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Shannon Mohr and Dave Davis on their wedding day, September 24, 1979 (photo: au.news.yahoo.com) |
Like many a good little
Catholic girl, as a child Shannon Mohr thought she wanted to be a nun when she
grew up. A sweet and caring child who
was both a daddy’s girl and a mommy’s best friend, she eventually decided that
she wanted to marry and have a family.
Nursing suited her caring and compassionate nature and it was a natural
fit for her.
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Shannon as a nurse (photo: imdb.com)
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By the summer of 1979,
Shannon was 24 years old and while happy with her career choice, she was
feeling down over her personal life. She
had recently broken up with a firefighter from her Toledo, Ohio hometown and
was not looking forward to attending a friend’s August 4 wedding solo. Her mother Lucille encouraged her to go,
suggesting that perhaps she might meet someone at the wedding. It was sadly prophetic for Shannon.
At the wedding, she met 35-year-old
Dave Davis, a self-described millionaire who told Shannon he was an orphan who had
recently lost his fiancée in a car wreck.
He said he owned farms all over the country. He also claimed to be a Vietnam veteran who
had been injured in the war, a football player for the University of Michigan
who had played in the Rose Bowl and then graduated with a psychology
degree. Davis was so charismatic, he not
only swept Shannon off her feet but charmed her parents, Lucille and Robert, as
well.
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David Richard Davis (photo: findagrave.com) |
On September 1, 1979,
Shannon turned 25. Twenty-three days
later, she and Dave eloped to Las Vegas, only eight weeks after meeting. Eight days after the wedding, and two days
after returning from their honeymoon, $220,000 in insurance was taken out on
the new Mrs. Davis.
Shannon left Toledo and
moved to Dave’s 100-acre farm in Hillsdale County, Michigan, where he grew corn
and soybeans. She was able to find a
nursing job at the nearby Flower Hospital in Sylvania. Shannon’s salary was the only real income in
the Davis household; it’s unknown what excuse Dave gave her for the lack of
cash flow.
On July 23, 1980, only 10
months into the marriage, Shannon and Dave took their Tennessee walking horses
to visit their neighbor, Dick Britton.
Dave helped Dick repair some machinery and then he and Shannon trotted
off for home. Not long afterward, Dave
returned alone, telling Dick that Shannon’s mare had bolted and she had hit her
head on a rock. Rushing back to the
scene with Dave, Dick found Shannon lying on the ground on her back, shoes off
and with her blouse unbuttoned. A rock
nearby – the only one in the area – was stained with blood. Rushed to the nearest emergency room, Shannon
was pronounced dead on arrival.
When Lucille and Robert Mohr
arrived at the hospital, they found Dave Davis in tears and with scratches on
his arm. Although apparently
grief-stricken, he told his wife’s shocked parents that he wanted Shannon’s
body cremated. The Mohrs disagreed,
wanting Shannon to buried back home in Toledo and Dave consented.
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The Davis farm in Michigan (photo: forensicfilesnow.com) |
He told Lucille and Robert
that he couldn’t afford to pay for a funeral for Shannon since his money was
tied up in farm properties and he had no insurance on his wife.
The Mohrs paid for Shannon’s
funeral and were shocked when his mother and stepfather showed up for the
service. They would soon learn more
about their son-in-law. Not only was his
mother still alive but so was his father.
Shortly after Shannon’s
death, Lucille and Robert were horrified to discover that Dave left for a
Florida trip with a woman. Dave would
later claim that he needed to get away and regroup after his wife’s sudden
death and the woman was just a friend who had invited herself along. While he was gone, he asked Dick Britton to
forward his mail – he needed copies of Shannon’s death certificate for
insurance purposes.
To the local authorities,
Shannon’s death looked like an accident and they closed the case.
The Mohrs, however, weren’t
so sure. They began a letter-writing
campaign to ask Michigan’s attorney general to look further into Shannon’s
case. Dick Britton also asked the
authorities to take a new look at the evidence against Davis, his
neighbor.
