The Wrong Man
The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case
For Chris and Jamie
Chase after the truth like all hell and you’ll free yourself, even though you never touch its coattails.
—CLARENCE DARROW
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I grew up in Cleveland in the 1950s and 1960s, where I learned that Dr. Sam Sheppard, despite his 1966 acquittal, was guilty of murdering his pregnant wife. The farther I moved away from Cleveland—a student at the University of Notre Dame, working as a reporter in Chicago and Austin, Texas—the more likely it was that people, if they were familiar with the case, felt that Sam Sheppard was innocent. Journalists are drawn to conflict, and I became fascinated with the idea that this famous murder had not been solved. I began investigating this primal American drama ten years ago. Nearly everything I thought I knew about the case would turn out to be wrong.
Five years ago, I benefited from the judgment and faith of Ann Godoff at Random House, who saw a book in my early research. No author ever had a more patient editor. Whenever I thought my research was done, the Sheppard case would take another twist that delayed its conclusion: three times, important physical evidence was discovered and sent off to be DNA tested; twice, bodies were exhumed and studied for clues; when the Ohio Supreme Court ruled, in late 1998, that the estate of Dr. Sheppard would indeed be able to go to trial with a wrongful imprisonment lawsuit, the story galloped off in new directions.
I am most appreciative to my friend and research associate Joan Fechter for her tremendous contributions, both professional and personal. Over the past five years, she managed, despite her own family’s demands, to meet every challenge, from tracking down long-lost jurors from the 1954 trial to getting my sons to school during family emergencies. Her critical reading of the manuscript improved it considerably.
I especially want to thank editor Ruth Coughlin, who joined this project at the last minute under a fierce deadline. She did an excellent job of tightening and sharpening the book, while remaining calm, funny, and available at all hours. I am lucky to have Esther Newberg of ICM as an agent, supporter, and friend. Thanks also to Margaret Wimberger, Sarajane Herman, Lauren Field, Bonnie Thompson, Chuck Antony, Sybil Pincus, Sarah D’Imperio, and Sunshine Lucas of Random House for making The Wrong Man a better book.
My love and appreciation go to my parents, Dorothy and Charley Neff of Cleveland, who were of great support and comfort over these years and spent hours doing records research at the Western Reserve Historical Society. My love and appreciation also to my six brothers and sisters, notably Joe for his insightful reading and comments on an early draft. Thanks also to Dr. Mark Mayer of the Cleveland Clinic for deciphering medical records and overall support; Linda and Bob House and the Lesko family for their recollections; Barb Vanarsdall for random acts of kindness; G. Boots; Dan Davis; Mark Naymik; Marian Marzynski; Peter Myers, who transferred old Dictabelts to audiocassette; and Don Ray, who tracked down vital records in California.
My gratitude goes to Investigative Reporters and Editors as well as the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), both of which came through with outrage and letters of protest when prosecutors tried to commandeer my research. Thanks to Plain Dealer executive editor Doug Clifton and editorial page director Brent Larkin for the editorial backup. I was blessed by the generous, aggressive work of First Amendment lawyer David Marburger of Baker & Hostetler, who defeated the prosecutors’ efforts to obtain my work product and to compel me to testify about my methods. David and his associate Kyle Fleming put in many hours without compensation. Thanks also to the SPJ’s Legal Defense Fund, which provided a small grant for legal expenses.
Members of the Sheppard and Reese families, some of whom have been hounded by journalists over the years, generously granted interviews: Sam Reese Sheppard, Stephen Sheppard, Betty Sheppard, Jan Sheppard Duval, Carol Leimbach, Dorothy Sheppard, Margaret Cellini, and Melissa Bevilacqua.
My thanks go to all who agreed to be interviewed, especially Terry Gilbert and Carmen Marino, and Jean Disbro Anderson, Harvey Aronson, F. Lee Bailey, Elizabeth Balraj, Howard Barrish, Doris O’Donnell Beaufait, Pat Bogar, Tom Brady, George Carr, Marilyn Cassidy, Jim Chapman, William Joseph Corrigan, Charles Cowan, George Cowan, Mary Cowan, Richard Dalrymple, John Davis, A. Steven Dever, Henry Dombrowski, David Doughten, Fred Drenkhan, Kathy Wagner Dyal, John Eberling, Richard Eberling, Barton Epstein, Kurt Fensel, Anne Foote, Harry Franken, Dan Gaul, Roberta Gerber, Norm Gevitz, Andre Gibaldi, Otto and Beverly Graham, Peter Gray, Helen Hall, Leonard Harrelson, Buck Harris, Virginia Haskett, Obie Henderson, Pamela Henry, Michael Howard, Jay Hubach, Roy Huggins, Leah Jacoby, George Jindra, David Kerr, Marion Koloski, Vince Kremperger, William Lamb, Kathy Levine, William V. Levy, Jane Lowenthal, Linda Luke, Lois Mancini, William D. Mason, Timothy J. McGinty, Janet McGlothin, Doug McQuigg, Dick Moore, Phyllis Moretti, Beatrice Orenstein, Ralph Perk, John W. Reese, Faith Corrigan Refnes, Oliver Schroeder, Jessie Dill Seymour, Chester M. Southam, Leo Spellacy, Victor Strecher, Alvin Sutton, Mohammad Tahir, Emanuel Tanay, Bill Tanner, James Tompkins, Andrew Tuney Jr., Walter Vallee, Daniel Volkema, Cyril Wecht, Harold Wilbert, James Willard, William Wiltberger, Robert White, Toby Wolson, Jim Wooley, Chalmers Wylie, and Dave Zimmerman.
