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Memphis teacher Eliza Fletcher came from a pedigreed Tennessee family that founded a $3.2 billion private hardware company and is well known within the city.
Fletcher, 34, vanished on Friday after being violently abducted during her morning jog and her body was discovered by authorities Monday.
Cleotha Abston was charged Sunday with especially aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence, and authorities announced Monday he has also been charged with first-degree murder.
Fletcher’s grandfather, the late Joseph “Joe” Orgill III, ran Orgill Inc., a hardware supply company that currently employs more than 5,500 people.
Orgill, who died at 80 in March 2018, was a respected businessman and philanthropist in Memphis, according to his obituary in the Commercial Appeal newspaper.
The paper described Orgill Inc. as an “under-the-radar company,” saying, “most people in Memphis have no idea of the scope of Orgill Inc.”
The company says it is “world’s largest independently owned hardlines distributor providing retailers across North America and in more than 60 countries throughout the world access to over 75,000 products and industry-leading retail services.”
Under her grandfather’s leadership, Orgill Inc. went from a regional business to a worldwide leader in hardware supplies.
Forbes listed Orgill as the 143rd-largest private company in the country in 2021, raking in $3.2 billion in revenue that year.
According to Historic Memphis, Orgill is the city’s oldest running business, founded in 1847.
Fletcher was a mom of two young boys and married her husband, Richard James Fletcher III, in a lavish 2014 ceremony that seemed to spare no expense.
Local event planners said “without hesitation” it was the year’s most memorable wedding, according to Memphis Magazine.
“There has been no other wedding like this in Memphis,” wedding pros Russell Whitehead and Ruthie Bowlin told the magazine.
The service was held in a church where the couple met, and the party following it was in a custom tent with hand-painted wood floors.
Fletcher herself seemed to be an avid runner who loved the outdoors. Memphis Magazine described her as a “‘natural’ girl — outdoorsy, athletic, and warm.”
In a particularly chilling social media post from 2020, Fletcher asked her Facebook friends for recommendations for their favorite true crime podcast.
“Loved Tom Brown’s Body,” she commented about the show that investigated the 2016 disappearance of a popular high school senior.
“We like true crime,” she wrote in another comment.
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