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Susan Fast, Bradenton, FL 6/29/07
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gozgals



Joined: 28 Jul 2005
Posts: 2892
Location: A Place Called Vertigo

PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:00 am    Post subject: Susan Fast, Bradenton, FL 6/29/07 Reply with quote

Susan Fast

Age 60

Missing from Bradenton, FL

Date of Disappearance- 6/29/07

Construction Company Owner

Missing since Friday
stepson suspected in this disappearance

Stepson is being held on other charges. See links below related to this case. (not in any order)

As of this time, Susan has not been found and a landfill has been searched.

Gozgals
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:04 am    Post subject: Susan- missing since Friday Reply with quote

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,287772,00.html

Woman Who Owns Florida Construction Company Missing Since Friday
Tuesday, July 03, 2007


BRADENTON, Fla. — Investigators say they have few clues as to the whereabouts of missing Florida construction company owner Susan Fast, who has been missing for three days.

And the more time that goes by, the more authorities are worry whether they will find her alive.

"As hours and days go by, it gets less hopeful," Dave Bristow, spokesman for the Manatee County Sheriff's Office, told the Bradenton Herald Monday. "But there's always hope."

Fast's stepson, Thomas Fast, who was arrested recently on a separate concealed weapons charge, is considered a person of interest by police because he was the last person believed to have seen her, reports FOX affiliate WTVT.

Click here to read the full report and watch the video from My FOX Tampa Bay.

His criminal history includes convictions for petit theft, worthless checks and prostitution-related charges. His bail was raised to $100,000 on Sunday morning.

"He admits that he was there at the house and spoke with her at 5 p.m. ... so that's essentially the last person that may have seen her, and so we do suspect foul play because she hasn't made any contact," Manatee County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Major Connie Shingledecker told My FOX Tampa Bay.


Susan Fast's husband, Bruce, reported her missing after returning from a business trip. The couple runs the construction company together.

"He arrived home later that evening he couldn't find her, he couldn't find her vehicle and that she was not answering her cell phone," Shingledecker said.

At a bail hearing Sunday, a detective said more than a dozen spots of blood were found in the Fasts' home and a set of steak knives were found clean in the dishwasher. Bruce Fast said his wife normally didn't wash the knives in the dishwasher, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported. Also, two rugs were recently washed and a fresh cut was on Thomas Fast's elbow, the paper reported.

Detectives found her Lexus SUV about 10 miles away from her home with keys still in the ignition and a missing tag.

The Bradenton Herald reports that relatives of a 16-year-old boy who lives directly across the street from where the vehicle was found at 603 11th Ave. said the teenager told investigators that he watched a man in his 40s get out of a Lexus at about 3 a.m. Saturday.

"He was a white guy in his 40s, he held two big old black bags and walked north on Sixth," one of the teen's relatives told the Herald.

Click here to read The Bradenton Herald story
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070702/NEWS/707020462

Blood found at home of missing woman
Evidence of violence is found at residence; stepson's bail is raised

By MICHAEL A. SCARCELLA and HEATHER ALLEN


STAFF WRITERS


michael.scarcella@heraldtribune.com
heather.allen@heraldtribune.com

EAST MANATEE -- While police searched for a missing woman among the yards and lakes of the affluent subdivision where she lived, details emerged of a bloody scene at her home and a stepson with an alleged grudge who may have been there.

Manatee County authorities were still trying to piece together evidence to charge Thomas Fast, 52, with his stepmother's disappearance.

Susan Fast, 60, has not been seen since Friday night. Her husband, Bruce, believes she is dead, and that his son murdered her because she stood in the way of an inheritance.

Bail for Thomas Fast was raised Sunday from $2,000 to $100,000 after a prosecutor said Fast could flee the area if released. He was being held in the Manatee County jail on a concealed weapon charge after being arrested with a pistol and an empty magazine early Saturday.

At Sunday's hearing, a detective cited evidence of a violent struggle within the Fasts' home: 14 blood spots, a set of steak knives in the dishwasher, two rugs recently washed, a fresh cut on Fast's elbow and no sign of Susan Fast.

Detective Ricardo Alvarado told a judge that Fast admitted being at his stepmother's home and in her Lexus SUV. He said Fast told police he was looking at his mother's jewelry.