Many in the forensic community provided advice, services, and consultation, for which I am particularly grateful: Norah Rudin, Keith Inman, Lisa Calandro, Robin Cotton, Kathryn Colombo, Chuck Morton, John Murdock, Ed Blake, Mitchell Holland, Rebecca Reynolds, Michael Baden, Leonard Harrelson, Robert K. Ressler, and John E. Douglas, among others.
I want to thank Ohio State University’s School of Journalism, where I directed the Kiplinger Reporting Program, from 1994 to 1999, and enjoyed research support, especially the hard work of Debra Baer and Ben Zeng, and also of Susan Glaser, Nan Wang, Sarah Wendell, and Angela Chundrlek.
Others who helped were Maureen Hays, Russ Mussara, John Caniglia, Tom Mudd, Carlos Davis, Darlene Brown, John O’Brien, Jim McCann, James Monroe, Dennis Kucinich, Janet Holmes, Miriam Holmes, Charles Stuart, Nick Gatz, Arthur and Shirley Cooper, Timothy M. Schaefer, Donald G. Dutton, and especially Fredric Dannen.
Special collections, archives, and libraries held many treasures about the Sheppard case and its times. My thanks go to the following institutions and employees: Judy Lueders, Frank Baker, and Walter D. Morrill at Hanover College; Danielle Bickers at the Ohio Medical Board; Joanne Drake at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library; Angie M. Burton at the Osteopathic Medical Board of California; Dorothy “Duffy” Knaus and Linda Long at the University of Oregon’s Knight Library (Margaret Parton papers); Bill Bowers at Northeastern University (Samuel H. Sheppard papers); Michael McCormack and Ann Sindelar at the Western Reserve Historical Society (papers of Louis Seltzer, James Monroe, William Corrigan, Ralph Perk); Cliff Farrington and Avi Santo at the University of Texas’s Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center (Erle Stanley Gardner collection); Henry York at Cleveland State University Library (Cleveland Press Archives); Kenneth G. Hafeli at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library; Linda Wyler at Cleveland Public Library; Pat Anderson at the Richard M. Nixon Presidential Library; Betty Januska at Parke-Davis Research Library; the Bedford (Ohio) Historical Society; Susie Hanson at Case Western Reserve University’s Frieberger Library; Kristine Marconi of Princeton University’s Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library; Carol A. Turley at the UCLA Biomedical Library; Mike Widener at University of Texas’s Tarlton Law Library (papers of U.S. Supreme Court justice Tom Clark); Jeff Flannery and Bradley Gernand of the Library of Congress’s Manuscript Division (Harold Burton papers; Roy W. Howard papers); Dale Meyer of the Herbert Hoover Library; Glenn Longacre at the National Archives Regional Center, Chicago; Jennifer Kane Nieves at Case Western Reserve University’s Dittrick Museum of Medical History (Lester Adelson papers); Sue Presnell at Indiana University’s Lilly Library; and David Farrell at the University of California at Berkeley’s Bancroft Library (Paul Leland Kirk collection).
Above all, my deepest love and affection go to my wife, Maureen, and sons Jamie and Chris. We made it.
PART 1
Their father’s dream from the time the boys were little was to have a hospital and to have his three sons working with him. What happened, naturally, destroyed that whole thing. Darn near destroyed a village.
—ESTHER HOUK,
BAY VILLAGE NEIGHBOR
PART 2
Any theory that is contradicted by a proven fact has to be incorrect.
—PAUL KIRK, PH.D.
PART 3
Be kind, Oh be kind to your dead and give them a little encouragement and help them to build their little ship of death.
For the soul has a long, long journey after death to the sweet home of pure oblivion.
—D. H. LAWRENCE
1
EVE OF DESTRUCTION
Early Saturday morning, July 3, 1954, Dr. Sam Sheppard pulled his Lincoln into the parking lot of Bay View Hospital, housed in a huge, Georgian-style mansion built on the bluffs of Lake Erie. His family had bought the place several years earlier and had converted it into a 110-bed hospital. Dr. Stephen Sheppard, the middle Sheppard brother, pulled his car in just behind him. They talked for a few minutes about how they were going to celebrate the holiday weekend.
It promised to be a beautiful day, with low humidity, a slight breeze off the lake. Steve planned to go sailing on his Raven-class racing sloop. Sam reminded him that he and Marilyn were having a cookout the next day for about twenty couples, the hospital interns and their dates. After a quick cup of coffee in the hospital cafeteria, the brothers split up and headed into separate operating rooms. It was shortly before 7 A.M. Even on a holiday weekend, the Sheppards tried to squeeze in half a day of surgery. Bay View, an osteopathic teaching hospital, had all the business it could handle.
A little while later, less than a mile away, Marilyn Sheppard arose at the lakefront home where she and Dr. Sam lived. Her day was going to be just as busy as her husband’s. She was still angry with Sam because he had volunteered to hold the intern party without first checking with her. This was not her idea of how to spend a family holiday. Sam would be out on their boat, water-skiing with the guests, leaving Marilyn, an expert skier, “getting the groceries and entertaining a lot of dull dry people who can’t ski.”1
She had to clean and shop and spruce up the yard and the boathouse while keeping an eye on their seven-year-old son, Sam, whom they called Chip. Also, she was four months pregnant, more tired and uncomfortable than usual. If Sam had just asked her first, she would have agreed to host the party without complaint because she truly wanted to be what her older sisters-in-law referred to as “a good doctor’s wife”—an attractive, cheerful helpmate who could run the household like a quartermaster, manage the children, and make life easy for her ambitious, hardworking husband. She knew that Sam was obliged to the interns at Bay View, which relied in part on their low-paid labor for its success. In return, these doctors in training received invaluable education from senior doctors, such as Sam’s father, Dr. Richard A. Sheppard, a highly regarded diagnostician who took referrals from all over Ohio.
