Crime Junkie - NEW SEASON: Park Predators
Episode Date: May 28, 2024Sometimes the most beautiful places hide the darkest secrets.audiochuck is back with the fifth season of the hit podcast Park Predators. Host Delia D’Ambra is telling listeners about murders and mis...sing persons cases in parklands across North America and beyond. Learn more at www.parkpredators.com. Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllc Crime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
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Hi, Crime Junkies.
It is finally summer.
And whether I'm soaking up the sun close to home
or heading out on some family adventure
or doing a new investigation,
the new season of Park Predators
will be playing in my ears all summer long.
And if you haven't already, you need to check it out too.
This season, Delia Diember is back
to take us all over the world,
covering mysteries from the most iconic park
spanning from the Grand Canyon all the way
to some more remote locations like the plains of Zambia.
I promise Delia is gonna tell you about a ton of cases
you probably have never heard of,
and maybe some that my crime junkies think they know,
but you can always count on Delia
to give you the full scoop.
You can listen to new episodes of Park Predators on Tuesdays.
And just to give you a little sneak peek,
I wanna share the first episode with you right here.
So buckle up, park enthusiasts, and remember,
sometimes the most beautiful places hide the darkest secrets.
Hi, park enthusiasts.
I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra.
And the case I'm gonna tell you about today takes place in the Grand Canyon
at a remote spot known for being a hidden paradise,
Havasu Falls.
This area technically sits outside of Grand Canyon National Park and is within the boundary of the Havasu-Pai Native American reservation.
This story is a tragic tale of murder, and unlike some cases I've told you about on this show,
it doesn't have a complicated narrative.
There aren't multiple people involved
or multiple theories about what might have really happened.
It's the case of a cold-blooded killing
perpetrated by a young man who was hell-bent on robbing
and killing the most vulnerable person
he thought he could find, A young woman hiking alone.
He used his lifelong knowledge of the remote rugged landscape he'd grown up in to try
and cover up his crime.
But eventually, it all caught up to him.
The murder of Tomomi Hanamura in the summer of 2006 should be a case that sticks with
you long after listening to this episode She was a young Japanese woman with so much life still ahead of her and so much left to give this world
But it was all cruelly ripped away from her far too soon. I
Also want you to remember this episode for another reason
Remember it as a warning to think twice whenever you encounter someone who says they're a local.
Maybe you've bumped into someone like this on a trail or while getting directions traveling
internationally.
Well, let this episode be a reminder that sometimes a local may be the last person you
want to encounter. This is Park Predators.
On the morning of Tuesday, May 9th, 2006, a housekeeper working inside a lodge on the outskirts of the remote Havasupai Reservation village of Supai opened the door to a guest
room only to see that the bed was still made and didn't look like it had been slept in.
She thought that was kind of odd, so staff at the lodge checked the records and saw that
a 34-year-old woman from Japan named Tomomi Hanamur was the registered guest for the room.
But from the looks of things, it didn't appear as if she'd stayed the night there.
Several of Tomomi's personal belongings, like her passport, were still inside the room,
which indicated to staff members that she likely was planning on coming back at some
point but for some reason just hadn't yet.
The source material isn't clear on when exactly the lodge's staff checked in on Tamami's
room again, but at some point that afternoon her absence became noticeable, and that caused
the employees at the lodge to grow concerned, enough so that they contacted the Coconino
County Sheriff's Office in Arizona to inform deputies that one of their guests
was missing.
The next day, May 10th, more than 40 Sheriff's Office deputies and search and rescue volunteers
made their way to the remote village and started fanning out to look for Tamami.
At that point, the crews were worried that she had fallen or become injured somewhere
on the rocky two-mile trail leading from the village of Supai to
Havasu Falls.
The trek wasn't the easiest to make, and because Tamami was believed to be traveling alone,
authorities figured it was possible she'd either gotten lost or needed medical attention
and had no one with her to call for help.
Along the hike to the falls, the lazy creek that bubbled through the small Native American village gradually got much swifter and eventually led to several tall cascading waterfalls.
A sense of urgency to find Tamami before something worse happened to her in that environment
was felt by everyone who was looking for her.