Detectives found a set of steak knives in the dishwasher. Her husband of 30 years, Bruce Fast, said Susan did not usually clean those knives in the dishwasher.

Bruce Fast, 74, told the Herald-Tribune that his son had been looking for him and his wife for the last three weeks. He fears that his son ambushed Susan outside of their home Friday afternoon.

The father called authorities when he arrived home from a business trip in the Bahamas early Saturday and discovered that his wife and her vehicle missing. Bruce Fast is president of Construction Team Management, and Susan, his wife of more than 30 years, is manager at the business.

Susan Fast's Lexus SUV, its license plate removed, was discovered Saturday night at a vacant home in east Bradenton.

Thomas Fast was arrested early Saturday after he took a cab from East Bradenton to a shopping plaza off State Road 70 East near Interstate 75. His pickup truck was in the parking lot, about a mile from his stepmother's home in the Tara subdivision.

Authorities were waiting by the truck when Fast pulled up in a taxi cab about 3 a.m., according to sheriff's reports.

An officer found a loaded .22-caliber pistol in a duffel bag that Fast allowed a deputy to search. Investigators found a second magazine, which was empty, in the same bag.

Fast's permit to carry a concealed firearm was revoked in January, according to a letter from the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Affairs. Police found that note in the bag with the gun.

Richard Fast said his brother's permit was revoked "due to mental health reasons" but would not elaborate.

A Bradenton police officer found Susan Fast's SUV at an abandoned house in East Bradenton, less than a mile from where Thomas Fast reportedly summoned the cab. A neighbor told detectives he saw a man get out of the vehicle carrying two bags.

Bruce Fast described his son as a mentally ill nomad and said he is not cooperating with the investigation, which leads him to believe that his wife is dead. Thomas Fast suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, his father said.

Bruce Fast told the Herald-Tribune that his son has long disliked Susan Fast because she stands in the way of an inheritance.

In court Sunday, Thomas Fast told a different story: "Unfortunately, they pretty much turned on me," he said of his father and stepmother.


Last modified: July 02. 2007 4:53AM
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:18 am    Post subject: No body in case yet, no arrest Reply with quote

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070704/NEWS/707040419


Case without body tough to prove
By MICHAEL A. SCARCELLA and ANTHONY CORMIER



michael.scarcella@heraldtribune.com
anthony.cormier@heraldtribune.com

EAST MANATEE -- Proving a murder charge without a body is a rare challenge that could develop here as authorities continue searching for Susan Fast, whose abrupt, suspicious disappearance was likely the result of foul play, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office said.

Detectives say they have circumstantial evidence linking the missing woman's stepson, Thomas L. Fast, to the disappearance. But a murder case is hindered by not having her body -- which would hold clues to how she was killed, if she is, in fact, dead.

Thomas Fast admits to being with his stepmother just hours before she was reported missing.

In the Fast home, detectives discovered spots of blood. Steak knives and rugs were washed. The carpet was vacuumed.

Thomas Fast, his family says, long disliked his stepmother.

"There's a tremendous amount of evidence, but to make a case solid we need Susan," Fast's husband, Bruce Fast, 74, said Tuesday. "If we could just have her back, not necessarily alive, to have closure, it would help so much."

Sheriff's spokesman Dave Bristow said that while investigators are searching hard for Susan Fast, they are also focusing on a criminal case against her stepson, whom family members described as a mentally ill drifter.

Thomas Fast is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail on a charge of carrying a concealed firearm. He has a pending firearms charge in North Carolina, where he was arrested in late May.

Detectives are gathering physical evidence and want to find possible witnesses who can link Thomas Fast to his stepmother's disappearance.

Police found Susan Fast's luxury vehicle Saturday at a vacant house at 600 block 11th Ave. E., in Bradenton. Her stepson's pickup was found miles away in the Twelve Oaks shopping plaza, 7200 block 55th Ave. E., in East Manatee.

Fast reportedly picked up a cab less than a mile from his stepmother's car. He was arrested after he returned to his Chevy truck.

"We're trying to build a case against him so that if we don't find a body, we can still charge him in connection with this," Bristow said.

