Bogeyman: He Was Every Parent's Nightmare

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Bogeyman: He Was Every Parent's Nightmare Page 1

by Steve Jackson




  BOGEYMAN

  He was every parent’s nightmare.

  “When the woods are black as night

  That’s the bogeyman’s delight.

  Better run away, better run away

  Pretty little maiden run away.”

  — Author Unknown

  STEVE JACKSON

  WildBluePress.com

  Table of Contents

  PART I

  Every Parent’s Nightmare

  PART II

  A Case of Divine Intervention

  PART III

  Prayers Have Been Answered

  PICTURES

  Some names have been changed to protect the privacy of a few of the individuals discussed in this book. Also, some conversations are recollected from the memories of characters in the book and presented as quoted dialogue for dramatic purposes; efforts were made, however, to corroborate the accuracy and context of the conversations.

  As with any book comprised of the blending of a number of individual stories, some personal accounts received more attention and space than others; other worthwhile accounts do not appear at all. The author may have decided to use one account over another as representative of others, but the intention was not to slight the importance of events on any individual or group. The “ripples in the pond” caused by David Penton washed over far more people than this book can record.

  BOGEYMAN published by:

  WILDBLUE PRESS

  1153 Bergen Pkwy Ste I #114

  Evergreen, Colorado 80439

  Copyright 2014 by Steve Jackson

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  WILDBLUE PRESS is registered at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Offices.

  978-0-9905573-0-2 Mass Market Paperback ISBN

  978-0-9905573-1-9 eBook ISBN

  Interior Formatting by Elijah Toten

  www.totencreative.com

  Acknowledgements

  The author wishes to express his grateful appreciation first to the law enforcement officers who participated in the writing of this story, especially Gary Sweet, Bruce Bradshaw, and Jeff Heck. And more than their help with this work, I’d like to thank them, as well as other officers such as Bob Holleman and Jerry Schrock who have passed on, for their quiet, often unappreciated and unrewarded, service to the people they take an oath to serve and protect. Far too often the only notice the men and women in law enforcement receive is when a “bad apple” makes headlines, but those individuals do not represent the vast majority who accept the dangers, hardships and stress and do their jobs well on behalf of their communities. There are dragons in the world, and we should be thankful that there are also dragon-slayers.

  I would be remiss if I didn’t note the considerable contributions of the spouses of some of the detectives to this book so that we may appreciate from their unique perspectives the dedication and sacrifices their husbands make; the families also make sacrifices. So thank you Julie Sweet, Gail Bradshaw and Molly Robertson.

  I would also like to thank my extraordinarily talented editor, Jenni Grubbs, and my partner at WildBlue Press, Michael Cordova, without whose expertise, extraordinary efforts and belief in this brave, new world of indie publishing, this story and the others found at WildBluePress.com might have never seen the light of day.

  Lastly, I wish to thank the people in my life who make all the work, long hours, and absences worth it. First are my family starting with my parents, Donald and Charlotte, whose love, belief in me, and encouragement has never wavered; my sister, Carole, her husband, Bob, and my nephew, Michael, who supported me not only with their love but with shelter from the storm; my sister, Mary, who makes me laugh; and my much-missed brother, Donald, who reminds me of what it means to be a good man, a good brother, and a good son. A special tummy rub for Winkie the Wonder Dog—some might wonder why I’d want to acknowledge a crazy, sometimes frustrating canine, but in the hardest and loneliest times of my life, he has been my big-hearted companion. I also count on the love and support of my children, Mackenzie, Hannah and Lillia, and their fine, young men, Eric and Iaian; and my newest reminder that there is no bottom to the well of love, my grandson Callum. I also thank Roger, Patti, Doug, Linda, Brian, Tom, Kathy, Tim, and Carla; I am so grateful that when I need someone to talk to, a shoulder to cry on, a beer or a kick in the ass, you are there. And last, never least, my companion Janet Roll, without whose love and support these past few years, I would have been truly lost but instead am truly happy, there are no words to express my gratitude and love.

