Park Predators - The Worker
Episode Date: November 11, 2025In April 1995, two troubled teens on the run from the law in Payette National Forest encounter an innocent forest service worker and commit the unthinkable.View source material and photos for this epi...sode at: parkpredators.com/the-worker 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, Delia Diambra. And the case I'm going to tell you about today
takes place in Payette National Forest in west central Idaho. This recreation space is more than
2.3 million acres and contains forests, grasslands, and beautiful mountain peaks among many other
types of scenic topography. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's website,
there are trails in this vast landscape that are rarely used, simply because of how remote they are.
The National Forest Foundation's website explains that the landscape is sectioned
into five different ranger districts, which are home to lots of camping areas, hiking routes,
fishing spots, and snowmobiling trails.
Because each of these districts offer unique experiences for visitors,
dedicated employees of the National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service
work hard to make sure day-to-day operations run smoothly.
In April 1995, though, one worker's act of kindness to two strangers was betrayed
in the most tragic way.
When I tell you that the raw senselessness of what happened to him
brought me to tears, I'm not lying.
I spent a lot of time researching this case
and obtaining old court records,
which included law enforcement's interview transcripts of the offenders.
And the absolute disregard for human life
that this story reveals broke my heart.
And like it has for me,
will likely remain a case that will stick with you
for a long, long time.
This is Park Predators.
Around 12.30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 26, 1995, a deputy with the Washington County Sheriff's Office in Idaho was listening to his police scanner when he heard a call go out that caught his attention.
The dispatcher's crackled message stated,
that two teenage boys had escaped a youth detention facility in nearby Elmore County,
and they were believed to be armed with a Winchester-22-caliber rifle and a 357 Smith and Wesson handgun.
They were also suspected of driving a stolen older model white Chevrolet flatbed truck.
The fugitives were 17-year-old Eric Scott Brown and 16-year-old Ronald Steiner.
The deputy who'd heard the alert about them noted that the vehicle they were suspected of stealing
was described as having Idaho plates
and displayed the text
Hiddleston well drilling on the doors,
which, to me at least, seems like a pretty good description
considering there could have been
any number of Chevy flatbeds on the road
in that part of Idaho at that time.
According to investigative reports,
a witness working east of the city of Weezer, Idaho,
had reported seeing the missing flatbed around 9.30 a.m.
And an Oregon State Police Trooper
had also clocked it around 11 a.m.
So the odds seemed to be
in law enforcement's favor of catching the two young men at some point.
But it wasn't going to be as easy as going to their homes and knocking on their front doors,
because when a deputy went to two addresses associated with Eric and Ronald,
he didn't see the stolen flatbed at either of those locations,
which meant most likely they were still on the run and probably somewhere laying low.
Thankfully, it was only a matter of hours before investigators with the sheriff's office caught a major break.
According to police reports, around 4.45 p.m. on that Wednesday, a police lieutenant for the
city of Weezer spotted a pair of young white men walking on a sidewalk, who he suspected could be
Eric and Ronald. The teen's clothing closely matched the outfits the missing pair had last been
seen wearing, and as the lieutenant passed them, the duo stared back at him. The cop's intuition
told him they were most likely the guys everybody was looking for. So he quickly whipped
his cruiser around and followed them,
eventually engaging with the pair
and calling other personnel
with the sheriff's office for backup.
While the teens were being handcuffed and patted down,
Eric and Ronald confirmed their identities,
but Eric protested as to why they were being detained.
That's when law enforcement officials
informed the pair that they were wanted for escape,
firearm theft, and motor vehicle theft.
At the time, Ronald was in possession
of a lighter matches, a pack of cigarettes,
and a map of Payette National Forest,
that was marked with the words, official use only, not for resale.
Inside Eric's pockets, authorities found several keys, a flashlight, papers,
six 22-caliber bullets, $43 in U.S. currency, and $10 in Canadian money,
and an ID and credit cards that had the name David Jack Wheeler on them.
When investigators asked Eric where he got those items from,
he claimed he'd found them by some local railroad tracks.
but investigators didn't totally buy that answer.
