Park Predators - The Neighbor
Episode Date: October 21, 2025When a 38-year-old waitress vanished on a weekend trip to Mount Rushmore in August 2013, red flags went up right away for her friends and family. But the road to justice for her case would take many w...inding turns until finally it ended with a long-awaited conviction.Find Nancy Herman's Facebook page, Help Find Meshell's Murderer, here. If you or a loved one is experiencing domestic abuse of any kind, you are not alone. You can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233 or text START to 88788 for help.More Than a Phone partners with domestic violence programs across the country to provide free smartphones and data service to the survivors they support. For more information, visit morethanaphone.org.Coburn Place works to provide support and safe housing options for survivors of domestic violence and their children in the Greater Indianapolis area. For more information, visit coburnplace.org.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-neighbor Park Predators is an Audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @parkpredators | @audiochuckTwitter: @ParkPredators | @audiochuckFacebook: /ParkPredators | /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Dillia Diambra.
And the case I'm going to tell you about today takes place near Mount Rushmore in the Black Hills National Forest.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's website, Black Hills is 1.2 million acres in size and covers parts of northeast Wyoming and western South Dakota.
When you look across this landscape, the hills and mountains appear very dark, thus the name Black Hills.
To soak in the scenery, most people travel on Iron Mountain Road.
which is known for having one-lane tunnels
and what are referred to as the pigtail bridges.
For those of you who don't know what that is,
basically, it's a uniquely engineered wooden bridge
that allows the roadway to curve or circle around on itself
in order for drivers to easily ascend or descend in elevation.
There's a picture of what the pigtail bridges look like
on the blog post for this episode if you want a point of reference.
I'm not going to spend too much time geeking out over bridge architecture with you,
even though I do find it fascinating.
But in a way, the design of these iconic bridges mirrors some of the realities of the criminal investigation that took place in today's story.
The phrase, what goes around comes back around, comes to mind when I think about how this case played out.
It may have taken a while, but in the end, the violent path this story's perpetrator was blazing for himself, caught back up with him.
And no matter how hard he tried, he couldn't outmaneuver or evade the truth about himself any longer.
This is Park Predators.
On Thursday, August 22, 2013, a woman named Nancy Herman, who lived in Custer, South Dakota, was in her car when she came across her friend, 38-year-old Michelle Will.
Nancy had met Michelle about six months earlier when Michelle came into a women's shelter.
that Nancy used to work for called women escaping a violent environment.
Michelle regularly volunteered at the facility and over time she and Nancy had grown close.
When Nancy spotted her friend on that Thursday, she offered her a ride because she knew Michelle didn't have a driver's license or own a car.
A short time later when the two women parted ways, Nancy didn't give much more thought to their interaction because it was seemingly just like every other time they'd hung out.
According to what Nancy would later ride online, it seems like some of the stuff they talked about was how excited Michelle was for an upcoming weekend trip she had planned to Mount Rushmore with a guy she'd been seeing.
She was really looking forward to shopping at specialty stores in that area, dining at some of the local restaurants, and even riding a train to nearby Hill City.
After the weekend passed, Michelle's co-workers at a place called Wrangler Restaurant expected to see her for her shift on Tuesday, August 27th.
But according to police reports, she never showed up.
One of her colleagues named Carrie felt that Michelle missing work was so out of character
she decided to call the Custer County Sheriff's Office and asked them to go by Michelle's
apartment in Custer to do a welfare check.
When a deputy arrived at Michelle's unit in the Valley High apartments and was shown inside
by the building manager, he didn't see signs of a disturbance or anything that pointed to a potential crime.
So, he left.
A couple more days passed and nothing really happened.
Michelle's whereabouts remained unknown, and unfortunately, because she was an adult and
no one had filed a missing person's report for her, there wasn't much law enforcement could do
to investigate her absence.
According to reporting by Hill City Prevailer News, Michelle had come to South Dakota to get
away from her past and personal issues she dealt with in Texas.
Her sister Amanda Dillon told the Custer County Chronicle, quote,
She has always been a really wild free spirit.
