Going West: True Crime - Patrick Mullins // 424
Episode Date: July 23, 2024In January of 2013, a 52-year-old high school librarian from Florida headed out on his boat for a quick afternoon ride. When he didn’t return home, an intense search ensued, leading investigators to... his remains tied to an anchor. His body was found floating in the water, but he hadn’t drowned...he had been shot. And with the circumstances around his strange death, his family pushed for justice. This is the story of Patrick Mullins. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is going on true crime fans? I'm your host T and I'm your host Daphne and you're listening to going west
Hello everybody a big thank you to Lacey and Amanda for recommending today's case.
This is a really suspicious story that takes place on a boat and it has a really bizarre twist. Like
I feel like you and I, Heath, we're gonna and all of us, we're gonna be really talking about the
details of the crime scene here. Yeah there's a lot of very like small details that will just completely throw you guys off. It's a very,
very strange story. Seriously. So thank you again to Lacey and Amanda for putting this one on our
radar and please make sure that you guys share Pat's story. All right guys, without further ado, 124 of going west so let's get into it Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event, skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash ymx.
Benefits vary by card, other conditions apply.
This episode is brought to you by LEGO Fortnite.
LEGO Fortnite is the ultimate survival crafting game found within Fortnite.
It's not just Fortnite Battle Royale with minifigures.
It's an entirely new experience that combines the best of LEGO Play and Fortnite, created
to give players of all ages, including kids and families, a safe, digital space to play
in.
Download Fortnite on consoles, PC, cloud services, or Android, and play LEGO Fortnite for free,
rated ESRB E10+. In January of 2013, a 52-year-old high school librarian from Florida headed out on his
boat for a quick afternoon ride.
When he didn't return home, an intense search ensued, leading a fisherman to find his remains
tied to an anchor.
His body was found floating in the water, but he hadn't drowned.
He had been shot.
And with the circumstances surrounding his strange death, his family pushed for justice.
This is the story of Patrick Mullins, also known as Pat, was born on October 20, 1960 in Tallahassee, Florida
to parents Nancy and Patrick.
He was the middle of five children, growing up alongside brothers Bert and Gray and sisters
Linda and Nancy.
At three years old, the family relocated to Anna Maria Island, located in Manatee County
on the southern tip of Tampa Bay.
And after graduating from Manatee High School in Bradenton, Florida,
Pat went on to attend the University of Florida where he met the love of his life,
Jill. Now Jill had grown up in Sarasota. That's very close to where today's story takes place.
And she was rooming with Pat's brother's girlfriend.
So that is how she met Pat, you know, through his brother.
So Jill remembers fondly, quote,
"'Pat was a wonderful person.
He was able in many ways
and just really enjoyed helping people.'"
So Pat and Jill got married shortly
after graduating from college in 1983
and settled back where Pat had spent most of his life,
again, Manatee County, Florida.
They eventually found a home
that backed right onto
the Braden River in Bradenton, which is just 20 minutes
from where he grew up on Anna Maria Island.
And this was a total dream for Pat,
because he was an avid fisherman and boater,
so being on the river would be really exciting for him.
And it was there that he and Jill raised their two sons,
Mason and Miles.
Now for 20 years, Pat taught fourth grade in the Manatee County School District.
And after a very happy career in education, both Pat and Jill decided to go back to school
to acquire their graduate degrees with the goal of becoming librarians.
In 2004, after finishing his degree at the University of South Florida, Pat was hired
as the librarian for Palmetto High School, where his niece and his brother Bert also
worked.
So that's pretty fun.
And there he was beloved by his co-workers and students alike.
I mean, I read so many comments online from previous students who knew him as their librarian,
who just absolutely loved him. Like, he brought so much joy to so many people.
And Jill remembers proudly how committed he was to helping his students and that
he would often keep the library open after hours just to help them finish
their homework. One former student remembers his unrelenting commitment to
following the rules that he put in place,
but that he was such a selfless presence in the school that it didn't bother them.
And Pat especially loved to show up for students who were struggling or who were lacking a father figure,
and he loved stepping into that role.
Sometimes he would even pay the fees for some of his high schoolers to be able to take their standardized tests for college admissions.
Like Pat is incredible.
