Canadian True Crime - 98 The Murder of Ronald Platt
Episode Date: October 15, 2021In 1996, a body washed up in a fishing net off the south coast of Devon in the UK. Through intrepid detective work, English police would link it back to a diabolical Canadian criminal who left an unbe...lievable trail of destruction behind in Southwestern Ontario.This is the story of the crimes of Albert Johnson Walker. If you recognize the name and think you know this case, stay tuned until the end. There has been an update from 2021...Thanks for supporting our sponsors!See the special offer codes here Ad-free episodes:All episodes, ad-free and often early on Patreon and Supercast.Credits: Research and writing: Diedre Bradley and Kristi LeeAudio editing and production: We Talk of Dreams Disclaimer voiced by the host of TrueTheme Song: We Talk of Dreams Website and social medias:Website: www.canadiantruecrime.caFacebook: facebook.com/CanadianTrueCrimeTwitter: @CanadianTCpodInstagram: @CanadianTrueCrimePodInstagram: @kristileehelloAll credits and information sources can be found on the page for this episode at canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Canadian True Crime is a completely independent production, funded mainly through advertising.
The podcast often has course language and disturbing content, and it's not for everyone.
This episode carries an additional content warning for themes of grooming and sexual assault of a
minor. Some names have been changed out of respect for survivors.
This case spills over into the UK, and that's where we'll start today's episode.
In the summer of 1996. On July 28th, a commercial fishing trawler was preparing to pull up in the
English Channel, off the south coast of Devon, a county in southwest England.
As the net was pulled in, the fishermen noticed that something much bigger than a fish was coming
in. Entangled in the net was a human body. The coast guard was contacted immediately,
and the information was relayed to the Devon and Cornwall Police.
There were no matching missing persons reports for the area,
so originally the authorities thought the person must have either suffered an accident,
or had taken their own life. It was a coastal area, and these things were not out of the ordinary.
At autopsy, the forensic pathologist determined that the body belonged to a man aged between
40 to 50 years old, and from the level of decomposition, the body had likely been in
the water for around a week. The man was wearing a blue and white check shirt,
a leather belt and green pants with the pockets pulled inside out, but there was no identification
on him. As for his cause of death, there were injuries on the body, including bruises on his
left hip and lower leg, and a large gash on the back of his head, which indicated he had been hit
with something heavy. But this wasn't what killed him. His lungs were full of water. It was determined
that he had been beaten and then thrown in the ocean where he drowned. Despite the man having
no identification, there were several things that were potential clues. On the back of one of his
hands was a unique tattoo of what looked like a cluster of stars, and on one of his wrists was
a Rolex watch. One of the officers involved in the investigation knew a little bit about the
luxury Rolex watch brand. This one was one of their oyster models worth thousands of dollars.
They also have individual serial numbers, and Rolex keeps meticulous service records.
So, if they could track the serial number back, they might learn the identity of the man who was
wearing the watch. Rolex in London was contacted, and after six weeks looking into their file
archives, it was 1996 after all, they tracked the watch back to the last place where it had
been serviced and learned that the owner's name was Ronald Platt. His last known address was traced
to Chelmsford near Essex, a location around four hours drive northeast from where his body had been
discovered. Ronald Platt's next of kin, his brother, was contacted, and a positive ID was
easy to make. He was 51 years old, and that tattoo on his hand was not a cluster of stars,
it was actually the Canadian Maple Leaf. See, Ronald Platt was British, but had lived in Canada
as a child, loved it, and had been back at least one more time. He was shy, kept only a small number
of friends, was a bit of a loner by choice, and didn't keep in close contact with his family,
which is why no one had reported him missing. Next for investigators was to keep digging
into Ronald Platt's life to see what other people he'd been associating with recently.
They got a hold of his rental records and found that he listed a man called David Davis as his
reference when he applied to rent his house. And David Davis lived in the same general area of Essex,
there was a cell phone number listed with the name. The police called the number, David Davis
picked up and was informed that Ronald Platt was now deceased. They wanted to know if David knew
anything about what Ronald had been doing recently. He spoke with what sounded like an American accent
and confirmed that he was friends with Ronald Platt, but hadn't actually seen him for a few months.
The last time they saw each other, Ronald was about to leave for France where he wanted to
start an electronics business. As far as David Davis knew, that's where he still was, but he was
cooperative and helpful and happy for them to contact him again if they needed to.
And the police did. They wanted to clarify a few things, so they just drove out to visit David
Davis at the address listed. An elderly resident answered the door and it was quickly established
that there'd been some kind of confusion with the address and the police had knocked on the
neighbour's house instead. That neighbour pointed out the correct house, the one listed on the address,
but said that there was no one called David Davis at that house anyway. That was the home of the
Platt family, Ronald Platt, his young wife and their two young children, and they were all still alive.
Investigators were stunned. It seemed that there were now two Ronald Platts. There seemed to be
far more than met the eye to this story, so they decided to look into a few other things before
circling back to this David Davis character. The police soon learned that Ronald Platt,
the deceased Ronald Platt, had a former partner called Elaine. They were no longer together
when he passed away, but their relationship had spanned more than a decade. Investigators
contacted Elaine and gave her the news about Ronald Platt. She didn't know and was devastated to learn
about her former partner's death. They discovered some more information about that maple leaf tattoo
on his hand. Ronald Platt was obsessed with Canada, and when he and Elaine were together,
they had actually moved there to start a new life. Unfortunately, it didn't work out,
which caused the death of their relationship. They parted ways and made their own way back
to England individually. Elaine described Ronald as a quiet and shy man who was also warm and caring.
Quote, he was calm. He was a very gentle fellow. He was just lovely. Out of the blue,
the police asked her if she knew someone called David Davis. She said yes. He was a semi-retired
wealthy businessman from the United States. Maybe in his late 40s, early 50s,
she'd known him for a few years and they had business interests together,
and she'd spoken to him recently too. Elaine was very surprised to learn that the last time
she spoke with David Davis was after the police had informed him about Ronald's death.
