iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

British Fugitive 'Fast' Eddie Maher Lived Inconspicuous Life In US (VIDEO)

Fast Eddie Maher

By MARIA SUDEKUM   02/19/12 01:48 PM ET  AP

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- On the surface, Edward Maher and his wife appeared to enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. They had homes in quiet neighborhoods, drove late-model cars and took occasional weekend trips. They raised two sons.

But beneath that veneer lay a darker past: Maher was an international fugitive – wanted in Britain on allegations that he stole a fortune worth $1.5 million back in 1993 while working as a security guard for an armored truck company.

When he was captured in rural Missouri, the suspect dubbed "Fast Eddie" by the British media had managed to evade arrest for nearly two decades. Public records and interviews with neighbors suggest he did so mostly by living an inconspicuous life of unremarkable jobs and making frequent, sometimes abrupt cross-country moves.

Maher's adult son, Lee, claims his parents did not tell him anything about their real identities until shortly before his father was arrested Feb. 8.

"I had just found out that my life is ... not anything that I thought it was," the 23-year-old Maher said in a phone interview.

Growing up, he said, "nothing ever seemed out of the ordinary. It's not something I would even consider because everything was so normal. It really kills me for it to be portrayed this way. I had no idea."

Prior to his arrest, Maher was last seen sitting in an armored truck in Britain, waiting for a fellow security guard to return from a bank with a load of cash. Maher, who was then in his mid-30s, vanished, along with the armored truck.

The vehicle was later found abandoned. Fifty bags of coins and currency were gone.

Authorities offered a reward. Sightings were reported across Europe. But Maher's trail quickly went cold.

At some point, the family fled to the U.S., where Maher often used a brother's name or the alias Stephen King.

No one knows what happened to the money. Spread over nearly two decades, the stolen cash would amount to $75,000 a year – enough for a contented, though not extravagant lifestyle.

To throw off any pursuers, Maher sometimes uprooted the family. At least once, they left in the dark without saying goodbye.

"They literally packed up and moved in the middle of the night," said Betsy Voit, a neighbor when they lived in Grafton, Wis., about 25 miles north of Milwaukee.

Jim Coffey lived across the street from the "Kings" in Laconia, N.H., for several years in the 1990s. He described them as a quiet, seemingly affluent family.

"They were always buying things," Coffey said. "They put in a new pool. They were always doing something around the house."

The man Coffey knew as Stephen King was a "very pleasant fellow" who spoke with a British accent. One day, a truck from the Fast Cash Trading Center in nearby Tilton showed up and took away most of the furniture. King's explanation was that they were buying new furniture.

"Next thing you knew, they were gone," Coffey said. "They were here one day and disappeared the next."

By 2004, the family was living in Philadelphia, where Maher worked for Nielsen Media Research as a field representative and supervisor. They then moved to Milwaukee, where he became a field supervisor for the company in 2005 and a regional manager in the St. Paul, Minn., area in 2007. He was laid off from Nielsen in 2008.

His wife, Deborah Ann Brett, who went by Sarah, acknowledged to neighbors that the family had guns. But she didn't want anyone to worry. The weapons were always locked up, Voit said, and the Maher family used to go to a firing range regularly.

Sarah didn't often open up about her background. She said the family had moved from Pennsylvania because of Maher's job, and she showed Voit a photograph of their old house, a home that Voit described as a "mansion."

In Wisconsin, the family lived in a two-story townhome near a large park. Voit said they never flaunted any wealth, but they also spent freely. They bought four expensive mountain bikes, which they used for several months and then abandoned in Voit's backyard when they moved away.

Sarah, a homemaker, once mentioned to Voit that her family needed a second vehicle. Shortly thereafter, her husband drove up in a decked-out SUV for her.

"The one thing I remember her saying was that they didn't believe in payments," Voit said. They preferred to pay in cash.

Sometime in 2008, the family moved to the small town of Ozark, Mo. And in 2010, the family's finances soured so badly that they filed for bankruptcy.

Maher, now making about $2,000 a month as a cable technician, reported having only $85 in his checking account and a slew of bills from hospitals, dentists and credit card companies. The Internal Revenue Service was after him for $3,148 for back taxes.

Hannah Evans, a former girlfriend of Lee Maher's who says she's pregnant with his child, described the family as traditional. The father was the boss.

"When Mike came home it was about Mike. You had to be quiet, and Sarah devoted all of this attention to him," said Evans, who lives in Springfield. "It was like their family felt very kind of 1950s. ... He's in charge, what he says goes. It's all about pleasing him."

Early in their relationship, Lee told her that he had learned as a teenager that he had actually been born in Britain and that his father had a different identity, Evans said.

Months later, after she told Lee she wanted to break up – in part because of his "constant lying" – he shared the story of "Fast Eddie" and said his father had robbed the armored car. She felt that was Lee's way of explaining his own penchant for lies.

"He said `This is just how I am. I've been trained to lie by my parents because they've lied to me,'" Evans said.

Lee Maher denied knowing anything about his father's earlier life until this month.

Evans said she did an Internet search then for "Fast Eddie" and found only a rapper under that name, so assumed it was "another of Lee's lies."

