Uncover - S32 E4: The Day of Reckoning | Sea of Lies
Episode Date: February 10, 2025After the revelation that Albert Walker is one of the world’s most wanted men, Sam investigates his origin story - and the trail of crimes he committed on the opposite side of the Atlantic. ...
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This is a CBC podcast.
Just drop that nice down.
Here we go.
In a story filled with consequential doorknocks, here's another.
That's the sound of my knuckles on the door of what's important to know for this chapter
of the story, a modest middle class home.
Hi, Andy.
I'm Sam.
Sam, a pleasure.
So nice to meet you.
I didn't tell you to come through the main door.
Oh, sorry. Come on so nice to meet you. I didn't tell you to come through the main door.
Oh, sorry.
Come on up.
Welcome.
To figure out how a mere Canadian man named Albert Walker became one of the most wanted
men in the world, one frosty night I drove an hour from Toronto to a small town called
Orangeville to meet someone.
I tell this story often in various bits and pieces, forms and layers.
And you know, how many rabbit holes do you want to go down?
And I was pretty much ground zero for the whole nonsense.
That's Andy Staley. Talking with Andy, I learned quickly that whenever he references the intersection
of his family's life and Albert Walker's life, he calls it broadly the nonsense. And he's in his 60s now. He
outclasses me by wearing a sharp blazer for our audio-only interview as if we're
doing it on camera. As I set up, he uncorks a bottle of red. Where we're going,
he's gonna need it. Hey, I mean, how much do you want me toorks a bottle of red. Where we're going, he's going to need it.
Hey, I mean, how much do you want me to tell you?
All of it. I wanted to know all of it.
I first read the Staley family name in an old newspaper clipping when I was learning about Albert's life in Canada and the people left in his wake.
I cold emailed Andy Staley telling him what I was trying to piece together.
How did this man I'd been hearing about called David Davis and Ronald Platt come to be hunted
by authorities across the globe? How did a middle-aged family man from small-town Ontario
come to be an international fugitive? And he responded by saying that he had something to show me,
something that might help. The box. To say I was intrigued is an understatement.
When I walked into his place, right away, I see it. Spread out on the dining room table are piles
and piles of papers stacked high. Notepads, do-it-hangs, folders, handwritten notes
scrawled on post-its.
As I set up my microphones, I see one of the file folders
has written in Sharpie, the Walker file.
Let's start, why don't you tell me what we're looking at.
I guess what we're looking at is,
so this came out of a big box. It was, like I say,
my mother put a lot of it together.
Andy's mother curated the box, but when she passed away, none of her adult children wanted
to take it because they knew what was in there, vaguely at least, and they knew it wasn't
good. As I sit down across from Andy and I see on the wall behind him dusty portraits
of his ancestors, men in uniform, family shields. It makes sense to me that he's the one in the
family who wound up with this box, this decade of his mother's work.
And I really don't know. I mean, I just, I pulled it out two nights ago for the first time in 30
years. Just last year, a friend of his recommended that he should just burn it all,
take the box to the family cottage and throw it in the fire pit in an act of catharsis.
John I remember going to a couple of times going to burn it. And I looked,
something would catch my eye and I go, no, my mother, my mother saved this. I'm not going to burn it now.
When he couldn't bring himself to do it, he just left the box by the wood pile for
months.
But I never moved it from the burning pile either, but it never got burnt.
And there it sat unprotected from the elements until a journalist from Toronto
emailed him out of the blue.
And here you are, the new proud owner of a whole pile of reading
material if you want to so choose. As we talk in the kitchen of his home,
something suddenly flew between us. A hornet?
A hornet? In February?
Did that come in one of your bags Sam? No, I saw it earlier when we came in.
You know where I think it might've come out of?
Where?
These files.
He was hibernating.
Well, and like, hornets love paper.
Oh, shit.
How appropriate, the hornets nest.
We've stirred one up.