She was very independent and did what she wanted to do.
do when she wanted to do it. End quote. At the time of her disappearance, Michelle had two
young sons who she'd left with relatives to care for. About a week after she vanished,
investigators' attention got pulled to a new mystery. Around four o'clock in the afternoon,
on Saturday, August 31st, a man who was visiting Black Hills National Forest taking pictures
along Mile Marker 54 on Iron Mountain Road near Mount Rushmore, noticed that there was something
unusual lying in the distance. The object he saw appeared to just be sitting out in the open
next to one of the pigtail bridges. As he, I imagine, slowly processed what he was seeing,
he realized it was exactly what it looked like, a decomposing body. So this guy reported what
he'd found to local authorities, and within about an hour, units from Custer County State Park
and Pennington County Sheriff's Office arrived on the scene. A quick look at the remains
showed they were partially skeletonized from the waist up, but was indeed a person who was
wearing only Capri-style sweatpants and a t-shirt.
Investigators cordoned off the scene, took pictures, and searched for any other evidence
that might be of value. After that, the body was transported out of the National Forest and sent
off for an autopsy. Meanwhile, back in Custer, Michelle Will's co-worker, Carrie, had grown increasingly
concerned about her friend. I'm not sure if she'd seen or read the news about a body being discovered
in Black Hills or what, but either way, she decided on September 4th to officially report
Michelle missing. The Custer County Sheriff's Office took that report, and Carrie told deputies
that the last time she'd laid eyes on Michelle was around 1 or 1.30 p.m. on Saturday,
August 24th. Carrie said she dropped Michelle off at her apartment after work, fully expecting to
see her again three days later on the 27th. Carrie explained to authorities that something else that
made her feel Michelle's absence was very suspicious, was that she'd failed to pick up a paycheck
that was waiting for her at Wrangler Restaurant. On top of that, Carrie had checked in with
Michelle's sister Amanda, who lived in Custer, and Amanda told Carrie that the last time she'd communicated
with Michelle was also on August 24th. Michelle had texted her to let her know that she was on her
way to the nearby town of Keystone and would touch base later. The day after Michelle's missing
person's report was filed, a doctor at Rapid City Regional.
Hospital conducted an autopsy on the body that had been found in the National Forest.
According to court records and investigative reports, the doctor determined that the person was a
female and had been out in the elements for several days. He didn't see any obvious signs of
trauma on the remains, but did note that the woman's hyoid bone and soft tissue in her neck and upper
body were gone. From the waist down, there was still some soft tissue in skin that he could
examine, which is what I think allowed him to draw samples for toxicology. Results from
the talk screen indicated the woman had a BAC of 0.086, but besides that, no other substances
were found in her system. A closer look at her remains showed that a section of her left
collarbone had been damaged by some type of sharp item. But even with that peculiar discovery,
the victim was in such an advanced state of decomposition that the doctor doing the autopsy
couldn't say for sure if she'd been murdered, had fallen accidentally, or died from some other
cause. So he unfortunately had to label both her manner and cause of death as undetermined.
The next day, September 6th, investigators with Custer County Sheriff's Office got in touch
with Pennington County Sheriff's Office, since that's the jurisdiction where the remains were
found. The two agencies discussed the fact that Michelle Will was a missing person from Custer,
and when the Pennington County folks learned a bit more information, they felt confident that
Michelle's general characteristics were similar to the body that they'd yet to identify.
So a few days later, to see if their hunch was correct, authorities compared known impressions
of Michelle's fingerprints to the human remains and discovered they were a match.
It was official. The woman who'd been found dead along Iron Mountain Road was for sure
Michelle will. The same day she was IDed, investigators with the South Dakota Department of
Criminal Investigation and Custer County Sheriff's Office started looking into a man named Richard
Smith's. Turns out, he was the guy who Michelle had recently been dating. Richard had a long
criminal record in Custer County and Pennington County dating back to 1988 for crimes including
forgery, multiple burglaries, domestic violence, aggravated battery, fraud, embezzlement, and
disorderly conduct. According to investigative reports, several women who knew Michelle, including
Nancy Herman and Carrie, told deputies that Michelle and Richard had a history of domestic violence.
Nancy said that in the spring of 2013, Michelle had arrived in South Dakota after moving from
Killeen, Texas, and before that, had lived in Wisconsin.
But after only a few weeks of staying at her sister's place in Custer, she'd gotten kicked out.
So she'd moved into a women's shelter.
In May, she left the shelter and moved to the Valley High apartment complex.
Not long after that, Nancy said she noticed that whenever she saw Michelle, she'd have bruises
around her eyes.
Nancy immediately suspected that Richard, the guy Michelle,
Michelle often hung out with had caused the injuries, but Michelle always denied it. She would say
things like she'd fallen or provide some other explanation. Another one of Michelle's friends
told authorities that she'd also seen Michelle with a black eye and bruises in the past. There was
even one instance where Michelle had lamented about her entire body hurting. But when this friend
asked what happened, Michelle told her that she'd injured herself while drinking and taking
sleeping pills. Like Nancy, though, this friend always suspected that Richard was to blame for
Michelle's pain. The last interaction this friend had with Michelle was fairly positive, though.
