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.


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Sunday, November 19, 2023

The 1994 Fox Road Murder Mystery, Part 17: An Unlikely Tie to the Molly Bish Case?

 
One person who keeps being brought up in Tammy Lynds cold case, let’s call him “Evan,” had been charged with raping two girls in Springfield at one point. The older girl was a close friend of Tammy’s, as was the girl’s brother, so Tammy spent a lot of time over their house. So did Evan, who was married to the younger girl's mother.

The charges were eventually dismissed, but a man who knows the Lynds family—and also knows the older girl who Evan allegedly raped— thinks that Evan might be tied to another crime: the unsolved murder in 2000 of 16-year-old Molly Bish, whose remains were found in woods in the town of Palmer. He has his suspicions about the guy partly because his car was eerily similar to the one authorities were looking for. Evan had a white car “that suddenly caught fire for no reason and was towed away and hauled off to the junkyard,” he said. Molly’s mother Magi Bish, who dropped her daughter off to her lifeguard job at Comins Pond in Warren the day she disappeared, happened to notice the day before a man smoking a cigarette in a white car. The same car was also allegedly seen in the area the day of Bish’s disappearance. Police created a sketch of him based on Magi’s description, and he does look a bit like Evan—especially with his mustache (above and below):


 

The car, according to Magi, was an older sedan, and looked like this, only there was rust on the side:




“The girls told me how [Evan] used to pick up young girls in that white car,” said the friend of the Lynds family.


A dump truck driver taking sand to the Comins Pond beach also recalled seeing a white sedan moments before Molly and her mother arrived. A worker in St. Paul’s cemetery remembered a white sedan parked in the cemetery later that morning, and a path happens to lead from the pond to the cemetery.

 

And  get this—Tammy had met Molly Bish a few times because the younger girl was good friends with Molly when she got older. “Tammy met Molly through the younger girl,” he said. “The girl is the one who actually told me about her suspicions that [Evan] might have killed Molly—how he was in that area that day.” And when the sketch of the suspect was publicized, “His own kids asked why Daddy’s picture was in the paper,” he said.

 

The man who points out these weird coincidences—and they are eerie, with Evan being tied to the two teenage girl murder victims—said he did report all this “to the proper authorities.” To him, the timing of the burning of his white car, along with Evan’s resemblance to the sketch, means that Evan should certainly be looked into, even though his rape charges “went away.”


In recent years, there was a focus on another white car. In 2017, a tipster alerted investigators that a white car possibly linked to the case, a 1986 Buick LeSabre, was buried in the now-defunct campground in West Brookfield where a person-of-interest had been staying. A criminologist from the University of New Haven brought ground-penetrating radar to the site and found an underground “anomaly,” but the search yielded nothing.


The owner of the car that they were looking for was reportedly not at the campground on the day of Bish’s disappearance, but showed up the next morning, appearing drunk. A witness said that the unidentified man had told him that "something bad happened" and that he was “in the woods all night.” He also allegedly had bloody scratch marks on his face, and that he resembled the composite sketch of the suspect. The man denied any involvement in the murder.


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Some people I knew were familiar with Evan because he grew up in Sixteen Acres, and they always found him strange. As a junior in high school, he was overly friendly on the bus to freshmen—at a time when no upperclassman would talk to a ninth-grader on the bus. The following year, when they were at our neighborhood hangout called The Gully on Fairlawn Street, a couple of times he volunteered to take them down to Enfield to buy beer when the drinking age was only 18 in Connecticut. They thought it was a better idea for him to go to the package store alone with their money and bring the beer back to The Gully, since the police might nab him for procuring alcohol for minors if they pulled him over with 16-year-olds in the car. But he insisted both times that they come with him.


A few years prior, some of the older kids who hung out at The Gully before we did lured an openly gay teen into The Gully woods and beat him up. Then they let it be known that Evan was next because he was close to the kid, and he was a bit too chummy with younger guys in the neighborhood, but they never carried through with the threat.


My friends also thought Evan was gay, but if he was willing to go on beer runs, they reasoned, who cares?



★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★



In 2018, a Hell’s Acres reader posted a link to my first post on the Tammy Lynds murder (below), and a person responded to the post: Melissa Antoinette Garza, who claimed Tammy had been to her house when she was younger, and she had her suspicions about her father, the late Eugene McGahee, “who may have been involved.” She wrote that her father was a “sociopathic child molester who raped 70-plus kids,” and that “some of my family (myself included) always thought my father killed Molly Bish. There's a lot of parallels and coincidences between the Bish case and my dad's whereabouts.



Garza, after talking it over with her husband and brother, texted police at 274637 with the information. “When I spoke with my brother, he was like, 'You're not being crazy. It's very possible.' I thought I had to reach out,” she wrote. “I hope one way or another the police do find who is responsible for Tammy's death so that her family can have some peace. If it does happen to be my father, I will reach out personally to Tammy's family and see if there's anything they need me to do.”


