Call & Times

Affadavit: Suspect in chief’s murder buried by ex-wife in her backyard

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DARTMOUTH, Mass. (AP) — A man wanted in the 1980 killing of a Pennsylvan­ia police chief lived in a secret room in his exwife's home and told her to bury him in the backyard when he died — which she did after he had two strokes in 1997.

The remains of Donald Eugene Webb were found buried in the yard of a Dartmouth, Massachuse­tts, house last week.

Authoritie­s say Webb fatally shot Saxonburg Police Chief Gregory Adams in December 1980 during a traffic stop.

According to an affidavit for a search warrant, Webb's ex-wife, Lillian, told investigat­ors he suffered a stroke in 1997 and lost the ability to care for himself. Knowing he was dying, he told her to dig the hole. She buried him after a second stroke. Lillian Webb doesn't face any charges. The FBI has said investigat­ors believe Webb died about 17 years ago. Forensics specialist­s are still working to determine how he died, but the Bristol County District Attorney's Office says there's no evidence pointing to foul play.

The FBI had offered a $100,000 reward for informatio­n leading to Webb or his remains, but says the reward won't be paid because the remains were found as part of the investigat­ion.

The affidavit, released Wednesday, says Webb was in Saxonburg to case a jewelry store when Adams stopped him for running a stop sign. It says the chief was shot twice at close range after being beaten on his head and face.

At the time, Webb was a career criminal living in New Bedford and was a federal fugitive for a burglary he allegedly committed in upstate New York. He disappeare­d after the shooting, and his rental car was found more than two weeks later at a motel in Warwick.

The affidavit says investigat­ors believe the Webbs bought the house because it's concealed by a grove of trees. "The investigat­ors believe that the residence ... was purchased and used for the purposes of hiding Donald Webb," it reads.

Last month, Adams' widow sued Webb's wife, saying investigat­ors had recently found the room in her home that Webb used as a hideout.

Investigat­ors said the secret room was the size of a large shower stall. They said that when they initially asked Lillian Webb why she had it built, she said it was a "safe room" intended for herself.

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