Warning: Graphic content, readers’ discretion advised. This article contains a recollection of crime and can be triggering to some readers discretion advised.
In 2013, two prosecutors and a prosecutor’s wife were murdered in Kaufman County, Texas. The case gained national attention in the United States due to speculation that the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang was responsible, but this was later found to be untrue. Eric Lyle Williams (born April 7, 1967), a former lawyer and justice of the peace whose theft case was prosecuted by two of the victims, was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to death for two of the murders. He was also charged with the murder of prosecutor Mark Hasse, but a decision was made not to prosecute him as he had already received a death sentence for the other murders. His wife, Kimberly Irene “Kim” Williams, was tried separately, and sentenced to 40 years in prison.
It’s Thursday morning outside the county courthouse in Kaufman, Texas. A man is screaming for his life in the parking lot. Then shots are fired.
Five shots ring out in broad daylight. Attorney Jenny Parks was heading into the courthouse. She saw friend and colleague Mark Hasse, Kaufman County’s Assistant District Attorney, lying shot on the ground.
“Everybody in the Dallas legal community knew Mark Hasse. He had a big reputation,”
said Collin County District Attorney Bill Wirskye. “He was a very prolific trial lawyer and had been a very successful prosecutor in Dallas for many years.”
Police dashcam catches the chaos.
Hasse was barely clinging to life, his body riddled with five bullets. He was rushed to a hospital, but it was too late. Mark Hasse died.
The Kaufman County sheriff says this was no random shooting. Hasse was targeted. But by whom?
“When a prosecutor is murdered, you have no shortage of suspects,” said Wirskye. “Every person that’s been put away by that prosecutor or been prosecuted becomes suspect number one.”
There were 25 years’ worth of suspects, including violent murderers and drug dealers.
And now with many of them out of jail, investigators wonder if one of them could be looking to settle a score.
Mark Hasse was armed when he was shot to death. Tragically, his gun was under his buttoned-up jacket. He didn’t have time to pull it out when he was ambushed.
After firing the fatal shots, the shooter and his getaway driver raced from the scene. But this happened in broad daylight, and there were witnesses. The getaway car is described as an older-model brown or silver sedan missing a license plate. Unfortunately no one got a good look at the two suspects. They tell cops the driver was too far away and the gunman was wearing a hood.
Mark hasse , mike McLelland
Because Hasse was a close friend of Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland, special prosecutors are brought in from the next county to oversee the investigation.
Bill Wirskye is one of the special prosecutors assigned to the case. While investigators track down possible suspects, there’s breaking news about another member of law enforcement being gunned down in Colorado.
“There was a prison warden in Colorado that had been murdered at his home by a white supremacist and that person fled down to Texas,” said Wirskye.
Could these two shootings be connected?
Just a little more than 100 miles from Kaufman County, a deputy with his dashboard-camera rolling corners the suspect in the Colorado murder: Evan Ebel, a recent parolee and white supremacist is sitting behind the wheel of the black Cadillac.
He’s got a pistol on his lap, lying in wait with his finger on the trigger, as the deputy approaches the car. Montague County Sheriff’s Deputy James Boyd is shot three times. Though gravely wounded, he will survive.
As for Ebel, he races off, leading deputies on a wild high-speed chase that comes to a crashing end when his car smashes into a semi-truck. Ebel was still alive inside the mangled mass of metal, and exchanging gunfire before deputies finally take him out.
Did Evan Ebel also gun down Mark Hasse, or is there another killer on the loose?
“He was proving that it was him by giving little details about the weapons used, the bullets used, how the killings had taken place,” said Kathryn Casey, author of In Plain Sight: The Kaufman County Prosecutor Murders.
And then in a chilling email exchange with officers through the Crime Stoppers website, this same person threatens to commit more murders unless a Kaufman judge resigns. The terrorizing tipster writes, “You have until Friday at 4 p.m.”
“We were unable to successfully trace that IP address back to the killer,” said Bill Wirskye. “It turns out had used the TOR network through the ‘Dark Web’ to access the website, and he was in a sense taunting us online.”