And just to give you a little bit of background on this geographic area for a second, it's
important to know that if you ever visit that part of Havasupai Reservation, you must be committed to enduring
intense heat, lots of hiking, and the inability to really reach the outside
world. This spot is for all my off-the-gritters. You guys know who you are.
Anyway, there is literally zero cell phone service in this remote town. It's
mostly just old buildings, horse-hitching stations, a small school, campground store,
and the tourist lodge.
It's one of the most remote spots in the Grand Canyon and has the reputation among visitors
as being a destination only few dedicated people can make it to.
There are no roads that lead there and you can only access it if you're walking, riding
a horse, or if you contract a helicopter.
As author Annette McGivney describes it in her book Pure Land, when you start hiking from the Suppai trailhead at the dead end of Indian Road 18, you're roughly 80 miles from the nearest gas
station. Once you get going, you'll meander for several miles down a steep descent into the Grand
Canyon. The iconic blue-green color in the canyon's creek and pools leads visitors through the
area to the remote village and eventually to Havasu Falls.
And it's the falls that are the main attraction for most everyone who visits the area.
They're what had attracted Tamami to the spot back in May 2006.
The feature's turquoise-colored water pours out roughly 100 feet and it's a site unlike
anything else on earth. The unique geologic rock formations around it can only be found in the
Grand Canyon and many people who visited say the spot has got a heaven on earth kind of vibe.
Annette McGivney wrote that roughly 20,000 to 25,000 people visit the falls every year just to
catch a glimpse of the amazing landscape
Law enforcement figured Tomomi had to be somewhere between the small village where she checked into her room and the falls
But where exactly in that two-mile stretch was what they were having trouble figuring out?
The month of May was when sup I was the busiest it would be all year
which turned out to be kind of a benefit for law enforcement investigators
because there were hundreds of people in town,
including lots of visitors that they could stop and interview.
But each tourist the Sheriff's Office interviewed had little to no information to report about Tamami.
No one had remembered bumping into her on May 8th,
the day before staff at the lodge had noticed her missing.
The only scrap of information investigators learned was that Tamami was last seen walking
in the direction of Havasu Falls.
In their hunt for clues, investigators checked a parking lot several miles back off of Indian
Road 18 near the start of the Supai trailhead.
There, authorities located a rental car that came back as belonging to Tamami.
The LA Times and Arizona Daily Sun reported that she'd picked up the car in Los Angeles when she'd
arrived in the U.S. the week before and then driven it to Arizona. Mark Schaeffer reported for the
Arizona Republic that Tamami's travel records showed she'd driven around seven hours from Los
Angeles to Flagstaff, Arizona, spent the
night in a motel there, then took off for the trailhead at about four o'clock in the
morning on May 8th.
She'd parked and hiked to the tourist lodge by that afternoon.
When authorities found the rental car, it was locked and a handful of Tamami's personal
belongings were still inside of it, which told investigators she'd likely taken only
what she needed to make the hike to Supai.
Basically, she had enough with her to go to the falls, stay the night, and then leave.
However, clearly she'd not left the area since the car she'd rented was still where she
parked it.
But critical items that were missing from both the car and Tamami's room at the lodge
were her cell phone, camera, credit cards, and cash.
Finding the car wasn't surprising since everyone who traveled to the village had
to leave their vehicles behind near the trailhead. The inability to drive to
Supai was a known thing. The fact that Tamami's overnight belongings had been
found at the lodge confirmed she'd safely made it to town and checked into
her room without any problems. But what happened to her after she left her room was the question police needed to answer.
The lodge and a public campground are the only two places in town where visitors to the canyon can
stay. The rest of Supai Village that's not designated for visitors is described as clusters
of dilapidated homes and makeshift buildings that belong to the local tribe members.
According to officers from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and an agent from the FBI,
violent crime was an issue at the time of Tamami's disappearance,
which is why the tourist lodge she'd stayed sits behind a 20-foot high concrete wall
and has an iron gate that staff members lock every night.
The threat of visitors' belongings being stolen is ever present, so essentially the tourist
lodge has become its own compound, isolated from the rest of the town.
And in 2006, there had been a spike in property crimes and assaults.
