Dark Downeast - UPDATED: The Murder of Leslie Spellman (Maine)
Episode Date: August 29, 2022You’ve heard Leslie Spellman’s story on Dark Downeast before. I was initially compelled to tell Leslie Spellman’s story because I couldn’t believe a homicide on the perimeter of Maine’s most... well-known national park could go unsolved for over four decades and I couldn’t believe I’d never heard her story before. That was reason enough to shed new light on it the first time, and it’s even more of a reason to revisit it now.Since the first airing of this episode, a family member of Leslie Spellman reached out to me. Leslie’s cousin Margaret only met Leslie once in her life when they were just children, but the fact that her family member was murdered and that it remains unsolved is something Margaret cannot shake. Margaret wants to take action and seek answers for her cousin, Leslie.More is happening behind the scenes as Margaret and others in Leslie’s family prepare to bring new attention to the case, so I’m re-airing this episode of Dark Downeast to help in their efforts. View source material and photos for this episode at darkdowneast.com/lesliespellmanFollow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTokTo suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case Dark Downeast is an audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low.
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You've heard Leslie Spellman's story on Dark Down East before.
I first released this episode in February of 2021, just a few months after I started the podcast.
I was initially compelled to tell Leslie Spellman's story because I couldn't believe a homicide on the perimeter of Maine's most well-known national park
could go unsolved for over four decades.
I also couldn't believe I'd never heard her story before.
That was reason enough to shed new light on it the first time,
and it's even more of a reason to revisit it now.
Since the first airing of this episode, a family member of Leslie Spellman reached out to me.
Since her first email in early 2022, Leslie's cousin Margaret has stayed in touch.
Although she only met Leslie once in her life when they were just children, the fact that her
family member was murdered and that it remains unsolved is something Margaret cannot
shake. Margaret wants to take action and seek answers for her cousin Leslie. Margaret informed
me that Leslie Spellman's sister, Amy Vaughn, who supported and advocated for Leslie throughout the
years, traveling to Maine for press conferences, and keeping her name and face alive
on the anniversary of her death, Amy passed away in May of 2022. Margaret wrote in her email to me,
quote, Amy tried hard to keep Leslie's story alive, but now it's up to us, end quote.
More is happening behind the scenes as Margaret and others in Leslie's family prepare to bring new attention to the case.
So I'm re-airing this episode of Dark Down East to help in their efforts.
That's why I created this show, to offer a platform to the surviving family members in Maine and New England.
With that, I'm Kylie Lowe. This is the case of Leslie Spellman on Dark
Down East. The area we now call Acadia National Park on Mount Desert Island is the ancestral land
of the Penobscot Nation and Passamaquoddy Tribe.
The Wabanaki people have inhabited the area for more than 10,000 years,
long before it was a national park and popular destination for tourists in down east Maine.
Millions of people flock to Acadia National Park every year. Visitors pour into the gorgeous
landscape that truly has it all,
from its 26 mountain peaks to deepwater ponds, the rocky main coastline and thick pine forests,
and that salty down-east air that could never be captured by a Yankee candle scent.
Many well-known names have claimed a piece of Mount Desert Island as home at one point or another.
Among them, Rockefellers, Carnegies, Vanderbilts, and Morgans.
These wealthy summer residents built up their cottages as they contributed to a massive tourism boom,
telling tales of how beautiful Maine is this time of year,
and so their city-dwelling neighbors just had to come see Mount Desert Island for themselves.
But Acadia wasn't Acadia until 1929.
That moniker was given just as the Great Depression arrived.
The once-wealthy people from away retreated from their down-east escapes back to the cities from whence they came.
Tragedy struck Mount Desert Island and the National Parkland in 1947. Fire raged through the
dry autumn forests, destroying 10,000 acres of Acadia, as well as nearly 70 estates,
several historic hotels, and 170 homes in Bar Harbor. Can you imagine what Bar Harbor and MDI would look like today, with every one of those
early 1900s structures still standing? Think of how the landscape of the park would look if those
trees lost in the fire were given the last 70 years to spread their roots. The loss was devastating,
but nature has done as it does and it started new again.
