Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
parking area of Garvey, Schubert and found all four of the studded
tires on her van had been slashed.
They had, indeed, been "taken care
of."
Within a very few days after Cheryl hired Betsy Welch and even before
Welch could file the necessary documents for her divorce, Cheryl called
her, very upset, and said that Brad had announced he would be moving
back in with herþat his attorney's suggestion.
Aks a general rule,
that was good advice, and Welch knew it.
There is no rule or law that
says a spouse who has moved out of the home cannot move back in.
In
child custody cases, the parent who moves out acknowledges that the
parent left behind with the children is providing acceptable care.
In
a disputed custody, this gives the parent who remains the upper hand.
Brad had lost too many custody battles.
Even Loni Ann, whom he had
seen as the weakest link in his chain of women, had prevailed in court
and had been awarded Kit and Brent.
Lauren had controlled his visits
with Amy.
He had let his first three children go, finally, because he
had Jess, Michael, and Phillipþthree bright, handsome sons who looked
so much like himself He was not about to let Cheryl have them.
They
were his trophies, his prizes.
They reflected his boundless ego,
miniature versions of himself who would validate his manhood, his
potency, and his power.
Betsy Welch immediately called Brad's current lawyer and explained why
she felt it would be a fruitless and emotionally damaging move for Brad
to return to Cheryl's Gresham house.
But Brad did exactly what he had
threatened to do.
When Cheryl got home from work on the Friday evening
of a long holiday weekend, she found him in her bedroom.
She was
horrified, and she was angry, but she was helpless to get him out.
Betsy Welch could not go into court until Tuesday morning to ask for an
order to remove Brad.
Cheryl knew he wasn't there for anything more
than to reestablish his legal beachhead.
"It was a very long,
confrontive, unpleasant weekend," Welch recalled.
Cheryl asked him to go, but Brad refused to budge.
At one point, he
took Jess with him and locked them both in the master bedroom for
hours.
He would not allow Cheryl in to get her clothes, her makeup, or
anything else she needed.
The boys were frantic, Cheryl was frantic,
but
Brad stayed put, as if he had never left his "home" at all.
although the house had six bedrooms, Cheryl slept on the couch in the
recreation room so that she could watch the stairs from the master
bedroom, she was afraid Brad might leave with the boys.
It was a ghastly three days, and Cheryl wondered hopelessly if Brad
actually intended to take up their sham of a marriage.
He acted as if
he was home again for good, and the thought was almost more than she
could bear.
Knowing that he would listen in to all her phone calls on
the bedroom extension, she nevertheless called her mother.
Trapped in
the house with Brad, she had to have someone to talk to.
As they
discussed the situation, Betty made a bad joke about ways to get rid of
Brad.
"Maybe we should just poison him," she said.
"I think I read someplace
that a woman did that to an abusive husband, and they let her go .
.."
Neither mother nor daughter realized what a devastating impact their
conversation would have on Brad.
He looked at everything from his own
point of viewþthe point of view of a man who had virtually no sense of
humor, who believed that the end (his end) justified the means (any
means), and who considered women spawn of the devil.
Even though Brad had told her that he had to spend the weekend with his
sons, Dr. Sara Gordon was blissfully happy, delighted with the new man
in her life.
She had no idea of the hell Cheryl Keeton was living
in.
Brad seemed to Sara to be very kind, very honest, and quite
remarkable.
Often she marveled at her good fortune in finding such a man.
Within weeks of their meeting, she was as anxious as he to have his
divorce finalized.
She was just as concerned as he was about his poor
children who had to spend so much time with the woman Brad had
described to her as a slut and an incompetent mother.
She knew that
Brad was only doing what he had to do to save his sons.
Of course, Brad had never intended to leave Sara or the comforts of his
new apartment permanently.
Once he had proven that he could move back
in anytime he pleased, he left Cheryl's house and returned to the
Madison Tower.
Both of them aware of the inflammatory possibilities in the divorce
action they were handling, Jake Tanzer and Betsy Welch worked together
to find the best solution not only for Cheryl and Brad but especially
for Jess, Michael, and Phillip.
