TJ
01-21-2003, 02:26 AM
http://www.sanmateocountytimes.com/Stories/0,1413,87~11268~1119787,00.html
MENLO PARK -- A Menlo Park fugitive suspected in the disappearance of his wife 11 years ago was watching a soap opera and eating potato chips when he was captured this week in the Philippines, authorities said.
Agents from the FBI and the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation located Joseph Eli Morrow, 54, Tuesday in the town of Imus, just south of Manila. Authorities say he had slipped into the country using a friend's identity.
Morrow was returned to San Francisco Wednesday, and is being transferred to Colorado to stand trial on federal charges of passport fraud.
Police expect he will be returned to California to face murder charges in the death of Donna Morrow, 37, who disappeared from her College Avenue home on Dec. 19, 1991, following an argument with her husband. Her body was never found.
Authorities on Friday said Morrow's capture Friday was the result of 11 years of following leads, and cooperation between local, state and federal agencies.
The case has grabbed national media attention, including a segment on a recently aired episode of the television program Unsolved Mysteries.
"Our police department has never given up or forgotten the victim or her family," added Menlo Park Police Chief Christopher Boyd.
In January 1992, Morrow dropped his children off at his mother's house and asked her to care for them. He didn't return and she reported him missing.
The next day, he was discovered semi-conscious in a motel in Bodega Bay, having overdosed on Halcion sleeping pills in an apparent suicide attempt.
A few days later, police searched the Morrow house and found a plastic bucket in the garage with a blood smear. Tests confirmed it was Donna Morrow's blood type.
Later that year, Donna Morrow's mother Shirley Rubio filed a wrongful death suit against Joseph Morrow on behalf of the couple's four children. But Joseph Morrow disappeared in June 1993, when he was supposed to report to Santa Clara County Jail to serve time on a fraud conviction, according to court records.
Although Morrow was a prime suspect in his wife's disappearance, police did not have enough evidence to charge him with murder until 1997. A San Mateo County judge issued a $10 million warrant for his arrest that year and he was declared a fugitive by the FBI.
Boyd declined to comment on any evidence in the case, other than to say investigators are certain Morrow was responsible for killing his wife.
"We have significant evidence to believe Donna Morrow is dead and significant evidence to believe Joseph Morrow killed her," Boyd said.
Investigators are still unsure what Morrow was doing in the Philippines and exactly how long he had been there, according to FBI Special Agent LaRae Quy .
Quy said Morrow had just returned home from playing tennis and was sitting on his couch watching TV when agents arrived at his home Tuesday.
Quy said it's unclear whether Morrow was working there, but she doesn't believe he had a wife or children in the Philippines.
Menlo Park Police are asking for anyone with information about the disappearance of Donna Morrow to contact the department's investigative unit at 251-8808.
MENLO PARK -- A Menlo Park fugitive suspected in the disappearance of his wife 11 years ago was watching a soap opera and eating potato chips when he was captured this week in the Philippines, authorities said.
Agents from the FBI and the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation located Joseph Eli Morrow, 54, Tuesday in the town of Imus, just south of Manila. Authorities say he had slipped into the country using a friend's identity.
Morrow was returned to San Francisco Wednesday, and is being transferred to Colorado to stand trial on federal charges of passport fraud.
Police expect he will be returned to California to face murder charges in the death of Donna Morrow, 37, who disappeared from her College Avenue home on Dec. 19, 1991, following an argument with her husband. Her body was never found.
Authorities on Friday said Morrow's capture Friday was the result of 11 years of following leads, and cooperation between local, state and federal agencies.
The case has grabbed national media attention, including a segment on a recently aired episode of the television program Unsolved Mysteries.
"Our police department has never given up or forgotten the victim or her family," added Menlo Park Police Chief Christopher Boyd.
In January 1992, Morrow dropped his children off at his mother's house and asked her to care for them. He didn't return and she reported him missing.
The next day, he was discovered semi-conscious in a motel in Bodega Bay, having overdosed on Halcion sleeping pills in an apparent suicide attempt.
A few days later, police searched the Morrow house and found a plastic bucket in the garage with a blood smear. Tests confirmed it was Donna Morrow's blood type.
Later that year, Donna Morrow's mother Shirley Rubio filed a wrongful death suit against Joseph Morrow on behalf of the couple's four children. But Joseph Morrow disappeared in June 1993, when he was supposed to report to Santa Clara County Jail to serve time on a fraud conviction, according to court records.
Although Morrow was a prime suspect in his wife's disappearance, police did not have enough evidence to charge him with murder until 1997. A San Mateo County judge issued a $10 million warrant for his arrest that year and he was declared a fugitive by the FBI.
Boyd declined to comment on any evidence in the case, other than to say investigators are certain Morrow was responsible for killing his wife.
"We have significant evidence to believe Donna Morrow is dead and significant evidence to believe Joseph Morrow killed her," Boyd said.
Investigators are still unsure what Morrow was doing in the Philippines and exactly how long he had been there, according to FBI Special Agent LaRae Quy .
Quy said Morrow had just returned home from playing tennis and was sitting on his couch watching TV when agents arrived at his home Tuesday.
Quy said it's unclear whether Morrow was working there, but she doesn't believe he had a wife or children in the Philippines.
Menlo Park Police are asking for anyone with information about the disappearance of Donna Morrow to contact the department's investigative unit at 251-8808.