Read Devil's Knot: The True Story of the West Memphis Three Online
Authors: Mara Leveritt
425. In the interview in January 2002, Paudert said that none of the allegations of misconduct that had been reported to him related to the department’s investigation of the 1993 murders. Sergeant Lawrence Vaughn, head of the department’s new internal affairs office, agreed. Vaughn said that he had been working as a uniformed patrol officer in 1993 and had participated in the search for the children. “I was there on the scene at the discovery,” he said. “I was there when they were bringing the bodies out of the woods. There were so many people there, we had to set up a perimeter. We were sitting by the hearse. We assisted in putting the bodies into the vehicle.” (Inspector Gary Gitchell had begged the crime lab for information about the “Negroid hair” found in the sheet around Christopher’s body, but no explanation had surfaced. Yet, during the trials, when defense attorneys had asked the crime lab’s trace evidence expert, Lisa Sakevicius, if she had ever received “any Negro type hairs from any West Memphis police officers to compare with the questioned hair,” Sakevicius testified that she had not.) Vaughn also reported that Sudbury’s role in the murder investigation had been unique within the department. According to Vaughn, after the boys’ bodies were found, Gitchell had assigned all of his regular criminal detectives to work the murder investigation, and he’d temporarily reassigned the department’s narcotics unit, where Sudbury was second in command, ordering them take over the regular detectives’ duties. Vaughn said that Sudbury—who’d been the first West Memphis detective to question Damien, the first to report Jerry Driver’s suspicions, and present during key interviews with John Mark Byers and Vicki Hutcheson—was the only narcotics detective whom Gitchell had allowed to participate in the murder investigation. Sudbury, Vaughn recalled, “was the only one who worked both.”
426. Damien’s son, Seth, born six months before his father’s trial, turned eight in 2001. Seth and his mother, Domini, had left Arkansas after the trials, and their contact with Damien in the years that followed had been slim.
427. The wedding, which was approved by Warden Greg Harmon, took place on December 6, 1999.
428. She’d moved to Little Rock, and two years later the couple asked the warden for permission to marry. The wedding ceremony, held in a visitation room at the maximum security unit, began and ended with the sound of a bell. Damien wore his white prison uniform and shackles. His head was shaved in the manner of a Buddhist monk. A Buddhist priest from Little Rock, who also worked as a volunteer chaplain at the prison, performed the ceremony, which was attended by a half dozen of the couple’s friends, including some of the supporters from California. Officials at the prison stressed that while inmates generally had a right to marry, they do not have a right to sexual contact. “There was no reception, no honeymoon, no overnight stay in Branson,” a prison spokesman said, referring to a popular vacation spot in southern Missouri.
429. “Death Row’s Echols Ties the Knot in Prison Fete,” by Cathy Frye, December 7, 1999.
430. Though the handling of money was illegal in prison, and Jason had never had much of it to begin with, he was trying to understand finance. “I know to stay away from credit cards,” he said. “I know that mutual funds are a safer investment and offer a higher yield, but that right now is the best time to buy stocks. I wish I could get out right now and just buy a bunch of stocks while it’s low, and just keep buying stocks every month, every month…. I just don’t want my kids to live in a trailer park.”
Allen, Mike
America’s Most Wanted
(television show)
Appeals
Arkansas
Arkansas Crime Laboratory
Arkansas Democrat–Gazette
Arkansas law
Arkansas State Police
Arkansas Supreme Court
Arkansas Times
Arrests
Atkinson, Michael
Autopsies
Autopsy reports
Bakken, Kathy
Baldwin, Jason
Baldwin, Matt
Beasley, Mandy
Berlinger, Joe
Bicycles
Black clothing
Black man, reports of
Black T–shirts
Bland, Danny
Blood
Blood samples
Damien
Jason
Jessie
Blue Beacon Truck Wash
Bodies
Bojangles restaurant
Bouisson, Maurice
Branch, Steve
Branch, Stevie Edward
Bray, Donald
Burnett, David
Byers, Christopher
Byers, John Mark
Byers, Melissa
Cadwal lader, Sara
Capital murder
Carson, Michael
Castration
Catholicism
Champion, Lloyd
Children
Child’s tennis shoe
Christianity
Circle diagram
Clark, Ryan
Clinton, Bill
Coerced confessions
Confession ( Jessie)
Confession(s), false
Conflicts of interest
Constitutional rights
Corning, Arkansas
Coroner
Cotton Mather on Witchcraft
(Mather)
Craighead County
Craighead County Courthouse
Creative Thinking International
Crime
Crime laboratory
Criminal profiler
Crittenden County
Crittenden County Courthouse
Crittenden County Drug Task Force
Crittenden County Sheriff’s Office
Crow, Greg,
Crowley, Aleister
Cult activity/cults
Cult cops
Cult expert
Cult materials, search for
Cult theory
Cult-related crime
Davidson, Scott
Davis, Brent
Damien and Jason’s trial
Damien and Jason’s trial: closing argument
Damien and Jason’s trial: cross-examining Damien
Damien and Jason’s trial: meeting with judge
Damien and Jason’s trial: objections
Damien and Jason’s trial: sentencing phase
incident at Rector
Jessie’s trial
Jessie’s trial: closing argument
offered Jason deal
possibility of Jessie tetifying against Damien and Jason
Davis, Lorri
Death penalty
Death row
Defendants
Defendants’ families
Defense
Damien
Defense lawyers
Defense lawyers, Damien and Jason’s trial
Directed verdict
Discovery
Discovery materials
Discovery mess
Discovery records, Lax’s search in
Discrepancies
DNA
DNA evidence
DNA testing
Documentary
Dog skull
Dougherty, Robin
Driver, Jerry
Durham, Bill
Ebert, Roger
Echols, Andy “Jack,” 42
Echols, Damien