Shawn Custis Mugshot
Life’s a lot
easier that way…
by
Robert A. Waters
If
82-year-old Doris Thompson had
worked a steady job, she might have retired decades ago. Instead, she’s back in the slammer. For fifty years, Thompson has been
burglarizing homes and businesses.
“She’s not really apologetic about it,” a Torrance, California
prosecutor said. “This is her
thing.” She’s served at least 9 stints
in prison, and it looks like she’s got more time coming her way. Her latest crimes were, if nothing else,
creative. FoxNews.com reports: “In the latest incident, Thompson is accused
of targeting doctors’ offices. Torrance
Police Sgt. Robert Watt tells KTLA she allegedly would enter an office, hide
until closing and search for keys to the cash box. She is accused of stealing about $17,000, and
allegedly was identified by security footage.”
In addition to burglary, Thompson has used at least 25 different
aliases.
The
nanny cam shows it all: a mother and child sitting on a couch watching
television. Suddenly, a man bursts into
the room and beats the woman to the floor.
Punch after punch rains down on her as her daughter watches in
horror. Shawn Custis, the suspect, has a criminal record dating back to the
1980s. I counted 21 arrests for crimes
such as burglary, unlawful possession of a handgun, robbery, assault, forgery,
and resisting arrest. In each case, Custis
plea bargained his sentences to minimal time in prison, even though he
repeatedly violated probation once released.
Because his alleged assault was caught on film and released to the
public, millions viewed the horrible attack.
Now prosecutors are finally ready to charge Custis with crimes such as
attempted murder and home invasion. If
convicted, he might serve some real
time, like maybe life in prison.
His
lawyer called William Sheppard “likable,
loyal, kind and considerate.” Except
when he was high or robbing people to obtain money for cocaine. Then he became violent and
uncontrollable. Sheppard’s criminal
record dates back to 1989. Finally,
after committing his latest robbery, he was sentenced to 15 years, plus five
years’ probation. After Sheppard’s
girlfriend lured a man to Indian Leap Bridge in Norwich, Connecticut, the
career criminal robbed his victim at knifepoint. The duo came away with $150, just enough for
another round of dope. Now Sheppard has
until 2027 to think about how he might have avoided incarceration. The judge who sentenced him said: “You’ve
robbed people for the last 20 years. All
you do is scare people and take their money.”
(Sheppard was already on probation for armed robbery.) Now, at least society will be protected from
the crack-head.
I’ve
often thought it might be easier just to work for a living.
Twelve years and
counting…
by
Robert A. Waters
On September 25, 2002, Jennifer
Short’s sad remains were located beside a stream in Rockingham County, North Carolina. After twelve years, lawmen are still stumped: was her killer someone known to the
family, a hit-man, or a pedophile? Or
was there some vast conspiracy surrounding the non-descript family?
M.
S. Mobile Home Movers operated out of Henry County, Virginia, in the
rural community of Oak Level. The “M. S.”
stood for Michael Short. His wife, Mary,
helped run the business from their home. By all accounts, Michael and Mary scraped out a meager living. The light of their life was a daughter,
nine-year-old Jennifer.
At
9:00 a.m., on August 15, 2002, an employee arrived at the Short home and discovered
Michael lying dead on a couch inside an attached garage. Investigators soon found Mary Short lifeless in
her bed. Each victim had been shot in
the head. Jennifer was nowhere to be seen.
After
six weeks, Jennifer’s remains were discovered fifty miles from her home. An
autopsy revealed that the nine-year-old’s death was caused by a gunshot wound
to the head, just like her parents. Her
body was too decomposed for lawmen to tell if she’d been sexually assaulted.
An
FBI summary of the case reported that “Mary was described as a shy, neat and
extremely focused individual, who was actively involved in the family business.
Jennifer appeared to be a happy little
girl experiencing a normal childhood. She
was an excellent student and actively involved in organized sports.”
I
noticed that the FBI report contained no description of Michael Short’s characteristics.
That’s
a bare-bones synopsis of what has been published about the mysterious murders
of the Short family. For more than a
decade, the killer (or killers) has walked free. Because of the on-going investigation, little
information has been released to the public.
