Park Predators - The Rest Stop
Episode Date: July 15, 2025A man on the run lures a Mesa Verde National Park visitor to a tragic end and then flees to the West Coast only to find that the consequences of his lawlessness have followed his trail from the mesas ...of Colorado to the coast of California.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-rest-stop 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 I want you all to pay close attention to this episode, because the case I'm going
to tell you about today is a crime that I feel could literally happen to any of us.
It takes place near Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado, which has been the ancestral
home of the Pueblo people for more than 700 years.
If you've ever visited this park, then you know just how unique the landscape is,
especially in areas where communities built structures
directly into the cliffs of the park.
There's an example of what I'm referring to
in the blog post for this episode,
so check it out if you need a visual.
Two areas closest to the park are Mancos and Cortez, Colorado.
Many visitors travel between those two areas along US Highway 160 to make their
way into the park.
And of course, like any highway, there are rest stops along that road.
One in particular became the epicenter of a terrible tragedy in the late summer of
1998, a crime that's trail would eventually lead all the way to southern Idaho and the California coastline.
This is Park Predators. I'm going to go to the beach. Around 8.30 p.m. on Wednesday, September 16, 1998, a California Highway Patrol officer
named Richard Hedgecock noticed a 1991 dark gray Mazda pickup truck driving erratically
in Oceanside, California.
Richard was a 15-year veteran of the CHP and was used to conducting traffic
enforcement while patrolling on his motorcycle near the area's freeways.
It wasn't unusual for him to see a suspected drunk driver or even a tired
driver in that area during nighttime hours.
And that scenario was exactly what Richard believed
he was likely dealing with.
Whoever was behind the wheel of the Mazda
was possibly intoxicated or had fallen asleep.
When he spotted the pickup,
it had just drifted from the roadway into the shoulder
while merging off an interstate and onto a nearby highway.
So the fact that it was no longer on a busy interstate,
I imagine made it that much easier
for Richard to pull it over and see what was up.
After he parked his motorcycle, he began walking toward the passenger side window of the pickup,
but along the way, he noticed a couple of odd things that stood out.
First, it appeared that an old license plate had been covered with a new one, and beneath
a camper shell that was fixed over the truck bed, someone had stretched out a sleeping bag, almost as
if they'd been living or sleeping there.
When Richard asked the driver for his ID and the truck's registration, the man inside
apologized and claimed he didn't have either of those things. The only form of identification
he was able to produce was a social security card.
Unable to do a whole lot with that, Richard decided to walk around to the driver's side
windshield and take down the VIN, which he knew would likely be displayed on the dashboard.
But once he got over to the driver's side, he saw that there was some kind of mat covering
the information he needed to write down. So he reached out his hand and began to move it.
But right as he did that, the driver pulled out a 9mm handgun and fired two shots in Richard's
direction.
One round struck the officer in the left side of his chest, right above his bulletproof
vest, and went out his left shoulder, and the other went through the visor of his motorcycle
helmet.
Neither wound was fatal, and despite the chaos of getting ambushed, Richard was able to retreat
from the front of the pickup, unholster his firearm, and return several shots, one of
which struck the driver in the top of his head.
Once Richard saw that the suspect had sort of slumped over, he stopped firing, but just
like Richard, the driver had not been fatally wounded.
At some point, Richard had also called for backup.
According to news coverage about this incident,
Richard's round had only grazed the man's skull.
However, the injury was serious enough that when first responders arrived to
transport Richard by helicopter to a nearby hospital in Escondido, California,
they realized just how potentially life-threatening
the perpetrator's gunshot wound was, so they called for a second chopper to transport him
to the same hospital.
Just a few hours after the incident, Richard was patched up, discharged from the hospital,
and returned home.
But the suspect was kept under guard and eventually moved to UCSD Medical Center in San Diego.
He was listed in serious condition, but expected to survive.
