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In February 2007, Bieber's case was delayed due
to a European Court of Human Rights review on whether lifelong
imprisonment is a violation of human rights. If this case is
successful, it will result in Bieber and all other such prisoners
having their cases recalled to court for a new minimum term to be
decided.
In 2007, Bieber was involved in an escape plot
with two other prisoners.
On 23 July 2008, Bieber was told by the High
Court that he would not have to serve a full life sentence, as
originally recommended by the trial judge, but would still have
to serve a minimum of 37 years before being considered for
parole, meaning that he is set to remain in prison until at
least 2041 and the age of 75.
His lawyers had
made a successful appeal on the basis that the sentence amounted
to 'inhuman treatment', which Paul McKeever, chairman of the
Police Federation, described as "[leaving] the judiciary with
blood on its hands".
On his release from British
Custody, Bieber (if he is still alive) will be extradited to the
United States where he faces charges relating to the murder of
Markus Mueller and the attempted murder of former girlfriend
Michelle Marsh in Florida in 1995.
An American Bodybuilder Becomes An International Fugitive
By Daniel Schorn - CBSNews.com
In 1995, a bodybuilder who sold steroids and was involved in a
love triangle in Fort Myers was gunned down inside his home.
Police eyed an associate of the victim as a suspect but he
disappeared before officers could make an arrest.
Years later and thousands of miles away, the murder of a police
officer would stun a nation and reveal to investigators that the
two cases were linked.
48 Hours correspondent Susan Spencer reports on the
investigation, in cooperation with Granada Media and True North
Productions.
On Dec. 26, 2003, in Leeds, England, police officer Ian Broadhurst
lay dying in the street beside his patrol car. The search for his
killer - one of the biggest manhunts in British history - had just
begun.
Ian’s mother Cindy remembers the day had started so peacefully. It
was a holiday, the day after Christmas, what the British call
“Boxing Day,” and Ian and his wife were visiting.
"They actually came for Boxing Day breakfast and we had a lovely
breakfast and a lot of laughs. We sat together and we watched the
film and we laughed," she says.
Ian, 34, was a traffic cop in the city of Leeds and, holiday or
not, he had to go to work.
"Boxing Day is generally a quiet day. Looking for what we normally
look for, stolen cars, anybody that is doing something that draws
us attention," says Neil Roper, 43, who had been Ian's partner for
only a few months.
The two men had grown close.
"He was my mate, not just a policeman. He was just a genuine fella
that got on with everybody," says Roper.
In the short time they were partners, Broadhurst and Roper had
developed an almost uncanny ability to spot stolen cars, and this
day after Christmas would be no different.
That afternoon the officers turned onto a small side street to
check out a BMW that was parked at an odd angle.
"I just basically saw this black 3-series BMW parked up on the
causeway in a - how can I put it - a peculiar position," Roper
says. "We went slowly past the passenger side of the vehicle. I
looked and saw just this white man reading a racing post."
The officers approached the vehicle and then radioed in. Their
hunch was right: the car was stolen.
The driver - a very big man - was making Roper nervous.
"In the police car there is a button that you press which gives
you the facility, obviously, to record anything that’s being said
in the car. This is the first time I’ve ever done this," he says.
The chilling record of what happened next was all caught on tape.
On the tape (video), one can hear the man saying he was from Leeds
but that his country of birth was Canada. He also told officers, "Just
to let you know I did not steal the car."
Roper was growing more wary by the minute and decided he should
handcuff this suspect and got out of the car to call for backup,
leaving Broadhurst alone.
The BMW was towed away. Moments later, Officer James Banks arrived.
Broadhurst now got out of the patrol car.
Like most British police, none of the three officers carried a gun.
"I said to James, 'When I’m cuffing him, can you just watch me
back,' " says Roper. "As I’ve looked forward, I’ve just seen this
gun coming up to my face and what can I say from there. I’ve just
shouted, he’s got a gun."
Then gunshots could be heard on the tape.
Though Roper was hit in the shoulder and stomach, he somehow made
it to a nearby building and radioed for help.
"I’ve been shot twice. I don’t know about Ian, he’s down on the
floor," Roper radioed.
Neil Roper was critically wounded and James Banks was saved only
because the bullet hit his police radio. But Ian Broadhurst died
on his way to the hospital.
