Other books by Ann Rule the stranger beside me POSSESSION IN liA," J^^ ^ A'&ue StDcycf EassmandMJrdei? 'ANNEULE NAL BOOKS MEW AlVIEraiCAM UBRARY NEW YORK AND SCARBOROUGH, ONTARIO For Christie and Danny ... and Cheryl Downs Copyright © 1987 by Ann Rule All rights reserved. For information address New American Library. Published simultaneously in Canada by The New American Library of Canada Limited @NAL TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES REGISTERED TRADEMARK--MARCA REGISTRADA HECHO EN CRAWFORDSV1LLE. IN., U.S.A. signet, signet classic, mentor, onyx, plume, meridian and NAL books are published in the United States by NAL PENGUIN INC., 1633 Broadway, New York, New York 10019, in Canada by The New American Library of Canada Limited, 81 Mack Avenue, Scarborough, Ontario MIL 1M8 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Rule, Ann. Small sacrifices. 1. Downs, Diane. 2. Crime and criminals--Oregon-- Springfield--Biography. 3. Murder--Oregon--Springfield --Case studies. I. Title. HV6248.D68R85 1987 364.1'523'0979531 8633253 ISBN 0453005403 First Printing, May, 1987 123456789 PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ETOBICOKE - PUBUC LIBRARIES LMBROOK PARK ,3,.» C: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In the three years I have worked on this book, I have been most fortunate to have been offered the intelligence, empathy, sympathy, inspiration, support, and recollections of so many people. I am more grateful than I can say to: Sheriff Dave Burks, Dick Tracy, Kurt Wuest, Doug Welch,' Jon Peckels, and Bill Kennedy of the Lane County Sheriffs Office; It. Jerry Smith, Springfield Police Department; Jim Pex, Oregon State Police Crime Laboratory; Ray Broderick, Paul Alton, Paula Krogdahl, Lane County District Attorney's Office. Judge Gregory G. Foote, Lane County Circuit Court. Shelby Day, Judy Patterson, Jan Goldberg Temple, Carleen Elbridge, McKenzie Williamette Hospital. Nancy and Billy McCoy, Evelyn and Ray Slaven, Claudia Langan, Eugene, Oregon; Dr. Ron Holmes and "Tootie" Holmes, Louisville, Kentucky; Edison A. Barlow; Charlene and Robert Knickerbocker, Chandler, Arizona; Maureen and Bill Woodcock, Donna Anders, Ann Combs, Barbara Easton, Jennie Everson, Betty Fredericksen, Bill and Shiriey Hickman, Gerry Brittingham, Andy Rule, S. Bruce Sherles, James Jones, Diane and Alan Espy, Dr. Peter J. Modde, Seattle, Washington; Laura Harris, Battleground, Washington; Mike Rule, Pullman, Washington; Dick Reed, Camas, Washington. ^ Press: Elouise Schumacher, Betty Udeson, Seattle Times; Rick Attig, Springfield News; Dave Angier, Dee Dixon, KGW; Maureen Shine, KMTR; Sandy Poole, Henry Zinman, Paddy Kean, Mary Starett, KATU; Ross Hamilton, Kathleen Monje, Dana Tims, The Oregonian; Jack Hamann, Diana Wilmar, KING; Sally Hodgkinson, UPI; Ken Koopman, Cottage Grove Sentinel; Eric Mason, KOIN; Ann Portal, Eugene Register-Guard, with special thanks to Anne Bradley Jaeger of KEZI, who shared her insights regarding the videotape of her exclusive interview with Diane Downs, and to Lars Larson, KVAL. I wish to express my particular gratitude to Enes and Jana Smith of the Eugene Police Department; and to Mildred Yoacham, my favorite and most dogged researcher; Sophie M. Stackhouse, my favorite critic; Leslie M. Rule, my trial assistant; Frederick Noonan, my copy editor; Michaela Hamilton, my astute and encouraging editor throughout this long and sometimes discouraging three-year project; Joan and Joe Foley, my first, last, and always literary agents; and, finally, to my friend Pierce R. Brooks, the man responsible for my writing this book, with my highest respect and admiration for his contributions to his fellow man. The fairest things have fleetest end, Their scent survives their close: But the rose's scent is bitterness To him that loved the rose. —Francis Thompson m PROLOGUE The strai Picifhl' suci] ma t?allov tpiald 1 Id Idl^ PROLOGUE Ill There is no more idyllic spot in May than the Willamette Valley that cradles Eugene and Springfield, Oregon. Sheltered by the Cascade Range to the east and the steel-blue and purple ridges of the coastal mountains on the western horizon, the valley was an oasis for pioneers more than a century ago. It remains an oasis today. Rivers thread their way through Eugene and Springfield: the Willamette, the McKenzie, the Mohawk, the Little Mohawk-- nourishing the land. Eugene and Springfield are sister cities--but far from twins. Eugene, with a population of 100,000, is bigger, brighter, and far more sophisticated. Eugene has the University of Oregon and the prestigious Hult Center for the Performing Arts. Eugene is the runners' mecca of the world--spawner of champion after champion; it has been estimated that one out of three of its citizens run regularly. Not jog--run. Eugene is fitness personified, with bicyclists' paths emblazoned along the edges of even the busiest y? downtown street, sacrosanct. Eugene is the successful sister of " the paired cities, cool and slender, professional. Her restaurants serve artichoke and ricotta pie, salads with raspberry vinegar, Brie and pate and wild mushroom and sorrel soup, and vie with one another to discover ever more obscure spices. Springfield, half Eugene's size, is the sister who never graduated from high school, who works for Weyerhaueser or Georgia- pacific, and no longer notices the acrid smell. People in Spring"eld work a forty- or fifty-, or sixty-, hour week and, if they still ^ed exercise, they go bowling or to a country-western dancing Bvern. The appetizers in a good Springfield restaurant are carrot ^icks, celery, pickled beets and soda crackers; the entree is xcellent chicken-fried steak or prime rib. The main street is ailed Main Street and it wears its neon signs in proud prolifera 4 ANN RULE tion. Excepting Portland, Springfield is the largest industrial region in Oregon, and yet pioneers' descendants cling to tradition even as factories threaten to obliterate the old days. It is a city unpretentious and homey. A long time back, Clint Eastwood lived in Springfield for a while. The dipping, curving Belt Line freeway connects Eugene and Springfield, and their boundaries merge into one another. Some citizens live in Eugene and work in Springfield--or commute to Eugene from neat ranch houses in Springfield. Both cities have wonderful parks and spectacular scenery. Between the two, everything that anyone might seek--barring tropical temperatures--is available. Willamette Valley winters are long and dismal for rain-haters, clouds hanging so low that they obscure even the huge buttes looming north and south of Eugene. In May when the sun glows and the rivers have absorbed the rain storms, it is as if the gray days never were. Oaks and maples leaf out, brilliant against the darker green of fir and pine. The air is drenched with the sweetness of fresh-cut rye grass, wild roses, strawberries, and a million bearded irises. Beneath this sweetness: the pungent lacing of onions, sawdust, cedar, and the fecund smell of good red earth, furrowed and waiting for seed. May, 1984. It was ironic that it should be May again. Four seasons had come and gone since it happened. May to May. Neat. Some slight sense of order finally after months of chaos and uncertainty. Oregon has good springs and bad springs, depending on the point of view. This May was not good. The wind that whipped around the Hilton Hotel and the Lane County Courthouse was as sodden as a handkerchief drenched with tears. Rain pelted and slashed and dripped, finally trapping itself in small torrents in the gutters at Oak and Eighth Streets. The first day of the trial so many had waited for was a day to stay at home, light a fire, and read a good book. And still the parking lot across the street from the courthouse was full, and the Hilton had dozens of rooms reserved for out-oftown media. The carnival began where the elevator doors opened onto the courthouse's third-floor lobby. Cameras and lights and reporters and microphones. Technicians laying cable along the floor, cov- SMALL SACRIFICES 5 ering it carefully with silver duct tape. Photographers leaning nrecariously over the "No pictures beyond here" barrier, pressins their luck for a forbidden candid shot. The hall was filled--not with sadness, but with excited expectancy. The would-be gallery lined up--a hundred, two hundred peonie shivering and drenched, women mostly, hoping to be admitted' to the inner sanctum of Courtroom Number Three, to pass beyond the double oak doors whose two tiny windows were covered with butcher paper blocking even so much as a peek inside. Uniformed deputies and a thick rope attached to a heavy steel stanchion held them back. The women, and a sprinkling of embarrassed-looking men, carried raincoats and lunches in precisely creased brown bags. Those first in line had been there for hours. Occasionally, necessities of nature forced one or another to dash around the corner to the restrooms, a neatly folded raincoat left to save a place in line. The fabric marker was always honored. Oregonians, all Northwesterners, are a civilized breed. Even so, when the doors finally opened, there was a stampede. Two little old ladies were carried along in the surging tide of human bodies, their black, laced shoes inches above the floor. Unruffled, they sailed in, and found two narrow spots on the long benches, hats still firmly planted on their heads. The long wait promised to be worthwhile. Advocacy both for and against the defendant was passionate. The gallery murmured and twittered; spectators half-rose to crane their necks for a closer look at the principals--mostly at the defendant. Few eyes lingered long on Fred Hugi, the lone assistant g district attorney who would be prosecuting this case for the State. Thirty-nine years old, his dark hair already salt-and-peppered, Hugi had shouldered the final responsibility for bringing the defendant to trial. Tall, lean (or downright skinny, depending . . .), tough as whipcord, he wore a moustache that gave him the look °f a man from another, earlier century--some frontier lawman or ^dge, maybe, peering solemnly from a browning tintype. From time to time, Hugi's brown eyes swept over the court- ^om. They seemed to fix on no one, and they revealed nothing. rL^ glanced over his notes on the long yellow legal pad. Behind hls tightly capped facade, he was champing at the bit, eager to get on with it. He was neither pessimistic nor elated; he was "^mensely relieved to find himself at last in court. By avocation a °ng-distance runner, Hugi saw the weeks ahead as a marathon-- L 6 ANN