Los Angeles Times

Tip leads to millionair­e fugitive hiding in Mexico

Peter Chadwick fled in 2015 while out on bail awaiting trial in his wife’s 2012 slaying.

- By Hannah Fry

A tip to investigat­ors ended a years-long manhunt for an Orange County multimilli­onaire accused of killing his wife and dumping her body before fleeing to Mexico to avoid prosecutio­n, officials said Tuesday.

Peter Chadwick, 55, a fugitive on the U.S. Marshals Service’s most-wanted list, was taken into custody late Sunday and arrived in California early Monday. A photograph of a handcuffed man said to be Chadwick was taken as he arrived at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

Police allege Chadwick strangled and drowned his wife — 46-year-old Quee Choo Chadwick — in the bathroom of their Newport Beach home, wrapped her in a comforter from their bed and dumped her body in a trash bin in San Diego County on Oct. 10, 2012.

The couple had been fighting over a possible divorce and related financial issues, police said.

Investigat­ors later learned that Chadwick had been unfaithful in the marriage. Inside his wife’s closet, detectives found a list detailing topics Chadwick had allegedly searched for online, including escorts, a divorce attorney, abortion costs and, chillingly, how to torture someone, police said.

When Chadwick first arrived in Mexico in 2015, he initially stayed at luxury resorts in various towns. Eventually, those resorts began

requiring identifica­tion that he couldn’t provide, authoritie­s said, so he turned to more modest accommodat­ions at motels and hostels. Most recently, Chadwick had been staying at a residentia­l duplex near Puebla, just outside Mexico City.

Last year, Newport Beach police officials released the true-crime podcast “Countdown to Capture,” and announced a reward that investigat­ors hoped would drum up interest in the case and lead to Chadwick’s arrest.

Newport Beach Police Chief Jon Lewis said at a news conference on Tuesday that the podcast, along with “good old-fashioned police work” using a tip, led to Chadwick’s capture.

“It’s our belief that we put pressure on Peter, which was something that we wanted to do,” Lewis said.

U.S. Marshal David Singer said sustained interest in the case made Chadwick nervous. He moved around frequently, doing odd jobs to supplement the wad of cash he brought with him when he fled the U.S., Singer said.

“When these people feel pressure, they have to keep moving and they make mistakes,” Singer said.

The probe into Quee Choo Chadwick’s death initially started as a missing person’s investigat­ion after a neighbor, who noticed the couple’s sons standing at a bus stop waiting to be picked up after school, called police to report that the boys’ parents couldn’t be located.

When investigat­ors entered the home hours later, they found a decorative vase broken near the bathtub and tiny droplets of blood splattered on the bathroom wall. The home’s safe had been emptied, police said.

Early the next day, Chadwick called 911 from a gas station in San Diego County to report that his wife had been killed. Chadwick said that someone else killed his wife and forced him to load her body into a car and drive to the U.S.-Mexico border. He later admitted to investigat­ors that he made up the story, authoritie­s said.

Chadwick was released on $1-million bail shortly after his arrest in 2012 and agreed to live with his father in Santa Barbara as he awaited trial. He surrendere­d his British and American passports, and showed up to hearings for two years before authoritie­s discovered he had vanished in January 2015.

Authoritie­s had long suspected that, even without a passport, Chadwick had probably left the country.

Investigat­ors discovered several books in his home detailing how someone could change their identity and live on the run. Chadwick also emptied millions from his bank accounts and took cash advances on his credit cards before he disappeare­d, police said.

In addition, authoritie­s discovered Chadwick had been making test travel trips to other states, including Pennsylvan­ia and Washington, to test the bounds of law enforcemen­t and his court orders. He planted items at his father’s home that Singer alleges were meant to convince investigat­ors he had fled to Canada instead of Mexico.

“We promised the community in 2018 when we placed Chadwick on our 15 most-wanted that we would pursue and bring him back to face justice,” Singer said. “Together with our law enforcemen­t partners we have accomplish­ed this and it should be an example for any fugitive on the run.”

Chadwick faces a felony count of murder. He has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 25 years to life in state prison.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? ORANGE COUNTY Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer shares photos of the trash bin where Peter Chadwick is accused of dumping his wife’s body, left, and of their home.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ORANGE COUNTY Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer shares photos of the trash bin where Peter Chadwick is accused of dumping his wife’s body, left, and of their home.
 ?? Newport Beach Police Department ?? PETER CHADWICK’S case gained attention through the podcast “Countdown to Capture.”
Newport Beach Police Department PETER CHADWICK’S case gained attention through the podcast “Countdown to Capture.”
 ??  ?? QUEE CHOO CHADWICK was strangled and drowned, police believe, by her husband in their Newport Beach home. They were apparently planning to divorce.
QUEE CHOO CHADWICK was strangled and drowned, police believe, by her husband in their Newport Beach home. They were apparently planning to divorce.

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