Apparently, each of the parents loved
the boys, and the opposing attorneys hoped that a psychologist could
help establish which of the dueling parentsþif either, and if not both
þshould have custody of their sons.
They needed to know who was the
"primary" parent.
Where would the little boys fare better?
With their
mother?
With their father?
Tanzer suggested to Betsy Welch that they contact an expert who was not
under the aegis of the family court to be sure they had the most
unbiased evaluation possible.
Dr. Russell Sardo, quite probably the
leading clinical psychologist in the family counseling field in the
Portland area in the mid-eighties, agreed to consult.
He would attempt
to establish whether Brad or Cheryl was the primary parent.
Dr. Sardo
would talk to each of them separately, administer the M.M.P.I (the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) to both, and then visit
with Jess, Michael, and Phillip and hope to get a fix on the family
dynamics.
After extensive testing and multiple interviews, Sardo would
then deliver copies of his report to Jake Tanzer and Betsy Welch.
Dr. Sardo spoke first with Brad, on March 23, 1986, and found him very
verbal and quite comfortable in communicating.
His body posture was
relaxedþas if he were a man whose career had been fuli of highpowered
meetings, as, indeed, it had been.
Brad explained to Dr. Sardo that
he and Cheryl had been married for six years and separated for one
month.
"I am the children's primary parentþI always have been," Brad said with
assurance.
"My wife loves the children very much, but I don't think
she likes them.
She is not a natural parent, the children were anz
idea."
Brad stressed that he had been the one who longed to have chiidren in
their home, while Cheryl had always seen her legal career as her main
goal in life.
although he assumed that Cheryl's profession would equip
her to be a superior litigator and make her a trained negotiator, Dr.
Sardo wondered if he might not be speaking to the "skilled negotiator"
of this family.
Brad was very glib and dynamic.
And his description of Cheryl's
parenting abilities was devastating.
He told Sardo that she was not a
nurturer, she had no patience, she was overreactive and loses control,
and she was critical and condemning when dealing with her small sons.
He said that Cheryl often yelled at the boys, calling them "fuckers"
and "little assholes."
Cheryl's career took precedence over everything else in her life,
according to Brad.
She was alwav.s gone and it was his perception
that
Cheryl found it very difficult even to be around the childrenþunless
of course, she had someone to help her care for them.
Brad sighed a.s
he told Sardo that Cheryl just didn't have the inclination or the
skills to cope with the complete care of Jess, Michael, and Phillip.
"Perhaps hedonistic' would describe Cheryl," Brad said.
And he went on
to describe her as "a very sexual person" who had been "promiscuous.
Dr. Sardo listened quietly now as the man sitting in his office tried
to wipe out his wife with words.
The Cheryl Keeton that Brad sketched
sounded, indeed, like a selfish, dissolute woman who wouldn't be a good
mother for any child.
But Sardo had listened to a thousand couples
argue over their children, and he had long ago learned to reserve
judgment until he had heard both principals out.
Smiling expansively, Brad went on to say that he, on the other hand had
been absolutely faithful in his marriage.
As remote as such a
possibility might be, he said he actually hoped for a reconciliation.
He wanted nothing more than to be back with Cheryl and his children in a
solid family unit.
It had always been Cheryl who wanted the divorce.
He felt further, that she was seeking custod!
of their three boys not
because she wanted them, but "because she is combative."
Sardo was a little bemused by Brad.
He was, at the very least, a very
complicated man.
Sardo found him quite intelligent and sophisticated
and vet he caught inconsistencies in Brad's statements, jarring
discrepancies that a man of his obvious brilliance should have noted
and censored before they ever passed his lips.
Although Brad had
stressed early in the mtervlew how scrupulously faithful he had been
throughout his marriage, he suddenly reversed himself and described a
period when he and Cheryl had had an "open marriage."
During this
time, Brad admitted, he had had an affair with their nineteen-year-old
baby-sitter.
It hadn't lasted too long, and he had told Cheryl about
it.
"And how did she react?"
"We still kept her as our baby-sitter for months after that," Brad
replled.