Yeah, he just seems like the nicest guy and he cares deeply about all of these students.
Like more than most.
And even Jill says that he was pretty perfect and joked that his only demon was how deeply
dedicated he was to being the best librarian that he could be.
In addition to his passion for his job, Pat was an avid reader and a fan of jazz and also
donated much of his time to charitable causes.
In the 90s, he was a sergeant in the National Guard and volunteered to help hurricane survivors
after the devastation of Hurricane Andrew, and he also belonged to multiple education advocacy associations.
I mean, it's just like...
Again, I mean, God.
He's just like a perfect guy, pretty much.
Seriously, such a good man.
So as their sons grew up, Pat would frequently take them out on the water to swim, boat,
and fish, and enjoyed kind of tinkering with the mechanics of his boats
and cars with them.
And Jill happily remembered what a treasured childhood memory this was for Mason and Miles,
saying quote,
Each of our sons had a small boat that Pat fixed up for them when they were in elementary
school.
Mason painted the bow of his boat to resemble the P-40 airplane that had the menacing shark's
teeth on it.
Miles weighed so little that his boat would tilt about 80 degrees before it would settle
onto a plane.
She added that on the weekends, quote, Pat would be covered up to his elbows in grease
when he found that he needed to run to the parts store.
He'd come in from the garage, shower, and painstakingly remove the grease from underneath
his fingernails just because he might run into one of his fourth graders. In 2013 both Pat and Jill were
nearing retirement and naturally you know they were looking forward to it.
Pat was also excitedly anticipating grandchildren in the next few years and
he just really hoped to share his passion for the water and the joys of
growing up in Florida with his son's future kids. So now it's January and it's nearing he and Jill's
30th wedding anniversary and they already had this beautiful hotel picked
out in Fort Myers to spend it at. But they wouldn't get to go on this trip
because something deeply disturbing and very puzzling would happen right before their anniversary
came. On Sunday January 27th 2013, 52 year old Pat was tending to some
household duties before working on his boat for the afternoon. Well around mid
day he headed out to a gas station to pick up oil and a boat fuel filter and
this transaction was the last time that he ever used his debit
card.
Then after this, Pat returned home to change the filter on his son's boat, before setting
out in his own boat, which was a Stumpknocker brand flat-bottom skiff that measured about
14 feet in length, so it's a motorized boat that could hold just a few people. One neighbor, Glenn Westbury, recalled seeing him mow his lawn from 1.30 p.m. to 3.00 p.m.
on Sunday afternoon before heading out on the water by himself.
Glenn remembered, quote, He left around fourish.
We heard that he wanted to test the motor on his boat.
Patrick is a very intelligent, hardworking man who's very dedicated to his wife and
boys.
He's always in the garage working.
And let's talk about this river for a sec, the one that he is going out onto in his boat
by himself.
Because Pat had been out on this river hundreds of times.
I mean, he lived on it for years.
And this river, which again is the Braden River, stretches 21 miles and it's a tributary.
So it flows into the Manatee River and it even goes up to a place called Ward Lake.
Because, you know, this is Florida.
There are a ton of rivers and just small bodies of water around here.
So, by the way, I always like to say this.
I don't know why I automatically always picture rivers to be super narrow.
And so I feel
the need to describe them to you guys but Braden River it's pretty wide like multiple boats could
drive next to each other if they needed to and for those wondering it hosts alligators, fish,
and even river otters. And probably some Florida manatees. Well yeah actually in the adjoining
manatee river there are manatees and then you know it connects in the adjoining Manatee River, there are manatees and then, you know,
it connects into the ocean.
So, so Braden is, like I said, it's a tributary,
it's very long, you know, this is a, it's lengthy.
Yeah, and he's, you know, a good old boy from Florida.
He spent a lot of his time on this river.
So again, he knows it very, very well.
Yeah, and it's not uncommon for him
to go out there by himself.
He's always working on his boats.
He knows so much.
This is his thing.
This is his niche, you know?
So again, Pat left to go on his boat
at about 4 p.m. that day.
So just two hours before the sun set for the evening,
which happened just after 6 p.m. that day.
Now Jill had left that morning to run errands around 11.30 a.m. that day. Now Jill had left that morning to run errands
around 1130 a.m.
