Monster of Mayport, Nine Days, Seven Deaths, and the Making of a Florida KillerIn May 2003, William Edward Wells III sealed a bedroom door with duct tape, piled dirty laundry over the bodies of his wife and two of her family members, and waited. Over nine days in a Mayport, Florida mobile home, he would kill five people, a domestic mass murder that shocked a tight-knit coastal community already shaped by generations of normalised violence, commercial feuding, and the long shadow of a father who had killed two children on a Florida road in 1961.
But the Mayport massacre was only the beginning. Monster of Mayport traces the full criminal arc of Wells from his formation in the insular world of Gulf Coast shrimping to the maximum-security prisons of Florida, where, serving five consecutive life sentences, he discovered that additional incarceration held no power over a man with nothing left to lose. Two more institutional homicides followed, each more sophisticated than the last, culminating in a premeditated execution planned across thirty days of camera analysis in a prison dayroom blind spot.
Drawing on criminological research, forensic psychology, and the sociology of community violence, this book examines what Wells' story reveals about transgenerational violence, the structural failures of carceral management, and the limits of a legal system that creates the very conditions it cannot contain. Seven people are dead. The system failed every one of them. This is the full reckoning.
Monster of Mayport, Nine Days, Seven Deaths, and the Making of a Florida KillerIn May 2003, William Edward Wells III sealed a bedroom door with duct tape, piled dirty laundry over the bodies of his wife and two of her family members, and waited. Over nine days in a Mayport, Florida mobile home, he would kill five people, a domestic mass murder that shocked a tight-knit coastal community already shaped by generations of normalised violence, commercial feuding, and the long shadow of a father who had killed two children on a Florida road in 1961.
But the Mayport massacre was only the beginning. Monster of Mayport traces the full criminal arc of Wells from his formation in the insular world of Gulf Coast shrimping to the maximum-security prisons of Florida, where, serving five consecutive life sentences, he discovered that additional incarceration held no power over a man with nothing left to lose. Two more institutional homicides followed, each more sophisticated than the last, culminating in a premeditated execution planned across thirty days of camera analysis in a prison dayroom blind spot.
Drawing on criminological research, forensic psychology, and the sociology of community violence, this book examines what Wells' story reveals about transgenerational violence, the structural failures of carceral management, and the limits of a legal system that creates the very conditions it cannot contain. Seven people are dead. The system failed every one of them. This is the full reckoning.