Lee
Mackenzie, author of a book published this week called The
Charming Predator, is hoping to flush out the notorious,
international conman Kenner Elias Jones, her former husband. He was
last reported to the police while seeking political asylum in Sweden.
Originally
from Caernarfon in Wales, Jones absconded from a trial in Lewes Crown
Court in Sussex, England, in 2003. He has been at large ever since,
continuing a career of theft, deception and fraud.
Jones
has been deported from both Canada and the United States. A senior
immigration officer in America described him as “the best conman I
have ever encountered in my entire career.”
He
is wanted in Kenya. allegedly for unpaid debts of more than $100,000
after running his own charity for seven years, posing as a doctor. He
also conducted church services claiming to be a priest.
Back
in Europe he continued on his wicked way across the Netherlands,
Belgium, Portugal and Spain, apparently undeterred by having
previously racked up more than 60 convictions over a period of four
decades.
BBC Wales tracked him down
and filmed him in Lisbon, but ‘Conman Ken’, as the BBC dubbed
him, refused to answer accusations of defrauding individuals,
businesses and institutions.
A travel agent in the town
of Palmela near Lisbon said he persuaded her to hand over €2,500
worth of travel tickets and then disappeared without paying for them.
But
his deceptions in Portugal were minor compared with his activities
elsewhere.
In
southwest Spain he spent six weeks having medical checks in a
district hospital only to leave in apparent good health without
paying a bill of some €26,000.
Two
years ago a man in Malmo reported Jones to the Swedish police
because of suspicious money transfers and after researching the
Welshman’s background on the internet. The Swedish police declined
to investigate. Meanwhile, Jones was seeking political asylum in the
country as a refugee from Kenya.
The
Canadian author Lee Mackenzie has written an account of how she met,
fell in love with and married Jones only to find out too late about
his true character.
As
a young, unworldly woman from a small, trusting community on Canada’s
west coast she fell victim to a sociopath regarded by all who met him
as highly intelligent and charming. But he went on to shatter her
emotionally, psychologically and financially.
“After
storing all the memories away in a cardboard box for decades,” says
Mackenzie, “I finally opened it and looked inside. Not long after
that I connected with an editor who challenged me to write my story.
I love a challenge.”
Mackenzie
admits that even after a long passage of time, sifting through the
story was difficult. “It was certainly a journey into the past,”
she says.
“And
along with remembering the damage Kenner had done, I also had to face
my own part in the story. It was embarrassing, humiliating to see how
easily I had been duped. I see now how I simply wanted to make my
marriage and my life a happy one. I had to heal and forgive myself.
That’s part of the story too.”
A
former CBC radio and television journalist, Mackenzie is now a
professional artist as well as a member of the administrative staff
at her local detachment of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Since
her ex-husband’s last sightings in Spain and Sweden she has been
trying to locate him via the internet.
With
the publication of her book she plans to step up her efforts and has
launched a website with a page called “Where’s Kenner?” www.thecharmingpredator.com.
The
Charming Predator has been published by Penguin Random House:
/http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/546232/the-charming-predator-by-lee-mackenzie/9780385687126/
A
CBC interview with the author on the subject of deception can be
heard here:
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/outintheopen/pastepisodes/deception-effects-1.4030392?autoplay=true
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/outintheopen/pastepisodes/deception-effects-1.4030392?autoplay=true