Cold Case Files - REOPENED: The Well
Episode Date: March 13, 2025An elderly man, loved by his community, is found dead at the bottom of a well. But the case goes cold until the murder weapon is found, three years later.Greenlight: Start your risk-free tria...l today at Greenlight.com/coldcaseHomes.com: We’ve done your homework.Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at Shopify.com/coldcase and take your retail business to the next level today!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This episode contains descriptions of violence. Use your best judgment.
Children, people with disabilities, and the elderly, they're some of the most vulnerable members of our society.
Fortunately, a lot of people go out of their way to protect and care for them. Unfortunately, they're also the most susceptible to manipulation,
and there are some people who take full advantage of that.
In this case, an elderly man, Bruce Stark, was living alone,
but he was taken good care of by his neighbors,
who often looked in on him to make sure he was doing okay.
So when Bruce went missing, his neighbors were appropriately concerned.
The community began to search for their missing neighbor.
Four days later, they found him at the bottom of a well.
Bruce had been murdered.
From A&E, this is Cold Case Files.
I'm Brooke, and here's the laudable Bill Curtis with a classic case, the Well. It's a small place and you see for this window is open here.
That's the kitchen.
On a hill in New Mexico sits an old trailer.
Inside it lives an old man.
He's a lonely guy and a friendly guy.
I don't think he actually met anybody that he didn't like.
Very friendly, very open, always wanting to visit and talk.
Ken Hamill and Bob Nelson are Bruce Stark's neighbors
and make a point of checking in on the 72-year-old.
On the morning of September 11, Bob Nelson stops by.
Notice that he wasn't around.
Things didn't look right.
I searched the area for him, was unable to find him.
Alerted my neighbor, Ken Hamill.
He stopped by my place and asked me if I knew where Bruce was.
I told him, probably at home.
He said, no, I stopped over there and the camper here was unlocked and he couldn't find anything.
Nelson and Hamill returned to Bruce Stark's camper and began to walk the land looking for some trace of their friend.
When we did come down here, we saw all these beer cans laying here.
I knew Bruce didn't drink beer so I told Bob I said you know he had some
friends here. I'm immediately concerned because I found several items that
appeared that an altercation had occurred here. Right behind me here on
the ground I found a knife taken out of its case and I also found the spotting
scope lying on the ground that I didn't recognize.
I found his glasses laying by the front door and they were broke.
And also an empty billfold. We found this empty billfold up on top of the refrigerator.
I was concerned that somehow he had been involved in an altercation here and had been assaulted
and was lying on the ground somewhere.
A state police officer himself, Nelson
puts a call into the local station.
A more thorough search of the land, however,
turns up nothing.
I think both of us thought at that time
that Bruce is either dead or somebody had taken him and dumped
him someplace, but we really thought he was dead.
For three days, Hamill and Nelson continue to walk the hills around the last frontier,
looking for some sign of their friend.
In the end, however, Bruce Stark is simply nowhere to be found.
It was really the only place left to look.
We had searched the entire area, and this was the last place he could possibly be.
Five days after Bruce Stark disappeared, Bob Nelson and Stark's son Johnny Ray begin removing planks of wood covering a well just 200 feet from Stark's camper
the well itself is encased with this wooden box and it was locked with a padlock
and I was unable to gain access
but Johnny explained to me that this box is actually
a ruse and it's able to be removed.
And once we removed the box, we were able to get into the interior depths of the well.
The well is some 30 feet deep.
Johnny Ray finds a mirror and using the sun's reflection, throws some light down the dark
hole.
When we looked down into the well, we weren't able to see anything at first, but using the
mirror and the sunlight, we were both able to see Bruce down at the bottom of the well
submerged in water.
Bruce Stark is dead, his body draped with rope.
The cop in Nelson has a theory as to how his friend got there.
There was no doubt in my mind that this was a homicide,
because there was no way that Bruce Stark could have gone down into the depths of that well,
and then covered himself up with two by eight boards,
and then placed this heavy, very heavy box on top of the well itself.
An autopsy confirms Bruce Stark's death. boards and then place this heavy, very heavy box on top of the well itself.
An autopsy confirms Bruce Stark was beaten but still alive when he was thrown into the well.
Unable to make his way to the surface, Stark lay there probably four hours before he died of exposure.
before he died of exposure.
Generally speaking, yeah, there's not, there isn't a lot of crime out here. Mike Applegate is an officer with the New Mexico State Police.
On September 19th, he pulls up to the Last Frontier's place to see and be seen,
the Eagle Guest Ranch restaurant.
It's the only place to see and be seen, the Eagle Guest Ranch restaurant.
