Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
sat down with the vice president and described the situation.
I said
that 1 was confident that I would get some sort of settlement from the
divorce.
t Jnbelievably, the bank carried me through the divorce and let me stay
in the condominium."
Over that lonely Christmas of 1977 and into the first months of 1978,
Lauren was furious with Cheryl.
She was probably angrier at her ol(l
friend than she was at the husband who had walked out on her.
There
was another cruelty that had been inflicted on her.
"When Cheryl
separated from Danþand I am confident that she and Brad were then
involved in an intimate relationship," Lauren said, "Brad and I were
the ones that helped her move into her new apartment and carried her
furniture in .
.
. just some memories that are sort of hard to stomach."
Lauren hoped never to see or talk to Cheryl again.
What good would
words or explanations do?
What had happened had happened.
But a few
weeks after Lauren found herself alone, she did see Cheryl again.
Even as she still carried his unborn child, Brad had begun divorce
proceedings against her, and Cheryl came with Brad to the tiny condo
where Lauren now lived.
"She was the person to hand me the divorce
documents," Lauren-said.
"That was salt in the wound."
After seeing Brad's smug face as he watched Cheryl present her with
divorce papers, Lauren realized that Brad had really left her, that he
wasn't just going through a temporary lapse.
He loved Cheryl and not
her.
That loss was bad enough.
The loss of Cheryl's friendship was
difficult too.
Her behavior was totally alien to the person Lauren had
known for almost a decade.
It was as if she were hypnotized.
She had
never known Cheryl to doþor even sa›!þan unkind thing before.
Lauren could not have imagined that the day would come when she would
forgive Cheryl, when she would begin to understand why Cheryl had
changed so completely from her sorority sister and confidante and dear
friend into the woman who had stolen her husband and wrecked her
life.
There would even come a day when Lauren would feel sorry for Cheryl.
If Lauren assumed that Brad was completely out of her lifeþthat he had
abandoned all interest in herþshe was woefully mistaken.
Brad was not
finished with her.
She still had things he wanted.
Lauren had legal
claim to some of his real estate holdings.
But more than that, more
than anything, she was carrying his child.
Brad was still fighting
Loni Ann to win back Kit and Brent, and he wanted this child too.
He
was a "child keeper," a man obsessed with owning all the children he
had sired.
Even before Lauren gave birth, Brad filed for custody of the baby.
And although she was hugely pregnant and struggling to survive
financially, he began to fight her in one court hearing after another
for property he considered rightly his.
She met him in court or in
their attorneys' offices for almost a dozen hearings and
depositions.
Lauren had naively hired an attorney who would have been perfectly
adequate for a simple divorce, hut Brad had never had a simple
divorce.
Lauren's attorney asked her if there were any marital assets that she
might still he able to claim, and she remembered that she and Brad had
a joint bank account that had twelve thousand dollars in it.
The
attorney took Lauren at once to the bank so she could withdraw the
money, with that done, he was confident that she would now have
something to live on.
Brad was livid when he found the twelve thousand
dollars missing.
He filed to freeze money in Lauren's
accountþsuccessfullyþand she could use none of the twelve thousand
dollars to take care of herself as she drew closer and closer to giving
birth.
Brad battled with Lauren over everything.
She had an oriental rugþ a
rug that had been in her family for years before they passed it on to
her at her wedding.
Now Brad claimed that it belonged to him.
He even
deposed Lauren's mother in his efforts to get it away from Lauren.
Lauren's original attorney saw that she was in for a terrible courtroom
struggle.
"Within a couple of weeks," she recalled, "he told me that I
needed a big gun."
" She hired another attorney, one known for digging in and fighting.
But by the time she was nine months pregnant, the war had just begun
and she was learning that the charming, wonderfully sensitive man she
had married had an entirely different side.
She would remember that he
"was extremely litigious and seemed anxious to do whatever he could do
to make things uncomfortable and difficult in the course of our divorce
proceedings."
