Murder With My Husband
Murder With My Husband

310. The Suspicious Death of Lois McMillen

23h ago47:457,492 words
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On this episode, Garrett and Payton explore a brutal murder that shattered a quiet island paradise. As authorities rush to make arrests, doubts grow, as some believe the true killer might be free. Li...

Transcript

EN

We always recommend Shopify, it took us from an idea to a real business.

We got set up, I think, in less than a day.

β€œWith very little effort, we could just focus on the supply chain to the product development.”

Shopify gives us the ability to customize without the complexity. We can change something without introducing fragility or having to pay a developer. We're thirsty total and we leveled up our business with Shopify. Start your free trial at Shopify.com/au. Mama, how do you feel the greatest Liban?

Hmm, is that so? And so creamy. Hey! We can then pack that creamy sign. Nutella, what a fan Mama is and what Papa has lived. Nutella is Nutella.

You're listening to an owner media podcast. Hey, everybody, welcome back to the podcast.

This is murder with my husband, I'm paying more.

And I'm Garrett Moreley. And he's the husband. And I'm husband. Welcome back. Thank you for being here.

Thank you for listening. Thank you for watching. I'll be appreciate you. Another week, another podcast. Oh my god.

Oh my god. Thank you so we're tired. Oh tired. I don't know, Garrett, your hair is like blown in the wind. No, my hair's getting long.

Here's getting crazy. I don't have too much of a 10 seconds this week. I'm going to be honest. I've been sitting here while we're recording. Trying to think and I can't think.

I've just been working a lot. So I don't have too much for you guys. I'm sorry, but I will say thank you to everyone who conversed in DM me and commented talking about last week's criminal defense attorneys and prosecutors.

I'm a pretty open book in general. I like the hair. Other people's opinions and here are other people have to say. So make sure the conversations. Yeah, kind of all I got.

Something Peyton and I are trying to figure out. I feel like this might be a good 10 seconds. Is it is extremely. And when I say extremely, I mean, extremely dry in our room at night. Like to the point where Peyton and I fall asleep and then we both wake up and it

feels like there is someone's hand over our faces. Like it feels like I have a sore throat every time I wake up. And we both have humidifiers. We've tried everything. I, I don't know, maybe there may be we need better humidifiers.

But we have big humidifiers.

β€œI, I don't know, honestly, at this point, like I would pay for.”

You know, those air conditioning units people put in third, like the single units.

I would pay for one of those if someone could hook a water line up to it and then constantly just push steam into my room. You want a steam shower bedroom? Yeah, I just, I, it was like, it was like 19% humidity in our room the other night. And that might not seem dry to people.

But well, it doesn't help that we have like the worst air quality ever as well. Like tacked onto that. High elevation. It's just all the things. It's really bad.

I'm, I'm probably just complaining from our reason. But if anyone has any ideas or thoughts, please let us know. On top of that, thanks again for listening. Thank you for being here. And we are going to hop into today's episode. Excited because your accommodations are practically free.

Plus, they know all of the hot spots in the area, all of the great restaurants to eat out, all of the private beaches to go to, and all of the most interesting locals to hang out with. So you pack your bags and you take off for what will surely be a trip to remember. And it is, but not in the way you hope. One night out changes everything.

And the next thing you know, you're trapped on this island, spending the next few years

β€œin a cold jail cell wondering, how did things go so wrong so fast?”

Now, this was the story of not one, but four, American men in 2000, after a young woman was found dead where they were vacationing. These four men insisted they were innocent, but the question remains to this day. If they didn't do it, then who did? So today we are turning back the clock to the year 1999, okay?

We are hopping on a plane to the exotic island of Tortilla in the British Virgin Islands.

To basically what the local tourist board calls nature's little secret.

It's just 60 miles east of Puerto Rico, and the island was a hotspot for wealthy British and American families to stay during the winter months of the year. So just a vacation island, not only was it beautiful and a great place to surf and sail. It also had a practically non-existent crime rate and only about a total of 19,000 residents at the time.

