Harper returns home after serving time for shooting PI

The man who shot Wichita private eye Emory Goad said through his lawyer that he was too old and sick to go to prison. But two years later, 79-year-old John Harper called after returning from serving his time and said he’s never felt better.

As his 2006 trial for second-degree murder ended, Harper drove the Rolls Royce at the center of the violent case to the Sedgwick County Courthouse

As his 2006 trial for second-degree murder ended, Harper drove the Rolls Royce at the center of the violent case to the Sedgwick County Courthouse

“I came out healthier,” Harper said.

Harper spent the first year of his sentence for attempted second-degree murder at the El Dorado Correctional Facility in 23-hour lockdown.

“There’s not much you can do there except read,” Harper said.

But after being transferred to Lansing, Harper said he started getting exercise, which improved his health.

“I started walking five miles a day around the path, and then I started running,” Harper said. “Pretty soon, I’m was so healthy they put me on work detail. I’m almost 80 years old, and I’m mowing lawns.”

The former car dealer was convicted of shooting Goad in May 2005, as the private investigator tried to repossess a 1951 Rolls Royce at Harper’s house. Goad could have died.

Harper was outspoken during his trial, claiming he shouldn’t have been charged with a crime. After the shooting he told police he hoped Goad died. And after going to prison, his family took out a series of ads in the Eagle claiming his innocence.

Now, Harper sounded more mellow on the phone. He’s on parole and said he’ll end up on house arrest, an ankle bracelet monitoring his movements, for the rest of his life.

“It really will help me,” Harper said. “I don’t ever want to see Emory Goad again.”

Harper’s family managed to maintain his house. And his grandson still has the Rolls.

How much prison time should a fake Indian chief get?

Malcolm Webber will soon face sentencing as the convicted chief of a fake American Indian tribe that duped thousands of illegal immigrants out of money with the promise of U.S. citizenship.

Lawyers in the case are asking U.S. Senior District Judge Wesley Brown to consider sentences between eight months and 18 years for the 70-year-old Webber.

A jury in August convicted Webber on six counts, including immigration fraud, for selling memberships in the unrecognized Kaweah Indian Nation for hundreds of dollars. As the case unfolded in Wichita, evidence showed that Webber used Hispanic churches to recruit members, which eventually reached 10,000 to 12,000 nationwide.

Prosecutor Brent Anderson said Webber should get maximum time of more than 17 years for preying on vulnerable victims:

Here, we have thousands and thousands of persons who gave what little money they may have had to Mr. Webber in the hope he could make good on his promise of making them U.S. citizens. … (They) either did not know that or naively believed, in their desperation to stay in the United States, that he somehow could make that happen.

But Kurt Kerns argues in Webber’s defense that the people who joined were in the U.S. illegally and so were participants in the crime – not victims. Kerns also disputed the prosecution’s contention that Webber carried out an elaborate scheme over years to promote fraud:

The government contends that because tribal members received official looking membership cards and certificates, this somehow makes this a sophisticated operation. This is the equivalent of saying that because someone has nice handwriting, they must be a writer.

Anderson said no court has ever contemplated the kind of lengths Webber went to in selling his “tribe:”

Mr. Webber created an entire government … complete with a secretary of state, cabinet members, articles of incorporation, multiple offices complete with official seals … an Indian store complete with Kaweah trinkets and merchandise, actual Kaweah Indian Nation license plates, and a police department with vehicles, uniformed officers, badges and guns.

Kerns is asking the judge to compare the sentences given to those other chiefs, secretaries of state and police officers – all of whom received about a year or less following guilty pleas.

Webber faces Brown for sentencing at 10 a.m. Friday in U.S. District Court in Wichita.