Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
that.
The note said nothing at all about plans to drive into Portland.
"Cheryl left a note for her brother that she was meeting you at the
Mobile station on the West Slope," Ayers said to Brad.
"She told her
mother that, too, when they talked on the phone this evening."
"No."
Brad shook his head.
"She was coming here to pick up the
boys."
They had been talking for about forty-five minutes, and Jim Ayers had
yet to detect any sign of emotion in the man sitting before him.
It
was very quiet, high above the city of Portland, in the early hours of
a Monday morning, a long time before the city below woke up to begin
the business week.
Somewhere in that large apartment, three little
boys slept, unaware.
Brad's older son Brent was also in the apartment,
although the detectives didn't vet know that.
"Did you kill Cheryl?"
Ayers asked, suddenly blunt.
The question hung heavily in the air.
Ayres's dark brown eyes bore
into Brad Cunningham's.
Brad stared back, unflinching.
"No."
At that time, Ayers saw what he later estimated to be "fifteen
seconds of emotion."
Brad seemed startled and even a little
frightened.
But those feelings washed over his face like a slight wind
rippling a pond, gone as quickly as it blew in, leaving no sign that it
had ever been there.
Ayers pulled back.
"When were you in the Toyota van last?"
"MarchþMarch, I think."
March was almost six months ago.
Of course, even if they found Brad
Cunningham's fingerprints in the Toyota van, they would likely be
useless as far as physical evidence went.
Mom-and-Pop homicides were
tough when it came to physical evidence, both victim and killer had
good reason to leave their prints, hair, cigarette butts, semen, urineþ
you name itþwhere they lived or had once lived.
Fingerprints could be
retrieved after decades, and Cunningham's prints could be expected to
be found in a van he had often driven.
Unless they happened to find
his prints in blood, they wouldn't necessarily link him to this
investigation.
Having sprung his most straightforward question on the man before him
and gotten little in the way of response, Ayers excused himself and
went out on the walkway to have a cigarette, allowing the events of the
evening to sink into Cunningham's mind.
Sometimes silence was more
intimidating and productive than questions.
At this point, Ayers and
Finch knew next to nothing about Cheryl Keeton or her estranged
husband, other than that there seemed to have been no love lost between
them.
The two detectives were akin to researchers just beginning a
scientific project.
They would weigh any number of variables that
might eventually bring them to the truth.
Brad had not spoken of his newly deceased wife in hushed, shocked
tones.
Whatever love or respect or friendship he might once have felt
for Cheryl, it was patently clear he felt it no longer.
He was coarse
and voluble about the woman who had been his wife for seven years, who
had borne him three sons.
He told the two detectives that Cheryl had
been "fooling around" with a large number of menþprimarily other
attorneys with whom she worked at the law firm of Garvey, Schubert and
Barer.
These men, he said, were all married.
"There are a lot of mad
wives," Brad said a little smugly.
Of course, he admitted with a half grin, half grimace, he had not been
exactly celibate himself Why should he have been faithful, once he
found out Cheryl was cheating on him?
He told Ayers and Finch that,
initially, he had been involved with a woman named Lily Saarnen who
worked with him while he was a bank executive in Salem and then in Lake
Oswego.
Coincidentally, Brad said, Lily also lived in the Madison Tower.
"In fact, it was.she who introduced me to Dr. Gordon, and we started
dating."
Ayers let Brad continue his odd, almost stream-of-consciousness
conversation until he eventually wound back around to Cheryl.
His
description of his dead wife was hardly flattering.
He said that she
had been a great fan of country music and had often hung out at the
Jubitz Truck Stop south of Portland alongside the 1-5 freeway, where
she went to pick up men.
Finch and Avers exchanged glances.
Why would a woman who was a partner
in a prestigious law firm be picking up truck drivers?
But then, why
not?
The O.S.P detectives had seen all varieties of human sexual
peccadillos.
Brad went on to describe Cheryl as "narcissistic," a woman who enjoyed
going to nude beaches along the Columbia River.