"He could’ve been a model. He was a good
looking guy," says Bobby Ammons, who grew up with Bieber in Fort
Myers. "The kinda shape he was in is phenomenal. Of course, he
drove around in, you know, a nice car. And he always had money."
And it had always been that way, recalls pal Greg Martin.
"When I went over to his house, it was full of swimming trophies,"
he says. "That really, that kinda started his physique, 'cause
even as an 11-year-old he had a better body than the rest of us.
He was stronger than us."
In high school,
Bieber’s lean swimmer’s physique became more muscular. He and
Martin joined the football team and started lifting weights.
"David was getting bigger than a lot of us. He really was starting
to get really good size on him," says Martin. "And some of us were
starting to rumor, 'Hey, maybe David is using steroids.' ”
In fact, Ammons says he and Bieber did start taking steroids. He
remembers that there was an obvious change. "He got even bigger
and stronger than he already was."
By the time
he graduated in 1984, Bieber had morphed into a He-Man, ready for
the Marines. But military life handed him a setback.
"He realized, 'This ain’t for me. People here actually tell me
what to do.' He didn’t like that. The authority thing didn’t
really fly with him," says Ammons.
His friends say that,
as his physique grew, so did his appetite for steroids. After all,
he now was winning contests.
But competing costs
money and Bieber began selling steroids, as well as using them.
And he was moving with a new crowd.
"We kinda
took different roads," says Ammons. "I was working 50, 60 hours a
week and trying to fit the gym in. Where he would, you know, he
would go in the gym in the morning and in the afternoon."
That’s when Bieber met fellow bodybuilder Markus Mueller, a German
immigrant.
Appearances aside, Mueller's little
sister Nancy says Markus had a big heart.
"He
was probably the coolest brother you can really imagine," she says.
"I could stay over at his place at night and watch the scary
movies. He was always funny, always happy. I’ve never seen a sad
side of him."
In the 1990s, Mueller flirted with
an acting career, playing the tough guy in several low budget
movies.
He may have dreamed of stardom, but
unbeknownst to his sister, he already had one lucrative career:
importing steroids from Europe.
In October 1994,
Mueller and his girlfriend Danielle Labelle were arrested on
steroid charges. They pled guilty.
David Bieber
was also part of their operation, says Bieber’s friend John
Saladino.
"He would come down from Germany.
That was like his main, one of his main sources of getting it,"
says Saladino.
But Saladino says Bieber
eventually wanted to control the business. "He’d got into a couple
of arguments with Markus Mueller over the steroids."
And it turns out, Bieber also wanted Mueller's girlfriend,
Danielle. They started an affair and, to the shock of his friends,
got married just weeks later.
“I could just tell
her heart wasn’t in the right place," says Ammons. "You know, you
hear all these stories about how she was so in love with Markus.”
When she spoke Fox TV's "America's Most Wanted," Danielle Labelle
said, "I was seeing both Markus and David. I loved Markus but
David was just fun to hang out with."
On Feb.
10, 1995, this love triangle came to the attention of Lee County
Sheriff’s Det. Barry Futch.
“It was a little
after noon when I heard, probably noontime. We had a person shot,”
says Futch. “I approached the front door. And there laid this huge
man. When I say huge, I’m talkin’ about a man that was - muscles.
This guy was gigantic.”
It was the lifeless body
of Markus Mueller, shot in the head and stomach.
The body was found by none other than Bieber’s wife and Mueller’s
ex, Danielle Labelle, who called 911.
Even more
bizarre, David Bieber had driven her to the crime scene.
"He had brought Danielle Labelle, his new wife, over because she
had forgotten to get her purse from Markus Mueller’s house," says
Futch.
Futch says Bieber was there when
detectives arrived. What was Bieber's attitude when he talked to
Futch?
“Just nonchalant. Just like nothing was
going on. He did seem like he was concealing something,” Futch
says.
Futch says he was convinced from the start
that Bieber was behind the murder.
"He had two
reasons for knocking Markus off. One was the steroid business. And
two was Danielle," he says. "So he just decided to get rid of him.
And then he would have the girl and he would have the drugs … And
I told him that day, 'You know you’re involved in this. And we’re
gonna prove it.' ”
But David Bieber was about to
go to extraordinary lengths to make sure that didn’t happen.
