In 2013, after his retirement, he was arrested, convicted, and imprisoned for five years on the charge of "illicit conduct in foreign places". He had sexual acts with two underage boys in the Philippines and possessed erotic paraphernalia related to Child Sexual Abuse Material.[1][2] Williams was apprehended in a public park in Playa del Carmen, Mexico in 2013 and extradited to Los Angeles, United States for trial.
Williams earned an undergraduate degree in history from Georgia State University in 1970. He did graduate work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he earned a master's degree in history in 1972, and a Ph.D. in history, in 1974.[4] His doctoral thesis was Black American Attitudes Toward Africa: The Missionary Movement, 1877—1900, and would form the basis of his first book.[5]
From July 1987 to July 1988, Williams was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to lecture in American history at Gadjah Mada University, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.[12] While there, Williams collected autobiographical interviews, 27 of which were published as Javanese Lives: Women and Men in Modern Indonesian Society in 1991.[13]
An amateur ethnographer, Williams has also traveled throughout North America from Alaska to Yucatán to study Native American tribes. His other areas of expertise include cultures of Southeast Asia and the South Pacific, based on his years of field research in Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Cambodia, the Philippines and Polynesia.
From1994 to 1995, Williams, with Jim Kepner, oversaw the merger of the International Gay and Lesbian Archives and the ONE, Inc. library holdings to form the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at USC, the largest repository of LGBT materials in the world.[16][17]
On June 17, 2013, he was placed on the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. Williams was the 500th addition to the list.[22][23] He was arrested in a public park in Playa del Carmen, Mexico one day after he was put on the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list[24] and was extradited to Los Angeles, California for prosecution.
The FBI, with reasonable suspicion, searched Williams's personal computer, finding photographs of unclothed teenage boys.[21] In 2014, Williams pleaded guilty to illicit sexual contact with boys aged 14 to 16 in the Philippines[20] and was sentenced to five years in prison.[25] He was given BOP#65562-112 and released from FCI Englewood in 2017.[citation needed]
In Indonesian: Kehidupan orang Jawa : wanita dan pria dalam masyarakat Indonesia modern. - Jakarta : Pustaka Binaman Pressindo, 1995. - 261 p. - ISBN979442028X.
Walter L. Williams "The United States Indian Policy and the Debate over Philippine Annexation: Implications for the Origins of American Imperialism" // The Journal of American History — 1980. — No. 66.