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Powell was a suspect in Susan Powell's 2009 disappearance from their home in West Valley City, Utah. He had always claimed that he didn't know what happened to his wife. He took the boys
-- then 2 and 4 -- on a midnight camping trip in freezing weather in the Utah desert, he said, and when he returned home the next day authorities were at the house looking for her. Weeks later, he moved the boys to the home of his father, Steve Powell, in Puyallup. After Steve Powell's arrest on voyeurism and child pornography charges last fall, the boys were removed from the house and turned over to Susan Powell's parents. A social worker brought them to Josh Powell's rental home for what was supposed to be a court-sanctioned supervised visit. Josh Powell let the boys inside, locked the social worker out, hit them with a hatchet and set fire to gasoline, authorities said. The records indicate that Susan Powell remained a focal point in the family. Charlie talked about how her favorite color was purple. Powell talked about how she made tasty pumpkin pies from pumpkins that they had grown themselves. As they ate pancakes, bacon and orange juice one day in early November, Braden looked at Powell and said: "I wish mommy was here." Powell said he did, too. The next month, as they decorated for Christmas, Charlie showed the visit supervisor a stocking with "SUSAN" lettered across the top. He later found his mother's favorite stained glass ornament, and Powell said he could hang it on the tree.
In notes from Jan. 29 -- the day of the last visit before Josh Powell killed his children
-- the social worker wrote that the boys made Shrinky Dink toys with him. When the visit was over, Josh Powell walked Charlie and Braden out to the car, buckled them into their booster seats, told them he loved them and said he would see them as soon as he could. "Be happy and have a good time," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Associated Press writer Manuel Valdes contributed to this report.
Baker can be reached at http://twitter.com/MikeBakerAP.
Copyright 2012 The Associated
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