It's the only place to buy gas. It's the only place that you can go to eat, if you want to eat out. It's the only place you can buy groceries. So this is a gathering point.
And Mr. Stark made trips here on a regular basis, knew the owner.
Waitresses remember seeing Stark just days before he disappeared.
One waitress in particular recalls the old man
with two strangers.
We knew that Mr. Stark met with two individuals a day or so
part of his death.
And if I'm not mistaken, they might
have had dinner together.
Composite sketches of the two men are generated. No one, however, can put a
name to either face. Meanwhile, Stark's family tells police about some guns Stark had, now
missing from the camper. He had three long guns and two handguns. His son and or his
ex-wife had maintained serial numbers for each of those weapons.
Those were given to the investigators and they were entered into NCIC as stolen.
The federal database, however, turns up nothing,
and Bruce Stark's homicide is shuffled into New Mexico's cold files.
Meanwhile, investigators wait, wonder, and hope
that someone will be foolish enough to use
a gun that could connect him to a murder.
In everyone's mind, all the investigators involved in the case knew that at some point
a weapon's going to show up, either on a traffic stop, if an officer searches a car, or something. That something doesn't happen for three years until a gun turns up in a pawn shop.
I just wanted to draw your attention to some of the damage.
Bill Richardson and Jeff Campbell are investigators for the New Mexico Attorney General. Of course, one thing I found interesting was the fact that his pants had been pulled down,
indicating that perhaps that happened when he was being drugged as well.
In May of 1999, they pick up the three-year-old evidence file on Bruce Stark and try to make sense of his murder. The Stark case seemed to be one that was perhaps easier solved than others,
largely because Stark lived in a solitary environment.
It was one of the things that was obvious from the get-go with the state police and so forth,
that there were several guns missing.
Where did those guns go? It was a big question.
Five guns, to be exact, all owned by the murder victim,
all gone missing from his camper.
These firms were taken from the property,
we assumed at the time that he was killed.
You can always trace guns
unless someone just virtually destroys them.
Campbell and Richardson pull out serial numbers on the weapons
and begin cross-checking against national databases.
The first lead we got on the.357 Ruger was that it had been
pawned by a fellow by the name of Jack Rowe.
Rowe acquired the gun from another pawn shop in January of 1997,
one year after Stark's murder.
Detectives contact an agent at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and request
a complete workup on the Ruger's history.
So I asked him to trace, do a gun trace from manufacture, basically from cradle to grave,
of the gun.
He got back to me very quickly and we were able to come up with a transaction that had
been made in September of 1996.
The transaction took place within a month of the murder, close enough to have been pawned
by the killer.
For more specific information, Agents Richardson and Campbell need to head out to Albuquerque's
Hillbilly Pawn Shop.
Pawn shops in Albuquerque have a pretty good reputation as far as cooperation with law enforcement.
On a November afternoon, Campbell and Richardson sift through pawn shop gun records, looking for a pawn ticket to Bruce Stark's 357 Ruger.
By transaction records and so forth, we're able to track it to this pawn shop and associate the
pistol with the person who pawned it. The gun was pawned two days after Bruce Stark's murder by a
man named Edward Sedler. Campbell runs a background check and finds Sedler to be a man with a past.
He'd had some trouble with the law
and had had some trouble with drugs and so forth.
During the process of backgrounding him,
found out that he was tied to a missing vehicle.
According to police records,
Sedler and the second man, Philip Lopez, borrowed the vehicle from the local Salvation Army and never returned it.
Campbell and Richardson have no choice but to follow the trail as it leads them from pawn shop to soup kitchen.
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Witnesses had seen Bruce Stark with two other men the night before he had disappeared.
They were having dinner together at the only restaurant in town.
Having no leads or information other than the fact that several guns had been stolen
from the Stark home, the case came to a standstill until one of the guns resurfaced.
The gun was purchased at a pawn shop within a month of the murder.
The detectives visited a string of pawn shops
looking for the pawn ticket for the murder weapon.
Fortunately, they were able to locate the pawn ticket
and identify two possible suspects,
Edward Siddler and Philip Lopez.
This is just plain old-fashioned police work. This isn't CSI. It's not a bunch of chemicals
and reagents and everything else. It's just get out and pound the bricks and find the
answers.
On December 10, 1999, Shue Leather takes cold case investigators to the local Salvation
Army with questions about settler, and a missing truck.
In interviewing the manager, he indicated that he certainly knew these two guys,
had loaned his pickup truck to them to go on a camping trip at about the time that Bruce Stark was killed. According to the manager, Settler and Lopez
never returned the red pickup and were never seen or heard
from again.
