Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
van, Diane clocked the distance to the Mobile station at seven-tenths
of a mile.
"It took just a couple of minutes to get down there," she
remembered.
She parked the van and waited.
8:07:00: It is dusk when Shinn and the i'killer'' pull out of the
Madison Tower parking area and head for the Sunset Highway.
They will
be careful to travel at legal speeds.
A camcorder in their car
automatically registers the passing of seconds and minutes.
8:09:44: The arrow to 26
West appears, the car moves left onto the approach toward the westbound
tunnel.
8:13:28: The car emerges from the tunnel and onto the Sunset Highway.
The speed is fifty-five miles an hour.
8:16:32: They reach the location of the Mobile station.
8:17:00: They pull in and park in the shadows there.
The "killer'
slips on gloves.
He walks slowly around from the hack of the station
to the "victim's" van parked out front.
He pounds on the "victim s"
window, forcing his way in.
("I was trying to think as Cheryl would
have that night," Bakker remembered.
"I sat in the van waiting,
looking all around for Brad."
But even though I was waiting for
someone to attack me, I didn't see him.
He was just there
suddenly....
") 8:18:20: He is inside the van.
(This period could never be
absolutely reconstructed.
Had Brad pulled up close to Cheryl's van so
that she could see that Michael was in the car?
Or had he left
Michaelþwith orders to "take a nap"þin Sara's car behind the station.
Or conceivably, could he have left all three boys in his apartment?
Furthermore, no one could really know where the savage beating of
Cheryl Keeton had taken place.
More than likely, it was a continuous
attack in the van, although she might well have tried desperately to
leap from the passenger door!
only to be winked back by the belt of her jeans.
Her injuries had been
inflicted by a heavy object.
Shinn was inclined to believe it was a
"policetype" flashlight, although he could never locate it.
) 8:22:10:
The "victim's" van, with the "killer" at the wheel and the "victim"
dead or unconscious in the passenger seat, is stopped on 79th Street a
minute or two away from the Mobile station.
The eastbound lanes of the
Sunset Highway are just ahead.
8:22:48: The "killer" sends the van toward the freeway.
He then jogs
back toward the Mobile station.
He is wearing shorts and a T-shirt
now, and carrying a bundle of clothes under his arm like a football.
8:30:50: The "killer" arrives back at the Mobile station where his car
is parked.
8:32:28: The "killer" gets in his car, checks traffic carefully, pulls
out of the Mobile station, and heads toward the Sunset Highway going
east.
He is slightly out of breath from his jog.
8:37:40: The "killer" is back on the Sunset Highway, headed east toward
the Madison Tower.
8:38:13: He is in the tunnel going east.
8:42:07: He pulls into the Madison Tower parking garage.
8:42:34: He exits his parked car.
The re-enactment of Cheryl's murder was only a drama.
It wasn't realþ
but it seemed real.
"I relived it," Shinn recalled.
"I was sweating,
my heart was pounding like crazy, even though we knew it was just a
re-enactment.
It was almost as if it was really happening."
Brad could have easily been back in the Madison Tower garage at 8:42
P.M. In two more minutes, he would have been able to ride the elevator
to the eighteenth floor and enter his apartment in time to take a phone
call.
With ten minutes to spare.
"If Brad had not answered the phone when Sara called just before
nine," Shinn commented.
"He would not have locked himself into such a
tight time frame...."
But it was loose enough.
The test run had proved that it was, indeed,
possible to drive from the Madison Tower to the West Slope and back in
thirty-five minutesþeven allowing for almost five minutes in which to
strike a helpless victim almost two dozen times.
But if Brad was
Cheryl's killer, he may not have had ten minutes to spare.
Later,
experts estimated that it would take almost fifteen minutes to bludgeon
someone two dozen times.
In late 1990, Mike Shinn's office was in the Bishop's House, in a
remodeled parish house that was once a part of a church complex.
Because it had been built in a time when crime in Portland was not a
major concern, the Bishop's House had had to be beefed up with security
devices.