Even worse than getting stuck with the intern party, Marilyn had an unwanted houseguest to deal with—Sam’s old friend from medical school, Dr. Lester Hoversten. Acting on his own, Sam had agreed to let Hoversten live with them a few days while he interviewed for a job at Bay View. Marilyn thought he was a pig. A couple of years earlier he had made a crude pass at her and she’d shut him down fast, not worrying about hurting his feelings. Just being around him put her on edge. He left his room a mess and was an inconsiderate guest overall. She refused to make his bed or even go near that bedroom.
Hoversten thought of himself as a playboy, and made sexual passes at any woman who strayed within his gaze. Even though he was fourteen years older than Sam, they had gone through medical school together and had served as surgical residents at Los Angeles County General Hospital. The experience explained their friendship, the foxhole bonding of young doctors as they endured grueling hours at little pay under the intellectual hazing of senior surgeons, who themselves were famously condescending toward women. Hoversten was recently divorced and had been asked to leave his position at a Dayton hospital. He had written Sam asking for help. “I’m so depressed I wish my life were over. I’m too busy for much leisure time and I do so little surgery I’m bored with the drudgery of it all.”2
Sam had invited him to Cleveland, but Hoversten wrote that he was reluctant to stay with them. “Your beloved wife’s attitude of the past still fills me with an aversion to staying at your house much as I enjoy your son and wife.”3 But Sam insisted that he come and have a good time.
At Sam’s suggestion, Hoversten had agreed to get up early that Saturday and assist him in surgery, a good way to check out Bay View’s operation. But when Saturday morning came, Hoversten slept in. He didn’t get up until 10 A.M., leaving him home alone with Marilyn. In the afternoon, he left for an overnight stay with a friend.
That night, the Sheppards and friends from the neighborhood, Don and Nancy Ahern, had plans for a casual dinner together. Although the intern party was the next day, Marilyn had volunteered to cook, and even baked a blueberry pie, Sam’s favorite. Don and Nancy insisted on providing cocktails at their home first.
In the past year, the two couples had become close friends. Nancy and Marilyn bowled together on the Bay Village ladies’ afternoon bowling league while their children were in school, and the two couples were active in the Junior Club, a Bay Village ballroom-dance club for younger couples.
That evening, Don Ahern mixed martinis for the men and whiskey sours for the women. The children played outside. It was about a quarter to seven, the start of the holiday-weekend ritual—drinks at one house, dinner at another, the kids staying up late, since it was summer. Sam dressed in a white T-shirt and brown corduroys. Marilyn wore short white shorts and a blouse, and beaded moccasins. She was attractive, with wide hazel eyes and thick, shoulder-length brown hair. Athletic, tanned, and slim, she could pass for a teenager.
Sam was comfortable enough with Don to tell him about the hardship of his day. A specialist in orthopedic surgery and neurosurgery, Sam also oversaw the emergency-room operations. Today had been an emergency-room surgeon’s nightmare. A boy had been struck by a truck and rushed to Bay View. His heart had stopped. Sam, on emergency-call rotation, opened the child’s chest and massaged the heart, a method to restart it in the days before defibrillators. The tiny heart kicked to life, then stopped. Sam massaged it until his fingers gave out, and another doctor took over. It was no use. The boy was dead. The father was terribly upset, lashing out at Sam for not saving his boy’s life. Sam had nothing to say except that he had tried his best, he felt terrible, and was sorry.
They each had two drinks, and at about 8:20 Marilyn left the Aherns’ to start dinner. Sam drove to Bay View to check the X rays of a boy who had been brought into the emergency room with a broken thigh, and returned quickly. Meanwhile, Don and Nancy brought their two children, ages seven and ten, over to the Sheppards’ home on Lake Road. While Marilyn and Nancy put the final touches on dinner, Sam took the kids into the basement, showed them his punching bag, and let them pound away, stopping them at times to give pointers on how to throw a proper punch.
The children ate in the kitchen, while the parents enjoyed dinner out on the screened porch that faced Lake Erie; they watched the sun drop over the water, its last rays splintering into fiery reds and purples. Dinner was cottage ham, rye bread, green beans, and blueberry pie with ice cream. Marilyn, as usual, ate well.
They finished at about ten-thirty. Nancy cleared the dirty dishes and shut the living room door to the screened porch. She remembered later that she had locked the door. Don took their two children home, tucked them in, and came back. This was Bay Village in the early 1950s, suburban and safe, and many parents felt comfortable leaving sleeping children home alone for a few hours.
Don listened to the Indians baseball game on the radio in the living room—the team was in first place in the American League and would go on to win the pennant. Chip came out in his pajamas, holding a balsa-wood airplane. It was broken. Sam brought glue in from the garage and fixed the toy, telling Chip that he was doing this after bedtime as a special favor, because Chip had been a man about the broken plane, not whining but calmly asking for help. Marilyn took Chip back upstairs and tied on his chin brace, a sling that pulled in his jaw. Sam felt his son’s chin protruded too far, which might cause problems later with his bite.
The two couples settled in the living room and found the movie Strange Holiday on one of two channels. Watching television was still a new thing to do in 1954. Marilyn sat on Sam’s lap, and Nancy, envious, called over to Don, “I need attention, too.”