In the coming weeks, I would pour through this box,
through the spreadsheets, the personal letters,
affidavits, brochures, newspaper clippings, photographs, and discover a story.
One that begins with friendship, faith, and loyalty, and descends into betrayal, madness,
and rage.
To be dramatic, and I do intend to be, the box was the origin story of a villain.
The story of a man who brought an entire community to its knees and vanished.
I'll tell the story as I choose to tell the story and I'm not here to protect anybody.
Andy took a swig of his wine and shook his head.
I will only say this in terms of a rant.
You say you hate your boss, you say you hate whoever,
and I say no. Maybe you do, maybe you don't, but I know that I don't hate anybody because I know
what it feels like to truly hate somebody, right? And you know, that's the guy.
the guy. I'm Sam Mullins, and this is Sea of Lies from CBC's Uncover, Episode 4, The Day of
Reckoning.
Before the Staley's became entwined with Albert Walker, they were just one of those
families who moved around a lot. Andy's dad had one of those careers where if he wanted
to move up, he had to move. But luckily for Andy and his siblings, moving to new towns
and making new friends was never an issue. Because their parents weren't just anyone.
They were Bob and Betty Staley.
Bob was an affable government man, a leader and mensch. And his mom?
She was the belle of the ball. My mother was loved by everybody. I'll show you a picture of her.
She's posing on the hood of a Plymouth. Hot stuff, right?
Andy says his folks were the best parents imaginable.
They gave him the kind of idyllic Canadian childhood that you'd think only existed in
the paintings of a dentist's office.
Winters with hockey on frozen ponds, days at the beach, county fairs in the summers.
Andy's folks were college sweethearts, and with their four children in tow, they made
every space and community they inhabited brighter, better. This was Bob and Betty Staley before
the nonsense.
One of the first documents I find in the box that Andy gave me is an affidavit written
by his dad.
My father's affidavit which he gave to the police.
It begins,
I, Bob Neil Staley, make oath and say that my wife and I first met Albert Walker in 1968. We were neighbors in Ayer, Ontario,
and we attended the same church.
They belonged to Knox United Church in Ayer, Ontario,
a special place.
The church was their life.
It had that country church feel
where all the families would be there.
Their very, very best friends
were Knox United
Church people. Everybody knew you and you knew everybody and it was a beautiful church.
If Knox United was the center of the Staley's lives, the center of the center was on stage
in the choir people.
I sang in the junior choir.
My parents and Walker sang in the senior choir.
Andy first noticed Albert in 1968 when Walker was only 23 years old.
He joined the Knox United Choir after having just married into one of the church's more
prominent families, the McDonald's.
He married their only daughter, Barbara, after having just known her for three months, and
took his place on stage beside the Staley's.
His voice was a baritone.
He was tall, handsome, and to those at Knox United, a complete mystery.
Nobody really knew from where he came.
He just kind of showed up, right?
Walker's life in the years before 68 still remained shrouded in mystery.
Over the years, just a few press clippings and a self-published memoir by his wife Barbara
shed any light.
These tell how he was born in Hamilton, that he grew up in
a poor family who rented farmland, and he dropped out of school after having failed
two grades. That's about it.
I've come to believe that the details about his upbringing are hard to find by design.
He didn't want people to know that he was from a poor family or was poorly
educated. And so when he arrived in Andy's life, he was ready to shed all of that and
become someone new. And where better to be reborn than the church? Inside these walls, he could walk up to the most well-regarded couple in town and be considered
their equals.
And he never took the opportunity for granted.
He was very engaging and, you know, he had that ability to elicit trust, especially in a farm community where everybody does kind
of trust everybody.
Walker made quick work of joining the tight-knit clique of choir singers to which the Staley's
belonged.
There was a group of, say, about eight, three or four couples that they were part of initially.
And then out of that became their, I guess, a closer friendship that was not inclusive
of the group at large. Albert seemed to want to have the
Staley's all to himself. There was a time that my parents were
best friends with the Walkers, yes. In the 70s and 80s, the Walkers and Staley's built a beautiful friendship.