  If the measure of a man’s worth is the people who love him and are loved in return, then I am wealthy beyond all measure.

  He stands on the edge of a foul dark pond as the cold winds of hell howl around him. In his cruel hands, he holds a collection of shiny pebbles that represent every child he took, subjected to unspeakable horrors and pain, and then remorselessly killed in the most terrifying manner imaginable. With each murder, the monster, this bogeyman, this nightmare, tosses a pebble into the bottomless waters causing ripples of misery and devastation to spread outward, engulfing his victims, their families, friends, police officers, communities, and even, as these sorts of beyond-the-pale atrocities becomes public knowledge, the national consciousness. They erode how secure we feel in our homes, how safe our children are playing in the yard, whether evil is winning the battle…

  PART I

  Every Parent’s Nightmare

  CHAPTER ONE

  January 19, 1985

  After several days of cold, the weather on that Saturday in Mesquite, Texas, had turned downright balmy, with bluebird skies and temperatures climbing into the mid-seventies. Many of the town’s citizens were out enjoying the sunshine in the parks, playing softball, and watching their kids laughing and chasing each other on the playgrounds. Others used the opportunity to go for a drive in the countryside around Mesquite, a satellite city fifteen miles due east of Dallas.

  Detectives Bob Holleman and Bruce Bradshaw were home with their families enjoying a quiet Saturday afternoon when they got the call about 3 p.m. It was a moment that would forever alter the partners’ lives, though in drastically different ways.

  Holleman was watching television with his wife, Molly, and their seven-month-old daughter, Emily, when the phone rang and he picked up. He listened with a frown, then Molly heard him say, “Well keep me updated,” before he set the receiver down. Thirty minutes later, the phone rang again. This time he asked her to hang it up after he walked back to his home office. When he returned, he was dressed for work. “Looks like we’ve got a child abduction; they think it’s the real thing. … I don’t know when I’ll be home.”

  Molly understood. A seven-year veteran with the Mesquite Police Department, her husband worked with Bradshaw in the Crimes Against Juveniles unit. Most of these calls about missing children turned out to be false alarms; the child would be found at the neighbor’s or playing in a field and handled quickly. Occasionally, a parent locked in a custody battle took, or didn’t return, a child, but those cases were usually resolved within a few hours.

  After five years of marriage to a cop, especially a dedicated officer like her husband, Molly was used to the long hours and sudden calls to work when other families would be enjoying their weekends and holidays off. So she had no way of knowing that in a very real sense, their lives had been changed forever by a stranger.

  Bruce Bradshaw was also enjoying an afternoon off with his wife, Gail, and their two daughters, Jodi and Laci, ages three and one, when Holleman called him. A little girl was missi
ng from an apartment complex over near Highway 80, a main thoroughfare that runs east to west through Mesquite. He didn’t give a lot of other details, but Bradshaw could tell from his partner’s voice that he was stressed. “I need your help,” Holleman said.

  Bradshaw sighed and went to change his clothes. Their lieutenant, Larry Sprague, insisted that they dress professionally in a suit and tie whenever they were called out. Properly attired, he kissed his wife and headed for the door.

  Gail watched him go and expected that he’d be home in time for dinner. Sometimes people asked her if it was hard saying goodbye to Bruce when he’d leave for work because of the dangers inherent with the job. She’d answer that it was really no different than when their spouses went to work, except that her husband was fully aware of the evil he might face and carried a gun for protection. No, she’d say, the hard part wasn’t watching him go; it was learning to live with the darkness he sometimes brought back home with him.

