Mechanic confesses to three murders
Posted by Joe on February 26 2006 5:07 PM

Brian Bethell was desperate.
Broke and facing eviction from a rented four-bedroom Margate home, he took to extreme measures to keep himself, his girlfriend and her two children afloat.
Police said the car mechanic started a killing spree.
A return trip to a Coral Springs Wal-Mart with stolen credit cards tripped him up.
Bethell, 40, confessed Saturday to killing three people in a span of three weeks -- a good Samaritan who brought food and lottery tickets for the homeless, an Aventura grandfather who had taken his wife to a Miami show and, on Friday night, a man who had stopped off in Plantation Gardens to pick up a friend to take her ballroom dancing.
Extended News

Brian Bethell was desperate.
Broke and facing eviction from a rented four-bedroom Margate home, he took to extreme measures to keep himself, his girlfriend and her two children afloat.
Police said the car mechanic started a killing spree.
A return trip to a Coral Springs Wal-Mart with stolen credit cards tripped him up.
Bethell, 40, confessed Saturday to killing three people in a span of three weeks -- a good Samaritan who brought food and lottery tickets for the homeless, an Aventura grandfather who had taken his wife to a Miami show and, on Friday night, a man who had stopped off in Plantation Gardens to pick up a friend to take her ballroom dancing.
All of the killings occurred on a Friday.
Now, some investigators worry they may have a serial killer on their hands.
''He's done three in the last three weeks for certain,'' said John Coffey, special agent supervisor of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. ``We're looking for others.''
So far, Bethell, a mechanic who neighbors described as ''humble, polite and pretty decent guy'' is only charged with two counts of first-degree murder.
Police say Bethell shot and killed Frederick Gunther, 76, of Pompano Beach around 7 p.m. Friday as he walked to a Plantation condo.
The shooter took his wallet and cell phone.
Bethell and his girlfriend, Natasha Rishone Edwards, 20, then went shopping with Gunther's stolen credit card at a Coral Springs Wal-Mart Supercenter -- the same place police say a man and woman showed up with Albert Avenaim's credit card on Feb. 10, hours after he was killed in Hallandale Beach as he tried to park his Silver BMW convertible in a parking lot at Padrino's restaurant, investigators said.
In that shooting, witnesses told police a driver in a black car suddenly blocked Avenaim, 63, in. The man got out, wrestled with Avenaim, shot him in the left rib cage and took off.
Avenaim's cellphone and wallet were stolen. The credit card later was used by a man to fuel up at a gas station and buy paper towels, clothes and soft drinks.
Investigators had released a grainy surveillance video from a Sunrise Wal-Mart on the same night showing a man and a woman entering and leaving the store where Avenaim's credit card also was used. The woman was pushing a shopping cart with two small children.
Investigators now say the pair were Bethell and Edwards.
On Friday morning, Avenaim's anguished family held a press conference at the Coral Springs Wal-Mart, offering a $10,000 reward leading to their loved one's killer. They left Crime Stoppers posters all around.
SHARP-EYED WORKERS
Late Friday evening, alert Wal-Mart employees noticed a man and woman who police later identified as Bethell and Edward entering the store.
Store clerks remember a calm Bethell, dressed in shorts, whose hair looked unkempt.
He rolled a packed shopping card to the checkout, with more than $100 of food, can goods and baby clothing and said hello.
He paid by credit card.
When the couple left, one store employee followed the pair out to a black Hyundai Sonata. She took off her Wal-Mart jacket and fiddled around with a car parked next to theirs while noting the couple's Florida license tag number. She called police from her cell phone.
FDLE and police officers rushed over, but missed them by minutes.
TRACKED LICENSE PLATE
They tracked the license plate to Bethell's address in Margate where he rents a house for $700 a month. By 10:30 p.m., FDLE had three murder confessions from Bethell and information on the gun used in the killings.
The third killing that Bethell confessed to was Angel Pedro Medina, 41, of Margate, on Feb. 3. Charges were expected to be filed, according to Fort Lauderdale Police.
Medina was shot multiple times during an attempted robbery in the 900 block of Powerline Road, just south of Sunrise Boulevard.
Authorities also took Edwards into custody, but say they don't believe she knew about the murders. She faces grand theft, fraud and accessory charges.
Records show Bethell, who filed for bankruptcy twice, has been arrested on drug charges in Broward. He also has a charge of grand theft of a motor vehicle in Leon County.
Now, investigators are looking into unsolved murder cases in other places where Bethell may have been.
One neighbor recalled seeing Bethel fixing a Cadillac and Oldsmobile until the wee hours of the night. Bethel worked as a mechanic at several shops including Brake World in Margate, another neighbor said.
He usually wore a mechanic's uniform -- light blue shirt and dark blue pants, said landlord Thomas Rogers, owner of the home Bethell lived in.
''He looked and smelled and dressed like a mechanic,'' Roger said.
RELIEF, ANGER
Family members were relieved and angry.
''We feel cheated by this,'' said Gordon Gunther, son of Frederick Gunther. ``Many of his family lived very long lives. His mother lived to 96.''
Gordon Gunther, 52, of Morgan Hill, Calif., said his father, who loved ballroom dancing, was picking up a female friend in Plantation when he was killed. Gunther was planning to fly to Las Vegas on Monday to meet up with five of his siblings.
Gunther, who worked as a night watchman until his death, moved to South Florida about five years ago.
On Saturday, Avenaim's sister-in-law, Colleen Avenaim cried as she listened to authorities detail events leading up to Bethell's arrest.
''This is a very bittersweet thing to hear,'' she said.
The Victims
• Angel Pedro Medina, 41, lived in Margate. He had turned his life around after serving an eight-year prison term that ended on Aug. 24, 1992.
• On Feb. 3, as he had done once a week for many years, Medina drove to a rough neighborhood in Fort Lauderdale to buy food, beer, cigarettes and lottery tickets for homeless people who hang out there.
• He was a frequent visitor to the 900 block of Northwest Ninth Avenue, a blighted strip of Powerline Road just south of Sunrise Boulevard.
• He showed up with cash, as he always did, witnesses said.
• Minutes later, at 9:37 p.m., he was dead, shot multiple times during an attempted robbery.
• Albert Avenaim, 63, a retiree from Aventura, spoke five languages and his travels took him to China, Poland, Czechoslovakia and India. He had plans for a cruise and a trip to Africa.
• On the night of his murder, Avenaim and wife Joan saw a show in Miami. He then dropped Joan off in front of Padrino's restaurant in Hallandale Beach so she could put their name on the waiting list. Avenaim had driven around the restaurant to park his car when he was robbed and killed.
• Frederick Gunther, 76, of Pompano Beach, was the youngest of 12 children of Swiss parents. He has at least five surviving siblings. Frederick and his wife, Coralyn, were divorced. They had three children.
• Gunther moved to South Florida five years ago from California, where he worked in advertising sales. In Florida, he was a night watchman. His favorite pastime was ballroom dancing.
• He was known as a generous and helpful person who had a kind word for everyone.
• He had driven to Plantation to pick up a friend and take her dancing He was robbed and killed in the parking lot of his friend's condo.