Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - A Mother's Promise - The Murder of Jamie Walker
Episode Date: July 22, 2025Jamey Walker was a member of one of the most beloved and consequential families ever to have lived on Las Vegas’s Historic West Side.Her mother, her father, and her grandmother were all well-known a...nd highly regarded, going back to the 1960s and earlier.On Mother's Day 1981, a day when Jamey planned to spend time with her mom and grandmother, the unthinkable happened. She disappeared without a trace. Kidnapped. Gone. Her panicked family did what they were told, but they couldn't prevent the unimaginable from happening to her.https://sinspod.co/88https://sinspod.co/88bloghttps://sinspod.co/88sourceshttps://sinspod.co/88sub (Substack Article)Domestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_smsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.
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Jamie Walker was a member of one of the most beloved and consequential families ever to have lived on Las Vegas's historic West Side
Her mother her father and her grandmother were all well-known
and highly regarded going back to the 1960s and earlier. On Mother's Day 1981,
a day when Jamie planned to spend time with her mom and her grandmother, the
unthinkable happened. She disappeared without a trace, kidnapped, gone. Her
panicked family did what they were told, but they couldn't prevent the
unimaginable from happening to her.
Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast that focuses on cases involving domestic violence, as well as missing persons and unsolved cases. I'm your host, Sean.
And I'm your co-host, John. We're back this week with the third episode in our special series on the
shocking number of crimes that have happened in and around the Lake Mead
recreational area over the decades. In the past two weeks,
we've covered missing persons, unsolved crimes, likely mob murders,
and one man who could possibly have faked his own disappearance.
Lake Mead with its combination of lack of cell service, remote location, deep waters
– most years anyway – and hidden areas, remains the national park area associated
with a surprisingly high homicide and disappearance rate.
It's not just life jackets we're talking about here, but that has played a factor in
more than a few deaths on the lake.
In this third and final episode,
we're going to cover one of the most infamous events that ever happened on Las Vegas'
historic West Side. In order to give a little context to the story, we're going to talk
a little bit about the historic West Side and the people who live there and continue
to live there today. There have been books written and documentaries made about the West
Side, and it could easily support its own multi-season podcast, but for our purposes, we'll stick to the basics.
The historic West Side was formed around 1911, the same year Las Vegas incorporated as a city.
It was formed from the McWilliams town site and became known as West Las Vegas or just
the West Side. It grew steadily, but the population increased dramatically in the late 1920s during a resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan here in Nevada and nationally.
In 1923, the city of Las Vegas coerced African-American business owners to
leave downtown and move to West Las Vegas to make way for population growth and so
that they could bring more businesses downtown. They even threatened not to
renew their business licenses
if they didn't leave, so they had little choice but to move.
The West Side at that time was cut off
by the Clark Avenue Railroad.
The railroad, of course, was the reason that Las Vegas
was formed in the first place back in 1904,
so they were figuratively and literally
on the other side of the tracks now.
The real growth on the West Side began in the 1940s
because while
black entertainers like Nat King Cole and Pearl Bailey were more than welcome to perform on the
Strip, because of local regulations, they couldn't stay there overnight. All those talented people
would finish their shows, then head to the West Side to hang out, eat, and have what must have
been epic jam sessions with other performers. Obviously, it was the strip's loss. In the 1950s, Black-owned clubs started opening that offered the same amenities you would find
on the strip, and in 1955, the Moulin Rouge opened. That was the first integrated hotel
in the United States. It was featured in Life magazine a month later, but unfortunately,
it closed within six months for a combination of reasons. Strip casinos were desegregated in 1960 after the
aptly named 1960 Moulin Rouge Agreement, and that led to less foot traffic and revenue for the growing
Westside clubs and businesses. In the 70s and 80s, there was a serious lack of reinvestment in things
like infrastructure, which led to high unemployment, poverty, and crime. Historic buildings were
destroyed and not replaced,
and the construction of the I-15
cut the west side off further,
many think intentionally, from the rest of Las Vegas,
just like the railroad did originally.
There are efforts to revitalize the area,
and there have been, going back to around 2000,
including the 100 Plan in 2016,
that's the Historic Urban Neighborhood
Design Redevelopment Plan.
That plan has improved infrastructure, housing,
and established museum plans, and improved food access.
We're hopeful those improvements will continue,
and the West Side will continue
to get the attention it deserves.