So they kept pressing him.
The sheriff who arrived on scene asked Eric
where the guns in flatbed truck were
that he and his friend reportedly stole from his father's house.
And at first, Eric didn't answer the question directly,
but then he eventually offered up
that they'd parked the truck somewhere in the county.
After that, though, the pair declined to provide any further information
and requested to speak with a lawyer.
Authorities decided it would be best to separate the young men
and processed them at different law enforcement headquarters.
So Ronald was taken to the sheriff's office
and Eric was transported to the Weezer Police Department.
Interestingly, while Eric's arresting officer was filling out paperwork for him,
he noticed that Eric kept repeating that he wanted to know where Ronald was
because he said he wanted to be with him to protect him.
But the officer arresting Eric told him that he wasn't going to see his friend anytime soon
and he continued to try and get Eric to offer up more information about where the truck
and guns were that they'd stolen.
Eric responded that the truck was somewhere near the Mancreek Reservoir,
and he later told another officer the guns were at the bottom of an area river.
Not long after that, investigators who were dealing with Ronald learned that Eric had made
an admission to a Weezer police officer who was watching over him, that he'd shot a man by a
ranger station in the Man Creek Reservoir area.
This news obviously got investigators' attention because up until that point, they didn't know
anything about a shooting victim.
So they quickly brought Ronald over to where Eric was to try and convince the pair
that it was in everyone's best interest for them to show authorities where the man Eric said
he'd shot was located.
The teens agreed to cooperate at that point, and Ronald was eventually the one to go with
investigators to lead them to where the victim was.
Meanwhile, while that was going on, a deputy and an ambulance drove up to pay at National Forest
toward the Man Creek Reservoir to check things out and search for the person Eric
claimed he'd shot. At that point in time, no one knew whether or not that individual was
alive or dead, but based on Eric's admission, investigators had to have believed something
far worse than just a stolen car and guns was probably awaiting them.
Around 6 p.m. when units arrived at the Man Creek Guard Station, they saw a green U.S. Forest
Service pickup truck with a white camper shell on the back, parked on a bridge over the creek.
The door on the driver's side of the truck was open and on the ground, and on the ground,
next to it lying face up was a man whose head and chest area were covered with blood.
The victim appeared to be about 50 years old, had a gray beard and balding head.
And it was apparent right away that he was a Forest Service employee because he was wearing
a U.S. Forest Service shirt, chest waiters, a bright orange vest, and his government-issued
badge was lying on or near his chest. He'd been shot in the head and there was nothing
the responding deputies or paramedics could do for him. From that point, the sheriff's
office secured the crime scene and began taking photographs. About 15 minutes later, investigators
brought Ronald to the area, and he led deputies to where he and Eric had abandoned the stolen
flatbed truck after their escape. It didn't take long for the sheriff's office to locate that
stolen vehicle about two miles away from the homicide scene. After that, they linked up with law
enforcement officers with the U.S. Forest Service and tentatively IDed the victim as David Jack Wheeler.
It seems everyone involved in the investigation made the connection rather quickly,
since Eric had David's driver's license and credit cards in his pockets when he and Ronald were caught.
Evidence at the crime scene strongly indicated that David had been ambushed when he was killed.
The window on the passenger side of his truck had been shattered and there was glass scattered on the seat as well as on the ground outside.
The glove box was left open and its contents had been dumped out on the seats, almost like they'd been rifled through.
There was a large pool of blood on the floorboard of the truck's cab and blood smears on the driver's seat and door frame.
By 7.45 p.m., the local coroner's office had removed David's body from the scene and transported it to a local hospital for autopsy, which was scheduled to take place the following day.
The results of that exam were not made public, but it seems the conclusions were sort of what everyone already knew.
David had died from a gunshot wound to the head.
Shortly after removing his body, investigators made a range of.
to tow his government-issued pickup and the flatbed truck Eric and Ronald had stolen out of the forest.
Realizing that they were dealing with a homicide, officers and deputies turned their attention to getting
formal recorded statements from their two teenage suspects to try and piece together what in the
world had happened.
