Chace Swatek and his sister, actress Barret Swatek |
Alabama lawyer Chace Swatek died while in the midst of a two-mile roundtrip walk to a drugstore, according to details released by the Pelham Police Department.
The cause of death remains undetermined, pending results of a toxicology report that is expected to take six months to a year. Swatek's body was discovered on February 15 behind a stack of pipes on the shoulder of Shelby County 35, near the County Services Building in Pelham. Officials quickly said they saw no signs of foul play, and there have been no reports of a suicide note or evidence pointing to an accident.
Swatek, 35, was the youngest son of attorney William E. Swatek, who plays a central role in our Legal Schnauzer story and has a 30-year history of ethical violations with the Alabama State Bar. Swatek was the younger brother of Dax Swatek, a well-known Republican Party consultant with ties to Bill Canary and Karl Rove. We've seen no signs that Chace Swatek's death had anything to do with politics or his status as the son of an ethically challenged lawyer; it's what law-enforcement officials call an "unattended death," which can be mysterious by its very nature. But in a series of recent interviews with Legal Schnauzer, Pelham Police Cpt. Larry Palmer shined light on what an investigation has determined.
* Swatek was placed at the CVS Pharmacy store, at 100 Huntley Parkway, between 4 and 4:30 p.m. on February 14;
* Investigators found a CVS bag, containing several items and a receipt, near Swatek's body. That is what caused officers to trace him to the CVS store. Palmer said he could not identify the items that Swatek purchased because the investigation is ongoing.
* Palmer described Swatek's clothing as "casual," and said no vehicle belonging to Swatek was found in the area--and no one has come forward to report dropping him off at the CVS store. It appears he was on foot.
* Swatek was renting a house in the Mallard Pointe subdivision, which is just north of the CVS store, about one mile away.
* Swatek's body was found at 6 a.m. on February 15, which means he died at some point in roughly a 14-hour window. At the time Swatek's body was found, Palmer said, it appeared he had been dead for several hours.
Palmer said he could not give the exact address of Swatek's home, but it is in the 100 block of Mallard Pointe Circle. Our research indicates the house is at 154 Mallard Pointe Circle, which is owned by Brent and Charlotte Callihan. Brent Callihan is a lawyer who occupied the office at 451 Canyon Park Drive (Suite A) in Pelham before Chace Swatek took it over. In 2010, Brent Callihan became the police chief of Chatom, Alabama, which is near Mobile. Shortly after that, it appears, he rented his house to Chace Swatek.
The investigation, Palmer says, points to the following timeline:
* Late on the afternoon of February 14, Chace Swatek decides to walk from his home in Mallard Pointe to the CVS store. It's only one mile to the store, and the weather is mild, but the route is not pedestrian friendly. Turning left out of his neighborhood, Swatek walks for about 3/10 of a mile on a section of Shelby County 35 that has almost no shoulder, and a relatively steep ditch on the left side;
* He veers to the left on another section of 35, and that appears to be an easy section to walk, with plenty of shoulder on both sides of the road. An All-State Insurance agency sits in a small building to the right, which is the first step in what appears to be a budding office-part development. For now, it's mostly a vacant lot. Swatek passes the Brookshire neighborhood and the County Services Building on the left before reaching Shelby County 52;
* The CVS is visible to the left from the intersection of 35 and 52, and at some point, Swatek crosses five lanes of traffic to reach the store on the other side, maybe 200 to 300 yards down 52;
* Swatek buys a few items, leaves the store with bag and hand, and begins the trip back home, along the same route;
* As he reaches the intersection of 52 and 35 and turns right back toward his house, Swatek goes behind a stack of pipes that have been placed in a wide section of the shoulder, directly across from a Shell station at 75 Highway 35 in Pelham. His body is found behind the pipes the next morning.
Why did Swatek go behind the pipes when it appears there was plenty of room to walk in front of them? What caused him to die while behind the pipes? That remains part of the mystery surrounding the investigation.
"Until tox gets back, to tell us if there was anything in his system, it's just an unknown," Palmer said. "We talked to the family, and he didn't have any medical problems that we learned about. But that doesn't always play out to be true in the end. We've had cases where people had heart attacks at young ages and didn't realize they had a heart problem until it was too late.