While he recovered, law enforcement charged him with felony assault and attempted murder of a police officer and felony obstructing an officer.
After running his fingerprints through a State Department of Justice database,
they determined he was 34-year-old
Christopher Dean Paul, a convicted felon out on parole whose last known address was Phoenix,
Arizona.
And kind of random but interesting fact, this freeway shooting wasn't even Officer Richard
Hedgecock's first brush with death while working as a motorcycle cop for CHP.
According to Karen Smith's reporting
for the North County Times,
two years earlier, in August 1996,
a motorist had plowed into a vehicle he'd pulled over
and nearly killed him in the process.
Miraculously though, he'd been able to jump out of the way
at the last second and ultimately walked away uninjured.
So a different situation in many ways,
but still, this cop was two for two with near-death experiences.
I don't know of many traffic enforcement officers who can say that.
A follow-up article by Karen Smith stated that Richard was friends with and went to the same
church as another Oceanside motorcycle police officer who'd also survived two near-death
experiences while on duty in that part of California.
One of which, by the way, was a shooting.
And get this, both men were 42 years old
when they experienced those brushes with death.
So talk about a coincidence.
Anyway, once investigators learned more
about Christopher Dean Paul
and the gray Mazda pickup he'd been driving,
the more their suspicions about him grew.
For one thing, and this was a big red flag,
the truck's registration and license plate
didn't tie back to him.
They belonged to a 67-year-old man
from Idaho named LeVoyne Parrish.
The vehicle hadn't been reported stolen,
but it was a long way from home,
which I imagine naturally made authorities curious to know why Christopher had been using it and
what his connection to Levoine Parish was.
And thankfully, they didn't have to wait very long to get those answers.
On Friday, September 18th, two days after the freeway shooting incident, Christopher had recovered enough from his head injury to voluntarily speak with detectives from
the Oceanside Police Department, which was the agency in charge of investigating that
crime.
He told them that he'd served several years in prison for armed robbery, and by the beginning
of August he'd been granted parole and moved into a recovery residence in Phoenix.
He'd stayed there for a few weeks, but in early September had borrowed a friend's Ford
pickup truck and 9mm handgun and split town.
The friend who'd owned the Ford ended up having his father report it stolen to Phoenix
police on September 11th, but Christopher was long gone by then and had driven it more than 400 miles away
to Durango, Colorado. Christopher told Oceanside investigators that he knew he was going to have to
ditch the Ford at some point and find a new vehicle, as he made the hour or so drive from
Durango to Cortez, Colorado, which took him right past Mesa Verde National Park, he'd come up with a plan to kill someone in order to steal
their car and get rid of the stolen one he'd driven in from Arizona.
So on Sunday, September 13th, after visiting some historic cliff dwellings at the park,
he'd pulled over at the Sleeping Ute rest area on Highway 160, about two miles or so away from the park's entrance.
For three hours, he'd hung out in the parking lot waiting for someone to come along who he could target.
Eventually, he saw an elderly man who was traveling alone pull in and park.
Christopher said he'd approached the man and struck up a conversation with him. The unassuming victim was LeVoyne Parrish.
At some point during their conversation, Christopher said he told LeVoyne he wanted to show him
some quote unquote real good Indian ruins in a tree grove just north of the rest area,
and LeVoyne, a tourist who was on his way to a railroad attraction and museum, agreed
to follow him because he was interested in seeing good sites in the area.
Once the two men were alone, Christopher said he pulled out a 9mm handgun and shot Levoine in the chest and head, then stole his wallet and vehicle and spent the night at an area motel.
No one had seemingly heard the crime or come to help Levoine.
The following day, Monday, September 14th, Christopher said he returned to where he left his victim's body
and hid it in a more secluded area.
Then he covered him with a blanket from Levoine's truck
and disposed of the man's belongings in a dumpster
located in a parking lot at the entrance
to Mesa Verde National Park.
After that, he said he left Colorado
headed toward Escondido, California.
