Michelle Saum Schofield had just finished her shift at a burger drive-in, wrapping up an uneventful rainy night in Lakeland, Florida. The outgoing 18-year-old hopped in her Mazda to pick up her husband Leo as planned, but when she never arrived, he started to worry.
Three days later, on Feb. 27, 1987, Michelleâs body was discovered in a nearby drainage canal. She had been stabbed 26 times.
Despite unwavering denials and no physical evidence linking him to the scene, Leo Schofield, 21, was later arrested, convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in 1989. Prosecutors relied on witnesses who portrayed the young guitarist as an abusive spouse who regularly argued with his wife.
Leo maintained his innocence while his attorneys pointed to unidentified fingerprints found in Michelle’s car â as well as a purported confession from another man, Jeremy Lynn Scott. But appellate courts denied Leo a new trial year after year.
Flash-forward to 2018. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Gilbert King learned about Leoâs case that summer from a Florida judge and started probing the âclear miscarriageâ of justice.
âThe more I looked into the case, the more I came to realize that Leo was wrongfully convicted, and I became more and more convinced that Jeremy was never properly investigated by the State of Florida,â King, 60, of Brooklyn, told The Post.
âSo, I set out to answer this one question: Why is Leo Schofield still in prison, when the man who is forensically linked to the crime scene has confessed to the murder?â
In 2004, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement revealed that the fingerprints in Michelleâs red Mazda belonged to Scott. Scott, also known as âBam Bamâ on the streets, is currently serving life for robbing and strangling Donald Moorehead, 37, with a phone cord in a Lakeland trailer in 1988.
King tracked down both Leo Schofield and Jeremy Scott, and turned his quest for the truth into a true-crime podcast, âBone Valley.â Scott, now 53, gives a detailed confession about Michelleâs slaying in the ninth and final episode, which airs Wednesday,
In the episode, Scott reveals it was dark and raining when he spotted the teen at a gas station.
âI was sitting there while she was on the phone talking to somebody,â Scott told King from Martin Correctional Institution in Indiantown, Fla. âAnd when she got off, she asked [if] I needed the phone, I said no. She said, âWhy you all wet,â you know, cause itâs raining, you know? And I said, I got no ride. You know? So she gave me a ride. And thatâs when I guess I lost it then.â
Michelle gave Scott a quick lift to an isolated lake, where he planned to steal her car, but âpanickedâ when she started screaming after his hunting knife fell out his pocket.
Scott said he then repeatedly plunged the knife into Michelleâs body.
âIt just happened so fast. Once it happened, it just happened fast.â
Then, Scott said, he found some plastic nearby and wrapped her body in it to âprotect her from being eaten by the gators, snakes or whateverâ and âslid her down into the water.â
Scott said he regretted killing a woman who had shown him kindness.
âShe gave me a ride and all that,â Scott told King. “Thatâs why it hurts me more. Girls like that, they donât pick up people.â
Nearly 36 years later, Scott said he still relives the day of her murder.
âI dream, I wake up, I turn over, I see a dead body sleeping next to me,â Scott said. âI sleep with dead bodies every night when I go to bed. Thatâs my punishment.â
In the same episode, Scott also admits to gunning down a cab driver in Intercession City, Florida, on April 10, 1987, about six weeks after killing Michelle. That homicide had stymied investigators and went cold for decades after an initial suspect went free on a mistrial.
âThat happened right after Schofield,â Scott told King. âI broke into a house and stole the gun.â
Scott insisted that Leo Schofield had nothing to do with his wife Michelleâs barbaric death â a claim backed by Leoâs attorneys who are still fighting to get him out of prison.
âThe man has been in prison 33 years, he needs to be out,â Scott said. âThat man ainât do nothing. Heâs innocent.â
Scott even penned a letter admitting to his guilt, writing, âLeo didn’t kill his wife. I did.â
King sent that letter to Leo Schofield, now 56, at Hardee Correctional Institution in Bowling Green, Florida, roughly 100 miles away from Scottâs prison. Without his cherished guitar to play, Leo finds solace in the letter, which he carries with him every day.
âHe gets chills every time he reads Jeremyâs words,â King told The Post. âLeo gets very emotional hearing those words and hearing Jeremyâs confession to me. He told me, âItâs like, how many times does he have to say it?ââ
Scott initially claimed to have stolen the stereo from Michelleâs Mazda when his fingerprints were identified, but later confessed to stabbing Michelle in 2016, court records show. He then contradicted himself a year later â testifying at an October 2017 hearing that he killed Michelle before saying âI didn’t do thatâ upon seeing crime-scene photos.