Andy remembers working as the Walkers' paper boy.
And then when Al and Barb had their first two daughters, Jill and Sheena, they enlisted
Andy for some childcare.
I was babysitting.
I babysat Sheena and the kids like when I was, I don't know, 15, 16, something like that.
Sheena was my favourite. She was just a sweet child, like whether it was babysitting or whether it was family functions,
she was just, you know, she, in all honesty, when I think about it, she had her mother's soft personality and her father's good looks.
I mean, as crazy as that sounds.
Yeah, she was good looking, she was quiet, she was sweet. Yeah, that would have been
Sheena.
The two families grew to be fully entwined. It was a life of Sunday dinners with kids
running around.
Christmas at the farmhouse.
Church socials.
Al and my dad skied together.
And the two couples even traveled to the UK a few times together.
It's funny, now you're bringing back memories of actually many years of really happy times
without a walker.
It's really weird to think about.
Sitting with Andy, he's almost confused, like he's flipping through a photo album from another dimension.
So much happened before the nonsense, as he calls it, came to overshadow everything.
There was an age gap between the two couples.
Albert and Barb were many years the junior.
And the gap was most notable looking at their careers.
Bob was solidly mid-career when they met, whereas Albert Walker was still trying to
figure out what he wanted to be when he grew up. He'd been a man of many jobs.
He worked in a candy factory, a men's store. He was in management training at Zellers, which is sort of like
a Canadian Walmart. He sold insurance for a time, once in Scotland. He worked for a big
feed and supply company. He worked as a cattle herdsman, pig farmer, market gardener, and
then for several years as a librarian.
Walker was really searching. He was limited by his lack of schooling, but was always described
as ambitious, thirsty to become a somebody. His big break, though, came from the most
surprising of places. While Albert was bouncing wildly from career to career, Barb, right
under his nose, was building their bright future from the dining room table.
She was always good with numbers, so she started a side hustle doing taxes for a handful of
local farmers and folks that she knew through the church.
And this is where everything shifted onto a dark and ruinous track.
Everything that would go down with the Staley's and then later in the UK with Elaine
and Ron Platt and Noelle, none of that would have happened if it wasn't for Barb's innocent little
business. Picture Barb doing her taxes at the dining room table, the percussive clack of the
calculator. When one day Albert,
who had never shown much of an interest in his wife's work, looked over her shoulder.
Laid bare on the table before him were the numbers and assets and incomes and most intimate
of financial details of her clients, people he knew. And the numbers surprised him. He couldn't
believe how much money and savings and assets these humble rural folk had amassed. This
was the moment that Albert had an idea.
Walker's Financial Services
It used to be so simple. You went to a bank for a checking account, a trust company for
a mortgage, a broker to buy stocks, and an insurance agent to buy insurance. Life isn't
that straightforward anymore.
That's from an old brochure I found in the box. Walker Financial Services was the weapon
with which Walker would begin his career as a criminal.
It was incorporated in the province of Ontario in 1978.
Walker's vision was to turn his wife's tax business into a scalable, one-stop financial
shop.
Investments, bookkeeping, all of it and more.
This was a whole hog career pivot.
He literally went from being a junior-level librarian
to the front man of a full-service financial institution.
And did a good job of doing people's taxes.
Around the time that Walker Financial was born, both the Walkers and Staley's moved
away from the town of Ayer. But the bond between them didn't suffer.
Albert saw to that.
I think if anything, that was where the friendship continued to grow.
In the ensuing 10 years, the families were as entwined as ever.
When the Staley's daughter Kim got married, Sheena was part of the ceremony.
I remember Sheena, the flower girl girl going up the aisle. I mean
sweet Sheena. When Andy was fresh out of school, Albert wrote a letter of reference for him.
I have no reservations whatsoever recommending him to you. Yours very truly, Albert J. Walker.