Court records explain that later in the day on the 14th, a Colorado State Patrol officer
found the stolen Ford pickup Christopher had ditched before stealing LeVoyne's truck and
ended up towing it away from the rest stop.
So that detail supported at least some part of Christopher's story of having murdered
LeVoyne to get a new set of wheels and quietly get rid of the stolen vehicle he'd been driving from
Arizona. Shortly after Christopher confessed to all this, Oceanside
detectives placed a call to the Montezuma County Sheriff's Department in
Colorado, which is actually now known as the Montezuma County Sheriff's Office, to
let them know they likely had a recent homicide victim concealed somewhere in their jurisdiction
near a rest stop along Highway 160.
Not long after getting that call, the Sheriff's Office
deployed search teams with scent dogs and scoured the
terrain near the sleeping youth rest stop.
Late on Friday night, the 18th, they found Levoine's badly
decomposed body about 250 yards off
the highway — exactly how Christopher had described it, covered with a blanket and still
clothed in apparel that was later identified as belonging to Levoine.
Because his remains were in such an advanced stage of decomp, authorities had to use dental
records to confirm for sure that it was him.
Colorado investigators then traveled to the dumpster in the National Park, where Christopher
said he'd tossed some of the elderly man's belongings, including the title to his 1991
Mazda pickup truck.
And sure enough, when they arrived, they were able to recover those items from some park
rangers.
The title was there along with other personal items that Levoine's loved
ones later confirmed belonged to him.
I read one source that explained a bit more detail about this, and according to that coverage,
a visitor to the National Park had actually been the one to find Levoine's personal items
in the parking lot of the park entrance on the 13th, which included the Mazda's title,
a diabetic medication kit, $1,000 in travelers checks, and clothing. It was this visitor who'd reportedly given
everything to Mesa Verde park rangers shortly after discovering them. But
whatever the sequence of events was, after the murder was uncovered, Montezuma
County Sheriff's Office seemed to end up with all the relevant physical evidence
for their investigation. Something else that's important to understand in the timeline
of this case is that LeVoyne had actually been reported
missing in Idaho either on or shortly after September 13th.
You see, by the time Christopher got into California
on the 16th, the 67-year-old had failed to call
some of his family members and check in,
which is what had prompted them to alert authorities
in his home state
that something wasn't right.
But based on everything I read, it appears the various law
enforcement agencies involved in this case didn't make all these
connections right away.
Or I don't know, maybe there was just a bit of delay between
investigators in Idaho, Colorado and California because there
was so much going on simultaneously.
And unfortunately,
it's not like Lavoine had a travel companion who could better aid investigators
in solidifying his timeline or movements.
According to an article in the Cortez journal,
Lavoine was super into railroads and the history of the locomotive industry.
And it seems that was one of the reasons why he chose the Mesa Verde area to
spend some of his solo vacation. When he bumped into Christopher, he was headed in the direction of the Durango and
Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, which is located in Durango. It's an attraction that explores
decades of Colorado's railroad history and takes visitors through San Juan National Forest on an
old-time train. The whole experience is themed as if it were set in 1882, so I
feel pretty confident it would have been something right up Levoin's Alley."
But he never got the chance to enjoy that experience, because by all accounts, he encountered
Christopher right before going. After his murder, his family laid him to rest in Aberdeen
Cemetery in Idaho. His tombstone is one of the most beautifully crafted gravestones I've ever seen.
On the front, there is a snowy mountain range etched as the backdrop, a winding river covering
most of the bottom, and trees dotted along both sides.
Towards the middle, there's a train with a steam engine puffing along, and beneath his
dates of birth and death is the title of the sing-along song, The Happy Wanderer.
On the back of the memorial are his children and other family members' names, and right beneath those are some lyrics from The Happy Wanderer.
They go like this,
I love to go a-wandering along the mountain track, and as I go I love to sling my knapsack on my back.
