Park Predators - The Campfire
Episode Date: March 25, 2025When five teens visit a remote Iowa preserve but only one leaves alive, authorities are determined to catch three killers who have seemingly gotten away with a brutal crime. View source material and ...photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-campfire Park Predators is an audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @parkpredators | @audiochuckTwitter: @ParkPredators | @audiochuckFacebook: /ParkPredators | /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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Hi, park enthusiasts.
I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra.
And the story I'm gonna tell you about today is a harrowing one.
It happened more than 50 years ago, but still remains one of the most notorious multi-victim
homicide cases in the state of Iowa.
At least two books have been written about it, and television programs for Oxygen and
Investigation Discovery have both covered it.
A listener wrote to me last year and suggested I feature the case because it seemed like
a story that was appropriate for this audience, and after researching the details of the crime,
I can say that they were absolutely right.
I was simultaneously heartbroken and riveted with the information I read about because,
despite four people losing their lives in what I can only describe as something out
of a nightmare, there was someone who survived this terrible tragedy.
An individual that, to this day, is nothing short of a hero for ensuring justice was served
so many decades ago.
It takes place in Gitche Manitou State Preserve, which is located in the far northwest corner
of Iowa, right along the South Dakota border.
According to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, the preserve is 91 acres and considered
one of the most remote places in the state.
It's widely known for having a lot of pink quartzite, an extremely hard rock that begins
its lifespan as sandstone, but over time transforms into a really durable substance after being
exposed to a lot of heat and pressure.
Gitche Manitou is a Sioux phrase that when translated into English means great force of nature or great spirit.
And I imagine anyone who's been to this recreation space would agree with that moniker.
It truly is a force of nature with its stunning views, unique geological formations, and more than 130 species of plants.
It's also a fitting description for the lone survivor in this story.
A young woman who became a force of nature when it was time to face the ruthless human predators
who murdered her friends and nearly took her life at the same time.
This is Park Predators. On Sunday November 18th, 1973, a man and woman driving through Gitche, Manitou State
Preserve in Iowa were having a normal morning test driving a car they were thinking about
buying when suddenly they noticed something strange laying in a patch of thick grass on
the side of the road.
As they got closer to the mysterious objects, the more they slowed their car down until
finally the man behind the wheel pulled over and got out.
He instructed his wife to just stay put in the car while he walked toward the
section of tall weeds to investigate.
But just a few feet into his track,
he abruptly stopped because they're lying facedown in the grass where the
bloody bodies of three young men who all appeared to have been shot in their
backs and chests with a shotgun.
The victims were clearly dead and laying near a small parking area not far from an entrance to the preserve.
Not long after the couple found the bodies, members of law enforcement from Minnehaha County Sheriff's Office,
Lyon County Sheriff's Office, and Sioux Falls Police Department were alerted to the situation and responded to the scene.
and Sioux Falls Police Department were alerted to the situation and responded to the scene. The available source material seems to indicate that because this type of crime was so unusual
for the local jurisdictions, the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation was called in to
handle the case and process the crime scene.
Based on what I found in the source material, this entity used to be called the Iowa Bureau
of Criminal Investigations, but it now has a new name.
Just so there's no confusion, I want to refer to it by what it's known as now.
Anyway, when DCI agents arrived and started trying to piece together what had happened,
they walked a short distance away from the three bodies in the grass and into a clearing
that seemed like a place you'd have a campfire.
There they made another horrific discovery.
A fourth victim, a
young man dead from a shotgun blast to the head. Sitting near his body was a
partially smoked marijuana joint, the guitar leaned up against a tree, and
several spent shotgun shells scattered on the ground. DCI agents collected those
shells as evidence and quickly determined they belonged to three
different caliber shotguns, a 12 gauge, a 16 gauge, and a 20 gauge. Based on everything at the
scene, it became pretty clear that the campsite was the location where the
initial attack had begun. The victim whose body was there seemed to have been
killed there and most likely the three other victims who'd ended up in the grass
had been transported away from the campfire area and then fatally shot. Why? Investigators weren't sure yet, but for
the time being they needed to focus on something else equally as important
identifying all the victims. After checking the young men's wallets
investigators discovered that the three victims in the field were 15-year-old
Mike Hadrith, 18-year-old Stuart Beatty, and Stewart's field were 15-year-old Mike Hadrith, 18-year-old
Stuart Beatty, and Stuart's younger brother, 14-year-old Dana Beatty.