β€œSo definitely a little secret hidden spot, which is probably why the McMillan family thought”

in 1999, it was the perfect spot to escape to each winter. Now Russell and Josephine McMillan had been coming to Tortilla for the last 20 years, now with their 34-year-old daughter, Lois. They had been living in Connecticut, the rest of the time, ever since Lois was born in 1965.

Now Russell did have children from another marriage, but Lois was his only child with his second wife,

Josephine, and because Lois was the baby of the family, she was given an upbringing, most children only dream of, and this is on top of having a vacation home in a tropical island in the winter. She had horseback riding lessons, trips to Summer Sleepaway camp, school abroad in Switzerland, and then obviously her annual vacation to their beach house. Now over the years, the family got to know the other snowbirds who went her in the island.

Lois looked forward to going to the island every year, growing up.

β€œNot only was it quality time with her family, it was a break from school, which honestly,”

she wasn't very good at, plus it was a chance to paint until her heart was content. So yes, growing up, her high school Lois was a great painter, and as she grew into a young adult, she actually tried to find her way through a series of different colleges in potential career paths, from dropping out of Boston University in 1985 to modeling classes in Connecticut to voice and acting classes, and the American Academy of dramatic arts in New York City,

she tried it all. She actually even moved across the country to Los Angeles for some time to try and pursue startup there, but after meeting one to many directors and producers looking to cast her in exchange for a date, Lois got fed up with the entertainment industry in the constant

disappointment, and that's when she finally went back to her roots and decided

art in painting, or just her real calling. So in the early 90s, she attended the Parsons School of Design in New York, and when Lois wasn't studying or painting, she was volunteering her time with organizations like the Make a Wish Foundation, Greenpeace, or the Humane Society. But as of 1999, the time of our story, Lois was back under her parents' roof in Connecticut trying to get some gallery shows going. She already had quite a bit of success after her first

showing made her close to $10,000, and ironically, year before she had actually made a painting called "The World is Killing Women." It was a piece so powerful her parents hung it on the walls of their

home in their Beach House. Place where Lois had always felt safe. It was consistent,

the spot she knew they would go and slow down for the winter. In a place where she had actually met some people, she thought would be lifelong friends in this little vacation place, like a guy named Michael Spicer. You know, I've always found art really interesting, partly because I don't really understand it. Mainly because the only artist I've ever really looked

β€œinto is Banksy. I don't know. I think it's interesting how some pieces can go for so much money.”

It's have so much more value than other pieces. I think it's definitely one of those worlds you have to be into. Yeah, and I don't really understand it. But appreciate, kind of like fashion, right? Like there's like, there's like funky fashion. Yes. Uh-huh. I think it's similar to that. Yeah. Now, the Spicer family was another wealthy snowbird family on the island that had a home just up the hill from the McMillan's. And at the time, 36-year-old Michael was a law student in Virginia.

Now, he and Lois had known each other for quite a while now, basically from kind of growing up on the island together. But the relationship was fairly casual. They would now go to the bars together, go swimming together in the Spicer's pool. But when they were back to their real lives, it's not like they kept in touch. It was more just this life they had when they went to the island.

Michael had introduced her to someone else a few winters before.

named Alex Benedetto. Now, Alex was the son of a wealthy publisher and now worked at his father's

β€œcompany back in New York. And he had come out with Michael a few times with his family to”

Tortola. And he and Lois actually did have a brief summer romance seemingly ended on good terms because come 1999, Lois was willing to spend time with him again when he came out to visit that winter with his friend. In fact, Michael had brought a couple of friends with him that winter since his parents decided to stay back in the state. So he's in his 30s, he's going to his parents house, and they have it to themselves. I'll tell you who they are. 35 year old Alex, which is her old

fling as well as 23 year old construction worker Evan George. And 36 year old William Labrador,

who owned his own PR and modeling agency in New York City. So these four American guys. Now, the reason that Michael Spicer, who is the friend with the family home there, knew some of the

β€œother boys was William and Alex had grown up together, which was how he was introduced to Michael.”