Annette McGivney reported that the two stationed police officers from the Bureau of Indian
Affairs, who worked in Subai, had been tracking a group of teenagers who were stealing tourist stuff so they could buy alcohol
and drugs.
Other more serious crimes the Bureau police were investigating included fights between
tribal members, usually involving a weapon or reports of child abuse.
By and large though, most of the crime in the area back in 2006 and even still today
is directly tied to the fact that two-thirds of the residents live below the poverty line,
struggle with substance use disorders, can't send their high school age children to schools
close by, or have limited access to healthcare services.
But a tourist vanishing without a trace was not something law enforcement in the reservation
back in 2006 encountered often.
Very rarely had someone who was traveling internationally been abducted or murdered in that part of the reservation, which is why Tamami's case stood out to everyone.
And within just a day or so, the story started to receive a lot of attention from the American
and global press. Several news articles reported that Tamomi had literally traveled across the world to visit the US during the summer of 2006.
She was from a town in a suburb of Tokyo and as a treat to herself for her 34th birthday, she planned her solo trip to Havasu Falls to celebrate.
And she was no stranger to traveling alone internationally.
According to Annette McGivney's reporting for Backpacker
Magazine and John Doherty's article for High Country News,
Tamami had actually visited spots in the Grand Canyon
several times before 2006.
She'd visited America a couple of times in her life
and moved to the US temporarily to attend a university
in Mississippi to learn English at one point.
But despite any hope that Tamami's general familiarity with the Grand Canyon or southwest
United States landscape might make it easier for her if she'd been forced to take shelter
in a remote spot overnight or something like that, no sign of her turned up.
May 11th passed and then the 12th came and went, but there was still no progress in the
investigation or any trace of Tamami.
Then on May 13th, 2006,
five days after she'd last been seen
checking into her room at the lodge,
authorities learned a swimmer at one of the falls
came across the body of a young Asian woman
who closely resembled Tamami.
The woman's body was drifting in a large pool near the falls.
Local investigators and special agents with the FBI who joined the search showed up to
the scene and quickly realized after looking at the body that the woman had sustained multiple
stab wounds. She was pronounced dead at 2.45 p.m. and within just a short time, Tamami's
missing person investigation was over and
a murder investigation was officially underway.
There was no doubt in everyone's mind that the woman who'd been found in the large pool
near the falls was Tamami.
As soon as she was positively identified, the FBI assumed the lead role in the investigation.
Apparently Bureau of Indian Affairs police and the administration of the Havasupai tribe
often allowed the FBI to come in and manage violent crime investigations, especially in
situations like this, or at least they did in 2006.
The US attorney for that part of Arizona at the time told reporters that it had been five
years since a homicide occurred
in Supai.
Annette McGivney reported for Backpacker magazine that after Tamami's body was carried
out of the area where it had been found, an Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter
flew her out of the canyon entirely.
The FBI immediately dispatched a dive team to search the pool she'd been found in for
clues and potential forensic evidence. What, if anything, the team found was not disclosed to the public. It's worth mentioning
though that the Los Angeles Times later reported that some of Tamami's personal items had been
located near her body, but what those items were is unclear. According to more reporting by Annette
McGivney and East Valley.com, the Coconino County Medical
Examiner conducted Tamami's autopsy two days later on May 15.
That examination revealed that the injuries the 34-year-old had endured were extremely
brutal.
Of the 29 stab wounds the ME noted on her body, 22 of them were concentrated to Tamami's
head and neck.
The others were to her arms and a hand, which the medical examiner noted were likely due
to Tamami trying to fight off her attacker.
The weapon the killer used was determined to be about 3 to 4 inches long and at least
1 inch wide.
In addition to her defensive wounds, Tamami also had a punctured lung and chipped
skull from where her killer had landed hard blows during the assault. In addition to observing
her injuries, the Emmy also collected Tamami's fingerprints, fingernail clippings, and a sexual
assault kit. And that last thing, the sexual assault kit, was just done to be extra thorough,
because according to Annette McGivney's article for Backpacker that I mentioned earlier, the Emmy didn't find any obvious signs that Tamami
had been sexually assaulted when he conducted her autopsy, but just in case, he collected
a kit anyway.
