Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
There was the child's carseat right behind the driver's seat.
It was
empty, but that didn't make Blighton feel much better, the baby could
be on the floor someplace.
Counting on the flares to warn other cars
to go around, he slid the side passenger door open and patted the floor
and seats with his hands.
Everything he touched was wet and he
realized why it had been so hard to see through the driver's-side
window.
Something dark splattered the glass.
On some level, he knew he was
running his hands through pooled blood, but finding the baby that might
be there was more important than anything else.
When he found nothing,
he ran to the hack of the van, opened the hatchback, and looked in.
No
baby.
Thank God.
No baby.
Instinctively, Blighton wiped his hands down his shirt and pants, wanting to get the wet, iodiney-smelling stuff off them.
He shuddered,
hut he didn't stop to consider how there could be blood if the van had
not been hit by another vehicle.
He ran back to the driver's door,
hopped into the van, expertly shifted into reverse, and backed the van
across the freeway and onto the shoulder of 79th where it met the
Sunset Highway.
Only when he had assured himself that the
Toyota
was no longer in
danger of being hit by oncoming traffic did Blighton turn to look
closely at the person lying across the seat.
He thought it was a
woman.
Her hair was short and dark, but he didn't know if she was young or
old.
She did not respond to his questions, but he still kept asking, "Are
you okay?
Are you hurt?"
Blighton ran around to the front passenger door and found it was
slightly ajar.
He opened it and picked up the woman's hand, feeling
for a pulse in her wrist.
There was no reassuring beat.
He could see
blood on her face, and one of her eyes protruded grotesquely, as big as
a hardboiled egg.
Even if he had known this woman, he would never have
recognized her.
His first thought was that he had to get help for her maybe she did
have a pulse but too faint for him to detect.
He ran back to the
driver's side and reached in, running his hands along the dash,
searching frantically again for the emergency flashers switch.
He
finally saw it overhead and switched them on.
They clicked in eerie
rhythm, hut that was the only sound he heard.
The woman wasn't
breathing.
Blighton stuck more flares in the gravel along the shoulder of the
freeway and traffic in both lanes slowed down as it passed, hundreds of
cars whose occupants had no idea how close they had comc to being in a
massive fatal pileup.
Blighton then looked around for a place where he
could call for help.
He saw lights along S.W. 79th, the street that
ran at a right angle onto the Sunset Highway.
No one responded to his
knock at the first house, even though he could hear voices inside.
He pounded on the door of the second house and a young woman opened
it.
'iTllerc's a had accident on the freeway," he gasped.
"Call an
ambulance.
I'm going back out there."
It was hard to judge the passage of time, but Blighton estimated that
about ten minutes had passed since he first saw the Toyota van angled
crazily across the freeway.
Cars were inching by in a single lane now,
and he caught glimpses of curious faces darting a look at what appeared
to be nothing more than a roadside breakdown.
who lay across the seat hadn't moved.
Sirens wailed somewhere in the distancc, and soon Blighton could see
the flashing red lights of an ambulance.
Thomas Stewart Dulfy, Jr.þTomþwas on duty at W lshington County Fire
District Number One, the West Slope station, that Sunday night.
The
station was just east of the I.G.A supermarket between Canyon Drive and
Canyon lane at S.W. 78th Street.
The alarm bells sounded at on the
Sunset HighGhay.
There were a lot of calls from the Sunset, and a
fair amount of them were fatals, so Tom Duffy and his partner, Mike
Morn, both paramedics, were familiar with the area.
Running for
their rig, a Chevrolet van, the two men leaped in and headed up Canyon
Lane.
turned left on West Slope Drive, and then went northhound on 79th
toward the Sunset T,lighway.
It was an older neighborhood with houses on big lots set far off the
street and well apart from each other.
Huge trees edged the narrow
roadsha!
and there were no street lights.
The medics' rig lights were
on, but they still had trouble seeing until t,hey spotted the flares at
tlIc southwest corner of the Sunset and 79th.