And Evan seemed to be dating Michael Spicer at the time of that vacation. So it's maybe his boyfriend, his friend, and his friend friend. Either way, the four of them were excited about spending the holidays on the island that year. They'd spend their days

lounging around the pool or beach hiking, hitting the bars, hanging out a bit with

Lois Mcmillan, the other girl whose family had the place and had grown up there. So on the night of January 13th, Michael and his friends invited Lois out to dinner with them. Now, Lois had a car and they didn't. So they actually offered to pay for her meal if she drove. So she left her house at around 530 that night and then was back home later that evening.

β€œBut then the following afternoon, she told her mother, she was just planning to go out alone”

that night. She wanted to listen to some music at a venue on the other side of the island, called the Jolly Roger in. Can? So that night, January 14th, Lois left her family's home around 9 p.m. up by 1230, 1 a.m. Yeah, gosh. Lois's parents were getting worried. I mean, yes, she's in her 30s, but when Lois still

wasn't back by 10 a.m. the next morning, her parents raised down to the local police station to report their daughter, Lois missing. But let's rewind a bit. 2, 3 hours before the parents drove down and made that report. In the same area, a woman named wind some manning left her home on the island for a morning stroll. And about an hour into that journey, she was looking down at the water along the rocky shoreline. When she noticed there was a

body base up. The waves were crashing against it and it appeared to her that this body was no longer moving. Now, when some didn't bother to get a closer look instead, she ran to the police station that was less than a mile away and reported the body to the officers on duty. Detectives, obviously, rushed over and immediately confirmed what wind some had seen. There was a body of a young woman whose face had been bloated by sea water to the point that she was unrecognizable. They

started investigating. She had no ID, no pocketbook, and her shirt and bra were pulled up. So her her breasts were exposed. Now, the detectives got instant. Was that this woman had drowned, perhaps hit her head, maybe slipped. But nearby, there were other clues that suggested maybe there was more to the story. So as they scanned the path from the street to her body, they found things like a gold necklace, a can of mace, a hair clip, and a single shoe along the path.

I mean, this is kind of some random discarded things. The can of mace alone was enough to signal the victim might have been running from an attacker. She loses a shoe jewelry. A police sergeant also noticed some blood stains on the rocks along the sea wall with some tiny red spots leading down to the water indicating that before this victim had even made it to the water, they were probably injured and bleeding on their way there. Now, at that point, the police were worried that identifying

the victim might be difficult, considering there was no missing persons reported in the area,

Then 10 AM rolls around.

our adult daughter, lowest, didn't make it. I just, I just can't. Like, that would just be

β€œso sad. And it happens in a lot of our cases. But, and how do you receive that information?”

Like, how do you take that in when someone, when the police, I mean, even if you're like in the arm services, anything, right? When they have to tell you, hey, like, your loved one is dead.

Well, and I mean, the thing, whoever they talked to, whether it was the front desk person, first

or whoever they, hey, we need to report our daughter missing, right? Before they've even got into the report, yeah, everyone in that small local police station knows there was a body found that morning. Oh, for sure. You know what I mean? So, because that doesn't happen that often here. And now there's a girl missing. Everyone's immediately connecting the dots and these parents have no idea, which is just, it is so devastating. So, they are like, hey, she didn't make it home from a night out.

At first, they suspected that lowest had gotten into a car accident the night before. I mean, the roads along Tertola were pretty dangerous, winding, not well lit. Many of them didn't even have guard rails to prevent a car from veering off a cliff into the water below. I mean, it's an island. Yeah. And foul play was probably the last thing on the McMillan's mind since

violent crime is basically unheard of and they know a lot of people around the area. However,

once the McMillan set foot into that police station, looking for lowest, the officers put two and two together, 34 year old missing lowest McMillan was their victim. By that afternoon, with the McMillan's help, police also located lowesties are. But when they find it, it is in perfect condition. There's no signs of an accident or anything of that sort. It was actually discovered less than a mile away from her body, just parked at a fairy dog. Now, inside, they discover a single

gold earring and a brass colored heart pendant that actually matched the necklace they had found earlier near her body, which basically just confirms the necklace had fallen off.