But he hadn't mentioned anything to her about it. This was the death of her former long-term
partner after all, not just a business acquaintance. After Elaine hung up from the police,
she called David Davis herself to tell him she'd just found out about Ronald. She was
suspicious and wanted to see how he reacted. He jumped on a train straight away to see her,
apologetically telling her that he'd been saying prayers and shedding tears for their friend.
But Elaine called the police straight away to let them know there was more digging to be done
when it came to David Davis. Something was not right here. The man had told investigators that
Ronald had gone to France a few months back, but police found several witnesses who saw the two
men together in that area of the south coast of Devon, just a week or so before Ronald was
estimated to have died. And cell phone records showed that David Davis' phone made a call from
that same area during the same time. Now, the reason this is striking is because neither
Ronald Platt nor David Davis lived anywhere near Devon. They both lived in the area around four
hours drive away near Essex. Bank records showed that for the last few years, all of David Davis'
bills had been paid for with checks and credit cards, all signed by Ronald Platt, and some had
been signed after Ronald's body had been pulled from the sea. It was time for the police to pounce.
They waited at the train station to bring him in for questioning, but he didn't appear as they
expected. So the next day they got a warrant and arrived back outside his house, the correct house
this time, ready to make an arrest. But as they were preparing to walk up to the front door,
a taxi turned into the street, all of a sudden the front door of the house opened and a tall
man ran out, held the taxi to stop, and jumped into it. As the taxi sped off, the police cruiser
turned its lights and siren on, and before long the cab had pulled over. The 50-year-old man known
as David Davis, an American finance executive, was arrested on suspicion of the murder of Ronald
Platt. He was taken to the Chelmsford police station. But the man still had a young family at home,
a wife who was also American, and two children who were born in England, a six-month-old baby
and a three-year-old. With their father at the station, an officer went to the house.
The wife, Noelle, was very attractive and clearly very young, perhaps 20 or 30 years younger than
her husband. But they seemed to have a fairly ordinary domestic life. But what wasn't so ordinary
was when the officer watched Noelle pack up a diaper bag that seemed unusually heavy. The officer
searched it and found a hidden bounty. In it were £4,000 in cash, worth about $11,000 Canadian
dollars in today's currency, and there were also five gold bars which are said to have been worth
around $25,000 each at the time. And Noelle's purse contained identification documents and
credit cards in the name of Ronald Platt, as well as his former partner Elaine Boys.
On the children's birth certificates, Ronald and Elaine were listed as their parents,
and the family's neighbours knew them as the Platt family, not the Davis family. But the police
had already spoken to Elaine Boys, and the real Ronald Platt was confirmed dead. So who was this
American family?
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off the ground today. David Davis was an alias and he wasn't Ronald Platt either,
nor was he American. His name was actually Albert Johnson Walker and he was Canadian.
He was born in the city of Hamilton, Ontario in 1945 and grew up in the small city of Paris in the
same area of southwestern Ontario. Albert Walker was a high school dropout and ended up working in
the library at the University of Waterloo. In 1968 when he was 23, he met a university student
there called Barbara and the couple were married just three months after they met. They settled in
the town of Air near Waterloo, but Albert struggled to find direction in his life, especially when
it came to making a living. During the first 10 years of their marriage, Albert held down many
different jobs. He was a management trainee at Zellers, a Canadian retail store that has since
closed down. He tried his hand at being a laborer, a cattle herder, and a life insurance salesman.
He took a range of vocational courses at different universities, including literary criticism,
creative writing, computer training and business admin, but he reportedly never finished any of them.
His wife, Barbara's brother, would later say to McLean's magazine,
there was always some excuse why the job wasn't any good. It was getting to the point that there
was no money coming in. Six years after Albert and Barbara were married, they started a family and
over the next decade they would have four children, three daughters and a son. They scraped their money
together to buy a family home. The growing Walker family attended Knox United Church,
where Albert served as a youth counsellor, church elder and Sunday school teacher. He was charming,
professional and always well-dressed and the family were known to be good church-going people.
Albert's work fortunes turned around when he landed a good job at a bank and after that,
he started doing customer tax returns in his own time. Before long, people at church started to
learn about the service he was providing and more and more business started to come his way.
He saw an opportunity. He reinvented himself as a financial planner and turned his side hustle
into a company, Walker Financial Services. Things were tight at first but Albert never looked back
and was always looking to expand his business. In 1980, he purchased another bookkeeping operation
to take under his wing. He opened more and more offices and then he came up with a new idea.
He opened an offshore investment holding company on Grand Cayman, an island in the Caribbean,
which he was offering as a potential investment opportunity and tax haven for his growing portfolio
of clients. If they invested their money with him, he could guarantee them tax savings.
By 1990, Albert's confidence has skyrocketed as high as his business was a success.
But the opposite was happening to his family and his marriage and things took a steep dive
after he landed the biggest deal of his career so far. He was asked to help church friends sell
some large pieces of land and he engineered a bidding war that got them a higher price.
The deal was reportedly worth about $9 million. After this success, his church friends promptly
turned over the proceeds to him to invest offshore for their retirement.
But the problem was, he didn't. Dollar signs flashed in his eyes. This success should have
been a milestone in his career but his ego was now off the charts and he had developed
expensive taste. Before long, he started embezzling money from other accounts he controlled
and used it to buy flashy designer clothes, lavish business trips and a Jaguar sports car.
Everyone assumed the business was that much of a success. He also started having affairs,
which reportedly included the wife of a church minister as well as one of his employees.
After a trip, he decided to fess up to his wife, Barbara. With four children to consider,
they decided to try counselling over a period of a few years but it was no use.