Lauren's due date was during the week of March 26, which included the
Easter weekend, a three-day holiday.
Since she now lived alone, she
would have to depend on her telephone to call for help when she went
into labor.
She was appalled one night during that long weekend when
she picked up her phone to make a call and heard only dead air.
She
discovered that Brad had had her phone disconnected.
"I went through
some frantic time," Lauren said, "to get the phone hooked up because I
was alone."
When she did go into labor, Lauren had to count on her family and
friends to get her to the hospital.
She went through her labor alone,
delivering her baby on a soft spring night.
She might as well have
been an unwed mother.
In truth, she would have been better off Amy
Cunningham, a beautiful little girl, made up for a lot of the pain her
mother had gone through in the months before her birth.
But the pain
was not yet over.
The phone in Lauren's hospital room rang the day
after Amy was born.
It was Brad.
"I understand that we have a daughter," he said flatly, and before
Lauren could reply, he went on, "I wanted to let you know that I have
had your car repossessed."
Lauren wasn't even very surprised.
This was the Brad she had come,
bitterly, to know all too well.
He didn't seem thrilled or even
moderately happy about the baby.
Even so, Lauren knew that Amy would
he used as a pawn in Brad's war against her, and she felt a chill.
When she had left for the hospital, Lauren's car was parked, she
thought safely, in an underground garage at the University Towers where
she lived.
She learned later that Brad had talked the property manager
into letting him into.the parking area.
The car was gone when she
returned from the hospital.
"I don't know how he did it," Lauren
said.
"He probably had keys."
She never got her car back.
Even before Lauren regained her strength after childhirth, the legal
fight with Brad accelerated.
She was asking for full custody of Amy,
while Brad requested joint custody.
Their divorce trial was held
before Superior Court Judge Stanley Soderland, who had just been voted
the most respected judge in King County, Washington.
"My attorney was
not hopeful about my efforts to basically erase Brad from my life,"
Lauren recalled, "but he said, You are hiring me, and if this is what
you want to go for, this is what I will ask for."
" Lauren had requested that Brad undergo psychiatric testingþand he, of
course, countered with a request that she be tested too.
In the end,
the results were a wash.
According to the doctors who evaluated the
test results, neither Lauren nor Brad showed any emotional pathology.
Ultimately, Lauren put her faith in pure common sense.
She was the
abandoned spouse, and she figured that when Brad deserted her, he had
walked away from Amy too.
"My point was that Brad had relinquished his
paternal rights when he walked out before she was born.
And the judge
said, You are wrong."
He said, He is the biological father."
" Judge Soderland awarded Lauren sole custody of Amy but he said he
could not prevent her father from seeing her.
Soderland set up very
rigid visitation schedules for the first four years of Amy's life,
commenting that he hoped that Lauren and Brad could work out their own
custody arrangements after Amy was four.
Amy's visits with her father began when she was a month old.
Lauren was ordered by the court to take her to the King County
Courthouse and give her new baby to Brad for hour-long visits.
"I had
to turn her over to him, and he took her into another room for an
hour," Lauren remembered.
"It was torture for me.... I was scared to death that he was going to
leave with her.... I was awarded sole custody, which is not what he
wanted.
It just made me very, very nervous."
Possibly only a new mother can empathize with the terror in Lauren's
heart as she carried her month-old daughter onto the creaky elevators
of the King County Courthouse and then walked through the marblelined
halls to meet Brad.
Every courtroom and chamber in the venerable
building has at least two exits, every floor can be reached by
stairways as well as elevators.
One courthouse door exits onto Third
Avenue and another onto Fourth Avenue, while tunnels run from the
courthouse's first floor and basement to two entirely separate
buildings.
Had Brad wanted to take Amy away, it would have been so
easy.
But at the end of each hour's visit, he returned the tiny baby
girl to her mother.
Lauren had no idea what he did while he had the baby.
Did he talk to
Amy, rock her, walk around with her?
Or did he simply put her on a