DISCLAIMER

Many of the names and some of the descriptions in this blog have been changed to protect the guilty.

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

The 1994 Fox Road Murder Mystery, Part 19: Tammy’s Dad Died. Now What?


First of all, I cannot believe that I am writing about Richard Lynds in the past tense. I was last wishing him well on November 7, a day before his heart surgery, and now he’s dead.

I talked with him on the phone on November 1 for 47 minutes and now he is gone? What the hell? He got through his heart operation, but he didn’t survive the complication of five unexpected abdominal surgeries, and died on December 12.


He had joked before he went to the hospital that he was getting cow tissue for a new mitral valve in his heart, reminding him of his farm upbringing in South Hadley. Here’s his old house, now deteriorating:



When he married Susan, he originally wanted to purchase a house in a rural town, like Monson, but she convinced him to buy a home in Springfield—close to her family in Ludlow. 


“Susan wanted six kids and I didn’t,” he said. “In October of 1984 I got fixed so I would never have any more kids with Susan.”


The marriage was marred with acrimony, and I asked him why it took so long to decide on getting a divorce. Things were not good—before Tammy’s murder, but especially afterward. After they moved from Pine Point to Northampton, he said she decked him a couple of times with sucker punches—once knocking him out. Another time he said he called the police, and they arrested her when they saw his swollen, red eye. He said that when the children were growing up, he hung out with his kids when she disappeared on weekends. “I found out about Susan's boyfriend from Allison during my divorce in 2006,” he recalled. 


Again, I asked him what took so long to end it. He must have loved her, I insisted. He shrugged. He said that finally, when the kids grew up and moved out of the house, there was no reason to stay married. He drew up divorce papers with a lawyer, put them on her pillow, and she found them when she was on the phone with her mother. “Oh my God, he’s divorcing me,” she announced.


Mind you, I’m only getting half the version of this tale. I know Richard could be short-tempered, hard-headed, and stubborn—so I’m sure Susan’s take on this tale would be quite different.


He found love after Susan. He married Mary, who died of COVID in 2020, and he was the boyfriend of Linda, who was by his side until the very end. Yours truly met Linda this past summerI have corresponded with her since, and it was obvious that she adored Richard, and the feeling was mutual.


It's not my intention to write some kind of half-assed obituary on Richard, but there are a few things I'd like to say about him.


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Richard liked working with his hands, whether it be a complex Lego project, constructing a remote-controlled boat, or building a shed. Once you got him talking about the 1986 addition and remodeling of his house, believe me, you’d hear about the entire process, right down to the last nail.


Tammy in the old kitchen in 1984:



Tammy and Josh in the kitchen during construction:



The new kitchen:



Richard hammering away, putting in new second floor stairs before the second floor construction started:



Richard and his father putting in the new bay window in the living room:



The new second floor being built to Richard’s plans:




Construction begins on the back deck:



★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


I’m somewhat  surprised that the city of Springfield was playing ball with Richard about plans for Tammy’s memorial, because there was a rumor that the Springfield Police had dragged their feet on Tammy’s murder investigation as a result of bad feelings they had over a dispute he had with the Boston Road bar Mattie’s when he was president of the Pine Point Neighborhood Council. In 1992, residents had complained to the Council about underage drinking there, and this resulted in a hearing with state Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission.



The problem was that the owner had been married to a Springfield police officer who died in 1986 but her family still had strong connections to the police, who also did not take kindly to his haranguing the force over Tammy’s murder investigation over the years.


Still, inferring that the Springfield Police weren’t interested in finding the murderer because of petty stuff—this flies in the face of what the Homicide squad does every day, and that is trying its damndest to put murderers in jail. Frankly, it’s an incredible insult. Springfield Homicide wants killers caught. Period.


Richard launched his own citizen investigation about his daughter’s death in earnest in in 2018, five years after the case file was lost, and he approached a former judge, but was asked to be quiet. 