RULE k |Ev I: thi "u :j da II Th | sin . "y old '''» see ; Ghf I . oro \ mot the |1 Thf :| StPt pici 1; crii || As; this nui sesi , des erne ma gerd steady, determined pacing after meticulous training. Brilliant and stubborn--no, tenacious--Fred Hugi never gave up on anything he set out to do, even though his singlemindedness had been known to irritate the hell out of people around him. The words before him blurred. No matter. He was ready. He knew it all by heart; he could make his opening statement in his sleep. He'd lain awake too many long nights, worrying this case-- seeing it from one angle, and then reversing it, turning it in his mind like a Rubik's Cube. Sometimes he suspected he knew more about the defendant than he did about his own wife after almost two decades of marriage. It was a good thing Joanne understood him, accepted that her husband had to do what he had to do, and left him alone, unquestioning; he'd been obsessed with this case for a year. The defendant sat so close to him now that with the slightest extension of his right elbow, their arms would touch. Hugi caught the scent of jail soap and a faint whiff of acrid perspiration. He was accustomed to the peculiar economy of space in Lane County courtrooms. The prosecutor, the defendant, and the defense attorney sat adjacent to one another along one nest of tables. Normally, the State and the Defense in a major trial have their own space, but these battle lines were only imaginary, drawn in the air--as thick and impenetrable as iron walls. Fred Hugi sat on the far left, the defendant sat in the middle, and Jim Jagger, attorney for the defense, sat on the far right. They composed the triangle around which everything else would revolve. Hugi saw that the accused seemed confident, rolling--as always--with any punch, leaning over often to whisper and laugh in Jagger's ear, ignoring the prosecutor. That was fine with him. He had taken infinite pains to be seen as only "a dopey guy," an unknown factor. The defendant clearly viewed him as negligible. No threat. That was exactly the way Hugi wanted it. He, on the other hand, had tremendous respect for his opponent. Smarter than hell, a quick study, and, through the defense's rights of discovery, aware of his whole case going in. The worthiest of adversaries, armed with a clever attorney, and backed, seemingly, by a huge fan club. It was bizarre that the crimes the defendant was accused of defied credulity. Their very nature threatened to turn the tide against the State. Too cruel to believe. Fred Hugi had waited so long for this moment. Days had become weeks, and weeks months--months that had promised to _________________ SMALL SACRIFICES 7 stretch into a lifetime. This was the case that appeared initially to he simple--even ordinary in a macabre way--and easy to adjudicate. He'd been hoping to be entrusted with a murder case that might demand much more of him. Something interesting. Something that would challenge him, push him to the wall, and hone his trial expertise. When the Downs case came along, he had made the erroneous assumption that it would be over in a day or so, that it would take just long enough to clear to make him lose his place in the long line of assistant DA's waiting for a "good" homicide. ^: Easy. It had been hell. There was every indication that it would continue to be hell. There had never been a single moment when this somber, intense prosecutor had shouted "Aha! Now we've got it! From here on, it's a shoo-in." H A year in Vietnam had tested Fred Hugi severely; a year jousting with this media-savvy defendant, and with at least half the population of Eugene and vicinity, had been worse. Prosecuting a defendant like this--for particularly heinous crimes--scraped roughly across the grain of middle-American mores. Fred Hugi knew he was sniping at traditions as entrenched as Mom and apple pie. His eyes slid again over the packed gallery and he winced at the row upon row of "concerned" citizens. He figured they sure as hell weren't there for him. Solid support for the accused. If he recognized this outpouring of sympathy, he knew the jury would see it too. It did not occur to him that some of the spectators might be there simply to hear the juicy details of the defendant's purportedly promiscuous sex life, or even that some of them might be his cheering section. He felt quite isolated. That was OK; he was accustomed to it. Fred Hugi believed absolutely that what he was doing was right--that he had no other way to go. He had someone to answer to and if he lost, he would lose big. And so would they. He looked at the jury. Twelve jurors; three alternates. Hugi had rather unorthodox theories about juries. He considered the ^remony of voir dire to pick unprejudiced jurors basically bullshit, easily abused, and a vehicle for influencing likely jurors to ^e a position before they heard any evidence at all. He was no S°od at it; he knew he had neither charm nor charisma and he ^tested having to play the game. Now Jim Jagger was good at it. Jagger and the prospective L 8 ANN RULE jurors had chuckled and chatted. Hugi had been content to play off Jagger. As long as his opponent hadn't attempted to slant facts that might come out in the trial ahead, Hugi kept his mouth shut. But he tensed when he heard the defense attorney ask about religious affiliations and insinuate references to his own church work. Still, Hugi was relieved that it was Jim Jagger up there and not Melvin Belli, who had been scheduled to head the defense team. Belli would surely have held press parties on the top of the Eugene Hilton every night, effectively turning this bleakest of tragedies into a media circus. | Hugi had just about had it with the press; he glanced at them, packed into the first row behind the rail. He suspected for most of them this was all headlines only—not pain and blood and tears. They were as bad as the gallery—worse, really; many of them had pandered to the suspect, dancing obligingly to whichever tune was called. Well, now they'd get their headlines all right. He couldn't stop that, but they might be in for a surprise or two. Hugi hadn't changed anything about himself for this trial. Balking at the advice of his courtroom expert—DA's Investigator, Ray Broderick—he'd refused to grow his hair longer so he'd look less rigid. Nor would Hugi consider modifying his apparel. In court he always wore a conservative, off-the-rack suit with baggy trousers, or a blazer and slacks, a regimentally striped tie, and • heavy, polished, wing-tipped shoes. He rarely smiled. Hugi's strategy in this trial was to be a teacher. He was going to show the jury exactly what had happened, presenting some — extremely technical evidence and testimony. Would the jurors • understand it? Would they even try to understand it—or would it strike them as repetitive and boring? And one of his witnesses was very fragile, in danger of being broken beyond repair. The trial would be like walking on the cutting edge of a knife. • With it all, he was as ready as he would ever be. He would i| demonstrate what he believed devoutly to be the truth. That was • what justice was about. The truth. No frills. No high jinks. No pratfalls. I Hugi expected that he would have to play catch-up after voir dire. He assumed he wasn't likeable, so why should the jurors warm to him? He knew some people—particularly the cops—delighted in calling him an asshole. Hell, sometimes his own jinvestigators called him worse. When he was working on a case, he could be a juggernaut—and Lord help anyone who got in the SMALL SACRIFICES 9 way or failed to complete an assignment. But he never asked anyone to do more than he himself did. TheJ&oil-dys^ hadn't been as bad as Hugi expected. He'd used all his challenges, and he still had some reservations about the final twelve, but basically it was a crapshoot. He would have been just as happy to pick the first twelve people who came out of the jury pool. Same difference. All he asked were a dozen intelligent human beings with common sense, salt-of-the-earth people who couldn't be flimflammed. He knew that most people are frightened of making a decision. Americans have become so used to "seeing" the crime committed on television that anything else--including real life-- becomes fraught with "reasonable doubt." He looked at his jury now, sitting up there, getting used to their new roles. How many of them had guts enough to look someone in the eye and say straight out, You're a-murderer! All he needed was one bozo who had already made up his mind and four to six weeks of trial would be down the tubes. Fred Hugi was asking for a conviction on murder. He needed all twelve of those jurors. He couldn't afford to lose even one of them. The defendant only needed one to beat the murder charge. Everybody on the West Coast had heard the story by now, and half seemed to suspect a "railroad." Hugi thought of the stacks of letters in his files, calling him and the cops everything from cruel fascists to crooked grandstanders. Was one of those fifty percent sitting up there at this very moment, smiling guilelessly down at him? If someone wanted on a jury bad enough, it wasn't that hard to come up with the right answers on voir dire. Fred Hugi bit down hard, unconsciously grinding his teeth. The weeks ahead were so important to him. This was more than Just a trial. For him, it was as simple as good against evil; the ^rdict waiting down the road might help him allay his growing feeling that the system wasn't working. He rose to make his opening statement. The accused listened, °ored at first, and then with an incredulous expression. For the wst time, Fred Hugi was a recognizable enemy. A dangerous enemy. The defendant bent over a yellow legal pad, furiously brawling huge letters, and then holding it up for Hugi to see. He ead it without missing a beat in his presentation to the jury. 10 ANN RULE The tablet read, LIE! Jim Jagger reached for the pad and shook his head slightly. The pad hit the oak table with a slap; the defendant was seething. Someone was lying. Maybe when they emerged from this courtroom a month or two down the road, the question of who it was would be put to rest forever. . . . a i CHAPTER 1 May 19, 1983. It had been, if not a quiet night, at least a normal night for the Springfield Police Department. Cops know that hot weather encourages impromptu parties and triggers family beefs. The SPD log for that twenty-four-hour period lists the expected ration of trouble between a quarter after ten and twenty minutes to eleven Thursday night. An anonymous caller