The autopsy report went on to explain that when Tamami was found, she was wearing brown
boots, a brown short-sleeve shirt, a dark blue short-sleeve shirt, green
shorts, all of which had blood on them, a bra, underwear, and socks.
The report specifically said she was wearing two pairs of socks on each foot, which I imagine
she'd probably done to prevent getting blisters while hiking.
I don't know for sure, but I can say that I have also worn multiple socks while hiking
to help cushion my feet in my hiking boots.
Positively identifying Tamami wasn't difficult because she had two tattoos which were unique.
One was a Japanese symbol inked on her left foot that translated to the word Hana,
the first part of her last name, which means flower.
And the other tattoo was a heart on her lower abdomen.
Chris Khan reported for the Associated Press
that Tamami's immediate and extended family in Japan
knew how much she loved visiting the United States
and traveling alone.
The plan, at least in her family's mind,
was for her to experience all the scenic locations
in North America she wanted to visit,
then return home to Japan to help care for her father
after he retired and got older.
When news of Tomomi's murder made it to her family in Japan, they were all understandably
devastated. Her father, Tetsushi Hanamura, declined to speak with journalists from the
United States or Japan once he learned about what had happened to his daughter. Via the
Japanese consulate in America, he said that the loss had caused him to be quote, very, very distraught, end quote.
And it wasn't just Tamami's family that was avoiding the press.
After the murder, the Havasupai Tribal Council, with the support of law
enforcement, made the decision to ban all journalists from coming into
the reservation to continue covering the story.
Annette McGivney wrote in her book, Pure Land,
that the council viewed the media attention the story was getting as a negative thing that would
hurt the $2 million tourism industry in the region. So the council enacted a strict no-media policy,
which everyone in the journalism community was forced to take seriously. Trespassing on the
soil of a sovereign Native American nation is a big no-no.
As a matter of fact, John Doherty reported for High Country News that the Bureau of Indian
Affairs took this matter so seriously, it issued a formal statement on its website saying
if media representatives violated the policy, they would, quote, be immediately detained
by BIA police, escorted off the reservation and film recordings
and notes will be subject to confiscation, end quote.
Now the Japanese media outlets were furious with this policy.
News crews and journalists from Japan had traveled thousands of miles to Arizona and
were even temporarily camped outside the boundary of the reservation.
Some of them had also posted up near the Coconino Sheriff's Office.
Annette McGivney and the Arizona Republic reported that journalists from Japan openly
expressed in their coverage of the murder that they did not think the United States
government was doing enough to investigate Tamami's death.
Their outrage was palpable, which only ratcheted up the pressure on the FBI to identify a killer
and make an arrest.
Simultaneously, tensions inside the Havasupai reservation among the locals were boiling
over.
Pretty much immediately after Tamami was found dead, a handful of locals sent out a very
clear message to everyone who called Supai home.
Do not help law enforcement or else.
Annette McGivney reported that in the weeks following Tomomi's murder, time and time
again the FBI agent in charge
of the homicide investigation was met
with closed doors in Supai.
Residents from the village were noticeably uncooperative,
and those who did speak with investigators
later suffered retaliation from other members in the tribe.
There were reports of people who spoke with police
later enduring harassment and beatings
at the hands of their neighbors.
A reason for this was the Havasupai's lifelong deep distrust of the American government.
In particular, lawmen and women who historically had never treated the nation humanely or fairly.
I won't go into too much detail of the lengthy history, but I think it's important for all
of you to know that basically in 1919,
when Grand Canyon National Park was established, the Havasupai people were cruelly booted from
their homeland and forced into the reservation under terrible conditions.
More than a century of trying to survive in harsh conditions with zero help and only threats
from the US government had left a deep-seated rift between the tribe and members of law
enforcement from outside the reservation.
Despite most members of the tribe refusing to cooperate with the FBI and Tamami's case,
one potential suspect did surface that investigators were forced to take a close look at.
According to Annette McGivney's reporting, an Irish man named Neil who'd been living
in Seabye for a few weeks leading up to the murder, was a person who investigators felt like checked several boxes as a potential
person of interest.
