The prime suspect in Adam’s murder,
Otis Toole, was never charged in the
case. He died in prison while serving life for
other crimes. Toole never admitted guilt in
the case, denying the Walshes an
opportunity for closure. The tragedy began
to consume Walsh, and after Adam’s
murder he lost his company.
“I had three partners. We were building
a $26 million hotel on Paradise Island
when Adam was kidnapped,” Walsh said
recently while filming a segment for his
show at International Polo Club Palm
Beach in Wellington, Florida. “I loved the
hotel business and had worked very hard to
build the company. I lost 30 pounds, I
couldn’t work, I couldn’t focus on the
project. It came in $2 million over budget.
… I started going state to state … and we
created the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children. The first branch
was in West Palm Beach, Florida, called the
Adam Walsh Center. … Our job was to try
and change things. [Our style of living
diminished] but it didn’t matter to me
anymore. I didn’t care about building
hotels; I didn’t care about what we had
before. We didn’t have our son.”
Their grief also led them to push for a
bill, which, according to Walsh, would have
forced the FBI to put the names of missing
children into their computers. Walsh says: “… [The bill] was vehemently opposed by the
FBI back in 1981, and they refused to get in
Adam’s case. … We took our anger and
heartbreak to try to get that bill passed …
and to make sure the terrible circumstances
we had were not going to happen to another
set of parents. It took almost two years
before President Reagan signed [the bill] in
the Rose Garden.”
In 1987, after several years of working to
protect children, Fox television approached
Walsh. They wanted him to host a show
modeled after Crime Watch UK, which at the time had been on television for 20
years. It was done in partnership with
Scotland Yard and the BBC and profiled
fugitives. After several calls, Walsh finally
decided to give it a try.
“When I saw the first guy they wanted
to profile, an escaped child killer … I went
to Washington and did the pilot. I didn’t
know anything about television. I had seen
what the NBC movie about us had done,
how powerful it was and how it changed
people’s attitudes. …We caught David
James Roberts from the first show, and
now the rest is history.”
The show, now in its 20th year, has
helped capture more than 900 fugitives.
“The thing we are the proudest of is we’ve
gotten back 41 missing children, including
Elizabeth Smart,” says Walsh. “It has been
an incredible experience, and it has been a
great bully platform for me. … I’ve testified
before Congress 100 times. I’ve been
honored by Reagan, Bush, Clinton and
Bush Jr. Party lines mean nothing to me. …
It gives me the ability, AMW, to continue my
political agenda to change laws for victims,
children, women. The Adam Walsh Child
Protection Bill was about creating a 50-state registry, immediate notification if
someone jumps their parole or
probation, taking DNA of every
convicted rapist and sex offender,
solving thousands of old, unsolved
cases, hiring 500 new marshals
specifically to look for sex offenders.
We have 550,000 convicted sex
offenders in America—100,000 have
disappeared. Because of the bill
passed in July, marshals have now
started going after sex offenders.”
AN INTRODUCTION TO POLO
Today John and Revé have three
children. Revé is a foxhunter who has ridden
all her life. They have a daughter, Megan,
and two sons, Hayden and Callaghan, who
began playing polo at the Vero Beach Polo
and Saddle Club several years ago. “[Revé]
ganged up with the boys and said, ‘Look,
you’re always looking for something fun,
exciting and dangerous to play. Why don’t
you go with the boys and try polo?’ So I went
on a trip to Casa de Campo in the Dominican
with my friends, the Colleys, who played polo
in Mashomack [Polo Club in Millbrook, New
York]. … After that, I talked to [club
manager] Kris Bowman and said I wanted to
mount a team in the Vero Beach family 2-
goal league.”
Since then, Walsh has played all over. He
travels to the Skaneateles Polo Club in New
York in the summer and to the Vero Beach
club in the winter. Last year he had teams in
Vero’s 2-goal, 4-goal and 8-goal leagues.
Additionally, he has played in numerous
charity events across the country, including
in Wellington; Meadowbrook, Long Island,
New York; Poolesville, Maryland; The Plains,
Virginia; and Saratoga Springs, New York.
Professional 2-goal player Max Secunda
manages his Shamrock Ranch polo team and
teaches polo to Walsh and his two sons.
Walsh admits he is hooked on polo. “Polo
is so demanding physically and so exciting.
So far, in the last two and a half years, I broke
my nose once, my hand twice, I ripped my
thumb off, [broke] seven ribs and I broke my
back in January, which [kept me out] for five
weeks. [Nine-goaler] Javier Astrada said,
‘You’re crazy.’ I said, ‘No, I’m dying to get on
a horse,’ so I got back on in five weeks [to play in a benefit match I had committed to.]”
“John is out there bareback riding,”
Secunda says. “He rides all the time … and
he likes to win! … He’s definitely not timid.
Right from the get-go he has gone full speed.
He isn’t scared at all.”
Walsh responds: “I started playing polo
when I was 57 … I’m playing against the
clock. I started playing for just some
competitive fun, but we’ve entered
tournaments and won. So, now it is more fun
to keep that edge, to keep playing
competitively, to push the envelope. …
Sometimes we go to Argentina and play in
12- or 14-goal practices, and it is a lot of fun
because it is challenging. Polo is something
that allows you to push the envelope as far as
you can handle it. Keep pushing it if you are
serious and you want to learn how to ride
better and hit the ball better. I am trying to
speed up the curve. That is the way I am in
business and in my pursuit of certain goals. I
try to apply that to polo and say, ‘Look, if you
are going to do it, do it seriously and
competitively.’ There is nothing like
winning—it is fun!”