After the move, Albert and Barb would drive to visit Bob and Betty as often as they could,
which always perplexed Barb.
While Barb had always enjoyed the Staley's fine, she was baffled by why Albert continued
to be so insistent on remaining close to them after they moved.
This was a man who maintained no other close friendships, who maintained no other relationships.
He didn't even talk to his own siblings.
Why the Staley's and no one else? In her book, Barb describes one day asking her husband point
blank, why do you keep in touch with them? Why are Bob and Betty Staley so important to you?
And he said, because one day they will have money.
And he said, because one day, they will have money. The 1980s were Albert Walker's salad days, from the Walker Financial promotional materials.
Walker's Financial now has branches in Brantford, Hagersville, Paris, Woodstock, London, and
Guelph.
And this relatively small company has announced new plans for expansion using
the same unique formula.
Andy was out of his parents' house by this time, but he remembers his mom, Betty, keeping
him updated during Walker Financial's heyday and how enthusiastically she would celebrate
her friend.
It was this excitement of, oh, and oh, Al's so successful. Like she'd have reports of, oh, Al's so successful. She'd have reports of, Al's just set up another office in Paris.
And over those intervening years from, say, mid-70s to late-80s,
was this, my mother announcing the next great Al Walker accomplishment.
And for the Staley's, Walker's success in the financial world could not have been
coming at a better time.
Because burning a hole in their pocket was a windfall.
A lottery ticket of inheritance that they'd been waiting their whole lives to cash in.
In the late 80s, Betty Staley and her brother Bill inherited a huge swath of undeveloped
land just outside Toronto,
passed down all the way from their great-great-great-great-grandfather.
Two hundred acres split between them.
Nice little chunk of land, eh?
It was finally time to cash in.
So as Andy's parents start getting ready to go about selling off their hundred acres,
what should appear from stage
right, but the silhouette of an opportunist?
Al's doing well in business, Walker's financial services. He convinces my parents that he
can sell real estate.
He'd never sold real estate before, but he had proven that he knew what he was doing
in general. So they say, sure. And the Staley's prepared for their lives to change forever.
Economically, their existence had always been a modest one.
I would say certainly the very lower end of lower middle class, I use the term poor as church mice.
But always humming in the background of his and his family's existence was a promise,
a whisper of future prosperity. I remember thinking all my life, people have their big blessings,
and my big blessing was going to be my inheritance. The family farms was my gift. It wasn't like, oh,
was my gift. It wasn't like, oh, new boat, new car, right?
It wasn't anything like that.
It was just, we were going to be a wealthy family.
So that's how I always sort of anticipated it.
And it was just a thing that never was real, and then it was real.
The story goes that Albert Walker, real estate agent extraordinaire, had managed to drum
up something of a bidding war on the Staley's property.
The wildest expectation pre-sale was that he would fetch something in the ballpark of
two and a half or three million dollars.
And keep in mind, we're talking about $19.89 here.
But Walker didn't get them two and a half or three like they hoped.
Out he goes and sells the farm for more than it's worth.
He got them over five million.
Like, wow, how much?
Really?
And holy moly.
Eddie's uncle Bill was so impressed with the sum Walker managed for the Staley's, he got
Walker to sell his 100 acres. So Walker sold that for over five. And he became a god in that family.
Wow, look what Al Walker did for us, right? Just a magic money man. He turns water into
wine.
This is always how it began. When he offered Elaine the career of her dreams, when he bought Ron his own business, when
he gifted them tickets to move to Canada.
It was just like this.
The magic money man who turns water into wine.
In a short period of time, Andy's family turned their 200 acres into over $10 million.
It was a very, very comfortable time when it happened.
That niggling economic anxiety that rode shotgun with them for their whole lives was gone.
There was no mistaking it.
They were looked after.
They could breathe easy.
They had arrived. Andy remembers the money changing his dad in a good way.
He moved through the world differently now.
He was more grounded, confident, taller.