According to what she told investigators, on the afternoon of Friday, August 23rd, she'd been
hanging out with Michelle and Michelle was in really good spirits. She said that she'd just
paid her rent early for the next few months and was going on and on about her two beloved cats,
Abby and Miss Snickety. And these cats are kind of an important detail, because according to
Michelle's friend who was interviewed by investigators.
Michelle specifically told her that she would never leave her animals for a long period of
time without making arrangements for someone to care for them.
Michelle also informed this friend during their last conversation that she would never move
back to Wisconsin or Texas.
When Michelle's coworker Carrie gave another interview to investigators, she said similar
things as Michelle's other friends.
Richard was definitely Michelle's boyfriend, and it was obvious to everyone around them
that he was likely the source of Michelle's mysterious injuries from time to time.
Carrie told investigators that on September 7th, so two weeks after Michelle had last been seen,
but before she was publicly identified as deceased, Richard had come into Wrangler Restaurant
and shown her a text message that he claimed Michelle had sent him on Sunday, August 25th.
According to Carrie, the message said something to the effect that Michelle had left South Dakota
for Texas. But Carrie had doubts about that because she knew Michelle very well.
and knew that she would not just up and leave her cats to fend for themselves.
Plus, Michelle needed money to make a big trip like that,
and Carrie knew she didn't have much money.
Plus, she'd left a paycheck behind.
So nothing about Michelle going to Texas made sense to Carrie.
I mean, there was one conversation the two friends had
where Michelle had told her she might travel out of state around Christmas time to visit her children.
But it doesn't seem like any concrete plans were made to do that,
at least not that Carrie was aware of.
Other acquaintances of Michelle and Richards told investigators that they felt Richard's behavior after Michelle disappeared was unusually obsessive.
He would constantly ask if people knew what happened to her, and it got to the point where one friend told him that if he was so concerned about her, he should just contact law enforcement.
But Richard never did.
Another person told authorities that prior to Michelle's disappearance, they'd personally witnessed Richard behave stalkish toward Michelle and said he'd met her the way he met a lot of other women in his life.
by acting as a designated driver and hanging around local bars and casinos.
He would often keep Michelle's money from her, like in his possession,
and whenever she wanted to drink or cigarettes,
he would dole it out to her and ration how much she could spend.
So after learning all this information, authorities felt it was definitely time to speak with Richard.
And boy, did he have a lot to say.
On Tuesday, September 10th, about three weeks after Michelle was reported missing,
but a few days before authorities publicly announced her remains had been identified,
investigators sat down with Richard at his apartment, which was right across the hall from Michelle's.
He told authorities that he'd been really worried about Michelle ever since she went missing.
He quickly presented them with the text message he claimed she'd sent him during the early morning hours of Sunday, August 25th.
You know, the one that informed him,
she was going to Texas. He said that on the evening of Saturday, August 24th, they'd been
hanging out together in her apartment while she used his laptop to surf the internet, but then
she got a phone call from someone in Texas that made her upset. Afterwards, they ran an errand
together, and then around 9 p.m. he walked back to his place and went to bed. A few hours
later, he woke up around 1 a.m. because he said he got a text from Michelle stating that she was
leaving for Texas. Richard told investigators that he believed Michelle had $800 or so that she was
going to take with her on her trip.
Interestingly, on the day that Custer County had previously sent a deputy to do a welfare check
for Michelle, Richard had been home during that time and actually gone into her apartment
with the apartment building's manager and the deputy.
He said he looked around and saw that a duffel bag and purse which belonged to Michelle
were gone, but her cell phone charger was still there.
After several more days passed without seeing her, he said that's when he started to grow
more concerned.
According to investigative reports, Richard told authorities that, he told authorities that,
that Michelle frequently drank alcohol in large quantities and had lost her driver's license
after getting a DUI.
He claimed that she also had an up-and-down relationship with her sister Amanda, but as of
late, he'd gotten the impression that the sisters had started to mend things between them.
When investigators asked him about his relationship with Michelle, Richard told them that
they'd had a sexual relationship for a little while, but then that had ended towards the latter
part of July.