According to author Randy Mentor,
you can see the distinct line of young trees that have grown where the fire burned what was once there.
The beauty of Acadia is hardly a well-kept secret.
Over 3.5 million visitors experience it for themselves each year.
But of those millions of people seeking beauty,
adventure, or solitude with a trip to Acadia, some never return home.
76 people have died in Acadia National Park since it was officially labeled a national park in the early 1900s. Many of them accidental tragic falls to their fate after attempting challenging hikes.
Like the two climbers who decided the precipice trail wasn't challenging enough, so they struck
out on their own looking for more thrill. They were first-time free climbers. They had no experience
climbing without equipment, gripping the slick rock with just their
fingers and toes, and yet they thought they could handle it. Not long into the climb, they lost their
grips on near-vertical rock faces and tumbled to their tragic deaths. The author of the book Death
in Acadia said she writes books about national park deaths to help people be more aware of what
they need to know, to help them stay alive on their adventurous trips to national parks like Glacier,
Zion, and of course, Acadia.
But her research and teachings shared inside her book couldn't have prepared the visitors
whose trips to Acadia ended in murder.
One of those murders is still unsolved over 40 years later.
It was 1977, and the July 4th weekend was just a few weeks away from bringing the height of the
tourist season to the Down East area. Maine seems to be a go-to retreat for celebrating our nation's birthday.
Toll booths are always backed up to the state line, the back roads to lake towns are congested
with city-like traffic, and coastal hotels proudly hang their no-vacancy signs as tourists roll into
town. Northeast Harbor is a little village on Mount Desert Island, with just about 2,000 residents calling it home year
round. It's the quiet side of Mount Desert Island versus the more well-known and more frequented
Bar Harbor. The Rockefeller family owns a summer home in Northeast Harbor at present time,
and it's not unusual to see super yachts pull into the harbor. But in 1977, it was home to just over 600 people. A town small enough
that it didn't demand a full police department. There was Ernest Coombs, a civilian police and
fire dispatcher, two island police officers, Matthew Stewart and Chief Maitland Murphy,
and Sergeant Tyrone Smith. When the phone inside the community police station
rang mid-morning on Sunday, June 19th, Ernest took a sip of his coffee and put down the newspaper
before answering a call that would knock the tiny town of Northeast Harbor off kilter forever.
The caller was standing at the phone booth in front of the fire station,
and his frightened tone made it impossible to understand much beyond one key fact. There was a body at the Azalea Garden.
The fire station being just around the corner from the police station, Ernest asked the man
to come see him in person. Gordon Wheatman and his family walked into the station and began to
tell their story. This next excerpt is from the Boston Globe, an article titled On the Cold Trail of a Killer,
dated July 17, 1977.
Gordon Wheatman said he had driven into the gravel parking lot of the Azalea Garden behind
the Astakot Inn on Route 198.
It was 9.30 a.m.
They had parked their car on the left-hand side of the parking lot.
He and his wife had just started to walk down the crushed stone pathway into the highly landscaped
azalea garden. Their children were behind them. The Wheatmans had walked less than 25 feet down
the pathway when they observed the body of what they thought was a man lying on the side of the
path. The person's face was splattered with blood. The
couple presumed that the person was dead. They never let their children see the body and put
them back into the car. Gordon drove swiftly to the nearest payphone to make the call that would
land him in the police station, retelling what he and his wife had just encountered.
Ernest took notes and quickly picked up the phone to call Sergeant Tyrone Smith.
Sergeant Smith reached the gardens in less than five minutes, approaching the scene that the
Wheatmans had described. Smith radioed into the station, 10-49. That's a homicide. Ernest Coombs told the Boston Globe,
quote,
In fact, the only recorded murder in the town before this occurred in 1789, before Maine was even its own state.
The convicted murderer was hanged by the sheriff and buried at the low tide mark.
Descendants of both the victim and the murderer still live in town. The azalea garden planted around Astakou Pond is one of the primary draws
for people visiting Northeast Harbor. The land on which the Astakou Azalea Gardens were planted
was a gift by the Rockefellers in the mid-1950s. The gardens are technically outside of Acadia
National Park. However, the proximity to the formal park boundaries means the gardens are often associated with the park
and are close enough to add to any Acadia National Park itinerary.
