Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
Washington County jail and demanded to be moved to another facility.
He told Judge Bonebrake that prisoners were hiding cigarettes and
matches in the jail ceiling and creating a fire hazard.
He feared for
his life and asked to be moved to safer quarters.
He did not approve
of the alternate jails that were suggested, however, and he remained in
the Washington County jail.
His betrayal of his fellow prisoners did not go unnoticed.
The lowest
creature in any penal institution is a "snitch," and Brad was a
constant snitch.
In grade school, he would have been called a
"tattletale."
In jail or prison, the revenge against a snitch may not come
swiftlyþbut it always comes.
William Berrigan was the commander of the Washington County jail and
Brad was not one of his favorite prisoners.
During Brad's
eighteenmonth stay, he would be disciplined eleven times and spend six
months in lock-down in a six-by-nine-foot cell.
He wrote to the FBI
and asked for an investigation of the jail because he felt his civil
rights were being violated.
At his July 5 omnibus hearing, Brad was represented by Tim Lyons and
Kevin Hunt.
This time he was dressed in the traditional faded orange
pajamalike jail uniform.
His hands were cuffed, his legs were
shackled.
His complexion had taken on the yellowish jail pallor that all longtime
prisoners have, but his shoulders and biceps were "buffed"þhe had
obviously been working out in his cell.
He carried his omnipresent box
of files, and his confidence had not diminished at all.
This was to be
the only time when Tim Lyons could truly act as Brad's attorney, and
his expertise was apparent.
Since so much of the evidence was
circumstantial, it was quite possible that Lyons could win an
acquittal, but Brad treated him as he had all his other attorneys.
He
had to be in charge, and he leaned against Lyons constantly, mouthing
directions.
He pushed notes across the polished defense table, tapping
his finger to get Lyons' attention.
Lyons often pulled away from his
client.
The defense hit hard at the long delay in issuing the criminal
indictment and asked what new evidence the State had.
Most of all,
they wanted to have any statements Cheryl had made just before her
death banned from the criminal trial.
They also sought Upham's "work
products" in preparation for the trial and during his investigation.
Judge Bonebrake would not allow that and would delay his ruling on
whether Cheryl's statements and notes were "hearsay" or "excited
utterances."
If Upham could get into the trial Cheryl's statements
made to her mother minutes before she died and the note she wrote to
her brother, he would breathe easier.
There was new evidence.
DNA analysis had come into its own since 1986,
and O.S.P criminalist Julia Hinkley had retained the hairs found on
Cheryl's body.
There was more witness testimony, too.
But the most
important testimony, if Judge Bonebrake would allow it, would be from a
woman dead for eight years: the victim.
Brad's next trial date, August 29, 1994, was postponed.
Lyons was
representing another murder defendant and Brad complained that neither
of his attorneys was available for conferences with him when he felt it
was necessary.
His phone calls were not returned quickly enough.
He
abruptly fired J. Kevin Hunt and Tim Lyons and announced that he would
represent himself.
Brad felt completely capable of handling his own defense.
Even though
he was not an attorney, he certainly was conversant with the law, with
attorneys, with courtrooms, and with all manner of suits.
He had had
his own office at Vinson and Elkins' law firm in Houston whenever he
wanted it during the years his suit in Texas dragged on.
But he had no
experience with a criminal trial and had never gone to law school.
And even if he had, the old saw that almost anyone can quote is, "He
who defends himself has a fool for a client."
But nothing and no one
could dissuade him from taking the reins of his own defense.
Once he had dispensed with his lawyers, Brad went after Judge Alan
Bonebrake.
He couldn't legally fire a judge, but he did the next best
thing.
He sued him, claiming Bonebrake had violated his civil
rights.
Now that Bonebrake had personal legal matters pending with the
defendant, he felt he could not serve as an impartial judge.
He
recused himself.
Judge Timothy Alexander replaced him.
But if Bonebrake had been an
implacable brick wall whom he detested, Brad would soon find that he
had unwittingly placed himself in front of a judge who not only had an
encyclopedic knowledge of the laws of Oregon but who had almost no
patience with defendants' histrionics and diversionary tactics.