McGahee, a former Milton Bradley employee, died in 2014. “It just sucks that he died before going to prison,” wrote Garza. “In the last five years before he died, it seemed like there was going to be some crackdown, because he escaped to Florida and both the police and private investigators started contacting me and Geno (my brother) for info but we didn't have much because we wrote him off. I had little to do with him after 1997. I know he burned down a woman's house that wouldn't leave it to him, and he burned down my mom's first house and the family suspected him in killing one foster kid who ran away (Maggie) and ended up dead that night, and we have our suspicions about Molly Bish. If there's any DNA that they want to test, I'll be happy to offer mine because Gene was my bio father and if he did do it and left DNA, maybe they can tell by my DNA.”


Garza’s mother, Wanda, started taking in foster children in 1987 and sometimes had as many as 10 foster kids in her home at 9 Letendre Avenue in Ludlow—only a three minute drive from Tammy Lynds’ grandparents’ house. A newspaper archive search didn’t reveal an unsolved murder or a suspicious death of anyone named “Maggie” or Margaret, but in February of 1977 there was a fire in a cottage owned by Eugene McGahee in the Pine Point neighborhood, and it was determined to be arson, but there was nothing in the newspaper that determined who set the blaze.



★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Some readers may think I’m jumping the shark on the Tammy Lynds case in considering long shots like serial killer Alfred Gaynor in my last post, or her tenuous connection to the Molly Bish murder. In response, I’d say that in cases like Tammy’s, sometimes you have to think outside the box without diving too deep into rabbit holes. I didn’t bring up these “way out there” possibilities—others did, so they’re worth at least a mention, especially because Tammy is a common thread in two Molly Bish scenarios.


Also, in the Tammy Lynds investigation, facts have been coming my way haphazardly, unlike the Danny Croteau case, where there was an established timeline and extensive case files and witness statements to comb through. In Tammy’s case, the files have been lost, only several of Tammy’s friends have come forward, and I’m getting information out of only one cooperating Lynds family member out of four.


Nonetheless, you undoubtedly feel that by this point the suspect list should be shortening, not widening, but here we are. Your reasoning is similar to what Lieutenant Joe Kenda, from the show American Detective says: “Don’t tell me what you think. Don’t tell me what you believe. Just tell me what you can prove. If you can’t prove it, I don’t care what you think or what you believe.”


I still THINK Tammy Lynds was killed by a friend or friends, but I’m not ruling out ANYTHING.


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Thursday, November 16, 2023

The 1994 Fox Road Murder Mystery, Part 16: Missing Jewelry (?) and Suspicious Characters


A commenter suggested after my last post that the smart phone belonging to Tammy’s “friend,” Jason “Lumpy” Francis, should be checked by police. Does it still exist? He overdosed two years ago, so it could still be laying around, and he might have been sending and receiving messages and calls right to the very end.

He’s got a point: it’s obvious Francis was hiding something—possibly his or a friend’s involvement in the murder of Tammy Lynds in 1994. After Francis died, someone asked Lumpy’s friend if he thought he killed Tammy. With a wide smirk, he answered, “Yeah, he could have.” However, when another person confronted him soon afterward, saying “I think you killed that girl—you and your friends,” this time he was singing a different tune. His response: “Nobody was there!”

That same smirker also approached a good friend of Tammy’s back in 1994, a month after Tammy was found. “He told me he knew who killed Tammy and would never tell anyone who it was,” he said. “It ended up being a violent night.” Indeed, they got into a vicious fistfight.

An anonymous commenter in the last post asked, “When you talk about these guys destroying the evidence, are you talking about Tammy’s earrings?” I had heard a rumor that jewelry was taken from Tammy, but never heard anything specific. The commenter would not elaborate. So I asked the person who got in the fight with the smirker, and he said that the guy had also “mentioned Tammy’s missing jewelry to me, but would not tell what type of jewelry.” He said he told the police multiple times about his suspicions about the smirker. When asked if he had heard from anyone else about the jewelry, he said, “There were numerous people that talked about it.” What does he think of this dude’s potential involvement in Tammy’s murder? “To this day, I think he knows who did it or had something to do with it,” he said.

In the autopsy report, jewelry was mentioned among the items found on Tammy, including two necklaces (below). Ricky, her friend, had told Hell’s Acres that when questioned by police, they showed him Tammy’s rings when they questioned him, but Richard, her father, doesn’t recall being shown rings by the police. The “identification” below includes a dental match and “jewelry, personal effects ID by family father,” but Richard has said he didn’t pay that much attention to Tammy’s jewelry, so his identification was largely made by recognizing Tammy’s purple and white sneakers.

The idea of missing earrings, if accurate, is puzzling. That’s what is so frustrating about a hit-and-run anonymous post without any explanation. Is it legit? Did someone, like her sister, see her with earrings that night, but they weren’t found with her body? Here’s a possibility (or a wild guess): was she found with only one earring, and the other wasn’t recovered at the scene, so the attacker potentially took it as a gruesome souvenir?

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Here’s something from the paranormal department: a former boyfriend of Tammy’s (and rumored to be her boyfriend when she went missing), had his home’s front door camera capture on video something curious in his living room when he opened his door: a figure that looks alarmingly like the Grim Reaper on the couch next to his wife!