The lone victim at the campsite was 17-year-old Roger Essam.
All of the boys were from the Sioux Falls, South Dakota area, a city about 20 minutes
northwest of Gitche Manitou.
When law enforcement contacted each of the teens' families to break the bad news about
the murders, many of the boys' relatives reacted how you'd expect.
They were devastated and shocked.
I was actually able to speak with some of Mike and Stewart and Dana's other siblings,
and they told me the same thing, that losing them was absolutely heartbreaking.
Stewart and Dana, for example, came from a family of seven siblings, and their surviving
sister Mary explained to me that even though she was just nine years old when this happened,
she remembers her brothers were the most kind-hearted and loving people.
She doesn't have one bad memory of them.
When their family received the news from law enforcement about what had happened to Stewart
and Dana, her mother was actually in the hospital and it was one of her older sisters who took the
phone call from authorities.
Investigators asked all of the victims' loved ones if any of the young men had any enemies,
but no one could think of a single person who would have wanted to hurt them.
According to Investigation Discovery's series, No One Can Hear You Scream, which featured
this case in an episode titled, Get You Man a Tomb Massacre. The Beattie brothers were from a close-knit family, and both young men enjoyed playing a guitar that they shared.
So I think the instrument that was found at the crime scene was assumed to belong to them.
Shortly after the bodies were discovered, word got around town about the brutal killings,
and residents in Sioux Falls and I imagine Greater Lyon County were gripped with fear.
Folks began arming themselves and locking their doors, fearful of the danger.
The police were alsopped with fear.
Folks began arming themselves and locking their doors,
fearful that the killer or killers
who were still on the loose would strike again.
No one could wrap their minds around
why someone would commit such a heinous crime
in a peaceful recreation space like Gichie Manitou.
Back at the crime scene,
DCI agents had wrapped up the evidence collection phase of their investigation
and shifted their focus to finding potential witnesses
who might've seen what happened leading up to the murders.
Later that afternoon, November 18th,
they got the surprise of their lives
when a 13-year-old girl from the Sioux Falls area
of South Dakota walked into the Sioux Falls Police Department
and told authorities that she'd been inside Gichie Manitou on the night of the crime with Mike, Roger,
Stuart and Dana.
This young woman's name was Sandra Chesky, and she claimed that around 930 p.m.
on Saturday, November 17th, she'd arrived at Gichie Manitou State Preserve with her
boyfriend, Roger, and the other three boys in Stuart Beatty's blue van.
State Preserve with her boyfriend, Roger, and the other three boys in Stuart Beatty's blue van.
For a while, they just hung out, smoked two marijuana joints, and had a campfire.
But then suddenly, they'd heard some sounds in the woods that made them think at first animals were nearby. But then after a bit more rustling, they began to suspect it was actually people.
Shortly after that, three silhouettes just appeared out of nowhere, about 15 yards away from their campfire.
She said that Roger and Stuart went to investigate who the figures were and
even yelled out things like, who's there and hello.
But the looming silhouettes didn't reply.
Within a few seconds of the two boys going to check things out,
a shotgun blast pierced the night air and Roger immediately fell to the ground.
Sandra said that right after that a second shot rang out and Stewart began to yell that he'd been shot.
The three attackers then emerged from the woods, got Stewart on his feet and forced him, Sandra, Dana and Mike down a path that led away from the teens campsite.
When the group got to the end of that trail, one of the three assailants put Sandra in a pickup truck, but the other two attackers marched Mike, Dana, and Stuart in the opposite direction towards Stuart's van.
