After the wife of a wealthy executive is abducted, a note asks that ransom be paid to 12 different people.

An elderly woman, Annie Laurie Hearin, with short curly hair and a blue shirt.

Annie Laurie Hearin

Missing:

Gender: Female
DOB: 1915
Hair: Brown
Remarks: Last seen 7/26/88

CASE DETAILS

Robert Hearin was one of the wealthiest men in the state of Mississippi. His wife, Annie Laurie Hearin, a devoted wife and mother, was kidnapped on July 26th, 1988. Twelve days later, Robert Hearin called a press conference at his home in an attempt to make a personal plea to the kidnapper. He said:

“My name is Robert Hearin. My wife Annie Laurie was taken from our home over 10 days ago. My children and I have done everything humanly possible to obtain her release. My children and I appeal to whoever has my wife that she may be safely returned to us. Thank you.”

Robert’s son, Robert Hearin Jr.:

“I think of my mom all the time. And I’m sure my dad does, too. There’s no real way to quantify how enormous a tragedy and ordeal this has been to him and to the rest of the family.”

A typed letter, the kidnapper's note is being held up, though it is ineligible.

The kidnapper left a note

The kidnapping of Annie Hearin was unusual. The ransom note demanded payment not to one person, but to twelve, all of whom had some connection to one of Robert Hearin’s companies. It was a strange twist to an already troubling case.

After checking with friends and family on the day of Annie’s abduction, Robert called the police. Then he made a disturbing discovery: a note, apparently left by a kidnapper, lay by his front door. Jackson Chief of Police J.L. Black:

“The note said not to call the police. However, Mr. Hearin had notified the police prior to the note being discovered.”

A woman at a desk writing, she is handing off a letter to a man.

Annie wrote another note

It was clear from the contents of the note that Annie’s abduction was in some way connected to Robert’s businesses. FBI Special Agent Wayne R. Taylor noticed the correlation:

“The demands in the note were very vague and made several demands of Mr. Hearin, concerning certain individuals listed in the note who were allegedly harmed by a company of which Mr. Hearin was president.”

Robert Hearin had been president of a company called School Pictures. The company sold franchises to photographers throughout the United States to produce photo portraits of school children. Between 1981 and 1983, in an effort to collect money owed to them, School Pictures filed lawsuits against twelve franchise owners in eight states, including Florida.

A man in a suit holding an envelope.

Annie is still missing

On the day Annie was kidnapped, witnesses reported seeing a white cargo van with Florida plates in the neighborhood. Police soon discovered that the twelve names on the kidnapper’s ransom note were the same twelve people who had been sued by School Pictures. J.L. Black doesn’t believe that this necessarily implicates all twelve people:

“It’s possible that these 12 people had absolutely nothing to do with this abduction. However, you can’t rule out the fact that maybe somebody whohad the knowledge of School Pictures and its operation could’ve been involved with it.”

As a result, letters were then sent out to the 12 individuals. Robert Hearin Jr.:

“School Pictures was requested to look into the files on these 12 people. The transactions were reviewed and letters were, of course, sent out to these people trying to determine what damages they had, and what they’d wanted. At that point, we didn’t get a response except from several of them saying ‘We don’t want anything’.”

Eight days after his press conference, on August 15th, Robert received a letter. He recognized the handwriting immediately: it was from his wife, Annie. For Robert Jr. and the family, this came as quite a relief:

“This gave us quite an emotional lift because it meant that Mother apparently had survived the initial struggle. But it still was extremely vague as to what we were to do. At that point, dad, in order to do something to show our good faith effort to comply with these demands, instructed his attorneys to find out how much School Pictures had sued these 12 individuals for.”

Robert sent out checks totaling nearly one million dollars to the 12 people on the list. Half of the checks were returned. The letter in Annie’s handwriting would be the last word that her family or police would ever receive from the kidnapper. For Robert Jr. and the Hearin family, the search and the struggle continue:

“It’s been our sincere desire from the very beginning, from the moment of the kidnapping, that we do everything possible to comply with these demands. We want Mother back.”

Update:

Newton Alfred Winn, a 65-year old lawyer, was arrested by the FBI in Florida on charges related to the kidnapping of Annie Laurie Hearin. Winn was one of the 12 men named in the ransom note left at the Hearin mansion. Also, less than one month before the kidnapping, he had purchased a van that matched the description of the vehicle seen in the Hearin neighborhood.

Newton Alfred Winn was convicted of conspiracy to kidnap, extortion, and perjury. He was sentenced to 19 years and seven months in prison. Winn has since been released and still maintains that he is innocent of the kidnapping. Annie Laurie Hearin has never been found. Her husband, Robert, is now deceased, but Annie’s family is still looking for her.


