Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
as it usually was when he questioned witnesses, there was apparently
something in it that raised the hairs on the back of Cecilia Von
Beroldingen's dog.
The perfectly trained animal leaned forward and
growled deep in its throat, a sound that no one in the courtroom
missed.
Brad had always been a quick study, and he had apparently boned up on
DNA.
The DNA pattern revealed during Von Beroldingen's tests, he
submitted, was not that unique.
In fact, he managed to establish that
approximately one out of ten Caucasians in the greater Portland area
also had the same DQ A!pha genotype that Brad did.
It was not as if he
had left a fingerprint on Cheryl's flesh, a fingerprint that was
absolutely unique to him.
Von Beroldingen could only say that he was
among the 10 percent of the population who could have left the
contaminants on the retrieved hairs, as opposed to the 90 percent with
other DQ Alpha genotypes who could not.
This was physical evidence to
be considered with the circumstantial evidence that pointed to Brad,
but it was not conclusive.
There were fireworks later in the day when the defense's DNA expert,
Randell Libby, testified.
Brad's questions and Libby's answers seemed
to meld too well, and a suspicious Upham raised an objection.
It
turned out that Libby had prepared seven and a half pages of questionsþ
including many of the answers he planned to giveþfor Brad to use.
Upham said that the list should have been shared with the prosecutor,
and that the fact that it was not was a violation of discovery.
Judge Alexander sent the jury out, and when they were gone, he ruled
that Libby's testimony and the list that Upham called "crib notes" were
indeed a violation of discovery.
Randell Libby and his testimony
disappeared from the trial.
When the jury returned, he was gone and no
explanation for his absence was given.
Brad moved once again for a mistrial.
"Motion denied."
Brad took the witness stand for a second time on December 14.
He was
once again both witness and defense attorney as he continued his direct
examination of himself.
He spoke for more than two hours, focusing on
the good times and bad times of his marriage to Cheryl.
On a number of
occasions he choked up and seemed about to burst into tears as he
remembered his love for Cheryl.
His emotions were still evanescent,
howeverþgone in an instant.
Strangely, his grief did not prevent him
from harping on Cheryl's promiscuity.
Again and again he told the jury
that she was having sexual relationships with seven or eight men at the
time of her death.
"That didn't make her a bad person," he said
generously.
"It didn't bother me."
With a half smile of sad
acceptance, he said only that he had worried because he didn't think
Cheryl's affairs left her much time to care for their three sons.
Brad insisted that he was home with his sons all the Sunday evening in
question, except for two quick runs with Michael to the parking
garage.
He estimated he hadn't been out of his apartment for more than ten
minutes total.
"I was trying to run off his energy," he said of
Michael.
"He was very hyper that evening."
He denied that he gave conflicting stories of his whereabouts and
activities to a number of different people.
"I am telling you today,"
he said earnestly to the jurors, his voice quavering, "I did not kill
Cheryl."
Just as Judge Alexander had warned him, Brad was now fair game for the
prosecution.
Scott Upham had memorized the convoluted transfers of
homes, land, building materials, heavy equipment, guns, and vehicles
that Brad had accomplished.
He had already been relentless in
questioning some of Brad's attorneys and accountants, and now he was
harder on Brad himself.
Many of Brad's holdings had never been
disclosed to the bankruptcy court.
This, Upham maintained, was one of
Brad's reasons to want Cheryl dead: she had been about to expose his
financial machinations.
Now, Upham did what Cheryl had been unable to
doþhe held those transactions up to the light.
Brad had a hard time explaining how trucks and trailers and guns
changed hands on paper but, apparently, not in reality.
The Prowler
trailer that had eventually been purchased by Sara had bounced all over
Washington State without ever once actually moving.
Paperwork showed
that Brad had given it to a law firm to pay for attorneys' fees, then
bought it back, then given it to his father.
It seemed to have been
the same with Brad's guns and expensive cameras.
He fumbled when he
tried to remember where they had all gone.