Sandra also told police that the three men claimed they were members of law enforcement who were doing drug raids in the area, which is why she said she'd chosen not to resist them.
She told producers for Octogen's Killer Siblings that she believed
she could trust the men since they'd claimed they were the cops.
Like she honestly thought that as long as she did what they told
her to do, she wouldn't get in trouble for smoking that marijuana
joint with her friends.
She told authorities that two of the guys in the group kept referring
to the man who'd put her in the pickup truck as the boss.
When she described the men to police, she said that the heaviest set in the trio was called JR,
and the other one, who wasn't the boss or JR, was a thinner man with blonde hair who had gone by the
nickname Hatchetface. Sandra told police that after the boss separated her from Mike, Dana,
and Stuart, he drove her out of the preserve and she never saw any of the boys again.
While she and the man were riding around in his pickup, he'd asked her where she lived and promised
to take her home. But after a few hours of driving country roads seemingly not in the direction of her
house, Sandra realized she might not be going home and something was definitely wrong. She told
investigators that the whole time this was happening,
the boss kept telling her that Stewart was going to be okay,
because the guns they were using weren't actually loaded with real bullets.
Instead, they had tranquilizer cartridges in them.
The boss even claimed that the round he'd shot Stewart with had misfired,
which was why he was screaming out in pain,
but the round that had hit Roger had fired properly, which is why he was still back at the campsite, seemingly unresponsive.
Her captor eventually took her to an abandoned farmhouse where they met up with the two other assailants,
and then the man who went by the initials JR sexually assaulted her in the boss's truck.
Then the boss ordered her to go into the farmhouse with him, but she refused.
She told police and eventually producers for investigation discovery that she
believed in her gut that if she stepped foot through that building's front door,
she wasn't going to come back out alive.
And by some miracle, her adamant refusal worked because the boss ended up not
making her go inside. Instead, he put her back in the pickup and drove her home.
She said when they pulled into her driveway around five o'clock in
the morning, he told her not to tell anyone about what had happened,
or else he'd come back and kill her.
Now, as astonishing as Sandra's story was,
homicide investigators weren't quite sure what to make of it.
On one hand, they had a 13-year-old girl who claimed she was the sole survivor and only
eyewitness of a brutal attack that had left four of her friends dead.
She might hold the key to solving the crime.
But they also had to consider the possibility that she'd known the perpetrators or it was
maybe even involved herself.
To figure out which one it was, the police asked Sandra to take several polygraphs,
and she passed all of them with flying colors.
So from that point on, it seems like investigators took her story at face value
and began treating her less like a potential suspect
and more like the valuable eyewitness that she was.
To keep her safe from the suspects who were still at large,
authorities had her live temporarily at the county's detention center
so she would be protected at all times.
Over the course of the next few days and several follow-up interviews,
she provided investigators with more and more details about what
she remembered from the night of November 17th.
For example, she described the pickup truck she'd been forced into
as an older model Chevy
with brownish-colored paint.
She also said it had a cracked windshield, gun rack inside on the back window, and a
unique-looking glove compartment in the dashboard.
She also met with a forensic sketch artist to help police come up with a composite drawing
of the man she'd come to know as the boss and his other accomplices.
After developing those sketches,
authority spent several more days driving Sandra around on
roads in a 50-mile search grid adjacent to Sioux Falls.
They wanted to see if she could pick out anything she
recognized from the night of the crime, like the farmhouse,
for instance.
They spent day after day doing this, but every time they took
her by a structure that looked like a farmhouse,
she'd tell them that it wasn't the right one.
After about two weeks of doing this, things were not looking good.
But then, in late November, something astonishing happened.
While on yet another drive with investigators, Sandra did a double take at a random farmhouse.
Nearly two weeks after she first came forward to investigators, Sandra and a few deputies
from the local sheriff's office were riding around
in the countryside when she suddenly paused
and said she thought a structure they were nearing looked familiar.
As they pulled in to get a better look, a man driving a pickup truck was leaving the
property at the same time and passed them headed in the opposite direction.