  Bradshaw had been born and raised in Comanche, a small farming and ranching community in central Texas. His core values and strong Christian faith were instilled in Comanche. He’d grown up inspired by John Wayne westerns, the Lone Ranger, and other tales from the Old West in which justice prevailed and the bad guys paid for their crimes. An uncle who’d been in a deputy sheriff, William McCay, influenced his career choice. McCay was what you’d picture an old-time Texas lawman to look like: tall in the saddle—a former ranch hand, he was good with a horse—and always dressed in a cowboy hat and boots. Such was his influence that Bradshaw, his brother, and three cousins all ended up in law enforcement, a job that Bradshaw saw as an ongoing battle between good and evil.

  Bruce met Gail, a Dallas native, when they were both attending Tarleton State University in Stephenville. Tarleton was a small “cowboy” college with a good science program. Perfect for a small town boy who’d never been on an escalator until Gail took him to a mall after he got the job with the Mesquite Police Department.

  As he drove to meet up with his partner, Bradshaw, a medium-built man with intense hazel eyes behind thick-rimmed glasses and a bushy reddish moustache, also thought he’d be back in a couple of hours. However, this bright and shiny day was about to turn dark.

  Arriving at the Charter Oaks apartment complex in a lower-middle-class, residential neighborhood, Bradshaw met up with Holleman, who briefed him on what was going on and what he’d learned from the witnesses so far. The call for help had come from Linda Meeks, the distraught mother of five-year-old Christi Meeks. She’d tearfully explained that she was divorced and that her daughter and son, Michael, age seven, were visiting for the weekend. She’d been inside the apartment getting supper ready when Michael and a nine-year-old neighbor girl named Tiffany Easter ran in to tell her that Christi had gone off with a stranger.

  As they were talking, Lt. Sprague and their sergeant, Maggie Carathers, arrived and were also briefed. They called in more detectives and began assigning them to start canvassing the neighborhood. Meanwhile, Bradshaw was tasked with talking to Michael Meeks and Tiffany Easter.

  Traumatized, Michael wouldn’t say much. However, Tiffany was more forthcoming. She said the three of them were roller-skating on the sidewalk when a young white man approached. She described him as about the same height as Bradshaw, around five-foot-ten, a hundred sixty pounds, with medium-length brown hair and bangs, unshaven, possibly with a moustache. He was wearing a pullover shirt, shorts, and tennis shoes.

  Tiffany said he asked if they’d like some cookies. Older and more wary, she tried to get her two younger friends away from the man by inviting them to her house; she said she had cookies, too. Michael followed her, but Christi stayed behind.

  Meanwhile, Holleman located two young Hispanic boys in the building south of where Christi was last seen. They claimed that they saw Christi get into a car with a man. The car was small, they said, but couldn’t agree on whether it was yellow or gray.

  The detectives knew that Christi was in danger. But these were the days before cell phones, Amber Alerts, and the internet, so all they could do to get the word out to other law enforcement agencies was send a statewide teletype. They were also starting to worry about a change in the weather. A ‘blue norther,’ a swift-moving cold front named for its gunmetal-blue sky and cold winds, was racing in from the north. Within minutes, the temperature dropped thirty degrees, and the searchers worried that the stranger might let the little girl go somewhere in a rural part of the county where she’d be exposed to the elements wearing only a “Color Me The Rainbow” T-shirt, blue jeans, and Cabbage Patch Doll shoes.

  More officers were called in to help search nearby parks, fields, and drainage ditches. But as night fell and temperatures plunged, there was no sign of Christi or the man who’d taken her. Bradshaw and Holleman drove home to dress in warmer clothes, but other than a quick word with their families, they were soon back out knocking on doors. Yet, despite the number of people who’d been outside the day before, they couldn’t find anyone else who’d seen anything suspicious. They also drove past all of the motels and hotels in the area looking for a car that matched the description of the suspect’s vehicle.

  Members of the community volunteered to help, and the search widened, including by aircraft. Photographs of the little girl with brown eyes and sandy-blonde hair—possibly wearing a gold necklace with a red stone in the middle of a heart—were distributed. But she’d simply vanished.

