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Wray told Memphis, Tenn., newspaper The Commercial Appeal that FBI agents visited her home and told her Kane's son, Joe, gunned down Paudert and Evans. "Jerry had nothing to do with it," she told the newspaper Saturday. Kane made money holding debt-elimination seminars around the country, and he was known for railing against the government, saying it held no authority over him. Wray told The Commercial Appeal that her husband's distrust of government began after his infant daughter's death 14 years ago from what was diagnosed as sudden infant death syndrome. She said the hospital insisted on conducting an autopsy, against Kane's wishes. "He just couldn't understand that," Wray said. She said Joe idolized his father and would parrot his anti-government views, and that the two grew closer after the death of Kane's first wife and Joe's mother, Hope, of complications from pneumonia in 2007. Wray said she met Kane in February at one of his seminars, and within weeks Kane and his son had moved in with her and her two children in Clearwater. She said she couldn't imagine what led to the shootout between her husband and the police. She said Kane wouldn't have killed anyone but that she wasn't sure what Joe would have done if he felt his father was in danger.
[Associated
Press;
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