Saran Nite-Pretty and her family
have been advocates of the West Side
and civil rights here in Las Vegas for decades.
She and her husband opened a casino casino which became the People's Choice,
which would eventually be run by her son, James Walker. You can't read about the
historic West Side without hearing about her family's activism and contributions.
James Walker was married to Eleanor Knight, who was another crusader for
civil rights. She was a past president of the local chapter of the NAACP, served
on local civic
boards and owned her own insurance business. That brings us to Eleanor and James Walker's
unsurprisingly amazing daughter, Jamie, who was 18 years old and a 1981 graduate of Clark
High School. She was described as being an 18-year-old beauty queen, and it's definitely
accurate.
Jamie was the first black prom queen at Clark High and according to her mom her prom king was Danny Tarkanian, son of the legendary UNLV
basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian who led UNLV to 17 conference championships.
She was an honor student, she was on the school executive council, and she was the
head cheerleader. She was also very religious and took her faith very
seriously. In an interview her mom told reporters a story about Jamie
which shows the kind of person she was. She said that Jamie would help the less
popular kids with things like fixing their makeup and hair. She was also the
leader of the NAACP youth and in many respects a third-generation civil rights
activist, very active in her community. She and her family were referred to as West Side Royalty
in many of the articles we read.
Everyone who talked about her agreed she was a great kid
and a beautiful soul.
Another resident of the historic West Side
we need to talk about is Willie Lee Shannon,
who at 60 years old in 2010,
was living with his mother in Ellington, Florida.
His neighbors thought he was just another resident,
an average person who was teaching local kids about boxing,
fixing bicycle chains, and going about his job as a landscaper.
They said he was a nice guy who was helpful and charitable.
One neighbor told a story about how Shannon would borrow his lawnmower
and bring it back full of gas.
Shannon was a Florida native who had a very troubled
past. He was born in 1952 and grew up in Palmetto, Florida, in a house with a large
and complex living situation with 20 other children. The family situation that
was a result of two divorces, and it wasn't ideal. It was clear he didn't get the
attention someone needs growing up. When he was 16 years old, according to police
reports, he went out joyriding with a group of older boys. While they were at a gas station,
they committed a spur-of-the-moment smash-and-grab robbery where they took $93 and a single pack of
cigarettes. All of the people involved were caught and prosecuted. In an in-depth interview
with Shannon from 1981, he shared that at the time in Florida,
the state was very interested in making examples
of anyone committing even petty crimes.
Coming from a very poor family,
Shannon didn't have money for bail or a lawyer,
so he was held for three weeks before he was arraigned.
At one point during the trial,
he was told that he could be looking
at three consecutive life sentences,
which is insane given
that no one died and the amount of money and items stolen was under $100. In the end, he was given
15 years in prison at age 16 and he ended up being paroled after nine. He served from 1967 until nearly
1977. He talked in that same interview about the horrific conditions in prison, and of course,
that type of sentence is pretty unlikely these days.
It was a gross miscarriage of justice, a complete overreaction.
While in jail though, he went from 135 pounds to over 185 pounds, and when he got out, he
was an ex-convict without an education with limited career prospects, so he got into boxing. He started fighting locally in Florida,
and in September of 1977, won his first professional fight
in four rounds, and then went on to win his next 10 fights,
two, nine of them by knockout.
He was fighting in the heavyweight division,
over 200 pounds, even though he was only 185 pounds.
So he was routinely knocking out opponents
who outweighed him by up to 30 pounds. In an interview one time, he was asked 185 pounds, so he was routinely knocking out opponents who outweighed him by up to 30 pounds.
In an interview one time, he was asked why he fought
at heavyweight in Florida, and he answered,
because they pay me more at heavyweight.
In October of 1979, he moved to Las Vegas
because at the time, it was becoming the center
of the boxing universe.
Willie Lee, the Canon Shannon Shannon came into the boxing scene
at exactly the right time.
The 1970s and 80s are considered to be
the golden age of boxing.
The 70s were dominated by larger than life fighters.
Literally, most of the biggest names then were heavyweights
like Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, George Foreman,
and Larry Holmes.
All of them had huge personalities
and fought in giant global
events like the 1971 Fight of the Century, the 1974 Rumble in the Jungle where Ali beat
George Foreman, and the 1975 Thrilla in Manila. Then, in the 1980s, we saw the smaller welterweights
becoming more popular, people like Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran, Thomas Hitman-Herns,
and Marvin Hagler.