And when she returned much later in the day,
actually around sunset, Pat still hadn't come home.
So that Sunday morning, she had headed out
to her aunt's house back in nearby Sarasota
to pick up some items that belonged to her mother
who had actually passed away three months earlier.
Then a coworker of hers was planning on meeting her back
at her house to pick up some furniture
that she was getting rid of.
Before Jill left, it was a very normal morning.
You know, Pat kissed her on the forehead
and helped her move some of the furniture
that was getting picked up outside.
And when she returned again around sunset at 6 p.m.
she found that Pat was gone.
Now he hadn't informed Jill of his plans
but he had told his brother and a friend
that he planned to test out the boat motor.
But it was definitely strange that he had been gone
for over two hours, especially after dark
because again, he's just testing out the motor.
He's not going on like a night long journey.
He's just going out in the water to test this, this new part.
Right.
Make sure it works.
Probably have a nice little ride along the way.
And then he was supposed to be back by the time Jill returned.
Again, she didn't even know that he was doing this.
So as night crept in, Jill became increasingly concerned about his safety
and whereabouts because although Pat was an experienced boater, he was very conscious
about safety and would not have been out there past dark. According to Jill, the navigational
lights on the boat weren't working, so he wouldn't have stayed out past sunset anyway,
you know, giving us more reason to believe that something was wrong.
And not only that, but his cell phone was found in his car, so no one could even attempt
to reach him.
After calling around to friends and family and realizing that nobody had heard from him,
Jill finally called 911 to report her husband
missing at 11pm on the evening of January 27th.
Completely unsure if he was still out on the vast river water or if something else had
happened.
Now, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office came to take her statement and began their
investigation shortly after.
Because you know, luckily, even though Pat was 52 years old, they started looking for
him that same evening.
Yeah, because I mean, he's out on this water.
He left his cell phone in his truck or in his car.
They know that he doesn't have any navigational lights.
So they're kind of assuming that things aren't right here.
I mean, yeah. And again, they know that things aren't right here I mean yeah and
again they know that he wasn't gonna be out there for that long they probably
talked to his brother and his brother relayed to police that yeah he was just
going out to test this engine and would be right back right I think the fact
that he was out on the water is what made this more of an urgent search
because we really don't see this very often if you're over the age age of 18, unless the circumstances are really weird, they don't usually look right
away. They make you wait. So at least a day.
Yeah, absolutely.
So that night it was 62 degrees Fahrenheit or 16 degrees Celsius. The moon was full and
the tides were strong out on the water. So alongside the Sheriff's Office Marine Unit,
the US Coast Guard and the Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission
worked together to scan the coasts for Pat.
Though growing increasingly concerned,
Jill couldn't imagine that Pat was in any real danger
because again, a Florida boy through and through,
he was a very strong swimmer and
he knew the waters well but there was no sign of him at all that night.
Well the following day the Coast Guard came across an unmanned boat bobbing in
the Egmont Channel which can reach depths as low as 80 feet beneath the
water. His boat was found a significant
distance from the Mullins home and not somewhere that his wife believes that he
would be heading. I mean it was farther than he would have ever traveled in this
small skiff which he normally wouldn't have even taken out on the open water.
The boat was west of the nearest plot of land which is the Egmont Key National
Wildlife Refuge, a former
military base located on an island northwest of Bradenton. So this boat was
discovered at 11 a.m. the following day between Buies 9 and 10. Sadly there was
no sign of Pat, but he had clearly been on board at one point as his hat and
sunglasses were recovered from inside.
The only discernible damage to the body of the boat were the scuffs of red paint
that looked as if the boat had rubbed up against something and had been streaked with red paint residue.
Yeah, and they didn't know what this came from, but there is a very interesting theory that we're
going to discuss later, so remember this little detail here.
Yeah, remember these red streaks of paint.
Well, the top was down, and though it had run out of gas, the keys remained in the ignition,
and the engine was still running, but had been placed in neutral.
Which is so suspicious as well, that the boat is literally running until it ran out of gas,
and he's just not in the boat.
Yeah, it's very, very strange. Now, the chance that Pat had been robbed was pretty slim because
the boat was still intact and pretty much the same as it had been when Jill had last seen it.