The stunning garden design with distinct Japanese-style landscaping was dreamt up and created by Charles K. Savage,
and it was intended to be the perfect area for a stroll,
just as the Wheatmans were planning that morning. By 10.15 a.m., Corporal Edward Mendel from the
Maine State Police Homicide Department was on the scene, and Ernest the Dispatcher was busy phoning
the reserve policemen and detectives who lived in town. Together, they sealed the scene and began
their investigation.
The first piece of information investigators learned was that this was not a man, as the
Wheatmans had initially believed. It was a young woman, mid-twenties. She was wearing a beige
sweater, a maroon nylon vest, and knee-length socks, along with unique jewelry, a wooden serpent bracelet,
a silver band bracelet, and a tiger's eye stone ring. She only had on underwear from the waist
down. Her shoes and shorts were missing. The woman's hair was styled in long pigtail braids.
She had olive skin and gray eyes. She died between 6 and 6.30 a.m. that day, just three hours before the
Wheatmans came upon her body. It appeared that she had died from multiple blows to the head with a
blunt instrument. And upon completion of the autopsy, this was confirmed. She had lacerations of the scalp and brain and fractures of the skull.
She had a broken upper jaw. The autopsy also showed no signs of alcohol, drugs, or sexual
assault. However, this did not mean there were not sexual motivations in the case.
Other clues they uncovered at the scene showed that she may have tried to defend herself,
but couldn't get her arm in the air to cover her head. It looked like she had been running
from her attacker. The murder weapon was found nearby, but details on what that object was
were not released to the public. For 48 hours after the murder, the woman remained unidentified. A sketch artist
drew a photo of her face and it was circulated in the media. Leads poured in, people looking
for their missing daughters and sisters, but still no positive ID on the woman. In the early
days of the investigation, the Boston Globe was pulled in to help identify the woman.
The vest she was wearing could be traced to an Eastern Mountain sports in Boston.
A sales clerk there remembered selling her the vest and some camping supplies.
He said she seemed to be new to the camping scene.
The Boston Globe published the details of this vest and the story, and it reached Mrs. Betsy Spellman.
When she saw the sketch of the woman found murdered in the gardens, she knew it was her
daughter. On June 26, 1977, the body was positively identified with dental records as that of 27-year-old Leslie Spellman. Leslie Spellman was a brave, adventurous soul. Her
bravery no more clearly demonstrated than when she helped stop an armed robbery in action at
the bank where she was a teller, and Leslie's adventurous nature drew her outdoors and into the wilderness.
She was from Hingham, Massachusetts, but she had just finished a week of backpacking with
her sister Amy on the Long Trail near Bennington, Vermont. Leslie planned to continue her adventure
north while her sister ventured onward to New York. After a night at a friend's house,
Leslie set out to hitchhike from Vermont to Acadia National Park with all of her camping equipment and her dog, Taylor.
The last time Amy saw her adventure buddy and sister, Leslie, was Saturday, June 18, 1977.
Hitchhiking was standard practice for Amy and Leslie, although they always traveled together with Leslie's dog
and Amy's two huskies. Thumbing a ride just used to be super commonplace in the first half of the
1900s because fewer people owned cars, interstate mass transit wasn't as easily available or
affordable, and there wasn't much fear around hopping into a vehicle with a stranger. Some of the first laws against hitchhiking were passed in the 1960s and 70s,
and the FBI started using scare tactics in campaigns to warn drivers that a hitchhiker might be a sex maniac or a vicious murderer.
It's curious to me, though, that those campaigns at first didn't warn the hitchhiker about whose car they may be getting into.
There was a campaign by Rutgers University Police that I found particularly problematic.
At the time, they handed out cards that basically said,
if you're a woman and you hitchhike and you're sexually assaulted, it's your own fault.
