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Scott
Wilson WILLIAMS
Classification:
Serial killer
Characteristics:
Rape -Mutilation - Dismemberment
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 1997 / 2004 / 2006
Date
of arrest:
March 9,
2006
Date of birth: 1963
Victims profile: Sharon House Pressley
/ Christina Outz Parker / Sharon
Tucker Stone
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Union
County, North Carolina, USA
Status: Sentenced to
three
consecutive life sentences without parole on
July 17,
2008
Union man gets
life in 3 killings
Scott Williams enters a
plea, saying prosecutors have the evidence
to convict him.
By Mike Torralba -
Charlotte.com
Sat, Jul. 19, 2008
In a plea bargain with
prosecutors Friday, serial killer Scott
Wilson Williams was sentenced to life
without parole in the shootings and
dismemberment of three Charlotte-area women
between 1997 and 2006.
Williams entered an
Alford plea in Union County Superior Court.
That means he acknowledged prosecutors had
enough evidence to convict him of three
counts of first-degree murder in the three
women's deaths.
Union County prosecutors
earlier sought the death penalty against the
former state road crew worker from northern
Union County.
But District Attorney
John Snyder said Friday he offered the plea
deal “in light of the nature of the case,
the sensitivity of the victims and the
uncertainty of capital punishment.”
The evidence against
Williams included DNA and ballistics from
weapons found on his property, detectives
said. Investigators also read statements by
Williams and two more victims who survived,
which show the 44-year-old picking up women,
torturing and killing them.
They also portrayed
Williams as a fetishist and predator who was
insecure in his sexuality and quick to anger.
Williams'
attorney, Frank Wells of Asheboro, said the
defense “did not have any grounds on which
to dispute the statements” read in court.
“It wasn't a close call,”
Wells said. “The evidence was overwhelming.”
Superior Court Judge
Richard Boner handed Williams three
consecutive life sentences. They involved
the deaths of Sharon House Pressley in 1997,
Christina Outz Parker in 2004 and Sharon
Tucker Stone in 2006. Their bodies –
mutilated in similar but increasingly
gruesome ways – were found off rural roads
in Union County and Chesterfield County, S.C.
Williams also entered
Alford pleas to first-degree charges of
kidnapping, rape and sexual offense against
two more women in 1995 and 2000. Williams
let both women go.
The serial murder case
has been one of the most gruesome in the
Charlotte area in recent years. But its
resolution Friday was low key. Only about a
third of seats in a Union County courtroom
were filled. Attending were fewer than two
dozen family and friends of the victims and
Williams.
Williams walked in a side
entrance, tieless and wearing a gray suit.
Shackled at the wrists, he answered Judge
Boner's questions softly, saying “Yes” and
“No” and showing no emotion.
His buzzed hair had
grayed since his arrest in March 2006. He
sported the same thick, dark mustache and a
pair of wire-frame glasses.
As investigators read
evidence against him, the courtroom was
quiet.
According to Union County
Sheriff's Lt. David Linto, one survivor told
investigators that Williams removed her
shoelaces, wrapped them around her breasts
and tightened them until her breasts turned
blue.
“He said, ‘I was once
your worst nightmare; now I'm your guardian
angel. If anyone (messes) with you, I will
kill them,'” the woman told detectives.
According to testimony,
Williams also told investigators that he
planned to cannibalize one woman's remains,
but was turned off by the smell of cooked
flesh.
Union County Sheriff's
Sgt. Brian Helms testified that when
Williams was confronted by detectives at his
home in northern Union County in early March
2006, he yielded.
“He was sitting on the
couch. He shrugged, placed his head in his
hands and said, ‘I didn't mean to hurt those
girls,'” Helms told the court.
Near the two-hour
hearing's end, family members of victims had
a chance to speak.
“At first I was shocked
about him not receiving the death penalty.
But I guess God has a plan …” wrote Heather
Brown, daughter of Sharon Stone, in a
statement read to the court by her brother,
Scott Hinson.
“My mom was always around
smiling,” Brown wrote. “She called every
holiday and for my birthday. She was not a
woman of the streets. She worked as hard as
she could at restaurants, until she met
Scott Williams.”