He was like a country squire.
He had this demeanor about him.
It wasn't cocky, but it was just proud of his world and it was just a really good look on him.
In our interview, Andy's expression gets heavy as we get to this part. In 1989, the Staley's
found themselves in the unfamiliar position of not just having money, but more than they knew
what to do with. Luckily for them, though, they knew a guy.
My wife and I decided to hire Mr. Walker to invest the proceeds from this sale and manage
the funds on our behalf. This decision was made as a result of our close friendship with
Mr. Walker and our belief that he had some expertise in financial management.
They had every reason to believe that to be the case. He was 15 years deep into a well-to-do
business. He managed the portfolios of many people they knew, and every time he turned around,
there was another location opening up. His reputation was immaculate. So they handed
their best friend their millions. There was no formal agreement, contract,
or written instructions with respect to how these
funds were to be invested or managed.
Albert Walker had spent the entire 1980s portraying himself as a stock savant.
He just had a knack for spotting an up-and-coming company at the right moment, he'd say.
He saw opportunities that others missed.
So what was his favorite company to convince folks to buy shares in?
Well, there was this exciting young company in southwestern Ontario, with locations in
Brantford, Hagersville, Woodstock, and even London and Paris.
The Canadian ones, but still impressive.
A little one-stop financial shop called Walker Financial.
When the Staley's millions arrived, Walker invested the money immediately in Walker Guaranteed
Investment Certificates, Walker's Capital Corporation, Walker's Financial Services,
and the United Canvest Corporation, which is four fancy ways of saying,
Albert Walker's Pocket.
The vast majority of the documents Andy gave me meticulously detail exactly how Walker was scamming people.
And having gone through it all, I can assure you he wasn't stealing in an exciting or innovative way.
Attract new investors by promising bigger returns than you
can get anywhere else. If you bought a Walker Promissory Note, TM, he promised 15% returns
annually. These Promissory Notes were his Ponzi scheme, his crypto coin. Please don't email me
about that. As long as investors kept receiving their 15% annual returns without him bouncing a
check, Walker was free to do whatever he wanted. Lavish vacations, Michelin meals, buying a
Jaguar, all investments went directly toward the Albert Walker just having the nicest time fund.
As long as his businesses continued to grow,
as long as he kept attracting enough new investors
to keep paying existing investors,
and nothing happened to disrupt the market as a whole,
Albert Walker could ball out.
But then, 1987 happened.
After the 1987 crash, Walker was cooked. Until he miraculously convinced his best friends
to not only use him as their realtor, but to hand over their whole fortune to him.
But even the staley millions wouldn't be enough to save him. It just gave him a bit
more time to make a plan.
So Albert crunched the new numbers and looked at the calendar.
In the box, I found a list of all the promissory notes he'd signed that year.
Matures 13% June 10th. He'd issued millions of dollars worth of promissory notes that would all mature in
early 1991.
That was it.
That was when he wouldn't have the money.
He could carry on the way he was without being found out until the end of the year, December.
And then, after that, well, he'd have to figure something out. That was a problem
for 1991, Albert. But it was still summer 1990. And he had a much bigger mess to deal
with in his own family.
Albert Walker had been unfaithful to his wife for years. To those in the community, that was old gossip. What was new, however,
was how shameless and out in the open it all was. He had an open affair with a woman from church,
the Reverend's wife to be specific. He was conspicuously courting at least two of the women
who worked for him, and I found out in one of the case files in the staling box that he had a Swiss girlfriend
who he paid to fly to Canada and was putting up in a nearby hotel in Woodstock.
But that summer was when it all blew up.
When Albert and Barb's relationship went nuclear.
They were getting divorced and Albert, of course, was feeling greedy.
He wanted the house, the kids, the
businesses, and he'd do anything to win. The main war was waged through the children.
Albert had them all write letters to the court saying that they preferred him to their mother.
Fifteen-year-old Sheena wrote,
If I did live with my mother, I wouldn't be allowed the freedom that I would get if I lived with my dad.