After a while, Sam moved to a narrow living room couch, more like a short daybed, near one of the stairways to the second floor. He stretched out and drifted in and out of sleep in the darkened living room. He was wearing a corduroy sports coat because it had gotten chilly.
With the dishes done and Chip asleep, Marilyn finally had time to relax with some adults. But Sam was asleep. “C’mon, Sam, it’s going to improve,” she said. He lifted his head, watched the movie for a few minutes, then fell back asleep.4
About midnight, Marilyn fell asleep in her chair and the Aherns tried to slip out quietly. Marilyn woke up anyway and walked her friends to the kitchen door, which led to the driveway and Lake Road. They passed Sam on the daybed, sleeping soundly.
“Jump in bed before you get over being sleepy,” Nancy told Marilyn.
It was 12:30 A.M. Later, Nancy told the police that she could not remember locking the kitchen door. And, no, she could not remember if Marilyn had locked it, either.
2
INDEPENDENCE DAY
At 5:40 A.M. on July 4, 1954, the mayor of Bay Village was awakened by a telephone call. It was his neighbor Sam Sheppard, shouting, “My God, Spen, get over here quick! I think they’ve killed Marilyn!”1
“What!”
“Oh, my God, get over here quick!”
Spencer Houk jumped up and got dressed, waking his wife, Esther. She hated to get up early, but she knew something terrible had happened. She pulled on a dress and shoes. They lived only two houses away from Sam and Marilyn, but Spen, a butcher, had a bad knee, so they got in their car and drove to the Sheppards’ house. They didn’t stop to call the police or grab a weapon.
Sam and Spencer had become fairly good friends in the past year, even though they appeared at first glance to have little in common. Sam was a decade younger, just shy of thirty, and physically vigorous—he was always water-skiing and playing pickup basketball with the neighborhood boys. With his bad knee, exacerbated by long days on his feet cutting and selling meat to his Bay Village customers, Spen had to sit on the sidelines—except when they went fishing. Spen could outfish him any day; Sam didn’t have the patience to fish for Lake Erie perch or walleye when he could be flying across the lake on skis at thirty miles an hour. Together they had bought a thirteen-foot aluminum boat and clamped on two powerful outboard engines. Sam liked to race sports cars in amateur road rallies; now he had another grown-up toy to satisfy his need for speed.
The Houks found the Sheppards’ kitchen door unlocked. It faced Lake Road, a two-lane highway along the lake. Just inside the hallway and to the right was the den. Sam was leaning back on a red leather swivel chair, holding his neck.
“Sam, Sam, what happened?” the mayor wanted to know.
Sam was bare-chested, his pants soaked, and moaning softly, his surgeon’s fingers laced like a sling at the base of his skull.
“Pull yourself together, Sam!” Spen ordered. “What happened?”2
He mumbled that he was asleep on the couch in the living room, heard Marilyn cry “Sam!” and ran up the stairs to help, and then “somebody clobbered me.”3
Esther had gone right upstairs. In the northwest bedroom were twin beds. The far bed was empty, its quilt and covers neatly turned down, as if waiting for someone to quietly slide underneath. A spray of blood flecked the covers and the pillow.
A few feet away, on the bed closer to the door, Marilyn’s body lay faceup. Her legs hung over the foot of the bed, bent at the knees, her feet dangling a few inches above the rug. It was an odd position. Her legs were under a wooden bar that ran from post to post across the foot of the bed. It looked as if someone had pulled her legs under the bar, pinning her like a giant specimen. Her body was outlined by blood, a huge crimson aura. Her face was turned slightly toward the door, as if she had been expecting someone to walk in, and coated with stringy, clotting blood. She was unrecognizable. About two dozen deep, ugly crescent-shaped gashes marked her face, forehead, and scalp.
Her three-button pajama top was pushed up to her neck, baring her breasts. A blanket draped her middle. Underneath, her flimsy pajama bottoms had been removed from one leg and were bunched below the knee of her other leg, exposing her pubis.
Esther Houk steeled herself and checked Marilyn for a pulse. Nothing. She ran back downstairs and yelled to her husband, “Call the police, call the ambulance, call everybody!”
Esther poured a glass of whiskey in a kitchen glass and carried it to Sam. “You need this.”
“No, no,” he said. “I can’t think, I’ve got to think.” Then he asked about Chip—was he okay?
Esther went upstairs to check. The boy’s bedroom door was open. He was sleeping, curled on his right side. From the distance, sirens wailed, grew louder and louder, then abruptly shut down.
At 5:57 A.M. Bay Village policeman Fred Drenkhan took a radio call that help was needed at 28924 Lake Road, the home of Dr. Sam Sheppard, a friend. Within a few minutes, he was inside the house. On the hallway floor he saw a black leather medical valise opened wide, standing on end, its vials and prescription pads spilled out on the wood floor.
Drenkhan found Sam in his den. On the shelves behind him were two shotguns, two small air rifles, Sam’s beloved record player, and a row of medical textbooks. Two trophies lay on the floor, broken: one of Sam’s treasured high school track trophies and Marilyn’s bowling trophy.
Drenkhan wanted to know what had happened, and Sam gave him more details. He woke up, heard his wife shout his name, then ran upstairs. On the way up, he saw a large form wearing a white top in their summer bedroom. When he reached the top of the stairs or just inside the bedroom, he was struck from behind and knocked out. After he came to, he heard a noise downstairs, ran down, saw something in the dark—a large, dark figure, probably a man—outlined against the living room windows facing the lake. He chased him out of the house, thundered down the long flight of wooden steps, caught the figure on the sand, grappled with him, and was knocked out once again. When he woke up, he was facedown at the water’s edge, his lower half in the water, his head toward the bluff. Dawn was breaking.