According to police,
police reports, when a deputy formally interviewed Ronald around 10 p.m. on April 26th, he said that the
night before, which would have been Tuesday the 25th, he and Eric had escaped a low-security
juvenile facility they'd been temporarily housed at in Mountain Home, Idaho. While on the run, they'd
stolen two firearms from Eric's father's house and then stolen the Chevy flatbed from a local
drilling business. Several hours after that, they'd driven into the city of Weezer, briefly gone to a
Walmart and shopping mall located close by in Oregon and eventually made their way back to Idaho
where they stole fuel at a gas station. He said they attempted to hang out with some friends in the
area but no one was available, so they continued driving around. Around 11 a.m., Eric had driven them up
to the Man Creek Reservoir area, which sits within Payette National Forest. And after they arrived,
they made their way further into the mountains to ditch the flatbed. Shortly after 1 p.m.,
they got out of that vehicle and began hiking on foot in the drive.
direction of a Forest Service Guard station.
Around 2.30 p.m., when they were close to that building, they noticed a man in a pickup truck
and decided to approach him.
Ronald said he mentioned to the guy that he was thirsty and asked if he and Eric could have some
water.
The worker told the young men they could have all the water they wanted, but when he turned
his back to get a plastic canteen for them, Eric displayed a 357 handgun from his waistband
and shot him.
Ronald told investigators that at that moment he immediately dropped a 22-caliber rifle he had been holding and took off into the woods.
He was fearful that Eric would try and shoot him too.
A short while later, though, he said Eric caught up to him and admitted to shooting the park employee.
After that, they hitched a ride from a good Samaritan who took them to a bridge that spanned the Snake River.
There, they discarded the murder weapon and the 22 rifle, then headed back to Weezer on foot to get some food at a local superboy.
market. The investigator who took Ronald's statement noted in his report that the entire time
Ronald was providing this information, he seemed genuinely unfazed by he and his friend's actions.
He was described as almost casual about what they'd done. He didn't cry, he didn't get angry,
he was completely emotionless. There were even some points in time where he reportedly yawned.
When authorities interviewed Eric, he confessed right away to shooting David Wheeler and said,
the 357 revolver and 22-caliber rifle he and Ronald had been carrying with them had come from
his father's house and mountain home. He explained that after escaping the youth detention facility
and stealing the guns, he and Ronald had stolen the Chevy flatbed from a drilling and pump
business and driven it up into the mountains past the Man Creek Reservoir Guard Station.
They decided to leave the flatbed in the woods and hike back towards the guard station.
When they arrived, they spotted a forest employee and green pickup truck.
and Eric got the idea to steal it.
So he told Ronald to walk up to the guy and ask him for water.
When the employee went to get the young men some,
Eric said he pulled out his handgun
and shot the worker in the back of his head from roughly three feet away.
After that, Eric said he rifled through the truck's glove box
and stole some first aid kits, two jackets,
and the victim's wallet, which contained credit cards and cash.
In Eric's version of events,
it seemed the boys had spent at least some amount of time
planning to kill their target in order to steal his pickup truck.
Whereas in Ronald's story, he'd made it sound like the whole thing was Eric lashing out at random.
And there was never a plan to commit murder to steal another vehicle.
In Eric's statements, he told an officer that he'd heard voices in his head, and he thought
that maybe if he shot the guy, those voices would stop.
He also admitted to contemplating killing Ronald, too, per the voices, but had chosen not to.
In the end, Eric ultimately said,
he didn't know why he killed the victim.
At one point, he said he thought David might have had a gun,
but then later confirmed that he knew he didn't.
Eric stated that after the murder,
he and Ronald caught a ride from a motorist
who took them to a bridge that spanned the Snake River.
There, he said he'd wrapped the murder weapon
in one of the jackets from the victim's truck
and dumped the 22 rifle and extra ammo
directly into the river.
When they got to Weezer,
he discarded the first aid kits in a dumpster,
but held on to the other jacket
that had belonged to David.
As a part of their due diligence,
authorities confiscated the green-colored jacket Eric was wearing,
swabbed his hands for what I assume was likely gunshot residue
and took fingernail clippings.
