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William Dear (detective)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William C. Dear (August 1, 1937 – July 5, 2024) was an American private investigator.[1]

Background

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Dear owned the firm William C. Dear & Associates. His notable cases included the original "steam tunnel incident" involving James Dallas Egbert III, the murder of millionaire businessman Dean Milo in 1980, the exhumation of Lee Harvey Oswald in 1981 and the Glen Courson murder case in 1986.

Television work included being an investigator on Alien Autopsy, a 1995 Fox Television program about an autopsy supposedly carried out on an extraterrestrial being. Dear was later featured in the 2000 BBC Documentary OJ: The Untold Story.

Dear was a candidate for Governor of Texas in the 2010 Texas Democratic Primary.[2] Dear died on July 5, 2024, at the age of 86.[3]

Books

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According to Dear's webpage, he has also written a fictional book called Dead Men Don't Lie. He has also written two instructional books: Adopted: How to Find Your Biological Parents and Other Family Members, and Fingerprinting: How to Take Mistake-Proof Fingerprint Impressions.

References

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  1. ^ Erickson, Bethany (2024-07-08). "Dallas private investigator Bill Dear dies at 86". Retrieved 2024-10-08.
  2. ^ "Texas gubernatorial election, 2010".
  3. ^ "William Dear Obituary - Frisco, TX". Dignity Memorial. Retrieved 2024-12-14.
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