Smithville, TennesseeShe's served her time and successfully won back custody of her three daughters from her dead husband's parents. Now she's revealing a new secret about her life. It's a whole different world these days for Mary Winkler. She's renting a home in Smithville, Tennessee and raising her three daughters.
After telling prosecutors that he had helped Perry move Janet's body to Kentucky, he agreed to cooperate with them and testify against his son in exchange for a reduced sentence; however he was unable to recall exactly where he had disposed of the body and it has never been found.
Arthur March died in prison. Perry March is still in and will stay awhile. A jury believed what Arthur said Perry said, that he struck and killed Janet March with a heavy wrench, in their Nashville home, during a divorce debate over his indiscretions. That was August 15, 1996.
Patricia WinklerBreanna WinklerMary Alice WinklerMary Winkler/Children
Newschannel 5 has learned March was recently moved 200 miles from the Northeast Correctional Complex in Mountain City to the Morgan County Correctional Complex in Wartburg.
After March was arrested, the children — who had been sent to stay with March's siblings in Chicago — were returned to their grandparents in Nashville, who soon won permanent custody. Levine's nephew has graduated college and is working as an engineer.
Janet March's remains have never been found, despite Col. March's efforts to lead authorities to them as part of a plea agreement with federal and state authorities trying Perry March in his wife's August 1996 disappearance.
Ajijic, MexicoArmed with a keen knowledge of the law, March (a longtime attorney who ultimately was disbarred) has filed another in a string of lawsuits from jail, this time in an attempt to remove his two children from the Levines' care and send them to live with his second wife in Ajijic, Mexico, where he embarked on a new life ...
Arthur March (23 February 1891 – 17 April 1957) was an Austrian physicist. From 1909 he studied mathematics and physics at the Universities of Innsbruck, Munich and Vienna, earning his doctorate in 1913. In 1917 he obtained his habilitation, and in 1928 became an associate professor at Innsbruck.
Winkler was serving as the pulpit minister at the Fourth Street Church of Christ in Selmer, Tennessee, at the time of his death. Members of his congregation found him dead inside his home after he failed to appear at the church for a Wednesday-night service he was to lead on March 22, 2006.
Filming began in early January 1996. Trinity United Methodist Church in Newark, New Jersey, served as the Biggs' New York City church. The production leased the church, and began renovating it in February 1996.