Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
where Brad was expected to appear.
He advised the Washington
authorities of Dr. Herman Dreesen's address.
When contacted, Dreesen
said it would be up to Brad to bring the children in.
He would not
override his nephew's decision.s As he always had, Brad contested every
legal document that came his way.
Day after day, he had more delaying
tactics.
Finally Gloria Parker, a legal assistant for the Snohomish
County Prosecutor's office, informed McKernan that Brad and his
attorney were scheduled to appear in the Everett courtroom at 4
P.M. on March 25 and promised to do soþythe court did not require them
to bring the children.
Brad knew the authorities were breathing down his neck.
they had
little doubt that he would, as he had told Dana, flee the country
before he would submit himself or his sons to questioning.
No way was
he going to appear willingly in that courtroom in Everett, and if they
didn't move fast, he and the boys would be on a plane to Chile or
Mexico.
On Thursday, March 25, 1993, Scott Upham and investigatorsSim Carr and
Mike McKernan had reason, finally, to smileþand to take a deep
breath.
Even without hearing Jess and Michael Cunningham's testimony the grand
jury had handed down a secret indictment charging Bradlv Morris
Cunningham with the murder of his wife Cher.l Keeton on September
21,1986.
The jurors believed the testimony they had heard, and stated
their conclusion that Brad had killed his estranged wife by beating her
on the head twenty-one times with an unknown blunt instrument.
Now Upham and his team could get their arrest warrant.
But their
biggest fear was that Brad had somehow learned of the indictment and
had already bolted and run, taking Jess, Michael, and Phillip with
him.
They had done their best to keep a lid on the grand jury proceedings,
and there was no news release on the indictment.
Brad was aware the
police were watching him.
But maybe he didn't know they were now ready
to move in on him.
Brad had always been the stalker.
He was now
playing a completely different role.
He was the one being stalked.
McKernan flew to Washington before dawn to be sure he was in Everett
when the arrest warrant arrived.
Word was that Brad still had plenty
of weapons.
When the Mill Creek police checked back at the house where
he had collected a virtual arsenal, they found almost every interior
wall smashed, they speculated that Brad had been removing additional
guns from their hiding places.
Above all, McKernan wanted to facilitate a nonviolent arrest by working
with authorities in Snohomish County.
He contacted Captain Don Nelson
of the Snohomish County Sheriffs office, and Nelson assigned Sergeant
Kevin Prentiss to coordinate Brad's apprehension.
It was 2:25
P.M. on March 25,1993.
The no-bail murder warrantþ C930434CRþfor the
arrest of Brad Cunningham was entered into the NCIC (National Crime
Information Center) computers.
At 3:43
P.M. Jim Carr faxed a copy of the arrest warrant from Scott Upham's
office in Hillsboro, Oregon.
In the best of all worlds, Brad would
show up at the courthouse in Everett at 4:00
P.M. as he had promised.
At 4:20
P.M. Doug Purcell, the boys' attorney, arrived at the Snohomish
Courthouseþwithout Brad.
He said Brad had informed him he could not be
there.
He was in Burien, Washington, picking up items needed for a
civil trial in Yakima the next day and said "he couldn't make" this
court appearance.
At 4:45
P.M. McKernan spoke to a records clerk at Yakima County Superior
Court.
Brad's civil trial there (which involved his selling of
properties
that were legally in Cheryl Keeton's estate) had been rescheduled to
April 16þand all parties were informed, Brad included.
At 7:45
P.M. McKernan observed the black Isuzu Trooper that Dana said was
Brad's vehicle parked at Herman Dreesen's house.
At 8:05
P.M. the Snohomish County Sheriffs office SWAT team and McKernan
gathered near Dreesen's house while Deputy David Vasconi stationed his
patrol unit across the street so he could surveil the residence.
The
waiting lawmen observed a Jeep Wagoneer and a new maroon sedan drive
away.
Mike McKernan couldn't help feeling nervous.
What if they were
watching Dreesen's house while Brad was boarding a plane for Chile?
He
knew how adept he was at slipping through police lines.