In that moment, Sandra let out a scream because she'd seen the driver's face clear as day
when he went by and she recognized him as the man who'd abducted her.
She pointed at the guy and shrieked to investigators, quote,
That's him.
That's the boss.
That's him.
End quote.
Right away, a deputy took Sandra out of the cruiser she was riding in, and another deputy
hightailed it after the pickup.
About a quarter mile down the road, he caught up to the driver and initiated a traffic stop.
As soon as the deputy walked up to the window, he immediately noticed that the guy had an
uncanny resemblance to the composite sketch.
And when he asked the man what his name was, the driver told him he was Alan Friar.
Immediately following this traffic stop, Alan was brought in for questioning but denied
any involvement in the murders from November 17.
He claimed that he'd been out hunting with his two brothers, James and David Fryer.
Investigators quickly learned that 29-year-old Allen was the eldest of the three brothers,
and 21-year-old James, the youngest of the group, often went by the nickname J.R.
One investigator told producers for Oxygen's episode of Killer Siblings that
during Allen's initial interaction with authorities, he said, quote, I didn't shoot anybody. My
brothers did, though. It was my brothers, end quote. According to the coverage I was
able to find, all of the friars were convicted felons and had participated in crimes, including
one incident where 24 year old David had been caught as a teenager hanging out
of a vehicle shooting people with a 22 rifle. James or JR as most people called
him was known to be quiet and kind of awkward. He reportedly had limited social
skills and frightened people. According to the Associated Press, Nick Lamberto's
reporting for the Des Moines Register and a piece by Thomas Slaughter for the Rapid City Journal.
On November 17, 1973, so the day the Gitche Manitou killings happened, JR was actually an inmate at nearby Minnehaha County Jail,
but had been allowed out to participate in a work release program which permitted him to come and go from jail even though he was an inmate.
Within a matter of hours of Alan being taken in for questioning, investigators got a hold
of both David and JR too.
When authorities put the brothers in a suspect lineup and asked Sandra to pick out her and
her friends' attackers, she immediately pointed to the Friar brothers.
She stated that JR was the person who'd sexually assaulted her, David was the one who went by hatchet face,
and Alan was who the group had referred to as the boss.
On November 29th, so almost two weeks to the day after the crime,
Alan, David, and JR were each arrested and charged individually with four counts of murder.
Between the end of 1973 and February 1974, David decided to cooperate with investigators
and essentially flip on his brothers. He claimed that initially they'd just gone to Gitche
Manitou to poach deer, but when they stumbled upon the group of teenagers around their campfire,
David said something changed. He claimed that Allen had gotten a look in his eyes that David knew
wasn't good. And before he knew it, his older brother had shot Roger Essam. Then JR had
started firing. And though the source material doesn't explicitly say this, it seems like
it was a round from JR's gun that struck Stewart.
But what is clear is that this sequence of events actually aligned with what Sandra had already told investigators.
So I think the fact that David's story, for the most part,
corroborated Sandra's story kind of gave it some credibility.
Anyway, according to the rest of David's confession,
he said that when Alan took Sandra to the pickup truck,
he and JR rounded up the three boys.
Then he and JR got into Stewart's van
and shown the headlights on Mike, Dana, and Stewart.
And with the boys seemingly blinded by the light
and unable to see anything in front of them,
JR quickly jumped out of the van
and started shooting at them.
Dana was struck first, then Stewart, and lastly Mike.
David claimed that he'd also shot Stewart,
but clarified that he believed the teen was already dead
from JR's shots by that point point and so he wasn't personally responsible for
taking his life.
In exchange for this information, prosecutors allowed David to plead guilty and ask for
leniency from the court.
According to an article by Nick Lamberto for the Des Moines Register, David formally accepted
his plea deal on February 12, 1974,
almost three months after the crime. The judge weighing his case had to determine if his murder
counts would be for first degree or second degree. If it was first degree, then he was facing a
mandatory life sentence, but if the judge went with second degree, then his sentence would have
been anywhere from 10 years to life. At a degree of guilt hearing for him a week later in Lyon County District Court,
Sandra took the stand as a witness and described to the judge the events of November 17th, 1973.