To land a murder conviction, the state must prove someone died, the manner of death, and that the defendant killed the victim.

First, prosecutors must show that Fast's routine suddenly stopped. The state could show that there has been no activity in her bank and phone records; she has not shown up to work; and she has not visited family members.

Without her body, prosecutors would infer that she is dead.

"But that's certainly not proving it beyond a reasonable doubt," said defense attorney Richard Reinhart of Bradenton. "That's one of the things the state has to prove, that a person is dead."

The state also would have to show evidence suggesting violence -- blood, cuts, weapons -- to convince jurors that Fast did not voluntarily walk away from her husband, her home and her job.

But the hardest part in a circumstantial evidence case, legal experts say, is proving the defendant is connected to the crime.

Disproving the defendant's alibi becomes key. Eyewitnesses -- or in some cases, an accomplice -- often provide critical information.

"It's an uphill battle," said University of Florida law professor George "Bob" Dekle, a former prosecutor who won a murder conviction against Ted Bundy, the infamous serial killer, in 1979. "It's very difficult to do, but it's do-able."

In a high-profile case in September 1998, 7-year-old Amanda Brown disappeared from her home in Hillsborough County. Her body was never found.

Lacking a confession, prosecutors relied on physical and circumstantial evidence. Amanda's abductor, Willie S. Crain Jr., was convicted of murder and sentenced to death.

In a 1998 case that got national attention, a mother and son -- Sante and Kenny Kimes -- were convicted of slaying Irene Silverman, a Manhattan socialite and their landlady, whose body was never recovered.

Years later, Kenny Kimes admitted that he disposed of Silverman's body in a trash bin in Hoboken, N.J.

New York police spokesman Martin Speechley would not comment on the specifics of the case, but he said that two aspects of an investigation are critical: physical evidence or eyewitnesses.

"You first have to prove that a crime was committed," he said. "Say somebody gets shot in a mall, and their body is dragged away. Well, 100 people saw that crime -- but you don't have a body. But a crime still occurred, and you may have enough evidence to bring a case."

Fast could be convicted and punished for the gun charge, and later be prosecuted for murder even if his stepmother's body is never found. There is no statute of limitations for murder.


Last modified: July 04. 2007 4:15AM


Comments: All the evidence is pointing to Susan's stepson at this point in time. I hope she is found soon though. It looks like she was an enemy to him and he wanted to rid himself of her. Let us keep Susan in our thoughts that she is located soon and if her stepson is charged, they can get the evidence on him. At least this time we don't have to look at the husband (it doesn't appear that way).

Goz
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:27 am    Post subject: Missing Camera may hold clues Reply with quote

<snip>
Son: Missing Florida Woman's Camera Could Provide Clues to Her Whereabouts
Tuesday, July 03, 2007

By Audrey Bright

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,287907,00.html


BRADENTON, Fla. — The son of missing Florida woman said his mother had just returned from a business trip to the Bahamas with his father and had a camera with her that could provide important clues in the case.

Travis Fast told FOXNews.com that Susan Fast had flown back to Florida a day earlier than her husband, Bruce. Travis Fast said he hopes someone can locate the camera's memory card, which may help in the search for his mother.

“She was carrying a camera that has photos of her and my dad,” Travis Fast said. “Hopefully, we can trace back that information ... We’re trying to get as many clues as we can.”
<snip>
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rd



Joined: 13 Sep 2002
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Location: Jacksonville, FL

PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 6:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

This was sadly all too obvious. The son thinks he's made it difficult by hiding his mother's body, but it won't be difficult at all to convict this sorry excuse for a person.

rd

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laskipper



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 7:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
This was sadly all too obvious. The son thinks he's made it difficult by hiding his mother's body, but it won't be difficult at all to convict this sorry excuse for a person.



Agree with you there, rd.

Reading the above article, there were a few comments by Daddy Dearest that caught my eye:


Quote:
"There's a tremendous amount of evidence, but to make a case solid we need Susan," Fast's husband, Bruce Fast, 74, said Tuesday. "If we could just have her back, not necessarily alive, to have closure, it would help so much."


Could that be a clue? Not necessarily alive? He doesn't care, evidently, if the wife is dead- just wants closure?

