Indictment reveals how federal agents built a case that led to Erik Maund's arrest
AUSTIN, Texas — Full details have been revealed in the FBI
investigation that led to the arrest of Austin auto dealership executive ErikCharles Maund.
Maund and three other men are facing a federal indictment in
connection with the deaths of an estranged couple in Tennessee as part of an
alleged murder-for-hire plot.
Maund, 46, is the grandson of Charles Maund and a partner of
Maund Automotive Group, a car dealer in Austin that sells Toyota and Volkswagen
cars.
A new report from KVUE’s media partners at The Austin
American-Statesman by Senior Reporter Tony Plohetski shows Maund was driving
home from a hunting trip at a South Texas ranch last week when federal agents,
alongside San Marcos police and Texas DPS troopers, surrounded Maund’s black
Toyota SUV.
The FBI had likely been surveilling Maund for days following
a yearlong confidential investigation, The Statesman reports. It’s alleged
Maund directed and financed the million-dollar plot that left two people dead
to hide his affair.
A federal indictment unsealed on Monday showed Maund had
begun a relationship with an aesthetician, 33-year-old Holly Williams, using
the fake name “Erik Moore” while visiting his son in college in Nashville,
Tennessee. Text messages obtained by investigators show Maund last saw Williams
at a Nashville hotel in February 2020, calling her “beautiful” when arranging
to meet up.
The indictment says Maund began receiving demands for money
three weeks later from Williams’ on-again, off-again boyfriend, 36-year-old
William Lanway, with whom she had a violent relationship. Lanway had reportedly
traced Maund’s cellphone number to his auto company, revealing his name and position.
Authorities say instead of turning the alleged extortion
over to police or a civil lawyer, Maund went to an Austin-based security
company and developed a plan with three other men over the next three weeks to
kidnap and kill Williams and her ex-boyfriend. The group allegedly coordinated
via encrypted cellphone messaging apps as Maund sent a flow of high-dollar
payments.
The Maund family has now hired Austin attorneys Perry Minton
and Sam Bassett to defend Erik Maund locally and in Nashville, according to The
Statesman.
Attorneys told The Statesman facts emerge in trials that do
not match initial allegations by investigators.
“We intend to give Erik Maund the vigorous defense to these
allegations that he deserves and that the law provides,” they said.
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