Also, Pat's wallet was still inside with all of his cards and identification, as well as $8 in cash.
But panic-stricken knowing Pat had somehow separated from the boat, she contacted her
sons to let them know what was going on.
Well, Mason was serving overseas in Afghanistan at the time, but he was actually able to get
home with the help of the Red Cross.
Miles on the other hand was a student at his parents alma mater,
which again was the University of Florida in Gainesville, so he was just
under a three-hour drive from his parents house. So both sons raced back
to be by their mother's side and assist in the search. Now later the boat would
become a real point of contention because to the dismay of the family, the boat was
not tested for fingerprints or for any DNA, which would turn out to be a huge mess up
here.
And it was also stored uncovered and unsecured outside as it underwent examination, so they
basically just left it out there for all of the potential, you know, evidence to be washed away by the rain or by whatever else.
Yeah, it's so disappointing to see this because I think at
first, they're really not thinking that there's foul
player, anything nefarious involved.
They're probably thinking that he fell overboard or was
attacked by an animal or something more basic happened
like that, but it had so hard,
like hindsight's 20-20, but I really wish
that they would have done that.
Well, the more we get into these details,
the more that it just does not appear to be an accident.
Oh yeah, so recovered from the boat were two fuel tanks,
two flotation devices, the one was reportedly missing,
two paddles, a boat hook, a battery, a screwdriver,
a dock line and two plastic water bottles.
And according to the private investigator
that took over the case later,
the water bottles were also never tested for DNA
when one of them may have contained a sample
that did not belong to Pat,
and they also were unaccounted for later
because investigators claimed that they did not know
what became of the bottles
because they were never entered into evidence.
So just remember that.
Like what the hell?
Nothing is being done.
They just threw away these water bottles
that could have potentially had DNA evidence on them.
They did something to them, but they definitely didn't,
they definitely didn't take any of this into evidence
or take any samples for DNA.
So initially his family had also believed
that just something kind of flukey happened, you know,
like maybe he suffered some kind of medical emergency
and fell overboard because according to Jill,
in the week before Pat's disappearance, he
had been suffering from severe headaches.
In the aftermath of Pat's death, Jill recalled, quote,
"...One thing I've always thought strange about Pat's death was, about a week before
he disappeared, Pat was having some really severe headaches.
He was irritable.
Pat was not an irritable person. Later on, I was talking to a
medical professional who suggested that severe headaches might very likely be tied to something
that was of extreme stress to Pat. However, Jill can't imagine what he would have been keeping from
her because she called him her best friend saying that they told each other everything and always
had.
So this was a really confusing thing to her if these headaches were totally random and
can be explained away by something very simple or if they could in some way be tied to whatever
happened to him.
The Manatee County Sheriff's Office and the Coast Guard continue to comb the surrounding
waters for any sign of Pat, but to no avail.
They also searched area hospitals and a 7-mile or 11-kilometer stretch of the beaches along the coast.
to have witnessed Pat's boat or a boat similar to Pat's traveling out of Terracia Bay, which is north of Bradenton, at 6.20pm on the day that Pat disappeared, so just after sunset.
However, when Jill questioned the witness, they couldn't be sure if it had been Pat on
the boat or not.
So the one possible sighting that we have doesn't feel super credible.
Now the CSX bridge, which connects Bradenton and Palmetto across the Manatee River, had active
security cameras on the day that Pat went missing and these cameras would have captured some part of
his journey. But this is so frustrating, Heath, because when law enforcement sought to download this file,
it was corrupted and they couldn't view it.
So I'm curious here why this video footage was corrupted.
Like was it corrupted on purpose?
Right.
Or did something, you know, fluky kind of happen here
where the camera's, you know, just messed up in some way.
It just seems too perfect. It seems very convenient. Yes. It's so frustrating. So
I'm, we're not sure the information has not been released if this corruption was intentional or
not, but it's definitely disappointing either way. Now, sadly on January 31 31, 2013, the Coast Guard announced that they were calling off
the search for Pat Mullins.
But more disturbing evidence would soon be uncovered. found. or even listening to this walk, then you know and love the excitement of the store.
But do you have the thrill of getting the best deal?
Rakuten members do, yes.