They sent all that stuff to a forensic lab in Meridian for further examination.
Then they escorted Eric to the overpass across the Snake River
where he'd indicated he and his friend had disposed of the two firearms.
Unfortunately, though, the guns were not able to be retrieved that night.
Around that same time, so 10 or 10.30 at night on that Wednesday, authorities got in touch with David's wife of 16 years, Christy, and notified her of what had happened.
Because there seemed to be some discrepancies, at least in terms of motive between Eric's version of events and Ronald's story, the deputy who first interviewed Ronald decided he needed to conduct a second interview with the 16-year-old to sort out where their accounts differed.
According to police reports, before this deputy spoke with Ronald a second time,
his boss, the sheriff, advised him to ask the county prosecutor if that was okay.
But the deputy didn't do that.
Instead, he visited Ronald in jail without his lawyer present and interviewed him anyway.
During that conversation, the deputy confronted Ronald with information he said Eric had provided
about the murder being premeditated.
And it was only then that Ronald reportedly changed his.
entire statement. This time around, he said that he and Eric had walked to the guard station
near Man Creek Reservoir and stumbled upon who they thought was a ranger working near a bridge.
He said he and Eric squabbled for about 10 minutes about who was going to kill the man,
and eventually Eric made the executive decision to be the one to commit the murder.
Ronald said they'd use the ruse of asking for water to distract the victim.
After the deputy got this confession from Ronald, he finally called Washington County's prosecutor
to let him know what was up, and the prosecutor, naturally, wasn't happy with this investigator's
actions. He told him not to speak with Ronald again without his lawyer present. Because, yeah,
duh, everyone knows that has a huge potential to cause major problems down the line. Still,
this whole thing about the investigator questioning Ronald a second time didn't seem to impact what
came next in the case. Because according to investigative reports and news coverage on this case,
On April 27th, authorities officially charged Eric and Ronald as adults
with first-degree murder and possession of stolen property.
If they were convicted, they faced the death penalty or life in prison.
When news of their arrests hit local newspapers, the story was everywhere.
As you can imagine, David's loved ones and coworkers were absolutely devastated by his murder.
He was a 49-year-old married father of two who lived in Baker City, Oregon.
He was also a decorated Vietnam veteran and civil engineer who'd worked for the U.S. Forest Service for 15 years.
Normally, he was stationed in nearby Wulawa Whitman National Forest in Oregon,
but on the day of the crime, he'd been temporarily assigned to inspect bridges and pay at National Forest for a few weeks.
When he was killed, he was working by himself and was believed to have either just completed an inspection on the bridge at Man Creek or is about to start one.
His supervisor told the press that David was a big supporter
of barrier-free access to facilities in the National Forest
and desired to be a counselor and mentor to his coworkers.
David's widow, Christy, told the Associated Press
that when she first learned that her husband had died,
she initially thought he'd drowned or maybe gotten into a car crash.
She couldn't really wrap her mind around the fact that he'd been murdered.
She told the publication, quote,
It's just sort of incomprehensible right now
that he's not going to drive up and walk in the door.
End quote.
She later expressed in a more in-depth interview
that prior to this incident,
she was never really afraid
for her husband's safety while he was at work.
The only times they'd ever discussed potential threats
was in regard to mushroom pickers in the forest.
According to Marianne Flags reporting
for the Idaho statesman,
the couple had been together since 1975
and shared a mutual love for nature.
They enjoyed raising their son and daughter
in Baker City and being a part of their country,
community. David in particular was very involved in his church, an area rotary club, and youth sports
programs with the local YMCA where his wife was the executive director. He was also a big part of
his son and daughter sports teams and schools. People who knew him said he was a super nice guy
who was very giving of his time and had a knack for connecting with young people. For example, in 1994,
just one year before his murder, he was crowned Baker County's father of the year after his daughter,
a persuasive, heartfelt essay about how great of a man he was,
which I think is just another reason why it made it all the more shocking
that the suspects accused of killing him were teenagers.