In August of 1980, a month
after Shannon died, her body was exhumed and autopsied. A severe gash on her head was discovered,
along with various bruises on her face, hand, and arm.
Despite this, the case
remained closed.
A Detroit Free Press
reporter by the name of Billy Bowles entered the picture. Having heard of the case, he began poking
around David Davis. He found that Davis
wasn’t a millionaire; in fact, the only farm property he owned was the one in Hillsdale
County, Michigan. Furthermore, he hadn’t
played college football (in the Rose Bowl or anywhere else), hadn’t graduated
college and had never served in Vietnam.
Davis had also never told Shannon that he had been married once before
and was the father of two daughters. Dave’s
first wife had resided with him on the same farm property that would be
Shannon’s final home until she filed for a court protective order, alleging
physical abuse.
Bowles also discovered that
Davis had profited from two separate fire incidents on his farm, as well as a
workers’ compensation case in which he sustained a suspicious injury while
working for a car manufacturer.
He also found out that Davis
had taken advanced courses in pharmacology at the University of Michigan. Sharing the information with investigators,
the investigators began to wonder if Davis could have used some type of drug to
cause Shannon’s death. The state finally
reopened Shannon’s case.
Davis, meanwhile, sold his
Michigan property and collected several smaller life insurance policies on
Shannon’s life that netted him five figures.
Currently living in the Bahamas on a boat with a new girlfriend, he was
awaiting the results of a second autopsy on Shannon in order to collect from
the larger life insurance policies.
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Shannon, during the last year of her life (photo: au.news.yahoo.com) |
It would take a third
autopsy before investigators sent their findings out to a Swedish lab who found
high concentrations of succinylcholine in Shannon’s body. Succinylcholine is a medication used to cause
short-term paralysis, or a skeletal muscular relaxant, during anesthesia. It paralyzes every muscle but the heart and makes
it impossible to breathe without use of a ventilator. The drug is often used for medical procedures
with horses.
With this information,
investigators determined that Davis gave Shannon two injections of succinylcholine
and it was the succinylcholine that caused her death and not the blow to the
head.
The Attorney General’s office
took the evidence before a grand jury in October of 1981. The grand jury returned with a first-degree
murder warrant. Authorities moved in to
arrest Dave Davis on Christmas of 1981 in Port au Prince, Haiti but he had
already fled, leaving behind his sailboat.
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(Photo: shannonmohrmovie.blogspot.com) |
Eight long years would pass
by for Shannon’s parents, who wanted justice for their daughter. Salvation came in the form of the television
show Unsolved Mysteries. Hosted
by Robert Stack, the documentary-style show, complete with reenactments, featured
cold cases, unsolved crimes, missing persons, and the paranormal. The first episode, part of a seven-episode
special, premiered on January 20, 1987; on October 5, 1988 it officially became
a weekly series. The program featured
Shannon’s case on its November 29, 1987 episode. One viewer, a Beverly Hills dentist by the name
of Cheri Lewis, thought the David Richard Davis on the program resembled a man
she had dated. That man, according to
Lewis, claimed his wife Shannon had drowned.
A Hollywood stuntman by the name of Beau Gibson had also caught Unsolved
Mysteries and noticed an eerie resemblance between David Richard Davis and
a man he knew as Rip Bell. Bell was not only
his “best buddy” but had also given Gibson flying lessons.
However, it would take a
second airing of the episode, on December 28, 1988, to get the tip that would
lead to the capture of David Davis. A female
viewer claimed she knew her from her visits to American Samoa and gave authorities
information on where to find the man who was now going by the name of David Myer
Bell.
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Under arrest (photo: mlive.com) |
On January 6, 1989, Davis
was arrested at Tafuna International Airport in Pago Pago by four FBI agents. Davis was not only working as a pilot for
Pacific Island Airways, he also had a 23-year-old wife whom he had met through
his job as a pilot. When asked if he was
David Richard Davis, he admitted he was and surrendered.
