And the Sea Will Tell (ISBN 0-393-02919-0) is a true crime book by Vincent Bugliosi and Bruce B. Henderson. It recounts a double murder on Palmyra Atoll and the subsequent arrest, trial and acquittal of a suspected conspirator whom Bugliosi and Leonard Weinglass defended. The book was published in 1991 and adapted into a television mini-series starring James Brolin, Rachel Ward and Deidre Hall that same year.
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In 1974, a yachting couple from San Diego, California, Malcolm "Mac" Graham III, 43, and Eleanor LaVerne ("Muff") Graham, 41, sailed to Palmyra – 1200 miles south of Honolulu – hoping to find it deserted and to pass an idyllic year or more there. The Grahams overcame their disappointment at finding other "yachties" already on Palmyra and stayed.
Also on Palmyra were Duane ("Buck") Walker (later known as Wesley G. Walker) and Stephanie Stearns (referred to as "Jennifer Jenkins" in the book), who had sailed there together from Hawaii. Walker was an ex-convict fleeing the law for life on the Iola, a deteriorating, patched-together wooden sloop. In contrast, the Grahams' ship, the Sea Wind, was a beautifully finished, impeccably outfitted ketch, with a machine shop equipped with a lathe and acetylene welding torch. The Grahams had brought more than a year's supply of food, but Walker and Stearns quickly consumed their own meager supplies. They were forced to plan a voyage in the rickety Iola against prevailing winds and currents to Fanning on Tabuaeran, a nearby atoll in Kiribati, to restock—a voyage that was somewhere between difficult and impossible without a working auxiliary engine.
According to Stearns, the Grahams disappeared sometime between August 28 and August 30, 1974, and the young couple found the Grahams' Zodiac dinghy upside down. On September 11, 1974, after days of searching and waiting for the Grahams to return to their boat, Stearns said she and Walker scuttled the Iola and sailed for Hawaii on the Sea Wind. Once in Hawaii, the couple had the Sea Wind repainted and renamed it, which according to boating superstition brings bad luck. This act aroused suspicion; acquaintances of the Grahams easily recognized the distinctive Sea Wind despite its new paint job. The female Stearns was arrested in the lower level of the Hawaii Yacht Club, but Buck Walker was able to escape and avoid capture by using a motorized dingy to race up the "400 row" of the Ala Wai Yacht Harbor. It was believed he fled on foot after leaving the dingy at the loading dock near the Ilikai Hotel. Stearns was arrested for the theft of the Sea Wind. Eventually Walker was caught in California and in separate trials, both he and Sterns were finally, convicted, and served time.
Early one morning in 1981, another visitor to Palmyra, sailor Sharon Jordan, from Johannesburg, South Africa found Muff Graham's skull and other skeletal remains in the surf near a large metal container. The remains showed signs of dismemberment and burning (possibly by Mac Graham's acetylene welding torch), and the body appeared to have been concealed underwater in the container. Mac Graham's remains have yet to be found.
Buck Walker was tried and convicted of Muff Graham's murder. Walker was being held at United States Penitentiary, Victorville, in California. He was released on parole in September 2007 at the age of 69, after serving 22 years of a life sentence[1].
Stearns was tried separately in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California in San Francisco, after Bugliosi persuaded the court that publicity about the murders in Hawaii prevented the empaneling of an impartial jury there. Stearns was acquitted of the murder of Muff Graham and resumed her life in California in the telecommunications industry.
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