Markus Mueller’s death had a profound affect on his sister Nancy.
"It was very important for me to let the police know that there’s
a family that cares," she says. "And it’s very important for us to
find out what happened."
Nancy says she feared
police would just ignore the murder. But not only were police not
ignoring it, says Futch, they already had a prime suspect: David
Bieber.
Police weren’t the
only ones who suspected Bieber. In her 911 call, his own wife,
Danielle Labelle, accused him of shooting Mueller.
“I think Dave shot him,” she said during the call.
A few weeks later she told Bieber’s friend, Bobby Ammons the same
thing.
"I ran into Danielle and David, shortly
after Marcus was killed, at a club. And this Danielle girl says, 'You're
old friends with my husband, Dave.' And I said yeah. She goes, 'Did
you know that he killed my ex-boyfriend?' " Ammons says. "She said
this to me."
At first, Ammons didn’t believe her.
And Bieber had a solid alibi: witnesses saw him at a club the
night Mueller was killed.
But as the summer of
1995 wore on, suspicions about Bieber grew.
"In
the midst of this, there was another incident that happened in the
city of Fort Myers," says Futch. "And that was where a guy walked
up to a girl who was taking some trash out, and shot at her five
times. The girl ended up to be David Bieber's ex-girlfriend."
The target - who escaped without a scratch - was Michelle
Stanforth, who had once had a stormy relationship with Bieber.
But a tip to police led them not to Bieber, but to a 17-year-old
kid named David Snipes. Futch brought him in for questioning.
"In the midst of that conversation with David Snipes that night,
he admitted to shooting at the girl. And, he told me that night 'I
thought I killed her,' " says Futch.
Futch says
Snipes then dropped a bombshell. He confessed to killing Markus
Mueller. "He went into the whole details of how he drove, and how
he got to Markus's front door. Knocked on the front door, Markus
came to the door, Markus opened it, and he shot him. And he made
sure he was dead and he shot him again."
But
Snipes claimed he was only a hired gun, and that John Saladino had
paid him just over $1,000 for each hit. Police found Saladino
holed up with David Bieber.
"We didn’t think we
had enough evidence to arrest David Bieber. We did think we had
probable cause to arrest John Saladino," says Futch. "So we went
to the apartment and knocked on the door and, eventually, John
opened the door. John Saladino. And, I said 'Hey John, I need you
to go downtown with me, and we need to talk.' And David was in the
background going, 'You don't have to go, John. You don't have to
go.' But he came with us. I started talking to him, and I told him
what David Snipes had said."
When he saw Snipes
was in custody, Saladino confessed but insisted he was only a go-between.
He said that he had hired Snipes but that David Bieber had paid
for it.
"When he asked me to find somebody to
kill Markus Mueller, I says, 'Why do you want to do that?' And,
he's like, 'I have my reasons.' " says Saladino. "David Bieber
gave me, it was $1,000. And his address - Markus Mueller lived in
Hacienda Village in Bonita Springs. And I asked David Snipes he
was willing to do it and he said he would."
Finally, Futch had enough to arrest David Bieber for first degree
murder. But Bieber was gone.
"So I called him on
his cell phone," says Futch. "I said, 'Why don't you come on in
and see me, and talk to me. We need to straighten this up.' And he
goes, 'Well, I tell you what, let me call my attorney, and I'll
get back to you.' That's the last phrase I ever heard from David
Bieber. David just disappeared."
Months passed,
then years. A new investigator, Charlie Ferrante, inherited the
case and quickly became consumed with the search.
He put Bieber’s family and friends under surveillance, and says
they were hiding and assisting him.
He pored
over their phone records, monitored their travel and kept tabs on
Bieber’s old hang-outs.
He scoured the country
to follow up on leads but leads that initially seemed promising,
led nowhere.
"We obtained a Tennessee driver's
license in his name," says Ferrante.
Ferrante
believes Bieber used his own name to mislead investigators and
focus their search on Tennessee.
Bieber wasn’t
there. And now, complicating their search, police noticed that his
appearance was starting to change. He changed his hair and started
gaining weight, leading Ferrante to believe that Bieber was off
the steroids.
What police didn’t know was that
Bieber was hard at work on a whole new identity. But he needed a
name, someone roughly his age, with an innocent past.