complained at 10:16 p.m. about a party on North First Street. "RP [reporting party] called to report a loud party in the above area. Unit dispatched. Responsibles contacted. Noise abated. Subjects to depart the area." "Suspicious conditions" were reported--again anonymously --at 10:22 p.m. "RP reported hearing a small child crying. Unit dispatched. Involved parties contacted, found to be a dispute between children. No crime involved." At 10:32 the call was a bit more serious. "RP called to report a male/female verbal dispute in the apartment complex on North Seventeenth. Male half reported to be carrying rifle. Units dispatched. Charged with menacing. Lodged Lane County Jail." At the headquarters of the Lane County Sheriffs Office in ^ugene. Sheriff Dave Burks's officers were also pulling a fairly Viet shift. Rob Rutherford was the graveyard shift sergeant; ^elective Lieutenant Louis Hince would be on call for anything ^at might require his detectives; thirty-one-year-old Doug Welch as at home in Springfield with his wife, Tamara, and two young ^s. Richard Blaine Tracy (of course, "Dick Tracy") was a year Way from retirement after twenty-six years as a cop, and he °uld be just as happy if nothing heavy came down before he left. Forced, Tracy was getting ready for bed alone in his Eugene 12 ANN RULE apartment. Kurt Wuest was away at a training seminar that Thursday night. Roy Pond was working days. Assistant DA Fred Hugi, radio and television turned off, was reveling in the quiet of a perfect spring evening at his lodgelike home set far back in the forest along the McKenzie River. It was a different life out there in the woods, and he was a different man. He wore frayed jeans and battered logging boots as he planted seedlings to thicken even more the forest outside his windows. Joanne Hugi, co-director of the computer center at the University of Oregon, was lost in concentration in her computer room. It made her husband smile; he, who had degrees in forestry, finance, and law, had been baffled by the single computer course he'd attempted, and he'd challenged Joanne to try it. She had proved to be a natural, understanding terms and concepts that eluded him. Hugi gave up on computers, but Joanne flew with them, higher and higher. He was extremely proud of her. She'd worked her way up at the university from an entrance level job to the top. The sun set long before 10 p.m., and Hugi paused to look at the filigree of tree branches silhouetted against the last bit of sky before he took his dirt-caked boots off and went inside. The Hugis' two cats sat on the deck, alert, staring at the glowing eyes of something--probably a deer or raccoon--out there in the woods. The Hugis had come to this perfect spot along the McKenzie after years of living in the kind of apartments students could afford in the city. It was well worth the half-hour commute into Eugene. Sometimes, they could hear logging trucks zooming by far away on the road, but usually they heard only the wind in the trees, or rain, or the cry of a nighthawk. | The bad call came into the Springfield Police Department at 10:40 p.m.: "Employee of McKenzie-Willamette Hospital advises of gunshot victims at that location. Officers dispatched. Arrived 10:48 P.M." w Rosie Martin, RN; Shelby Day, LPN; Judy Patterson, the night receptionist; and Dr. John Mackey, physician in charge, comprised the evening shift in the emergency room at the McKenzie-Willamette Hospital in Springfield. The McKenzie-Willamette ER as it existed in the late spring of 1983 was a little cramped, a little out of date. Paint on walls and baseboards had been scrubbed dull and drab; the waiting room furniture was chrome and peeling vinyl. rSMALL SACRIFICES 13 Facing the two sets of doors that led to the circular driveway ff Mohawk Boulevard, the three treatment rooms were to the right: Day Surgery nearest the street, Minor Treatment in the middle, and the Trauma Room at the back. On the left, Judy patterson's desk was just behind a small waiting area near the street doors. Five feet or so behind her desk there was a small bathroom and beyond that a larger waiting room. The floors were hospital-waxed shiny--the forest-green-andwhite-swirl asphalt tile popular in the 1950s, patched here and there with odd squares. The rooms smelled old. Old wax, old dust, old disinfectant. Old sorrows, it would seem, with the sharpness of immediate grief dulled by time. The old ER had known decades of pain. That velvet black spring night Dr. Mackey and his staff, working in an almost obsolete ER, would be the first to encounter what was unthinkable for Springfield, what would be unthinkable for even a big city. None of them would have much time to think during the hours they fought to save the injured, their white shoes sliding on floors slick with fresh blood. Only later would terrible musings rush in to destroy all hope of sleep. SBelby Day is a slender, soft-spoken woman near forty, with six years' experience in the McKenzie-Willamette ER. She wears white slacks and pastel, patterned smocks. When she remembers the night of May 19, 1983, tears well unbidden in her eyes. "We were working the 4 p.m. to midnight shift. We had the usual kind of 'nice day' injuries--lacerations, bumped heads, sprains, and broken bones. We were busy steadily, but there were no real emergencies. Dr. Mackey was finishing up with a patient ^ a quarter after ten, and Rosie and I were in that little back room doing paperwork. There's always paperwork to catch up ^th. Judy was out at her desk in the corridor ..." Judy Patterson, a smiling strawberry blonde, works two jobs 10 support her son Brandon, who was nine in 1983. She is the ^ceptionist in Pediatrics at Eugene's Sacred Heart Hospital on ne day shift; after five, she puts in another five or six hours as he ER receptionist at McKenzieWillamette. Rosie Martin was pregnant in the spring of 1983, into her econd trimester. Already her belly had begun to get in her way diri^ moved swiftly to care for patients. She was tired, but she un l ^mplain to her co-workers. She and Shelby worked to- oether quietly in the back room. 14 ANN RULE When Dr. John Austin Mackey had a full beard, his nurses wondered if he ever smiled. When he shaved it off, they saw that he had been smiling all along behind his hirsute facade. Tall, balding, and broad-shouldered, a bear of a man, Mackey inspires confidence. The perfect emergency room doctor; his assessment of patients' needs is deft. In his late thirties, married, and the father of young children, he had worked full-time in the ER for eight years. Because they were winding down, the others told Judy she could go home a few minutes early. She was scheduled to leave anyway at 10:30, but she grinned gratefully and grabbed her sweater and purse. As she walked toward the ambulance doors, a woman in the hall, a relative waiting for a patient, called to her. "There's someone out there honking their horn and yelling for help. You'd better check." Judy whirled and walked back to where Shelby Day and Rosie Martin were shuffling paperwork. "Someone needs help out there. They're laying on the horn." Judy ran back then to the ambulance entrance. Rapidly, she propped open both sets of doors to the drive-through. Rosie Martin grabbed an air-way and an oxygen mask and headed toward the drive-through. Their most common crisis was cardiac arrest; that's what she and Shelby Day expected to find. It was strange, though, that they had had no prior warning. Invariably, paramedics and police called to warn that they were coming in with a critical case so that the ER crew could gear up. The two nurses hurried through the double entry doors into the emergency drive-through. A shiny red foreign car was parked under the rain roof. The fluorescent lighting bounced off the car's glittering paint, casting eerie elongated shadows. It was almost impossible for them to see inside the car. "What's going on here?" Rosie Martin asked. "Somebody just shot my kids!" A slender blonde woman in jeans and a plaid shirt stood next to the car. She was pale, but she was in control. She wasn't crying and she didn't appear to be hysterical. Desperately she implored them to do something. The two nurses and the young woman gazed at each other for a fraction of a second, and then llic emergency personnel went into action. Kosie Martin had reached the car just ahead of Shelby DayShe ducked through the passenger door; she'd seen a child lying across the right rear seat. Rosie emerged, carrying a girl with long _________________SMALL SACRIFICES 15 hrown hair. The child had to be heavy. Dead weight, Shelby Day thought, and then bit her lip. Rosie carried the little girl in maroon corduroy slacks and a bloody multicolored T-shirt as if she had no weight at all, draping the child carefully around her pregnant abdomen. As Rosie rushed past Judy Patterson's desk, she turned her head slightly. "Judy! Call a code! It's bad!" A "code" meant Code 4, a page to summon all available personnel to the ER. Judy Patterson called the hospital operator and told her to activate a code. Back in the drive-through, Shelby Day saw there was another child on the back seat, behind the driver's seat—a yellow-haired little boy, hardly more than a toddler. She ran around the front of the car and leaned over to release the back of the driver's seat. Her fingers numb with shock, she couldn't find the right lever. She heard Dr. Mackey's voice behind her. %yS "What's going on, Shelby?" he asked. "These kids have been shot," she said softly. "Oh, Jesus Christ," the doctor murmured. It was not an oath; it was a prayer. Only two words had registered in Mackey's mind: "kids" and "shot." He could see over Shelby's shoulder to the tiny child who was gasping for air and crying weakly. The blonde woman murmured that the seat lever was on the side. Shelby's hand reached the right spot, clicked the catch free. Before she could straighten up, Dr. Mackey had reached past her, scooped the little boy up in powerful arms, and disappeared into the hospital. He had seen what the nurses hadn't noticed yet. When he leaned in to get the little boy, he'd glimpsed yet another figure crumpled on the floor in front, and thought, My God! There's a third one! What are we going to do? Mackey was sure Shelby Day had seen the third child a moment after he had. But in the shadows, in her shock, she hadn't. The quick look he'd had at the first two injured youngsters ^old Mackey they were dealing with chest wounds. Short of a lrect head shot, there is nothing more cataclysmic than gunshot founds into the chests of