Really, Richard said, he just tried to take care of Michelle and make sure she got home safe
at night. The day before she disappeared, he said Michelle had actually asked him to marry her,
but he turned her down. He denied ever harming her or being involved in domestic violence
incidents while they were together. He did admit, however, that he was likely the last person to
see her on August 24th. He said about a week after she vanished, he learned that a body had been
found in Black Hills National Forest off of Iron Mountain Road, and he really hoped it wasn't
Michelle. When investigators inquired about his laptop, which he said,
said Michelle had used on the evening of August 24th, Richard claimed that he didn't have it
anymore. He said he'd spilled soda on it a few days after Michelle used it and it broke, so he tossed
it in the trash. Towards the end of the interview, an investigator informed Richard that law
enforcement was going to obtain cell phone tower data to look into the alibi that he'd provided,
which was that he was home all night on August 24th after 9 p.m. and not someplace else.
According to investigative reports, Richard's response to being told that was to get up,
walk to his kitchen, and get some water.
Then he began lamenting that medication he took for his heart was beginning to affect him.
Authorities didn't have enough to arrest him, but they were definitely suspicious of him.
So they executed a search warrant on Michelle's apartment, Richard's apartment, his cell phone, and his Jeep.
The apartments and Jeep were processed with Luminaw, but only a blanket in Michelle's place lit up
indicating the presence of blood.
Investigators seized that item as evidence and kept going.
Inside Richard's place, they found two women's necklaces in his trash can, but not a whole lot
else.
On his cell phone, there was an outgoing call dated for the afternoon of August 24th that had
been placed to a motel in Keystone called the Brookside Motel.
But investigators just made note of that and planned to follow up later.
A few hours after his first interview, investigators took another run at him and confronted
him with the fact that multiple people claimed he'd been abusive toward Michelle, but Richard
continued to deny the allegations. So authorities tried a different tactic. They revealed that
Michelle was dead and was the person who'd been discovered off of Iron Mountain Road.
Reports don't say what kind of reaction Richard had when he learned that information,
but nevertheless, he denied being involved and told investigators that he hadn't visited Iron
Mountain Road in years. He came clean a little more, though, regarding his relationship with
Michelle. He admitted that he may have been mentally abusive to her by calling her derogatory
names, but stopped short of confessing to ever physically harming her. Still, investigators weren't
buying it. According to court documents, Richard had been a married man for about six years,
but divorced his wife in 2002 not long after she came forward with an allegation against him
for trying to kill her while holding her head between a toilet and a bathtub and attempting to break her
neck. The same year as his divorce, he was charged with violently assaulting another woman
and ultimately pleaded guilty to that act of domestic violence a few months later in 2003.
Court records from that case show he wasn't required to spend any time behind bars or pay fines
or victim's compensation. Court records and Custer County Sheriff's Office reports from January
2013, just months before Michelle vanished and was found dead. Richard had dated a woman named
Bonnie, who quickly moved in with him, after a few.
few months of sharing a place, though, Bonnie had tried to break things off with Richard and told
him she was seeing another guy. Toward the end of that conversation as Bonnie was grabbing her
backpack to leave, she said Richard jumped off his couch, grabbed her by the neck, shoved her onto a
bed, and tried to break her neck by violently twisting it. Somehow, though, she managed to push him
off her, get out of his apartment, and run to a friend's unit in the same building for help.
Folks inside that apartment then called police to report the assault. Richard was quickly a
arrested for that crime, but ended up getting his charges reduced to disorderly conduct.
He eventually pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 30 days in jail, which were all suspended.
He was also ordered to pay a few hundred dollars in fines and be on his best behavior,
as well as attend and complete a domestic abuse program or anger management course.
Whether he did that, though, is not information that was available in the court records I obtained.
What is in the documents, though, is that Bonnie told deputies that the day after Richard tried to kill her,
his mom came to visit her and told her all about Richard's past violent history with women.
Richard's mom apologized to Bonnie for the way her son was, but by that point, it was a little too late in my opinion.
Just like Michelle, Bonnie was also a new transplant from Wisconsin when she met Richard.
She'd come to South Dakota to spread the ashes of her late husband, and because of circumstances in her life, chose to leave her teenage daughter with relatives back home.
Not long after arriving in Custer County, she'd met Richard and their relationship.
had moved quickly from boyfriend and girlfriend to sharing an apartment together.
Another interesting crossover between Bonnie and Michelle's lives, aside from their connection to
Richard, is that after Richard was arrested for assaulting Bonnie in January 2013, Custer County
deputies gave her an informational pamphlet for a women's shelter in town, and that shelter
was none other than women escaping a violent environment, also known by the acronym Weave,
which was the same women's shelter Michelle had stayed for a period of time.
and volunteered at.