Set up?


More:


The father called authorities when he arrived home from a business trip in the Bahamas early Saturday and discovered that his wife and her vehicle missing. Bruce Fast is president of Construction Team Management, and Susan, his wife of more than 30 years, is manager at the business.



That was a quick decision, was it not?


Susan Fast, 60, has not been seen since Friday night. Her husband, Bruce, believes she is dead, and that his son murdered her because she stood in the way of an inheritance.


Fresh from the Bahamas and he has the case "rapped".

Quote:
Bruce Fast, 74, told the Herald-Tribune that his son had been looking for him and his wife for the last three weeks. He fears that his son ambushed Susan outside of their home Friday afternoon.


So the husband knew that the son was "looking for him and his wife for the last three weeks" and allows her to come home alone?

???

More from Dad:

Bruce Fast described his son as a mentally ill nomad and said he is not cooperating with the investigation, which leads him to believe that his wife is dead. Thomas Fast suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, his father said.


The son is diagnosed as a paraoid schizophrenic- and Dad allows the wife to come home alone- knowing that the son is looking for them for the past 3 weeks?


The police found the truck really quick, I'd say. Got there before he did.

Amazing!

ls
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 10:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Skipper, how could we overlook what you found? It is amazing! Now I'm so unsure because it could be a frame job the way you have laid it out there so well that I can see the husband trying to get rid of his wife and blaming the son. He does not seem that concerned and it is like he wants to just hurry the whole "Minor Situation" along.

I now have to re-think this whole case and really follow up on what transpires. Maybe RD it is not as cut and dry as we thought.

Time will only tell but either way, the poor woman. The chances she is alive look slim.
-----------------------

Added ----
Skipper you quoted this:

"The father called authorities when he arrived home from a business trip in the Bahamas early Saturday and discovered that his wife and her vehicle missing. Bruce Fast is president of Construction Team Management, and Susan, his wife of more than 30 years, is manager at the business."

Now that I look at this, I do remember they found blood so that can be a reason he called so quick but still I'm wondering if he is responsible even though the son was the last to see her, as the information states.

Gozgals
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rd



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sheriff's spokesman Dave Bristow said that while investigators are searching hard for Susan Fast, they are also focusing on a criminal case against her stepson, whom family members described as a mentally ill drifter.

Thomas Fast is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail on a charge of carrying a concealed firearm. He has a pending firearms charge in North Carolina, where he was arrested in late May.



Looks like they've been setting him up for quite awhile.

rd
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 1:47 pm    Post subject: Search continues Reply with quote

Very True Rd, he doesn't seem to be an Upstanding Guy!! As if..


http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070703/NEWS/707030345

<snip>

Search for Susan Fast continues while stepson is being held
By ANTHONY CORMIER



anthony.cormier@heraldtribune.com

EAST MANATEE -- Thomas Fast is a drifter.

He rarely speaks to his family. He has never owned a home but bounces between Gainesville, Englewood, Sarasota and Miami. He works when he needs the money, moonlighting as a painter, a roofer and even an funeral home embalmer.

He owes thousands of dollars to collection agencies, spent some time in the military and told fantastic lies about participating in hostage rescues in Iran and shoot-outs with the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War.

Now, he is the prime suspect in the search for a missing woman.

Authorities continued to look Monday for Susan Fast, a 60-year-old from East Manatee County who was last seen by her stepson -- Thomas Fast -- on Friday night.

Investigators began the day by hunting through trash bins and garbage trucks in East Manatee and a landfill on Lena Road, suggesting that authorities are no longer searching for a missing person. Now, it seems they are treating the case as a homicide.
<snip>

Good theory Skipper but the stepson has got to be the guy. He really looks good for this disappearance which is now being treated like a homicide. As I always wish, I would like Susan to return.

I took an interest in this case too because we usually focus on younger women and wanted to highlight a case of someone older on the board too.
My thoughts would be they find the body soon and an arrest will be made. Not looking forward to another "no body, no crime" or a case where we will see a court case without the body which is harder to prove..

Goz
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laskipper



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 9:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't doubt that the stepson did the murder- I just wonder if the Dad may have put a stick in the hornet's nest, knowing the probable outcome.