In
this blog, I’ll explore several possible explanations for why the family was
targeted. (Admittedly, much of this is
speculation and certainly doesn’t cover the full spectrum of what may have
happened.)
Who
could have wanted Michael, Mary, and Jennifer Short dead?
(1)
Business associate or employee. Moving mobile homes is a tough way to make a
living. Michael Short hired laborers
when he needed to move a trailer, and it is thought that he paid them in cash. This could have been dangerous. Some day laborers have criminal backgrounds,
addictions, and mental illnesses. The
employee who found the bodies was thoroughly investigated as a suspect. It’s likely that he’s been eliminated since
he was never charged. Did a worker or
former worker snap and murder the entire family? If so, why take Jennifer out of
the home and kill her fifty miles away? No evidence has been presented to the public to confirm that a business associate or employee murdered the family.
(2)
Neighbor/Friend/Acquaintance. Were the murders due to a grudge someone held
against the family, or one of its members? Since we can never really know
our neighbors, it’s certainly possible. However,
there has been no indication that lawmen suspect a neighbor or friend.
(3)
Gary “Storm” Bowman. The first and only known suspect was a
retired carpenter from Mayodan, North Carolina. The FBI became suspicious when agents discovered that Gary Bowman had moved
to Canada the day after Michael and Mary were killed. Later, Bowman’s landlord claimed to have
heard Bowman threaten to “kill a mobile home mover in Virginia.” Then, according to news reports, two men
stated that they saw Bowman carrying a young girl from the Short home on the
night of the murders. Bowman was
deported from Canada and held in custody (without being charged) for a
month. Lawmen processed hundreds of
items from the home of their suspect in an attempt to link him to the crime,
but were unsuccessful in their efforts. Then, Timothy Fennon Sampson and Jerry Riley Mills were indicted for
lying to federal officials. Court documents alleged
that they had made up the story of Bowman carrying a girl from the Short home in order to obtain the reward money. Eventually, Bowman was released. He has never been officially cleared, but it
seems investigators moved on to other leads.
(4)
The man in the truck. A witness reported seeing an unusual truck
parked near the Short residence on the night of the murder. (See photo above.) It was described as being a 1998-2002 white
single-cab flat-bed with wooden rails. The vehicle resembled a 4500 Series International Truck. The man driving it had a “weathered
expression,” according to the FBI. The truck
should have been easy to find, but lawmen never located it.
(5)
Conspiracy of cops? In 2006, four years after the Short family
murders, the sheriff of Henry County, Virginia and 12 of his deputies were
arrested for drug trafficking. Federal
prosecutors called Sheriff Harold Cassell “corrupt to the core.” The lawmen were accused of filling out
paperwork attesting that they had destroyed confiscated drugs,
but then sold the marijuana, cocaine, and ketamine to dope dealers in the
area. Local deputies were also accused of
laundering money. Many of the lawmen,
including Sheriff Cassell, ended up serving prison terms. Did Federal investigators ever determine whether the
corrupt department had any hand in the Short family murders? In his myriad travels across the area, could
Michael Short have seen suspicious activity and reported it to police? Could he and his entire family have been
eliminated to cover up the sheriff department’s criminal enterprises? Or was Michael Short himself involved in the
drug trade in some way? These questions need
to be answered.
(6)
The Joseph E. Duncan scenario. One of the most pressing questions of this
case is why Jennifer was taken from the residence and dumped fifty miles
away. It’s not too far-fetched to
envision a sexual predator killing Michael and Mary to get to Jennifer. It’s happened before. In 2005, serial killer Joseph E. Duncan
stalked a Coeur d’Alene, Idaho family before breaking into their home and murdering
Mark McKenzie, his girlfriend, Brenda Groene, and her son, Slade Groene. Duncan then kidnapped pre-teens Dylan and Shasta Groene for the purpose of
raping them. The sadistic psychopath tortured his victims
for more than a month before shot-gunning Dylan to death. Shasta survived and was eventually rescued. Could a
similar crime have occurred in Virginia?