These four often faced each other and were some of the biggest and most watched fights in boxing history.
At the time, the fights were shown on the three major networks,
ABC, NBC, and CBS, and really became part of the culture.
People would watch them, then talk about them at work the next day around the water cooler.
The fighters were treated like rock stars, larger than life celebrities.
Prior to the 1970s, the two major boxing centers were New York's Madison Square Garden and
Los Angeles.
But in the late 70s and 80s, Las Vegas started to become synonymous with boxing events.
It was a combination of the lights, the glamour, the high drama, and the spectacle in Las Vegas
at that time.
The marketing was just crazy, and venues like Caesar's Palace courted promoters like Don
King to get them to hold major events outdoors at their pavilion.
Of course they wanted that because big fights meant whales, the largest high rollers, who
would visit and spend a lot of money during the events.
The Nevada Gaming Commission also worked with the promoters making fights easy to stage,
and of course with gambling being legal here in Nevada, it was a natural fit.
Some of the highest profile fights ever took place here.
Ali vs. Holmes in 1980, Sugar Ray vs. Hearns in 1981, Hagler vs. Hearns in 1985, and of
course in the late 80s we got Mike Tyson who still lives here in Las Vegas and in fact
goes to my gym.
I see him a lot there and it's never not surreal. Even 40 years later, the celebrity persists.
So this was the boxing world and at the time, Willie Shannon wanted in on it. He had the talent
and the 14-0-1 record with 11 knockouts. So he came to Las Vegas to fight. He won the cruiserweight
title in 1979. Just to note the cruiserweight title in 1979.
Just to note that cruiserweight sort of bridges the gap between light heavyweight 175 pounds
and heavyweight 200 pounds.
It really seemed like he had it made in 1981.
It was on a great track.
Jamie Walker was on a very different but very promising track too.
With her activism, her popularity, her intelligence, and her empathy, her
family and community knew she was destined for great things. She was headed
off to college at UNLV, ready to take on the world. All of that came to a
screeching halt on May 9th, 1981, the day before Mother's Day, when Jamie was
kidnapped right out of the home she shared with her mother Eleanor. Eleanor
and James, her parents, weren't together anymore at
the time and were living their own full lives. Eleanor had a new boyfriend named Lesby Marshall,
who went by Pep, and her dad James was running the People's Choice Club, later the People's Choice
Casino. Of course, they were all well known and pillars of the historic Westside community,
which had slowed down, of course, after desegregation,
but was still vibrant.
Jamie came home after a date late on Friday, May 8, 1981, and was kidnapped early in the
morning of May 9.
The circumstances were confusing.
The back door to her home was ajar when her mother came home, and her shoes were still
there.
There was no sign of forced entry, which made it seem like she might have known whoever
it was who kidnapped her, letting them in.
There was evidence of a struggle, though.
After Jamie was kidnapped, the ransom calls began, three in all.
James Walker got the first call in the early morning while he was working at the People's
Choice.
He described the caller as African American, and he was told, I got your daughter.
They demanded $75,000 for a safe return.
To confirm they had her, they let Jamie talk to her dad.
She said, daddy, they are not kidding.
The kidnappers told him not to call the police and they'd know if he did because he was
being watched.
In the second call, he heard the voice of a second kidnapper, also African American.
This one pressed him on the $75,000 ransom. When James
told him that it wasn't easy to just get $75,000 cash because the banks are all closed
on the weekends, he suggested that maybe he should sell his Mercedes. Some sources we
read said that the second caller also suggested that he ask Eleanor's boyfriend Pep for
the money.
In the third and final call, hours later, he was able to talk to Jamie and confirm
she wasn't hurt. This call got a little weird though. This time, the kidnapper told him
that there had been a mistake. He said that they got the wrong girl and they intended
to kidnap Eleanor's boyfriend, Pep, instead because he burned someone on a drug deal.
After that, the caller promised that Jamie would be released safely the next day.
The family followed the instructions and didn't call the police, but Eleanor did call a friend of hers who worked at the DA's office who did call the police, which prompted them to start
looking for her, though they didn't start searching until about 10 hours after they were informed.
Almost immediately, they determined that there were likely several people involved,
just based on the number of voices James had heard in the ransom calls.
The next day, May 10th, in the early morning, three US Marine Corps sergeants were on military exercises in the Lake Mead recreational area, about 30 minutes from where the walkers lived.