Unfortunately, subsequent searches of the Snake River
where Eric and Ronald had both confessed to ditching the murder weapon
didn't turn up the firearms right away.
Recent heavy rains had forced authorities to temporarily suspend the search for those
pieces of evidence, but they weren't totally at a dead end.
According to police reports, around 11 p.m. on Saturday, April 29th, investigators received
a call from an angler who claimed he'd found a jacket floating in an area reservoir that he
believed belonged to the slain forest worker. This witness reported he'd been fishing on Saturday afternoon
when he noticed a dark green hooded jacket drifting in the water in front of him. He snagged
it with his fishing line and when he looked inside, he saw tags that had the U.S. Forest Service
logo on them and the name Wheeler written down.
A few hours later, when the sheriff's office got the jacket from the angler around 1 a.m. on Sunday, April 30th,
they made those same observations about the tags and went through several waterlogged items that the witness had retrieved from the pockets.
Those things included a set of keys with the name Wheeler written on the back, a few pieces of paper, one of which had David's name on it, remnants of a sandwich, a ski lift ticket, a candy bar, and some gum.
All of those items were quickly sent off to the lab in Meridian
that was processing the other physical evidence in the case.
That same day, friends and loved ones held David's memorial service
at Baker High School's auditorium.
Nearly 1,000 people attended to celebrate the 49-year-old's life and legacy.
Family, friends, coworkers, and city officials
shared story after story about their fond memories of him
and what a lasting impact he left on their lives and the world around him.
His two accused killers, on the other hand, did not seem to have nearly as bright reputations.
Not much is known about Eric and Ronald before this, but from what I read in the available news
coverage, they both came from broken homes and either had parents who were not alive anymore
or who struggled with mental illness.
Eric had recently moved to Idaho from California and stopped attending high school shortly
thereafter. Ronald was from Payette, Idaho, but had withdrawn from Mountain Home High School in
1993 to pursue studies at home. Both young men had a habit of skipping school, and in Ronald's
interaction with law enforcement, he expressed that he couldn't read or write very well.
The juvenile detention facility they'd escaped from was nothing more than a trailer located in Elmore
County in the city of Mountain Home, which was about 100 miles southeast of the crime scene.
According to an article by the Baker City Herald, it was mainly used to house juveniles
who were waiting to be transferred to more secure facilities.
Before Eric and Ronald literally walked out of the building undetected, they were facing charges
for car break-ins and burglaries in Elmore County.
Marianne Flagg reported for the Idaho statesman that two different area magistrates had previously
raised concerns about Elmore County's juvenile detention trailer and its lack of security,
but nothing was done to correct the situation.
In July 1994, for example, three teens had managed to get out of the building and steal a car before eventually being caught.
Not long after, the magistrates issued their warnings, Elmore County Sheriff at the time somewhat addressed their concerns,
but he later wrote in a letter that there was only so much he could do with the amount of resources and manpower at his disposal.
It's clear from the source material that this specific situation pointed to a much greater problem within the state of Idaho's juvenile justice system at the time,
which was that there simply wasn't enough room in secure youth detention facilities to house the
growing number of adolescents waiting to be incarcerated.
When Eric and Ronald were first brought to the detention trailer a few days before David's
murder, they were deemed nonviolent offenders.
They'd been arrested for thefts, so nothing is violent as murder.
And typically, juveniles who were temporarily housed in Elmore County's trailer fell into that
same category.
Anytime a suspect was determined to be violent, they were always
taken to a secure facility straight away.
According to what Elmore County Sheriff told the Associated Press, the door to the trailer
the pair had escaped from was always kept unlocked for safety reasons, but there was an
attendant who monitored the room.
Unfortunately, when that attendant took a short restroom break on the night of April 25th,
that's when Eric and Ronald got out.
In early May, so just a few days after the teens were arrested, Eric's court-appointed attorney
submitted a request for him to undergo psychological evaluation.
Because he'd expressed to investigators after his arrest
that he'd heard voices in his head at the time of the murder,
his attorney felt it was appropriate to determine
if he was competent enough to understand the charges against him
and eventually stand trial.