“In 2018, I found many of Tammy's old friends on Facebook,” he said. “At that time, I asked to be friends with them. Most of them did say yes. I then introduced myself to them and said briefly that I knew that they had knowledge about Tammy's case, and I will get the truth. I texted everyone once to see what kind of responses I would get. I got back nothing until here on your blogs.”


Unfortunately, Richard had blundered into the social media world by being a little too in-your-face. In his notes, he pointed out that a couple of Tammy’s friends had shared one of his memorial posts (below), but his subsequent contact with these guys proved unproductive. Things turned sour, and they blocked him.




For years he suspected Ricky, Tammy’s friend and sometimes lover, in the murder—and they clashed—but that changed for a bit this past summer when it became clear that both were former suspects who were looking for the same thing: the truth. In fact, it was Ricky who persuaded Richard to contact—and trust—Hell’s Acres with telling Tammy’s story. Last August, Richard acknowledged that he had been unfair to Ricky. “We never were able to talk like we are today,” said Richard. “My first contact with Ricky was in 2018. I texted him with saying a lot of things that today I know I should not have. But I had no direction to go in. I also started to hunt online all the other kids that I found out were friends or knowledge from Tammy from here phone book. I had a very long list.”


Richard knew full well, especially after Tammy’s case file was lost, that justice doesn’t just fall out of the sky. Often you have to fight for it. But at times he got too combative. Ricky made much of a claim about Richard’s alleged drunkenness the day Tammy went missing—an accusation made by a visitor at the Lynds house—and soon Ricky and Richard were fighting online again.


Richard said that the observation about his intoxication wasn’t true—that he pretty much gave up alcohol and smoking on December 22, 1982. “After that, I might have had a beer at family gatherings,” he said.


And then there was the rumor that Richard had molested and killed Tammy. The main instigators of “the father did it” rumor are, in my opinion, the top suspects. One of them is the late Jason Francis. I believe they told police this in 1994 to divert attention from themselves. I’ll tell you one thing—Richard didn’t kill her. He did rub people the wrong way when he was trying to figure this crime out, so he became a convenient scapegoat for some. But the guy had been going at great lengths to get this case solved. If it was all a cover for his guilt, it was an extremely elaborate one, and I’m not easily fooled. Yes, he lost his temper during this investigation. I can’t defend all his actions, but to all these people who seem to have hated his guts: how perfectly would YOU behave if your daughter was slaughtered?


“My problem has been all the years that no one has been willing to sit down, in person, and talk with me,” said Richard. “I have been on my own for 29 years. All these people have been accusing me of so many things, without asking about my side of the story. It makes it hard to go forward like I want to on this. I hope someday it will all open up and I will get the truth about how and why Tammy was killed.”


And then came his health issues. “I do not want to stop trying to solve my daughter’s case, but I have more important things to worry about right now,” he said. “Will I survive my open heart surgery coming up in November?” 


I thought he would survive. But his unexpected death is a reminder that life is precious—that you should hug your family members, and not take them for granted, because they can be gone in an instant. Richard knew that more than anyone.



He is with Tammy now, and knows the answers about her death. But where does that leave us? For information on Tammy’s murder, I was relying solely on him and a couple of others.


In 2023, the last year of Richard’s life, the rest of his family and the vast majority of Tammy’s friends have remained incredibly quiet about her murder, even though this latest publicity—yes, I’m talking about this blog—is clearly the last gasp of this investigation.


Why the silence? Please enlighten me. 


Read Part 1


Read Part 2


Read Part 3


Read Part 4


Read Part 5


Read Part 6


Read Part 7


Read Part 8


Read Part 9


Read Part 10


Read Part 11


Read Part 12


Read Part 13


Read Part 14


Read Part 15


Read Part 16


Read Part 17


Read Part 18

Read Part 19


Read Part 20


Read Part 21


Read Part 22


Read Part 23


Read Part 24

Sunday, December 3, 2023

The 1994 Fox Road Murder Mystery, Part 18: A Hang-Up Phone Call, A Medical Emergency

One of the more curious occurrences in the Tammy Lynds case took place even before it was even a murder investigation. When the 15-year-old was still regarded as a missing person, two police officers showed up at the house of Tammy’s friend Ricky and asked to come in. “They told my mom someone from our house called the Lynds and then hung up.” Ricky denied it, “but they used this opportunity to ask to check our basement,” he said. “My room was down there, and my mom let them.”