At 9:31
P.M. Sergeant Tim Shea called the house using his cell phone.
All he got was Dreesen's answering machine.
At 9:41
P.M. Shea called the residence and spoke with Dreesen.
Brad's uncle
confirmed that he was inside the residence.
Brad came on the line and
was informed that the officers had a warrant for his arrest.
"We request that you exit the house now.
If you don't, we will obtain
a search warrant and the SWAT team is coming in."
Brad asked for more
time.
He said he would call the police mobile phone to let them know
when he was coming out.
Oueside in the dark, officers had completely surrounded the perimeter
of the residence.
Minutes later, they saw a large white male come out
of the back door and look around.
Apparently spotting the waiting
police, he turned and went back inside.
At 10:03
P.M. Brad came out of the house, accompanied by his uncle.
Deputy Vasconi drove his patrol car to the front of the house and
watched as Brad obeyed orders to put his hands up and walk slowly
toward the patrol car.
"When the suspect reached me," Vasconi wrote in
his report, "I had him get down on his knees, at which time I placed
him into handcuffs."
Brad's arrest was almost anticlimactic.
He had put up no fight at all,
he hadn't even tried to runþnot when he realized his uncle's property
was alive with cops.
He was searched for weapons and put into the back
of the patrol car.
Mike McKernan advised Brad of his rights under
Miranda and asked if he would like to explain his side of the story.
Brad looked at McKernan and said flatly, "I want to talk with my
attorney."
"Does that mean that you don't want to talk to me either?" McKernan
asked.
Brad simply repeated, "I want to talk to my attorney."
That was no surprise to McKernan, he knew his prisoner had had almost
as many attorneys as a law-school graduating class.
Their names and
faces changed continually.
Brad scarcely went to the bathroom without
consulting an attorney.
McKernan asked Dreesen if he might speak with Jess and Michael about
what they remembered of the night their mother died, but Dreesen shook
his head.
"I would be bitterly opposed to you talking with the kids.
If I could grab you by the neck and tell you, Don't hurt these kids!"
I would."
nFi."
:."
< Kornan wþnted to do was hurt Cheryl Keeton's children.
On that
matter, he was in complete agreement with Dreesen.
But sometime,
somehow, there had to be a way for the boys to release whatever was
buried in their memories.
Brad was driven to the Snohomish County jail.
On the way, he attempted
to talk to Vasconi.
"This has been hard on my children," he said.
"I was going to come to the police department .
.."
"I don't want to talk to you," Vasconi said.
For once, Brad shut up.
He had plummeted a long, long way down from the successful bank
executive and millionaire builder.
On his knees, in handcuffs,
silhouetted in the lighas of police unies, he had not made a very
prepossessing picture.
It had taken six years, six months, four days,
and two hours, but he was finally facing criminal charges for Cheryl's
vicious murder.
The charge he was booked under was "Fugitive from Justice."
A bail hearing was held at one the next afternoon.
Brad had retained
yet another lawyer, James Tweety, to oppose his extradition to
Oregon.
The hearing was conducted by video linkup between the jail where Brad
was being held and Superior Court Judge Richard Thorpe's courtroom.
During the course of the hearing, Brad interrupted the proceedings and
asked to speak to his attorney.
He then began a lengthy statement in which he essentially blamed the
women in his life for his current predicament.
He said that Dana
Malloy had given him an Uzi as a gift, otherwise he would not have had
such a weapon.
He said that he had lived with Dana for three years,
that she was a stripper, and that he had finally broken up with her.
All the charges coming out of Oregon were the fault of one of his
former wives, Dr. Sara Gordon.
Brad suggested that both Dana and Sara
had set him up to seek revengeþDana because he had left her, and Sara
because he was suing her for child support.
As Brad watched the television image from his jail cell, Judge Thorpe
set his bail.
Brad always talked in millions, and his bail fit his
lifestyle: S2.5 million.
David Wold, a legal assistant in the
Snohomish County Prosecutor's office, said that he would have to post
cash bail of $250,000 and post a security deposit for the remaining