Robert Scott (author)

Robert Scott
Born c. 1941
Died January 9, 2015 (aged 73)
Northern California
Nationality  United States
Occupation Author
Years active 2000–2015
Notable credit(s) Guest E! and Discovery ID
Style Narrative
Website http://robertscotttruecrime.com/

Robert Scott (c. 1941 January 9, 2015) was a New York Times best-selling American non-fiction author who wrote 20 true crime books.

Education

Scott attended Diablo Valley College.

Career

In the late 1990s, after reading newspaper accounts about a series of local murders, Scott, a delivery company driver at the time, began researching and writing a book about a couple, James Daveggio and Michelle Michaud, who committed murders in the county in which Scott lived.[1] In 2001, Kensington Books, as a Pinnacle Books imprint, released his book about the couple's murderous crime spree, titled Rope Burns. In November 2012, Scott appeared on an Investigation Discovery episode of "Deadly Women" about the case.

His 16th book, Shattered Innocence, about kidnap victim Jaycee Dugard, made the New York Times Best Seller list in paperback nonfiction the week of October 2, 2011.[2]

TruTV's "Crime Library" recounted Scott's book Like Father Like Son about the 2000 murder of 9-year-old Krystal Steadman.[3]

He contributed chapters for two anthologies, Masters of True Crime, released in 2012 by Prometheus Books, and Murder Past, Murder Present, released in 2009 by Twilight Times.[4]

Scott appeared in the second series of the TV show Nothing Personal about the Todd Garton case and the plan to kill his wife, Carole Garton, about which Scott wrote the book Kill Or Be Killed.[5] He also appeared in the 2010 documentary Too Young to Kill: 15 Shocking Crimes to talk about 14-year-old Cody Posey and the murder of Posey's father.[6]

Awards

In 2007, Scott was awarded Best East Bay True-Crime Author by the East Bay Express newspaper.[7]

His book Shattered Innocence was named a New York Times bestseller in October 2011.[2]

Personal life

Scott died at his home in Northern California on January 9, 2015.[8]

Books

Non-fiction

References

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