The prosecutor assigned to the case knew that her testimony would go a long way.
He didn't want the judge to buy David's story that he'd shot Stuart Beatty after the teen was already dead.
That claim, the attorney believed, was just David's
attempt at skirting responsibility for committing
cold-blooded murder.
The prosecutor was convinced that David had conspired with
his brothers to kill all living witnesses after Alan shot
and killed Roger Essam where the teens had been having their
campfire. David's defense lawyer disagreed with that portrayal, though.
He said that his client had simply gotten caught up in the moment and partaken in the
shooting of the Beatty brothers and Mike Hadrith because he'd seen his younger brother JR do
it.
During her time on the stand, Sandra explained that she and her friends had gone to Gitchey
Manitou to hang out because it was a popular spot for young people.
She described how shadowy figures had appeared near their campfire and then Roger and Stuart
were shot.
Other details she shared were that Mike had actually asked the shooters a question, and
then he'd been struck too, but not fatally.
Initially after the gunfire subsided, she'd tried to play dead on the ground, but one
of the Friar brothers discovered she was faking it and told her to stand up and walk.
Under cross-examination, David's defense lawyer asked her a lot of questions about her drug
use that night and whether her perception of things could have been flawed due to being
under the influence of marijuana.
For example, the lawyer pointed out that Alan Friar's pickup truck was actually blue, not
orange-ish brown like she'd initially described it to police.
But 13-year-old Sandra's response to that discrepancy was that she'd been
processing a lot during the traumatic events of seeing her boyfriend killed,
then being abducted, and eventually sexually assaulted.
She claimed that her flashbacks of November 17th convinced her that Alan's
truck was orangeish brown.
Ultimately, the judge weighing David's case determined that
he was in fact guilty of maliciously killing Stuart
Beatty and sentenced the 24 year old to life in prison.
Murder charges against him for the other three boys deaths
were later dropped by Lyon County authorities.
During David's degree of guilt hearing, his brothers, Allen
and JR, were kept in separate jails under substantial bonds.
At their arraignments, they both pled not guilty and opted to put their fate in the hands of jurors.
A few months later in May, Allen's case went to trial first.
His defense seemed to hinge on the firearm evidence that authorities had uncovered since the murders happened.
Turns out on the night of the crime, Alan said he'd been carrying one type of
shotgun and his brothers were armed with different caliber shotguns.
Investigators determined that only one round from the gun Alan claimed to have
been carrying ended up in Mike's body.
Other shots from JR's gun were also found in Mike and it was those shots that were
believed to have been the rounds that killed him.
So Allen's defense claimed that was proof that he had not
actually murdered anyone.
But the prosecutor disagreed and said that the ballistics
information only showed what ammunition ended up in what
victim, not who'd actually pulled the trigger of which gun.
He suggested that Allen very well could have fired any one of the guns he and his brothers brought that night or used
more than one type of shotgun shell in the weapon he said he'd handled. In the
end, Allen's jury agreed with the state's point of view because it took them less
than six hours to find him guilty of four counts of first-degree murder. He
was sentenced to four concurrent life sentences without the possibility
of parole. However, just a few weeks after Allen's trial concluded, the case took another bizarre
twist when both he and his youngest brother, JR, disappeared.
According to multiple news outlets, on the morning of June 19, 1974, staff at the Lyon County Jail in Rock Rapids, Iowa discovered that Allen and J.R. Fryer had escaped from
their cells overnight and were nowhere to be found.
At the time, they'd each been held on separate floors of the jail because Allen was awaiting
transport to a state prison, and JR had not yet gone to trial.
Plus, authorities just didn't want the brothers anywhere near one another in the event they
tried to pull off a jailbreak.