For one thing, Neil was an outsider to the tribe and had a head of bright red hair which
made him stand out compared to everyone else in the area.
At least one witness living in the village told investigators that they'd seen Neil
in the town's cafe on May 8th
talking with Tamami.
This account turned out to be true and was later corroborated by other people.
That alone made Neil interesting to the authorities.
When the FBI investigated him a little more,
they learned that he was a bit of an odd duck and had been living in the village for a few weeks prior to Tamami's murder.
He often slept on the ground outside of town near the creek or couch surfed between tribal
members' homes while partying.
And a few locals told the authorities that Neal had expressed a bunch of grandiose ideas
about how the tribe could and should rightfully claim their homeland back from the US government.
But what really piqued the FBI's interest in Neal were allegations that he'd made some aggressive sexual advances on women from the tribe.
After probing further regarding those reports, the FBI learned that Neal had crossed the line with a woman during a sweat lodge gathering on the night of May 9th,
and he'd been severely beaten for that.
Afterwards, he was found completely nude, suffering from head trauma along the Villages Creek, and he was immediately evacuated via helicopter on May 10th.
Neil being gone from the reservation on May 10th didn't mean he wasn't the killer,
because we know that he was alive and well on May 8th and 9th.
But the more the FBI agent in charge of the case learned, the less and less he suspected
Neel of Tamami's murder.
None of the source material really goes into detail as to how the feds cleared Neel.
All I could find was Annette McGivney's coverage that states the FBI told her that
Neel was interviewed but eventually dismissed as a suspect.
But while they'd been looking into him,
FBI agents had also learned a lot of other valuable information about solo female hikers
in the canyon. And this information struck a big chord. Annette McGivney reported in her piece for
Backpacker that while the FBI was conducting its investigation, reports slowly started coming in
from other women who said they'd been hiking alone or staying in the Supai campground around the spring and summer
of 2006.
And these women's stories were that they'd been violently attacked.
An FBI agent told McGivney, quote, These all happened within a few months before or after
the murder.
They wanted me to know because they thought it might help us find the killer."
Apparently, all these incidents that investigators were hearing about had initially gone unreported when they first happened. It was only in the wake of Tamami's murder that the victims of these
assaults had decided to come forward. In most of the cases, the victims reported that young men
from the tribe verbally harassed them with sexually intimidating comments while they'd been hiking.
A lot of the times this happened in secluded spots along the trail.
But in at least two cases, young men had just straight up grabbed the victims and attempted
to pull them off the trail.
Thankfully, these women from those assaults managed to ward off their attackers and get
away.
But no matter how hard the FBI tried to identify
whoever these local young men were
who were being accused of this behavior, they got nowhere.
Investigators chased down and followed up dozens of leads,
but nothing seemed to pan out.
At least, that's how it appeared to the public.
And then the case just went quiet for weeks.
In July, the FBI offered up a $5,000 reward for information,
but again, nothing compelling enough came forward and didn't help detectives.
Because the press was unable to report on the story due to the Tribal Council's standing media ban,
many people just kind of forgot about Tamami for a while.
That is until seven months later, when December 5th, 2006 rolled around.
That day, a federal grand jury formally indicted
an 18-year-old Havasupai member named
Randy Redtail Weskigami.
The five count indictment charged him with Tamami's murder,
kidnapping, and robbery.
Up until that point,
Randy's name had never been
publicly mentioned in relation to the crime. However, according to reporting by
the Los Angeles Times and Annette McGivney, he'd been in tribal custody
for unrelated assault charges since shortly after Tamami disappeared. John
Doherty reported for High Country News that in February 2006, Randy had been
released from the juvenile justice system,
then shortly thereafter, he was picked up
by reservation police officers
for assaulting a fellow tribe member.
The source material doesn't explain exactly why,
but for some reason, Randy wasn't prosecuted for the assault
and was yet again released from custody.
Three months later is when Tamami was murdered.
Then at some point, shortly after she was killed, released from custody. Three months later is when Tamami was murdered.
Then at some point shortly after she was killed, Randy was picked up again for an unrelated
case of assault.
