shovel that was laying in the grass.
Then they started digging a hole in the middle of the yard.
Finally, when the hole was deep enough,
they walked over to Abraham's body,
grabbed him by the legs, dragged him across the yard,
and dumped him into the hole.
Then they took the shovel and filled the hole back in.
Later that night, they cleaned the bloodstains from inside their house and out in the yard,
and then they found a phone number of a construction company that they planned to call the next day
to place a concrete slab over the hole where they had just buried Abraham.
Then the killer went into the living room, hooked up their video camera to the television,
and watched the recording they had made with Abraham earlier that day. Dee Dee Moore, Abraham's friend who was an aspiring writer,
had murdered Abraham. It turned out that months before the murder, she had convinced Abraham to
give her control of his finances, and she had promised to play the bad guy and collect money
from all of Abraham's friends
and family who owed him. And she even agreed to hold on to a large amount of Abraham's cash for
him in her safe so he wouldn't be tempted to just hand it out to people who asked him for money.
And because Didi was a successful business owner, Abraham had believed she would be better at
managing money and collecting debts than he could ever be. So he thanked Didi for her help and put her in charge of millions of dollars in cash and assets.
And Didi had collected money from people who owed Abraham, but instead of giving the money to
Abraham, she kept it for herself. And she spent that money and some of the cash Abraham had given
her on a brand new huge Hummer vehicle and
other expensive items she wanted. And for months, Didi had gotten away with it without anyone
suspecting anything. But then in the spring of 2009, not long before the murder, one of Abraham's
friends started to catch on to what Didi was doing. Because even though he was making regular
payments to Didi to clear his debts with Abraham,
she kept asking him for more money. And when he got angry and said he had already paid what he
owed, Didi worried he would tell Abraham and Abraham would find out that she had been stealing
his money. So Didi decided she would just get rid of Abraham, but keep collecting the money people
owed him for herself. But in order to do that, she had to make it seem like Abraham was alive
and just wanted his distance.
And so when she filmed him on her camera,
claiming it was for her book and movie,
even though in reality she had no aspirations to write Abraham's story,
she intentionally steered the conversation to how tired and frustrated he must be.
And when Abraham talked
about wanting to escape to a foreign beach, Dee Dee knew it was time to put her plan into motion.
So, she told Abraham to come to her house to get thousands of dollars in cash that she'd been
holding for him in her safe, and when he arrived, she killed him and then used his phone to text
his friends and family, and then she showed some of his friends and family the video
recording of Abraham where he was talking about how he wanted to leave Florida and go to a beach
somewhere and just kind of disappear and be left alone. And so naturally, his friends and family
believed that that was what happened to Abraham. He had chosen to kind of go away. And Didi almost
got away with it. But once Abraham was dead,
Didi became relentless in her pursuit of his cousin Cedric,
and she called Cedric and came to his house all the time,
demanding he pay back all of the money he owed Abraham,
and Cedric just wasn't going to do that.
And so finally, Cedric got fed up with Didi,
and he filed a missing persons report.
Now, Cedric did not actually believe that Abraham was dead,
but by alleging that he had been murdered and pointing at Didi as potentially the murderer,
he knew that would launch a police investigation into Didi and that would get her off of his back
for at least a while. And when Detective Clark got a record of Abraham's text messages, he was
shocked at how well written and how formal they
were. After all, he knew that Abraham still struggled with reading and writing. Then,
when Abraham supposedly called his mother on the day after Christmas, Detective Clark got
confirmation that what he believed had been going on was going on. Somebody in town had been using
Abraham's phone and had been pretending to be him. And when Clark traced Abraham's phone to the mall parking lot,
he and the other detective saw Dee Dee leaning into a car,
handing over cash to a man and taking a phone back from him.
And when they chased that man down,
he admitted that he was a friend of Abraham's
who Dee Dee had paid to call Abraham's mom and pretend to be Abraham.
And the man had told Abraham's mom on this call that he was fighting a winter cold
to make up for the fact that he didn't really sound like Abraham.
Not long after that, Abraham's cousin Cedric came back to the sheriff's station
and he admitted that someone had paid him to deliver the greeting card
that Abraham supposedly wrote to his mother.
And it would turn out that the money Cedric was paid to make that delivery could be traced back
to Didi. And so Cedric had been right about Didi all along without actually knowing it.
With all of this new information and with Abraham's phone records, police determined that
every text message that had been sent from Abraham's phone since he disappeared had actually been sent by Didi.
And eventually, they learned that Didi had hired a construction company to lay a concrete slab down in her backyard.
So, on January 27th, 2010, over nine months after Abraham's murder, police went to Didi's house.
And they broke up the concrete slab out back, dug up the ground underneath, and found the skeletal remains of Abraham Shakespeare.
And pieces of the t-shirt and jeans that Abraham had been wearing
in the video that Dee Dee recorded on the day she killed him were still clinging to his bones.
Dee Dee was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Dee Dee was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Abraham was given a proper burial and his family was finally able to grieve. And his murder helped lead to a new Florida law that keeps the identities of large jackpot lottery winners private for 90 days.
And in a telephone interview from prison, Dee Dee surprised reporters and said she strongly supported this new law.
So that's going to do it.
If you got something out of today's episode, be sure to check out our YouTube channel, just called Mr. Ballin,
where we have hundreds more stories just like this one, many of which are not on the podcast. They're only on YouTube. Again, that channel is called Mr. Ballin.
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In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red
wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell. So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away
so he could get treatment. While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott.
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one and so many more.
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