Aaron Fraser was just 3 when his mother disappeared in 1993 and he told the authorities that his father had done something to hurt her.
“Daddy shot Mommy,” he said then, according to court documents. “Daddy placed Mommy in time out.”
That account, from the mouth of child, was not enough to solve the case. But as an adult, Fraser would find the evidence that would.
The discovery came after more than two decades, years in which Fraser was adopted, won a wrongful death judgment against his biological father and acquired the rights to his childhood home in Jacksonville, Florida. He was doing renovations on the property in 2014 when he struck something in the ground and realised he had stumbled upon his mother’s remains.
His testimony, from 1993 and now, bookended a
“While some sins can be buried away, they are never forgotten,” Alan Mizrahi, a state prosecutor, said during the trial. “The truth was always out there, buried in their own backyard.”
Bonnie Haim went missing in 1993 after she made plans to leave her husband. She had saved money, looked for a new apartment and made plans to take her son and move out. But on the night of January 6, 1993, she disappeared after the
The next day, her purse was found in a dumpster and her car was found in an airport parking lot. A
But with Bonnie Haim still missing, the case went unsolved, and Fraser grew up to have no memory of what had happened.
By 2014, Fraser was in his 20s and had obtained the title to his childhood home, which he rented out. He was doing construction to remove the swimming pool when he accidentally dug up human remains. Fraser called his psychologist afterward and left her a message: “I think I might have found my mom.”