Apparently, Eric's brother had experienced something similar
with regards to voices in his head in 1994,
and he'd gone as far as attempting to take his own life.
So in Eric's attorney's eyes,
Eric's mental health certainly merited a closer look.
The court agreed and ordered a doctor perform that exam on May 3rd.
At a preliminary hearing a few weeks later, the results of that evaluation were not discussed
in court, but several investigators, fellow inmates, and witnesses who'd come across the
defendants after the crime did take the stand.
For about three hours, both sides introduced numerous photos and items of evidence related
to the case, and Eric's father, Ed, even testified about.
incriminating admissions his son had made to him after his arrest.
Ed recounted for the court how he'd discovered his home broken into in the early morning hours of
April 26, with two of his guns and their accompanying ammunition missing.
When the preliminary hearing concluded, the judge determined that there was substantial
probable cause to move forward with a trial.
At an arraignment a few days later, Eric pleaded not guilty, but Ronald asked for more time
to consider how he would plead.
At that point, both teens' attorneys wanted to sever their cases so they could each get a jury of their own.
In the weeks that followed, Ronald eventually ended up pleading not guilty, too,
and their defense attorneys got to work filing motions to have all the statements they'd made to police before their arrests suppressed.
Prosecutors obviously didn't want that to happen, though, because the teen's admissions were pretty central to the state's case.
However, that was a fight the prosecution would ultimately lose
because in mid-September, the judge presiding over the case
granted both defendants' requests to have their statements suppressed.
The judge told the court, quote,
Coercion and intimidation was placed on these individuals.
This is not a court-made law, but society's law passed by the legislature.
He later continued.
It keeps building and building.
They keep interrogating, suggesting, and keep ignoring,
denying while re-notifying them of their rights and tape recording. At some point, the coercion is
overwhelming, and that is why the law is so strict saying all questions must cease until an attorney
is provided." But it wasn't all victory in celebrations for the defense after that. At that same
hearing, the judge denied their motions to have separate trials, which meant, like it or not,
Eric and Ronald were stuck with one another for the long haul. Several months later, in March of
In 1996, with their trial date barreling toward them, both young men seemed to experience a sudden
change of heart about how they wanted their fight to end.
According to court records, on March 13, 1996, Ronald's defense attorney notified the court
that his client intended to enter an Alfred plea for second-degree murder
and grand theft by possession.
Eric's attorney informed the judge
that his client would also be pleading guilty,
but not to second-degree murder.
Eric agreed to plead guilty
to first-degree murder
and grand theft by possession
in exchange for the death penalty
being taken off the table.
In response to this announcement,
Washington County's prosecutor stated,
quote,
I believe that this resolution is fair and just.
For my contacts with the family of Mr. Wheeler,
I know of the painful year they have
endured. I am satisfied now that justice will be done." End quote. David's widow, Christy,
told reporter Charles Etlinger that she didn't think her late husband would have wanted to see
either of the offenders put to death. From what I read in the news coverage, the wheelers were
described as fairly religious people, and the idea of capital punishment was a subject
Christy said she and her husband had talked about prior to this incident. In the end, the family
and their close friends were just happy they didn't have to go through a trial.
David and Christy's children were elementary and middle school age at the time,
and on top of what they'd already been through,
I'm sure their mother was just glad they could all try and move on.
A month earlier, the federal building in Baker City, Oregon,
which housed a U.S. post office in several offices for Wallowa-Wittman National Forest employees,
was renamed the David J. Wheeler Federal Building.
As of this recording, it still bears that name,
but reporting by the Baker City Herald in March of 2025 explained that
it's actually one of several hundred government-owned properties that could be sold due to being deemed functionally obsolete for the modern workforce.
Now, even though Eric's previous psychological evaluation had determined he was fit to stand trial, it also was considered in the sentencing phase.
Ronald eventually had one too, by the way, because understanding his mental health history would have some bearing on how the judge decided to punish the teens.
At their sentencing hearing in early May 1996, the doctor who performed those exams testified,
but his specific findings were not archived in the court records that are available.