Court records reviewed by The Post indicate Scott did maintain his confession when questioned again, flatly saying, âI killed her.â But a judge denied Leo Schofieldâs motion for a new trial, a ruling that was upheld by an appellate court in May 2020, records show.
Leo, meanwhile, said his wifeâs confessed killer isnât the villain he always imagined â but rather a âpathetic human beingâ who made poor choices amid a rough upbringing.
âHeâs nothing like I was expecting,â Schofield said on the podcast. âHeâs had a really rough go as Iâm sure youâre aware of â even in the prison. And I do believe heâs sorry. But it just shows you that he has a heart, he does have a heart, you know, that heâs not a monster ⦠I thank him for the truth.â
Scott also sheds light on the still-unsolved 1987 homicide of Joseph Broward Lavair, 25, confessing to killing the cab driver with a .357 Magnum revolver he stole from a copâs house in Winter Haven.
Scott said he called the Yellow Cab Company, which dispatched Lavair to a shopping center in Kissimmee. He said he intended to rob the cabbie for âextra money,â but instead shot him three times and dumped him on the side of a road in Intercession City.
Scott got behind the wheel and sped off, but crashed a few miles later. He then ran away while warning those nearby that the taxi was âgonna blowâ as he ducked into a dilapidated home and made off undetected, he said.
Daniel Otte, then 19, was charged in Lavairâs slaying, but was ultimately acquitted by a jury in October 1987 following a mistrial. Witnesses identified the landscaper as the man running from the totaled taxi, but Otte maintained he had been with friends all night.
âI got lucky because they accused somebody else of it,â Scott said. âBut nobody else been charged with it.â
Once behind bars for strangling Moorehead in 1989, Scott told his cellmate he also killed Jewel Johnson, 75, in 1985 when he was 15, said King. The young Scott pled not guilty at the time, and was acquitted for the crime. In total, Scott has confessed to killing four people, King said.
But prosecutors have shot down Scott’s claims regarding Michelle Schofield, saying heâs âwaffled between denials and confessionsâ in that case since 2016.
âJeremy Scott cannot and should not be believed,â Chief Assistant State Attorney Jacob Orr said in a statement. âHe is simply not credible.â
Orr also noted Leo Schofield failed a polygraph when asked if he stabbed Michelle as part of the initial probe, as well as a judge ruling that Scott âcould not recount facts accuratelyâ during a 2018 hearing.
âThis issue has been litigated extensively,â Orr continued. âIt has been ruled by multiple judges. It seems this is an attempt to promote a podcast.â
King remains undeterred though, promising to keep fighting for Leoâs exoneration. The author believes Scott provided him details only Michelleâs true killer would know, including a pack of Marlboros found near bloodstains just feet away from the canal where her body was recovered.
Scott, who smoked Marlboros at the time, said he also stole $10 from Michelle after stabbing her â or the same amount she made during her shift minus $3 she spent on gas, King said.
âI am confident that Bone Valley corrects the State of Floridaâs false narrative that Leo Schofield is guilty of killing his wife, Michelle,â King told The Post. âI do believe that if the Schofield case is turned over to any Conviction Integrity Unit in the state, they will reach the same conclusions that Iâve reached: Jeremy Scott killed Michelle Schofield, and Leo Schofield is an innocent man.â
Leo could be paroled as soon as May, officials for Florida Commission on Offender Review confirmed. But heâs unlikely to be freed since heâll ârefuse to apologize for a crime he did not commit,â King said.
Still, Leoâs legal team, led by attorney J. Andrew Crawford and the Innocence Project of Florida, remain undaunted in their crusade for vindication.
âForensic and testimonial evidence ties Jeremy Scott to the crime, yet Leo Schofield remains locked up,â Innocence Project of Florida Executive Director Seth Miller told The Post. âThatâs the kind of tunnel vision that leads to wrongful convictions. Weâre reviewing the revelations in the podcast to determine the best way forward.â
Law enforcement sources, meanwhile, said they will not be pursuing King for the murder of cab driver Lavair either.
âWe recognize Mr. Otte was acquitted of the crime in a second trial based on a technicality,â Osceola County Sheriffâs Office told The Post in a statement. âHowever, his acquittal in court does not prove actual innocence. At this time, there is no credible evidence linking Mr. Scott to this crime.â
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