By December 2006 though, the FBI considered him their prime suspect for her murder.
And according to the lead FBI special agent on the case, Randy had come onto investigators
radar not long after Tamami was found.
However, officials stopped short of saying how they came to suspect Randy, nor would
they comment about if a murder weapon had been located.
After being indicted, Randy was transferred out of Havasupai custody and into the custody
of the US Marshals to await his first appearance in an Arizona courtroom.
His case documents detailed how prosecutors were prepared to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that Randy was to mommy's killer.
The authorities believe that Randy had ambushed to mommy while she was
hiking alone on her way to Havasu Falls.
His end goal was to rob her of her cell phone, camera, credit cards and cash.
The indictment specifically said that her death was not just a result of being attacked,
but in fact a premeditated killing Randy had intended to carry out.
Paul Charlton, the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case, told the Los Angeles Times, quote,
The facts underlying the indictment reflect the last moments of a young lady who came
from Japan to enjoy the beauty of this country, and who, instead, met a senseless and tragic end to her life.
Our thoughts remain with Ms. Hanamir's family during this difficult time."
A week after being indicted, Randy was assigned a public defender who immediately filed a
unique motion.
It had to do with a small but very important language barrier issue.
Randy was Native American, and according to what his mother told the court, the only language
he spoke fluently or efficiently was Havasupai.
So his lawyer argued before a mandatory detention hearing that because English was not Randy's
first language, he needed to have someone interpret for him during all of his court
proceedings.
His attorney asked the presiding federal magistrate
to continue Randy's detention hearing
until the court could find a suitable have
a suit by interpreter.
But according to court documents,
the federal magistrate was like, no,
we're going to get this taken care of now.
And it didn't take long before an approved interpreter was
found and patched in via telephone,
which meant Randy's December 12 detention hearing got underway without much of a delay.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the magistrate denied Randy a pretrial release and deemed
him a danger and a flight risk.
A week later on December 20th, Randy and his lawyer and a court-appointed interpreter appeared
in court again for his first appearance, and he entered a plea of not guilty, which meant the case was headed to trial.
While all that was happening, news of Randy's arrest and indictment got out to the public.
Once words circulated that a local Havasupai teenager was alleged to be behind Tamami's
brutal murder, the floodgates from the press opened.
Publications started doing deep dives into Randy's background and learned
a lot about the young man who was now facing federal murder charges. And none of it was
good. The picture of Randy Weskegaumie's life by the time he turned 18 was not a pretty one.
According to multiple news reports, he dropped out of high school and by the time he was
a teenager, he'd earned a reputation of being a delinquent.
Prior to that, though, he'd been in trouble at schools in the reservation for everything
from verbal sexual abuse to assaulting other students to attacking teachers. Larry Hendricks reported for the Arizona Daily Sun that by the time Randy turned
18, he'd been through more than eight drug and alcohol treatment programs. He'd resume
using after each. According to law enforcement officials and Annette McGivney's reporting,
from his youngest middle school age, Randy had been drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana. In his later teen years, he developed an addiction
to methamphetamine. He'd spent a lot of time in and out of juvenile detention
centers in Arizona, and on several occasions when he wasn't in one of those
facilities, Randy was in foster care. Annette McGivney reported that after
Randy's parents divorced when he was five, they fought bitterly in tribal court over things like custody, child support, and restraining orders.
Randy had two other siblings who also were caught up in these legal battles.
Leading up to Tamami's murder on May 8th, 2006, Randy had been bouncing around living
wherever he could in Supi.
One Bureau of Indian Affairs officer told author Annette McGivney, quote,
his whole life he was a loner, end quote. Normally guys Randy's age hung out in groups together in
the village. Law enforcement said many young men like him who didn't leave the tribe or go off to
school elsewhere in the country usually found work helping their families bring tourists to and from
the village or drive mules through the canyon picking up and delivering goods. But not Randy. He had no friends or buddies he hung out with. He truly was
on his own. Despite by that point Randy's lengthy history of bad behavior and confirmed criminal
activity, as well as a strong case against him for Tamami's death, his father Billy Weskegami told Annette McGivney
that his son was not a murderer.