Tammy’s disappearance was being treated as a possible runaway case, and police believed she might have been staying with one or more of her friends. In fact, the day after Tammy went missing, her father Richard asked to check Ricky’s basement, and his parents allowed it, and Richard also went over to Ricky’s uncle’s house on Moss Road, where he was allowed to check the house to verify that his daughter wasn’t staying there.


Ricky thought at the time the cops might have been lying about the hang-up phone call as an excuse to interview him. “That accusation was the reason my parents let those officers question me unsupervised,” he said. And after all, Ricky said the police were used to playing loosely with the truth, coercing him to say—falsely—that Tammy snuck out one night and knocked on his bedroom window, to fit the narrative in her diary that she went over a boyfriend’s house from time to time after both their parents went to bed.


But Ricky also entertained the possibility that maybe his mother might have called the Lynds’ number to ask about any news about Tammy, and then had changed her mind just as someone picked up the phone—thereby it being treated as a hang-up call. “When I recently asked my mom about it, she said she didn’t call,” he commented. “I was hoping she would say yes—then it might hinted at the police actually having a copy of the everyone’s phone records at one point, or at the very least the Lynds’ records.”


If the police did have phone records, they would have shown that her friend Sindy Pabon called Tammy around 1:00 p.m. or 2:00 p.m. on July 21, 1994—the day she went missing. They also would have an idea of who phoned in the answering machine-recorded threat to Tammy and other annoyance calls—including an anonymous person who claimed she was in Floridathat prompted them to reach out to the phone company. In addition, they might have revealed that Tammy could have talked to another Ricky the day she disappeared—a Ricky who lived on Carew Street and had been intimate with Tammy. According to the investigative notes of Tammy’s mother Susan, a friend of Tammy told Susan that she was meeting a “Ricky”  that night:



However, that friend recently told me that he does not remember talking to Ricky from Carew Street about Tammy back in 1994. “And I have a great memory,” he added. Did they, in fact, communicate over the phone that day? We don’t know.


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Tammy’s desire to get pregnant was evident in her diary, but I didn’t think she had shared this with any of her friends. But I found out that she did tell one of them: Jack (not his real name). “I told her she shouldn’t do it at that point—that she should concentrate on school,” he said. He explained to Tammy that she had her entire life in front of her.


After Richard read her diary, and assessed Tammy’s home life—including her vicious fights with her mother—he concluded that Tammy’s motivation to get pregnant was to get out of the house. What she didn’t account for was the fact some teen moms, looking for both unconditional love and some independence in a new phase of life, go out on their own, only to move back home when financial and other pressures become too much. 


There is some evidence in the autopsy that Tammy was indeed pregnant. If so, she nonetheless was deprived of the chance to chase her dreams—which ultimately came down to being a mother.



★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★



If you are a praying person, Richard needs your prayers now more than ever.


In 2018, his cardiologist told him his heart had a leaky valve, and that they’d keep a close eye on it. Then, in late 2022, he was having some difficulty breathing and congestion. This past summer, when I met Richard, it was evident this congestion was still bothering him—he kept coughing and clearing his throat. So he decided to have surgery.


Richard went into the UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester on November 8 to have open heart surgery—undergoing bypass surgery on one plugged main artery in the front of his heart, and replacing his leaky mitral valve with a cow’s valve, which is supposed to last 20 years. Cardiac bypass surgery is no small thing: they stop the heart, do the necessary repairs, restart the heart, and sew him up.


