A woman who befriended a Florida lottery winner who later
went missing was charged with trying to conceal his slaying,
five days after his body was found buried in her backyard.
Dorice "DeeDee" Moore (37) was charged as an accessory after
the fact to first-degree murder in the slaying of Abraham
Shakespeare, Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee said.
Moore has denied hurting Shakespeare (43).
Authorities said in an affidavit that Moore took "steps to
make it appear that the victim was still alive."
But at the same time, she was also trying to find someone she
could pay to take the rap for his killing and someone to dig
up and move his body, investigators said.
So far, no one else has been charged, but that could change,
officials said.
"I won't say we have identified all of the players involved,"
said Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee. "We're going to
find out everyone that was involved. We're going to seek
justice."
Moore's arrest is another twist in the monthslong, bizarre
case. Detectives said Shakespeare was killed on April 6 or 7,
2009, at a home in a rural town east of Tampa.
He was buried, officials said, at the home next door, which
according to property records, was purchased by Moore and
listed in the name of her boyfriend.
Investigators said in an affidavit that Moore asked an
unnamed witness if he knew anyone who was awaiting sentencing
to prison and would be willing to take the rap for killing
Shakespeare in exchange for $US50,000.
Around the same time a few weeks ago, she told an unnamed
witness - it's not clear if it was the same witness - to dig
up the body and move it to another location, according to the
affidavit.
Authorities said she showed the person where the body was
buried on January 25 and provided a pickup truck to transport
it, along with bleach and plastic sheeting.
Police began digging up her backyard the next day.
Shakespeare was last seen in April, and officials in Polk
County - where he lived and was reported missing - have long
thought he was slain.
Investigators had announced earlier that an autopsy showed
the Lakeland resident died of "homicidal violence" but would
not give specifics.
In January, Polk officials named Moore a "person of interest"
in Shakespeare's disappearance. She befriended him after he
claimed the $US30 million winning ticket in 2006 and took a
$US17 million lump sum payment.
Moore said she wanted to write a book about Shakespeare, but
officials said she actually scammed him out of money.
Property records show she bought a $US1 million home from
Shakespeare for $US655,000 and she acknowledged moving $US2
million of his money into her bank account.
In the affidavit, detectives said Moore wrote a letter to
Shakespeare's mother, claiming to be him - even though the
lottery winner was barely literate.
Detectives also said Moore had an unnamed witness make a cell
phone call to Shakespeare's mother, pretending to be him. In
an interview Monday with The Tampa Tribune,
Moore said she anticipated being arrested.
Shakespeare's body was found buried 1.5m deep under a 9-by-9
metre concrete slab behind the home Moore owns with her
boyfriend.
Moore told the paper that she ordered it poured for use as a
boat and camper skirt. However, Moore said she never hurt
Shakespeare.
"I would never take another human's life. No amount of money
in the world is worth that," she said.
Moore's attorney, John Liguori, said he's not surprised his
client was arrested, considering recent developments in the
investigation.
But Liguori said the killer could still be on the loose.
"DeeDee may be a valuable witness against anyone responsible
for the actual murder of Abraham Shakespeare," Liguori said.
It's too early to speculate about the possibility of a plea
bargain, Liguori said. He acknowledged that more serious
charges could be filed later against his client.
Family members say Shakespeare, a truck driver's assistant,
was barely literate, and people constantly hounded him for a
piece of his winnings.
Last week, Shakespeare's brother said that Shakespeare often
wished he had never bought the winning ticket.
"'I'd have been better off broke.' He said that to me all the
time," Robert Brown said.