Fla. Murder Suspect's Criminal Past
Documents Obtained By CBS News Shed Light On Lead Suspect's Rap Sheet
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Leonard Patrick Gonzalez, Jr. , 35, has been accused of being the "organizer" in the murders of Byrd and Melanie Billings in Beulah, Florida on July 9th. (AP Photo)
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Leonard Patrick Gonzalez, Jr. , 35, has been accused of being the "organizer" in the murders of Byrd and Melanie Billings in Beulah, Florida on July 9. So far, eight persons have been arrested in those murders, including Gonzalez, who is being held without bond.
Pamela Long Wiggins, the only woman charged in the case, was arrested earlier this week in Alabama. Wiggins may have personal ties to Gonzalez, the alleged mastermind of the robbery-murder attack.
CBS News has exclusively obtained the confidential deposition of Gonzalez Jr. in an unrelated case in Pensacola, Florida.
Gonzalez Jr. was subpoenaed by the State Attorney’s office and granted blanket immunity for his involvement in that case.
During the October 30, 2008 deposition, Gonzalez, Jr. describes how his criminal past started when he was only 17 years old and violated his probation. He credits his criminal history for preparing him for the job he held at the time, which he described as "criminal counter-measures."
"Had I not committed those crimes and suffered and paid the consequences, I wouldn’t be able to do the job that I do now," Gonzalez, Jr. told James Jenkins, the criminal defense attorney who was taking his deposition.
Gonzalez, Jr. received $150,000 for providing "intelligence" services from January through April of 2008, according to Jenkins.
During the deposition Gonzalez characterized himself this way:
-- I had a colorful background and if you want to call it a misspent youth. I worked as a body guard for several people in the area and I did do some criminal countermeasures work.
-- I understand the criminal thought processes. I can help people to decide what’s the best measure they should take to protect themselves and their families and businesses.
-- I was interested in starting a company, UDT Institute. It stands for Ultimate Defensive Tactics Institute, which would provide criminal countermeasures training to wealthy individuals.
In the deposition, he also described himself as an advocate for victimized children. And interestingly said at one point, "I couldn’t commit a crime."
Gonzalez and six of the alleged accomplices are charged with murder and scheduled for a grand jury hearing where the case will be presented by Florida state Attorney Bill Eddins.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Armed and odd. We should sell that sh^ hole back to Spain
You have to send him to a Supermax Prison, solitary confinement will be the only way to control him (Other than capital punishment which would be cheaper).
Is that an unknown or you just don't want to tell us?
We have a "Fast check out" lane, very little waiting time, here for capital crimes
He thinks life is one of those jerky, fast British crime movies where all the criminals are just oh-so-cool.
What a little scumbag.
Question is:
Who hired him? I think some money-laundering was going on..
WHY IS THE DEA INVOLVED?!?
This is Florida after all..
Somebody made the wrong choice, even if it WAS for the right reasons..
Sad..
And whats a "murder robbery-attack" exactly?
Geez you guys have terrible editing skills.
Seriously,email me, I work cheap!
LOL
..And tell Yvonne to lookup grisly. Yeah, OK, any murder is grisly, but that adjective is usually reserved for things like beheadings.
- by legacyabq July 16, 2009 8:54 PM EDT
- Hey CBS,when I clicked the tag to read this article, it told me I needed to install a IE language pack for Korean?!?!?
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- by vielmann July 17, 2009 4:53 AM EDT
- Well said. I have e-mailed CBS complaining about how bad their system has become. Not a word in response. I'm glad I'm not the only one complaining about their system being a big mess.
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- by mswolfestock July 17, 2009 11:25 AM EDT
- Yeah, really. My computer is plenty fast, it loads other websites in an instant. But navigating throughout the CBS website is like waiting for a glacier to melt (global warming notwithstanding, ahem!). If you could see me now, I'm the one with the spiderwebs forming around me from waiting an eternity.
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See all 17 CommentsWhat in the heck??
The website is full of bugs, and not just in the comments section..
I'm available if you want to hire me, and fire the overpaid consultant who obviously bilked you!