Watch this case now on Amazon Prime in season one with Robert Stack and season eight with Dennis Farina. Also available on YouTube with Dennis Farina. Various seasons available now on Hulu.

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43 Comments

  1. Kevin D. Wigley

    I called the FBI a couple of weeks after this terrible tragedy and they already had a plan and never called me back. I have my own theory based on what I saw on July 26 1988 at 10:45 pm on hwy 278 east in Rockmart Ga. If anyone is interested call me.

    Reply

  2. Alfred Winn

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkrsArd-c4s

    Guys I just came back from the dead!

    Reply

  3. Annie Hearin

  4. Jan

    That poor lady must have been terrified, crying out for her lovely husband.
    I hope that evil murderer is haunted and dragged to hell for what he did.

    Reply

  5. Sarah

    Heart breaking

    Reply

  6. Kit

    Heartbreaking story! It’s obvious that Wynn was the kidnapper. I would think there may have been some of the kidnapper’s DNA left at the Hearin home or Mrs. Hearin’s DNA left in the white van. If so, and if it was preserved, it could possibly provide the kidnapper’s identity considering the technological advances in DNA.

    Reply

  7. Johnathan

    Wynn knows exactly what happen to Annie hearin but didn’t wanted to speak about it. I bridge that he was responsible for her death and should’ve gotten a higher sentence. He was released early due to the lack of evidence when it comes to murder. I believe that Annie hearin was trapped in the basement for a long time and probably died from starvation. Her remains should be around in the house or outside the house. Sad, Mayb if they can in contact with Wynn family can help the case.

    Reply

  8. Sara

    How the eff was he not convinced of murder?

    Reply

    • Susan

      Honestly I thought the same thing I mean I was a kid when I watched this the first time so I really didn’t know what to think about it back then but at the same time yeah that guy should have not gotten out of prison cuz even if he didn’t specifically murder that lady the fact that she was never found she probably did die in that basement from old age and everything. Very sad

      Reply

  9. Brenda Shields

    By using the word cellar in the note, she may have been put into one of those outside cellars, with the door above the ground that you open and walk down into. If that’s the case, she most likely would not call that a basement.

    Reply

  10. Aaron B

    You could get a writing specialist and get hand writing samples from suspects and find a match

    Reply

    • John

      I didn’t see anything the kidnapper sent that was hand written except the one victim wrote. Kidnapper used a type writer.

      Reply

  11. GR

    The basement story sounds bull. No killer gives clues about where and what he/she has done

    Reply

  12. Ned

    Wow Ned, you are so smart.

    Reply

  13. Dom

    My guess? She signed those letters shortly after being kidnapped and was killed shortly after signing those letters.
    They were probably structured to string her family along if they didn’t want to pay up. There were probably a lot more than two letters also.
    Sounds like either revenge or a thrill kill

    Reply

  14. Robert Boyd III

    Im not saying this is right in any way, however this husband seems like a real scumbag who screwed over a lot of employees. In other words, he probably deserved what happened.
    The entire family seems like rich, entitled douchebags. I can only imagine how the wife was. Probably worse than all of them. But that certainly doesn’t mean that this was right in any way whatsoever. No one deserves to die like that.

    Reply

    • Kiss

      I hope police is reading your comment because you have just become the prime suspect.

      Reply

    • Anonymous

      They weren’t the 12 ppl employer, these ppl franchised business from School pictures and didn’t pay that’s why he sued them and won. Business is Business. I’m sure u wouldn’t want to do business with someone who doesn’t pay.

      Reply

    • Big Jodie

      What a ridiculous thing to say. He made claims against franchisees who owed him money. How does that make him a scum bag?

      Reply

    • Susan

      I spent what makes you think that he’s a douchebag what makes you think just naughty people who are entitled and think they’re better than everybody I mean she was kidnapped and probably died or was murdered and certainly doesn’t seem like he did anything wrong this is kind of horrible to say I mean if it was the case then karma would have gotten him but this is not detective karma anybody deserves. So that makes you just as much as a horrible person even more so for saying something like this

      Reply

  15. Emily

    JO, yes Florida is quite flat, (the *highest* elevation is 334 feet) but basements and cellars are extremely rare, due to the fact that in most areas if you dig down more than 5-6 feet, you’ll either hit water or unstable limestone. I’ve only ever seen one house with what might be termed as a basement here, and obviously it was just because earth had been mounded up high enough to put the main house on top of that. So it’s more like the “basement” is really a first floor that happens to have dirt all around it.

