Why Florida Grandmother Killed Her Husband and Buried Him in Her Herb Garden
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In January 2012, 67-year-old Barbara Scott began sharing inconsistent stories with her family about the whereabouts of her 77-year-old husband, Benny. As a mother and grandmother, her shifting tales raised concerns.

Barbara initially claimed Benny was either in Oklahoma, their home state, or in Lake Alfred, Florida, where they’d resided for the past three years. However, towards the end of March, she made a startling confession—she said Benny had fallen ill, passed away at home, and that she had taken care of his remains herself.

During the November 16 episode of Oxygen’s Killer Grannies, Benny’s daughter, Pam Harris, shared her account. “She dragged him out and buried him in their backyard,” Pam revealed.

The latest episode of the series, aptly named “Granny’s Garden” and hosted by June Squibb, featured Pam describing the surreal nature of the situation. “I swear,” she remarked, “it feels just like an episode of the Twilight Zone.”

What did Barbara Scott tell sheriffs?

Following these revelations, Barbara’s daughter, Sonya, escorted her to the police station. There, Barbara was questioned with her attorney present.

Detective David Clark, now retired from the Polk County Sheriff’s Department, recounted, “Barbara said her husband died on January 2 while in the shower. She believes he might have slipped, hit his head, and fallen.”

She said that she rolled him onto a rug and dragged him outside. Then, Barbara’s account took a startling twist. She claimed that she found a gun near the shower and Benny might have a bullet hole in his head.

“She says, ‘Well, I think he may have shot himself,’” said Clark. “I’m not sure. But I saw the gun.” 

Barbara appeared lucid and didn’t seem to be having memories issues. But red flags raised when her account of Benny’s death suddenly went from an accident to a suicide.

Barbara Scott’s herb garden

Police searched Barbara’s residence and then focused on the backyard. As they dug in the herb garden, they were struck by the smell of decomposition.

They unearthed Benny from a shallow grave. His hands and feet were bound, and his head had a bullet wound.

“It looked like a professional hit,” said Clark. “This does not look like a suicide.” 

Benny had been wrapped in a tarp, according to Lake Alfred PD Chief Art Bodenheimer. Barbara claimed she’d dragged him into the garage before burying him and that she tied him up to make it easier to move him.

Officials comb through evidence

Police carefully searched Barbara’s home for evidence that supported or contradicted her account. 

They found traces of blood in the bathroom and garage and a gun in a drawer where she said it would be. 

Neighbors told police they hadn’t seen Benny for months and that Barbara had been selling his belonging at garage sales. Barbara explained to them that Benny was in Oklahoma. 

“She says, ‘He’s having a blast with his friends and he just realized that he was not cut out to be in Florida,’” said WTSP-TV former senior investigative reporter Mike Neeson, “‘Our marriage is over.’”

Police investigate Barbara Scott’s past

Detectives learned from Sonya that her mom had been under a lot of stress caring for her mother and stepfather as well as Benny.

When they dug into Barbara’s past, investigators found that she had a criminal record. She was arrested in 1988 for embezzling $64,000 and served five years for the offense.

Police also learned that her previous husband, Marvin Toolate, died unexpectedly at age 53 at home in the bathtub. His cause of death was ruled acute ethanol intoxication. In layman’s terms, said Deeson, “He drank himself to death.” 

What Benny Scott’s autopsy revealed

After performing Benny’s autopsy, the medical examiner concluded the gunshot wound wasn’t consistent with a suicide. 

Based on data from Benny’s pacemaker, he died at 3 a.m. on Jan. 2. That detail didn’t match Barbara’s account, casting more doubt on her version of the events of Benny’s death.

The cause of death was deemed to be a gunshot. The manner of death was ruled a homicide.

Detectives turned their focus on finding out where the gun that killed Benny came from. They learned that Benny and Barbara had visited Oklahoma and that a .22 caliber handgun his son-in-law Gary Harris had stored in a garage was missing. 

That description matched the gun found in Barbara’s Florida home. 

Barbara Scott charged with murder

Investigators presented their evidence to a grand jury. Barbara and her defense team presented her side of the story. She claimed that Benny killed himself, she didn’t know where the gun came from and admitted she buried him.

“I think what Barbara was maybe trying to get across,” said Pam, “was that Benny, my dad, found the gun and took it and drove it back to Florida with him.”

On April 12, 2012, the grand jury came back with a first-degree murder indictment. Barbara was arrested.

Barbara Scott tried and convicted

Barbara remained in custody for about two years and she steadfastly maintained her innocence. 

When the trial began, prosecutors presented the theory that Barbara killed Benny to relieve herself of the burden of caring for him. They argued that Barbara stole the gun from her son-in-law.

On April 24, 2014, Barbara was found guilty of first-degree murder and tampering with evidence. She was sentenced to life in prison.

Watch Killer Grannies Sundays at 8/7c p.m. on Oxygen.

 

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