They store the brands they like and make important savings, in addition to cash.
And you can also start making money from your favorite stores,
like Old Navy, Best Buy and Expedia, and even accumulate sales and cash.
It's easy to use and you get your returns via Paypal or check.
The idea is simple.
The stores make Rakuten to send them to people who store them.
And Rakuten shares the money with you in cash.
Download the free Rakuten app and never miss a good deal.
Or go to rakuten.ca to get more for your money.
It's R-A-K-U-T-E-N.
10 days after Pat's disappearance, and 9 days after his boat was recovered, Jill received the call that she had been dreading.
Pat's body had been discovered.
Now that morning, Mason and one of Pat's brothers were out for a boat ride, just kind of scanning the waters for any sign of Pat.
And Jill called them to return to the house upon hearing the news.
That fisherman had recovered Pat's body, floating face down in the crystal south Florida
water.
He was pulled from the water about a half mile, or.8 kilometers west of Sneeds Island,
which is about 5 miles, or 8 kilometers8 kilometers west of Sneed's Island, which is about five
miles or eight kilometers from Bradenton by car. But to the shock of everybody
involved in the search, Pat hadn't drowned. He had been shot.
Disturbingly, the man who recovered him noted that his face was gone, bloodied
beyond recognition. But other than that, his body appeared pristine.
Clean and without visible marks from a struggle, and still wearing the same clothes that he
had disappeared in.
Now, Pat's remains were collected and brought to the medical examiner, who determined that
he had been hit in the face with a shotgun blast.
As law enforcement puzzled over the circumstances surrounding Pat's death and scrambled to
collect evidence that would either prove that it was a homicide or prove that it was a suicide,
Pat's community of decades and his school of devoted students and co-workers came together
to mourn this really sudden and tragic loss.
Now, two days after his body was recovered from the bay, Palmetto High
School hosted a memorial for him that was met with standing room only
attendance. And Jill really struggled with this because, you know, she had all
these unanswered questions, she was going through all this grief, and she
remembered, quote, I was disturbed, finding it hard to concentrate, finding it hard
to sleep. It was difficult. Well, here's another thing about the case.
Whoever had killed Pat made sure to try to hide
what they had done because according to the autopsy
conducted on Pat, his body was weighed down in the water
by a 25 pound anchor tied to a three quarter inch rope.
So Pat had been bound with this thick
rope which wrapped around his waist, looped through his legs, and was secured
with a nautical knot. And this is kind of crazy to me because of how well he was
tied. Like it seems like it would have been overkill to tie yourself this
way. When you look at photos or a reenactment of the rope tied around his body,
you're like, why would somebody go through all that trouble to tie themself that securely,
um, if they were gonna take their own life?
No, it's really weird, because it is super excessive the way that it's wrapped around his waist,
and then down in his thigh area around his legs,
it really seemed like somebody
didn't want his body to surface.
They wanted him to go down there,
possibly be eaten by alligators,
and leave no trace of him,
which is very reminiscent of a case
that we covered recently on the murder of Mike Williams.
But anyway, so the medical examiner's office reported
that Pat Mullins died of a gunshot wound
on the right side of his head.
And based on the pattern of his injury,
he was found to have been killed by a buckshot shell,
which contains eight to 10 pellets
that are about the size of a marble.
Yeah, they kind of just spread out when the gun goes off.
Is that kind of like birdshot? Birdshot is is a lot smaller because obviously it's for birds. Yeah. But you know,
same kind of idea there where the gun is going to spread these little pellets. It's gonna do a lot
of damage. But in this case because it's buckshot it's a lot bigger so it's going to cause a lot more damage and if you've ever seen a wound from a shotgun from buckshot it's it's very very intense
which is why I hate to say it again but like you said that the fisherman who
found him said that his face was gone yeah basically gone so at first based on
the results of the autopsy, investigators began to explore the possibility
that Pat had taken his own life.
But of course, his family and friends scoffed at this
and maintained that he was not depressed or troubled
and that they couldn't imagine a reality
where he would do this.
And hello, you know, he was bound and weighted down.