    Reply

  16. Tracy

    I just saw this story and it is July 2018 my only question is how did the man convicted of crime serve time and get out of jail with no answer to where Ms Hearins remains we’re? I am just so amazed at the world we live in! I’m outraged pissed u name it. What are officials so afraid of? Why would he be let out to live and die later without having to admit and lead them to her remains cause obviously she was killed and not still alive! She reminds me of my mom. Idk how someone could hurt any elderly person I’m not judging and God forgives all sins but he also wants people to accept responsibility for wrong doings and make them right. Our officials in charge let this woman down. I’m sure she is in heaven but it is so sad no one seemed to do anything about it and now he is dead man who probably was responsible for her death. So sad paperwork in this world n red tape to everything takes so long that people get away with murder and all sorts of things because people in general suck ! Thank God my mom taught us Christian values and if we did wrong we felt guilty and had to admit it and make things right otherwise nothing in our life would go right. All goes back to DO UNTO OTHERS AS YOU WOULD HAVE DONE TO YOU!

    Reply

  17. Karen

    I wonder if there was any DNA evidence found inside the van linking to the kidnapping or if cadaver dogs were used in their search. Although he maintains his innocence to kidnapping, I think Mr. Winn died knowing where and what happened to Mrs. Hearin. This is a very heartbreaking case. My hope and prayer is that she will be found so that the family can have closure and that this mystery can be solved.

    Reply

    • Susan

      I was honestly wondering the same thing too I mean why don’t they bother to go and look for her body why didn’t they try to see if they could find her even if she was dead at some point it’s kind of like they didn’t even bother to try to look for her so I’m just totally thrown off by that!

      Reply

  18. JO

    I thought Florida was pretty flat, is there a lot of houses with basements or root cellars? If it was a regular basement I would think she would have been found by now. But a root cellar, some could be sealed and never opened. What kind of structures do people have in Florida or any property this man owned? Did anyone do checks on this? Especially if he did property management for clients.

    Reply

  19. Ruth

    I grew up in Jackson and remember this story. I saw Mrs. Hearin mentioned again on WLBT this week. I’m just so sad for her, for her loved ones. Bless her soul, Mr. Hearin’s soul and their children’s hearts.

    Reply

  20. Anon

    If she’s alive today she’d be 102 however the more likely scenario is she’s Deceased MR Hearin died without knowing his wife’s Ultimate fate not knowing gotta be the worst thing. if she’s no longer with us I just hope she didn’t suffer and is reunited with her husband hope springs eternal

    Reply

  21. unknown

    The paralegal knows where Annie is

    Reply

  22. Anonymous

    What a rotten thing to do, if anyone is spinning in their grave I hope it’s this guy.

    Reply

  23. DebiDel

    Is Winn dead yet?

    Reply

  24. Lord of a Manor

    Winn died in 2012; his obituary is online.

    Reply

  25. Bowen

    I would like to know what the 2nd letter said. If there were more demands. Also the original letter sounded like a person who may have lacked higher education. I wonder if the man they arrested spoke in the manner the letter was written. Also, I wonder why wasn’t the family or the police banging on the door of every name on that list as soon as they got it instead of sending letters to ask what they thought they were owed. Seemed obvious it was one of them.n2re

    Reply

  26. Mulder

    Link to an LA Times Article regarding Mr. Hearin’s passing
    http://articles.latimes.com/1990-12-09/news/mn-8472_1_actual-kidnaping

    I believe the man convicted has passed as well according to my research. Not much on Alfred Winn other than whats posted here online regarding this case. But my information shows he has since died as well.

    Reply

  27. Confused

    What did the kidnapper say he did with her ?

    Reply

    • Mulder

      From what I have heard and read. He never admitted to abducting her. Hence he never has stated what happened or where the remains were placed. I have a feeling he prob burned the remains. What got him convicted was his renting of the van. The timeframe. And eyewitness reports stating the same type of van was in the area at the time of the abduction. He maintained his innocence.

      Reply

  28. am

    If she is ever found she’ll be dead by now or 100 years old I don’t think she’s still alive unfortunately

    Reply

  29. BJ

    They need to have the note checked for fingerprints. If Newton Alfred Winn had anything to do with it, his fingerprints should be on either one of the notes, including the one handwritten by Mrs. Hearin. His fingerprints would be on file since he was arrested and jailed for conspiracy. At least someone’s fingerprints will be on the note and that would be a great way to find out who is involved.

    Reply

    • Ned

      As if they didn’t check for fingerprints? It’s the first thing even the most backward police department in the country checks for. The criminal(s) wore gloves. Mrs. Hearin wore gloves. This was established within a week of receiving the note. Given the FBI took over the case, the note was checked with minimum of seven techniques for lifting latent prints. You don’t know much about CSI, do you?

      Reply

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