"We had fifty guns...."
Some went to a gun shop on consignment, some to his law firm.
He
wasn't quite sure.
When Upham pointed out bankruptcy report irregularities, Brad had a
ready answer.
"Cheryl filled those out," he said.
Upham was also fascinated with Brad's tax returns, returns that Brad
seemed to have forgonen.
During the years when he had brought in
virtually no income, he had taken huge deductions for business
expenses.
Cheryl had also threatened to expose his tax dodges to the IRS
þheightening his motive for murder.
Brad's face glistened with sweat as he tried to answer Upham's
increasingly intricate questions.
At the same time, he took notes to
help him with his own re-direct testimony.
Brad wasn't concerned with questions about his sex life.
He readily
admitted to having affairs with his baby-sitter Marnie and with Lily
Saarnen.
As for his other coworker, Karen Aaborg, he was disdainful.
"She would come to my apartment and she was a date I couldn't get to go
home.... She wanted sex so I did.... I only slept with her so she'd go
home."
"You have a facetious sense of humor?"
Upham asked suddenly, changing
the subject.
"Yes," Brad said warily.
"The poison plot' was a joke?"
Upham asked incredulously.
"Cheryl and I thought it was a joke," he said, then added, "But it was
like Bettyþto poison me and take the kids to Arkansas and hide them so
Cheryl could live the kind of life she wanted until she wanted them
back."
It was obvious to everyone watching that Brad was not only in deep
water, he was way over his head.
Upham hit him again and again with
questions that demanded precise answers.
And Brad could no longer
tailor his answers to fit the facts and make them sound like anything
but fiction.
Even so, he would not show that he was in the least
rattled.
He continued to write down each question Upham asked him.
He
was alternately insolent and bored.
He ignored Upham as much as anyone
on the witness stand could ignore the attorney who was verbally
pummeling him up one side of the courtroom and down the other.
Brad choked up as he said he had cried when he learned how Cheryl had
died.
"Finch said she had been bludgeoned.... You understand my state
of mind," he said.
"I was nauseous.
I was actually weaving.
I threw
up a little in my hand and ran for the bathroom."
Had he forgotten Jim
Ayers' testimony that he had shown virtually no emotion upon learning
that Cheryl was dead, and that neither he nor Finch had told Brad how
Cheryl died?
Again and again, Upham tripped Brad up.
On times.
On whom he had
talked to the night of the murder and when.
Even on what snacks he fed
his children and what was on television.
Brad was angry, but
controlled.
"You were wearing a yellow-and-orange vest when Jess opened the
door?"
Upham asked.
"No."
"You didn't tell Jess you'd been jogging around Sara's hospital?"
"No.
"You washed up in the kitchen?"
"No."
Brad said he had put an old pair of shoes and pants in Sara's
car because he had to test soil on land in Tigard the next day.
He had
planned to pick up his Suburban at Providence Hospital early the next
morning.
Upham asked a question that surprised Brad.
"Who was going to take
care of Phillip?"
Brad looked puzzled.
"You didn't call anyone Sunday night to take care of Phillip Monday
morning?"
He had not.
The inference was, of course, that Brad knew that this
Monday morning would be different, that there would be no need for
routine baby-sitting.
Brad wanted to talk instead about the many loads of laundry he had done
in his apartment Sunday night.
"I did a lot of wash.
I was staying
busy," he said.
"I was having a good time with my sons."
Brad's answers were making less and less sense.
Now in response to
many of Upham's questions, he evaded answering and talked instead of
the destruction of his life by everyone.
He could count on no one.
He
had been fired after Cheryl's murder.
Yes, Sara had paid some of his
legal feesþbut he had paid her back.
Bob McNannay withheld trust funds
from the boys, so he had had to borrow from the Colville tribe.
He had
had no choice but to let Sara adopt his sons so Betty wouldn't get
them.
Sara didn't want children.
"I wish I hadn't done it."
Upham showed Brad the letter in which he begged Sara not to divorce