Iron grilles were placed over windows on the ground and second
floorsþnot just in Shinn's offices but for all the offices located in
the building.
Brad Cunningham was a man who resented anyone snooping into his
business and his life.
Judging by the huge stack of reports from
Connie Capato and Leslie High, there was ample evidence that
Shinn had done both.
And the civil trial was fast approaching.
It
seemed a wise thing that his office was secure.
Diane Bakker began to receive obscene phone calls at Shinn's office.
The male voice was Asian, or at least disguised to sound Asian.
"I
know who you are," he breathed.
"And I'm going to come up there and
rape you."
He added some ugly details about what he planned to do.
By the third call, Bakker was ready for him.
She kept saying, "I can't
understand youþcould you repeat that, only slowly?"
and every time the
obscene caller tried again, she pretended she couldn't understand the
string of obscenities he uttered because of his accent.
"I don't think
it was Brad," she recalled.
"But maybe it was someone Brad hired.
The guy finally got so exasperated with me because I couldn't
understand' him that he hung up.
That was the end of the phone
calls."
But not the end of the pretrial incidents.
Diane Bakker went to work
early one morning and found Mike Shinn's office a mess.
Someone had
come in during the night, someone with a very explicit mission.
It was
easy enough to find the point of entry.
Powerful arms had twisted the
iron bars away from the bathroom window of the second-floor office
complex.
"Someone broke the window to the bathroom and took powdered cream and
sugar from next to the coffee machine in the hall and scattered it all
over the hall and Mike's office," Bakker said.
"They didn't touch the
other two attorneys' offices."
What was oddþand disturbingþwas that nothing of value was missing.
There were computers, typewriters, all manner of office machines, and
Shinn had any number of paintings and sculptures in his offices that
were worth thousands of dollars.
The intruder had taken nothing, nor
had he damaged anything in Shinn's offices.
He seemed, rather, to have
broken in just to leave a message.
"The only thing that was disturbed," Shinn said, "was the Brad
Cunningham case file.
Whoever broke in had taken that from where I
kept it and scattered it all over the hall.
That was what was under
all that spilled sugar and cream.
Whoever came in during the night may
have read the file, but he didn't take it away with him.
He just left
it in sheets scattered all over my officeþlike a calling card."
Shinn figured he must be getting to somebody, forcing him to look over
his shoulder and annoying the hell out of him.
But he was not about to
quit.
He was hot on the trail.
Someone was hot on his trail, too.
His car was broken intoþnot at his
office but where it was parked near his houseboat.
The message was
clear: I know whereyou work, and I know whereyou live .
. .
, Mike Shinn wasn't the only target.
Some of Dr. Russell Sardo's
records of his sessions with Brad and Cheryl during their custody
battle disappeared.
And Sara Gordon received a scribbled letter that
might have been meant to be reassuring, but it was unsigned, and
anonymous messages frightened her.
Dr. Gorden [sic], we heard about your testimony today.
Our police
friend tells us based on what you've said they can almost arrest him
and by the end of your sworn statement we expect he'll be in jail by
end of month Hang in there þyou have our support.
Your friends in Washington What friends in Washington?
What
testimony?
Although Sara was prepared to testify in the civil trial, only a few
people knew about it.
Superstitious people, those who believe in omens and in the power of
evil, might have felt a pall over the years-long quest for justice in
Cheryl's murder.
Oregon State Police Detective Jerry Finch, who had
been the lead detective in the criminal investigation of Cheryl's
death, had succumbed to lung cancer in 1988, almost exactly two years
after Cheryl herself died.
He had been in his early forties.
Connie
Capato, the private investigator who had been most active in Shinn's
civil investigation of Cheryl's death, was barely thirty when she also
developed cancer, a deadly fast-moving malignancy of the brain.
She
was dead within a few months and did not live to see the civil trial
she had worked so hard on come to fruition.
Nor did Bob Burnett,
another P.l.
who had worked on the case.
Mike Shinn and Diane Bakker were not afraid, but they had long since