They discovered the body of a young woman about 47 feet under a bridge over a wash on North Shore Road
They called Las Vegas Metro telling them they thought she might be around 20 years old
Tragically it turned out to be Jamie
She'd only been missing less than 30 hours and it seemed like she'd been thrown off the bridge
Her cause of death was a massive skull fracture on the rocks below
She'd been raped and murdered. There was some
speculation that she was trying to escape her kidnappers when she was murdered, but that was
never proven. One of the first reporters on the scene was George Knapp. It was his first day on
the job with News Channel 8 and the first murder he had ever seen. It stuck with him his whole career
and he's reported on it many times over the years. Given who was involved and the family's high profile,
it was huge news.
Initially, the police took some criticism
that they didn't take any action until 10 hours
after they were informed Jamie was missing.
And there was some speculation that they delayed
because of persistent but absolutely unproven rumors
that the Walker family was involved in drug trafficking.
In this case, as it turned out,
the criticism of Metro wasn't really warranted.
They interviewed 55 potential suspects,
held dozens of lineups, and ordered polygraph exams.
Not only that, but importantly,
they preserved evidence from Jamie's sexual assault,
and I'm sure you realize by now, if you listen often,
that that will be important later.
It wasn't only Metro that was investigating, though.
Eleanor was as well.
She was absolutely relentless, supplying Metro with many of the tips they acted on.
She had dozens of pages of single-spaced typed notes with descriptions of people who could
potentially be involved.
Right at the top of Eleanor's list was, in her words, a boxer that lives nearby named
Willie Lee the Cannon Shannon.
Eleanor explained that Shannon had met Jamie through Jamie's brother, James, who was taking
boxing lessons from Shannon, and that when they met, Shannon flirted with Jamie.
Keep in mind that in 1981, Shannon was 29 and Jamie was 18.
Jamie wasn't having it though.
She didn't like Shannon and she didn't keep it a secret.
The first time Eleanor met Shannon, it was at the People's Choice Club and she got a
weird vibe from him too.
Shannon apparently warned her that it was dangerous for two women to live alone and
he told her that he was always looking out for Jamie because there are a lot of weirdos
around.
On the very day of the kidnapping, Shannon reportedly came to Eleanor and Jamie's house
to sign some insurance papers
But he acted very strangely just getting up and leaving saying that he had an errand to run
as we mentioned earlier
1981 was when Jamie was murdered and also when Shannon's career hit the skids and never recovered a
Month after Jamie was murdered and just after that article was written about him in boxing today
He defended his welterweight title against a fighter he should have beaten
easily, but he barely won in a nine-round decision.
In his next fight, two months later, Shannon was beaten so badly by Marvin Camel, the WBC
cruiserweight champion, that he had to be rescued from a pummeling in the third round
of the fight and he lost his title.
In October of 1983, the next time he was scheduled to fight, he didn't show up for the weigh-in
because he had been arrested.
But not for what you might think, but it's going to sound familiar.
He was arrested for kidnapping and battery of a woman he was dating, and in 1985 he was
sentenced to 30 years in prison for the crime.
He ended up serving 13 years
and was parole again in 1998. While Shannon was in prison between 1986 and 1987, he allegedly
had several conversations with another inmate named James Phillips, where Shannon allegedly
admitted to Phillips that he had killed Jamie Walker. He also repeated the allegations about
the Walkers being involved in the drug
trade and claimed that he gave James Walker some heroin to sell, but Walker had burned
him, keeping either the drugs, the money, or both. Of course, the Walker family denies
any involvement in this, and there has been no proof of that. It does seem to be consistent
with Shannon being involved, though, given all the allegations that the kidnappers made
about someone being burned on a drug deal, so it does seem like Shannon did
consistently claim this. Phillips later recanted this whole story and because
there wasn't enough corroborating or physical evidence, no charges were brought.
After Shannon was paroled in 1998 at age 46, he headed back to Florida again where
he kept his head down for 12 years until 2010,
being a good neighbor and keeping out of trouble.
The problem for him was that Metro had done a good job of preserving the evidence from Jamie's rape and murder and there is no
statute of limitations on murder.
They had suspected him from the beginning for many reasons and he was right there at the top of the file and they were just
waiting for the break in the case that meant they could get him.
In 2006 the cold case detectives paid Willie Shannon another visit in Florida.