Fred Drenkhan, twenty-six, with only three years of police experience, didn’t know what to think. It was a puzzling story, but if Sam had been knocked out twice, he would be disoriented and perhaps give an odd account. Mostly Drenkhan enforced traffic laws in a suburb that was essentially a long, narrow strip of beachfront and nice homes, bisected by a two-lane highway, Lake Road, that connected Cleveland and Toledo. His part-time partner this weekend had never even received training, just pulled on a blue uniform a year earlier and became one of the city’s cops. Drenkhan had investigated break-ins, but never a homicide.
As the first policeman on the scene of what would rapidly metamorphose into a world-famous murder case, Drenkhan would soon find his life turned upside down.
At 6:10 A.M. Dr. Richard N. Sheppard, the oldest brother, arrived at Sam and Marilyn’s house. He lived nearby in Bay Village and had been called by Houk. He stopped to check on Sam, but Drenkhan told him to forget about Sam and to see Marilyn upstairs. She was probably dead.
Richard ran upstairs. He had seen his share of broken bodies and split skulls at car crashes and in emergency rooms, but the sight of his sister-in-law shocked him. This was not an accident but deliberate brutality, blow after blow. He tried to find a pulse. Her body was slightly warm to the touch. He wondered who the hell could do such a thing.
Esther Houk volunteered to take Chip to her house, to shield him from such horror, but Richard said no, he would take him home. He felt that the boy should be with family. He asked Esther to put together a bag of the boy’s clothes. In Chip’s room, Richard fumbled with the chin brace, trying to slide it off, ignoring the ties. Esther thought Richard was so frazzled that he would hurt Chip, so she reached in and untied the ties. Even with all this commotion, the boy still slept. Like his father, he was a sound sleeper, difficult to waken.4
When Richard returned downstairs, he saw Sam stretched out on his back on the floor of the den, trying to immobilize his neck. Richard hunched down close and said, “Sam, she’s gone,” and he wailed, “No, no, no!”
Meanwhile, a Bay Village patrolman raced over to the small farm of police chief John Eaton to break the astounding news. Stout, gray-haired, and bespectacled, Eaton, who was also a high school science teacher, was sitting on his tractor, dressed in blue denim overalls, plowing a field. The news jolted him, and he hurried to the Sheppard home, not bothering to change into his uniform.
Eaton could not believe the bloody mauling. Such crimes were not supposed to happen in Bay Village. Families moved to his suburb to escape crime. And now this tragedy had befallen a fine family he had known for years. Except for Cleveland Browns quarterback Otto Graham, the Sheppard doctors were the most respected and best-known citizens of Bay Village. Their hospital was the town’s biggest employer.
He and Mayor Houk walked the grounds and descended the fifty-two steep wooden stairs to the beach. About 150 feet to the east, a pier at the public Huntington Park jutted into the lake. Two men were fishing there. Eaton and Houk walked over to them along the narrow strip of wet sand and noticed two sets of footprints and those of a dog. They took the fishermen’s names and asked what they had seen that morning, which was nothing.
At about this time Dr. Steve Sheppard and his wife, Betty, drove up in an emergency-equipped Ford station wagon. They and their two daughters lived in Rocky River, an upper-middle-class suburb just east of Bay Village. Theirs was the fifth car in the driveway, behind Richard’s, a fire department ambulance, a patrol car, and the Houks’. They came in through the screened porch and into the living room just as Drenkhan, on the telephone to the Cleveland Police Department, was saying, “It’s a homicide. We need help.”
Sam was still lying flat on the floor in the den, his face turned away from the door. Betty spotted him first and thought he was dead, that he was the homicide victim. She nudged her husband and pointed at Sam. Steve went over, knelt, touched Sam, and Betty saw his foot move. He was alive but cold, unable to stop shivering.
He’s in shock, Steve decided, probably suffering from a fractured neck; he needs to be treated right away and to have his neck X-rayed. “Can you get up or do we need a stretcher?” Steve asked him.
Sam replied, “I think I can make it.” Steve decided to transport him to Bay View, two minutes away, and not to use the firemen or the stretcher that was standing in the upstairs hallway.
Chief Eaton entered the house and helped Esther Houk put Chip, wrapped in a blanket, into Dr. Richard’s car. Then Steve helped carry Dr. Sam out of the house and to the station wagon, which had an emergency flasher and siren.
The chief and the two Bay Village police officers watched them leave. No one said a word. They did not insist that Sam stay at the house or be taken to a different hospital. It all happened quickly.
At Bay View Hospital, the staff was near the end of its overnight shift. A call had alerted them that Dr. Sam was being rushed in for treatment. During the short ride, Sam slumped next to Betty, moaning, saying, “I don’t understand what happened.”5
Anna Franz, the night nurse, saw Sam at about 6:35 A.M. He wore a raincoat Steve had wrapped around him at the house. Underneath he was bare from the waist up. The right side of his face and his eye socket were swollen and bruised. A light film of blood coated his teeth, two of them slightly chipped.
Anna Franz and the staff stretched Sam out on an emergency-room examining table and undressed him. Franz pulled off a waterlogged shoe and a sock. The skin on his feet was wrinkled. She piled his wet clothes on a nearby table and dressed him in a gown. She put a thermometer in his mouth but could not register a temperature—he was hypothermic, so she put several hot-water bottles around his body to warm him. His blood pressure was 140 over 70, slightly elevated.
Is Chip all right? he kept asking. Is Chip all right? She didn’t know what to say.