Well apparently sometime around midnight on June 18th, Allen discovered that new locks
had recently been installed on the cells but had not been welded into place yet. So he fashioned a
piece of wire from his bed into a makeshift ratchet wrench and freed
himself. He then got a hold of a set of keys and went to the first floor of the
jail where JR's cell was and sprung him free too. When the two men were discovered
missing around 8 a.m. on the 19th, the Lyon County Sheriff's Office immediately launched a manhunt.
Members of law enforcement also went to Sandra Chesky's house to make sure she was okay.
They were very worried that Alan and JR might try to harm her since she was the only living
witness against them. And she was scheduled to testify at JR's upcoming murder trial.
According to Investigation Discovery's episode of No One Can Hear You Scream,
armed Iowa DCI special agents stood watch inside Sandra's house 24 hours a day
to make sure neither of the suspects would come for her.
Roughly 48 hours into the manhunt, authorities got word that the Friar brothers
had stolen a car right after escaping and driven it some 500 miles away to Gillette, Wyoming where they struck a pedestrian. That
incident led to a high-speed chase and ultimately ended with both men being
arrested and charged with the federal crime of interstate transportation of a
stolen motor vehicle. About three weeks later in early July, JR was extradited
back to Iowa and arraigned in federal court.
His trial for the Gitche Manitou slangs began five months later on December 11, 1974, a
little more than a year after the crime.
Leading up to the trial, his defense had filed a change of venue request and successfully
gotten his trial moved an hour east to Spirit Lake, Iowa instead of Lyon County.
Naturally, the state's star witness was Sandra Chesky. For several hours, she testified about
what happened to her and her friends and recounted in excruciating detail everything that Alan,
David, and JR had done. She once again identified JR as the person who'd sexually assaulted
her outside of the farmhouse. But according to that investigation discovery episode I mentioned earlier,
JR was never actually charged for the sexual assault.
Basically, how the interviewee explained it was that authorities
wanted to avoid having to put Sandra through the trauma of testifying
in a separate sexual assault trial.
So they decided to only go after JR for the first degree murder charges.
During Sandra's testimony, jurors heard how the brothers had
claimed to be police officers on a drug raid and that Alan's
apparent reason for separating Sandra from Mike, Dana, and
Stuart was because he allegedly said, quote, you were too young
to be busted in a drug deal like this, end quote.
In addition to Sandra, a special agent from the Iowa DCI testified and recounted that after
JR was first arrested, he told investigators that he and his brothers had spotted the group of teens
and then one of them said, quote, they've got marijuana down there and we've got to get it.
That was reportedly believed to be a possible motive for the whole thing,
to rob the teens of what turned out to be a meager amount of marijuana.
The special agent said that JR claimed he'd only fired a warning shot into
the air before approaching the teens at their campfire.
And it was Alan who'd leveled a shotgun at Roger and took the first life.
After that, JR said he tried to drive away in Stuart Beatty's van, but it stalled. Shortly after that, he said he heard shots ring out and then he and David managed to
start the van up again and get out of there.
Then the two of them met up with Alan at the farmhouse, and that's where he claimed both
he and Alan had sexually assaulted Sandra.
Afterwards, he said he and David left and he eventually returned to jail for that work
release program he was in.
Obviously, JR's version of events, as told by the special agents in court, stood in stark contrast to what Sandra remembered. Her recollection of the crime was that JR was very
much an aggressor. She'd even testified that he'd threatened her and the boys by saying, quote,
stand right where you are or I'll blow your heads off, end quote.
In the end, the jury believed Sandra
in the prosecution's narrative of the crime.
After deliberating for nearly a dozen hours,
they voted to find JR guilty of three counts
of first degree murder for the deaths
of Mike, Dana and Stuart.
He was only found guilty of manslaughter
in the death of Roger Essam. At his sentencing hearing in early January 1975, a judge gave him three life sentences
plus eight years for the manslaughter charge. Basically, he was never getting out of prison.
In the wake of the Friar brothers being caught and their legal battles ending,
people sat back and tried to comprehend what the true motive was for the crime.
You know, understand why.
