Without Pity: Ann Rule's Most Dangerous Killers (47 page)

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Authors: Ann Rule

Tags: #General, #Murder, #True Crime, #Social Science, #Criminology

BOOK: Without Pity: Ann Rule's Most Dangerous Killers
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When the time came for trial, the smug defendant wasn’t nearly as confident as he had been. As the eight-day trial progressed, Robin testified for a day and a half. Wendell Stokeberry testified, too, although he drew giggles from the gallery as he swaggered to the witness chair. He adeptly parried defense efforts to discredit him by saying, “If you say I got busted for something, then I guess I must have. My record is
ex
-ten-sive.”

He might not have been a law-abiding citizen, but he was telling the truth—and it showed.

Prosecutor Bob Hamilton presented expert testimony on the fact that there were no lead particles in the tissues around Hank Marcus’s wounds. Using a long wooden dowel, he demonstrated just how far the killer had to have been away from Hank so that a shot wouldn’t leave gunpowder stippling on his skin. There was no way that it could have happened as Tom Brown said.

Hamilton showed the judge the angle of the wound. Again, it contradicted Brown’s version. Brown had even forgotten which side of the victim’s head the bullet entered.

After hearing his story riddled with errors, Tom Brown insisted on testifying. Now he gave a different version of his recall of the gun exchange, but his efforts were feebly transparent.

Over defense objections, Judge Bradshaw allowed testimony on the mechanisms of brainwashing into the record. This was a major coup for the prosecution. As Dr. Treleaven explained it, the brainwashing of Robin Marcus was a classic example of mind control. Her mind literally became evidence in the case.

As the trial wound down, it was apparent that the attorney general’s prosecutors, Bob Hamilton and Steve Keutzer, had presented a brilliantly organized case—a case that had begun with all the earmarks of a loser.

Judge Bradshaw retired to make his decision. Three days later, he came back with a verdict of guilty. Thomas Leslie Brown was sentenced to life in the Oregon State Penitentiary. His motion for a new trial was denied on July 19, 1977.

The testimony in the Marcus-Brown case on brainwashing was something of a landmark in legal precedent. Bob Hamilton pointed out that, although such testimony is generally not admissible, furtive conduct to cover up a crime is evidence of guilt. In this instance, the evidence that Tom Brown covered up was Robin Marcus’s memory. If he could have permanently changed the “computer” of Robin’s brain, the crime might never have been discovered, much less successfully prosecuted.

 

The long ordeal of Robin Marcus seemed to be over. At the time Hank Marcus was murdered, however, life sentences in Oregon were not what they seemed to be. Some lifers got out in ten to twelve years. And by the late 1990s Tom Brown began to appear periodically before the parole board, asking to be released.

The victims or the victims’ families usually appear at these hearings, standing in a small room with the felon who terrorized them as they give their reasons why the prisoner should
not
be released. To protect Robin, Bob Hamilton stands in as the victim. “It would be too hard on Robin to have to see Tom Brown again,” Hamilton explains. “So I’m there in her place, and Brown and I engage in what’s basically a long staring contest.”

Thus far, Brown has failed psychological tests that would indicate he was safe to move about in society. He is still in prison, but he will continue to come up for parole, and it’s quite possible he will one day be released from the Oregon prison system.

Robin Marcus is over forty now; she has remarried and has children. In her new, happy life she now lives thousands of miles away from Oregon. Only a handful of people know where she is and what her name is, and she is grateful for that. She is still afraid of the man who hunted humans rather than animals, and she dreads the day he is paroled.

Acknowledgments

We try to give readers at least one new book a year, and I couldn’t possibly do that without the super-efficient help I get from my friends at Pocket Books! I’d like to thank them, the team that stands behind me—and sometimes tugs me forward: Louise Burke, Executive Vice President and Publisher; Mitchell Ivers, my editor; Josh Martino, Mitchell’s very able assistant and the man who edits my newsletters; Steve Llano, Copyediting Supervisor; Donna O’Neill, Managing Editor; Hillary Schupf, Publicity Director; Louise Braverman, my longtime publicist; Paolo Pepe, Art Director; and Felice Javit, Vice President and Senior Counsel.

As always, I received encouragement from my first-reader, Gerry Brittingham Hay, and my literary agents, Joan and Joe Foley of The Foley Agency. Ron Bernstein of International Creative Management is my theatrical agent and makes my books turn into miniseries and movies, although it isn’t as easy as simply waving a magic wand!

And a big hand and thank you for my readers. I am more grateful for you every year. I enjoy your letters and emails and read every one—even when I can’t always write back.

The Tumbledown Shack

Beverly Johnson left the Oregon Coast with her best friend, Patty Weidner, to hitchhike hundreds of miles. Neither girl ever came home.

Beverly Johnson and Patty Weidner were much too isolated to call for help when they desperately needed it.

Two young women from Oregon chose this abandoned shack to spend the night in.

Jack Stolle told detectives a number of scenarios about what had happened in the lonely shack. He went to prison for forgery, but he had a much worse crime on his conscience.

Pretty Patty Weidner and Bev Johnson thought joining the Washington State apple harvest would be fun and lucrative. Instead, they encountered a deadly stalker.

Beverly Johnson’s jeans, shirt, and boots were on the floor next to her body.

“Charlie,” one of the victims’ dogs, tried to protect them. Their other dog was not at the crime scene when Chelan County investigators arrived.

 

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