little children. Mackey too shouted at ""y Patterson. The command was short, but Judy understood. • "Find Wilhite!" br ^v' <)teven Wilhite is a thoracic surgeon. To crack a chest, to ^k the sternum and reach with gloved, artist's hands into the 16 ANN RULE heart and lungs of a human being, takes skill that few surgeons possess. Wilhite is one of the few board-certified thoracic surgeons in the Springfield-Eugene area. His presence in the ER was something devoutly to be wished. Wilhite was just pulling into his own driveway when his beeper picked up the code call at the hospital, followed by a specific request for his presence. Children had been shot. He shifted into reverse and turned back toward McKenzieWillamette. The drive normally took him twenty minutes. Driving eighty miles an hour, he cut his time to eight minutes. | Shelby Day turned to follow Mackey into the ER. "No--" the blonde woman said urgently. "Cher . . . Cheri!" Shelby stopped, puzzled. "What?" The woman pointed toward the floor area of the passenger seat in front. "Cheryl's on the floor. She hasn't moved at all." Shelby peered into the shadowy car. There was another child! A dark sweater had been draped over a little girl who lay face down on the carpet. The slender nurse had to sit the youngster up to get a good grip on her. Then, with one fluid movement, she had her free of the car and was running toward the ER. This child was as heavy as a stone in her arms. When she felt not even a faint independent support of muscle from her burden, Shelby feared that this victim was gone. Still, she ran. Shelby felt a heartbeat bumping crazily, but it was only her own. She laid her burden gently on the bed at the left rear of the trauma room. She could see doctors and nurses working frantically on the other two youngsters. She could hear the hospital's PA system droning out the Code 4 over and over. Already, the ER was beginning to fill with personnel, all of them working efficiently with at least surface calm. Jan Goldberg Temple, a registered nurse assigned to the intensive care unit, hurried to the ER. She joined Shelby Day at the bedside of the third child. Carleen Elbridge, an X-ray techniM cian, was there and Ruth Freeman, the supervising nurse on duty.* and Sue Sogn, an RN from the third floor. Two respiratory therapists--Bob Gulley and Demetria "D.J." Forester--rushed in. Joe "Tony" Curtis, the maintenance man, worked along with the medical team, running for blood units, propping doors open'^ doing whatever was needed. " It was sheer luck that so many physicians were available to help this late on a weekday evening. I ,1 I fan SMALL SACRIFICES 17 Dr. David Scott Miller is a pediatrician, a fine-boned man with a moustache and glasses, a gentle man meant to be a children's specialist. Ordinarily, his hospital rounds would have ended hours before, but on this night one delay after another had kept him at McKenzie-Willamette Hospital. He was walking toward the hospital parking lot when he heard a commotion and deciphered electrifying phrases in the words cutting through the night air. He heard "children" and "shooting." He turned and sprinted for the ER, all his fatigue forgotten. Judy Patterson reached Dr. George Foster, a pediatric surgeon on staff at Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene, and he too raced to McKenzieWillamette. Four of them had arrived in the red Nissan Pulsar. Shelby Day had noted how the young woman--the mother?--had stood so woodenly next to the car. Shock. The layman is never prepared for the gore and suddenness of traumatic injury. Shelby turned to see that the blonde woman had followed her into the trauma room. Stark white but dry-eyed, she stood mutely and glanced from bed to bed to bed. She shouldn't be here, Shelby thought. No mother could deal with such a sight. All three of her children were probably dying. Shelby spotted Judy Patterson standing quietly outside the doorway to the treatment room and called softly, "Judy! Take her out of here!" The woman went obediently with Judy. "OK. I'll just sit here on the stretcher." She waited there, perched on the wheeled gurney across from Judy's desk. Shelby Day forgot about the blonde woman as she fought to save ^e child she'd found crumpled on the front floor boards. She suctioned the youngster's throat to clear blood clots that were blocking air. But the clots were as thick as liver, hemorrhagic blood in the throat so long that it had coagulated. Odd. It was rare w the ER crew to see coagulated blood. Patients were usually brought in while they were still actively bleeding. Each time Shelby removed a blood clot, she found another beneath it. As Shelby struggled with her hopeless task, Jan Temple s npped off the child's clothing, leaving her naked save for a pair I 'f8^0" snorts sne wore m place of panties. Jan attached the ^"e-Pak leads to the patient's chest. The heart monitor required man ^ectrical impulses to react. There was nothing there. Only 18 ANN RULE a straight line; she might as well have hool the bed or a chair. Dr. Mackey broke off for a moment frc the two children who still breathed, howe1 attempted to intubate the last victim discov blood. Puzzled, he lifted the child gently holes in the little girl's back--one over the and one just below the left shoulder blade. monitor and slowly shook his head. "There's nothing we can do for this ct Shelby was angry, unwilling to accept whose butterscotch hair lay so brilliantly i sheet. "What do you mean you're not go her?" she demanded of Mackey. "Shelby," Mackey said gently. "She's we can do. She was dead when you carriei She knew he was right; she put aside 1 stared down at the little girl, her skin as w; cent as a crushed gardenia. So young- seven. She'd worn a pair of brown cord . belt, and a faded purple and white stripe' that had hidden the youngster from the vi far too big for a child. It was blue gray, U.! postal workers. There was a U.S. Mail pi Shelby folded the clothing and put the g basket at the end of the bed. The other two children were barely whimpered softly, panicked by his inabili lungs. Jan Temple moved away from the di to help with the boy. The other girl was motionless. Davi ishly over her. She looked to be a year or child. She had two small-caliber bullet w One slug had entered near the left nippi through her chest, exiting at the scapula i bullet had entered two or three centimeter a much larger wound, and was still in her through-and-through wound near the base She was as close to death as a hurnai beginning processes of dying. She regist and she was not breathing beyond a few a pupils had reacted to light when she arri SMALL SACRIFICES 19 ked up the monitor to )m his ministrations to ver tenuously. He too ered, but only elicited and found two bullet ; right shoulder blade, He stared at the heart lild," he said flatly. the death of this child, alive against the white ing to do anything for > gone. There's nothing d her in. I'm sorry." the suction device, and ixy yellow and translu- not more than six or jeans with a blue Levi d T-shirt. The sweater ew of the rescuers was "I . government issue for atch on the left sleeve. arments in the clothes alive. The blonde boy ity to draw air into his ead child and pitched in d Miller worked fever so older than the dead ounds in the left chest, e, traveling completely^ n her back. The second^ s from the first, leaving fe body. There was a third of her left thumb. i can be, actually in the ered no blood pressure igonal gasps for air. Her ved, but even as David Miller watchel, he could see the life fading from her eyes. Damn it' They wouk not lose this child too. On Miller's orders, respiratory therapist Gulley inserted an endotracheal lube into her throat, and tried to force air into her lungs. There was some blockage preventing the oxygen from expanding her chest. A portable chest X ray pinpointed the problem. In the lefi lung a massive hemorrhage left no room for air. Moreover, the patient's right lung was collapsing. She was rapidly bleeding out, in imminent danger of dying from exsanguination. Her bbod tests indicated barely enough oxygen-carrying hemoglobin to sustain life. She was crifting away from them. Her skin was cold, shaded the dread blue of cyanosis, and her heartbeat was faltering and sporadic on the monitor. All signs were incompatible with life. She had nothing going for her beyond the adamant refusal of her physicians to let her slip away. The patient's heart stopped beating. Miller "pushed" (rapid, forceful injection) thirty milligrams of sodium bicarb to urge it to beat, then glanced up to see Steve Wilhite rush into the room. The chest surgeon looked at the patient. She looked dead and he cursed himself for being too late. There was no blood pressure now. No pulse. Her pupils were fixed and dilated. Wilhite and Miller simply refused to give up. Steve Wihite grabbed a chest tube and plunged it directly through her skin and chest well into the left lung. There was no need for anesthetic; the child could feel nothing. He recovered 300 ccs of bright red blood. Swiftly, he plunged another chest tube into her right lung. No blood appeared in the tube and there was very little, if any, air. That lung had folded in on itself, flat as an empty bellows. In the other lung, she was drowning in her own blood. Wilhite rapidly inserted a CVP line and hit an artery with the irst try--the first bit of good news: the patient's veins and arteres had not collapsed. 0-Negative blood was rapidly infused. fli ^nt^ ^len miraculously, the heartbeat, tentative as the "UtteriTID r>f Q hntt^^fl,,'^ „,;„„„ K^^^^ r,^^;^ C^^a,,,hoyo ol/^nn nenng of a butterfly's wings, began again. Somewhere along e sure passage toward death, this little girl had turned around. co mte' Miller, and Mackey dared to hope that she might beo au the way back to them when ^y saw that her P"?