Elbit was on a different path and the marriage had run its course.
He and Barbara agreed to separate. But Elbit didn't want to play nice. After a prolonged
custody battle, he secretly rented a home in Brantford, another small city in southwestern
Ontario and then he took his three youngest children for a trip to England. When he returned,
he secretly moved all four children to the new home while Barbara was at work,
essentially abducting them. He left no forwarding address and made sure his
telephone number there was unlisted. Elbit Walker really wanted to make his wife Barbara pay.
For what? Who knows? Barbara filed a custody suit and Elbit filed a counterclaim before an
upcoming custody and support hearing, requesting custody of all four children. He provided supporting
documentation for his custody request in the form of handwritten notes from the four children,
stating that they would prefer to live with their father over their mother.
The second eldest of the children, 15-year-old Sarah Walker, listed three reasons for preferring
her father over her mother. She would enjoy more freedom, fewer disagreements and more affection
if she lived with her dad. It was a long and bitter custody battle and it wasn't over yet.
And as the end of the year approached, family, church and business associates were becoming
suspicious. Large sums of money were going missing and none of Elbit's explanations made any sense.
Things came to a head in November of 1990 when Elbit tried to push his way into Barbara's home
and she called the police. He was charged with domestic trespassing and forcible entry and
the custody matter was settled by splitting things right down the middle. The two older children,
teenage girls, lived with Elbit and the two younger children lived with Barbara.
Soon after this, Elbit suddenly announced to Barbara that he had decided to take their
second eldest daughter, 15-year-old Sarah, on an impromptu skiing holiday to Europe for two weeks.
He dropped the oldest daughter with her mother and siblings and flew first class to London's
Heathrow Airport with Sarah on December 5th 1990. But Elbit and Sarah did not arrive home in Canada
as scheduled and Barbara couldn't get hold of them. Frantic, she contacted the police with
suspicions that her teenage daughter had been abducted by her father and taken to the UK.
Feeling helpless, Barbara decided to take things into her own hands
and hired private investigators to help look for Sarah. Elbit had left them with next to no money
but her local community in Paris, Ontario rallied together to hold fundraisers to help her pay for
the private investigators. Sarah's disappearance was re-enacted on a global TV show called
Missing Treasures. But all search efforts were in vain. There was no trace of Elbit nor Sarah.
While Barbara never stopped hoping and fretting that one day she would see Sarah again,
she had to move on for the sake of her family. She had three other children to look after to
raise by herself. The trail of destruction Elbit left for her to clean up made a good case for
divorce which she was granted in his absence in 1993. By that point, several different policing
agencies were involved in investigating the missing money from Elbit Walker's accounts,
including the RCMP Commercial Crimes Unit and the Ontario Provincial Police Anti-Racket Squad.
There was a lot of money missing from the business and Barbara was devastated to learn
that he had also taken out a second mortgage on the family home. Elbit Johnson Walker was now a
wanted fugitive. It was exactly as he'd planned. When he flew out of Canada with his 15-year-old
daughter, he knew it was a one-way ticket. He'd seen the writing on the wall, people would soon
be asking questions about missing money. So in the months before they left, he ramped things
up, stashing money and offshore accounts and converting cash to gold bars. He was preparing
to disappear forever and once the full extent of his fraud was realised, he and Sarah would be long
gone and untraceable. Once they arrived in England, he manipulated her into believing they needed to
assume new identities. Elbit chose to use the name of David Davis, the name of a former client of
his in Ontario. Sarah would be his daughter and her new name would be Noelle. They rented a home
in these new names and settled in the North Yorkshire region in the northern half of England.
They kept to themselves generally except they always attended church. The Reverend there would
say that he found Elbit to be a pretty helpful, pleasant guy who was supportive to others.
The next year, 1991, Elbit Walker was at an auction house not far from where he lived
and he met the receptionist there. He introduced himself as David Davis and said he was a semi-retired
businessman from America. Her name was Elaine Boyes. She would describe David Davis as very
charming, very engaging and they soon got to chatting about their shared interest in
art and antiques. They had a lot in common and before long the conversation moved on to their
professional and personal lives. Elaine told him about her partner Ronald Platt, who was fond of
Canada so much so that they were thinking about moving there one day. It was this piece of information
that sparked an idea. Elbit told Elaine about a new company he was starting, an investment firm
called Cavendish Corporation and he might have a very well-paying job there for her and if she
saved that extra income she might be able to make that Canada plan happen much sooner with her partner.
Elaine was over the moon and she introduced the man she knew as David Davis to her partner,
Ronald Platt. David Davis proceeded to make them both a flattering but unexpected offer.
He wanted them to be directors of the Cavendish Corporation and not him.
When they inquired as to why, since they had no experience in that area, he told them that his
ex-wife was a successful doctor who lived in New York City but she was always after him for
more alimony so he just preferred to keep his own name off the paperwork. David Davis was charming
and charismatic and seemed so transparent with an answer to everything. Elaine and Ron would take
this and all his other strange stories and explanations at face value. Elaine's new job
with the company was to travel around Europe looking for properties that might be good investments.
As she went, Elbit would give her money to deposit in his various offshore bank accounts.
She likely thought this was money that would be used to eventually buy the properties
but none was ever purchased. While Elaine Boyce thought she was doing her job, what she was
actually doing was laundering money for Elbit Walker, money he had stolen from his company
and his clients back in Canada, money that they were still looking for.
See, back in Canada, the estranged family that he left behind was still dealing with the fallout.
Walker's financial services ink was declared bankrupt with $2.8 million in claims against it.
It would be determined that he had embezzled up to $4 million before taking Sarah and disappearing
to England, and on his way out of Toronto, he purchased diamond jewellery worth some $12,000,
leaving the bill for that behind in Canada too. Ontario police would charge Elbit Walker in
absentia with multiple counts of theft, fraud and money laundering, but they had to catch him first.
