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A photo of Vashti S Seacat

Vashti S Seacat 1977 - 2011

Vashti S Seacat of Kansas was born on March 21, 1977 at Kansas, and died at age 34 years old on April 30, 2011 in Kingman, Kingman County. Vashti Seacat was buried at Resthaven Gardens of Memory US-54, in Wichita, Sedgwick County.
Vashti S Seacat
Vashti Spring Forrest
Kansas
March 21, 1977
Kansas
April 30, 2011
Kingman, Kingman County, Kansas, 67068, United States
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Vashti S Seacat's History: 1977 - 2011

Uncover new discoveries and connections today by sharing about people & moments from yesterday.
  • Introduction

    Vashti and Brett Seacat were a couple who had known each other since high school and eventually got married. Vashti was employed at Cox Communications, while Brett was a law enforcement instructor and had previously worked as a County deputy. Together, they had two young children: Brendan, who was four years old at the time of Vashti's death, and Bronson, who was only two years old. Tragically, a few weeks before her death, Vashti had filed for divorce from Brett. Later, Brett claimed that Vashti had committed suicide. However, this was eventually found to be untrue, and he was charged with murder. It was discovered that Brett had also set fire to their house, while their two little boys were still inside. See an account of the murder at Find A Grave memorial story about murder case. Brett didn't respond well to his conviction, the former Deputy telling the judge: “You are going to hell for what you have done in this case”. See Ex-police instructor rants at judge before sentence in wife’s death for the full account of his sentence and his response. Following Brett's conviction, a court case involving custody of the two boys surfaced between Vashti's sister and mother. See In wake of Kingman murder case, another court battle over young sons.
  • 03/21
    1977

    Birthday

    March 21, 1977
    Birthdate
    Kansas
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Vashti was Caucasian.
  • Nationality & Locations

    A native of Kansas, Vashti lived in Wichita, Kingman, and Harper, Kansas.
  • Early Life & Education

    She attended college at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas.
  • Military Service

    Vashti never served in the military.
  • Professional Career

    Vashti worked at Cox Communications in Wichita, Kansas.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Vashti Forrest married Brett Seacat and they had two sons, Brandan and Bronson. When Brendan was only 4 years old and Bronson was 2 years old, Brett was accused of murdering his wife, their mother, and setting their house on fire with the boys in the house. Brett was later convicted of Vashti's murder and sentenced to over three decades in jail. He loudly protested his innocence, and continues to claim that Vashti had committed suicide.
  • 04/30
    2011

    Death

    April 30, 2011
    Death date
    murdered: shot
    Cause of death
    Kingman, Kingman County, Kansas 67068, United States
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    Resthaven Gardens of Memory US-54, in Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas 67209, United States
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    Vashti Seacat, born on March 21, 1977, died on April 30, 2011, at the age of 34 in Kingman, Kingman County, Kansas. She was laid to rest at Resthaven Gardens of Memory on US-54 in Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas.
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6 Memories, Stories & Photos about Vashti

Ex-police instructor rants at judge before sentence in wife’s death
KINGMAN — Unrepentant and unapologetic, a former Kansas police instructor was sentenced Monday to life in prison for the April 2011 shooting death of his wife.

Minutes before Brett Seacat was sentenced, he delivered a courtroom rant accusing the judge of helping to convict him by hiding evidence that proves his innocence.

Accusations of family abuse, multiple suicide attempts, and life insurance payouts — all kept out of the murder trial — got an airing at the sentencing in the high-profile case.

Seacat was convicted in June of shooting 34-year-old Vashti Seacat days after she filed for divorce, then setting fire to their house to cover evidence. Investigators found her charred body in the Kingman home where the couple lived with their two sons, ages 2 and 4. Seacat, a former instructor at the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center in Reno County and former Sedgwick County deputy, escaped with the boys.

Prosecutors at his trial portrayed Seacat as a manipulative man who used his law enforcement background to make it look like his wife shot herself. The defense argued it was suicide, noting even an experienced coroner couldn’t decide whether the death was suicide or homicide.

At his sentencing, the 37-year-old Kingman man accused Kingman County District Judge Larry Solomon of seeking publicity and assuring his wife’s family even before the hearing that he would receive a harsh sentence.

“This is the kind of sentence you believe you will need for a Kansas Supreme Court nomination,” Seacat told the judge.

Solomon imposed a sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years for premeditated, first-degree murder. He also gave Seacat a total of more than six years in prison for one count of aggravated arson and two counts of child endangerment. Since the four counts will run consecutively, Seacat won’t be eligible for parole for more than 31 years.

“You are going to hell for what you have done in this case,” Seacat told the judge.

Seacat vowed that the evidence the court suppressed will one day be presented and “I will be free.”

