Update: Ind. pilot suspected of faking death is in custody
MILTON, Fla. - January 13, 2009 Authorities searched Monday for Marcus Schrenker after he
apparently made a phony distress call and secretly parachuted to
safety near Birmingham, Ala. His single-engine plane continued
flying on autopilot and eventually crashed late Sunday more than
200 miles away in a swampy area of the Florida Panhandle.
In the weeks before the crash, Schrenker's life was spiraling
downward: He lost a half-million-dollar judgment against one of his
companies when he skipped a court hearing. His wife filed for
divorce, and investigators probing his businesses for possible
securities violations searched his home and office.
Authorities believe Schrenker was last seen Monday morning in
Childersburg, Ala., just south of Birmingham, when a man using his
Indiana driver's license told police that he'd been in a canoe
accident. He was wet only from the knees down and had what appeared
to be goggles made for flying.
The investigation into the crash began Sunday night, when
Schrenker's single-engine Piper Malibu crashed in a swampy area of
north Florida.
The plane was en route from Anderson, Ind., to the Florida
Panhandle city of Destin when Schrenker reported turbulence. He
said the windshield had imploded and he was bleeding profusely,
according to the sheriff's office in Santa Rosa County, where the
plane crashed.
After he stopped responding to air traffic controllers, military
jets tried to intercept the plane. They noticed the door was open
and the cockpit was dark and continued to follow it until it
crashed in a bayou surrounded by homes.
But when investigators found the plane, its door was ajar and
the wreckage showed no signs of blood or the blown windshield. The
sheriff's office said Schrenker appeared to have intentionally
abandoned his plane.
Bill and Debbie Timbie, whose house is less than 100 yards from
where the plane crashed, were home Sunday night when they heard the
jets flying overhead. Bill Timbie gave rescuers looking for the
downed plane a ride through the swamp in his canoe.
"Now, after you think about it, it could have been real bad, it
could have taken out two or three houses," he said Monday.
The case grew stranger Monday morning, when the man with
Schrenker's license told police in Childersburg - about 225 miles
from where the plane crashed - that he'd been in a canoe accident
with friends.
The officers, unaware of the plane crash, took him to a hotel.
He was gone by the time they returned. They learned he had paid for
his room in cash before putting on a black cap and running into the
woods next to the hotel.
Authorities in Indiana have said little about the nature of the
investigation into Schrenker's businesses - Heritage Wealth
Management Inc., Heritage Insurance Services Inc. and Icon Wealth
Management - wealth management companies that provide financial
advice. Jim Gavin, a spokesman for Indiana's secretary of state,
said investigators are looking at possible securities violations,
and officers who searched Schrenker's home Dec. 31 were looking for
laptops, computers, notes, photos and other documents related to
those companies.
Court records show his wife, Michelle, filed for divorce a day
before the searches.
Gavin said the Indiana Securities Division obtained a temporary
restraining order Monday freezing the personal assets of Marcus
Schrenker and Michelle Schrenker and the assets of the three
companies.
On Friday, two days before the crash, a federal judge in
Maryland issued a $533,500 judgment against Heritage Wealth
Management Inc., and in favor of OM Financial Life Insurance Co.
The OM lawsuit contended that Heritage Wealth Management should
have returned more than $230,000 in commissions because there were
problems with insurance or annuity plans Heritage had sold.
Schrenker is an accomplished pilot with a background in
aerobatics, said Ron Smith, an interim manager at Anderson
Municipal Airport. He usually flies out of the airport about once a
week, making regular trips to Florida, he said.
"He's an outstanding pilot, from what I understand," Smith
said. "If he can fly aerobatics and a Meridian, you've got to be
pretty decent."
Those skills made Tom Britt, who edits a newsletter for the
affluent Indianapolis suburb in which Schrenker lives, suspicious
of the circumstances surrounding the crash when he heard about it
from a local reporter. Britt knew about the securities
investigation.
"I said, 'Do they have his body? Call the police and tell them
to pull the teeth out of it, because if there's a body in that
plane, I guarantee that's not Marc Schrenker,"' Britt said.
Residents jokingly call the community where Schrenker lives,
which overlooks a reservoir, "Cocktail Cove" because the boaters
plying its waters often have a mixed drink in hand.
The serene setting belies what Britt described as a sometimes
tense relationship between Schrenker and his neighors. He said
Schrenker has two sides - one very cordial and generous, the other
threatening and litigious - and that many in the neighborhood had
run-ins with him and "didn't care too much for him."