That was kind of the view of hitchhikers around the time of Leslie
Spellman's trip to Acadia. If you hitchhike and something bad happens, well, maybe you shouldn't
have been hitchhiking in the first place. Of course, that is tremendous victim-blaming, but it was the
view of the time. Leslie's sister Amy told the Boston Globe that she was concerned that because
Leslie was hitchhiking, quote,
people would have the image of her as some crazy hippie. Instead, she was a highly motivated,
hardworking woman. There seemed to be no end to what she could do, unquote.
As the investigation continued in the days following her discovery and identification,
Leslie's dog, Taylor, who was always her sidekick, became a key clue in the timeline of the attack.
A witness came forward saying that around 6.15 a.m. that day, they saw a dog being tossed out
of a car about a quarter mile from the Azalea Garden on Route 198. The driver
pulled off towards Seal Harbor, but the witness couldn't make out the license plate number or any
distinctive details of who tossed the dog. Before Leslie's body was even discovered in the garden,
an officer located a dog wearing a red bandana, wandering confused around the side of the road.
The dog had an injured shoulder.
Another witness, a gas station clerk, remembered a rusty, old, dark-colored car pulling into the pumps.
They added $3 worth of fuel to the tank, paid, and left.
But the clerk distinctly remembered a man driving the car,
and in the passenger seat sat a woman with a dog on her lap. He gave a description of the man, woman, and the dog. The dog was wearing
a red bandana. The clerk later positively identified the lost dog police rescued from
the side of the road as the same pup he saw that night. Amy, Leslie's sister, also identified Taylor
the dog and collected him from the kennel to bring him home to her family. With all of this information
and the witness statements, police determined that Leslie arrived in Mount Desert Island around 10
p.m. on Saturday, June 16, 1977, the night before she was killed. Leslie wasn't known to go camping
at campgrounds or formal camping sites. She was more of a find-a-spot-and-set-up-camp adventurer.
Amy said that Leslie loved the woods, so she may have set up her tent in the woods the night she
arrived in town. So, police searched for signs of a campsite in the
wooded areas near the gardens. They hoped her personal items, like a journal she always carried
with her, might still be there. But her personal items were never recovered. In an interview with
the Boston Globe one month after her murder, lead investigator on the case, Howard Mandel,
told reporters, quote, I wish I could say that we had
something solid to go on, but the real truth is that we don't have a thing that would help us
identify the killer, unquote. That's where the speculation, theories, and possible connections homicides began swirling. In July of 1977, a man named Lorne Aquin entered the Connecticut home
of Cheryl Bowden, killing Cheryl, her seven children, and her niece before burning down the
house. In the book Death in Acadia, the author notes that a FBI report surfaced showing comparisons
between the Bowdoin slayings and the death of Leslie Spellman. A few of those similarities
in the cases center on the dog, Taylor. While DNA, as evidence, was still a decade away at the time,
police found dog hair in Aquin's car that was, quote,
compatible, unquote, with Taylor's hair color, texture, and chemical composition. Also similar,
the suspected murderer did not hurt Taylor the dog, except for his minor shoulder injury likely
caused by getting pushed out of that car. In the Bowdoin murders, Aikwin let the family
dog out into the backyard, leaving it unharmed. Outside of the canine connections, there's this.
The murders were committed with the same type of blunt object, and Aikwin's appearance was similar
to the description the gas station clerk gave of the man that Leslie was assumed to
be with the night before her murder. Aquin also had dies to MDI and his whereabouts were unaccounted
for between June 17th and June 20th, 1977. This possible connection found its way into the press,
and whether you feel those connections are too loose or worth exploring
further, one man took great offense to the circulating story, the attorney of Lorne Aquin.
Attorney John Williams of New Haven, Connecticut said, quote,
Whoever made these charges in Maine should be dismissed. I'm even more upset that the media
has seen fit to print this. It's a classic non-story, unquote. Despite
it all, Aquin was put to trial, found guilty, and sentenced to life in prison in Connecticut in 1979.