David Bieber found that identity in a Georgia cemetery, on the
gravestone of a 6-year-old boy, Nathan Wayne Coleman, who had died
in 1975.
Bieber bought a copy of the Coleman’s
birth certificate and got a passport in his name. In September
1996, the fake Nathan Wayne Coleman fled the United States.
Days after British policemen Neil Roper and Ian Broadhurst were
shot, lead detective Chris Gregg was hot on the trail of Ian’s
killer, and finding out more about the man British police knew as
Nathan Wayne Coleman.
Bieber, Gregg found out,
was doing security work. "And that's where he was earning his
legitimate money. He's into bodybuilding. He was certainly working
at his fitness. Gambling was a major part of his life. And we
calculated that in the three years he'd gambled around £300,000
($535,000)."
Bieber had lived in England for
seven years, and worked as a nightclub bouncer.
"He wanted to be a gangster. He just wanted to be a big shot. He
wanted people to fear him, he wanted people to respect him,"
remembers Pearce Coyle, who worked with him.
"We found items in there which we knew were connected to the
shooting. Whoever had this flat had got the interest in gambling.
A gun cleaning kit was under his bed. There was a bulletproof vest
in there," says Gregg.
Meanwhile, Bieber -
a.k.a. Coleman - was popping up on security cameras all around
Leeds.
The day after Broadhurst’s murder, he had
been to several banks, withdrawing thousands in cash.
Then police got another tip.
David Costello, who
operates a storage facility in Leeds, recognized the name. "So I
instantly got on the computer system here and just made sure that
Nathan Coleman was one of the people that stored here, and it just
stood out."
In Coleman’s storage unit, police
made an ominous discovery.
"There were hundreds
and hundreds of rounds of home-made ammunition, nine millimeter
bullets," Gregg says. "And there was a bullet reloading machine
there. So, there was a bullet press to make all the bullets, there
was the gunpowder, the primers, the cartridge cases. The bullet
heads. It was all there."
Surveillance tape
showed Bieber had just been there, apparently arming himself.
"It (the surveillance tape) showed this character going in with
one bag and coming out with another. And we thought that rucksack
is probably packed with ammunition. We were very, very concerned
that now there's a man on the run, he's dangerous, he's killed one
cop, he shot another. He's probably realizing that he's gonna be
facing the rest of his life in jail. What has he got to lose?"
says Gregg.
Having found no fingerprint match
in their own database, police had submitted the prints to the FBI.
On day four of the manhunt, they got a hit, and Gregg remembers it
did not put their minds at ease. "Those fingerprints were
identified in the States as those of David Bieber."
Gregg says the Americans told him a great deal about David Bieber.
"The fact that he was wanted in the States for conspiracy to
murder. And that they had seen nothing of him since 1996. Learning
about David Bieber's background answered the key question for us,
which was 'Why had this person reacted so violently in the way
that they did?'"
Knowing who their fugitive
really was added even more urgency to the hunt. Because police now
feared that Bieber might try to flee the country. And on Dec. 30,
day five of the chase, a tip was called in that he had been
spotted at a train station in York, only about 20 miles from the
scene of the crime.
By the time police arrived,
there was no sign of Bieber. In fact, he was nearly 100 miles away,
having arrived that very afternoon in the town of Gateshead, in
the far northeast corner of England. He had checked into the Royal
Hotel, a modest place off the main highway.
Vicky Brown, who was on duty that night at the hotel, remembers
what Bieber looked like. "Very big, very tall and he looked quite
broad and he was wearing this black, wooly hat pulled right down
over his ears, and a big pair of old fashioned glasses."
Brown says Bieber's room overlooked the main street.
Brown went back to the reception area, but couldn’t stop thinking
about the stranger upstairs. She had heard about the manhunt
briefly on the news but then saw a photo of the fugitive in the
newspaper.
"It wasn't until I looked at the
photograph and I seen this picture of what this guy might look
like. So, I sat and drew a pair of glasses on this paper and
that's when I thought, 'Yeah, could be,' " recalls Brown.
She called her boss at home, who then called police.
Vicky waited for police to arrive, alone with the most wanted man
in Britain. She remembers being "terrified."
