Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
Mike Shinn is back out on the Columbia River sail-boarding.
He bought
some hilltop property in Hawaii where he plans, one day, to build a
house.
In the meantime, he has more cases than he can handle and he
presents trial seminars with criminal defense attorney Gerry Spence.
Susan McNannay Keegan gave birth to a baby girl, Anna Marie Keegan, in
May 1995.
She would have loved to share Anna Marie with Cheryl and she
had always believed that accidenes of birth had hastened her sister's
death.
"The thing that killed Cheryl," she said, "was that she gave
Brad three boy children, and she tried to keep them.
If she had only
had one childþa girlþshe'd be here today.
If Loni Ann had had two
boys, instead of a boy and a girl, she'd be dead now.
If Lauren had
had a boy instead of Amy, she'd be dead.
But Cheryl had three
boys...."
Bob McNannay still lives in Longview and he dotes on the only child of
his only child.
Mary and Betty Troseth have moved away from Longview.
Betty still
works as a therapist for the mentally ill.
Loni Ann Cunningham is hoping to move back to the Northwest, now that
she no longer has to hide from Brad.
Rosemary Cunningham Kinney died in 1993 in Washington.
To the end of
her long illness, she hoped that Brad might call her.
One cousin says,
"I think he did callþbut she was already gone."
Kit Cunningham stood
at her grandmother's grave and gave a eulogy, after telling the
minister, "You didn't know my grandmother.
How can you speak of
her?"
Brad Cunningham found that the Oregon State Penitentiary was not much
more to his liking than the Washington County jail.
Two longtimers who
had been in the jail at the same time he was remembered that he had
"snitched them off" about their secret places for hiding cigarettes.
A
few weeks after he got to the Salem prison, he was eating lunch in the
chow hall when a convict walking down the row popped him in the face
and broke his nose.
He will probably be transferred to an eastern
Oregon prison for his own protection.
Brad has appealed his conviction.
In the spring of 1995, the proceeds from Brad's Houston suit were
disbursed.
After his legal fees, he had something more than six
hundred thousand dollars left.
Secured creditors and others in his
bankruptcy got all but two hundred thousand.
Garvey, Schubert and
Barer, Cheryl's law firm, had spent twice that amount to sue him
civilly.
"We split what was left with Cheryl's sons," Greg Dallaire
said.
"We'll hold it in trust for them."
Brad got nothing at all.
The taxpayers of the State of Oregon took a heavy hit from the cost of
Brad's defense.
The entrepreneur (now indigent) defendant's
attorneyscum-"legal advisors" and his private investigator cost the
state $261,435.
That amount did not include the general costs of his
lengthy trial.
Sara Gordon wants her sons to remember the mother they lost.
She has
asked all of Cheryl's family to write down their memories of Cheryl,
and to send pictures and videos so that Jess, Michael, and Phillip will
know what a wonderful woman their mother was and how very much she
loved them.
the end.