Dr. Steve came in and told Sam that Chip was safe. He ordered a sedative for Sam, and Franz gave him a one-hundred-milligram injection of the painkiller Demerol.
Cleveland Browns quarterback Otto Graham was driving past the Sheppards’ home Sunday morning to get the newspaper—Bay Village had no morning home delivery—and noticed a swarm of cars at Sam’s house, some of them police cruisers.
Somebody drowned water-skiing, he figured, and pulled in.
Graham was the best NFL quarterback of the day and knew the local police by first name. Police had not secured the crime scene or even the murder room; they allowed Graham to come inside and look.
“Oh my God,” Graham thought. “It looks like someone stood in the middle of the room with a great big can of red paint and a brush and flicked it all around. This wasn’t a couple of blows. Oh, no. Whoever did it, they had to be out of their mind.”6
When he got home a little while later, he told his wife, “Marilyn Sheppard was murdered last night.”
She asked, “Did Sam do it?”
Beverly Graham was a friend of Marilyn’s, though Marilyn complained that Bev paid too much attention to Sam. They bowled on the same league, they water-skied together, had neighborhood potluck dinners with their families. But Beverly had lost some of her fondness for Sam. They had joined the Sheppards at what was then an unusual new leisure sport, waterskiing. Sam had given her a lesson, and she’d managed to get up on skis on her first attempt, making her an instant member of what Sam called his “club,” all the friends he taught to ski who hadn’t fallen their first time out.
Later, when Otto was away at football training camp and she was skiing with Sam, he taught her a trick move that she could do at the end of her run. He would bring the boat near the shore, then turn, propelling her toward the dock. At the right moment she was to drop the tow bar, glide a couple of feet parallel to the concrete dock, then, as a finale, just before losing momentum, turn and sit down on the dock. Beverly Graham was fit, but she had no intention of crashing into a concrete piling. She didn’t tell Sam, but she was not going to attempt his trick.
She made her run, and as Sam pulled her close to the shore, she let go of the tow bar. But she sat down after a few yards, still in deep water, short of the dock. When Sam pulled the powerboat around to pick her up, she remembers that he erupted. “Why didn’t you do that? I told you to do that!” She was surprised by his anger.
Chief Eaton and Officer Drenkhan thought a drug addict had broken into the doctor’s house to steal narcotics. Only someone truly fiendish could batter a woman’s face so relentlessly. Plus, the doctor’s bag had been upended. Dr. Sam was a friend; they couldn’t imagine he had anything to do with such a brutal crime. Drenkhan radioed surrounding police departments to look for suspicious persons. The chief telephoned Dr. Samuel Gerber, the Cuyahoga County coroner.
In Ohio, suspicious deaths were handled by coroners who were medical doctors elected by voters. Gerber, a Democrat, had held the office since 1937. His office investigated more than 150 violent deaths each year, and he was forever being quoted in Cleveland’s three competing daily newspapers. He was savvy about press relations and dined regularly with reporters. He distributed news tips, quotes, and exclusives evenly so that he wouldn’t appear to play favorites. With his gray hair and rimless glasses, Gerber could slip into a white lab coat and pass for the friendly family practitioner. He was a tiny man, only five feet three, but he compensated with a booming voice and a manner some described as arrogant. He felt he would be a good mayor for Cleveland and was trying to decide when to run.
Even though it was a holiday and he had a deputy who could work it, Dr. Gerber felt it best to handle the Sheppard case himself. He telephoned his investigator and told him to pick him up. He put on a summer suit and grabbed a Panama hat, and soon they were headed out to Bay Village. They arrived at the crime scene at about 7:50 A.M. Gerber could not believe the number of bystanders in and around the house. He assumed command and ordered the Bay Village police to clear the house.
Drenkhan related what Dr. Sam said had happened. The account struck Gerber as suspicious. In the living room, he noticed the drop-leaf desk had its three drawers neatly pulled out. What kind of murderer or burglar would ransack a home so delicately?
On the steps leading upstairs, Gerber noticed small drops of what looked like dried blood. He also saw blood smears on the doorjamb and knob plate of the pane-glass living room door that led to the screened porch. The door chain was off—he didn’t know yet that Nancy Ahern would remember locking it the night before. Whoever opened the door had blood on at least one hand, perhaps from a flowing cut.
The first Cleveland detective arrived at about 8:10 A.M. Michael Grabowski, a thirty-eight-year-old technician in the Scientific Investigation Unit, had only eight years on the force, which may have explained why he was stuck with holiday duty. He brought in his boxy camera and flash, and as Gerber pointed out objects and shots he wanted, Grabowski began taking photos inside the house. Grabowski took shots of the stacked desk drawers, the murder room, and the blood-spattered walls. He ended up on the beach, where he photographed two different sets of footprints, one of them barefoot.
Next he turned to looking for fingerprints, which were more useful when you did not know the identity of a suspect. Gerber already believed Dr. Sam was the key suspect. On the surface, it looked like an open-and-shut case of domestic homicide. Normally, scientific-unit detectives might stay at a crime scene for several hours, sifting for forensic evidence such as fingerprints and hair, scraping and labeling blood samples. Grabowski’s efforts to find the fingerprints of an outsider were less than exhaustive. He may have spent as little as thirty minutes looking for fingerprints, his trial testimony later would show.
He was unable to obtain a useful fingerprint from the doctor’s bag. He detected smudged fingerprints, but at first glance none had the minimum seven or eight elements—swirls, ridges, and patterns—needed to build a print that was “identifiable.” He checked the vials and supplies inside the medical bag, but they all appeared to have smudged prints, and he decided not to attempt any lifts.