Billy openly admitted that Randy was a thief and struggled with substance use, but he claimed
that Randy would never have gone as far as killing someone unless he was under the influence
of meth.
Havasupai tribal leadership's reaction to Randy's indictment and arrest was a deep
sense of shock and surprise.
The tribe's chairman penned a formal letter detailing how unexpected Randy's arrest was,
as well as the fact that a murder had occurred in the reservation to begin with.
On September 18, 2007, what was expected to be a long ordeal in court with a jury trial
ended abruptly when Randy decided to take a plea deal for second-degree murder. According to court documents, the
prosecution decided to downgrade his first-degree murder charge to second
degree murder and toss out the kidnapping and robbery charges. However,
the court still had the right to consider those crimes when it came to
sentencing Randy. Interestingly, in the transcript for the plea hearing, Randy's lawyer revealed to the court that Randy spoke English just
fine. He never needed the services of a Havasupai interpreter. Yeah, weird, right?
In fact, Randy's lawyer stated that his client preferred to have all court
proceedings in English rather than Havasupai. Super bizarre. But anyway, after Randy
accepted his plea, more details of what had really happened between him and
Tamami on the day of the murder were revealed. According to the transcript
from the hearing, Randy admitted to approaching Tamami on a trail to 50
foot falls, one of the five waterfalls in the reservation, and the first you
encounter on your way to Havasu Falls.
He'd offered to escort her.
Using his knowledge as a local, he misguided her and cornered her in an area where they'd
be secluded from other people.
Once there, he said he grabbed her and held a knife to her throat.
After demanding her money and belongings, Randy said he stabbed Tamami four or five
times in the neck and dragged her body to the nearby creek where he covered her with vegetation.
In his confession, he provided no explanation about where the other 20-some stab wounds the medical examiner found on Tomomi's body came from,
or how she ended up floating in the tidal pool.
The magistrate presiding over the case accepted Randy's guilty plea without forcing him to reveal more details about the crime, which I'm sure for Tamami's family was probably
both comforting and a bit frustrating.
I mean, clearly he kept the true nature of the attack he inflicted on Tamami to himself,
and the court didn't push him to give more information, which might have provided a bit
more closure for Tamami's family and friends.
According to Chris Kahn's reporting for the Associated Press and Larry Hendrick's article for the Arizona Daily Sun,
during the plea hearing, Tomomi's father Tetsushi had an interpreter
read a statement he wrote about how the crime had impacted his family and life.
He said, quote, As for my family and me,
the ruling makes us feel as if we have just entered
a tunnel with no end in sight. Although I am swamped with daily work, there is not a
single day that goes by without thinking of my daughter. Her life was taken by someone
on this soil, far from home. If only I could be there to take her place. End quote.
On June 19, 2008, more than two years after Tomomi's murder, a federal judge sentenced
Randy to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
He was also ordered to pay several thousand dollars in restitution to Tomomi's relatives.
Speaking directly to Randy in court during his sentencing, the judge remarked that what Tomomi had encountered
was quote, the ugliest part of human society, end quote.
Today Randy is 36 years old and remains behind bars at a federal prison.
The only insight he's ever provided as to why he committed this crime was because he
admittedly had a bad temper.
In the wake of Tomomi's murder and Randy's arrest, the Bureau of Indian Affairs took
steps to hire two more police officers and add some more law enforcement presence on
the hiking trails that lead to the reservation's waterfalls.
But as a rule of thumb, the sovereign nation still says that all tourists should consider
their safety a personal responsibility.
Basically, you're on your own.
A remarkably ironic fact that I pulled out of the coverage on this story came from Annette
McGivney, a dedicated journalist who did a phenomenal job covering this case, both in
her articles for Backpacker Magazine and her book Pure Land.
She learned that Billy Wes Kagame, Randy's father, visited the area where Tamami
had been found shortly after her body was discovered. An avid woodworker and deeply
spiritual Havasupai native, Billy whittled a cross and erected it at the spot where Tamami
was believed to have taken her last breath. He did that several months before he ever learned that his own son was the person responsible for taking to mommy's life.
Park Predators is an AudioChuck original show.
So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?