He was now a high-profile fugitive, the most wanted man in Canada and number four in Interpol's
global most wanted list. Elbit Walker, posing as David Davis, had become friendlier with Elaine
and her partner Ron since they were the directors of his new company. The couple were invited over
for Christmas Day 1992, and David introduced them to his daughter, Noelle. Elaine noted that
Noelle was shy and looked to her father for approval, the man they knew as David Davis did
most of the talking. At that dinner, he handed Elaine and Ron an envelope and waited for them to
open it. It was a Christmas card with a proposal inside. He wanted to help them move to Canada
and would purchase two airline tickets for them, but there was a catch. Elaine and Ron
had to use them by the end of February. It was a pretty grand Christmas gift,
but Elaine was worried that February was only two months away and she didn't know if they were ready
yet. But Elbit tuned in to his usual charisma to whip Elaine and Ron into a frenzy, extolling the
virtues of the Great White North and the golden opportunities that could be found there and
reminding Ron that moving there was his goal anyway, his life's dream. Elaine would say he
really sold the idea of Canada, so much so that they couldn't refuse. They talked about what would
happen with Cavendish Corporation and Elbit said he wanted them to remain directors of the company.
How would that work if they were in Canada though? Elbit had an answer for that as per usual. He
told them that it was standard business practice in these kind of situations for him to keep some
kind of ID for them on record, like a driver's license or a birth certificate, and also to have
rubber stamps made up of their signatures. So if anything needed to be signed by the company
directors while they were in Canada, David Davis could just use the stamp in the UK,
nothing to be concerned about, he said. Obviously what he was suggesting was forgery and fraud,
but his confidence and charisma were convincing. He was a gifted salesperson, and besides,
Ron and Elaine's knowledge about standard business practices wasn't extensive, so they took him at
his word. So while the Canadians stayed in Britain, the Brits jumped on a plane to Canada.
Ron Platt and Elaine Boyce landed in Calgary in February of 1993. They were promptly greeted
by a temperature of minus 40 degrees, a real Canadian experience right off the bat. Elaine
was not impressed, but there was no time for letting the weather get in their way. Immigration
is a grind, and there was no time for acclimatization. They had to find jobs and a place to live as
soon as possible. So why did Albert Walker suddenly and so desperately want Elaine and Ron shipped
off to Canada as soon as possible? As it turns out, his daughter Sarah, who was by that point
18 years old, had just found out that she was pregnant. This threw a spanner in the works,
both when it came to optics and when it came to needing proper medical attention.
Because the Noel Davis identity wasn't real, Sarah had no valid ID. They would need to steal
someone else's. Albert manipulated Sarah into changing their cover story and posing as husband
and wife moving forward. With a baby on the way, there would be less questions if they pretended
to be a married couple. As soon as Ronald Platt and Elaine Boys left for Canada,
Albert assumed Ronald's identity. He had the man's signature stamp, driver's license,
and birth certificate after all. And while Sarah didn't assume Elaine's identity,
she did use her ID documents to access medical care. With the real couple in Canada,
Albert had free reign with their identities in England. So just like that, 47-year-old Albert
Walker and his 18-year-old pregnant daughter Sarah had gone from posing as David Davis
and his daughter Noel to Ron Platt and his wife Noel. Things were going great for Albert Walker.
But in Canada, Elaine and Ron's new immigrant life was much harder than they ever expected.
They found the Calgary winter weather inhospitable. Elaine wasn't able to work in Canada,
and Ron found it difficult to secure steady employment. Elaine only lasted a few months.
She always planned to fly back to England for her sister's wedding,
but she decided she was going to stay. She wasn't coming back to Canada.
Ron was devastated. He understood her decision, but this was his big life stream.
He loved Canada so much, he wanted to stay and keep trying to make it work there.
The couple sadly parted ways.
Albert Walker wasn't aware that Elaine had returned to England and was surprised when he ran into her
at that sister's wedding. Elaine told him what had happened and that she wasn't going back to
Canada. Albert was not happy. His plan for Sarah to use Elaine's identity would be in Jeopardy
if she was back in England, and maybe now Ron would end up returning too. He tried to guilt
trip Elaine to return to Canada. He told her that Ron was a nice guy, he deserved a second chance.
Don't give up on your dreams. But Elaine wasn't having it. She confirmed that she would be staying
in England. So Albert decided it was time for the family to move from North Yorkshire about
four to five hours drive southwest to the Devon area, where they knew no one, where they could
avoid running into Elaine anymore. And a few months later, in September of 1993, 18-year-old Sarah
gave birth to a baby. The baby's surname was Platt, and their parents were listed on the
birth certificate as being Ronald Platt and Elaine Boys. While the family were living in Devon,
Albert had purchased a 24-foot sailboat called the Lady Jane, which he kept moored in a local
marina. But after a while, the family decided to up and move again, as is the hallmark of a life on
the run. They moved about four hours drive northeast to the Essex area, where they rented a house in
Ronald Platt's name. According to a book by Bill Shiller on the case called A Hand in the Water,
The Many Lies of Albert Walker, the sisters who owned the house that the family rented
lived close by, and said they thought the pair they knew as Ron and Noel were pretty convincing
as a married couple. They did notice that Ron was clearly old enough to be Noel's father.
They chuckled at the two tight jeans he always wore, and how he noticeably dyed his hair to
cover the greys. But they also observed him to be an active father and attentive husband.
He changed the diapers, did the cooking and cleaning, and played with the baby often,
encouraging the baby to call him Dada. And when it came to the role of husband,
the sisters recalled that Ron was quite romantic. He once made a big deal of showing them
the ostentatious mahogany bed that he said he and Noel shared. They noted that he seemed to treat
her very well, but she also seemed very subservient to him. According to Bill Shiller's book,
Albert was highly manipulative and controlling when it came to Sarah. He had succeeded in
skillfully removing her from her past life and home in Canada and created a quote,
tightly controlled present, one from which she could not escape and hopefully from which
she would not wish to escape, provided he could make it attractive enough and exciting enough,
provided he could make her believe they were partners engaged in a common enterprise,
but partners in a plan in which she would always defer to him. He made the plans.