In a heartheat, the
quiet dark street ended in a usually roaring freeway.
That night, they
saw cars hacked up to the west for miles.
It had taken tllelll two minutes and twenty seconds to reach the
site.
Tom Duffy Was a former army combat medic who senred in Vietnam.
He had
worked for thirteen years as a paramedic with the Washington County
Fire district and Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue.
Altogether, he
had over twenty-eight years in the medical field.
Ven tall and lean,
he rarely smiled.
he had seen people die in all manner of ways.
He
had seen scores of fatal accidents, and they always bothered him.
He
had long since learned to shut his mind to the terrible things he saw
during those moments when he fought to save lives, but he never really
forgot and he would have almost crystalline recall of that Sunday
night.
Duffy and Morn saw a blue Toyota van parked facing north along 79th.
A man ran up to them, shouting, "A lady's in the van.
She's hurt
really bad!"
"How long has it been since the accident?"
Duffy asked.
"I don't know for sure.
It took me a while to find a phone.
I think
about fifteen minutes," the man answered.
"We saw the van," Duffy would remember, "and we assessed the situation
quickly.
We saw no hazards around itþno power lines down or gas
leaking.
There was very little damage to the van itself."
As for the man who had run up to him, Randy Blighton, Duffy didn't know
who he was and he had no idea what had happened.
Blighton's clothes
were streaked with dark stains that could have been blood.
The van
didn't look wrecked.
For all Duffy knew, he and Morn might be walking
into trouble.
The three men went over to the van and Blighton opened the nassenger
door so the paramedics could see the woman inside.
"She's in here," he
said.
"The van was crosswise over there in the fast lane."
Duffy attempted to find some sign of life in the woman who lay sprawled
across the front seat in the shadows of the van.
He put a hand on her
shoulder and asked, "Are you all right?"
There was no response.
He exerted more pressure and gave the woman a "trapezius squeeze" on
her shoulder muscle.
Someone even semiconscious would have reacted to
that force.
There was no response.
Duffy held sensitive fingers to the carotid arteny along the side of
her neck and felt nothing.
"There was no response at all," he would
remember.
I could palpate no pulse.
No respiration."
Turning to Mike Morn and three firefighters who had arrived at the
scene in a firetruck, he said, "We need to get her out of this van
fast."
They maneuvered her limp body out of the front seat with extreme
caution, careful not to aggravate any cenvical-spinal injuries she
might have sustained in the accident.
They circled her neck with a
bracing collar so that her spinal processes would not be jostled as
they took her out of the van.
If by some miracle she was alive, they
didn't want her to be paralyzed.
They placed her on the road beside
the van and began attempts to resuscitate her, even though they were
quite sure it was an exercise in futility.
The gravelly shoulder alongside the Sunset Highway now bristled with
people who wanted to help when there was no longer any way to helpþa
Buck Ambulance and its crew, Mike Morn and Tom Duffy, the firefighters
and EMTs, and a half dozen state police.
In the yellow rays of
headlights and flashlights, they could all see that the victim who lay
on the ground had suffered massive trauma.
The top of her head was, in
the blunt words of an obsenver, i'like mincemeat."
One of the
paramedics thought he saw brain matter leaking.
There was so much
blood þso terribly much blood.
It was as thick as curdled sour milk,
already beginning to coagulate.
Duffy knew that meant that more than
five or ten minutes had passed since the woman had last bled freely.
Depending on her own particular clotting factor profile, it might have
been up to half an hour.
There was no hope of saving her.
The dead do not bleed.
"The patient fit into the category of a patient who could not possibly
be resuscitated," he would say later.
"Not at all.
She was in
cardiopulmonary arrest."
That meant her heart no longer beat, her
lungs no longer drew breath.
Even without the tremendous loss of
blood, the assault to the brain itself would have been fatal.
An
injured brain responds by swelling, and as it does so, it bulges into
centers that control heart rhythm and breathing, effectively shutting