As Hinson and other
family of the victims entered statements
into the court record, Williams' gaze tilted
toward his shackled hands, and he rocked
slightly in his chair.
He watched as the
earliest known victim, a survivor, made her
statement.
The woman, now in her
40s, held up a photograph of herself taken
shortly before her 1995 abduction from the
parking lot of a 24-hour supermarket and her
subsequent rape. It showed a smiling woman
with curly brown hair. She described herself
as “very vivacious and full of life.” She
has since married and has “a beautiful child.”
But she spoke in a slow, soft monotone.
“At least I was lucky to
survive,” she said. “But mentally and
emotionally, I constantly look over my
shoulder.”
Defense attorneys and
prosecutors had discussed a plea arrangement
for “a long time,” said Jonathan Megerian,
Williams' co-counsel. But it wasn't until
Thursday that Williams gave the final OK,
Megerian said.
The court appointed
Megerian and Wells, both of Asheboro, in
January. Williams' previous attorneys
withdrew citing a shortage of support staff
and a strained relationship with their
client.
Following Williams'
arrest, Judge Boner sealed documents that
contained many details of the case. Several
media organizations, including the Observer,
sought to obtain the documents after
Williams' March 2006 arrest.
According to records that
were made public, investigators seized
assorted whips, chains, handcuffs, knives
and handguns from Williams' home.
Scott Wilson
Williams Makes His Deal
July 18th, 2008
Scott Wilson Williams, who
was charged in 2006 with the murders of three
women in North and South Carolina entered an
Alford plea, and received a sentence of life
without the possibility of parole. An Alford
plea means that Williams admits that prosecutors
have enough evidence to obtain a conviction,
were the case to go to trial.
Williams was charged with
three counts of first-degree murder and
kidnapping in the deaths of Sharon Tucker Stone,
Christina “Christy” Parker, and Sharon House
Pressley. Ballistic tests on the bullets found
in the victims were tested and found to match
firearms found in his home.
Arrest Made
in Carolina Murders Case
March 9th, 2006
An arrest has been made as a
result of the investigation into three murders
committed in Union and Chesterfield counties in
the Carolinas.
Scott Wilson Williams, a 42-year-old
NC Department of Transportation worker has been
charged in the crimes.
Williams was charged with
three counts of first-degree murder and
kidnapping in the deaths of Sharon Tucker Stone,
Christina “Christy” Parker, and Sharon House
Pressley. Stone’s body was found in a
Chesterfield County, S.C. field last month,
Parker’s in 2004, and Pressley’s in 1997. Parker
and Pressley’s bodies were found in the same
area of northern Union County, about 10 miles
from Williams’s home.
He was also charged with one
count of attempted first degree murder and one
count of first degree sex offense due to an
attack on an unidentified women who was attacked
by Williams but managed to escape.
Police said Williams lived in
Monroe and did not have a previous criminal
record.
“Williams is cooperating with investigators and
provided a great deal of information,” Cathey
said. ” He lived a quiet life. Worked a job, but
he was not as quiet as everyone suspected,”
Cathey said.
Cathey was hesitant to
describe the suspect as a “serial killer.” He
said the slayings weren’t his original intent
but developed from other actions. He would not
elaborate. During the press conference police
also did not elaborate on physical evidence
recovered in their investigation.
Scott Williams at least on
the surface would seem to fit the profile for an
organized serial killer.
He has a job, though not a
great one. He lives a normal life, stepping out
of it during the times when his fantasies take
over, leading him to commit these crimes.
His position at the
Department of Transportation would put him in a
vehicle that would not be noticed easily, since
they are seen driving all across the state. It
would also not appear out of place parked on a
dirt road, by the highway or just about anywhere.
This type of job also allows him to travel
within his area a good deal, something that
organized killers tend to do more often than
others.
With no physical evidence
released, we are left to wonder if Williams has
confessed, or if they were able through
interviews to get him to release enough
information to convince them he is their prime
suspect.
Reports: Killings grew in severity
15
march 2006
Mutilations to the
bodies of three women authorities say were killed by the same person
during a nine-year span were more severe each time, autopsies and
investigators' statements show.