He set the rules. He was the mastermind capable of achieving anything."
End quote. But just over a year later, Albert Walker's carefully constructed life was about
to be threatened. Ronald Platt, the real Ronald Platt, had run out of money. He had tried so hard
to make it work in Canada. After a lane left, he'd stayed in Calgary for a while longer before
bravely moving away, looking for work in other areas, including in British Columbia,
but it just wasn't working. He couldn't sustain himself any more and arrived back in England
with no money to his name and nowhere to live. The first thing he did was track down his
sometime business partner and friend, David Davis. After all, the American businessman
had always shown himself to be helpful and generous. What Ronald didn't know was that
David Davis was a fake name and the guy had stolen his identity while he was in Canada.
But Ronald Platt trusted him implicitly and, as expected, David Davis generously agreed to
help Ronald set himself up in England again, in Reading, a town about 90 minutes drive away
from where he lived. But while Albert was good at pretending to be someone else,
he was not happy about this situation. He had been using Elaine and Ronald's identities for
medical care to put on birth certificates and other records to launder money. He'd even reinvented
himself as a personal counsellor or therapist and had opened an office in the nearby village
under Ronald Platt's name. But now the real Ronald was back and while he didn't live in the same
area, he was close enough that Albert would need to tread carefully for a while and see how things
shook out. But the problem worsened when Ronald started experiencing problems at work. He quit
his job and moved to Chelmsford, only about 20 minutes drive away from where Albert Walker lived
with his family. David Davis signed on to be guarantor at the new home too.
According to later media reporting, it seemed that Albert kept up the pretenses,
continuing to help Ronald Platt get his life back together while also continuing to assume
his identity. But behind the scenes, he was plotting.
That December 1995, Albert planned a celebration to mark five years living in England. That's five
years since he became an international fugitive, abducted his teenage daughter and manipulated
her into posing as his wife. He gave 20-year-old Sarah five gold bars to mark the anniversary.
He showered her with attention and praised her for her loyalty and commitment. Sarah was also
heavily pregnant with her second child at the time. A few weeks later, Albert invited Ronald
Platt to spend Christmas Day with their family, the Davis family. Ronald had been in Canada when
they switched from posing as father and daughter to husband and wife. And it's not known what they
told Ronald about the fact that they now had a child and Sarah was pregnant with another.
But given Albert's history, it was likely a convincing story. Sarah would say that Ron had
been depressed since he returned to England. It was clear to everyone how utterly devastated he
was that his lifetime dream of permanently moving to Canada had not worked out. That Christmas Day
of 1995 was the last time Sarah would see the real Ronald Platt in person. A month later,
she gave birth to another baby who was again given the surname Platt. The neighbours commented that
the baby looked just like the man they knew as her husband, Ron. By that point, Albert had realised
that Ronald needed to be eliminated. There was only room for one Ronald Platt in their lives
and he was starting to formulate a plan involving his sailboat. The Lady Jane was conveniently
still moored at a marina on the South Devon Coast, hours away from the area where they all
currently lived. At the police station after David Davis' arrest, investigators had separated him
and his young wife, Noelle. They wanted to know why she had thousands of dollars of cash and gold
bars in a diaper bag as well as several pieces of identification that didn't belong to her.
And the age difference was glaringly obvious. It was clear from how they presented that they
were trying to make it look less obvious but there was no mistaking that Noelle was a young
looking 21 and her husband couldn't pass for much younger than 50. There was much more to this
story here clearly, so police continued to ask Noelle pointed questions about her husband
and their relationship, historical questions that she didn't have the answers to,
having to invent new lies on the fly flustered her. As the questions got more and more nitpicky,
she finally broke down and admitted that David Davis, the man they had arrested,
was not her husband but her father. Investigators asked her who the father of the children was
and she would not tell them. She also wouldn't give a proper explanation for why she had
Elaine's identification, only to say that she used it to get medical treatment when she was
pregnant. By this point, investigators were starting to think that David Davis was not a real person
but an assumed identity but they needed more information.
They continued on what would be a massive investigation, starting with a search of the
family home where this Davis family lived. There they found thousands of pounds in Swiss francs.
There was also around 17 gold bars, valuable artwork, various keys to lockers and prepaid credit
cards. They went through piles of papers and receipts, spending hours and hours pouring over
the minute details for anything that might be a lead or a clue. Their hard work paid off.
They found a receipt from a marine fishing store called Sport Nautique, located along the same
south Devon coastline where Ronald Platt's body had been recovered. The receipt was paid for by
Ronald Platt's credit card but it was what was printed on that receipt that gave them their
next lead. There were seven items purchased, including an anchor. Quick-thinking investigators
went back to the fishermen who found the body to ask if they also found an anchor and they did
but they didn't notice it until the following day and didn't connect it with the body.
Investigators took the anchor and sent it for forensic testing and then paid a visit to the
marine store to ask about the purchase. The shop owner remembered it in vivid detail because the
customer was a tall, charming American man and his request was a bit strange. He just wanted the
anchor, not the chain, and the anchor he wanted was only about half the size needed to moor
his 24-foot sailboat and besides why would anyone want an anchor without a chain to connect it to
a boat? They soon had an answer. The forensic pathologist placed the anchor next to Ronald Platt's leg
and compared the anchor's shape with the patterns of bruises and gashes. It was a clear match.