Police also noticed the floor on the driver's side of the vehicle was wet and sandy. Not that

rare for an island. Yeah. But it's something. I don't know. I mean, it's the driver's side is wet and sandy. So that means that maybe she was wet and sandy. So detectives tried to gather something your prints from the vehicle thinking, okay, maybe it wasn't her who was wet and got in here. Maybe someone chased her down and then got in her car and parked it here. But there were barely any finger prints, not on a steering wheel, gear shift or handles, which means someone had likely wiped the

vehicle down. So it was most likely parked here, which does answer a question for them, but doesn't

β€œreally get them any closer to finding out who. The only thing of note was a shoe print found on the”

rear door panel of the car. So the next step for detectives is to try to retrace Louis's steps from the night before. Her parents tell police, you know, we had dinner with her at our beach house after a long day of shopping. They say, "Low a seam to be in good spirits." She was excited about going to the bar at the Jolly Roger Inn to listen to some music. She had put on a new outfit she had bought with her mother shopping that day and then left around 9 p.m. The officer's

check and a bartender said, "Low a seam to come in by herself that night and ordered a drink." But some witnesses saw her talking to an unidentified man at the bar and another witness claimed they saw Louis leave the bar around 1030 p.m. They say she got into her car and she did drive off alone and they didn't see anyone follow her. Now after that, no one admitted to seeing or speaking to Louis again until the following morning when her body was discovered on those rocks along

the surf. Now news of this is going to spread fast. So a lot of the McMillan's friends and neighbors reach out to express how sorry they are for their loss. But there's one group that hasn't reached out to Louis's mother Josephine that she finds really strange. Michael Spicer and his friends she knows that these two know each other. They were you know friends on this island and she knows they were just hanging out together the night before. So why wouldn't he at least be especially upset

β€œover Louis's death and then you also have Alex, her old summer fleeing. Why wouldn't he be upset?”

Why wouldn't he have reached out? In fact she thinks it's suspicious and so she has no problem

Telling police.

the night before and this is suspicious because they have not said anything to me and these two

β€œwere pretty good friends. So police waste no time racing up to the Spicer home to talk to the”

four guys. Because here's the here is the thing you're in a small town or on an island. There's not many suspects. And there's even less snowbirds who know each other. There's only a handful of suspects. This could be like I'm hoping it's open and shut. I'm hoping they find out who it is if there's lack of evidence. It's going to be hard but there can't be that many people. So they get to the Spicer home and they actually find the boys sleeping off a hangover from the night

before which could explain why they hadn't reached out because they weren't even up for the day

and had heard the news. So police break the news to Michael Spicer on why they're there and

he does come off totally blindsided. Like the news of Louis's death was shocking. It wasn't even really reaching them. Now when detectives asked Michael when he last saw Louis, he says it was

β€œThursday around 11 p.m. She dropped off Michael in his friend Evan before heading home.”

But as they start questioning Michael, one of the detectives notices something. There's a few pairs of wet sandy sneakers lined up near the pool area of the home. Obviously they're in a beach town. So this might not seem that weird but police do have to make the connection that there was wet sandy spots in Louis's car and they do believe whoever had done this move the car. I mean, this really does seem to set off alarm bells for detectives but it doesn't seem that

out of place for me. Eventually the other guys start to come out of the house to speak with police each appearing just as shocked as the last to find out why the police were there to find out the news about Louis the girl they just gone to dinner with. So the detectives start asking them some questions including what clothes they were wearing last night. Now the four guys go inside

β€œthey grab the items of clothing and happily hem them over to police. But there's one thing on”