Initially, the operation went well—at one point during his recovery he woke up and he thought he had been at home sleeping, not in the hospital. He even went for a couple of short walks, and had a “mascot”: Walker, a cute cow stuffed animal, in honor of his new body part. The initial plan was to be in the ICU for three to four days, and then a recovery time at home of about six weeks. But then there were complications. Many complications.



After Richard suffered severe abdominal pain, it was discovered that part of his large colon was necrotic (dead) due to lack of blood flow, so he had emergency surgery to remove five centimeters of dead colon and reattach his large and small bowels. Since then he has had four additional bowel surgeries, and during the last few weeks he and has suffered fevers, high white blood counts, and irregularities in his heart rate and blood pressure. He also had a blood transfusion. Richard has been mostly sedated, intubated and on a ventilator, though there has been moments of consciousness. He had a tracheotomy to assist with breathing, but he has also been on a CPAP machine to try to wean him off the ventilator so he can eventually breathe on his own.


Of late, Richard has taken baby steps in the right direction to get better, but the truth is he is facing months and even a year of recovery time instead of the originally planned six weeks. This is not what he signed up for—a life-threatening condition after the first surgery—but Richard has faced other devastating setbacks in the past and managed to stay positive. It is well-known that Richard is a fighter, and this is what fighters do when presented with the biggest health challenge of their lives—they go to battle, and this mentality certainly helps, day by day, hour by hour, and breath by breath. At present, he is stable, and doctors are cautiously optimistic, but this has been quite the roller coaster ride since he checked into the hospital, and as his family and friends have painfully found out, this condition could change at any moment. 


This past June, because of his health issues, Richard posted on his Facebook profile that after 29 years he had decided to stop trying to find out what happened to his daughter. “I feel now that I will never get any answers to any of my questions,” he wrote. “I will leave this earth not knowing why Tammy was taken before myself.”


But then as the cold case started heating up over the summer, he decided to give it one last try, entrusting me with his binder of information his family collected on his daughter’s murder. 


Richard also pursued with the City of Springfield’s Parks Department the possibility of a memorial to Tammy—specifically, a bench in her honor. One of the potential options was putting it in a small park the city would create on the former site of Russell’s restaurant. However, since he has been hospitalized, the mayor has announced that along with the “pocket park,” the EMBR cannabis dispensary would be located there. They even had a groundbreaking ceremony. I am looking forward to seeing Richard’s reaction to the news of a pot shop being put on the site, next to a possible Tammy memorial, but part of me thinks that Richard, as the former president of the Pine Point Community Council, would actually welcome a $2 million business investment in a longtime vacant lot and eyesore. I really would love to be able to have a conversation with Richard at some point on the way to a successful, 100 percent recovery—but I know that will take time.




Along the way to recuperation, do you know what would really get Richard’s spirits up? I think you know the answer. Last June, in the same post that he announced his health problems, he provided an update on Tammy’s murder investigation: “Recently, I talked to the D.A., and they have informed me that there is nothing that can be done unless someone breaks down and talks about what did happen.”


Unfortunately, the case has had the same prognosis for nearly three decades.


Read Part 1


Read Part 2


Read Part 3


Read Part 4


Read Part 5


Read Part 6


Read Part 7


Read Part 8


Read Part 9


Read Part 10


Read Part 11


Read Part 12


Read Part 13


Read Part 14


Read Part 15


Read Part 16


Read Part 17


Read Part 18

Read Part 19


Read Part 20


Read Part 21


Read Part 22


Read Part 23


Read Part 24

Sunday, November 26, 2023

An Indian Orchard Cold Case, Part 2: A Person of Interest?


Above: Karen and her daughter, Jenna


After the murder of Karen Soucie, the case got cold quickly—pretty much immediately—because the cause of her death was unknown at first. Found in a full bathtub on November 3, 2000, it would be five months before the medical examiner told police that there was evidence of blunt trauma to the neck and chest, according to the autopsy, so then it was listed as a homicide.