Ronald's leather belt was tested and it was found to have had traces of the same zinc coating on
the anchor and there were traces of the leather belt on the anchor too. What this evidence suggested
was that after being hit in the back of the head with the anchor it had been attached to Ronald's
waistband before he was thrown into the English Channel with the intention of it sending the
body straight to the ocean floor and it might not have ever been discovered unless the body and
anchor were swept up in fishing nets just a week later. So with this police knew that Ronald Platt's
death was a murder not a suicide and not an accident. Next was to find out who was responsible.
Investigators hired an expert who concluded the currents in the English Channel were not
strong enough to have carried a body weighed down with an anchor. The conclusion was that the body
had been found right where it had been dumped in a specific area along the South Devon coastline
and it wasn't long before investigators discovered that the Davis family sailboat
the Lady Jane was kept moored at that same general location. What a coincidence. They seized the boat
for forensic investigation looking for evidence that Ronald Platt had been on it. With their
effective use of intelligent investigation tactics it wasn't long before they did. There was a plastic
bag from Sport Nautique there tying it with that receipt. Investigators located all of the other
six items purchased from the store that day on the boat. Everything was there except the anchor.
The plastic bag itself was sent for forensic testing along with samples of hair and blood
that had been found on a cushion on the boat. The fingerprint belonged to Ronald Platt as did the
blood and the hair. So Ronald Platt had been on David Davis's boat but now they needed to connect
it with the time of his murder. Location and timing was everything. Investigators checked the boat's
GPS system to see where it had been and discovered that the last time the boat had been turned off
it was July 20th and the location the boat was at was less than four nautical miles away from
the spot where Ronald Platt's body was pulled up a week later and that Rolex watch that he'd been
wearing came in very handy yet again. It was a wind-up watch that was designed to run for an
average of 40 hours before it stopped and needed to be wound up again. According to the book Forensic
Human Identification and Introduction by Tim Thompson when investigators looked at the watch
the time read 11 30 with the date reading July 22nd that's when the watch stopped.
So the last time it was wound up was 40 hours before then which put the date at July 20th.
So Ronald Platt's body went in the water at around the same time and location that David
Davis's boat was there too. Investigators now needed to place David Davis himself on that boat
too. They spoke with Noelle about what she remembered about that summer of 1996.
She told them that they had actually been on vacation there at the time along the South
Devon Coast and her father had been with her the whole time except for one day and that day he
told her he was going solo sailing on the Lady Jane. She said he was gone all day and arrived
home late he seemed nervous and discombobulated. Investigators knew they were getting close to
something if Noelle could just remember what the date was or even the day but she couldn't.
She did remember something though as she waited for her father to return home that night she
remembered watching the opening ceremony of the Atlanta Olympic Games. Investigators checked the
TV schedule and what do you know it was July 20th 1996 the same day.
In the meantime the police had taken the fingerprints of the man they had in custody the
man who told them his name was David Davis. While Noelle had fessed up and told them that
they were father and daughter she hadn't given them any more information than that.
To their surprise the fingerprints matched those of the most wanted man in Canada the
fourth most wanted man on Interpol's global list. His name was Albert Johnson Walker the
man had defrauded his family his business his clients and his church and fled with his teenage
daughter six years beforehand. Albert had been so successful that he'd managed to evade several
police agencies in Canada and no one in England was able to figure out who they were.
It was only because of Albert's careless mistakes with Ronald Platt that he'd been found out.
Investigators called Albert Walker's ex-wife Barbara in Canada to give her the good news.
They had finally found her daughter in the UK. Barbara got straight on a plane to England
for a reunion with her daughter and to meet her two new grandkids. The question of who their father
was was being asked by everyone. Barbara was quoted in McLean's magazine saying that she
and Sarah didn't discuss it at all. Quote at this point I'm not in a position to say we just don't
know. She did say that her only priority was to bring Sarah and the kids home to Canada which
she did. After the news came out about this twisted Canadian story there was widespread
shock and disbelief in both England and Canada. In Canada those in southwestern Ontario who had
known Albert as a church-going family man before he vanished couldn't believe that the man they
knew was responsible for all of this and back in England the neighbours and locals in the village
where Albert and Sarah lived couldn't believe the story that was unfolding. Once they discovered
the couple they thought were husband and wife were actually father and daughter and they had two
young children. Police wanted to see if there were any additional charges that needed to be laid on
Albert Walker. The investigation was massive with a large team of investigators taking hundreds of
statements and seizing more than a thousand potential exhibits and they believed there was a lot
more hidden that needed to be accounted for but Canada was eyeing things too. Albert Walker was
sought by both the RCMP, the OPP and Interpol on charges of frauding 30 Canadians out of millions
of dollars. His bankruptcy trustees were keen to have him back too as were all the people that he
ripped off who included a large group of unsuspecting seniors from church but he needed to be tried in
British court for the murder of Ronald Platt before he could return to Canada and face the
consequences of his fraudulent acts there. In 1998 the trial was held in Exeter a city in
the county of Devon. Albert Johnson Walker pleaded not guilty to the murder of Ronald Platt.
The defences case was that Ronald Platt had taken his own life that day because he was depressed
after he'd failed to make it work in Canada. Albert Walker would testify in his own defence
but first the Crown presented expert testimony of 55 witnesses and hundreds of exhibits
to prove their case which was this. Albert Johnson Walker had been defrauding people in Canada to
fund his increasingly lavish lifestyle as his world started crumbling and people started asking
questions he stole more than three million dollars from his company abducted his 15 year old daughter
and flew to England. Their Davis family alias was good at first but they had no actual pieces
of identification to back it up so Albert was thrilled when an opportunity dropped on his lap
in the form of Elaine Boyce and Ron Platt a couple who clearly wanted to move to Canada. He thought
if he helped them do that he could manipulate them into giving over their identification
and then when they were gone he would be able to assume their identities.
When things didn't work out and they each returned Albert Walker tried to make things work for a while
but the threat of there being two Ronald Platt's in England the threat to his house of lies was too great.