So with all this background information
and documented incidents of Richard abusing
other women, investigators who
suspected he might be involved in Michelle's death
were not willing to back down.
They wanted to know why
if he was so concerned for Michelle's well-being
after she disappeared, Richard hadn't contacted police.
They suggested that perhaps he was the person
who'd used Michelle's cell phone
to text himself that message about her leaving for Texas.
But what if Richard's responses to this line,
of questioning was, quote,
How would I get her out of the apartment and into my open-top jeep and drive her to Iron
Mountain Road?
End quote.
Which to me is a rather telling statement, because it was almost like Richard was suggesting
that whatever had happened to Michelle had occurred in her apartment, or maybe even his apartment.
But with no physical evidence to support that, authorities just had to make a note of it and
move on.
To prove he was telling the truth, though, Richard agreed to take a polygraph because he
claimed he had nothing to hide. That test was administered the next day, and the results
indicated he had answered deceptively when he responded with the answer no to the following
questions. Did you cause Michelle's death? And concerning Michelle, did you cause her death?
After he failed the polygraph, investigators interviewed him a third time, but Richard denied
leaving his apartment on the evening of August 24th and maintained that he had nothing to do
with Michelle's death. Authorities confronted him about the fact that his internet
activity showed he was on Facebook at 2.30 a.m. on August 25th, which was a time he'd previously
said he was sound asleep after taking sleeping pills. They also confronted him about the fact
that it seemed sort of convenient that the laptop he said Michelle had used the night she disappeared
was no longer around to back up his version of events. But Richard would not break. He maintained
his innocence and ended the interview. On September 12th, the day after authorities had their
third interview with Richard, investigators followed up on the call his cell phone records
indicated he'd placed to Brookside Motel and Keystone on the day Michelle vanished.
An employee at that establishment recognized a photo of Richard and handed authorities
copies of a room reservation slip and a credit card receipt that had been signed by Michelle.
This employee said that Richard had called the motel on the 24th and made a reservation
earlier that day. When he and Michelle arrived, she had paid with a prepaid credit card. The
The hotel employee told investigators that Richard and Michelle, who she believed was his girlfriend,
had checked in around 5.30 p.m. and stayed the night, but at some point they complained the power
had gone out and were moved to a different room. On Sunday, August 25th, the motel employee
never saw Richard or Michelle pass back through the lobby. But the hotel's owner did interact
with Richard. The owner told investigators that she had gone to Richard and Michelle's new room
on Sunday morning to apologize for the power going out the night before. While speaking with Richard
in the doorway, she never saw Michelle because she said the conversation she had with Richard
was very brief.
In addition to these witnesses, there were even more people who positively identified Richard
and Michelle as guests of the motel on the night of the 24th and had seen them at a nearby bar.
They also interviewed Richard's prior girlfriend, Bonnie, who told them that at 1.30 in the
morning on Sunday the 25th, Richard had called her and informed her that he was in Wyoming
and was sleeping in his Jeep. I know. It was odd to me, too, to learn that
Richard and Bonnie were still in contact with one another after their past history of domestic
violence. But be that as it may, Bonnie said she thought it was super strange, too, that Richard had
rang her in the middle of the night just to let her know where he was. Despite that, though,
the next day, at 10 a.m., Bonnie agreed to join Richard to run errands in Rapid City. She said they
stopped at an auto parts store, a Hardee's, and a Walmart, where she thought he bought a new phone
card and antifreeze. Bonnie told investigators that during their trips to all these different
places, she was very uncomfortable. She said Richard had an unusually large amount of cash with
him and was playing weird music and wasn't acting like his normal self. At one point, he touched
her leg, which she didn't like, and then after a few hours of driving around, he just dropped
her off at a casino. The next day, investigators interviewed Richard again, and this time
his story changed. When confronted with the fact that witnesses had seen him and Michelle at
Brookside Motel on the night of August 24th, Richard came clean. He took to the time. He
told authorities that he had gone to the motel with Michelle to spend time together after she
proposed to him and he turned her down. But once they got there, Michelle had decided to go out
drinking and he stayed in their room. He now claimed that the last time he saw her, she was
drunk and headed toward a bar seemingly not far from their motel. But investigators were not
convinced. They came at him with everything they had, but Richard wouldn't admit to anything
and eventually lawyered up.