My mother and I often disagree on a lot of matters and often end up in a real fight.
I don't feel that the relationship between my mother and I contains enough love and affection for us to be together on a daily basis.
However, my father shows me a lot of affection on a regular basis and we are very
close. I feel that it would be better for everyone if I stayed with my father."
And Sheena got what she asked for. When they finally had their day in court, the judge
said that Sheena and Jill could stay with Albert, while Barb was awarded temporary possession
of the house and custody of the two younger
children. Under no circumstances was Albert allowed in the house. This was the arrangement
when the most consequential thing, in a summer filled with consequential things, happened.
One day, Albert crossed the threshold of the house and got into a shoving match with Barab
at the door.
She called the police, and despite their best efforts to talk her out of it, she said she
wanted to press charges.
So for the first time in his life, Albert Walker was arrested.
He was processed.
They took his mugshots.
And crucially, very, very crucially, dear listener, they took his fingerprints. nurses, and the hands of our doctors. It's what makes Scarborough Scarborough.
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But it's time to imagine what we can do with more.
Join Scarborough Health Network and together, we can turn grit into greatness.
Donate at lovescarborough.ca.
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A message from the Government of Canada.
As it turned to fall 1990, his companies were overextended.
He'd lost his house, custody of two kids, and his reputation
in the community. The board of his company was firmly demanding more transparency, and
Barb's divorce attorneys were lighting up his phone lines, demanding a full disclosure of his
entire financial picture so that they could divvy up their estate. But as the pressure was building, Albert was not available. He
was out of office. If you called his business number during this
time, a secretary would tell you he was in Switzerland or the UK or France or Cayman Islands.
Every week it seemed he had a first class ticket somewhere new. Barb knew all along
that he would almost certainly try to hide money somewhere new. Barb knew all along that he would almost
certainly try to hide money from her. But seeing all the travel he was doing, and noticing
the weird blips of large sums of money cruising through their shared bank accounts, she began
to suspect that he was up to something much bigger.
After a game of tennis with Betty Staley in the late summer, Barb took Betty aside for
a candid conversation.
"...Barbara Walker advised us to keep a close watch over our investments with Mr. Walker."
And Barb wasn't the only one who warned them.
"...Around the same time, we were advised by Al Boggs, an employee at Walker's Financial,
that Mr. Walker was investing large sums of money in second and third mortgages.
A classic move among men who have just lost all of your money.
So the Staley's were like, it's probably nothing, but we'll run this past him.
Albert, would you be a dear and tell us exactly where and what you invested our millions in?
And he wouldn't get back to them.
And then he finally sent them this letter I found.
Dear Bob and Betty, I have enclosed a spreadsheet list of all your investments placed on your
behalf through this office.
Please accept my apologies for the delay in getting this to you.
A combination of corporate affairs
and the tax season has put me behind in all areas." And he always signs off the same.
Yours very truly, A.J. Walker.
Just about every spreadsheet I find in the box that Walker sent the Staley's. The Staley's
have marked up the pages with pen. Numbers are circled. There are question marks beside some of the
columns. They do their own math in the margins at times. You get the sense that
to the Staley's things weren't quite adding up. When we subsequently attempted
to meet with Mr. Walker to discuss our financial portfolio, he was evasive.
Where was he? Under all of this pressure, with all of the mess of Walker Financial and
his personal life mounting, what was he up to?
One of the most surprising things I find in the box is from November 1990, a letter addressed to Albert
from a bank in Sarasota, Florida. Dear Mr. Walker, during our discussions in Tampa on Monday, October
29th last, we reviewed the international expansion of Walker Financial into the United States, Japan, South America, and Europe.
While everything was aflame, Albert was trying to get an investor to bail out the company,
but he'd run out of time. In a last ditch effort to stop him from fleeing, Barb tipped
off the police, saying plainly, he's flying on all these business trips with a briefcase filled with stolen funds.