The court heard that Ronald had returned to haunt Albert and needed to be eliminated.
The evidence showed that what likely happened was during that family holiday to the South Devon
coast on the day that Albert told Sarah he was going sailing by himself he actually asked
Ronald to come out on the boat. Through expert testimony the jury heard that once the boat was
about four to six nautical miles off the coast Albert grabbed the anchor hit Ronald from behind
with it tied it to his unconscious body and threw him in the English Channel to drown.
Ronald's hair and blood were found on the boat and the bruises on his legs matched exactly where
the anchor would have banged up against him. It would have been a perfect plan had his body not
been dredged up by fishing nets a week later and because Albert made the mistake of not
removing Ronald's Rolex watch investigators had a head start on finding out who it belonged to
since Ronald was a man who kept to himself and hadn't been reported missing. His distinctive
maple leaf tattoo would have also provided a unique identifier had the Rolex not been present.
For the Crown's case the only potential barrier to a guilty verdict was that there were no
witnesses to the crime no one saw Ronald Platt on the Lady Jane let alone on the day he died
but they had other evidence those witnesses who saw Ronald and Albert together in Devon the week
before Ronald was determined to have died there were also cell phone records that showed Albert
made calls from the same area that Ronald Platt's body was found during the same time period that
he would have entered the water and police discovered that Albert had been paying his bills
using Ronald Platt's checks and credit cards and continued to do so after Ronald's body had been
recovered and there was something else. Sarah had been flown back to England to testify against
her father the 22 year old told the court about the day during their vacation that Albert went
out sailing by himself and returned home late it was put to her that she must have known that
Albert was going sailing with Ronald but she insisted that she didn't what she did know was
that Ron couldn't swim didn't like water and didn't like boats the question was asked a number of
different ways and she did not falter she maintained that she had no idea that Ronald was there that
day when asked if she thought Ronald Platt may have taken his own life Sarah said no although she
did acknowledge that he seemed depressed six months earlier when she last saw him at the Christmas
dinner she shocked everyone when she told the court that her father had phoned her from prison
and begged her not to testify he wanted her to change her story and lie to the court but she
refused she had now realized that she was one of his victims she told the court that he used hypnosis
techniques to get her to do what he wanted she was angry certainly she was under coercive control
which wasn't a criminal offence in England then unless accompanied by a crime but coercive control
is a criminal offence now it's a strategic pattern of acts of assault threats humiliation and
intimidation or other abuse that's used to harm punish or frighten someone the goal is to make
them dependent by isolating them from support exploiting them depriving them of independence
and regulating their everyday behavior this is exactly what happened to Sarah when Albert
Walker took to the stand the 52 year old admitted that he was a thief a liar and a fugitive but
he denied murdering Ronald Platt he said quote Ron Platt was a very nice person I have no reason in
the world to ever kill him or ever harm him Albert Walker expected the jury to believe whatever he
insisted was true after all most other people had as you'll remember when investigators first
tracked Albert down as he was posing as David Davis he told them the last time he'd seen Ronald
Platt was several months earlier just before his friend moved to France to start a business
now on the stand Albert Walker told a different story about that summer of 1996
when he was on vacation with Sarah and the kids on the South Devon coast where their sailboat was moored
Albert admitted that Ronald Platt happened to be staying in a nearby village and he asked him to
help sail the Lady Jane up the coast closer to the Essex area where they all lived but
it didn't happen Albert told the court because when they set out Ronald banged his head and got sick
they didn't go out again together and two days after that which Albert said was July the 11th
Ronald upped and left for France to start that business now the evidence showed that Ronald
likely died on July 20th the day that Sarah testified Albert told her he was going sailing
himself Albert was asked about that testimony and insisted he had told Sarah the truth he
had gone sailing that day and he was alone Ronald's body was recovered by fishermen eight days after
that now as the evidence had rolled out and the court heard how Albert Walker and Sarah Walker
had started posing as husband and wife and then Sarah gave birth to two children who called him
dad brows around the courtroom started to furrow could Albert Walker have fathered his daughter's
two children it was a giant elephant in the room but it wasn't addressed in either Albert's testimony
or Sarah's this was by design at different points in the lead up to the trial the crown
had discussed potentially charging Albert Walker with incest under legislation now called the sexual
offences act which makes it illegal to have sexual relations with an immediate family member
but it was decided that charges like that would over complicate things and muddy the water in
Albert's murder trial when Albert testified he was only asked the very carefully worded question
of why he and Sarah had started posing as husband and wife initially his answer was that Sarah had
become pregnant and she was somewhat embarrassed to be a pregnant unmarried girl so they posed as
husband and wife that was about as far as questioning around the issue went and it was
probably for the best when it comes to a charge like this where there are children who are innocent
victims and their mother was also a victim under coercive control pursuing an incest charge is
probably going to do more net harm than net good especially since the one under investigation
had already been charged with murdering someone else
Albert Johnson Walker was found guilty by a British jury of murdering Ronald Joseph Platt
the judge described the murder as carefully planned and cunningly executed with chilling
efficiency he spoke directly to Albert Walker you are a plausible intelligent and ruthless man who
poses a serious threat to anyone who stands in your way he was sentenced to 25 years in prison
Ronald Platt's former partner Elaine Boyce attended the trial every day even though the
whole moving to Canada fiasco had caused them to separate she still obviously had a lot of affection
for him she was quoted in McLean's magazine saying that Ronald was a kind honest and gentle man
and she couldn't find the words to express her horror that his life was taken by a so-called
friend that they both trusted back in Canada Albert Walker's estranged family were relieved
that he'd been found guilty in England and would be staying there if he'd been found not guilty he
would have been extradited back to Canada to face his million-dollar fraud charges there and they
didn't want him back but seven years later the former fugitive made headlines again in 2005
it was announced that he was being transferred back to Canada to serve out the remainder of his