I love to wander by the stream that dances in the sun. So joyously it calls
to me. Come join my happy song."
As investigators continued to work the case, they dug into Christopher's background and
spoke with other law enforcement agencies that had interactions with him throughout
his life. They learned that not only did he have a criminal record in Arizona for things like burglary and armed robbery, he'd also been taken into custody in 1991 in Cortez, Colorado.
I'm not sure what kind of crime he was arrested for in that instance, because it isn't something
I saw mentioned in the source material, but whatever it was for, it's clear Christopher
was a career criminal who got around in a variety of US states.
According to Karen Smith's reporting for the North County Times,
when he confessed to Oceanside Detectives after his arrest in California,
he did an interview with a criminal psychologist from Orange County,
who specialized in profiling serial killers.
Over the course of that conversation, he ended up admitting to other violent
crimes, including an incident in Galveston,
Texas, and another in San Diego, both of which were from like seven to ten years prior to
LeVoyne's murder.
At one point, he also confessed that he'd wanted to kill a family in Escondido, but
it seems that getting pulled over and into the shooting with CHP officer Richard Hedgecock
had thwarted those deadly plans.
Which when you stop and think about that, it's super terrifying because if the freeway
shooting had never happened, it's very possible we could be talking about even more murders
in this episode.
What's wild to me is that authorities never seemed to publicly identify the family Christopher
was supposedly targeting in Escondido. But whoever that person or family was, they quite literally dodged a bullet.
At Christopher's arraignment on Monday, September 21st, 1998,
he pleaded not guilty to the freeway shooting and
a judge ordered he be held without bond.
According to reporting by the Associated Press, he'd already been convicted at
least three times for felony armed robbery and was now in violation of the three strikes law, or in other words,
a habitual offender.
Plus, the fact that he'd been carrying around a 9mm handgun while on the run meant San Diego's
deputy district attorney could also tack on an additional charge for him being a convicted
felon in possession of a firearm.
In early October, officials in Montezuma County in Colorado, who'd waited until Christopher had been arraigned in California, filed charges against him for
first degree murder, aggravated motor vehicle theft, and sentence enhancers for
using a deadly weapon and the robbery of an elderly or handicapped person.
A few days after that, the district attorney in Montezuma County requested
he be extradited back to Colorado to face the murder case against him there before California
tried him for the freeway shooting. But that didn't end up happening. According to an article
by David Hicks for the North County Times, on October 21st, a Superior Court judge in San Diego
County held a preliminary hearing for Christopher regarding the officer-involved shooting.
The goal of that proceeding was to determine whether there was enough evidence or probable cause to move forward to trial.
Officer Richard Hedgecock testified about what he'd endured as a result of Christopher's ambush attack and described it like this, quote, "'There were two loud pops, bright flashes.
I felt like somebody hit me in the left shoulder with a sledgehammer.
It took me an instant to figure out what was going on, and then I realized that a weapon
had been fired twice and that I had been shot.'"
End quote.
At one point during Richard's testimony, Christopher made an outburst in court and yelled at the
officer to tell the truth, then said, quote, I was justified.
He told me to shoot.
So I shot.
That's the way it goes.
End quote.
That display from Christopher elicited no response from Richard, but did prompt two
bailiffs to quickly reposition themselves on either side of Christopher.
I guess to make sure he wasn't going to do something else out of line.
But after barking this remark to Richard, Christopher didn't make another peep for
the rest of the hearing.
Nearly two dozen people who attended that prelim and sat in court behind
Christopher were either Officer Hedgecock's colleagues or other members of
law enforcement who wanted to show their support for him.
An Oceanside police detective who'd interviewed Christopher
after the shooting also took the witness stand and said that
when he'd initially spoken with the 34-year-old, Christopher
had described the officer-involved shooting as very chaotic.
He said after hearing glass shatter and metal grind, he'd
felt a warm sensation on the top of his head and realized
he'd been shot.