^ had „ ° u to react, and that she nnw had a cvstniir hinnd nrpsoirp nf ^iXtyi react, and that she now had a systolic blood pressure of 20 ANN RULE New chest X rays showed that her right lung had expanded, but the left lung was still filling relentlessly with fresh blood. Her chance for survival remained as frail as a strand of spider web. bing. As rapidly as blood was infused into her veins, it leaked away through her left lung. It would be 11:45 p.m., before she was stable enough to beg transported to surgery. Even then Bob Gulley would still have to I breathe for her through the trache tube, as her stretcher was walked to the operating room with Drs. Wilhite and Miller trotting alongside. j Dr. Mackey and Dr. Foster stayed with the little boy. Jan Temple worked beside them, trying to comfort the toddler. She removed his clothing--a green and white Hockey Puck shirt with the number forty on the front, a pair of faded OshKosh-By-Gosh jeans, and size two jockey shorts--and put them in the clothing basket attached to the gurney. He looked to be about three. John Mackey had begun resuscitation from the moment he'd first carried him into the trauma room. He'd inserted a CVP line into the right jugular vein and started the flow of a solution to keep the veins open and ready for medication or a transfusion. There was a small bullet wound of entry a fraction of an inch to the right of the spinal column. It was a near-contact wound. Mackey could see black powder from a gun's barrel around the bullet hole. The tiny boy was washed of color and terrified, his heart racing one hundred and fifty beats a minute. He couldn't draw a good breath. Mackey found markedly diminished breath sounds in his left lung. He inserted a chest tube; blood and trapped air gushed out. The small lung expanded, and the tow-headed boy began to breathe easily, but he continued to sob, a steady keening wail. He was out of immediate danger, but the bullet had come soJ close to his spinal cord. Injuries to this vital nerve center are unpredictable. If all went well, he might recover completely. ^ the spinal cord, insulted, should swell .... The bullet had slammed into his back close to T-6 and T7. His arms would be all right. Everything below midchest was threatened; there was a possibility that he might never walk again. * * SMALL SACRIFICES 21 <,teve Wilhite performed an exploratory thoracotomy on the suriving giri- He found the ragged exit wound in the upper lobe of the left l"^' cut awav the ravaged tissue that was steadily oozing blood, and joined the now-clean edges with sutures. There was no more seepage, but so much of her blood had had to be replaced. vyith complete blood replacement, there can be a profound loss in clotting capability, as well as diminished hemoglobin. Blood chemistry, out of balance, may behave chaotically. But she lived. At the completion of surgery, she had a normal blood pressure reading. She woke up quickly, fighting the endotracheal tube, pulling at the proliferation of tubes that were connected to her body. She was very, very, frightened, but she responded to the nurses' voices. One child was dead. One child had defied the odds and lived through profound blood loss, heart stoppage, and delicate surgery. One child seemed stable, but was at risk of paralysis. Who in the name of God could have aimed a pistol at three small children and pulled the trigger five times? V J CHAPTER 2 "Call the cops! He shot my kids!" —Diane Downs, May 19, 1983 It fell to Judy Patterson to comfort the young woman who had brought the wounded children to the hospital—and to try to find out what had happened to them. She told Judy that her name was Elizabeth Downs, but that she went by Diane, her middle name. The injured children were her own: Christie Ann, eight, Cheryl Lynn, seven, and Stephen "Danny" Downs, three. Diane Downs remained in a shocklike state; she spoke with a certain flatness of expression, holding her emotions in. She wore a pale blue T-shirt that spelled out "Nantucket" across her ample breasts. Over that, she wore a blue plaid shirt. There was a small red stain on one sleeve. Diane's blue jeans were well-worn, even baggy, but she had a near-perfect figure. She looked young, probably in her mid-twenties. She was quite tan, although now the golden tan was a thin veneer of false color over chalky skin beneath. Diane was not pretty; depending on the angle, Judy thought, she was either plain or beautiful. She had the facial bone structure! that models have: high cheek bones, an expanse of delicately rounded brow. There was a Dresden-doll quality about the round curves of Diane's face, and yet it was far from a perfect face, marred—ever so slightly—by a jaw a trace too prominent, lipsa shade too thin over long teeth. When Diane looked away, her profile was perfect. Her eyes . . . Diane's eyes dominated her face: someho^ SMALL SACRIFICES 23 .void of depth, and yet almost hypnotic in intensity. They were huge, pretty eyes; there was no fault there to jar the viewer. Diane's pupils were gray or green or yellow, depending on how the light caught itself in them, and they resembled something. What? Green grapes, maybe ... or cat's eyes. Something. Judy felt as if she were gazing into those sunglasses that bounce back only the observer's own image, giving no clue to the identity of the watcher behind the mirrored lenses. Diane's pupils floated toward the top of her eyes, with an unusually wide expanse of white beneath. Her brows were plucked into two pencil-thin lines, exposing her eyes even more. Judy caught herself staring and dragged her gaze away. She tried to organize her thoughts. She had called all the emergency medical personnel; the children were in good hands. But Diane was insisting there was still a man out there with a gun ... There was so much more to be done. Judy called the Springfield Police Department. She wasn't sure just where the shooting had taken place; the city limits were not that far from the hospital. The gunman might even be on his way here. "I figured that it had to be some kind of domestic dispute," she later recalled. "If a man had been crazy enough and cruel enough to shoot three children, I thought he might follow them into the ER and shoot everybody here. I wanted to get the police here. I don't mind saying I was scared." "I want to call my parents," Diane murmured. "I need to call them." Judy nodded and covered the phone. "I'm talking to the police. Just a moment. Could you tell me what happened again, so i that I can tell them?" "Somebody shot my kids ..." , ^"dy repeated information as Diane related it to her. Diane aidn t know just where the shooting had occurred, but she nought she could find it again. She mentioned "Mohawk" and Marcola-" Mohawk Boulevard ran directly in front of the hospifiefri then there was old Mohawk Readjust outside of Spring^ 'd. Marcola was a crossroads town northeast of Springfield. abo^ dlfficult to te11 exactly which area Diane was talking restr^ Judy talked to the dispatcher, Diane went into the small JudvmJust behind her desk area. The door remained open; > could hear running water. 24 ANN RULE I- As she hung up the phone, she saw Diane head again toward the trauma room. She hurried after her to stop her. Judy glanced into the trauma room. Someone had drawn the drapes around the bed where Cheryl's body rested; there was a gap in the cloth, though, and one chalky arm was partially visible. Judy quickly tugged Diane away, into the minor surgery room. In the bright light, Judy saw that Diane had apparently been injured too. Beneath the plaid shirt, her left arm was wrapped from elbow to wrist in a brightly colored beach towel. Unwrapping the towel, Judy found an ovoid, nasty-looking wound on the outer surface of Diane's arm, almost exactly halfway between her wrist and her elbow. There were two smaller wounds. Judy wasn't a nurse, but she was the only one available. She put Betadine on the three bloody lesions to disinfect them, wiping away the black particles around the first hole. Then she bandaged the arm. The wounds weren't life threatening, although they looked painful. "What happened?" Judy asked Diane again. "Where were you when he shot the children?" | "We went out toward Marcola to see a friend. We were headed back, driving along Old Mohawk Road. My kids were laughing and talking. I was laughing at something Danny said, _ and talking to Christie. . . . There was this man, standing there ^ in the middle of the road. He looked like he needed help. I stopped the car, and got out. He wanted my keys. He just reached in through the window and shot my kids. It's a terrible thing to be laughing one minute, and then have something like this happen to you." Judy touched Diane's good arm. There were no words to say. "You can call your father now. Come on back to the desk." Wordlessly, Diane followed her. Her face was a mask. She dialed a number, waited for someone to answer, and then blurted into the phone, "He shot the kids. He shot me too." | She hung up and turned to Judy. "They're on their way." ^H Wes and Willadene Frederickson, Diane's parents, the grandparents of Christie, Cheryl, and Danny Downs, had retired for the night in the white ranch house where they lived, less than two miles from McKenzie-Willamette Hospital. Elizabeth Diane was the oldest of their five grown children. She had moved from | Arizona to be near them only weeks before. Now, just when their SMALL SACRIFICES 25 ,yes seemed to be moving along with some serenity, a ringing nhone in the night had signaled disaster. Willadene was particularly afraid of hospitals; she could not imagine that anything good could come of a call from a hospital. Wes had lost both his parents in a terrible car accident a decade earlier; Willadene had never again been able to hear a phone ring in the night without a stab of anxiety. She threw on clothes, not noticing what she wore, and joined her husband. The Fredericksons raced for the hospital. Wes realized just as he drove up to the emergency entrance that he had forgotten his false teeth. Wes Frederickson is an ascetically handsome man in his early fifties, who resembles Palmer Cortlandt, the millionaire-inresidence on the soap opera "All My Children." He was an important man in Springfield, the number-one man in the local branch of the U.S. Post Office: the Postmaster himself. It seemed inappropriate for him to appear in public without his teeth. He stopped the car, let Willadene out, and raced home to get his dentures. Willadene Frederickson was forty-six but she looked a decade older. Fortune's assaults had humbled her, making her bend nervously into the wind as if braced for her next catastrophe. She seemed a woman who expected trouble at any moment. Her lovely thick chestnut hair--still styled as it had been back in the fifties when she married Wes--was shot with gray. Willadene looked like what she once had been: a good, solid Arizona farmwoman. She stood alone and indecisive in the empty parking lot outside the emergency room. She sought a way into the waiting room, considered using the double doors, but was afraid they might be only for ambulance crews. She found a single door and talked into the corridor. Diane stood in front of the window to ^e nurses' station. "What happened?" Willadene gasped. Diane stared back at