A little over two weeks later, Richard's mom contacted authorities with new information
that gave their investigation a bit of a boost.
She told a state special agent that she'd been storing some of Richard's stuff at her property
and while putting tarps over a pile of his things
had noticed a gray duffel bag that had medications in it that were prescribed to Michelle Will.
She'd also found a suitcase hidden on her property that she felt law enforcement might want to look into.
Investigators quickly went over to Richard's mom's house and collected the bags,
but when they opened the suitcase, it was empty.
The gray duffel, on the other hand, contained several personal hygiene bottles,
hair accessories, makeup, prescriptions, and a metallic watch with pink stones in it.
It was clear from the information on the prescription bottles that the duffel bag,
and likely all of its contents, belonged to Michelle.
For the next few weeks, authorities kept working the case
and even received the analysis from Richard's cell phone,
which confirmed some of the information he'd already told.
investigators. There were texts between him and Michelle on the afternoon of August 24th, which
stopped at 3.14 p.m. Then the next message between their phones came from Michelle's device at
1258 a.m. on the 25th, which read, I'm going back to Texas. Richard's phone then responded to that
text about 20 minutes later at 117 a.m. with the text, why? He texted her again at 2.10 a.m. and
258 a.m. asking if she was okay and for her to call.
him. He never actually dialed her number, though. Instead, he'd called Bonnie at 123 a.m., and then the
three-digit number, star 8.6, a few minutes after that. There was no more activity on his device
for several hours until 8.39 a.m. and 9.45 a.m. when he phoned a.m. other information retrieved
from his cell phone data showed that at the time he'd texted Michelle around 2 a.m., his device
had ping near a tower close to Horse Thief Lake, which wasn't super far from his phone.
from the mile marker on Iron Mountain Road
where Michelle's remains were eventually found.
Even more bizarre was the fact that Michelle's cell phone
had been active and pinged off a tower near Custer
on September 10th, almost two weeks after she was found dead,
which proved that someone who either lived in
or was visiting Custer had it in their possession after her death.
But still, even with all of that circumstantial evidence
pointing toward Richard as the prime suspect,
authorities didn't have enough to arrest him for murder.
And unfortunately, after that, days turned into weeks and then months, and nothing happened.
In October 2014, more than a year after Michelle died, investigators asked Richard to speak with them again, and he agreed to.
But his story hadn't changed much from the last version he'd shared, which was that he and Michelle had gone to Keystone together for a little getaway.
But then after going to dinner and doing a little bit of shopping, she'd gone out and he'd stayed in their motel room.
He suggested that maybe someone she'd encountered while out in Keystone had done something to her.
But once again, investigators were not convinced Richard was being truthful.
So they confronted him with the fact that Michelle's things had been found on his mom's property.
Richard's response to that was that he knew lots of folks who left things at his mom's place.
He denied putting Michelle's stuff there or trying to conceal it from his mom.
Eventually, that interview ended with authorities unable to make an arrest or elicit a confession from Richard.
After that, the case slowly went cold.
Years crept by with no new updates, and it looked like it would never be solved.
But there was one person who wasn't willing to let Michelle become a faded memory so easily.
According to reporting by Tiffany Tan for the Rapid City Journal, in the years after Michelle,
her friend Nancy Herman took it upon herself to be a voice for justice. In 2017, the 67-year-old had
become a vocal advocate for Michelle, who at that point had been dead for four years. Nancy had made
countless reward posters about the case, created a Facebook page titled Help Find Michelle's
murderer, which had the amazing handle at Granny Gonna Get Justice. And she was speaking with reporters
to keep Michelle's case in the public eye. In the Rapid City Journal article I just mentioned,
Nancy said that she'd even raised $1,100 of her own money in addition to the $5,000 reward
that law enforcement eventually put in place.
Investigative records show that Nancy regularly followed up with investigators to see what leads
they were pursuing and to make sure Michelle's case file wasn't just sitting untouched on someone's
death somewhere.
In the years since her friend's death, Nancy had adopted both of Michelle's cats and stayed
in touch with her two sons.
Nancy also wasn't shy about sharing her thoughts on who she felt was responsible for killing
Michelle. She shared her suspicions about Richard with the Rapid City Journal and Hill City
Prevailer News and even went as far as providing photos of some of Michelle's injuries prior to her
death, which Nancy alleged Richard had inflicted. Unfortunately, by 2017, Nancy was really the only
person left in South Dakota who'd been close with Michelle who was still around to fight for her
case. Amanda, Michelle's sister, had died the year prior, so really it was kind of up to Nancy
to keep pushing for answers from police.
