Walter Scott (singer)


Walter Simon Notheis, Jr., best remembered by his stage name of Walter Scott, was an American singer who fronted Bob Kuban and The In-Men, a St. Louis, Missouri-based rock 'n' roll band that had brief national popularity in the mid-1960s with the song "The Cheater".

Career

Scott was born Walter Simon Notheis Jr. on February 7, 1943, in St. Louis, Missouri, to Catherine Marie and Walter Simon Notheis Sr..
Scott found fame with Bob Kuban and The In-Men in 1966 with his lead vocals on the song "The Cheater", spent eleven weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at #12 on March 12–19, 1966. The In-Men were never able to chart another Top 40 hit and Scott left the group soon after to attempt a solo career. When this failed, Scott began touring with a cover band during the 1970s.
In early 1983, Scott and Kuban performed together again for a television appearance, and planned to reunite the band for their twentieth anniversary in June 1983.

Death

Scott disappeared on December 27, 1983. In April 1987, his body was found floating face-down in a cistern. He had been hog-tied and shot in the chest.
Scott's second wife, JoAnn, pleaded guilty to hindering the prosecution of his murder, and received a five-year sentence. She served 18 months of her sentence as a result of a plea bargain. Her lover, James H. Williams Sr., whom she had married in 1986, was found guilty of two counts of capital murder for the deaths of Scott, and of Williams' previous wife, Sharon Williams, who died in 1983 from what was originally thought to have been an automobile accident.
Police were told where to look for Scott's body by Williams' son.
The case was documented on the TLC TV series Forensic Files, HBO's Autopsy 3: Voices From the Grave, Secrets of the Morgue, Oxygen's Exhumed: Killer Revealed, and as part of The New Detectives: Case Studies in Forensic Science.
On September 11, 2011, James Williams Sr. died at age 72 while serving his life sentence. He had been in hospice in the state prison in Potosi, Missouri for some time due to having heart problems. JoAnn Williams died at age 75 in May 2019.