Another DNA test had been performed that was a partial match with Shannon due to
degradation and the state of DNA analysis in 2006. The detective said he
was uncooperative, which isn't really shocking, and they came away
saying he thinks he's gotten away with it.
The detectives had seen DNA technology steadily advance, so they knew their time would come.
In 2010, they got their big break in the form of a $500,000 grant to revisit cold cases
where DNA was available, having them analyzed using the newest cutting-edge DNA analysis
technology.
Again, they submitted the DNA for analysis and got a much better match.
Medra decided that it was time and they could make the case if they could get a fresh sample
to match what was left of the original 1981 evidence.
The cold case detectives decided to make the trip to Florida again with the goal of getting
a fresh DNA sample from Shannon to help make the case airtight.
Initially though, it did not go well.
There was an incident where Shannon's parole officer tipped him off by mistake that the
police were going to be trying to get a sample of his DNA, but they did finally succeed in
getting it.
On November 3, 2010, they got a conclusive match, and on December 7, 2010, Shannon was
arrested for the kidnapping, rape,
and murder of Jamie Walker while he was on a job site
in Palmetto, Florida.
He was held in a Manatee County jail
while he awaited extradition to Nevada
and finally made it to Nevada State Prison
where he would stay for the next five years awaiting trial.
The trial itself was surprisingly quick.
In January 2016, Shannon was offered an Alfred plea, which means he didn't admit to the
crime but he did acknowledge that the prosecution had enough evidence to get a conviction if
the trial were to proceed.
Another tragic aspect of this case is about Jamie's mom, Eleanor.
She was a tireless voice for her daughter right from the beginning, feeding Metro tips
and information, working with them, and keeping in touch with the cold case detectives for
over 30 years.
She wanted so much to see her daughter's murderer brought to justice.
She was relieved when Shannon was finally apprehended but endured five years of waiting
for justice to be served to him, and sadly, on the very day when Eleanor was to be deposed
in the case, she passed away.
Shannon's sentencing was on March 10, 2016, before Jamie's friends and family.
Dozens of them showed up for Jamie wearing Justice for Jamie t-shirts, showing how beloved
she was.
Her aunt, her uncle, and her cousin all gave heartbreaking impact statements and said that
although they believed it was their Christian duty to forgive Shannon, they were still working on it.
Shannon was sentenced to 15 years in prison, but because his plea fell under the law at
the time Jamie was murdered, he was eligible for parole almost immediately after the sentencing.
He applied for parole in 2017 and was denied, but he was set free just a
few months later. He ended up serving only five months in jail after being sentenced
for Jamie's kidnapping, rape and murder, only five years total.
In an interview, Jamie's cousin, Gayla Walker Thornton, talked about the lifelong impact
that the murder has had on her and the Walker family. She said that of course Mother's Day has always been a hard time for the family after what
happened. Currently, Gayla is a school counselor in Las Vegas and has a daughter
named Jamie. The Walker family believes, just like Metro Police do, that there are
still people out there who were involved with Jamie's murder and she wants them
brought to justice. Talanda Walker, Jamie's aunt, specifically said that the family believed they know who one or more of the accomplices could be. On the ransom calls,
James heard three voices, two men and a woman. At the scene, they didn't find Shannon's fingerprints.
They did find two other sets of fingerprints they couldn't identify. This case leads us to wonder
if justice was served for Jamie and her family, a young woman
who was kidnapped, raped, and murdered, and while one of the perpetrators was eventually
caught, he was given only 15 years and served only five, which might be the shortest sentence
for murder in any case we've covered.
It's not clear why he was offered an Alford plea given that the DA had more than enough
evidence to get a murder conviction, which would have resulted in a more appropriate sentence,
especially given Shannon's previous violent crimes against women.
Somehow this man remains at large in Florida to this day.
Jamie is buried here in Las Vegas at the downtown Palm Mortuary.
If you have any information regarding the other people responsible for this horrific crime, please reach out to Crimestoppers at 702-385-5555,
where you can remain anonymous, or to the Metro Police Cold Case Division at 702-828-8973,
or you can email them at coldcasehomicide at lvmpd.com. We also have a link to
Metro's Cold Case website at sinspod.co.m.m.
Thanks for listening and please take a moment to review the podcast if you're
enjoying it. It really helps us get these important stories out to a wider
audience. We appreciate it and we remind you that what happens here happens
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Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, is research written and produced
by your hosts, Sean and John.
The information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording.
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