 

And that, as far as we can tell, was just about the only evidence in the case for nearly two dozen years, other than the fact that there was no signs of forced entry into her Indian Orchard apartment, so the assailant was possibly someone she knew. It is unknown if DNA other than Karen’s was found at the apartment and preserved—but this is probably unlikely, since it wasn’t really a crime scene at first, with no signs that she had been slain.

 

Friends, family members, and Karen’s co-workers at Milton Bradley were unable to give police enough information to go on for anything substantial enough for a break in the case. If it were an instance of relationship violence, what clouds the picture is that she never brought home anyone she was dating who was important enough to introduce him—or even mention himto her family.

 

But now, thanks to the advocacy of Karen’s daughter, Jenna Soucie-Moore, it has recently come to light that Karen might have been the girlfriend of a man in his mid-twenties in 2000. “Just following the bread crumbs,” said Jenna. This particular bread crumb trail has indeed proven productive: in the past, Jenna had the name of at least one other paramour of her mother’s, but not her boyfriend at the time of her death.

 

I’m going to refrain from mentioning his name here because, well, I don’t want to be sued! And I have to respect the fact that even though he was possibly dating her, that doesn’t necessarily mean anything. Karen could have met up with a different guy that night—a stranger, a friend, a past flame—who knows? Or maybe a dirtbag followed her home and pushed her into her apartment after she unlocked her door, and the possible boyfriend knows absolutely nothing about it.

 

Still, Jenna would like to contact the possible boyfriend to glean any information he might have—especially who Karen might have socialized with during that time period, and possibly her whereabouts the night she was killed. For the moment, she’ll take any info she can get about him—including photos—and how to find him.




Karen's possible boyfriend lived near her Berkshire Street apartment, possibly in the mid- to late-1990s until 2001-02. He might have black hair and blue eyes, and frequented Indian Orchard bars like Potbelly’s (153 Main Street) and Christy’s (278 Main Street), as did Karen, where she liked to play darts and shoot pool. He was 23-26 years old, which would make him 46-49 now. Karen was more than a bit older than him, but Jenna said she sometimes went out with younger guys.

 

Indeed, what Jenna did learn over the years is that Karen, after she was divorced from Jenna’s father, was a social butterfly who liked to party, and was possibly killed on Halloween, when there is an uptick in bar nightlife. If she did go out that night, maybe somebody saw something, and Jenna will be happy with even the smallest details, because they might lead to bigger ones.

 

*  *  *  *  *  *

 

Jenna has come up with this lead because of dogged determination—and the help of a small group she calls “Karen’s Warriors.” They feed her tips. They comment on and share her social media posts. “Karen’s Warriors are real,” said Jenna, proudly. I, Hell’s Acres, would like to think of myself as an honorary member of Karen’s Warriors, but I came into this late in the game, when Jenna already began turning up the volume. However, she has assured me that it’s never too late join—in fact, she insists that me coming on board when the cold case is heating up may help produce tangible results because I have a following despite the fact that I write the blog anonymously.

 

I also consider Jenna a friend—a truly nice person who suffers from c-PTSD (Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) because of childhood abuse (mental and emotional), and at 12 years old being crushed by the trauma of her mother’s murder. She simply did not deserve the hand she has been dealt with. But rather than becoming resigned to being a victim, she became a fighter. And she wasn’t born with that fighting spirit. She learned it from her mother.

 

 

*  *  *  *  *  *

 

As a child, Jenna was beaten down with intolerable abuse by one of her stepmothers she lived with. She was isolated for months on end and sometimes starved. In what can be accurately described as a bleak, Cinderella-like existence, she was forced to do never-ending household chores. “And if I fucked up, I knew what was coming,” she said. What was coming was a beating. However, as the abuse progressed, and got worse, not only did the Springfield Public School System start to figure it out, but so did her mother.

 

She and her brother lived with her father and her stepmother in Springfield, and one time she was allowed a weekend sleepover at Karen’s apartment.