But they didn't act. And what Barb didn't realize was that Albert was planning on taking something much more valuable and precious than just her money.
As the holidays neared, the Staley's finally secured a meeting with Albert Walker. They had
a prepared list of questions and copies
of all the spreadsheets and correspondence
that they were going to confront him with
when he arrived at their home.
Mr. Walker was to meet with us on December 5, 1990,
this time at our residence.
My sister-in-law and her husband,
William and Sheila Richardson,
were also to be at this meeting.
On that date, however, Mr. Walker did not show.
At the scheduled start time of the meeting, Albert Walker was sitting in a first-class
seat in a plane over the Atlantic.
Every credit card he held was maxed out on
jewelry and as many things of value he could carry on his person. His trusty
briefcase, which he used to mule millions of his clients' dollars, sat beside him.
His months of hard work were done. He'd emptied every account he had access to,
he remortgaged the family farmhouse and transferred every penny he could into untraceable Swiss
accounts.
In the years to come, left in his wake, there was heartbreak and carnage he would never
fully understand.
I remember right around Christmas, my parents were a bit nervous. Not so nervous as to make
us nervous, they were really keeping it from us. But I remember there was conversation right around
Christmas of 90. Bob and Betty Staley had opted to keep most of their Walker financial concerns
a secret from their children.
But after being stood up by Walker and the initial rumblings they were hearing around
the community, they feared the worst.
Staley My father said, Walkers left the country.
Dave They've left the country?
What does that even mean?
For the holidays?
Is he coming back?
No one could say for sure. The true meaning of his
departure would arrive a few weeks later, January 15th, a day that Andy would never forget.
January 15th, it was a Thursday. I was at a conference at the old Skyline Hotel in Toronto,
and I knew something was up and I phoned my dad at a break. And it was like a man
who had changed. It was like I was talking to someone made of egg shells, right?
It was as much the tone as the content. That's what I remember, just this shattered man. And
he was like, dad, what's going on? I remember the tone being Walker's gone. We don't know where he is. We have no way of tracking him.
And he had the realization that everything was gone.
All of Andy's family's and his uncle's money, the generational security was gone.
And just this complete darkness. I still remember it like somebody punched me in the gut even though
no one punched me in the gut, right? I felt like the whole world had gone dark.
In the coming days, Andy was barely able to keep it together. Losing his family's great
blessing at the hands of their best friend was too bitter of a pill for Andy to swallow.
He kept running it over in his head.
I was just full of questions, full of questions.
The more he thought about it, nothing made sense.
And it was the start of Desert Storm 1 and they were showing the Scud missiles dropping
on Iraq and I'm going, the whole world's gotten fucking mad here, like it's just nuts.
People around Andy coped with the loss in different ways. Andy's sister seemed less
phased than him and were able to move past it with relative ease. And his grandmother,
the optimist, said it would all balance out in the end.
My uncle was crushed. My uncle was crushed.
But for Andy, it was complete consumption.
I was the most dramatically affected.
Like I was angry and I would talk about it at every occasion.
I wanted a lot of vengeance.
I wanted, yeah, I wanted, I wanted blood and lots of it.
Andy started being haunted by a vision. Every time he closed his eyes,
he saw an evil cartoon face,
delighting in his misery.
Sneering at me all the time, laughing at me,
how, like just how this dark evil had won in my life.
And it was like, it was a real image, Sam.
And I know that sounds goofy,
but it was like there there for night and day for
years. There was a period of time where I thought I was going to track this guy down and get my money
or get the family money back. I really believed that I could do that just fueled by anger and hatred, right?
Andy was brimming with anger about the money, about the betrayal.
But the thing that kept the fire of his rage burning white hot for years was what this
ordeal had done to his father.
Yeah, it ruined him.
It ruined him.
He was never completely the same.
