Judias Buenoano

Born in Quanah, Texas, on April 4, 1943, Judias Welty was the
daughter of an itinerant farm worker, named after her mother. In later years,
Judi would describe her mother as a full-blooded member of the nonexistent
Mesquite Apache tribe, but in fact, they hardly knew each other. The elder
Judias Welty died of tuberculosis when her daughter was barely two years old,
and the family disintegrated. Judi and her infant brother Robert were sent to
live with their grandparents, while two older siblings were placed for adoption.
It was all downhill from there, in terms of Judis family life.
Reunited with her father in Roswell, New Mexico, after his next marriage, she
found herself the target of abuse from both parents--beaten, starved, burned
with cigarettes, forced to work slave hours around the house. At age fourteen,
her anger finally exploded: Judi scalded two of her stepbrothers with hot grease
and lit into her parents with flying fists, feet, any object she could lay her
hands on. The episode cost her sixty days in jail, confined with adult
prostitutes, but when the judge asked if she was ready to go home, Judi opted
for reform school. She remained at Foothills High School--a girls reformatory in
Albuquerque-- until her graduation in 1959, at age sixteen, and she would
despise her family from that day on. Of brother Robert, she once said, I wouldnt
spit down his throat if his guts were on fire.
The year 1960 found Judi back in Roswell, working as a nurses aide under the
pseudonym of Anna Schultz. She gave birth to an illegitimate son, christened
Michael Schultz, on March 30, 1961, and ever after refused comment on rumors
that his father was a pilot from the nearby air force base. On January 21, 1962,
she married another air force officer, James Goodyear, and their first
child--James, Jr.--was born four years later, on January 16, 1966. Judis husband
celebrated the event by adopting Michael Schultz. Daughter Kimberly followed in
1967, after the family had moved to Orlando, Florida. A year later, Judias
opened the Conway Acres Child Care Center in Orlando, listing her husband as
co-owner despite his continuing service with the Air Force, which would soon
include a tour of duty in Vietnam. In fact, James Goodyear, Sr., had been home
from Southeast Asia for barely three months when he was admitted to the U.S.
Naval Hospital in Orlando, suffering from symptoms staff physicians never quite
identified. He died on September 15, 1971, and Judi waited a discreet five days
before cashing in his three life insurance policies. Before years end, an
accidental blaze at her Orlando home paid Judy another $90,000 in fire
insurance. It was rotten luck all around ... but at least it paid well.
Loneliness was not a problem for the recent widow. She moved her family to
Pensacola in 1972, and was living with new lover Bobby Joe the following year.
Son Michael, meanwhile, had become a problem for his mother, raising hell in
school, scoring in the dull-normal range on IQ tests. James Goodyears death
barred Mike from treatment at a residential facility reserved for military
dependents, but Judi wangled an evaluation at the state hospital in 1974,
farming her first-born out to foster care with a provision for psychiatric
treatment. Bobby Morris moved to Trinidad, Colorado, in 1977, inviting Judi and
her brood to join him. She hung around Pensacola long enough to collect fire
insurance on a second house, then reclaimed Michael from foster care and moved
west with her tribe, settling in Trinidad as Judias Morris. Bobby Joe was
admitted to San Rafael Hospital on January 4, 1978, but doctors could find no
cause for his sudden illness, and he was released to Judis care on January 21.
Two days later, he collapsed at the dinner table and was rushed back to the
hospital, where he died on January 28, his death officially ascribed to cardiac
arrest and metabolic acidosis. In early February, Judi cashed three life
insurance policies on Morris, further fattening her bank account. Bobby Joes
family suspected murder from the first, and Morris was not the only victim on
their list. In 1974, Judi and Bobby Joe had been visiting Morriss hometown of
Brewton, Alabama, when a male resident of Florida was found dead in a Brewton
motel. An anonymous call, traced to a local pay phone, led police to the room
where the victim was found, shot in the chest with a .22-caliber weapon, his
throat slashed for good measure.
After the news broke, Bobby Joes mother overheard Judy telling Bobby Joe, The
son of a bitch shouldnt have come up here in the first place. He knew if he came
up here he was gonna die. Later, raving in delirium on his deathbed, Morris
blurted out, Judi, we should never have done that terrible thing. Police in
Brewton, meanwhile, report that they could find no fingerprints inside the room,
no bullet was recovered from the corpse, and they have no firm suspects in the
case. On May 3, 1978, Judias legally changed her own last name and that of her
children to Buenoano, the Spanish equivalent of Goodyear, in an apparent tribute
to her late husband and mythical Apache mother. A month later, the family was
back in Pensacola, settling into a home on Whisper Pine Drive, in suburban Gulf
Breeze.
Michael Buenoano had continued his pattern of academic failure by dropping out
of high school in his sophomore year, and he joined the army in June 1979,
drawing an assignment to Ft. Benning, Georgia, after basic training. En route to
his new post, he stopped off to visit his mother in Florida, and that was the
beginning of the end. When he reached Ft. Benning on November 6, he was already
showing symptoms of base metal poisoning. Army physicians found seven times the
normal level of arsenic in Michaels body, and there was little they could do to
reverse its destructive action. After six weeks of care, the muscles of his arms
and lower legs had atrophied to the point where Michael could neither walk nor
use his hands. He finally left the hospital wearing braces and a prosthetic
device on one arm, the gear weighing a total of sixty pounds.