It was at that point Christopher explained to this Oceanside
detective that he realized he might die, which is why he
hadn't continued to fight once Richard Hedgecock subdued him
and more backup arrived.
So based on the evidence and all of this testimony presented
during the preliminary hearing, the judge overseeing the
proceeding ordered that the case against Christopher for the
attempted murder of a peace officer and
being a felon in possession of a firearm was to move forward to
trial. In the interim, he was held without bail until his next
court date. His trial was originally scheduled to get
underway in mid January 1999. But that date got pushed to the
spring of that year. According to David Grant Long's coverage for the Cortez Journal,
Christopher was eventually found guilty of attempted murder for the freeway shooting incident
and sentenced to 77 years in prison.
After that trial wrapped up, he was extradited to Colorado to face the murder case against him there in relation to LeVoyne's death.
In early November at his arraignment in Montezuma County,
a judge set his bail at $1 million, which he couldn't pay.
And it wouldn't have mattered anyway
because he was still technically a convicted felon
awaiting incarceration in California.
For the rest of November, 1999,
Christopher's public defender filed motions
to limit pretrial publicity about the murder case
and make sure the physical evidence the state planned
to use at trial was preserved.
A preliminary hearing was also scheduled to go over
what the prosecution's case was going to be
and whether the state had enough to even impanel a jury
and secure a conviction.
By the end of December though,
the answer to that question must have been
an overwhelming yes,
because shortly after the start of the new year,
Christopher made a pivotal decision.
Because the first degree murder charge
and other crimes Christopher was accused of committing
in Colorado were so serious,
and the prosecutor had tacked on sentencing enhancers, which made him eligible to receive
the death penalty if convicted.
Christopher made a request.
In early January 2000, in an effort to avoid likely going to death row, he asked the district
attorney's office in Montezuma County for a plea bargain.
Court records and coverage by the Cortez Journal explain that in exchange for Christopher admitting
full responsibility for Levoin's premeditated murder, the prosecution agreed to drop the
aggravated robbery and car theft charges against him, as well as the sentencing enhancers that
made him eligible for the death penalty. In early March, a few months after the deal was finalized, he was sentenced to life in
prison without the possibility of parole and required to pay close to $7,000 in restitution.
But there was a bit of a catch, or at least a logistical issue.
His prison time for the attempted murder conviction in California had to be served before his
sentence in Colorado could
begin.
The punishments were consecutive, which meant once his 77 years were up in California, he
would be moved to Colorado to begin serving life there.
But because Christopher was in his mid-30s by the time these two legal cases wrapped
up, that essentially meant he might never see the inside of a Colorado prison cell.
I mean, if my math is right, that would mean he'd have to have been over 100 years old
before even beginning to serve his sentence in Colorado, which seemed highly unlikely.
At his sentencing hearing, Levoin's three children spoke about how hurtful it was to
lose their father in such a vicious and violent way. One of his daughters named Lisa tearfully said in court, quote,
my dad had an amazing love for life and people.
And maybe that's what allowed this man to prey on him.
But I wouldn't have wanted him to be any less trusting and loving.
The irony of this tragedy is that he was murdered in cold blood
by a self-confessed predator, a weak little
man who should never see the light of day. You took from us the kindest, gentlest man
we ever had the privilege of knowing." Linda, another one of Levoine's children, told the
court that she wondered if perhaps God had allowed Christopher and her father to meet
that fateful day in September 1998 because it would begin a series of events that would ultimately lead to Christopher's
demise and prevent him from being free to harm others.
She remarked, quote, You took away all our tomorrows.
It is my wish that you have no tomorrows too.
I pray it eats you up inside.
End quote. I pray it eats you up inside." Levoin's son Damrin felt certain that Christopher deserved capital punishment for what he'd
done, but he explained that he and his sisters had resigned themselves to the fact that their
father's murderer would spend the rest of his life in prison instead, and that would
have to be good enough.