sentence the family were beside themselves Sarah who was by that time 29 years old spoke out for
the first time outside court to a local tv station in Kitchener Ontario she said she was shocked that
her father was allowed to return home and believed it posed a threat to her family that she needed
to protect them from no one consulted her about the transfer and she was left feeling powerless
appearing as a silhouette to protect her visual identity Sarah said that she'd tried to put the
whole ordeal behind her but it just keeps resurfacing the media took the opportunity again to ask her
about her children but she refused to discuss them and asked for privacy there were some
disturbing details included in Bill Schiller's book a hand in the water the author who was a
Toronto star correspondent based in the UK spent a year researching and writing the book
he interviewed Albert Walker in prison four times as well as many other people who knew the family
in Canada and in the UK the question of paternity was carefully danced around in this book too
but it did say that after Albert was first arrested and police thought he was David Davis
they found erotic lingerie and photographs in the house that he shared with Sarah that were
quote of a kind one would not normally expect between father and daughter the author tracked
down a person who knew the pair when they first arrived in the UK when they were still posing
as father and daughter duo David and Noel Davis the person said that Albert shared a bedroom with
his 15 year old daughter and she appeared to be under his spell the book also mentions some
other disturbing incidents with the Walker family before Albert abducted Sarah and fled to England
just a year before that her mother Barbara caught Albert and Sarah then 14 in bed together
but she wasn't clear if what she saw was just horsing around or if it was something more concerning
she approached it with her daughter carefully warning her about older men in general and the
tricks they might try on a teenager she then opened the floor in case Sarah had anything to talk about
Barbara noted that Sarah didn't say anything else or mention anything about her father
the next year was the custody battle where Sarah wrote a note listing why she preferred her father
over her mother at that point Sarah was 15 years old and part of the note read quote my father shows
me a lot of affection on a regular basis and we are very close the book also mentions and confirms
two disturbing details that Barbara did not find out until years later one is that Albert had helped
Sarah to access birth control when she was just 15 and before that he had helped their
eldest daughter Sarah's older sister to get breast implants when she was just 16 years old
when Albert Walker was transferred back to Canada it meant the authorities there could
push ahead with his fraud charges finally while Albert had tried to minimize and dismiss the
damage he'd caused to the people he defrauded making out that it wasn't that bad several had
come forward to refute that others were too scared too ashamed to come forward many of the people he
stole money from were from church where he was able to hide in plain sight by posing as an
affable and trustworthy father of an ordinary churchgoing family McLean's magazine spoke with
several of the victims a 74 year old farmer lost seventy thousand dollars thanks to Albert's
investment scams he said that he was heartbroken at the time quote he knew how to play you the
dirty jerk another man came forward with the story of his mother who owned a successful tax and
bookkeeping company that she was trying to sell she had received a really good offer but Albert
Walker swooped in and offered her more which she accepted but he took the business under his wing
and never paid up she ended up losing everything declaring bankruptcy and was devastated other
victims had breakdowns and ongoing mental health issues Albert was described as self-serving deceptive
and callous in 2007 Albert Johnson Walker was convicted in Canadian court of 20 fraud and theft
charges he was sentenced to an additional four years in prison to run concurrent to his life
sentence for murder not much happened for the next 12 or so years as Albert continued to serve his
sentence in Canada the case was high profile with books written including by his ex-wife Barbara
many of the books are now out of print but there was also a tv movie documentaries and even a
theatrical play in 2015 he applied for parole but dropped it in advance of the hearing the family
must have been relieved but six years later in July of this year 2021 he applied again
the London Free Press reported on what happened at the parole hearing where the board assessed his
understanding of the crimes he'd committed and whether he understood his risk factors for
reoffending when it came to the crimes of fraud and theft the board asked Albert to describe what
led to these crimes and he said his biggest risk factor at the time was insecurity and the need
for love and affection from others when the board asked about his crime cycle he told them he didn't
have one and when he spoke about the many victims of his fraud he minimized their pain and suffering
still claiming that none of them actually went bankrupt which was categorically not true this
and other comments led the board to conclude that he lacked remorse and didn't have a sound
understanding of how his actions affected those he stole from he was also asked to go over the
murder of Ronald Platt as you'll remember he had always denied killing him or even having
Ronald on the boat that day but at the parole hearing just a few months ago he told a different
story Albert Walker told the parole board that he had considered a plan to kill Ronald Platt on
his boat and dump the body but he couldn't follow through with it so instead he decided to take
Ronald on his boat and offer him a lump sum of money he was going to tell Ronald that there
would be no more money after that and then cut off contact but Albert said once he got
Ronald on the boat and gave him the cash he decided to tell him about the cancelled plan to murder
him but Albert told the parole board that Ronald instead got angry and retaliated and Albert was
not unconscious Albert said that when he came to Ronald Platt was in the water for some reason
trying to get back into the boat Albert said he prevented him from getting back on board until
he realized that Ronald had actually drowned so he went into the water retrieved the wad of cash
out of Ronald's pocket and then weighed the body down with an anchor so it would sink
when questioned about why there was a new version of the story now instead of at trial
he told the board that it was because of his failing memory the board didn't buy it
Albert Johnson Walker was denied both day and full parole and today remains in prison in British
Columbia thanks for listening and special thanks to Deirdre Bradley for research and writing
assistance as well as court documents and news archives this episode relied on the journalism
of Darcy Janish from McClain's magazine and excerpts of the book Hand in the Water by Bill
Shilling for the full list of resources for each episode and anything else you need to know about
the podcast visit canadiantruecrime.ca well that's it for this week thank you so much for your kind
ratings reviews messages and support thanks also to the host of true for voicing the disclaimer
and we talk of dreams who compose the theme song i'll be back soon with a new canadian
true crime story see you then
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