her mother, seemingly unable to respond. Judy Patterson spoke up. "The children have been shot." ^Shot?" Willadene echoed incredulously. "Shot?" road Tes'" Judy said softly- "^ght out in the middle of the -- "Where?" m ^'Marcola." "S "Mar cola?" 26 ANN RULE Willadene Frederickson could not comprehend what had hap. pened. She had seen Diane and the children only that afternoon. She'd looked after Danny all day as always, and the girls too when they came home from school. Usually, they all ate supper j together at her house, but she and Wes had had a meeting. Diane I had picked the children up after she finished work and had taken them home for supper. Everything had been fine then. Why on . earth would Diane and the children have been in Marcola? I Diane spoke up. "We were out to Mark and Heather's ..." Willadene could not remember who Mark and Heather were, or if she'd ever known them. That didn't matter at this point. She reached an arm out to her daughter. _ Willadene and Diane walked into the large waiting room. J "Mom, I can't live without my kids." te f Willadene Frederickson did what she has always done; she tried to smooth things over. "Don't worry. They'll be all right." She patted Diane. "The children will be fine. They have very good doctors." That seemed to calm Diane a little. The two of them filled out forms that Judy Patterson gave them. Why were there always forms? What did it matter at a time like this? | No one told Diane or Willadene that Cheryl was dead. Nor would they let Diane see her children again. Neither woman could, of course, see the desperate struggle going on in the trauma room, but they were angry at being shunted aside. Diane had apparently blanked out the sight of her younger daughter lying as still as a broken doll behind the drapes because she said nothing about that to Willadene. Surely, she must know, the nurses thought. How could she not know? Afterward, Diane said she had no memory of seeing Cheryl in the hospital. "I never saw Cheryl until I saw her in her coffin." When a nurse or aide raced past for more blood or on some other errand, they called out to Diane and Willadene that the children were "serious," but alive. They meant Christ'e and Danny. ^pg • cfe^ J Wes Frederickson hurried into the waiting room. He was the parent that Diane resembled the most physically. His face was taut and impassive as he joined the women. Less than a half hour had passed since the first call for help in the parking lot. Springfield's "Morning Watch" begins at 11:00 p.m. The shift's briefing takes place from 10:30 to 11:00 p.m. Officer Rich Cha_ SMALL SACRIFICES 27 neau had been summoned out of that "show-up" and disn^tched to the hospital. When Charboneau walked in, Diane looked up at him and ried angrily, "It's about time you got here! There's some maniac Suit there shooting people." It was now 10:48 p.m. Eight minutes since Judy Patterson's call- Diane told Charboneau basically the same story she'd told Judy Patterson. A stranger had demanded her car and then shot her children when she refused to give it to him. No, the children hadn't been awake; she recalled now that they had all been sleeping. "I wasn't going to let him have my new car!" she murmured angrily. "I just bought it." Diane appeared frantic with worry over her children. To compound matters, the wrong department had responded to the call for police assistance in the confusion over the location of the incident. When Diane recalled landmarks she had observed, Charboneau realized that the shooting had taken place outside the Springfield city limits. He called the Lane County Sheriff's Office. Sergeant Robin Rutherford responded. Rutherford and Charboneau were horrified as Diane outlined her encounter with the gunman. The trouble might not be over. Old Mohawk Road was only a few miles long, a curving, two-laned road that paralleled the main road between Marcola and Springfield. The river edged most of its west boundary, and there were vast fields, but near Springfield a score of homes huddled along the road. If a maniac was out there with a gun, they had to find him. Rural Springfield residents would open their doors to a stranger in need of "help." They had to be warned. Someone had to verify that Old Mohawk Road was indeed where the gunman had last been seen. No one but Diane could do that. Rutherford asked her if she would come with him back to we shooting scene. It was a lot to ask. Diane explained that her arm was injured, ^"d that she hadn't much more than a Band-Aid for it. Rutherford ked one of the nurses to evaluate Diane's wounds. -, I'm sorry," she called as she ran past. "I have no time. ^Ke her to Sacred Heart." fc p^1"^^' ^dy Patterson wrapped the arm again, but she wasn't "tident about it. Rosie Martin stopped, looked askance at the 28 ANN RULE arm, and unwrapped the gauze. She quickly put a less flexible bandage on it. "How are my kids?" Diane asked. Rosie answered that everyone was working on them--that they were still very serious. "We have four doctors doing their best for them." That much was true. Neither Rosie nor anyone else had time yet to come out and tell the family just how bad things were. | Diane and her parents conferred with the deputies. They decided that Wes and Diane would go with Rutherford to show him where the shooting had occurred. Shelby Day knelt down in front of Diane and said softly, "One of your girls is really bad. She may not be alive when you come back." | Diane nodded. She drew a deep breath and turned to Rob E Rutherford. She would go with him. She couldn't save her chil- tt I dren just sitting there in the waiting room anyway. Judy heard Diane murmur something else, but she couldn't understand it, the i| words didn't make sense; she turned back toward her post at the 1' I I front desk. ,„„ , | s1! H i.^- | "' When Diane and her father walked out of the emergency room with Rob Rutherford, the sheriffs sergeant noted that though Diane was clearly in pain, she seemed to have tremendous will power. She appeared calmer now that she had something to do, something that might help find the gunman. ^|]|iii|||i| They walked past Diane's red Nissan, guarded by Rich Jljlll Charboneau. She looked it over. "I hope my car's OK. Does it have any bullet holes in it?" "I don't know," Charboneau said. "Nobody's checked it over yet." thj l!111!! Sergeant Rutherford headed away from Springfield, along nu [ I ||j Mohawk Boulevard, following Diane's directions. At the intersec- ie; |;| tion of Nineteenth and Marcola Road, he turned right. They^ le j || moved away from the sprinkling of city lights, past empty houses ^ Hill with lawns that had long since become do-it-yourself junkyards, past the man-made mountain of sawdust that loomed through the night at the Kingsford Charcoal Briquet plant. Beyond the grubby northeast outskirts of Springfield, the innate beauty of the land took over, although it was shrouded now in the black of night. The squad car rumbled across Hayden Bridge. Beneath them. SMALL SACRIFICES 29 the McKenzie River narrowed itself into a chute of turbulent froth as it raced by the power plant. "This is where Christie stopped choking," Diane remembered. "Right here on the bridge ..." Rutherford shivered involuntarily. They came off the bridge to a crossroads of sorts. To the right, Camp Creek Road, barricaded for resurfacing, meandered off, forking again and again into a series of dead ends; to the left, two-laned Old Mohawk Road cut away from the main road to attach itself again to Marcola Road a few miles north. It was only a local access road, well off the regular route between Springfield and Marcola. Rutherford looked questioningly at Diane and she nodded. Old Mohawk was the road where it had happened. She had driven across the railroad tracks and then over Hayden Bridge as she raced to the hospital with her children. "I never should have bought the unicorn," she murmured softly, almost to herself. "What did you say?" Rutherford asked. "The unicorn," she answered. "I bought the kids a beautiful brass unicorn, and I had their names engraved on it--just a couple of days ago. It was . . . you know ... It meant we had a new life. I shouldn't have bought it." They passed by the patrol units that were stopping all cars entering or leaving Old Mohawk--not a busy job, since the road was sparsely traveled late at night. Rutherford drove slowly past darkened homes. It was very quiet; the Little Mohawk flowed more gently than her big sisters. Occasionally there was the sound , of a dog barking, or the soft whinny of horses behind the barbed- I ^re fences along the road. The air smelled sweet--cottonwood ^ees just budding out. Old Mohawk seemed the most peaceful of country roads. It was hard to believe that four people had been wot here less than two hours earlier. As they approached the far end of Old Mohawk just before it reconnected with Marcola Road, the road narrowed, with no 'shoulders or turning-off places. Every so often, a thin white '""epost protruded through the black beside the road. ,,, "Here," Diane said. "We're getting close. It happened just about here." ba i111^ were hard ^ the river- The current had nibbled at the wk so hungrily that it fell away only a few feet beyond the s-hne at the edge of the road. The underbrush was thick, clotted 30 ANN RULE I- with blackberry vines; firs and bulky dark maples loomed over the road. What a lonely place it was, Rutherford thought, and how frightening it must have been for a young woman and her three children to come upon a maniac with a gun out here. It was the most isolated spot along Old Mohawk. The river pushed by in the dark on one side; on the other, a field of wild phlox trembled in the wind as if the blossoms were woven into a solid sheet of white. | Diane and Wes Frederickson stared out of the squad car's windows, and Rutherford followed their gaze. He saw nobody human out there in the darkness. Of course there wouldn't be. The gunman had had ample time to get away by now, and good reason to be long gone. Still, the trio peered into the night, searching for some quick movement in the fields, some separation of shadows within a clump of evergreens as a figure moved to break and run. No one. The river gurgled and tumbled, heedless of the watchers on her banks. Rutherford felt a cop's familiar tightening of the muscles at the base of his neck. Was the gunman waiting somewhere out in the black? He cut the lights on his vehicle. Officers from the Springfield Police Department were already working the road and the fields with a search dog. More men were on the way from