On May 13, 1980, Michael was canoeing with his mother and younger brother on the
East River, near Milton, Florida, when their boat overturned. James and Judi--
described in press reports of the incident as Dr. Judias Buenoano, a clinical
physician in Ft. Walton--made it safely to shore, but Michael sank like a stone
and drowned. Local authorities accepted Dr. Judis description of the accident
and closed their files, but army investigators were more persistent, launching
their own search for evidence on May 27. Michaels military life insurance
finally paid off in mid-September, to the tune of $20,000, and sheriffs officers
began taking a new look at the case when they discovered two civilian policies
on Michaels life. Handwriting experts suggested that Michaels signature on the
insurance applications may have been forged.
Judy, meanwhile, went on as best she could without her eldest son, opening a
beauty parlor in Gulf Breeze, dating Pensacola businessman John Gentry II. For
Gentrys benefit, she fabricated a stint at nursing school, with Ph.D.s in
biochemistry and psychology from the University of Alabama, plus a recent tour
of duty as the head of nursing at West Florida Hospital. It was all nonsense,
but Gentry swallowed the bait, indulging Judis taste for expensive gifts,
Caribbean cruises, and imported champagne.
In October 1982, John and Judi purchased life insurance policies on one another,
Judi later boosting the coverage from $50,000 to $500,000 without Gentrys
knowledge, paying the premiums out of her own pocket. By December, she was
feeding Gentry vitamin capsules that produced dizziness and vomiting.
Hospitalized for twelve days beginning December 16, Gentry noted that his
symptoms disappeared when he stopped taking the vitamins. Even so, he was not
suspicious enough to break off his relationship with Judi in the interest of
survival.
On June 25, 1983, Gentry left a dinner party early, planning to pick up some
champagne for a private session with Judi. They had much to celebrate, it
seemed, for Judi had told him she was carrying his child. John never made it to
the liquor store, however, as a bomb exploded in his car when he turned the
ignition key. Near death, he was rushed to the hospital where trauma surgeons
managed to save his life.
Police got their first crack at questioning Gentry on June 29, learning of the
victims curious insurance situation. A background check revealed the gaping
holes in Dr. Buenoanos new biography, and Gentry was stunned to discover that
her pregnancy was also a lie, Judi having been surgically sterilized in 1975.
Detectives further learned that Judi had been telling friends about Gentrys
terminal illness since November 1982, lately booking tickets for a world cruise
including herself and her children ... without Gentry.
It was enough for John, and he provided police with several of the vitamin
capsules Judi had prescribed in 1982. Analysis revealed that they contained
paraformaldehyde, a poison with no known medical uses, but Floridas state
attorney declined to file charges of attempted murder, citing insufficient
evidence to prosecute. On July 27, count officers and federal agents searched
Judis home in Gulf Breeze, retrieving wire and tape from her bedroom that seemed
to match the Gentry car bomb. In Jamess room, they also found marijuana and a
sawed-off shotgun, jailing him for possession of drugs and an illegal weapon.
Judi, meanwhile, was arrested at her beauty shop on charges of attempted murder.
By mid-August, authorities had traced the source of the dynamite used in the
bomb, linking the Alabama buyer to Judi via phone records showing a dozen
long-distance calls from her home.
Judi made bail on the attempted murder charge, but there was worse in store. On
January 11, 1984, she was indicted for first-degree murder in the death of her
son, with an additional count of grand theft for the insurance scam. Arrested
that evening, she staged a fit of convulsions and wound up in Santa Rosa
Hospital under guard. The wheels of justice were sluggish, but there was no
stopping them once they started to roll. Bobby Joe Morris was exhumed on
February 11, with arsenic found in his remains. Identical results were obtained
with the exhumation of James Good-year, on March 14, 1984. Judis trial in the
first murder case-- Michaels--began on March 22, and she was convicted on all
counts nine days later. On June 6 she was sentenced to life imprisonment without
parole for the first twenty-five years. July found Florida authorities exhuming
the body of late boyfriend Gerald Dossett, deceased since 1980, in another
search for arsenic, but no charges were filed in that case. On August 10, James
Buenoano was acquitted of trying to kill James Gentry, but his mother would be
less fortunate. Judis trial in that case opened October 15 and lasted three
days; jurors deliberated a mere two hours before voting to convict, and Judis
12-year prison sentence was made consecutive with her life term for Michaels
slaying. A year later, on October 22, 1985, Judi went to trial for the murder of
husband James Goodyear. The trial consumed a week, with Judi denying any
criminal activity, but jurors werent buying her act. Convicted on her second
charge of first-degree murder, she was formally sentenced to death on November
16. Her latest stay of execution was granted by a federal court in June 1990,
and the case remains under appeal. In the unlikely event of Judis release from
Florida, Colorado authorities stand ready to prosecute capital charges in the
death of Bobby Joe Morris.
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