Michael Spicer's shirt that immediately does look worrisome to them. It's a small red stain about the size of a quarter just above the breast pocket. I mean, I get it. It makes sense but I don't think walking around. I would ever think of that like if I saw a stain on someone's shirt. Yeah, but if you're a cop. Yeah, if you're a cop shirt. Investigating homeside or else it's spaghetti. Okay. You know, I'm saying not saying. I mean, if it was you probably you know that they built spaghetti. All the time,

oh, made or spaghetti spill it. So of course they're like, thank you. Thank you for this clothing. Uh, Michael, you just handed us clothing with a red stain on it. What is this? He tells the police I don't know what that is but you're more than likely to take it and figure it out. So police are like, it feels like he has nothing to hide. In fact, all of the boys deny having anything to do with Louis' death. Still, the police are thinking these four guys are

their best lead at the moment. So they tell them they'll come back later that day with an official search warrant and they do. And keep in mind, her mom has said this is suspicious. She was with these four boys two nights earlier. So I mean, police are working on a hunch, but from the outside looking in, it seems abrupt. Yeah, it doesn't seem like there's anything. It's hard. But as they're searching the house and collecting potential evidence, police notice that Alex, the one who used to

date Louis, is acting a bit strange as police are there. He blocks the door to the room. He's staying in and sort of goes on about, I don't want you going in here. This is an infringement of my rights and do anything wrong. Michael, who is also there, says this is actually typical Alex. He's the kind of guy who is not going to let cops search his room just because it is an infringement of his rights. And he's going to be honest about it. I mean, he, he's also a lawyer. I mean, he's in his 30s.

He's a lawyer. So even if he has nothing to hide, there is something about like sticking it to the man. And Michael, his friend, is like, yeah, this is totally something he would do. He's the guy in a guy who would make a scene. But the police find it suspicious. Now, eventually, they move past him. They collect a bunch of items from the room he's staying in, pillows, bedding, clothing, by the end of the search, they've taken more than 85 items from the beach house, including

fingernail clippings and tampons that they found in a waste basket inside Alex's bathroom, okay, which obviously the police find particularly strange because the men had told them

lowest was never inside the house the night they hung out. But police also know she was on her

Period when she died.

brand of tampons. They found in Alex's waste basket in his bathroom inside her purse.

β€œYeah, so they're going to test them for DNA, see if they match. I mean, almost most girls do get a”

period. So if he had any other girl, but it is weird, I will say. Yep. So by later that afternoon, all four men are being called down to the station to give more formal statements to the police. And all of the men give the same story they initially did. They say they saw lowest the night before. She was last seen on January 13th, but not the final night of her life, January 14th. They said the night she did die. They had dinner at the Spicer's home and then went out around 11pm to a club

called ketos. But William Labrador actually did stay home that night. He said he was tired since they

were up at 730 that morning hiking. Now we'll all the other guys were out partying till 3am,

which other witnesses at the club do confirm. William was home at the Spicer's home. He just watched

β€œsome TV and then went to bed around 1215am. But there was one thing that raised red flags for”

detectives. William Labrador did have a small cut on his nose. He said, oh, I got it earlier in the day hiking. And apparently Alex also had a few scratches on him, which he said, no, that was from the hike as well. But there was something else the police found suspicious. All of the men had recently cut their fingernails, like very short to the point where it was hard for detectives to cut them again for samples. I mean, I'd be screwed. I bought my nails every

single day. Okay. They figure between the lack of reaching out to Lois' family, which the boys claim they were asleep. The wet sandy shoes out of Beach House, the stained shirt, Alex's reaction when they searched his room, the tampon, the cuts and the scratches on two of the men, the cut

β€œfingernails, they believe someone here is guilty. This is hard because it's very circumstantial.”

Right. Like from the outside looking in right now, extremely difficult. Like, I don't think there's no way this gets past a jury. Like, it's all circumstantial. It's all kind of random stuff, too. Like, oh, these guys cut their nails short. Okay. It feels definitely like. There's what shoes. Hey, you're by a beach house. A lot of coincidences, but also, not saying they didn't do it because I don't know what's going to happen yet in the case,

but difficult. On the flip side, the mom's gut thought it was suspicious. She was just with these boys. She had dated one of them. So there's an ex-boyfriend. Yes. They do find a tampon in the bathroom of that ex-boyfriend's bathroom, the same tampon she was wearing. So there are like, you understand why they're suspicious, but it doesn't feel like enough to arrest them. Now, despite that, that day, January 15th, this is literally the next day. They arrest all four of