"And she hung nude
photographs of herself around the house."
Ayers had, in fact, noted
several artistic photographs of a nude female on the walls of Brad's
apartment.
He couldn't know if they were of Cheryl, at this point, he
didn't know what Cheryl Keeton might have looked like in life.
She had
been so brutally beaten that she was unrecognizable.
And the nude's
head was cropped from the photographs, revealing only an exquisite
torso.
They weren't "Playboy shots", they were beautifully done.
The woman Brad was describing sounded as if she had been a wanton
creature who might very well have been a set-up for violent murder.
Ayers had no way of knowing if he was hearing an accurate description
of Cheryl Keeton, but her alleged avocations and preferences certainly
sounded bizarre.
Maybe she had been one woman in the courtroom and
another after dark.
Ayers asked again for specific details on Brad's movements during the
hours preceding Cheryl's death.
Brad seemed calm and confident as he
thought back over the evening.
After he returned to the Madison Tower
from the pizza parlor with his three sons, he said, he had left only
once, and that was just long enough to put some things in his carþshoes
and work clothes he needed because he had an on-site inspection of some
property the next day.
"In fact," he said, "I talked to a cop in the
garage.
He was talking to two people down there, and he nodded at
me."
Ayers made a note to check on that.
He asked if it might be possible
for him to ask a few questions of the three Cunningham children.
"No," Brad said firmly.
"Not until I talk to an attorney about it."
Again the two detectives' eyes met, but they said nothing.
Glancing at the jogging outfit Brad wore, Ayers asked, "Are you
athletic?"
"No.
I used to jog, but I haven't for some time."
"Was Cheryl athletic?"
"Cheryl?"
Brad looked surprised.
"Noþnot at all."
As Brad became more expansive, seeming to relax slightly, Ayers
commented that he himself had been through a divorce and could
empathize with the stress and frustration involved.
And then he caught
Brad up short again by repeating the question he had asked earlier.
"Did you kill your wife?"
The second time was too much.
Brad got up from the table and walked to
a phone.
He called Wayne Palmer, a Portland lawyer, and left a message
with his service.
Within a short time, the phone in the apartment rang and Jerry Finch
answered.
Wayne Palmer, who said he was representing Bradly
Cunningham, asked that all questioning of his client stop.
He informed
Finch that he didn't want the children to be questioned either.
"Don't
wake them up."
So, at close to 2
A.M the questioning had to end.
After Brad denied for the second time
that he had killed Cheryl Keeton, and after his attorney demanded that
the detectives' questioning stop, there was nothing more for them to
do.
They had informed Brad of his estranged wife's death and he seemed
no more troubled than if they had told him someone had dented the
fender of his truck.
Now he wanted them out of his apartment.
Whatever had happened to Cheryl Keeton, the answers were not going to
come easily.
Her almost-ex-husbandþnow her widowerþwas most assuredly
not devastated to learn that she was dead.
He wasn't surprised either,
he saidþnot given the lifestyle she had chosen.
But he had assured the
detectives that what had happened to Cheryl had nothing to do with him,
with his children, or with his activities during Sunday evening,
September 21, 1986.
His duty now was to protect his children, and he
intended to do just that.
At 6:30 on Monday morning, September 22, Brad called Sara Gordon at
Providence Hospital with news so shocking that she could scarcely
believe what he was saying.
"Cheryl's dead.
The police came by at eleven last night and inaormed
me."
"Brad!"
Sara gasped.
"Why didn't you call me?"
"I didn't want to disturb your sleep."
Disturb her sleep?
Didn't he know that her profession disturbed her
sleep all the time?
Way back when she was an intern, Sara had learned
to fall asleep leaning against a wall if she had to.
She could wake in
an instant, be perfectly alert during delicate surgery, and then
immediately fall back asleep.
All doctors could.
They had to learn to
sleep when they had a chance or they wouldn't survive.
Sara couldn't
understand why Brad hadn't called her the moment he learned the awful
news.
When his father died only two months before, he had called her