How weird is it that a skeletal figure in a robe appears in the house of an old lover a girl who was found as a skeleton? (Or is it just a bunched up blanket?)

Here is the reaper in question accentuated when converted to grayscale:

His wife never saw robed skeleton with her naked eye, although she sensed it: she felt cold and pain on the side of her body close to where the bony figure sat.

And how freaked out was the guy over this footage? Creeped enough for he and his family to move because of it.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

 

Speaking of paranormal, ghost hunter and videographer Lou Rock and Tammy’s sister Allison visited the house on the corner of Jennings Street and Grayson Drive—a home that has a view down the length of Fox Road, where Tammy was killed:

If you can picture less tree overgrowth obstructing a second-floor bedroom window, someone had the ability to see that night (if they had looked) how Tammy ended up behind a log next to the road if she were dumped from a car:

Or, if she were attacked on Fox Road, on a quiet summer evening, sounds of the struggle would have been audible if there were screams.

Or, alternatively, the viewer could have seen Tammy walking down the road and then jogged up to her, because, you see, there was a sex offender living in the house for decades. When he was 17, he raped a five-year-old boy in the woods across from the end of Jennings, in the North Branch Tributary Park behind Slater Avenue.

Lou Rock knew the people who were renovating the house, which prior to the extensive work on the place, was decrepit, filled with junk, and reeked of cat urine. Apparently, the guy was a hoarder—there were reportedly several shacks on the property, built apparently when he ran out of room to store his possessions. There was also an underground bunker in the backyard that is reminiscent of the pit across the street from where Tammy was murdered.

He sold the dump for $40,000 in 2020 and now lives with relatives down the street. “I’m single with no kids, never married, still looking,” he declares on his Facebook profile. I’m shocked: he’s such a catch. Apparently none of the lovely Asian “models” that he’s Facebook friends with think he’s marriage material. He’s trying, though. Here’s one of his posts, under a photo he took through his windshield of the empty Raymour & Flanagan parking lot on Boston Road at the end of Arnold Avenue: [name redacted] hey baby I’m having a hard time getting you reaching you if you can put up a site that I can get in to talk to you would be nice I can’t get you for some reason I don’t know why I’m trying my hardest to figure this one out.”


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

 

On the subject of creeps, Tammy’s mother Susan, in her notes, had floated the possibility of Springfield serial killer Alfred Gaynor’s involvement in Tammy’s slaying:


Gaynor, who killed nine women, took his first victim in April of 1995, nine months after Tammy went missing. But what if he had gotten started earlier? His relationship with the women he murdered was always based on mutual cocaine consumption, but what if he happened upon Tammy walking on Fox Road or somewhere else that night? He was from nearby Indian Orchard, so he might have known about the Fox Road shortcut from Pine Point to Sixteen Acres, especially since one of his victims, Joyce Dickerson-Peay, lived in Colonial Estates—extremely close to Fox Road. Incidentally, Gaynor lived in the Moxon Street projects, where Pine Pointers occasionally bought weed and other drugs.

He “posed” two of his victims, which some serial killers do: staging the body in positions for attention and shock value. Gaynor propped Yvette Torres up against the bathroom door of her apartment, and Dickerson-Peay was found in some bushes next to an abandoned restaurant on East Columbus Avenue—her left hand had been positioned on her abdomen, and her arm was propped up on branches.

Tammy, as far as we know, wasn’t posed—although her feet were touching a log that served as a guard rail on Fox Road. However, she was found when a boy had spotted a discarded hubcap in the brush and investigated. Since wheel covers can be expensive, a Hell’s Acres reader pondered about the possibility that the object was left as a marker so someone would discover Tammy.

But here’s the kicker: two of Gaynor’s victims were robbed of jewelry, including his first victim, Vera Hallums. As for his fourth victim, Robin Atkins, he took her earrings. They weren’t a trophy, though. He pawned them for $12, which he promptly spent on crack.

There was no connection found between Gaynor and several other unsolved homicides of Springfield women found dead between 1990 and his arrest on April 8, 1998. They were Shana Price (1990), Lisa DiSilva (1991), Corine Lee (1992), Tammy Lynds (1994), and Celestina Perez (1995). Two of them were teenagers: Price, 17, and Lynds, 15. Three of them were found on parkland: Price (Blunt Park), Lynds (North Branch Park), and Perez (Gurdon Bill Park).

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★


Regarding the lost case files and missing evidence in the Tammy Lynds murder investigation, there are some who simply can’t believe the description in Part 11 of the poor condition of the evidence room in the Pearl Street headquarters not too long ago, and the haphazard ways of storing evidence when they ran out of room for it—including evidence kept in holding cells and in a trailer truck behind the building.

Well, pictures are worth a million words. Stolen bikes stored in the police garage:

Confiscated computers kept in a holding cell:


Words of warning below on the wall of another holding cell in which evidence was kept. Yes, if you look closely, that says “Beware of possums and rodents.” The “dog ate my homework” trope takes on a whole new meaning: “the rats ate our evidence.”

Missing jewelry. Missing case files. Missing evidence. What is going on here?

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