Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
Cunningham.
Upham was low-key, quietly confident, almost businesslike in his
refusal to become emotional in the courtroom.
He began his opening
arguments at 1:47
P.M. He explained to the jury that they would have evidence to consider
in two forms: the sworn testimony of witnesses, and exhibits.
He encouraged them to take notes, and to remember that his own opening
statement was not evidence.
"What Mr. Cunningham says is not
evidence."
Upham detailed the charges against Brad.
He stood accused of
intentionally causing the death of another human being.
The question
the jurors must decide was quite simple: "Did Bradly Morris Cunningham
bludgeon Cheryl Keeton to death on September twenty-one, 1986?"
Then, in his steady deep voice, Upham told the storyþthe tragedy,
really, of Cheryl's and Brad's lives.
All the marriages.
All the
divorces.
The births of their children.
Cheryl's steadfast emotional
and financial support.
Brad's million-dollar projects and the collapse
of his financial empire.
The faltering of their marriage.
For reporters and witnesses who had committed to memory the horrific
end of that marriage, there were no surprises, only admiration for
Upham's precise memory of every detail, every date, all the diminishing
highs of Cheryl's life and the accelerating lows.
For months Upham had
sat up late, reviewing literally a roomful of files until he probably
knew
Cheryl Keeton's life better than he recalled events and dates of his
own life.
What were the jurors thinking?
Had they ever heard a story of stalking
and terror like this oneþoutside of a movie theater?
No one could
tell.
All jurors quickly develop poker faces.
They stare at the prosecution
and defense alike without expression.
They look at photographs that
show horrors they could never have imagined and pass them on down the
line.
Only courtroom amateurs say they know what jurors are thinking.
No one
knows.
Rarely do opposing sides object during opening statements, but Brad
did.
With Tim Lyons and Kevin Hunt on either side of him to try to
keep him from popping up, he managed to keep silent until Upham began
to describe the Saturday before Cheryl died, when she had gone to her
son Jess's soccer game, violating, Brad felt, his custodial rights.
"At the soccer game," Upham said, "Brad grabbed Michael and Phillip and
walked around the fieldþaway from Cheryl.
Cheryl told Nancy Davis an
old sorority friend, that Brad had threatened her if she cameþ" "I
object!"
Brad shouted.
"Overruled," Judge Alexander said.
Upham continued the dreadful recital of the last forty-eight hours of
Cheryl's life until he reached Sunday night, shortly after 7
P.M. "Cheryl calls Betty.
Mr. Cunningham has just calledþhe has gas
problems.... He hung up on her.
"Seven-thirty P.M. Jim Karr called .
. .
"Seven fifty-nine P.M. Cheryl calls Betty.
She's upset .
. . she's
stern.
Mother, write this down."
Mr. Cunningham had just called.
He
told me he's at the Mobile station by the I.G.A."
That station is
seven-tenths of a mile from her house.
She said to her mother, I know
that station's closed."
"Her mother said, Don't goþ' "She said, I have to."
As often as most
of those in the courtroom had heard this awful progression, it never
failed to raise gooseflesh.
And there was always the fervent wish that
somehow the ending might be rewritten....
When Upham began to describe the murder, the muscles in Brad's neck and
jaw tightened.
"She was beaten to a pulp," Upham said, moving to the
jury box to show the pictures of the face and head of the once
beautiful victim.
"I object," Brad shouted.
"Overruled."
"I think the word to describe that is overkill," Upham said, "done by
someone who is extremely angry and bent on destructionþ" I object!
"Overruled."
Upham moved on to complete his description of the murder and to state
his belief that there was only one man who could have committed it.
Brad was seething, apparently forgetting that Upham had told the jury
that this was not evidence, it was the State's theory.
Then Upham began to talk of the physical evidence he would present.
"In 1992 the Oregon State crime lab became DNA capable," " he said.
"In 1993 hairs found on Cheryl Keeton's arm were submitted for DNA
analysis.