The prosecutor for the state had repeatedly emphasized in court that there didn't appear
to be a strong motive, at least not one he could put his finger on.
Like I mentioned earlier, there was some discussion that maybe robbing the kids of their marijuana
was one motive, but that was never definitively proved.
At one point, the prosecutor remarked, quote,
This was a brutal, deliberate slang of four young people without any rhyme or reason or excuse or anything else.
It was a senseless, brutal massacre of four young people, pure and simple. End quote.
Investigators and other attorneys who'd been involved in the case also couldn't
pinpoint why exactly the brothers had done what they'd done. In May 1975, Allen, the
eldest, filed an appeal in Iowa's Northern Federal District Court, but in 1982 it was
denied. In 1985, he again requested a new trial, but that was also later denied.
His younger brothers, David and J.R., had made appeals too, but were both unsuccessful in getting their convictions overturned.
In an interview with the Des Moines Register, David revealed that if all of
his appeals continued to get denied, he was going to write a letter to Iowa's
governor asking that his life sentence be changed to capital punishment because
he didn't want to live the rest of his life in a prison.
He claimed he'd rather be put to death than be with other inmates who he claimed were
quote, like living with a bunch of hogs and other animals, end quote.
In that same article, David stated that before he and his brothers got caught, he'd attended
one of the victims funerals.
He explained that he wasn't even sure why he went, he just did.
From reading the available source material which discusses the Friar Brothers' upbringing,
it's clear that their environment growing up was not a positive one. Their parents had
13 children in all, and each of the brothers dropped out of grade school during their elementary
years. Their father was reported to be very overbearing and abusive,
and their mother didn't do much to help the boys deal with him.
From a very young age,
Alan, David and JR mostly relied on one another.
And as a result of that, they grew extremely close.
But let me be clear,
in no way am I saying that this information about their childhood is an
excuse for their homicidal actions.
Who they became may have some connection to the circumstances of their upbringing,
but I'm a firm believer that we're all responsible for our individual actions."
An article by the Des Moines Register stated that supposedly the fracture effect
the slaying had on the victims' families was long-lasting and immense.
After speaking with and exchanging emails with Mike's younger sister and Stewart and
Dana's surviving siblings, I learned that over time some family members of theirs just
had to leave Sioux Falls altogether to try and heal.
Staying in town was just too painful.
Mary, Stewart and Dana's youngest sister, explained to me that her older siblings, who
were closer in age to her brothers who died, experienced a variety of different struggles
in their lives after the crime.
A few of the victims' siblings, who are now deceased, spoke to various news publications
over the years, and they all seemed to say the same thing in one way or the other.
Dana, Stuart, Mike, and Roger were all good kids, best friends,
who lived a lot of their young lives together and who tragically died together. They were
innocent children in so many ways who did nothing to deserve what happened to them.
As of this recording, all three of the Friar brothers are in their 70s and 80s and still
serving their prison sentences at Fort Dodge Correctional Facility. In the many years since the Gitche Manitou
slangs, Sandra Chesky became a wife, mother, and grandmother, and she's become
more vocal about telling her story. But it wasn't always that way. She told
producers for Investigation Discovery that throughout the 1970s and 80s she
experienced a lot of shame for being the only survivor of the massacre.
She also felt like some members of the media and people living where she was from
still doubted her story.
She explained in the television program that it was really freeing to get to a place
in her life where she felt safe and proud to tell her story.
And Harold, the friend she was with in 1973 for being
heroes.
She told the Des Moines Register that even at 13 years old, despite all of the forces
that were telling her to stay silent, she was strong enough to know that she was the
only person in the world who could make sure her friend's killers went to prison.
And so she did what she had to do. She went to court as
many times as necessary to forever keep the Predators who preyed on her and her
friends behind bars.
Park Predators is an AudioChuck production. You can view a list of all
the source material for this episode on our website, parkpredators.com.
And you can also follow Park Predators on Instagram, at ParkPredators.
So, what do you think Chuck? Do you approve?