During his remarks, Damrin expressed his appreciation for all the investigators who'd worked on the case,
and everyone who was involved in prosecuting the man, who he said had murdered the best father and his best friend.
Before the sentencing hearing concluded,
Christopher spoke directly to LeVoyne's loved ones and told them that he didn't feel sorrowful about what he'd done. He remarked, quote, I could lie to you and tell you a nice story, but
I'm a person without remorse.
I wish I could feel remorse.
That's why I need to be in prison the rest of my life.
That's who I am, and I don't know how it happened.
I regret that I killed him.
I apologize for bringing you such pain and agony."
End quote.
Christopher's public defender told the court
that perhaps the reason why his client was so unremorseful
was because he'd had a very difficult childhood
and been abandoned by his parents.
The lawyer also said that while incarcerated in California,
Christopher had a documented history
of hearing voices in his head and been diagnosed with a quote unquote psychotic condition.
But what specifically he meant by that term or like what mental health disorder he was
specifically alluding to isn't mentioned in the available source material.
Like not in the news coverage, not in the court records, nothing.
Something else that took me a little while to figure out
while researching this episode too
is where exactly Christopher ended up
after both his convictions.
It was something that I thought would be pretty obvious
and easy to find, but it wasn't.
When I first searched his name and information
through California's Department of Corrections
and Rehabilitation Inmate Database,
fully expecting to see Christopher pop up, he didn't.
So I furiously tried to figure out
if maybe his sentence in California
had been reduced at some point in the last 25 years,
and he'd gone on to begin serving his time in Colorado.
But that search was also a dead end.
Finally, I got on the phone with California prison officials
and ended up filing a records
request for the dates he was admitted to a state prison and when I assumed he'd been
transferred somewhere else.
Well, turns out, he'd never actually left California.
In the summer of 2002, he'd committed another murder while incarcerated at a state prison
in Kings County, California.
Most of the official records about that offense are exempt from public record laws because prisons often don't allow much of what happens behind bars out
when it relates to inmate specific offenses.
But I was able to pull some court filings about the incident,
which clearly state Christopher was indicted for
assaulting and murdering another inmate named Rick Watson in June 2002.
He eventually pleaded guilty to that crime in 2006 and was sentenced in 2008
to an additional term of life without the possibility of parole.
That sentence seems to have been added on top of the 77 years he was already
serving in California, plus the life sentence he was
theoretically still supposed to fulfill in Colorado.
On November 9, 2024, Christopher died in prison, exactly where he'd told LeVoyne Parrish's
family he believed he should be.
A disturbing detail I read while putting together this episode is that according to the National
Park Service,
when Christopher was arrested in California driving Levoin's stolen pickup truck shortly
after killing Levoin, officials discovered an entrance receipt for Grand Canyon National
Park inside that vehicle. It was time stamped sometime after Levoin's murder took place,
but before Christopher was caught. Meaning Meaning after leaving Colorado and heading west,
Christopher had purposely made a pit stop at the Grand Canyon.
This small detail just sticks out to me for so many different reasons.
I mean, it's strange and kind of eerie when you think about it.
We know that Christopher had already ditched quite a few personal belongings of
Levoins back in Mesa Verde National Park, and there was no way he'd made this stop at the Grand
Canyon to ditch the handgun he'd used in the murder, since that weapon was found on
him when he was eventually arrested for shooting CHP trooper Richard Hedgecock.
So my question is, what was Christopher doing visiting another national park while on his
multi-state crime spree?
Why did he go to the Grand Canyon?
Was he just sightseeing or perhaps scouting out another potential victim?
I'll likely never know the answer to that question.
No other crimes that I could find during that time frame have been connected to him, but
it's a thought that keeps me up at night, and probably always will.
Park Predators is an audio chuck 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,
And you can also follow Park Predators on Instagram, at Park Predators.
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