At this point, they're looking like good suspects to me.
And the reason that they are is Ken Hamill,
who was a neighbor to the victim,
had told us when we interviewed him that about the time
the victim went missing, he had driven
by the Stark residence and glanced over at the residence and he could see Bruce Stark
sitting there with two other fellows and he also observed a blaze orange looking pickup
parked at the Bruce Stark residence.
Gold case investigators need to get a better handle on the movements of Sedler and Lopez at the time of Bruce Stark's murder.
When the Salvation Army tells them about EBT cards, also known as electronic benefits transfer, investigators realize they might have hit the jackpot. obtained those cards from Department of Social Services. We could sort of track
the travels of
the users of the cards.
In this case I believe either Lopez or Settler had used their card here in
Socorro
at about the time that the events
unfolded and resulting in the death of Bruce Stark.
Well what we're looking at here is that
we have two individuals,
one of them associated with the gun,
both of them associated with the pickup
that appeared to have been in the area.
And so things started looking likely
that there was something involved here.
Cold case investigators have enough evidence
to warrant a chat with their suspects.
The hope is that one of the two gets nervous and turns into a snitch.
I have a person saying something and I have a person saying nothing.
I have a person saying, you did it and you're not denying it.
Don't get testy with me.
Today's date is December 17, 1999.
The time is about 10.20 a.m.
And my name is Bill Richardson.
My practice as an interrogator is one of which
I try to make the subject I'm going to interrogate
as comfortable as I can.
I want to develop a rapport with that person.
I want that person to know that there's a certain amount
of trust going on here.
On December 17th, Agent Bill Richardson
questions Edward Sedler.
Can you tell me what happened back then?
Let's see.
Back then, I was in the Salvation Army.
And what were you a prisoner for?
For alcohol.
For drinking.
Richardson believes Settler and Philip Lopez murdered Bruce Stark in 1996.
Richardson shows the suspect a.357 Ruger, stolen from Stark's home at the time of the murder.
This is primarily the reason I want to talk to you. I'm going to show you the arm.
It's a 6-inch Ruger.357 Blackar Rebellion.
Do you recognize it?
No.
Richardson believes Sedler is lying.
The reason? A pawn ticket for the gun bearing Sedler's name and dated the day after the killing.
On the 11th of September, he pawned this, a physical pawn shop on Central Avenue.
Oh, Philip had, now Philip had used my license before. I haven't seen that gun.
Richardson pulls out the Stark murder file
and begins to work his suspect.
What we're investigating is the homicide death
of the man that owned the gun.
Jeez, that's what this is about?
It's a heartless gift to be here.
Of course, the obvious question is,
Mr. Sether, I'd like you to explain to me several things.
Why did you pawn this gun?
Where did you get this gun?
And is this your signature?
He immediately agreed it was his signature.
He immediately agreed that he had pawned it.
And then he went into the process of describing how his partner Philip Lopez had
done this very, very terrible thing.
I know Philip, but I think struggled with him.
What were they struggling about?
I think over money.
Did Philip strike no man?
That I don't know because I turned away from it.
I just turned away from it. I just turned away from it.
According to Sedler, he and Lopez drank beer with Stark in his trailer well into the night.
At some point, Sedler claims Lopez grabbed one of Stark's guns and began to beat the old man.
Well, that isn't a real part.
Yeah, it isn't a serial heart. Yeah, it's a serial heart. Jesus Christ.
I could hear what sounded like, you know, bone breaking.
I could hear it.
Philip started yelling at me,
don't ever say anything, or something to that effect.
I didn't know if he was really just unconscious
or if he was actually dead.
But he grabbed him from like the underside of his arms He was literally just unconscious or he was actually dead.
He grabbed him, put him like the underside of his arm
and started dragging him.
Then I kind of watched
and I just couldn't believe what he was doing.
Settler goes on to say that Philip Lopez
dragged Bruce Stark down to a well,
opened it up and pitched Stark in.
I saw absolutely no remorse.
I saw a fellow who was trying to figure out
how to get himself out of a very, very bad situation.
Detectives doubt Sedler's story
and book him on a charge of murder.
He is taken to Los Lunas, New Mexico,
where Philip Lopez is waiting to be interrogated.
When Settler arrives at Los Lunas again,
Philip Lopez sees him.
Initially, Philip Lopez made a comment
that, I believe now I'm going to spend
the rest of my life in the penitentiary.
Would you identify yourself by name, please?
Philip Lopez.
At 8 p.m., New Mexico State Agent Jeff Campbell sits down with Philip Lopez.
Sergeant Darrell Kindig watches from an adjacent room.