But detectives believe they might already know the man behind the twisted emails.
“After Mark was murdered and then after Mike and Cynthia was murdered, he became the one and only common denominator,” said Wirskye.
“Mark and Mike only tried one case together, and that was the case where they prosecuted Eric Williams.”
Eric Williams was the most unlikely of suspects. It wasn’t just his friendly babyface that made him a surprising person of interest. The married 46-year-old was a former National Guardsman and one-time member of the Kaufman County Chamber of Commerce. And that’s not all.
“He was the justice of the peace in town,” said author Kathryn Casey.
The man cops suspect just murdered three people was also a Kaufman County judge, a rising star in the legal community.
“He had gone from being the main CPS attorney in Kaufman to winning the J.P.’s position, and it came with power,” said Casey. “He had a bright future.”
That all changes when courthouse surveillance video surfaces starring the high-ranking and highly respected justice of the peace.
“On surveillance video, Eric was seen walking out of the IT department carrying Dell computer monitors,” said Casey. “He removed three of them on a Sunday afternoon when the building was closed. He was arrested on theft charges.”
and hwo prosecuted this case?
“Mark Hasse prosecuted this case and Mike McLelland was second chair,” said Casey.
Eric Williams pleaded not guilty. He was offered a plea deal, reducing the charges from a felony to a misdemeanor.
“He refused it. He thought he could talk his way through it,” said Casey. “I think he felt justified because, you know, he was trying to put that video surveillance system in at the courthouse to be able to do magistrations, and he was taking the monitors for that, or that was his defense.”
The jury doesn’t buy that defense the jury doesn’t buy. Williams is found guilty and gets two years’ probation.
But since Williams has been convicted of a felony, he automatically loses his justice of the peace position and his law license. In essence, he loses everything, and detectives believe that is his motive for the murders.
“I think it was just revenge,” said Bill Wirskye. “It was that simple. He wanted to take the lives of the two prosecutors that had prosecuted him. I believe in his mind, he wanted to take the lives of the people that had taken his life.”
“He had decided that he was entitled to this revenge, and everybody else was just collateral damage,” said Kathryn Casey.
But not everyone is convinced of Williams’ guilt.
“I thought he was a thoughtful considerate, kind, caring person,” said attorney Jenny Parks.
Attorney Jenny Parks worked with Eric Williams over the years and thought highly of the justice of the peace.
“There were several people that thought Eric was innocent, I wasn’t the only one in this county, there were several attorneys that didn’t want to believe it,” said Parks.
But there were plenty of people who believed Williams was capable of murder.
“Animosity that built up during the trial. The theft case had been so personal and that kind of an incubator of that little courthouse in that little town, that so much hate had built up,” said Casey.
But there’s just one problem concerning Eric Williams as the prime suspect: there’s not a stitch of evidence tying him to the triple murder. And Williams is refusing to talk to investigators.
“We were trying to get an interview with him, however his lawyers at the time prevented that,” said Wirskye.
Then detectives catch a break.
“We have evidence from video cameras in the neighborhood that show the white Crown Victoria, a typical police car, going into the neighborhood right before the murders and leaving the neighborhood right after the murders,” said Wirskye.
It’s the same car neighbors reported seeing on the morning the McLellands were gunned down. And even though the video is too grainy to make out the driver or passengers inside the vehicle:
“We knew then and there we had our man, and had the right person,” said Wirskye.
But there is no record of Eric Williams owning that type of vehicle. And you’ll remember that the getaway car used in Mark Hasse’s murder was described as a brown or silver sedan. But those seemingly contradicting facts don’t dissuade investigators.
“They thought that he had things stashed somewhere, but they just didn’t know where it was,” said Kathryn Casey.
Then in a strange turn of events, detectives actually receive word from Williams.
“Twelve days after the murders, he fired his lawyers and he actually wanted to talk with us in the investigation,” said Wirskye.
