PLAINFIELD, IL — The wife accused in the stashing her husband's remains in the freezer of their Plainfield-area home began researching suspicious questions weeks before his body was discovered, prosecutors said.
Robin Turner, 62, and 26-year-old James Adams, are each charged with concealment of a homicide and dismembering a human being in connection with the death of Dalewayne Turner, 38, the husband and half-brother, respectively, of the pair.
Illinois State Police began investigating Dalewayne Turner's death June 28, when recreational boaters on Lake Mattoon in central Illinois discovered a partial severed arm bearing distinctive tattoos
Adams admitted on June 30 — first to a family member, then to police — to killing his half-brother in the home he shared with him and Robin Turner in the 2400 block of Ruth Fitzgerald Drive, according to court documents.
Adams told his relative, "I killed Dale, he is in the freezer," prosecutors said. According to the relative, Adams and Robin Turner, who was present for the confession, also mentioned they took several body parts to a lake.
Prosecutors say Adams and Robin Turner cut Dalewayne Turner's body up into small pieces and placed many of the parts in a freezer purchased for that purpose at a local Best Buy store. The freezer was discovered in their home in the 2400 block of Ruth Fitzgerald Drive. Other body parts were found weighed down in trash bags in Lake Mattoon, Patch reported.
RELATED: 'I Killed Dale, He Is In The Freezer': Prosecutors Say Brother Confessed In Killing, Dismemberment
Robin Turner's questionable searches began almost a month prior, investigators said. Prosecutors found these searches in Robin Turner's Google history, per court documents:
No additional charges have been filed against Turner or Adams, as of Wednesday. State police said more are expected.
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