Lane County, from Springfield, and from the Oregon State Police. | Diane asked why there was only one tracking dog. "That's the only dog available now," Rutherford explained. "But these fields are full of horses. If there was a stranger out there in the dark, the horses would let us know." w-3 -- "Oh," she said, "I didn't know that." ie I "They're almost as good as dogs when something alien gets into their fields." - j That sounded reasonable; Diane had always loved horses, j and she had great respect for their sensitivity. * Suddenly, she remembered something she'd forgotten in all the panic at the hospital. The yellow car. She could see it in her mind, she told Rutherford. An "icky yellow car" parked somewhere along this road. It hadn't seemed important before. They looked for it, but the yellow car was gone. As the squad car cruised slowly back toward the south end of Old Mohawk Road, they passed a huge old farmhouse. Diane sa^ SMALL SACRIFICES 31 lieht on upstairs and nudged her father. They peered up at the doming structure. Wes saw the light; then it went out. Rutherford too, saw the light but doubted that anyone waited high up in the dark window of a farmhouse, taking a careful bead on them. That made little sense; why would a gunman choose to draw further attention to himself when the area was alive with cops? Diane's injured arm was beginning to throb, and she complained to Rutherford. She was frightened too, she said. The sheriffs sergeant picked up his radio mike and asked for someone to meet them and transport Diane and Wes back to the hospital. He would remain at the scene to help man the roadblocks. One of the most massive criminal investigations in the state of Oregon had begun. It was a quarter after eleven on that Thursday night when Lane County Detectives Dick Tracy, Doug Welch, and Roy Pond were called at home and told to report to the McKenzieWillamette Hospital. That was procedure: the cops were called first, then the DA's office if they needed a search warrant or other legal backup. Unaware, Fred Hugi slept the last good night's sleep he would have for a long time. As the crow flies, the site of the shooting was no more than six miles away on the other side of the forest land behind his house, much too far for him to hear the shots. From the brief information the sheriff s detectives got from It Louis Hince, they expected to find kids with minor injuries, children caught in the cross fire of a family fight escalated out of control. Photographs would be required, close-ups of the kids' | wounds, something to hand to the District Attorney's office. It ^as a chore Pond and Welch dreaded--directing hurt kids to sit frozen under bright lights at midnight so that the lurid topography 01 the damage done to them could be preserved for legal posterity. Welch checked on his own two sons before he left the house. He tried not to identify, but child abuse got to him. Some kids "rew the short straw in life, and it wasn't fair. Doug Welch, oldest son of a Detroit Tigers catcher-turned"^ntanaLevi-jeans salesman, sometimes wondered how he'd ended lie a cop' "^ never thought of being a cop. A ballplayer maybe, ki^ ^ ^ac*' ^e P^y^ P1'0 ^au' anc^tnen semi-pro when I was a th reInember going to the games. I always fell asleep before fj^.^^nth inning; even so, ball players were my heroes. Or 16lller pilots. Not cops. No way." 32 ANN RULE Welch had been about to graduate from the University of Oregon, six months away from a second lieutenant's commission and pilots' training, when the government ordered a reduction in force. They had enough pilots. "I had a wife, and a baby on the way. I looked on law enforcement as an interim career at best. I'd always been a little intimidated by cops, and I sure couldn't imagine myself actually arresting anyone." But Welch did make arrests and they soon became routine. The sandy-haired, freckled, would-be pilot turned out to be a sensitive, intuitive cop. After several years in patrol, Doug Welch had become a detective less than three months before Diane Downs and her children were shot. Welch reached the ER parking area in five minutes. He nodded to Rich Charboneau standing guard over a red Nissan Pulsar and walked to the trauma room. Three children lay on treatment tables, hardly what he'd expected. One child had been dead for at least an hour, her skin mottling with the purplish striations of lividity—blood reacting to gravity when the heart no longer pumps. Welch noted a gunshot wound in her left shoulder. Someone murmured that there was a similar wound in the other shoulder. He nodded; there was a roaring in his head. Sergeant Jon Peckels photographed the body. Welch focused on the other side of the room. Doctors were working feverishly over a second little girl; he could barely see her beyond them. i Within a minute or two, she was rushed—table and all—out of the 1 room. He had no idea where they were taking her. The little boy was crying. The three detectives watched as the doctors rolled the toddler over onto his side so they could treat his back. Welch recognized the single bullet hole, located almost dead center down his spine. He saw the black sprinklingpowder and debris from the gun barrel—stippling./ « Contact wound. Or almost. I The doctors closed in again around the little boy. The ER crew had domain here. Jon Peckels was in charge of physical evidence for the county. He moved around the gurney where the dead child lay, taking more photographs. She looked so exposed that Welch had the impulse to tug the blanket over her so she wouldn't get cold. He | looked away. I Roy Pond gathered the blood-stained clothing and the purplish' orange towel from the baskets at the end of the gumeys and bagged them for evidence. Labels with names, dates, locations. A SMALL SACRIFICES 33 ->'» clue was still caught in one of the shirts. Pond slipped it into a // siu& dear envelope. n'ck Tracy had almost two decades on the other detectives in -- County. "Silver Fox" attractive--white hair, ice-blue eyes-- Tracv could be dapper and shrewd or play the country hick to perfection. A long time back, when he played football in Warwood, West Virginia, Tracy was All-City, All-State, All-Ohio-Valley. He won a scholarship to the University of Iowa, but with the Korean War he joined the Marines. Like everyone else on this case he hadn't planned on being a policeman either. He hadn't even liked cops. But here he was, with a quarter century of law enforcement behind him. Dick Tracy had cleared every homicide he'd ever worked; Welch had never worked a homicide as a detective. Off-duty, Doug Welch researched the stock market; Tracy was an avid student of metaphysics. Fellow cops tormented Welch by telling him he looked like Howdy Doody. Tracy had his name to contend with. They would be only the first of a number of "odd couple" partners in a case just beginning to unfold. Dick Tracy turned into the emergency drive-through. Louis Hince waved him down, leaned into the car window. "The family's waiting for you to pick them up at the E-Z Mart. The mother's evidently been shot too and she needs treatment. Bring them back here." "How about the children?" Tracy asked. Hince shook his head. "One little girl is gone. The others are critical." Tracy sighed and turned his car northeasterly. He expected ^to find an hysterical mother waiting for him in Rutherford's police cruiser. Instead, he encountered a woman still in control: "very "atlonal, considering what she had undergone." Tracy had seen in "manner of emotional responses to disaster. He didn't know the ^oman or her father, who seemed as stoic as she was; he wouldn't resume to predict how they might react when the numbness °re off. Anxious to get his passengers back to the hospital, he _ fessed down on the accelerator. . Back at McKenzie-Willamette Hince motioned to Doug Welch. Ihi10 s ^"""g m with the mother now. I want you to work with "lm in questioning her." fath was tw0 mmutes to midnight when Diane Downs and her food^ ^nce again entered the McKenzie-Willamette emergency In- Dr. Mackey leaned protectively toward Diane, quietly tell 34 ANN RULE ing her that Cheryl Lynn had died, that she had been dead on arrival. Welch watched Diane's face as she heard the news. Her expression was impossible to read, a faint flickering of emotion, and then a closing in. Stoic. Diane followed Tracy into a small treatment room. Welch joined them. The woman was young, slender and quite pretty. Her face was a papier-mache mask. Welch found Diane's demeanor flat, almost brittle. She laughed inappropriately; her mind didn't appear to be tracking. It seemed to him that she simply would not accept that her little girl had died. Tracy and Welch accompanied Diane into the X-ray room. Dr. Mackey came to tell Diane that Christie was critical and in surgery. She thanked him for letting her know. I Dr. Miller came to treatment room number eight and told her that they were cautiously optimistic about Danny. He described the bullet's pathway in Danny's body. "You mean it missed his heart?" Diane asked. "Yes." There was too much for the family to absorb that night. Diane was confused over which of her daughters had died. Wes made the final identification. Shelby Day remembers him as he stood, impassive, in the center of the trauma room, gazing at the body of his younger granddaughter, nodding slightly as he said, Yes, that is Cheryl. While the doctors worked over Christie and Danny, Diane talked with Dick Tracy and Doug Welch. She spoke rapidly in a breathy teen-age voice, her sentences running on with no discernible ending. They scribbled frantically to keep up with the fountain of words. / fl She said she had had no alcohol that evening and no drugs or medication. She did not smell of liquor; her pupils looked normal. (Indeed blood tests would bear this out.) She was coherent and sober. Her brittle shell of vivacious cooperation remained intact. It was as if she felt compelled to keep talking; if she stopped, she might have to remember. Doug Welch studied her. "Her words were like ... the only way I can describe them . . . like verbal vomit. They just kep1 flowing. "You have a tremendous amount of recall," Dick Tracy_ commented at one point. "You must be fairly intelligent." SMALL SACRIFICES 35 "There are eight levels of intelligence," Diane explained. ^nd I'm at the seventh level." They had never heard of the "eight level IQ theory" but ™iane Downs was undoubtedly very intelligent; her vocabulary, syntax, and ability to answer their questions indicated that. And vet she was like a robot programmed to respond. She