Davis had apparently been
living in American Samoa since 1985, after stints in Florida, the Caribbean,
Alaska, and Hawaii. He had posed as a doctor,
a nurse, and a harpsichord player but he was indeed an actual pilot, as he had
earned his FAA certification while on the run.
He and his Samoan wife had been living in a tin-roofed shack in Tafuna.
Returned to Michigan via Hawaii,
Davis’ murder trial began in November of 1989.
The formerly blond, charismatic Dave Davis that Shannon Mohr had met and
married was now an overweight, gray-bearded, even slovenly, man. His appearance had changed so much that by
the time of his trial, many witnesses failed to identify him in the courtroom.
The prosecution presented
their case, theorizing that while taking the horses back to their property,
Davis suggested that he and Shannon stop to have an intimate moment. Shannon took off her shoes and began to take
off her blouse and it was then that he injected her with one or two shots of
the succinylcholine. Before the drug
could fully take effect, Shannon fought back, scratching him the process (he blamed
those scratches on tree branches as he was desperately seeking helping for his
wife). He then staged the scene to look
like an accident by striking her in the head with a rock.
Prosecutors also showcased
the character of Dave Davis by introducing evidence of his con jobs and
scams. He had been wife shopping before
meeting Shannon, asking a series of women to marry him only weeks after
introductions. Kay Kendall took the
stand and said that she had been briefly engaged to Davis, whom she believed to
be a CIA agent but she soon backed out of their engagement. Barbara Matthews had been another candidate
for murder and had also believed that Davis worked for the government, even
after learning of Shannon’s death.
A girlfriend by the name of
Jeanne Hohlman testified that Davis told her he was a CIA agent assigned to
protect Shannon; after Shannon’s death, Jeanne was informed that Davis’ “mission”
was over and they could resume their dating relationship.
Cheryl Nicholaidis testified
that following Shannon’s funeral, Davis had told her “you’re the most beautiful
woman in my life now.”
Shannon’s cousin, Tori
Abrams, testified for the prosecution that she recalled seeing drug vials in
the freezer of their farm while visiting.
Davis chose not to take the stand
during his trial and the jury took only two and a half hours to find him guilty
of first-degree murder. Judge Harvey
Moes, stating that Shannon’s terrifying death by suffocation was “more
despicable than a contract murder”, sentenced Davis to life without
parole.
Lucille Mohr publicly said
she wished that Michigan still had the death penalty while Robert Mohr believed
that Davis being locked up in a cage was “100 times worse.”
Sent to Marquette Branch
Prison, Davis continued to proclaim his innocence. In 2001, he told the Toledo Blade, “I could
never have hurt her,” maintaining, still, that Shannon had fallen from her
horse and hit her head.
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Incarcerated for life (photo: mylifeofcrime.wordpress.com) |
That same year of 2001, he
filed an appeal with a federal court, citing the controversy over the lab work
that revealed the presence of succinylcholine; a number of scientists believed
the tests were “junk science.” Not that
their beliefs helped Dave Davis. Added
to the life insurance policies, which he lied about, his life, which he lied
about, and the staged murder scene, he expectedly lost the appeal.
Other than a 1993 made for
television movie about the case, called Victim of Love: The Shannon Mohr
Story, David Richard Davis faded into prison obscurity.
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Lucille and Robert Mohr visit Shannon's gravesite (photo: findagrave.com) |
Lucille Mohr died in 2008;
Robert Mohr died in 2012.
Two years later, on November 9, 2014, David
Richard Davis, who somewhat ironically acquired a neuromuscular disease, died in
a prison healthcare facility at the age of 70.
Billy Bowles, the Detroit
Free Press reporter, who had started the real investigation into Davis,
died the same year Davis did.
As for the insurance money
that Shannon Mohr was married for and killed for? The bulk of the payout, some $300,000, went to
her parents.
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Shannon's final resting place. Her parents removed her married name from her grave marker when it was determined Dave killed her. (photo: findagrave.com) |