They were Cheryl'sþbut a contaminant on the hair was cellular material
that was consistent with that of Bradly Morris Cunningham.
. . . He
had motive, opportunity, and the timetable was right," Upham
continued.
"She was too tough.
She wasn't going to give up .
. . so the
defendant destroyed her physically."
It was 2:45
P.M. and Upham had spoken for only an hour.
But his whole case had
been laid out for the jury.
As the gallery filed out for the afternoon
break, no one said a word.
When the trial resumed, Brad was raring to go.
He would now have his
first chance to plead his case.
He was confident that he could explain
everything to the jury's satisfaction.
Dressed in his neat dark suit,
crisp white shirt, and wine-colored tie, he looked like the bank
executive he once wasþor like an attorney.
With whispered instructions
from Kevin Hunt, he walked to the lectern before the jury entered so
that they would not know about the restraining brace on his leg.
It was 3:09 when Brad began to talk.
His technique was to attack, not
to defend, and there was no logical order to his remarks.
"Right
before you left, the DNA evidence was mentioned," he said.
"We just
got it five minutes before.
It has nothing to do with me.
It won't be
borne out.
He ambushed us with tainted evidence.... In 1986,1 was not
charged.
I had alibi witnesses.... My children, six, four, and two,
told the police I was home all night with them.
In 1994 they are
fourteen, twelve, and ten, and they don't remember.
In 1986 my
children told the police to their satisfactionþand now it's been too
long.
That's very, very important to remember."
Brad's opening statement had much to do with the conspiracy he believed
existed to keep his children from him and to tape his calls.
He said
that of the fifty thousand relevant documents he needed, only sixteen
thousand of them had been paginated.
He then gave his own version of
the last day of Cheryl's life, telling of his strong suspicions that
Cheryl was "with someone" when he called her Sunday night.
"She was
coming for them.
I fixed popcorn and I put in a movie.
Michael and I
went down to pick up their little packs.... Lily saw us.
Jess was
watching The Sword in the Stone....
"Cheryl had a clump of hair in her hand, a cord with a key wrapped
around her wristþnot my hairþnot my key."
Brad then launched into his prime defenseþhis belief that Detective
Jerry Finch, who had been dead for six years, was having an affair with
Cheryl.
"The Collins Towing driver said Jerry Finch had a date with
Cheryl that night.
Why didn't they check Finch's house for blood?"
Brad told the jury how he had suffered.
"I lost my job.
I was kicked
out of my apartment.
Harassed by the news media.
I couldn't pay my
rent."
He then moved quickly to Cheryl's seamy childhood.
"Cheryl had
had a very, very tough childhood," he said.
"She had to baby-sit all
her younger siblings.
She was sexually molested by her mother's menþ
they were lower middle classþ" In the back row, Betty Troseth's mouth
dropped open in shocked, silent protest.
Brad had set out to throw mud
not only on Cheryl, but on her whole family.
In another abrupt change of direction, Brad began listing his many
accomplishments in real estate and construction.
He said he had made
millions before he was thirty-five.
"We went to Houston and built
seven office buildings and a warehouse."
But those responsible for
completing the project had ruined his and Cheryl's dreams, he said.
He
then veered off the subject of Cheryl's murder into an extremely
complicated explanation of his financial picture.
"In 1983, we had
fourteen million dollars in assets and six million in debts.
It was a
tough time.
We were lepers in the financial community.
I was earning
an income from the warehouse and two office buildings.
It was hard for
Cheryl to work because she faced the lawyers who were suing us.... We
eventually lost everything."
Standing at the lectern, facing the jury, Brad resumed his attack on
Cheryl.
"Our life was difficult .
. . Cheryl dealt with problems
differently.
. . . She went to the Jubitz Truck Stop and picked up
men.
She went to nude beaches.
She slept with attorneys.
She gave me
sexually transmitted diseases."
He dropped his head and half smiled,
saying that he wasn't very mad about that.
He clearly wanted to be
perceived as the ultimately forgiving husband.
In the next breath,