For years, she spent time investigating leads on her own
and working with some of Michelle's distant relatives in Wisconsin
to get the Pennington County Sheriff's Office
to contact a special cold case law enforcement review group in Philadelphia,
known as the VDOC Society.
Pennington County investigators told the press in 2017 and 2018
that they were open to whatever would help bring resolution to the case,
and that included possibly getting the VDOC Society involved.
They emphasized that everything about,
Michelle's death seemed suspicious, but they just didn't have enough evidence to be able to call it a
homicide, or put all the pieces together yet. One lead investigator said that in the department's
eyes, Michelle's case was very much active, and the different personnel who'd been assigned to it
over the years had pursued lots of leads, including DNA testing and interviews with some of the
same people. They just needed that one thing that would break the case wide open.
Meanwhile, Nancy went full send mode on the Facebook page she'd created for Michelle's case.
She was naming names and putting people from Custer on blast if she even suspected that they knew something about what had happened to Michelle.
As of this recording, that Facebook page is still active, and I've scrolled through all of the posts.
It's aggressive to say the least.
But hey, friends got to do what friends got to do.
And even Nancy knew that a lot of the stuff she was putting out there was a mix of the truth,
rumor, and her own opinion.
She told the press that she felt like the justice system had failed Michelle by allowing
Richard so many opportunities to harm women and seemingly get away with it.
She expressed to the Hill City Prevailer News that if Richard had been held accountable
for his prior incidents of domestic violence, he would likely have never met Michelle.
And honestly, I see her point.
But law enforcement needed to make sure that if they were going to arrest Richard for killing
Michelle, they had to have their case locked down.
and they lacked physical evidence tying him to whatever happened to her.
For example, in 2018, they'd followed up on a tip about Richard storing a hammer, a broken knife,
and some tarps, and a blanket in a storage shed behind an apartment he lived in.
But when investigators searched that shed and tested the items, none of the stuff had blood on it.
That same year, they interviewed Richard again, and his story hadn't really changed much.
He was asked more questions about his background, upbringing, past relationships,
and his relationship with Michelle at the time of her death,
but his answers were the same old, same old.
When that interview ended,
investigators were no closer to getting him to crack
or finding out how Michelle had died.
And that piece of info was the most important detail
authorities still hadn't pinned down.
No one knew what had killed Michelle.
On paper, her death was still labeled as undetermined.
So unless law enforcement could get that change to homicide,
they were stuck.
So at the beginning of 2021, they decided to enlist the assistance of a third-party independent
pathologist to review Michelle's autopsy.
That guy's name was Dr. Thomas Bennett.
And when he wrapped up his review in March 2021, he concluded that Michelle had not died as a
result of a natural death, suicide, or an accident.
He wrote that homicide was a possibility.
Bennett explained in his findings that the evidence supported Michelle had died rather quickly
after departing for her weekend trip with Richard and then was disposed of off of Iron Mountain Road
within hours of her death. According to court documents and investigative reports,
Bennett pointed to levidity or skin discoloration as a result of blood pooling in certain parts of the
body after Michelle's heart stopped beating and her advanced state of decomposition as the two main
reasons why he was convinced she'd been discarded rather quickly after dying but several days
before ultimately being found.
A second expert who specialized in the field of forensic anthropology agreed with Dr. Bennett's review,
and that's all the sheriff's office needed to have Michelle's manner of death changed from undetermined to homicide.
It's also what immediately gave them probable cause to move in on their prime suspect.
On Friday, July 16th, 2021, almost eight years after Michelle was killed, authorities arrested Richard for second-degree murder.
By then, he was 53 years old and living in Hill City, South Dakota, which is about 20 minutes north of Custer.
And his arraignment the following Monday, a judge set his bond at $1 million, and prosecutors argued that he was a danger to the community because of his past criminal history related to domestic violence.
After Richard's arrest, the sheriff of Pennington County stated, quote,
We never gave up on the Michelle Will case.
After eight years of hard work, we're pleased to finally arrest the person we believe is responsible for the crime.
crime. We never stopped conducting interviews, examining evidence, and reviewing forensic material,
end quote. Nancy Herman was elated by the news as well, telling the Rapid City Journal, quote,
I started to shake and cry. I was so happy. It has been almost eight years since she was murdered.
I stayed at it the whole time. I had shared tips and leads with investigators so much that I
probably made them mad. But I just wanted justice for Michelle. I am so happy that they kept
working on the case."
