Every Move You Make by M. William Phelps

Every Move You Make by M. William Phelps

Author:M. William Phelps [Phelps, M. William]
Language: eng
Format: epub, mobi
Tags: True Crime, Murder, General
ISBN: 9780786031764
Google: EqDiAgAAQBAJ
Amazon: 078603176X
Publisher: Pinnacle
Published: 2005-05-31T23:00:00+00:00


For two months, Bureau investigator Bill Morris had searched the entire Albany region for any sign of Evans or Falco. Every lead Morris followed turned up nothing. He would get what appeared to be a break and it would turn cold. He would hear from a source that Evans had been seen around town, but Morris always seemed to be one step behind him. Finally, word on the street was that Falco and Evans had split up and taken off: Evans to Colorado; Falco to California.

CHAPTER 47

Evans left Troy immediately after wrapping Michael Falco’s body in a sleeping bag and placing it, he later claimed, with the help of Tim Rysedorph, in the trunk of Tim’s car. At that point, as Rysedorph and Evans loaded Falco’s body into the trunk, Tim wasn’t going to argue with Evans about anything. In fact, when Evans told Rysedorph he was taking his car to dump Falco’s body, Tim said, “Hey, man, whatever the fuck you want.”

From there, Evans took off to the one place where he thought he was safe from the world: Lake Worth, Florida, where his half sister, Robbie, lived.

The one aspect of the trip that interested Jim Horton later when Evans sat down and recounted the entire ordeal was how Evans hid out while transporting the body. Along the way, Evans would stop at a rest stop every ten hours or so, park Tim’s car near the woods and camp out about two hundred yards away from the car in the deep brush.

“Why would you do that?” Horton wanted to know.

“Just in case,” Evans said, “the cops were watching me. If they had ever searched the car while I was sleeping in the woods, they would have nailed Timmy Rysedorph”—Evans began laughing at this point—“for the murder. That’s why I took his car to begin with.”

As to why he would bury the body only miles from Robbie’s house, Evans said he knew the area. Florida seemed like the logical next place to go. He could bury Falco and then go visit Robbie, his nephew and her new husband.

Evans lasted about six weeks in Florida and decided to drive back to Troy to face his demons. No more running. No more hiding. If the cops had anything on him, he surmised, they would have shaken down Rysedorph and eventually found him.

While in prison, Evans had learned that the best marks to rob were drug dealers. They always carried a lot of cash and were reluctant about calling the cops if they had been robbed.

Trying to lay off burglaries for a while, Evans hatched a plan when he got back to Troy in April 1985 to rob one of the most notorious drug dealers in town.



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