Criminal justice
experts say that fits the pattern of a serial killer who got bolder
over time, and demonstrated efforts to satisfy a compulsion caused
by an earlier trauma.
Authorities on
Thursday charged Scott Wilson Williams of Clontz Long Road in
northern Union County with three counts of first-degree murder, one
count of attempted murder, one count of first-degree forcible sex
offense and four counts of kidnapping.
He is accused of
killing Sharon House Pressley, Christina Parker and Sharon Stone
between 1997 and February of this year. He attacked another woman in
2000 but she escaped, authorities said.
The Union County Sheriff's Office has released few details about the
evidence investigators used to link Williams to the crimes, or the
conditions of the bodies.
Sheriff Eddie
Cathey, however, has avoided describing the suspect as a "serial
killer." He said the victims "weren't taken for the purpose of
murder. They were taken and then murder was the result." He would
not elaborate beyond that.
On Monday a judge
sealed the search warrant that lists what investigators discovered
last week when they combed though Williams' house.
The Observer on
Tuesday obtained autopsies for Pressley, whose body was found about
10 miles from Williams' house in 1997, and Parker, who was found
near the same location in 2004.
All three women
were shot to death before they were mutilated, autopsies and
authorities said.
The first woman
was sexually mutilated and the second victim's mutilations, sexual
and nonsexual, were more numerous, autopsies show. In the third
instance, victim Stone was decapitated and dismembered, authorities
said.
Chesterfield
County (S.C.) Coroner Donnie Baker did not respond to a request for
a copy of Stone's autopsy. Her body was found in a field there.
Authorities have
said all three women lived a "high-risk lifestyle" and that Williams
was part of it.
Williams in December 1993 sued a Union County hairdresser for
$80,000, saying the man sexually abused him over a 20-year period
that began when Williams was 8. The lawsuit was settled out of court,
and details were not released. The man Williams sued denied the
allegations.
Paul Friday, a UNC
Charlotte criminology professor, said serial killers typically have
"revenge fantasies" caused by a "significant shock in their life."
He said the
fantasies get more violent over time and "at some point the
opportunity and the fantasy come together" and the killing occurs.
Friday and Lawson
Bernstein, an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine who has studied death row inmates, said serial
killers need to satisfy a desire that continues to grow.
"The first
mutilation satisfies them, but they have to escalate that because
they need more satisfaction, and then more and more," Friday said.
Bernstein, a
neuropsychiatrist, said the mutilation's severity can progress
because the killer "needs more mayhem to achieve psychological
satisfaction."
Williams, held
without bond, was transferred Friday to Central Prison in Raleigh
for added security. His first court appearance is scheduled for
April 5.
Deputies: Williams was increasingly brutal
16
march 2006
MONROE, N.C. – Deputies in Union County say it’s likely three women
died at the hands of a serial killer.
New
information from the Union County Sheriff’s Office shows that the
killer became more brutal in his attacks over time. Scott Williams
is accused of the kllings.
Autopsy reports show that each woman was shot to death before she
was mutilated.
The
three slayings occurred during a nine-year period. A fourth victim
escaped Williams and was able to help lead deputies to the man,
authorities said.
Williams was charged with three counts of first-degree murder last
week. The 42-year-old is behind bars at Central Prison in Raleigh.
Search Warrant For Accused Serial Killer's Home
20
april 2006
Union
Co., NC -- Union County sheriff's investigators detailed everything
they took from Williams' home in the days following his arrest on
March 9. They found a variety of weapons, including knives and guns.
They also took handcuffs, hair samples and computer equipment.
Detectives also took DNA evidence from Williams himself by
collecting blood, hair and saliva samples.
Our
newspaper partner, the Monroe Enquirer Journal, confirmed the
district attorney does plan to seek the death penalty. Police say
Williams killed Sharon Stone, Sharon Pressley and Christina Parker.
Police say all three women led risky lifestyles. The murders date
back to 1997. So far no trial date for Williams has been set.
Scott Wilson Williams
Scott Wilson Williams was arrested in 2006 at his home on Clontz Long Road.
The victims
Sharon House Pressley Christina Outz Parker Sharon
Tucker Stone