In the living room he lifted a palm print on a drop leaf of the dark-hued wood desk. He shined his light at an oblique angle at the front of the desk drawers, but couldn’t find any promising areas to try to get lifts.
He checked the door that led to the screened porch. It was unlocked but showed no pry marks. The doorknob and jamb were layered with fingerprints, a mess of smudges and overlays. He ignored this area.
In the den Grabowski found smudged, layered, or indistinct prints on the broken trophies and on two metal file boxes. He also noticed extremely fine scratches on the hard surfaces of these articles. The trophies and metal file boxes had survived a house fire the year before and most likely had been scoured, perhaps with a finely abrasive cleanser, to remove any soot. He could not detect fingerprints on the letters scattered on the den floor.7
He climbed upstairs to the guest bedroom, which had two windows facing Lake Erie. This room was more comfortable in the summer, and Sam and Marilyn slept on twin beds. The west window was screened and open. Grabowski dusted the sill and picked up smudged prints. He tested no other places in the bedroom for fingerprints, saying later that he didn’t want to contaminate the blood spatter or physical evidence. He also ignored the banister along the steps between the first and second floors.
Meanwhile, Gerber called for an ambulance to move Marilyn’s body to the county morgue for autopsy. After attendants shifted the stiffening corpse, Gerber and one of the detectives found two tooth fragments on the bed-sheets. Gerber forced his finger inside Marilyn’s mouth, set from early rigor mortis. He said he couldn’t feel any broken teeth. So whose were they?
Grabowski left the scene of what would later evolve into perhaps the country’s most enduring murder mystery, after spending at best two hours collecting evidence. By 10:30 A.M. he picked up another assignment, a safetampering case. Grabowski wrote a three-sentence report of his work at the Sheppard house, noting that he took thirteen photos of the crime scene and one photo of a palm print. He made no mention that trophies, file boxes, and desk items were finely scratched, making it hard to get identifiable prints. Nor did he write in his report that fingerprints were wiped from the Sheppard house, as he and his supervisors would claim in weeks to come, under intense pressure from the press and public to solve the murder.
Back at the crime scene, coroner Gerber told Chief Eaton to drive him to Bay View Hospital so he could interview Sam Sheppard. Gerber was annoyed that Sam had left the crime scene and was ensconced at the hospital. He felt that Dr. Sheppard murdered his wife and it would be harder to get his confession from a hospital bed.8
Gerber knew about the Sheppard doctors but had never met any of them in person. Like some in the Cleveland medical establishment, he did not like them. For one, they were osteopaths, a profession that he associated with inferior training and faulty medical science. Also, the Sheppards were openly ambitious, always calling the newspapers to get free publicity for Bay View, recounting emergency-room heroics and lives saved. With medical reporting in the 1950s pretty much limited to ribbon cutting at new hospital wings and new cures, newspaper reporters loved the dramatic and easily related news stories of emergency rescues, complete with heroes and happy endings. M.D.s felt that grubbing for publicity was unseemly. In fact, earlier that year Gerber had encountered a Bay View resident doctor, H. Max Don, and asked if he was part of “the Sheppard clan.” Don replied that he was a resident at Bay View, and Gerber remarked, “I’m going to get them someday.”9
At Bay View, Gerber talked to Sam for ten minutes. “He looked in my hair and there was no blood,” Sam would say later. “He checked my fingernails most carefully and examined my wrist, eyes, ears, and eyebrows. He found no blood.”10 Gerber later would say he did not check Sam’s hair for blood or sand, or look under his fingernails for blood or skin. (If Gerber did not, his oversight would be surprising, coming from the future coeditor of Criminal Investigation and Interrogation.)11 Gerber did ask for Sam’s clothes, and Chief Eaton gathered them up from Dr. Richard Sheppard. Sam’s pants, boxer shorts, belt, and shoes were soaked. The wallet was waterlogged. Gerber saw grains of sand around the belt buckle and in the cuffs of Sam’s pants. A large diffused bloodstain on the left knee had soaked through the pants to the bottom of Sam’s boxers. Pinned to the flap of the wallet was a gold police-surgeon’s badge for Westlake, a neighboring suburb. Inside the wallet were gas-station credit cards, business cards, and a one-thousand-dollar paycheck from Bay View Hospital, Sam’s monthly draw. Sam was handsomely paid for a twenty-nine-year-old surgeon. In a hidden compartment were three twenty-dollar bills.
Gerber returned to the Sheppard house. There two Cleveland homicide detectives, Robert Schottke and Pat Gareau, had arrived and were already trying to untangle the slaying. Gerber and the detectives agreed that it looked as if someone had staged a burglary. A burglar usually dumped drawers and quickly scanned for valuables. These drawers were pulled out evenly. The position of the doctor’s medical bag, resting on end in the hallway, seemed contrived. Could a burglar on the run drop a bag and have it land like that? “It’s obvious that the doctor did it,” Gerber was overheard to say. He told the detectives to go to the hospital and get Sam Sheppard’s confession. When Gerber saw Chief Eaton and Mayor Houk, he repeated that Sam Sheppard should be arrested.
“Oh, no, not Sam!” Houk cried.
About an hour after Gerber’s visit, Dr. Sam looked up from his bed to find two detectives introducing themselves. Robert Schottke, thirty-four, and Patrick A. Gareau, twenty-seven, had been partners for several years and solved dozens of murders. The year before, their unit investigated ninety-five homicides and solved all but one. When they found a dead female in her home, their first questions were: Is there a husband? A boyfriend? If so, and if he didn’t have an alibi, he was assumed to be the murderer. And if the husband was home during the killing, only a dozen steps away, with no evidence of a jimmied lock or a broken window, then it was assumed the case would be closed later that day. Their experience told them that in all likelihood he was the killer.