Alexander would carefully explain pitfalls to the defense, but once he
had given his warning, he was not pleased to have to repeat it again
and again .
. . and again.
Outside the courtroom, Tim Alexander had a
great sense of humor.
Inside, he had virtually none.
With twenty years' experience as a trial lawyer, Scott Upham was
confident that, facing even as savvy a layman as Brad Cunningham one
on-one, he could make mincemeat of him.
But Upham shuddered at the
thought of the circus Brad could create if he was allowed to represent
himself.
There is an order and a sequence to the law.
Brad knew
nothing of that.
Even law school graduates rarely venture into
criminal law until they have been in practice for five years or more.
Brad's defending himself was going to be a little like a first-year
medical student performing open heart surgery.
Brad didn't know the rules, he didn't know the procedures, he didn't
know the language, he didn't know the techniques, and he would probably
turn what should be an orderly progression of witnesses, evidence, and
arguments into utter chaos.
Of all people concerned, Upham hoped that
Brad could be dissuaded from being a one-man show, that he would be
opposing a real attorney and not a man who had demonstrated throughout
his life that he had to be in charge.
But Brad was adamant that he would defend himself, although he
grudgingly agreed to allow the State of Oregon to retain Hunt and Lyons
as his legal advisors, if not as his attorneys.
He himself would
select the jury, question witnesses, and present his own arguments.
He
would be the voice, but he would have Lyons and Hunt next to him to
consult on issues where he had ventured out of his depth.
The trial that had been first scheduled for January of 1994 was set
over from August to October 24 and then to October 26.
Main Street in
Hillsboro was decorated for Halloween when the trial began at lastþ
nine months after it was supposed to.
Estimates were that it would
last two weeks.
When it finally ended, the jack-o'-lanterns were long
since gone, snow covered the Washington County Courthouse grounds, and
Main Street was decorated for Christmas.
Part VIThe Criminal Trial
Brad's initial bail hearing fourteen months before had been held in the
old section of the Washington County Courthouse.
On the fourth floor
of the newer addition, two elevators open onto a corridor with a huge
woven wall hanging done in peach, orange, and blue tones that greets
everyone who emerges with the motto "Wherever Law Ends, Tyranny
Begins"þJohn Locke.
Every spectator heading for the two courtrooms on
the fourth floor has to pass through highly sensitive metal
detectors.
Nothing metal gets through.
No pocketknives.
No hat pins.
No nail
files.
No "church keys."
No jokes.
Judge Alexander's courtroom had only three rows of chairs for the
gallery, and when Brad's trial began, the back row was almost entirely
filled with Cheryl's family.
They had been through this too many times
before, but this was the trial that might finally give them some
closure.
It would not be easy for them, but they would commute every
day of the trial from Longview in the hours before dawn and after
sunset: Betty and Mary Troseth, Susan and Dave Keegan, Bob McNannay,
Jim Karr, and Cheryl's cousin Katannah King.
Her half sisters and
their husbands flew up from California to be present: Debi and Billy
Bowen and Kim and Bill Roberts.
So many people had been involved with Cheryl's lifeþand with her
death.
Mike Shinn would often be in the courtroom, as would Sara's friend and
protector Jack Kincaid (a presence that particularly rankled Brad).
There would always be a line at the metal detectors and, except for the
media and family, seating would be scarce.
Portland networkaffiliate
cameramen, radio and television field reporters, an occasional
syndicated tabloid television- producer from Los Angeles, even a
reporter from the London Guardian would wander in and out.
The
constant media presences, however, were Fiona Ortiz and Robin Franzen
from the Oregonian, Laurie Smith from the Daily News in Longview, Eric
Apalategui from the Hillsboro Angus, and this author and her
assistant.
Every trial takes on a life of its own, and this one more than any
other would have a strangeness and, indeed, the chaotic propulsion that
Uphan had feared.
There was always the sense that, had it not been
for
Judge Alexander, it might hurtle off the track at any moment.
No one
could ever really know what the defendant would do next.
As the trial got under way, Upham was as low-key and inscrutable as his
opponent was volatile.
Brad was once again dressed in a neat dark