At first, Bob Staley, a lifelong problem solver, tried to be a leader in the investigation at
Walker Financial. He volunteered to be the point of contact for the dozens and dozens
of devastated people frantically trying to recover their money.
of devastated people frantically trying to recover their money. But some folks started directing their anger at him, started holding him at least partly
responsible for what happened.
Hey, wasn't this guy your best friend?
Why are you so interested in cleaning this up for him?
Somewhere in and around there, my father had his first trip to the hospital.
I can remember the first time I went to visit him when he had a psychic break.
They had my dad strapped down on a table and he was growling and snarling and crying and like this.
I remember looking at my uncle going, that looks like my dad, but that ain't my dad.
I got a call the end of that week and it was Dr. Viraswamy and he said, you need to come
up here now.
Your dad needs electric shock therapy and he needs it in the next 24 hours or we may
not be able to
get him back.
I said, whoa, whoa, wait a minute, you're asking me to like electrocute my father?
And he said, well, he said, your father's either going to be like that or we're going
to save him.
And I went, holy fuck.
During those years, while her husband was fighting for his sanity, Betty Staley tried
to keep hers in a different way.
She started the box of documents.
She needed to feel like she was doing something, so she compiled everything.
She cut out news clippings written about Al Walker fleeing.
She collected every family photo in which Albert Walker appeared, every bit of correspondence,
spreadsheet, and letter
that she could find between her and their former best friend. All in the hopes that
if someone somewhere eventually did catch the man, she would be ready. She would have
all of the information organized for him to be brought to justice. I think there's very little sympathy for financial victims. They just don't,
they didn't lose an arm, a leg, a child, there's no blood. I mean, there's some sympathy, but it's
not the same, right? If it didn't happen to you, you just don't feel it.
Andy told me that the same year his family's fortune was lost, one of his best friends
lost his fiance suddenly under tragic circumstances.
So the two friends were grieving together, grieving these very different losses.
And they were driving one day when his friend turned to him.
He said, for me, my issue is final. I'll never have her back. For you, theoretically, you could get your money back. But the interesting thing is he said,
the loss of money versus the loss of a spouse is what men jump out of windows over, right?
In the end, Walker made off with between $3 and $12 million of his clients' money. One man
hanged himself. Another, the Walker financial employee who had worn the staleys died suddenly of heart failure. There was little old ladies that
had $100,000, their life savings, they remortgaged their houses and they were done. They were done.
And that to me is like, it just shows the depravity of the fella.
In the moment that Albert Walker touched down in the UK, I imagined he was feeling very pleased with himself. He had dreamed since he was a young man of starting a European life. A life as a man
of culture. An important man. A wealthy man. And now he was.
But best of all, he had someone to share it with.
Because it turned out the most valuable thing he took was not something squirreled away
in a Swiss bank account.
It was the person seated beside him in first class.
His 15-year-old daughter, Sheena. In the next six years of Albert's life,
no one would believe what he would become. No one would believe what they would become.
Coming up on Sea of Lies. Well, he presented himself as a great international banker and just said things like, I've got
a lot of expertise in finance and all the rest of it, and if I can help any of you,
I'd be delighted.
When Ron came in initially, I think from memory,
he was quite white.
So he wanted me to put, obviously,
a dark color on his hair for his whole disguise, really,
of what he wanted.
In the middle of it, in the middle of this,
I questioned something he said.
He wasn't used to being challenged.
Sea of Lies is produced by What's the Story Sounds for CBC.
It's hosted and written by me, Sam Mullins,
and produced and reported by Alex Gatenby.
Mixing and sound design is by Ivan Eastley.
From What's the Story Sounds, our executive producers are David Waters and Darrell Brown.
At CBC Podcasts, the senior producers are Andrew Friesen and Damon Fairless.
Eunice Kim is our story editor.
Emily Kanell is our digital coordinating producer.
Executive producers are Cecil Fernandez and Chris Oak.
Senior manager is Tonya Springer.
And the director of CBC podcasts is Arif cbc.ca slash podcasts.