A few days after the shooting
death of NFL player Sean Taylor last year, one
Fort Myers mother was unsatisfied with the answers
her 16-year-old son was giving her.
Valerie Harris, the mother of Timmy Lee Brown, had
heard about Taylor’s shooting on the news Nov.
26.
She hadn’t seen her son at all since Nov. 20, and
she had also heard from Brown’s grandmother that
police had come by asking about him.
When she next saw her son, on Nov. 30, Brown
wouldn’t give her a specific answer about where
he had been that weekend, other than to say he was with
a friend. He didn’t say who the friend was.
“I asked him what was going on,” Harris
said during an interview with investigators the
following month. “His grandmother said the police
was over her house looking for him. I said, ‘We
need to go and turn you in and see what is going on.
Why they keep bringing your name up?’ He said,
‘I didn’t do anything. I wasn’t
there.’ So I said, ‘Well, for my
mind’s sake we need to do this.’ ”
A transcript of that conversation between Harris and
investigators was released this week by the State
Attorney’s Office in Miami-Dade County, now that
Brown has become the fifth suspect from Lee County to
be arrested in the case. Brown will turn 17 years old
in about a week.
The other suspects — Eric Rivera, 18, Charles
Wardlow, 18, Jason Mitchell, 20, and Venjah Hunte, 20
— were arrested late last year. They all had been
scheduled for August trials after being charged with
first-degree murder and armed burglary, but Hunte took
a plea deal earlier this month.
Brown, who is Wardlow’s cousin, was arrested May
14 in Lee County — a few days after the plea deal
was agreed to — also on charges of first-degree
murder and armed burglary. He transferred to a
pre-trial detention center in Miami late last week.
Wardlow, Hunte, Rivera, Mitchell and Brown are all
connected to each other by a mix of friendships,
school, sports and family ties. There were also loosely
linked to Taylor through the romance one of
Wardlow’s relatives had with Taylor’s
half-sister, and Mitchell had been to Taylor’s
Palmetto Bay home before for a party where he saw
Taylor’s wealth firsthand.
Investigators believe the men drove from Lee County the
night of Nov. 25 in a rented SUV and attempted the
burglary and shooting early Nov. 26.
Taylor, a 24-year-old player for the Washington
Redskins, died from his injuries Nov. 27.
In Florida, suspects committing a felony that results
in a death can be charged with murder, whether or not
they were the ones to pull a trigger.
The death penalty has been waived for Mitchell, Rivera
and Wardlow, and with Hunte’s plea deal, he is
expected to serve 29 years in prison for second-degree
murder and will cooperate with prosecutors.
(naplesnews.com)