Meanwhile in Florida, Lt. Ferrante was reeling from the news that
David Bieber had resurfaced after eight long years. "I was called
and told a police officer lost his life because of David Bieber. I
remember hanging up the phone, closing my door, and I actually
broke down," he says.
Thousands of miles away,
David Bieber was hoping to slip away one more time, but British
police had been tipped.
Police arrived at the
Royal Hotel shortly before 2 a.m. New Year’s Eve. David Bieber was
upstairs in his room alone and, they assumed, ready to shoot his
way out. But this time he wasn’t facing three unarmed men. This
time he was facing a S.W.A.T. team, armed with high-powered
rifles.
Police cautiously climbed the stairs to
Bieber’s room.
"When he first came to the door,
we didn’t actually see him. The door opened by about an inch, an
inch and a half, and then slammed shut quickly after that,"
recalls one of the officers who was there.
For
seven tense minutes there was silence while Bieber considered his
options.
"He couldn't go out of the window, he
had to go out of the door," says Gregg. "And I think he was
weighing up his chances of surviving. And I think he realized that
if he was going into a shoot out here, he would end up being
killed himself."
Bieber may have thought so,
too. He opened the door and gave up without a fight.
"After that, the door fully opened and the subject stood in the
doorway fully dressed and the most distinctive part was his hair,"
remembers one of the arresting officers.
His
hair was distinctive because the one-time master of disguise had
done a rather bad job dyeing it, which was now an odd orangey-blonde.
He fooled no one.
"But there was the most cruel
irony in his surrender," says Gregg. "He said to the officer, 'You
wouldn't shoot an unarmed man would you?' Now, considering what
this character had done to an unarmed police officer, David Bieber
using those words, I think he knew exactly what he was doing at
that point."
Police found the gun that killed Ian Broadhurst - fully loaded -
under Bieber’s bed, along with almost 300 rounds of ammunition.
Bieber was taken to a high-security jail, held at gunpoint every
step of the way.
"When David Bieber was arrested, he never spoke one word to us,"
says Gregg. "He never opened his mouth. He never uttered one word."
But that would all change a year later, when Bieber had his day in
court.
David Bieber’s two-week murder trial took place in a Newcastle
courtroom. And at its end he testified in his own defense. He
admitted being on the scene when Ian Broadhurst was murdered, but
he said the actual shooter was a friend of his from Florida,
somebody he refused to name. Prosecutors dubbed this the mystery
man “Mister X” and ridiculed the entire story.
Bieber even denied ever being in the patrol car, but prosecutors
found a novel way to convince the jury he was lying.
"We tracked down the gambling companies that he had been using,
telephone betting," says Gregg. "And the gambling companies tape
record the calls. So, we managed to gather quite a lot of
recordings of the person who was using the name Nathan Wayne
Coleman."
Voice expert Peter French compared the gambling phone calls to the
patrol car tape and says he found "very similar pronunciation to
the one that you found in the car recording."
"This is one of the most clear-cut cases in which I’ve ever acted,"
says French. "Short of a fingerprint, it doesn’t get much better."
Of course, prosecutors had Bieber’s fingerprint as well, on that
candy wrapper in the back seat.
The jury wasted little time, finding Bieber guilty in just three
hours. The sentence was equally emphatic - life behind bars.
"This is a whole life sentence, which is very unusual in this
country," says Gregg. "Very few and far between a sentence of
whole life. So, he will never be granted parole."
For Ian Broadhurst’s family, it was scant consolation.
"I’m old enough to be able to remember the time when if the news
told us that somebody had been shot in this country, you stopped
what you were doing and said, shot? Not here," says Broadhurst's
mother, Cindy Eaton. "That happens maybe in America, but not here.
We don’t stop any more."
Ferrante says the case will always hurt him. "Every time I think
of the officer in the United Kingdom, this Ian Broadhurst, it will
always hurt me, it will always bother me."
He also doesn't have the satisfaction of making the arrest. "But
that’s the selfish part of fugitive work. The real part of
fugitive work is the bad guy’s in jail."
British prison officials foiled an escape plot by David Bieber in
October 2007. He apparently planned to escape by helicopter with
an arsenal of weapons.
Danielle Labelle divorced bieber in 2003.
Since he is serving life without parole, there are no plans to try
David Bieber for Markus Mueller's murder.