Shocking Capture: "America's Most Wanted" Fugitive Found After 40 Years On The Run - main

'America's Most Wanted' Fugitive Caught After 40 Years in Hiding

By Mia R. • Oct 10, 2024

The long search for Donald Santini, a man who had been on the run for nearly 40 years, has finally come to an end. Known for his appearance on "America's Most Wanted," Santini was wanted in connection to the brutal 1984 murder of 33-year-old Cynthia Wood in Florida. The story of his capture has shocked many as details reveal he had been hiding in plain sight for decades.

The 1984 Murder That Shocked Florida

On the night of June 5, 1984, Cynthia Wood told her friends she had a date, and neighbors confirmed seeing a van in her driveway around 9 p.m. Unbeknownst to them, this was the beginning of a tragic evening.

Three days later, her lifeless body was found, shoeless but fully clothed, with signs of strangulation and bruises across her body. A witness who had been in a relationship with Santini at the time, told investigators he borrowed her van to take Wood out, intending to intoxicate her and leave her at a police station.

According to the witness, Santini had allegedly been paid by Wood's husband's family to gather damaging information to use against her in a bitter custody battle. That evening, Santini returned the van and parked it around the corner. The next morning, the witness alleged that he confessed to killing Wood to and dumping her body in Hillsborough County.

Living Under a New Identity

Over the nearly 40 years since Wood's murder, he had used at least 13 aliases, according to the arrest warrant. When authorities finally tracked him down, he was living in San Diego, California, under the name Wellman Simmonds.

Santini had a troubled past long before Cynthia Wood's murder. In 1978, he served time in prison for a rape he committed while stationed in Germany with the U.S. Army, as well as being charged with aggravated robbery in Texas in 1983.

After fleeing to California, he reinvented himself as Wellman Simmonds, creating a new life with his wife and children. In San Diego County, he held various roles, including serving on a water board, running an antiques store, managing apartments, and co-owning a Thai restaurant with his wife.

Despite these ventures, Santini built his new life on fraud, filing for bankruptcy three times between 2001 and 2012, with liabilities exceeding $161,000. In a letter from jail, Santini claimed his wife in San Diego had no idea about his criminal past, while admitting that he also had another wife and daughter in Texas.

The Arrest and Guilty Plea

Despite being featured on "America's Most Wanted" in 1990, 2005, and 2013, Santini successfully evaded law enforcement for decades.

In June 2023, U.S. Marshals apprehended Santini after he was reportedly found attempting to commit identity fraud while trying to secure a passport, according to Florida court records. By November 2023, the 65-year-old Santini pleaded guilty to the murder of Cynthia Wood, bringing an end to the nearly 40-year search, and was sentenced to 50 years in prison.

Justice After 4 Decades

With Santini now behind bars, there is finally some sense of justice for Cynthia Wood's family. However, peace comes with a heavy heart; her eldest son, just 14 at the time of her death, took his own life four years later. Her other son is in jail in Manatee County, and her daughter is homeless.

The devastating ripple effects of Wood's murder left her family shattered, with each member's life tragically marked by the trauma of her loss.

References: "America's Most Wanted" suspect in woman's 1984 killing returned to Florida after living for years as water board president in California | Man pleads guilty in 1984 Hillsborough murder, gets 50 years in prison | America's Most Wanted fugitive Donald Santini used bankruptcy to finance life on the run

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