"I've been in this business for 30 years, and I never try to assume anything or speculate. Anything could have happened. We're looking for anything that might give us an idea of what happened. In this case, we found nothing. . . .
"Any time you have an unattended death, we always ask, 'Why?' We want to know what happened to that person. If it's unattended, those will drive you crazy. . . . We want to know, as quickly as we can from the medical examiner, what caused this."
Reading between the lines, this sounds like something in the bag contributed to Mr. Swatek's death--or at least police think that is a possibility. If he bought toothpaste and breath mints, why not say that? Maybe I've been watching too much Matlock, but I say something in the bag is part of the mystery.
ReplyDeleteI say the mobs, thugs, gangs, lone assassins and / or more than one murderer of humans and other life forms are questioned with respect to the family connections.
ReplyDeleteThe financial commodities and trades right up there in the top part of the pyramid USA, with the levels of families investments in the systems which GOVERN - laugh at the words that get said for understanding.
Pirates operate America, or call them the Super Pirates since the digital / computer monies rule.
People with families connected to the matrix computer power can do whatever the salaries dictate of those people that rely upon a job and have families to feed too.
In other words, murder is easy in the digital age of computer monies pay the systems which are told to report and / or arrest the criminals who kill. No person does what the system of money does not want that person to do. A person does what the system wants when enough money is offered or the money is in laundered form.
Money is the tap root of what we as a country and the earth's entire global community of citizens, cannot seem to find an experience closer to balance.
Murder for pity's sake, and the victim is a young man who practices the law and is licensed to do so in Alabama. It is 2012, cameras are spying and even drones are flying spying.
Twilight Zone.
Your blog is one of the very best, thank you LS.
see biloximarx on scribd
I'm guessing that Chace Swatek sat down behind the pipes for some reason. I find it hard to believe that he just happened to collapse and die while walking behind those pipes.
ReplyDeleteA man harbors resentment toward an attorney because he represents a scumbag and wins. When that prompts him to dig into and examine corruption and the glaring flaws in our legal system, that's great; truth is a worthwhile cause. But you go beyond that. This is an obsession with the Swatek family, and you seem to take morbid pleasure in Chace's death... that's disgusting. A mother lost her son, and you talk about it as if it were an episode of Law and Order instead of a family tragedy. You need a very dedicated therapist.
ReplyDeleteYou're obsession with the death of Mr. Swatek is some what disturbing!
DeleteThen don't read my blog. Problem solved.
ReplyDeleteYou seem to find a sick sense of delight in the death of another person, and an unhealthy obsession with the Swatek family. Your entire blog is devoted to insulting others....are you so perfect in all that you do? You're quite quick to condemn...but have you ever taken the time to get to know the individuals you berate? You claim to be an animal lover, yet you never even bothered to learn how much
ReplyDeleteloved his dogs. How shameful that you are too conceited to appreciate the common ground you shared with him. Did you even try to see the good in him? I'll never bother to read anything else you write; and I'm
sure you won't care- but your bitterness is appalling. I
pity your pets for having to live with your anger and
self-righteousness.
Lindsey:
ReplyDeleteWhen a person dies in a public place, under uncertain circumstances, it's a news story. When that person is an "officer of the court" and a member of a fairly well-known family in legal and political circles, it's even more of a news story. Public resources are being used to determine what caused Mr. Swatek's death, so it's a matter of public concern. It has nothing to do with a "sick sense of delight in another person's death" or whether the deceased did or did not like dogs.
On a personal level, you allege that I have an "obsession with the Swatek family." Public records show that it was Bill Swatek who stuck his nose into my life, filing a bogus lawsuit against me. Records also show that he stole full ownership rights to my house, again unlawfully sticking his nose into my life. Bill Swatek also has acted in an abusive fashion toward a number of his own clients in divorce cases, causing significant harm to women and children. All of this has been done in his role as an "officer of the court," which makes it a matter of public concern.
I encourage you to come down from your high horse long enough to see that the Swateks have made their cozy living largely from abusing the rights of others. If you want to look at Bill Swatek's disciplinary record with the Alabama State Bar, I would be glad to meet you in Montgomery and show you. That will give you an eyeful of something that really is appalling.