them on suspicion of murder. Now, hoping they have something. Keep in mind, we're in the British Virgin Islands. Yeah. They can hold people for days or weeks without officially charging them with a crime, which is why they probably just make the arrest. I'm sure America would do that, too. If you'd worn on a time, crunch. So that is basically what ends up happening here. Now, after confiscating the men's wallets, they find something interesting in Alex's. It is an ATM

receipt from that night. Money was taken out around 11 15 p.m. in an area super close to where

Louis was last seen by the Jolly Roger Inn. But the three men who went out never even mentioned

to police that they were in that part of town that night, which only bolsters their case against them further. So by January 19th, all four men are officially charged with murder, but their families and many locals alike say these boys didn't do this. Like these four snowbirds did not do this. They are four professionals with careers. They have no history of violence. They come from good families who have lived here, like they have an established life here. There was no motive

for all four of them to want to kill or harm Louis. Which is interesting that I feel like this happens a lot. People say there's no way this person could have done this. It happens like every single case we have unless the serial killer and it just comes down to, you don't really know somebody. You don't. You just don't really know somebody. We understand gang mentality, but also all four men agreeing to murder does seem odd. For sure. But maybe one, I mean, there's so many

He didn't ever know.

to spread around some locals believe that because Louis's car was found by the docks, that the

person who drove it there probably drove it there got out and hopped on the first very out of town

β€œthat morning, which does make sense because that's how you get off the island. The car that they”

believe was driven by a suspect is found at the very dock that you use to leave the island. So they're like whoever did this obviously parked the car in the left. It's not these boys who were asleep. Okay. The locals are like this person was long gone by the time police were looking for suspects. They think it seems more likely that a the local police aren't used to dealing with a homicide case like this and b they want to wrap it up quickly and place blame on someone so it doesn't affect

their tourism, which is a major source of income for the island. They can have this unsolved murder

on the island. So regardless, a preliminary hearings scheduled for the foremen in March of 2000,

but that gets pushed to July as the prosecution waits for DNA results to come back.

β€œSo are they just sitting in prison this entire time? Yep. I mean, you're not here in the British”

virgin island. That sucks. And when it does, it sucks if they didn't do it. The DNA is not exactly a smoking gun. The stain on Michael's shirt did test positive for blood for spaghetti. It didn't belong to any of the guys. Now the results show it could have come from lowest, but it also could have come from tens of thousands of other people. I mean, it wasn't like a solid hit. What few prints they were able to find on the vehicle were also not a match to any of the fore suspects. And when

those wet sandy shoes were tested, only 15% of the sand on them matched the sand found where lowest's body was discovered. They were obviously worn in other beach areas. And that shoe print that was found in the back of lowest's car wasn't a match either. In fact, 90 items in total were tested from close to shoes to hair samples found in lowest's vehicle and all of it told the same story none of it connected to any of these four men. So the case is purely circumstantial.

That was until a man named Jeffrey Plant came into the picture. Jeffrey Plant was a business man from Texas who had been caught trying to pass bad checks. He happened to be in jail, awaiting trial at the same time as the other defendants. And he told police and prosecutors, he had seen and heard some stuff from the suspects that might be of interest to their murder case. Apparently, Jeffrey had witnessed Alex and William argue on more than one occasion in jail.

And at one point he claimed Alex pointed the finger at William accusing him of being guilty. Jeffrey also claimed that William asked him once if he thought God would forgive him if he had had something to do with lowest's murder. Did he trust this? I don't know. Like how do you trust that? This is even true information. Jeffrey said during this conversation with William, he was like, well, were you involved in

William told him yes? Apparently, William confessed to Jeffrey that on the evening of lowest's death, he was in her car. They got into an argument over money. She owed him. She tried to pull into the police station, but he chased her down to the water and drowned her by putting his foot on the back of her neck. And so in his story, the other guys weren't there because they were out partying. Remember? Yeah. He was the only one who supposedly home alone watching TV. Yep.