Police have never identified a credible link between Leslie's murderer and Lorne Aquin. In the year 2000, Leslie Spellman's case saw renewed attention when
serial killer James Hicks was arrested in Texas and made a deal with prosecutors to give information
about the locations of his victims' bodies if he could serve his sentence in Maine. According to the Murderpedia summary of his crimes, James had
three victims, all Maine women. His wife, 23-year-old Jenny Hicks in 1977, 34-year-old
Gerilyn Towers in 1982, and 40-year-old Lynn Willett in 1996. But while Sgt. Troy Gardner couldn't confirm or deny if Hicks was a suspect,
there are parallels in his M.O. and the timeline of his crimes. Leslie was murdered around the
same time that James Hicks' wife, Jenny, disappeared. He also had ties to Northeast
Harbor where Leslie was found. Maine State Police Lt. Daryl Ouellette told the Bangor Daily
News, quote, anytime you have a case where a woman's body has been found and she died as the
result of foul play, especially in central Maine, it's safe to say we would have been looking at his
possible involvement, unquote. Lieutenant Ouellette also said that Hicks was very capable of doing what happened
to Leslie Spellman. Maine State Police Detective Joseph Zamboni told the Bangor Daily News in an
article titled, FBI Lists Hicks as Serial Killer, dated April 14, 2000, that nothing explicitly
links James Hicks to Leslie's case. However, quote, I think logic tells you that when you have a suspected killer in the neighborhood,
you have to consider that when you have unusual and unsolved murders on your hands.
Unquote.
James Hicks is serving life in prison in Maine.
At this point, he has not been named a suspect in Leslie Spellman's murder.
In 2007, new developments in forensic technology gave investigators renewed hope in uncovering even the smallest clue as to what happened to Leslie.
State Police Sergeant Troy Gardner said that sophisticated methods for analyzing DNA,
along with new ways to study
footprints and fingerprints, could move the investigation forward. Leslie's sister Amy was
at the news conference that day to show her continued support and dedication to the search
for answers in her sister's murder. Amy Vaughn told reporters, quote, it's never over. It never goes away, unquote. In 2017, a major
milestone in Leslie's case passed without answers. 40 years since her brutal murder in Acadia
National Park. And it seemed to pass without any significant attention in the media. Two years later, in the summer of 2019, one short article
was published on foxbangor.com on June 17, 2019. The Northeast Harbor town manager told the reporter,
quote, unfortunately, I don't think we know a lot more today than we did 40-some years ago, unquote. This simplified version of the facts released to the public on
Leslie Spellman's case is this. Leslie Spellman and her dog arrived in Mount Desert Island late
on Saturday, June 18th, 1977. She was found dead along the walking trail of Astakou Garden, just after 9 a.m. on Sunday, June 19th, 1977.
Based on the autopsy,
she was likely killed between 6 and 6.30 a.m. that day.
She was killed at that spot, not dumped there.
Amy Vaughn said in that 2007 news conference, quote,
"'She was so precious to kill someone like that
who was so defenseless. I just can't understand. No matter what kind of monster did this,
they must think about it. It must follow them, unquote. I share in Amy's sentiment,
it must follow the monster who did this to Leslie.
I also share in the investigator's lingering, decades-old hope that someone, somewhere, will come forward with details even after all this time.
Maybe hearing this podcast will recover a long-buried memory.
Or maybe you know someone with tales of their 1970s summers in Bar Harbor.
Maybe someone will remember their conversation with a young woman
on her way into the Acadia woods with a scruffy pup at her side.
One thing's for sure,
someone knows what happened to Leslie Spellman.
If you have any information that could help in the cold case investigation of Leslie Spellman's murder from 1977,
please contact the Maine State Police Major Crimes Unit, North,
at 207-973-3750.
Any information can help Leslie Spellman's surviving family members finally have closure.
Thank you for listening to Dark Down East.
Sources for this episode include reporting by Anson Smith in the Boston Globe,
Nitnoy Ricker at WVII Fox Bangor,
Tony Lynn Robbins for the Bangor Daily News,
and the book Death in Acadia by Randy Minetour.
All additional sources cited and referenced are linked at darkdowneast.com
so you can do some digging of your own.
Thank you for supporting this show and allowing me to do what I do.
I'm honored to use this platform for the families and friends who have lost their loved ones,
and for those who are still searching for answers in cold missing persons and homicide cases.
I'm not about to let those names or their stories get lost with time.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is Dark Down East.