Walsh used to come out to polo when
the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children was first opened in West Palm Beach. Palm Beach Polo and Country
Club would hold benefit polo matches for
the center. “I always came to the polo
matches … never thinking I had the time or
inclination [to play]. … The polo world is
really very welcoming, very hospitable. It is
the antithesis of what everybody thinks
about it. It isn’t the snotty, elitist world that
people like to write about. It is competitive
fun and great exercise.”
HOMICIDE MEETS POLO
Secunda had played in Hawaii prior to
taking the job with Walsh. While there,
Secunda became friends with some of the
players there, including John Elwin.
According to news reports, this past May,
Elwin accompanied another player he knew
as Hank Jacinto to the Philippines for some
business, but though Jacinto came back,
Elwin did not. According to Walsh, a friend
of Elwin’s, Luis Soltren, who served as
executor of his estate, was suspicious about
Elwin’s disappearance, which led him to file
a missing person’s report. He followed up
with Hawaii’s attorney general and the
Honolulu police, but thinking they were
dragging their feet, he turned to Walsh.
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| Homicide victim John Elwin |
Left to right: Peter Cameron, Hank Jacinto, homicide victim John Elwin and Scott Sims in Hawaii |
Walsh had met Elwin last year when he
came to Vero Beach and stayed at his ranch. “[He was] a lovely guy, 51 years old, who was
semi-retired. [He had] sold a good painting
business. [He was] not a big, deep pockets
patron, [but] a club player with his own six
horses. He kept [inviting] us to come play in
Honolulu. … We brought him down to … get
some mallets and we took him to the
Tackeria [to] pick out a nice leather helmet,
which are big clues in the case.” According to
Walsh, Elwin talked about Jacinto and his plans to possibly go to the Philippines to play
polo with him.
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John Walsh and Max Secunda both knew
homicide victim John Elwin. |
Secunda says: “John Elwin was a friend of
mine. … I’d been working in Hawaii for a
couple of years and John had mentioned
Hank a couple of times and said [Hank] had
introduced him to polo. [Jacinto] had invited
him out to the polo club to stick and ball for
the first time. … That was one of the reasons
[Elwin later would] let Hank come back and play some of his horses.”
According to Walsh, a coroner in the
Philippines recognized a photo of Elwin on a
missing person’s poster as someone who had
been found on the side of a road with
gunshot wounds to the head and chest. He
had been buried in an unmarked grave.
Walsh believes Jacinto “used the polo
world, especially the membership at the
[polo] club to give him a false facade that he was a wealthy Filipino. ... He’s a real con
man. … He knew there were usually pretty
substantial fish in the polo club world. …
He used the polo club as a launching pad
… as a stamp of authenticity for himself … and he used it to woo
potential victims.”
In the meantime, Walsh
says, Jacinto had returned to
Hawaii and was “back at the
Honolulu Polo Club, riding
John Elwin’s horses, using his
mallets and wearing his
helmet.” Elwin had a 14-yearold
daughter he loved very
much, according to Walsh.
“He had a huge, beautiful
piece of property in Kauai, on
the ocean, he was going to
leave to this 14-year-old girl,”
says Walsh. “He had a really
nice girlfriend he lived with
now and his life was good.
“… [Jacinto] was a coldblooded
sociopath
businessman that was smart enough to
convince at least three serious
businessmen to make a trip with him to
the Philippines under the auspices of
investing in property or playing polo and
probably murdered all of them. But, in
the interim, getting to know them so well
… to find out what their assets were …
look at their signature, copy their
signature, get false documents and wind
up with their property.”
“… Jacinto was arrested in Hawaii for
credit-card fraud. He had the polo mallets
and the helmet sent from Hawaii to the
Philippines and paid for them with John
Elwin’s credit card a month after John went
missing. … He has a document that he had
forged, I believe, with a notary stamp on it,
giving John Elwin’s beautiful piece of
property to Hank Jacinto. … Now, we get
involved, a 30-year-old guy calls the
Honolulu paper and AMW and says 15 years
ago … ‘My father went to the Philippines
with Hank Jacinto and never came back. A
month later Hank Jacinto kicked me out of
my house and said my father left him our $3
million house in Honolulu and this Hank
Jacinto’s been living [there] for 15 years.’”
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Players Alex Caro, an unidentified man, Sylvia Firestone, Max Secunda and Will
Johnston helped John Walsh, third from right, with polo footage for the AMW segment. |
The man who went missing 15 years ago
was polo player Arthur Young. Since then
the family of a possible third victim, Douglas
Ho, reportedly came forward to say Ho
never returned from a trip to the
Philippines with Jacinto last year. According
to news reports Jacinto’s real name is Henry
Calucag, and he may have as many as 18
aliases. So far he is being held on theft,
identity theft and forgery charges and has
not been charged in connection with the
homicide. Former polo player and USPA
Hawaiian Islands Circuit Gov. Bob Miller is
helping defend Calucag and maintains that
he is innocent.
America’s Most Wanted covered the story
in an episode in November. Secunda
organized some players to stage some polo at
International Polo Club Palm Beach in
Wellington, Florida, the footage of which
was used as a backdrop for the segment.
According to the America’s Most Wanted
Web site, Calucag has previously served time
in federal prison for buying an SUV and
leasing computers using a false name and
false credit card histories while on parole.
Further, he was asked to leave one polo club
after a pair of boots was stolen there. When
police tried to arrest him after a polo match
in September on the most recent charges, he
initially tried to flee in a golf cart. Walsh
believes there may be other victims.
For Walsh, polo is a great release from
the pressures of fighting crime. “Polo is a
great way to work off anger and frustration.
It is a pretty good way to take your mind off
what’s bugging you. … I have signs in my
office that say ‘Saddle Up.’ Polo is my sport,
but to saddle up is to get the public
involved to get justice for people when
they’ve hit a wall.”
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