Now, when the prosecutors hear this, they find the statement interesting because lowest did die by drowning, not by any other manner like strangulation. And that was something that wasn't exactly public knowledge at this point, but she was found in water. So it's not that big of a jump to think that she drowned. William tells his lawyer, this is complete nonsense.

He never said anything like this to Jeffrey in prison. In fact, Jeffrey had a history of being a

prison snitch because he did the exact same thing when he was in jail back in 1995. He lied about

β€œanother inmate to try and lesson his own sentence. We talked about this. I think last podcast,”

last episode, you can, trusting an informant seems extremely difficult. Especially one who has a history of lying, like knowingly lying. Yeah, I get out of here now. But the prosecution uses it to bolster their case and in the spring of 2001, all four men are in the courtroom being tried together. And I just say you are innocent. Say you are innocent. You go out with this girl. You're

Just on vacation with your friends and police show up.

girl died. And the next day you're arrested. You've been in jail since and now you're at trial.

β€œLike that's a low key wild if you're 100% guilty. Yeah, I don't know what to expect. I don't know”

how this is going to go. Also, it's kind of an example of last time we're talking about criminal defense attorneys, how now prosecutor prosecutors will take stuff and run with it. Interesting.

So there is basically a month's worth of testimony that the judge hears against all four men.

And after a month, he decides there simply isn't enough evidence to uphold the charges against Michael Spicer, Evan George, or Alex Benedetto. All three of them are acquitted immediately and free. The judge is like you have no evidence on these three men. And that probably would have been the case for William as well, except for Jeffrey, the jailhouse snitch. I, this is why the if he goes to prison. I mean, I don't know who did this, but I don't think you can put someone in prison

for life if you get to this base off of an informant that was a liar previously. That's not fair. Okay, and say Williams innocent, he decided to stay home because he was tired and not go out with his friends. Yes. Yes. You know what I'm saying? Yes. But maybe he's not. So unfortunately for William, the trial continues. So they paint a very similar picture that after a heated argument, William was actually with lowest that night and he chased her down to the water and drowned her.

β€œSo with hardly any concrete evidence, the jury's decision comes down to one thing. Remember,”

there is no DNA. There's no nothing. I mean, the tampon in Alex's room now has nothing to do with this because they're saying it was William, who just wasn't with his friends that night. The jury has to decide, do they find Jeffrey plant a reliable witness or not? That's all this case

basically boils down to. William's lawyer tells the jury about Jeffrey's past. How he had been

married 10 times, he was approving con man. He was currently in prison for Grand Larsonie. What wasn't mentioned in the courtroom was how after Jeffrey had told police about William's confession, he was released from jail. His charges were dropped and he was put up in a seafront villa with a nice little stipend from the government waiting to testify. This is nuts. I will say six months later, he was back in jail this time in Texas with 34 new counts of fraud and theft. Still,

Jeffrey's story is enough to send yours away for seven and a half hours of deliberation. I mean, this is all they've got. Come on. We've got to have smarter jurors. Despite his inconsistent account on the stand, the jury sides with him. They find 37 year-old William Labrador guilty of murder and in the British Virgin Islands, that means an automatic sentence of life behind bars. Now, there's no way. He doesn't stop here. The story does not end here.

This is no way. It's no way. William obviously continues to maintain his innocence, filing a pill after a pill. I mean, even if he's guilty, this trial was not enough to put him away.