The road to justice, though, was going to be a long one, because Richard's defense
argued a lot of things in pretrial motions, primarily that Dr. Thomas Bennett's conclusions
were wrong.
They also argued that his testimony about Michelle's manner of death, likely being a homicide,
should not be allowed in as expert testimony.
They also wanted the other forensic expert who'd consulted on the case and agreed with
Dr. Bennett's findings to be barred from testifying, too.
The defense argued that the prosecution's use of the word dumped to describe how Michelle had been found
was not supported by the evidence in the case, and they disagreed with both forensic experts'
determinations that the damage to Michelle's left collarbone, which appeared to have been made
by a sharp instrument, was related to her cause of death. The defense wrote in their motions that
Michelle's collarbone injury could have just as easily been unrelated to her death.
Richard's defense team also did not want prosecutors to introduce witnesses associated with Richard's prior criminal convictions for domestic violence.
His attorneys claim that women like Richard's ex-wife, his former girlfriend Bonnie, and other women who he'd been convicted of harming, should not be allowed to testify because they'd been influenced by law enforcement over the years,
and jurors could unfairly draw conclusions about Richard's relationship with Michelle if they heard those women's testimony about his character.
His lawyer wrote in a pretrial motion that there was no evidence Richard had ever abused Michelle,
no police reports that proved she'd ever contacted authorities about him,
and no witnesses who'd come forward claiming that Michelle had told them she was being abused.
The only thing the defense conceded was that Richard had called Michelle derogatory names in the presence of others.
They even asked the court to ban the use of the term victim when parties referred to Michelle in court proceedings.
prosecutors were unshaken by these requests, though, and maintained that the crux of the
state's case came down to proving Richard's overwhelming need for power and control in his
relationships. They argued he had murdered Michelle because he'd wanted to control her.
For most of 2021, 2022 and 23, and the first few weeks of 2024, the case dragged on like this.
There was a lot of back and forth in court, objections, delays, request for continuances,
more motions and more delays.
But then, on January 30th, 2024, in a twist few people saw coming,
Pennington County prosecutors amended the criminal complaint against Richard to manslaughter
in the second degree, a class four felony in South Dakota, which was a substantially
lesser charge than second-degree murder.
A second-degree murder conviction could have landed him with a sentence of life in prison,
but second-degree manslaughter only carried a maximum of 10 years.
Richard quickly accepted what's known as an Alford plea,
which for those of you who don't know what that means,
it's when someone admits there's enough evidence
to find them guilty of the charge against them,
while also simultaneously expressing their innocence.
It's different from a no-contest plea
because with a no-contest plea,
you don't assert either guilt or innocence.
Nearly two months later, a judge sentenced him to 10 years in prison,
but he was credited roughly two-and-a-half years for time served.
So, in the end, he got at most seven and a half years behind bars for killing Michelle.
At his sentencing hearing, the judge told Richard, quote,
You have a significant challenge dealing with romantic relationships in your life.
I think you continue to remain a danger, end quote.
And that's something everyone should keep in mind,
because Richard will likely get out and be back on the streets at some point if he lives long enough.
If that isn't worrisome enough, another deep.
detail I learned while researching this case is that according to an interview his ex-wife gave
to law enforcement in 2018, his mother told the ex-wife at some point during the time she was
married to Richard that Richard had killed his three-year-old sister when he was a boy. And get
this, her name also happened to be Michelle. Richard's mom told his ex-wife and later told
investigators that she believed Richard had intentionally knocked down a large frame on their back
porch, which landed on his sister and killed her.
There's no mention of this allegation outside of law enforcement's reports, and his sister's
death, as far as I could find, was not investigated as an intentional killing.
So as far as that goes, that's all we know.
What I'd rather spend more time on is remembering who Michelle was as a person.
Nancy Herman told Hill City Prevailer News that despite her troubles in life, Michelle really was a
magnetic person.
Nancy said there was just something about her that made you want to smile whenever you saw her.
She described Michelle as a sweet person who just wanted a fresh start in life
and desired to repair bridges that she'd burned.
Unfortunately, her best opportunity to do that was ripped away from her by a person
who has never provided a reason for his actions.
If you're someone struggling to get away from a person perpetrating domestic violence,
please visit the links in the show notes and on the blog post for this episode.
Those resources are available to help.
Park Predators is an audio chuck production.
You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website,
parkpreditors.com.
And you can also follow Park Predators on Instagram, at Park Predators.
I think Chuck would approve.
Woo!