had taken " a mantle of words to protect herself, talking faster and faster and faster. It almost made them dizzy. Shortly after 1:00 a.m., Springfield Police Detective Sergeant Jerry Smith and Detective Robert Antoine came into the room. Diane held her hands out while Antoine swabbed them with a five percent solution of nitric acid--a routine test to discern the presence of trace metals that might have been left had she fired a gun. The next-of-kin must always be eliminated first. A positive reaction to the test (GSR-Gunshot residue) wasn't that precise. Especially with .22's. Rimfire .22's have a very low antimony-debris factor. Smoking a cigarette, urinating, or using toilet tissue can leave similar residue. The tests on Diane's hands were negative for the presence of barium or antimony. Antoine sprayed her hands to test for other trace metals. Iron would turn her hands reddish; copper dusting would elicit a green tinge. Negative. Tracy and Welch started with the easiest of questions. How many policemen, doctors, and nurses begin by asking legal names and birthdates--as if putting the dead in some kind of order will numb the pain? And how many laymen answer with eager efficiency? Those who still have first and middle names and birthdates cannot possibly be dead or dying. Diane gave her own full name: Elizabeth Diane Frederickson Downs, born August 7, 1955; she would be twenty-eight in two months. Christie's birth date was October 7, 1974; Christie had "cen seated in the right rear seat of the red car. Stephen Daniel's wthday was December 29, 1979; he'd been in the back seat with ^"nstie, on the left. Cheryl was born January 10, 1976; she had ee" on the floor in front, sleeping under a sweater. ^'The car is yours?" Tracy asked. ^ Yes," Diane nodded. "I bought it in February--a red Nissan sar MX with silver streaks on the side." the i" was tlme ^or ^le harder questions. Diane explained quickly "orror along the dark road, the stranger with the gun, her 36 ANN RULE flight to save her children. They had gone to see a friend of hers that evening: Heather Plourd, who lived northeast of Springfield on Sunderman Road. Diane knew Heather wanted a horse, and she had found an article about horses that could be adopted free. | Heather had no phone so Diane had taken the clipping out to her. f After a visit of fifteen or twenty minutes, they'd headed home. j Diane said she had detoured impulsively to do a little sight-seeing, 9 but when she realized her children had fallen asleep, she turned around and headed toward Springfield. Again with no particular plan, she'd turned off Marcola Road onto Old Mohawk and gone only a short way when she saw the man standing in the road, waving his arm for her to stop. Fearing an accident, she had pulled over. - -- "Can you describe him?" Welch asked. II "He was white ... in his late twenties . . . about five feet, nine; 150 to 170. He had dark hair, a shag-wavy cut, and a stubble of a beard--maybe one or two days' growth. Levis, a Levi jacket, a dirty . . . maybe off-color, light T-shirt." The man had been right in the center of the road. 1 "I stopped my car," Diane continued, "and I got out, and I said, 'What's the problem?' He jogged over to me and said, "I want your car,' and I said, 'You've got to be kidding!' and then he shoved me to the back of the car." And then, inexplicably, the man had stood outside the driver's door and put his hand inside the car. Diane heard loud "pops" and realized with despair that the man was firing a gun at her children! First Christie, and then Danny--and finally Cheryl, who lay asleep under Diane's postal sweater on the floor of the front seat. "What did you do?" Welch asked, shaken by the picture of the three children trapped in a dark car. "I pretended to throw my car keys. That made him angry. I wanted him to think I'd thrown the keys into the brush. He was about four or five feet away from me. He turned in my direction j and fired twice, hitting me once. I pushed him or kicked him-- maybe both--in the leg. I jumped into the car and took off for the hospital as fast as I could." "Did you see the gun?" "No . . . Wait ... Yes .. ." "Can you describe it?" "That's difficult." "Do you have any weapons?" SMALL SACRIFICES 37 "A .22 rifle that's on the shelf in my closet at home. You could go and ^ k if y°" wanted." "We'd have to have you sign a consent-to-search form to do that," Tracy advised. "That's OK. I'll sign that." She was very cooperative. If Diane voluntarily signed the form, there would be no need for a search warrant. Tracy handed her the consent form. Diane perused it, and then read it aloud. She came to a paragraph stating, "I understand this contraband or evidence may be used against me in a court of law." She paused and looked at the detectives. "Does this have to do with someone who's a suspect?" Tracy nodded. Diane said that, of course, she had no objection to their searching her car or the duplex at 1352 Q Street in Springfield where she and the children lived. Anything that might help find the gunman quickly. She signed the form. But there was a stilted--forced--quality in Diane's speech, hiding some fear they didn't understand. The detectives were beginning to tumble the crime more slowly around in their minds. They didn't really know if the shooting had happened in Springfield or in the country, even after Diane had shown them the river site. They wondered if she might possibly have recognized the person who had shot them but be under some constraint not to tell. Was the killer holding a worse sword over her head? Had he let her go to get treatment for her kids on the condition that she return, having told the cops nothing? The most unlikely chance meeting on a lonely road made the investigators think that the killer had to be acquainted, or have some specific connection, with Diane Downs. It was an emergency situation. They had to check out her "ome, and they also had to get to Heather Plourd's to see if anyone waited there with a loaded gun, possibly with hostages, w Diane to come back. Officers were dispatched to both addresses. ^ck Tracy left the ER briefly and joined Jon Peckels as he Photographed the red car, his strobe light illuminating the interior. ^ ""^thing glinted in the intermittent flashes. Bullet casings. They ^oed like ^o .22 caliber casings. Both men saw them, but they "n t touch them. The car was sealed, ready to be towed to the cri^ ^"^y ^ops for processing by the Oregon State Police ANN RULE SMALL SACRIFICES 39 »" As Tracy strode back to the ER, he saw Diane's parents in the waiting area. The father looked grim; the mother's face was swollen from crying. Wes Frederickson verified that Diane owned a rifle which she kept stored in its case, as well as--he thought-- a revolver. "She had those weapons because her ex-husband beat her up in the past." v^ant to stay in the hospital, although he told her that she must--at least for a few days. She made him promise not to tell her father about the tattoo on her back. It was not an ordinary tattoo; it was huge rose etched in scarlet on her left shoulder. Beneath it was a single word: Lew. When Tracy asked Diane if she owned, or possessed, any other weapons, she remembered that she had an old .38 pistol, a Saturday Night Special. It was a cheap gun and unpredictable; she kept it locked in the trunk of her car away from her children. Tracy and Welch had walked into Diane's life at a crisis point; it was akin to walking into a movie in the middle. They had to play catch-up in a hurry. Diane said that she had come to the Eugene-Springfield area only seven or eight weeks earlier. She had lived all her life in Arizona, working as a letter carrier in Chandler for the previous two years. Her parents had urged her to move to Oregon, and she'd done so--mostly to please them--to give them more of a chance to be with their grandchildren. Since her father was the postmaster of Springfield, he had helped her transfer and she was presently working as a letter carrier in the Cottage Grove Post Office. She was divorced from her first and only husband, Stephen Duane Downs, twenty-eight, who was still living in the Chandler/Mesa, Arizona area. She gave them his phone number. They talked for more than two hours, and the clock on the wall inched its way toward 3:00 a.m. The circles under Diane's eyes purpled. Still her voice held strong, and her words tumbled out, bumping into each other. It was after 3:00 a.m. when the two detectives left Diane and headed out to join the men at her townhouse on Q Street. Dr. Terrance Carter, an orthopedic surgeon, treated Diane's wounds. Her left arm was broken, but there was no nerve or tendon damage. Fortunately, she had still been able to open and close her fingers--and drive--despite the pain. In a week or so she would need surgery to strengthen the arm. Carter excised tissue around all three wounds to insure drainage. He took Diane's blood pressure and pulse. Both reading5 were normal. Carter also found Diane quite flat emotionally, her v/ords so alive and rapid while her eyes looked somehow dead. She didn'1 fcr CHAPTER 3 MSG ID 3293 SENT 5/19/83 2340 FROM TID 42 (AI) AM.EGS.EGO. * * * ATTEMPT TO LOCATE ARMED SUBJECT * * WHITE MALE ADULT POSSIBLY ARMED WITH .22 SEMI-AUTOMATIC WEAPON. DESCRIBED AS WMA 5'9" | 150-170 LBS DARK BROWN SHAGGY HAIR, STUBBLE BEARD, WEARING DIRTY T-SHIRT, LEVI JACKET, BLUE JEANS. POSSIBLE VEHICLE INVOLVED '60 TO '70 YELLOW CHEVROLET CHEVELLE, BEAT-UP, NO LIE. KNOWN. SUBJ. WANTED IN CONNECTION WITH SHOOTING IN MARCOLA AREA. OCA 83-3268. j LANE CO. S.O., EUGENE, 687-4150 VLB. --First teletype sent by Lane County i Steve Downs had spent a pleasant Thursday evening in Mesa, Arizona. He and his date had gone for a walk around the reservoir in the cool of the evening and then returned to her apartment. Although he and Diane had been divorced for two years, their lives had remained entwined--often abrasively--until she'd left for Oregon. With his family gone almost eight weeks, Downs was finally beginning to feel single, although he missed the kids. He missed Diane, too, in a way. Their relationship had derived fron1 the can't-live-with-her/him; can't-live-without-her/him school--ft111 of passion, jealousy, estrangements, and reconciliations. The desert sky over the Superstition Mountains had faded from the peach and yellow striations of sunset to deep black by the time Steve's roommate--advised of the tragedy in a phone call from Wes--located him. The man blurted out that all three o1 SMALL SACRIFICES 41 Steve's kids had been shot. Steve's new girlfriend drove him to <