But soon authorities were in pursuit. Ozark police, working on a tip, contacted the FBI about Maher. They had heard he was a possible fugitive, but there was no active warrant that would justify an arrest. Authorities then determined he was in the U.S. illegally and picked him up on a weapons charge. He acknowledged using a fake name and was jailed.

British police have asked that Maher, now 56, be returned to his home country, but the extradition process could take months.

The day after Maher's arrest, his wife appeared wan but resolute. She declined to discuss the family's past or any criminal allegations. But she said if Maher is sent back to Britain, the family will go there with him.

"He's a wonderful father and a wonderful husband," she said, patting the head of her younger son. "He's never hurt anybody."

___

Sudekum reported from Kansas City and Ozark, Mo. Associated Press writers Dinesh Ramde in Grafton, Wis.; Lynne Tuohy in Concord, N.H; Steve Karnowski in Woodbury, Minn.; and Jill Lawless in London also contributed to this report.


Below are photos from the "Fast Eddie" case:
1  of  6
PLAY
FULLSCREEN
ZOOM
SHARE THIS SLIDE 
"Fast Eddie" Maher was caught after 20 years on the run from authorities.
FOLLOW HUFFPOST CRIME

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- On the surface, Edward Maher and his wife appeared to enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. They had homes in quiet neighborhoods, drove late-model cars and took occasional weeken...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- On the surface, Edward Maher and his wife appeared to enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. They had homes in quiet neighborhoods, drove late-model cars and took occasional weeken...
Filed by David Moye  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 811
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (17 total)
05:46 PM on 02/22/2012
I find these comments amazing ....however I am not suprised before you judge this man try and look into his life ....he would lay his down for anyone ....he is no john dillinger just an ordinary man ....
12:03 PM on 02/22/2012
This guy looks like the personification of every dirty, old, promiscuous uncle/PE teacher
05:59 PM on 02/22/2012
How dare you judge when you no nothing
johns123123
To Be Or Not To Be...That IS The Answer
09:04 AM on 02/22/2012
Should change name to "incarcerated Eddie".
03:15 PM on 02/21/2012
How did he get all these jobs in the US ? He would need a social security number etc. How did he get a US drivers license ? When went to renew my drivers license last year, I had to have a birth certificate or social security card and one other form of identification. And I was just renewing my license. Don't know how he did it.
08:52 PM on 02/21/2012
He used his brothers name so it was actually pretty simple.
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:32 PM on 02/21/2012
Somehow this doesn't surpise me at all - given the right circumstances and luck - it can be achieved
02:08 PM on 02/21/2012
no
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kathie Shaffer
02:06 PM on 02/21/2012
it just goes to show you !!
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:33 PM on 02/21/2012
what what what does it show us - pleeeezzzzzzzzzzz the suspence is killin us - (:-)))))) sorry had a moment there !!
denisedts
Here there and everywhere
02:00 PM on 02/21/2012
I think its a sad twisted life to lead especially when you have children. His kids surely didn't do anything to deserve the kinda life they had and look at what happened. They are a product of their parents making. Ahhhh well this too shall pass and maybe his now grown kids can get on with leading a normal life.
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:35 PM on 02/21/2012
now the question is whether the kids are here legally - unless they were born here , deportetion hearings maybe next !!
06:18 PM on 02/22/2012
Appart one they ate illegal too .....
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AmosKnows
Educating The American Idol Masses
02:00 PM on 02/21/2012
So he stole a million dollars so he could work for a living but spend extravagantly. Not sure I understand the logic.Must have been an impulsive crime that couldn't be undone.
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:38 PM on 02/21/2012
nahhhhhhhhhhh , I can see someone doin this , havin a comfort zone , and workin to keep their fortunes hidden - I really don't see the difference in what he did over what wall street has done to the rest of this country - but thats another topic !!
05:51 PM on 02/22/2012
God at last some sense.....why do crimes concerning finance mean more than human life he didn't hurt a sole ....
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:39 PM on 02/21/2012
also , what comes to mind , might be the fact that he "thought" he would have been able to get more than the 1.5 he did get
06:19 PM on 02/22/2012
O don't think that entered his head ....
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alexchip192
01:45 PM on 02/21/2012
Lie down with dogs - wakeup with fleas.
photo
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:40 PM on 02/21/2012
is that like "goin to bed with itchy butt , wakin up with stinky finger " ? (:-))))))))))
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frycat44
01:30 PM on 02/21/2012
why would he hurt anyone he already has gotten all the free money he needed she knew ,she should be prosecuted.
01:22 PM on 02/21/2012
hi unclebob
03:43 PM on 02/21/2012
Hi reaper!!
01:21 PM on 02/21/2012
well atleast some one got some money that us poor ppl ( lol) never get to see.. yeah it sucks but as for stealing from "us" that is why the banks are FDIC so yeah maybe but he got away with so lots more years than most GO BABY GO!!!!!
06:07 PM on 02/22/2012
Go you reading this from England ....you are do spot on x
01:19 PM on 02/21/2012
weird
01:18 PM on 02/21/2012
Would be interesting to know what kind of a system he used for converting a million British pounds to U.S. dollars. That had to be intricate not to raise suspisions by banks or the IRS.
08:54 PM on 02/21/2012
Small amounts at numerous different currency exchanges over many years would work.