Somewhere,
one or more killers are walking free.
If
you know anything about this case, please call the FBI at 1-800-225-5324.
My Favorite
Books
by
Robert A. Waters
Several friends
have asked me to list my favorite books.
I hesitated for several reasons.
One problem is that there are so many great books, it’s almost
impossible to slim down to ten. Also, if
I pick out ten today, I might change them tomorrow. However, I’ve read each of these books more
than once, and in some way, each has influenced my life. So, for what it’s worth, here goes.
(1)
The Holy Bible – The greatest book
ever published is going out of style in America. Like it or not, when we no longer use Biblical
principles as our moral guide, this once-great civilization built by our Founding
Fathers will fall.
(2)
Hound of the Baskervilles and all
Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle.
(3)
1984 and Animal Farm by George Orwell – 1984 frightened me into hating
communism and totalitarian governments of all stripes.
(4)
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote.
(5)
Hank Williams: The Biography by Colin
Escot.
(6)
The Blooding by Joseph Wambaugh.
(7)
Digging Up the Bible: The Stories Behind
the Great Archaeological Discoveries in the Holy Land by Moshe Pearlman. I love books about archaeology, and this is
one of the best.
(8)
Lords of Sipan: A True Story of Pre-Inca
Tombs, Archaeology, and Crime by Sidney Kirkpatrick.
(9)
The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr
Solzhenitzyn. The author once said: “A great writer is, so to speak, a second
government in his country. And for that
reason no regime has ever loved great writers, only minor ones.” Gulag destroyed the New York Times-sanctioned liberal version of
Soviet history by detailing Russia’s concentration camps from 1918 to 1956.
(10)
Radical
Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak-Catchers by Tom Wolfe. Published in 1970 during the height of the black
power movement, this is one of the great politically incorrect books of our
day. (I always wondered how he even got
it published.)
But Ray Rice is finally gone...
by Robert A. Waters
So,
the thugs are back: the rapists, wife-beaters, mom-beaters, thieves, dopers,
drunks, dog-torturers and general purveyors of corruption.
The
2014 NFL season has begun and hundreds of multi-millionaires have a national forum to display their violent tendencies.
Unfortunately, millions of young boys look up to these paragons
of sleaze.
No
doubt, kids learn from television, and what they learn from the NFL is how to
be criminals. They learn that if you’re rich and famous, you can beat almost
any charge. They learn that the talking
heads at ESPN and other sports networks will generally give you a pass for
knocking down your mother, or beating your wife black and blue. If you rape a few women, who cares? She probably deserved it and anyway, boys
will be boys.
The
latest star player to have the spotlight of infamy turned on him is Ray
Rice. His actions quickly turned into a
public relations disaster for the NFL, so much so that after an initial slap on the
wrist, drastic measures were finally taken.
On February 15, Atlantic City police arrested Rice for assaulting his girlfriend, Janay
Palmer, in an elevator. Since Rice was a popular record-setting running back for the 2012 world champion Baltimore Ravens, the NFL attempted to cover up
the incident. The league suspended him for only two games. Over and done, folks, let's get on with the season.
A local
judge joined forces with the NFL and gave Rice the lightest sentence
possible. According to WJLA.com, “The
27-year-old Rice was charged with felony aggravated assault in the case, but in
May he was accepted into a pre-trial intervention program that allowed him to
avoid jail time and could lead to the charge being purged from his record.”
What
can’t be purged is the video of Rice slugging Janay Palmer. The blow is so hard it knocks her across the
room and into a railing where she slumps to the floor. She lies motionless for several minutes, even as Rice drags her
limp frame out of the elevator. Eventually, Palmer
recovers enough to leave the area.
The
video of the attack quickly found its way onto the Internet, and Rice’s fate
was sealed. The punch-out is so horrific
that finally the NFL was forced to act.
After the Ravens cut Rice, the NFL suspended him from football indefinitely.
You’d
think that with the duties of constant workouts, study, practice, and games,
these guys wouldn’t have time to commit crimes.
But
don’t count on it. A thug will always be
a thug.