You know my name is Feather.
Edward Feather.
I have nothing to say.
I don't know what Feather was. The long one I'm asking you to do is remember September of 96?
Okay.
Years I don't remember.
Because I used to be a little bit of an alcoholic and I blacked out a lot.
I don't remember that thing.
I can normally tell when an interview is about to be won or lost.
No doubt in my mind this interview was about to be lost. He was so evasive in his actions and the way he was fighting through this interview,
I just knew this thing was going to be lost unless it was rescued.
Kindig storms into the interview room, pulls up a chair and gets in Lopez's face.
I have a person saying something and I have a person saying nothing.
I have a person saying you did it and you're not denying it.
You explain that to me.
Well, I'm just telling you, be the good guy. Tell the truth from the beginning.
Don't get testy with me.
I began just to detail by detail, lay down the facts that happened in the case and that we knew what had happened.
I watched him, I watched his behavior, I watched his composition of
his body. The thing is, is by you telling me the truth you are helping you. So if I
can't do anything that helps you right now, that's the truth. But you can help
yourself. He started crossing his arms and crossing his legs and this is a this
is a thing that tells
us the guy's getting defensive. He knows we're getting close. I pulled up closer
and closer and closer to him bringing my chair just inches away from his face and
began to tell him straight up we know that you committed this crime.
Just tell me from the beginning what happened. I don't even have to give you any questions. Just tell me what happened.
He got the old man by the neck and broke his neck.
As investigators listen, Philip Lopez flips the script,
claiming Settler was the killer,
and he, Lopez, merely an accomplice.
First, you got to borrow from him.
No, I didn't borrow.
He was going to rob him, man.
He said, well, f*** it, let's go for it.
He grabbed him by the neck, took him down,
and twisted his neck and broke him.
And that's how we drove him into the window.
What I was thinking is we're finally here.
All this time that the Starks had waited
for the information to come forth
about who killed their father.
We finally had the killers. That's what I was thinking.
Cold case investigators intend to charge both men with murder,
but need to corroborate details of the confession.
Bopes claims the men stole five guns and all from Stark,
dumping some of them along the side of the road as they drove to Albuquerque.
It became important from my point of view to have them take us back dumping some of them along the side of the road as they drove to Albuquerque.
It became important from my point of view to have them take us back to that location, if they were willing to, and show us where they threw those guns out of the truck three years earlier.
Today's date is December 19, 1999. This is Agent Mike Applegate.
The next afternoon, Lopez and Sedler lead investigators down a series of dirt roads
in a search for Bruce Stark's missing guns.
Within a few hours, two guns are recovered and the final questions to Bruce Stark's
murder are laid to rest.
Six months later, Edward Sedler pleads guilty to second-degree murder and
is sentenced to 40 years in prison. In spite of his confession, Philip Lopez decides to
take his chances and face a jury. On March 5, 2001, he is found guilty and sentenced
to life in prison.
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According to the Medical Examiner's report, Bruce Stark was most likely thrown into this
well, still alive, and laid here for hours, maybe days, before succumbing to the cold and dying of exposure. Just a few feet away, his friends Ken Hamill and Bob Nelson searched
for their friend.
Neither thought to take a look in the well
until it was too late.
It's a decision they think about even to this day.
Yeah, when I found Bruce in that well,
I called myself some pretty bad names, Ken.
I mean, I cussed myself.
I'm being so damn stupid.
I don't know if Bruce realized how many friends he did have here.
I personally just thought that he wanted to be somebody or have people think he was somebody,
not knowing that he was. When I looked for current information on Edward Settler, he didn't appear on the New Mexico
Inmate Locator.
That website is run by the Department of Justice.
Another non-official website I visited listed his status as currently incarcerated.
Philip Lopez filed an appeal in 2005 stating that the process leading up to his conviction
on felony murder had violated his Sixth Amendment right.
That appeal was successful and his felony murder conviction was overturned.
Lopez was granted parole in April of 2019.
Cole Case Files the Podcast is hosted by Brooke Giddings, produced by McKamey Lynn
and Steve Dallamater.
Our associate producer is Julie McGruder.
Our executive producer is Ted Butler.
Our music was created by Blake Maples.
This podcast is distributed by Podcast One.
The Cold Case Files TV series was produced by Curtis Productions and is hosted by Bill
Curtis.
You can find me at Brooke Giddings on Twitter and at Brooke the podcaster on Instagram.
I'm also active in the Facebook group,
Podcasts for Justice.
Check out more cold case files at AETV.com
or learn more about cases like this one
by visiting the A&E Real Crime blog
at AETV.com slash realcrime.
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