But that's not gonna be the only detail that going to throw you guys off because the next detail is
Massive well his family argued that pat had many short-term plans laid out even for you know the very day that he disappeared
Which would not be typical for somebody who is planning on ending their life
Now though his hands had been left free, potentially giving him the ability
to tie himself up, the angle that the bullet struck him would have been exceedingly difficult
to achieve. Pat would have needed to tie himself up, linking himself to the anchor, and then
perch himself on the side of the boat holding a shotgun
in the exact position so that it would strike him in the face and knock him
overboard. So if these actions were not carried out in this exact order and
without mistakes it wouldn't be possible. So it just feels a little too specific.
Yeah it's kind of crazy to think about this scenario
actually happening.
And then he would also have to make sure
that no one saw him or heard him
so that his body could essentially
sink to the bottom of the ocean.
And then you'd have to wonder why this would be the method,
like why he wouldn't want his body to be found.
It just feels very excessive.
Yeah, I was going to say that too.
Like if like it just seems like so much like so much to take your own life,
to tie yourself up,
to put yourself in this crazy position in order to have the shotgun hit you in
the side of the head.
And you also have to be perched up on the side of the boat so that you fall
overboard. Like it just seems insane to me.
Well, there's so much more because as you hinted out,
as you hinted at a second ago Heath,
the most compelling detail that seems to veer away
from suicide being, you know, a possible outcome
is the fact that there was no blood found on his boat.
That is the biggest thing in this case.
It's the biggest thing that my mind is just so attracted
to here because I'm really thinking about the fact that,
you know, with a shotgun blast,
there had to have been some sort of blood spatter
on the boat.
I mean, it's just impossible for that not to have happened.
Especially like you're saying with the buckshot. Well, here's the boat. I mean, it's just impossible for that not to not to have happened. Especially like you're saying with the, with the buckshot. Well, here's,
here's the situation.
So with the placement of the bullet and the amount of blood that would have been
present, there would have been splatter on the boat,
at least a minuscule amount. Like there's no way that there wouldn't have been,
but the boat was tested with luminol and there was no proof of any even small minor traces of blood. That just is... it just blows my
mind because you know when they're testing for this minuscule amount of
blood and they find absolutely nothing, it means to me that he was not shot on
that boat. Well also the shotgun was not recovered on or near the boat despite the divers
searching for it in this entire area. It also wasn't found near Pat's body which was pulled from
you know much more shallow waters than his boat had been floating in but I will say investigators
noted that the currents were very strong like I mentioned and they may have carried the gun away
long before they were able to search for it.
But, according to the forensic anthropologist that examined his skull,
it's possible that there were two points of entry into the skull,
meaning there were two potential weapons and two potential assailants.
But due to how much damage his skull had sustained,
it was unfortunately impossible to tell.
But already with this scene that we can paint,
you know, there is one to two assailants,
one to two gunshot wounds.
It didn't happen in the boat.
He was tied to an anchor and then put into the water.
This all seems so intentional.
It wasn't like, oh, I'm going bird hunting
and I accidentally shot a man in the head.
Yeah.
This feels super, it didn't happen in his boat.
Right, and you really can't say that anyway
because the fact that he was tied up.
If something happened like that, if it was an accident,
I mean, I guess somebody could recover your body.
There would be a lot of blood all over the place, but somebody could recover his body,
tie it up, put an anchor.
Try to cover up what they did by accident.
Exactly, right.
But that just did not seem to be the case here.
Yeah.
I mean, it seems like somebody removed him from his boat and murdered him.
Well, the biggest question other than who did this seemed to be how his body could have
traveled so far in the water without being seen.
Rather than suicide, it seemed more likely that he had been forcibly removed from his boat and killed,
his body dumped later after being wrapped with rope and anchored in hopes that the connecting ocean would conceal it until he decayed.
And though his body had supposedly been in the water for 10
days, Pat's body had not been met with any decay or animal activity, which also
led many to believe that it had possibly been concealed elsewhere first or even
that Pat had been alive for some time after he vanished. Yeah and 10 days is
pretty significant. I'm not sure what the water temperatures were but it was 78 degrees Fahrenheit or 25 degrees Celsius when he
went out on his boat. So although it was January, it was technically winter, this
is Florida. Yeah it stays warm down there. Yeah I would be willing to bet that he
wasn't immediately disposed of. Well five months months after Pat's death, on June 26, 2013, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office
received information about a specific buoy where Pat may have entered the water, but
even after an extensive search was conducted around this area, no evidence was found to
support this claim.