When the defendant had finished, the judge calmly told the courtroom some of the comments were so bizarre they don’t deserve a response. But he said it affirmed to him that the jury made the right decision.

Solomon said Vashti Seacat wasn’t depressed or suicidal but was looking forward to a future with her two sons after the divorce was finalized. He said her family “hit it on the head” in their victim impact statements when they described Seacat as being controlling, self-centered and narcissistic.

“Your statement this morning confirms to me you live in some sort of bizarre alternate reality,” Solomon told him.

The judge also said he considered the fact Seacat hadn’t admitted guilt, hadn’t admitted responsibility and didn’t express any remorse.

“I don’t intend to show any mercy — you didn’t show Vashti any mercy,” Solomon said.

Earlier in the hearing, Vashti Seacat’s family recounted her fears about what her husband was capable of doing, the concerns for their own safety and the emotional havoc on the lives of the couple’s two young children.

Rich Forrest, Vashti Seacat’s brother, told the court that Brett Seacat destroyed his children’s innocence and deprived them of knowing both their parents growing up.

“When the children are older,” he said, “What exactly are we supposed to tell them when they ask about their daddy?”

- By The Associated Press
Posted Aug 5, 2013 at 5:31 AM
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In wake of Kingman murder case, another court battle over young sons
When former lawman Brett Seacat went to prison in August, convicted of murdering his 34-year-old wife, Vashti, and setting their Kingman house on fire, one might assume it ended the story.

But a lesser-known side of the saga, which has drawn national attention, continues to play out in Kingman County District Court. It is a guardianship case to determine who will care for the couple’s sons, Bronson, now 5, and Brendan, 7. The guardianship issue, quietly simmering for more than two years while the criminal case churned, has reached the boiling point.

What began as a face-off between maternal and paternal families has evolved into a struggle between Vashti Seacat’s mother and sister. In legal documents, the mother claims her daughter is unfit, and the daughter accuses her mother of being abusive. Although the mother has been the guardian for more than two years, her daughter says she also has spent a lot of time caring for the boys.

Judge Larry Solomon, who presided over Brett Seacat’s trial, has set a two-day trial beginning March 27 to decide who will be the guardian.

The decision is supposed to come down to this: What is in the best interest of the two children? Should they remain with their maternal grandmother and step-grandfather in the Harper area? Or should guardianship shift to their maternal aunt and her husband, whose plan is to raise the boys in Wichita? Or should it be someone else? The judge, through an assistant, said he couldn’t comment on the pending case.

- BY TIM POTTER
FEBRUARY 01, 2014 03:49 PM, UPDATED FEBRUARY 01, 2014 10:27 PM
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Find A Grave memorial story about murder case
KINGMAN, KS. — Three friends of Vashti Seacat testified Wednesday that she was optimistic about the future after filing for divorce and had planned a girls night out for the evening of April 30, 2011.

That's the same day prosecutors allege 37-year-old Brett Seacat shot and killed his wife sometime before 4 a.m., and then set fire to their Kingman home to cover up the crime.

It's the same day, Brett Seacat's defense attorneys counter, a depressed Vashti Seacat, 34, set fire to their home at 255 E. Ave. B before committing suicide.

Brett Seacat is charged (and convicted) with first-degree murder, aggravated arson and two counts of aggravated endangerment of a child. He escaped the blaze with the couple's two young sons, called 911 and reported to authorities that his wife shot herself and set the house on fire. Because of burns to the body, a coroner could not make a definitive determination on whether the death was a homicide or suicide.

Sarai Tobon, Vashti's co-worker at Cox Communications in Wichita, and Jaime Arnold and Jill Aaron – who each met Vashti Seacat in college at Wichita State University – all testified she had invited them to the girls night out. They described their friend as hopeful or excited about the future.

Vashti Seacat had filed for divorce a couple of weeks before her death, and Brett Seacat was served with divorce papers only a couple of days before his wife's body was found after the fire at their home.

Vashti leaves behind her two loving sons, a brother and sister and family that will miss her everyday of their lives. They now only have memories to hold them over, until they meet her in Heaven someday.
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The Gravesite of Vashti Seacat
The Gravesite of Vashti Seacat
A photo of the grave of Vashti Seacat Forrest added to Find a Grave
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Vashti Seacat
Vashti Seacat
A photo of Vashti Seacat added to Find A Grave by BWA in June 2013
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Vashti Seacat
Vashti Seacat
A photo of Vashti added to Find A Grave in 2013 by "BWA"
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Vashti Seacat's Family Tree & Friends

Vashti Seacat's Family Tree

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Friendships

Vashti's Friends

Friends of Vashti Friends can be as close as family. Add Vashti's family friends, and her friends from childhood through adulthood.
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3 Followers & Sources
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