IOW, the Dad may have said something to rile the son- one article mentioned that the son wanted to see his Mother's jewelry, which was his reason for the visit to the house.

After all the years, what has jewelry got to do with anything?

Maybe the Dad told his son (or a 3rd party) that the stepmom wears it? sold it? had it appraised and it's worth lots? Who knows- but the jewelry was a draw for the son it seems.

Family members know how to push buttons, and if this man is as sick as they say he is, that would be a dangerous thing to do.

It could be that Bruce Fast's remark was innocent and just came across as cold and indifferent in the article- who's to say.

I still wonder how the police found his truck BEFORE he got to it via taxi.

ls
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 10:25 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Records indicate that Thomas Fast is listed as a licensed funeral director and embalmer, but it is not known if he is currently working in that profession here in the Bay Area. .

Puts a new dimension on the matter.

http://tinyurl.com/233dsp


More excerpts:

At the bail hearing Sunday, it was disclosed that Thomas Fast was awaiting a July 23 trial in North Carolina on two weapons charges.


Bruce Fast told the Herald on Sunday his wife's disappearance came after months of threats from his son, who was diagnosed as suffering the mental illness, paranoid schizophrenia, 20 years ago.



http://www.bradenton.com/280/story/89036.html



MANATEE --Tara resident Bruce Fast said he and his wife have been living in fear for the past three months because of "open threats" from relatives.

This article states 3 months of threats.

http://www.bradenton.com/280/story/87673.html

More here:

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070703/NEWS/707030345


ls

**

One last excerpt:

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070703/NEWS/707030345


"He was actually a really nice guy," said a woman named Marie, who worked with Fast at a Miami funeral home and declined to give her last name. "Everyone around here loved him and hated to see him go."

Thomas Fast joined the Army in the late 1970s, in his mid-20s. As a medic with the 82nd Airborne Division, he would come home on holidays and tell unusual stories. Once, he told his family that he had helped free kidnapped Americans during the 1981 Iran hostage crisis, and that he was involved in vicious firefights in the Vietnam War.

"None of it was true," Bruce Fast said. "He's crazy as a coot. He's a liar. He sponges off people. He'll do anything as long as it benefits himself."

end excerpt
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rd



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PostPosted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 10:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's a very tough situation. Susan Fast came back to deal with payroll for the company. I doubt her husband wasn't taking care of something to wrap things up on that end where they were on vacation.

Yet they can't be forced to hire bodyguards because his son is threatening them.

Still, the timing is odd. If he's a drifter, is it just coincidence that he catches her when she returns to deal with payroll alone without his dad. Would he have killed them both, or done nothing if he was there, or knew she would be returning alone and was waiting?

I would find it very hard to believe any kind of communication with him at all that indicated their plans or whereabouts after months of threats. Maybe he was planning on robbing them while they were gone and she returned early?

rd
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 06, 2007 3:26 pm    Post subject: search continues Reply with quote

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070706/NEWS/707060341


<snip>

Missing Manatee woman search moves to I-75
STAFF REPORT

EAST MANATEE -- Acting on a "hunch," sheriff's detectives were searching Thursday in the thick brush on Linger Lodge Road near the Interstate 75 overpass for clues in the disappearance of Susan Fast.

Authorities still have not found the 60-year-old East Manatee woman who has been missing since Saturday.

For more than two hours Thursday, several deputies scoured the area for evidence. They would not say what led them to the site. They did not expect to find her body there, but had reason to believe they might find some evidence to further their case.

"We're trying to follow up on all leads," said Capt. Bill Jordan of the Manatee County Sheriff's Office. By early afternoon, they had not found any evidence. Deputies planned to return to the location on ATVs.

<snip>


Comments: wonder what lead them to this site,did someone call in a lead or does someone know something aside from what we all have figured out up until now?
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gozgals



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 06, 2007 3:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

My theory (or one of them) is that the son is extremely ill and out of control. He is broke and has a vendetta. He, of course, needed money. I think he wanted to harm them both and either planned to do this or stumbled upon Susan and it lead to a fight and he killed her.

Most likely if the husband was there, he would not have managed to take them both out or even Susan. Just my guess.

Goz
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