Right away, two Texas Rangers head out to Williams’ home. They make an audio recording of the conversation.
investigator: “can you understand why your name pops up about this”?
eric: “absolutely”.
investigator: ” did you have anything to do with it ?
eric: “no. absolutely not.”
Then the ask eric about how many guns he has in his home.
Investigator: ” you don´t have any more?
eric: i have , i have one gun i´m tryin´to sell and it´s just hard as hell to sell.
investigator: ” just curious, how many guns did you use to own?”
eric:” about sixteen.”
investigator: and you sold fifteen of ´em?
As a convicted felon he´s no lon ger allowed to own guns.
investigator #1 : ” i´d love to go back and say there´s no guns in that house. we´ve looked in that house.”
investigator #2 :” guess we could just look in there real quick?”
investigator: ” but you don´t mind uis just goin´ in there and looking?
eric:” okay”
Kathryn Casey:” eric williams little house of horrors.”
Bill Wirskye:” eric williams would stop at nothing till he got his revenge.
District Attorney Mike McLelland and his wife were gunned down before dawn. Investigators have seen enough.
“They had enough evidence to get a search warrant, and that was the first big break,” said Kathryn Casey.
The very next day Kaufman County investigators return and they bring backup: the FBI. And they go through every square inch of Williams’ home. Inside a filing cabinet investigators discover the title to a white Crown Victoria vehicle in Eric Williams’ name, the same type of car spotted in the McLellands neighborhood around the time of the murders. It had been purchased just weeks before. And that’s not all.
“You knew what was going to happen.”
“Yes I did.”
“Why did you agree to drive to the murder of Mark Hasse?”
“I was so drugged up and I so believed in Eric and everything that he told me. His anger was my anger.”
She testified he was almost giddy that murderous morning.
But the former justice of the peace wasn’t done killing.
Kim also confessed she was behind the wheel of that white Crown Victoria when her husband ambushed Mike McLelland and his wife Cynthia, slaughtering them in their own home in pre-dawn hours.
“They celebrated by eating steaks after the murders to celebrate the deaths of the McLellands,” said Bill Wirskye.
Even after killing McLelland and Hasse, Kim testified her husband still had a thirst for blood, claiming he actually made a hit list.
“After the McLellands were killed, were there more on the hit list?”
“Yes.”
“Who is that?”
“Erleigh Wiley.”
Erleigh Wiley is the new Kaufman County District Attorney who took over after Mike McLelland was murdered. Why did Eric Williams want her dead? Turns out Erleigh Wiley was a judge and caught Williams, overbilling the county when he was a court-appointed attorney. That was years before Williams was busted for stealing computer parts.
Williams was reprimanded, and that apparently was enough to put a target on the new D.A.’s back.
“And who else?”
“Judge Ashworth.”
Judge Glen Ashworth
Judge Glen Ashworth was considered a longtime friend of Eric Williams. But the former justice of the peace believed Judge Ashworth is the one who leaked information that led to his conviction for stealing computer equipment. And Kim testifies her husband had something extra terrifying in mind for him that involved that crossbow and napalm.
“How did he tell you he was going to kill Judge Ashworth?”
“He was going to wait until after Super Bowl and he was gonna wait for him and shoot him with the crossbow and then bore his stomach out and put the napalm in it.”
Remember, this is the same man who once tried to offer comfort to the victims.
It doesn’t take long for the jury to reach a verdict. Eric Lyle Williams is found guilty of capital murder.
Williams was sentenced to death by lethal injection.
The son of former D.A. Mike McLelland and his wife Cynthia, J.R. McLelland says he’ll be the one eating steak that night.
Prosecutors believe they stopped what they call a cold and calculated killing machine just in the nick of time.
“I don’t think the killings would have stopped unless we stopped Eric Williams,” said Bill Wirskye.
One day after she was indicted, Kim Williams filed for divorce. She said she believed her husband had a plan to kill her and himself when he was done killing all the people on his hit list.
Eric Williams appealed his conviction. That appeal was denied.