Officially, Pat's cause of death was labeled undetermined, but the Sheriff's Office detectives
and medical examiners thought suicide still somehow seemed to be the most likely cause.
However, they acknowledged that the case was odd and admitted that there was other possibilities
here.
As the investigation came to a close and suicide seemed to be law
enforcement's foregone conclusion, those who knew Pat were devastated at the lack
of information that they were able to glean from this investigation. One former
student of Pat said quote, at first I was going along with what others were saying,
suicide. I thought, wow, he was always in good spirits at school, but you never know
a person's circumstances outside of their workplace. But he was a by-the-book type of guy,
so I questioned it a little. I knew law enforcement had failed him and his family.
There were so many things that they should have looked further into.
So because they agreed, the Mullins family actually hired a private investigator and
a forensic expert to examine the case from top to bottom, confident that police had missed
something.
And the agency even ran reenactments of the shooting on a boat out on the water, and they
determined that it would have been nearly impossible for Pat to have done this to himself.
Which is amazing that they did this because with any suspicious death theories
really surrounded this case.
Some of Pat's family and friends believe that he accidentally encountered some,
you know,
maybe illegal activity on the water,
like maybe an exchange of drugs or illegal substances and that he was killed as a
witness.
Because as we know,
you know,
there's a lot of drug trafficking in Florida in general,
and there's a lot of ports in which those drugs come in.
There's a lot of waterways in which those drugs come in. So this is,
you know, definitely a possibility. Yeah. I mean, it makes a lot of sense.
And given Pat's character,
it's also possible that he pulled his boat up to maybe assist someone who was in
distress and he was instead met with an attacker or caught in the crossfire of an altercation involving guns.
That's definitely possible as well, but I guess one thing I would have to say about that is that if he was trying to help somebody that was in distress, why would they just randomly attack him?
Like, I think it's more likely that he maybe ran into something that he wasn't supposed to see.
Yeah, and maybe then they brought him onto their boat and executed him.
Right, like, hey, you're a witness to a crime that's happening here, so you have to be eliminated.
Well, and here's the thing.
Pat had never owned guns, and he claimed that he never would. So illegally and covertly
obtaining a gun would have been supremely out of character for Pat. But
just in case he had purchased one legally, investigators searched his
records and bank statements anyway and they couldn't find any evidence that he
had purchased a gun at any point before his death. Now there was also the possibility
that he had known his attacker and this next theory is really interesting to me
and it loops in this red paint situation. Some people think that this theory is a
little bit more far-fetched but basically the Mullins family had a
friend who began displaying very odd behavior shortly
after Pat's death, and some still feel like he was tied to the crime.
Damon Presswood was a friend of Pat's brother Gray and became known to the whole Mullins
clan like he would frequently join in on family gatherings and parties.
Damon and his wife Catalina also lived in Bradenton with their young daughter, and Damon
was actually a celebrated chef at a local restaurant.
But although Damon seemed like a good family guy, he did have a little bit of a checkered
past with the law, including driving under the influence and a battery charge that occurred
the same year that Pat
was killed.
His business also suffered some setbacks after logging a bankruptcy in 2009 and a foreclosure
in 2016.
According to Pat's family, who continued to see Damon after Pat's death, Damon exhibited
increasingly strange and erratic behavior following Pat's
disappearance.
Damon also eventually revealed that he was intermittently using methamphetamine, so
it may have been just the drug use that was to blame for his very strange behavior, but
it's also feasible that his drug use was to mitigate the guilt or responsibility that
he felt if he had in fact been involved
in Pat's death.
Yeah, I mean, definitely.
He's acting very, very strange here.
But according to Pat's family, Damon slipped into a deep state of depression after Pat
went missing, which was very odd to them because Damon was always closer with his brother Gray
than he was with Pat.
Yeah, it seemed like somebody in his position maybe wouldn't be that upset about Pat's death
because they weren't as close. So they were kind of like perking their ears at that.
Right. Well, Jill recalls with suspicion that Damon told her that he would sometimes stare out
to the Manatee River sobbing and wishing for his friend to come back.