“Mom saw right through my lies—my cover story, my protective behavior for my abuser,” she said. “Mom, a child of abuse, was quick to pick up the signs. She saw how skinny, bruised, and broken I was.”

 

At the end of the weekend, Karen drove her daughter home, knowing that Jenna had plans to go to a friend’s house that day. Karen staked out her daughter’s house, waited for Jenna and Jenna’s father to leave, and then stormed through the door, waved a knife at the stepmother, and said, “If you lay your hands on my kid again, I will kill you myself!”

 

Although this story is one of a mother’s love, Karen did something else for her daughter that day. It’s best to let Jenna tell the rest, because she is a skilled writer, especially when it comes to telling people about her crusade for justice:

 

“When I walked into that door, with cops everywhere, and the chaos, amongst it all, I couldn’t help but notice the fear in my stepmother’s face. She was terrified my mom was literally going to kill her. She was crying to cops, I mean the fear in her, that weakness—I had never seen that side of her before.

 

“My mom knew that her words were not powerful enough to break the abuse control this stepmother had over my psyche. So, she showed me that even the biggest monsters in life have weakness, and it’s okay to stand up to her. I mean, I was watching her sob to the cops. She was pitiful. Not long after this, I stood up against my abuser. I fought back, because I remembered her weakness was in there. I had seen it for myself. I finally told the truth, I stopped protecting my abuser. I was removed and placed into foster care.

 

“My mom literally saved my life that day. She showed me no matter what, don’t forget that fighter in you, even when you’re scared. She taught me even the biggest monsters have weaknesses. It’s a lesson I never forgot. It’s a lesson I integrated into my life after I was saved from my situation. I suppose that today I use that same lesson my mom instilled in me: to fight the fight against those that took her life. To say even in the darkest hours—girl, we get up, every day, and we fight back.


I never got to thank my mom for saving my life the way she did—for turning me into a survivor and not just becoming another victim of child abuse. So mom, thank you, as I intend to use that same survivor/ fighting spirit energy into your case—to be your voice.”


*  *  *  *  *  *


While writing about her mother’s warrior spirit may be somewhat therapeutic for Jenna, make no mistake, having her life on display is difficult for her. “Being someone who’s always been so private about my hardships, this one definitely hits at the top of the list,” she said “My family and I have been fighting for 20 years, behind a curtain for so long—and now it’s out there. Constantly posting something that literally talks about how my mom was murdered kills me. I wish it was so different. I am on a rollercoaster of emotions.”


Jenna has suffered from nightmares, lack of sleep, and anxiety while fighting this fight. At one point, she deactivated her Facebook page—her main vehicle to spread the word—because of blowback over her efforts. It wasn’t long—a few days—before she felt her mother picking her back up, and she resumed.



Also making it difficult, she pointed out, is that the “defund the police” movement after the George Floyd murder had a negative effect on cold case investigations. It’s not as if the Springfield Police Department budget was slashed or anything, but Police Superintendent Cheryl Clapprood did say earlier this year that her force is in a “fragile” state because it is short-handed. After the racial justice protests, law enforcement recruitment and retention is a problem nationwide, and the Springfield department at the time of the interview was short more than two dozen people.


Not helping things recently is the fact that Springfield has a record-breaking 29 homicides this year, straining their investigative manpower.


“They have no resources,” said Jenna. “My mom’s case has ME—to send them strong enough leads, and they look into them.”


Yet she is heartened by the grassroots support she has been getting—especially lately. When she has her doubts, Jenna’s Warriors keep her humble and at the same time make her more resolute. On social media, she said, “every share counts” and “helps ignite the fire that is in me. I promise, until the day I die, to fight for her justice. I will never give up till her murderer is off the streets.”


Those with any information about the case—no matter how small, or how insignificant it may seem—should call the Springfield Police Homicide Unit at 413-787-6355. People can also provide information anonymously through Text-a-Tip by texting the word CRIMES (2-7-4-6-3-7) and typing the word SOLVE followed by the information.


Read Part 1