  The process of elimination began with the detectives asking the immediate family to take lie detector tests to remove them from suspicion; both parents passed. Christi’s father, Mike Meeks Sr., was tough to deal with; he angrily blamed his ex-wife for letting Christi out of her sight and as the days passed, constantly called the detectives demanding updates, though there was little they could say.

  A reward generated telephone calls and leads to follow. Psychics contacted the police to offer their help or claiming to have some other-worldly information. The days turned into weeks, and then two months passed with nothing concrete to go on.

  In March, a young man named Bruce Greene, a graduate of the Art Department at the University of Texas, called the Mesquite Police Department and said that perhaps he could sit down with Michael Meeks and Tiffany Easter and create a composite drawing of the suspect. The two children were brought to his art studio, where they described the young white male with longish dark hair, parted in the middle, and pale blue eyes set below a wide forehead.

  Posters were made of the composite and distributed around town, as well as given to the news media. The drawing caused a new flurry of “tips,” which the detectives had to record and then track down.

  In 1985 there was no such thing as a sex offender registry, so Holleman and Bradshaw developed a priority system for leads. If a person called in and had pertinent information or knew of someone who looked like the composite and also had a history of committing sex crimes, they gave the lead a Priority One status. If the information was less pertinent to the investigation, they assigned it as a Priority Two. If the caller simply thought they knew someone who looked like the composite but had no other information, it was Priority Three. There were no computers for filing their information, so they kept a card file to cross-reference the leads by hand. But none of the tips led to Christi or her abductor.

  Then on April 3, two fishermen spotted what they at first thought was a large dead bird floating in a cove of Lake Texoma, a sizeable body of water seventy-five miles north of Mesquite on the border of Texas and Oklahoma. However, on closer inspection the fisherman realized, to their horror, that the “bird” was a dead child.

  Found below a cliff in a remote, heavily wooded area of the lake, the body had been in the water for a long time and was badly decomposed. In fact, the justice of the peace initially called in to identify the remains, believed them to be that of a boy. A few days later, the body was delivered to a medical examiner’s office; the ME then called the Mesquite Police Department with a different story. He said t
he body belonged to a little girl, and she might be their missing child. She was wearing a Cabbage Patch Doll shoe, blue jeans, and a “Color Me The Rainbow” T-shirt.

  These were the days before DNA testing, so Bradshaw called Christi’s father, Mike, and told him that the body of a young female had been found in Lake Texoma and she might be his daughter. He said they needed to locate dental records for Christi, if they were available, to make a positive identification. Christi’s father told him how to find her dentist, who reported to the medical examiner’s office and confirmed everyone’s worst fear: The dead child was Christi Meeks.

  At the same time, Christi’s family also reported to the medical examiner’s office to identify her clothing. Holleman went with them.

  In one way, finding Christi’s remains was a relief. At least her parents didn’t have to wonder if she was still out there somewhere, terrified and alone with the mysterious bogeyman who’d taken her. She could be given a proper burial. Still, there was no closure; not for her family or the lawmen assigned to find her killer.

  Bradshaw and Holleman, along with several other officers from the Mesquite Police Department, attended the funeral, writing down license plates and photographing the crowd at the funeral on the possibility that the suspect might be there. They then watched the gravesite for several days afterwards, stopping people who visited the grave and asking for their identification. Many citizens dropped by to leave items such as flowers, stuffed animals, cards, letters, and even the lyrics to the John Denver song, “Rhyme and Reasons.”

  “So you speak to me of sadness

  And the coming of the winter

  Fear that is within you now

  It seems to never end.”

  The detectives collected many of the items brought by mourners and tried to lift fingerprints so they could identify the visitors. But if the suspect attended the funeral or left behind some token of his presence, they couldn’t find proof of it, and the questions remained. What sort of monster could have done such a thing to an innocent little girl? Was he a member of the community? Or was he a stranger, just passing through as he carried out his depredations?

 

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