Dr. Sam’s story, as related to them by the Bay Village police, seemed implausible. How could he have been knocked out twice? Why hadn’t the killer used his weapon on Sam as he had on Marilyn? They were suspicious about Sam’s missing shirt—did he get rid of it because it was covered in blood?
At Bay View, Schottke and Gareau’s suspicions were heightened by Dr. Steve Sheppard. During their questioning, he came into the hospital room at least twice to check Sam’s vital signs. When interviewing any murder suspect, they wanted that person all to themselves, to establish an unbroken connection between hunters and prey. They had seen it many times before: killers in unplanned murders felt a suffocating, nearly irresistible need to purge themselves of the truth after committing a terrible, impulsive act. The confession usually came the same day, in the interrogation room. Schottke and Gareau expected to get a confession this time, too, but Dr. Steve was disrupting their efforts. Even so, Dr. Sam answered their questions freely, and they learned little that was new.12
After the interview, the detectives went to the Bay Village police station, where they examined Sam’s clothes, which had been sent there by Gerber. His pants had what looked to be a blood spot on the knee, as if he had knelt in blood. There was a large, downward tear at the lower corner of his right front pocket where Sam had clipped on a ring of keys. The blood-spatter patterns on the murder-room surfaces indicated that drops and mist were flung widely during the crime. But the detectives found no blood on Dr. Sam’s shoes, belt, or anywhere on his pants other than the knee. This could explain why the doctor dunked himself in Lake Erie, they reasoned. To wash off evidence.
At the county coroner’s office, Dr. Lester Adelson, Gerber’s top deputy, began an autopsy of the body of Marilyn Sheppard. A short, jaunty man, Adelson always wore a bow tie and a vest with a chain to his pocket watch and Phi Beta Kappa key. Unlike his boss, Dr. Adelson had been trained as a pathologist. A Harvard graduate, he had studied to be a gynecologist at Tufts University School of Medicine, but had fallen in love with legal medicine, wanting to do nothing else. He was highly skilled and nationally respected in his field. Adelson believed that in a murder case the body was the best witness. “Unlike a living witness, a victim’s body does not shade the truth, tell lies, or plead the Fifth Amendment,” he liked to say.
Marilyn’s body was weighed and measured. By 12:30 P.M., when Dr. Adelson began to cut, he determined that rigor mortis was now complete.
This was a significant fact. His challenge was to determine, as accurately as possible, the time she was killed. A fairly precise time of death would eliminate any suspects who could prove they were elsewhere. To make the calculation, Adelson relied on the body’s rigor mortis and its stomach contents.
If the body had been at room temperature, rigor mortis was usually complete six to eight hours after death, but it varied from body to body. Using six hours, it would put Marilyn’s death at 6:30 A.M., after police were at the scene. Eight hours placed her death after 4:30 A.M. This estimate fit with Dr. Richard Sheppard’s early-morning interpretation of the body’s rigor mortis and clotted blood; he placed Marilyn’s death between 4:15 and 4:45.
Adelson found her stomach empty, with only half an ounce of mucoid fluid. He learned that the Sheppards had started their evening meal at around 9:30 and finished before 10:30. A person needed five to seven hours to digest a large meal. By that measure, Marilyn had died sometime between 3:30 and 5:30. All three estimates overlapped from 4:30 to 4:45 A.M. In his report, Adelson put Marilyn Sheppard’s time of death “at about 4:30 A.M.”13 She also could have died up to an hour later, 5:30 A.M., based on Adelson’s autopsy findings.
However, Gerber, who was not a pathologist, told reporters that Marilyn had died at around 3 A.M. Despite his own deputy’s report, Gerber would testify at trial to the earlier time of death. If she died at 3:00 and Dr. Sam didn’t call Mayor Houk until 5:45 or so, what was he doing for nearly three hours? As Marilyn’s time of death moved earlier, Sam’s account of being knocked out became more suspicious. Adelson’s typed report, recently discovered in the county coroner’s office files, was either ignored by Gerber or simply withheld from the public and Sheppard for nearly five decades.
Working down from the body’s head, Adelson found fifteen crescent-shaped lacerations on the forehead and scalp, most of them about one inch long and a half-inch wide. Some gouges had not cut all the way through the scalp tissue; others were deep and exposed skull bone.
Adelson counted all the body’s wounds and came up with thirty-five. Her nose had been broken, and her eyelids were bruised blue and swollen shut. Two of her upper medial incisors were snapped off, one below the gum line. But her mouth did not appear bruised, though a small abrasion of crusted blood decorated her lips. The killer had fractured her skull plates with fifteen blows, but none of the strikes were powerful enough to push bone into the dura, which encased the cerebellum just under the skull bones. Adelson noted that her skull was cracked. Her frontal bones, which met at a seam called the frontal suture, were separated from the blows. Hemorrhages in the brain showed that her heart had been pumping when these blows were struck. Her lungs and windpipe were congested with blood, but no blood was in her stomach. She may have already been unconscious, unable to swallow, when the blows were landed. Her fingernails were pale blue—cyanosis, a sign of oxygen deprivation—which suggested she may have asphyxiated.
Marilyn suffered at least four blows to her left hand and wrist. She had a quarter-sized bruise on her left shoulder. Her right little finger looked broken. Her left hand was not marked except for the ring finger. Its fingernail had been torn off and was hanging by a strip of skin. There was no blood on the finger. A ring appeared pulled up to the first knuckle.