So finally, on April 7th, 2003, the British court overturns William's conviction due to what

β€œthey call judicial errors. They point to the fact that the prosecution's key witness was”

a proven quote, habitual liar. Yeah. That's ridiculous. And they were like, you, the prosecution made some improper comments during the trial. 100%. They're ruling also comes with another win for William Labrador. It bars a retrial, which means after nearly three years behind bars in the British Virgin Islands for murder, he's finally allowed to return to the state, get back to his life without fear of being retried. Now, one of the first things he does before getting on the

plane to go home is actually take a swim in the ocean. Keep in mind, his parents didn't even have this place. He was here with friends, was in jail for three years, gets out and is like, well, now I have to go home somewhere I haven't been in three years. He tells good morning, America, quote, "That's when I finally felt my freedom being able to do that without someone turning a key on me." Unfortunately for the McMillan family this means, justice hasn't really been

served because in the eye of the law no one is been charged officially now with her murder. And there are still plenty of theories about who might actually be responsible for Louis's death because she was murdered. One of the names thrown around was Louis's former boyfriend at the time,

Luigi Lungarini.

the two began dating in the spring of 1998, two years before her death they even were engaged at one

β€œpoint. But people who knew Louis and Luigi said the relationship was really toxic,”

hot and heavy one minute, and then they were screaming at each other in public the next. One source even claimed that after her parents told her to break things off with Luigi, Louis listened, but he continued to stalk her refusing to accept things were over. Luigi also did have a history of domestic violence with his ex-wife and previous girlfriends, and Louis had tried to get a restraining order against him in the past. There were also sources

who claimed she approached Luigi a few times since their breakup to ask him about a death that he needed to repay her father. So we have someone in prison with no motive. Why, yeah, why wasn't this guy? And we have an ex-boyfriend who has domestic violence has a record

β€œhot motive owed her money. And he wasn't a witness. Ernie wasn't a suspect at all.”

Right. I do want to mention what is strange here is during the investigation like

Garrett said, police never took any DNA or fingerprints from Luigi. In fact, they never even

reached out to him. They didn't even take a statement or I wonder if this, I don't know. I mean, it could be multiple things. It could be lack of experience. It could be we're protecting their quote unquote own people that were part of the British Highlands and not some Americans that are visiting and it could be so many different things. Or I mean, or it could still be them. I don't know. Yeah, I want to say no. This is the legit. We're obviously discussing potential suspects

at this point. No idea. I'm not trying to drag Luigi's name through the mud because this is a legit, but we do all so half to point out every suspect in a case that is unsolved.

Yep. Police do answer or why they never reached out to him. They claim they had evidence. He was

on his boat during the time of the murder and Lois's family didn't suspect him. It's pretty apparently trusted. Kevin, if hit an out by then, okay, I guess. I don't know. Now, there's a ton of other loose ends regarding Lois's case. Like the fact that it was proven she had inner course within 48 hours of her death, but she didn't appear to be sexually assaulted and seamen tests were not a match for any of the form men suspected of murder. There's just no way. I mean,

I just, I don't think it's them, but I could be totally wrong. There was also some indication that she had fish bites on her body, which would suggest she drowned further out from the shoreline and then her body washed up in more shallow water. No, maybe she was on a boat. And then her body

washed up. There was also never an ID made on the man that she was talking to at the

Drawly Roger in the night she died. Remember, she was talking to a man. But there is one terrifying truth in this case. What began as a dream getaway turned into a walking nightmare for a lot of people. And sometimes it doesn't matter how friendly an invitation seems or how safe you think you are, one single night can't change everything, weather victim or suspect. One wrong reaction, one sandy shoe, one drop of blood is all it takes to turn paradise into hell. And that is the murder

of Lois McMillan and the attempted trials. That's crazy. So it's just never been solved.

β€œI'll never know. Oh, that sucks for her family. That's horrible. I mean, who else could it?”

I mean, if here's a thing, there's just isn't enough evidence for me to think it was them. There's no other suspects. How does that happen? Just a cold case gone. Just nothing. And I will say, sometimes we see unsolved cases that the investigation has been like pounded into the dirt, right? Like they have attempted and attempted and attempted and they just don't know where to go. But there is so much investigation done. I do feel like this investigation was just

handled improperly from the beginning and got so skewed whether it was the men or an ex-boyfriend or a random stranger. Whoever it was, the investigation was just not done in a proper way. We have DNA, we have evidence and it feels like we have nothing. No. All right, you guys. That was our episode this week and we will see you next time with another one. I love it. And I hate it. Goodbye.

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