Which obviously she felt was very eerie and strange.
And you know, if he's just being a compassionate person, like that's amazing that you care,
but it was enough for them to really look at.
Well, there's a lot more to this.
So every January around the anniversary of Pat's death,
Damon would break
down, unable to function for a few days, and this behavior was described as paranoid and
impulsive.
Naturally, because everybody thought this was extremely bizarre, it raised the eyebrows
of everyone who knew him.
Was it possible that maybe they met up with each other on the water that day?
Had Pat perhaps come upon
Damon purchasing drugs and was killed by the dealer, making Damon feel responsible? Well,
the most credible indication that these men may have seen each other that day is that Pat's boat
arrived with red paint scratches along its side. Red paint that matched the exact shade and placement of red stripes along the side of Damon's boat.
It's a little weird.
Very weird, and get this.
A chip from the paint of Damon's boat was taken and tested against the paint remnants that were found on Pat's boat.
And get this. I already said that.
The paint samples were a fucking match, but detectives were dismissive about the development
because they basically knew that there would be no possible way to like definitively tie the presence of paint on Pat's boat to Damon's involvement.
Yeah, because even though, like, they could have gotten into a scuffle at another time, even though, by the way, Damon never said a week earlier, our boats came into contact or anything like that
that could prove that this was something else.
Are there other boats with red paint
and red stripes on the side?
Surely, but I think coupled with his behavior,
it was definitely just something that the family
wanted to look into that unfortunately
couldn't be resolved.
Yeah, and police did say that this was a pretty common color of paints, like it's
used on a lot of different boats, but it just feels very convenient that Damon's
boat had that same color of red on it. But just four and a half years after
Pat's death, on April 5th 2017, 48-year-old Damon died suddenly in his
home according to his obituary and
his death has widely been attributed to an overdose.
Around the first anniversary of her husband's death, Jill began papering the area with flyers
and also took out ads for benches to display Pat's picture as well as information about
the day he went missing and the reward, which by the way is $20,000.
By this point, no valuable tips have been brought forward at all, but both she and the
Sheriff's Office have received calls with some tips.
Jill admitted that Pat would hate the attention as a man who is known for being humble and just very low-key all around.
But Jill, her sons, and all of Pat's friends and family are still hopeful for answers in his case.
In January of this year, 2024, the Mullins family and the Manatee County Sheriff's Office jointly announced
that they sought to get the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to take over the investigation in hopes that fresh eyes
and renewed interest would produce an outcome. Jill recently shared quote,
this is a mission to find the truth and I can't change what happened so I can't
be angry with the world. I just have this purpose always in the background.
And sometimes it haunts me when I wanna go to sleep.
The circumstances surrounding Pat's case
are clearly suspicious and someone knows something.
So if you have any information
about the death of Pat Mullins,
please call the Manatee County Sheriff's Office
at 941-747-3011 or Manatee County Crime Stoppers at 866-634-8477.
Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West.
Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode.
What a strange one with such strange details.
Again, please make sure that you share this episode.
It's so frustrating that the cameras were corrupted that day, that the police didn't
take any DNA evidence from the boat, didn't collect any evidence from the boat. Like so many things were, so
many balls were dropped in Pat's case and I feel like maybe if they
hadn't been dropped there would be something that police could do but it
feels like, I don't know how they're gonna get answers. And not only that you
know the biggest thing that we kept coming back to was
the fact that there was no blood evidence inside the boat.
So it's just, it's just suspicious all around.
Yeah.
To me, it really feels like for whatever reason, somebody took Pat off his boat.
Whether it was like we're saying a friend, if it was Damon or somebody else
who was like, Hey, come over to my boat for a second, which happens on boats. It does. Yeah. And then something,
one thing led to another and he was killed or if it was bad from the start,
if the moment that Pat was brought onto somebody else's boat,
he knew it was bad news. Like I just wish for the family so bad that there was
more and really, really hope that they'll get justice.
So please do not forget to share this case. Yeah keep pushing this case out into the
limelight and we'll keep sharing as well. Yeah thank you guys so much for tuning
into this one and we'll see you back in the studio on Friday. Alright guys so for
everybody out there in the world don't be a stranger. I'm out. Thanks for watching!