However, coverage from that time by the Associated Press explained that the doctor had learned
that in the days prior to the crime, Eric had read materials about religions, including Satanism,
and expressed to other people that he needed to kill someone in order to become a Satanist.
The psychologist also noted that Ronald was the much more.
reserved of the two and was a person with an intellectual disability. The doctor said Ronald was more
likely to be a follower than a leader when it came to making big decisions, which is a characterization
Ronald's own loved ones later echoed in court. In addition to the doctor's testimony,
several investigators, relatives of the defendants, loved ones of the victim, and Eric Brown himself
took the stand. David Wheeler's father-in-law testified before the defendants and stated in part,
quote. You two. You may be from torn families, but what the hell do you think you did to this one?
I have no sympathy and I have no empathy for either of you. He later continued. I am only sorry that you
didn't meet your Lord and Maker the very next day, and I'm sure now you never will. But I hope you
never walked the streets of this earth a free person ever again, neither one of you. You destroyed
the life of a loving and caring man. End quote.
Before leaving court that day, Christy, David's wife, gifted Eric and Ronald Bibles with a photo
of the Wheeler family inside. The books also contained a letter, info about David's memorial service,
and the family's New Year's resolutions. She told the press outside of court that she genuinely
wished Eric and Ronald well and hoped that if they ever got out of prison one day, they would
strive to be contributing members of society and seek and receive God's forgiveness.
When all was said and done, the judge sentenced Ronald took concurrent sentences of 15 years to life
for second-degree murder and two to five years for the grand theft charge.
Eric was given concurrent sentences of 30 years to life and two to five years for grand theft.
The judge told the defendants he didn't think that either of them were remorseful or had compassion.
He especially took issue with the fact that Eric had reportedly bragged about the murder while in jail awaiting trial.
He said, quote, both of you are cold-blooded killers, end quote.
According to the news coverage, neither the 22 rifle or the murder weapon used in this crime were ever found.
After learning his fate, Eric quickly appealed to have his sentence reduced, but that request was denied in 1997.
He and Ronald continued seeking post-conviction relief in the years after that, but their bids were eventually dismissed.
As of this recording, Eric is still serving time in prison in the Idaho Department of
Correction. Ronald's records show that he was paroled in December of 2020 after serving roughly 24
years. Both men are in their mid to late 40s, which coincidentally is around the same age
David Wheeler was when they took his life. In 1996, several rotary clubs in Oregon and
Idaho, banded together to build a footbridge on property owned by the Boy Scouts near
Willowa Lake. When it was complete, it was named the Wheeler Memorial Footbridge. It was moved
about two decades later after some flooding affected the area at originally spanned over.
About 10 years after the crime, David's daughter Melissa spoke with reporter Jason Jacoby,
or it might be pronounced Jacoby, for the Baker City Herald, and recounted in detail some of her
favorite memories of her late father. By then, she was an adult who'd gone to college and started
a life of her own, but she still remembered stories about her dad like it was yesterday. She shared what
it was like learning of his death at such a young age and trying to navigate life, school,
and even something as simple as getting her learner's permit without him in the picture.
Her mother eventually remarried after the murder and remained in Oregon, as did Melissa.
She told the publication that even though she would likely never know why Ronald Steiner and
Eric Brown killed her dad, she was never really angry at them. She stated, quote,
The way I grew up with people who loved me and a community that supported me, I just could
never fathom killing someone or wanting to hurt someone. It makes me sad to think something was
so wrong with their lives. She later continued, I feel like a pretty happy, complete person.
I've got a whole life ahead of me and they don't. If I was going to spend my life being angry,
that would have taken me down some different paths, and I know,
That's not what Dab would have wanted.
It's kind of a cliche, but I think I'm the person I am because I've been through that tragedy.
End quote.
Before David Wheeler was killed, he'd set his sights on becoming the president of his local Rotary Club.
Part of that process included him writing out the reasons why he wanted to fulfill that position.
In the Baker City Rotary Club's April 1995 newsletter, which came out the same month as David's murder,
some of the reasons he wrote down were published and read, quote,
I believe in service above self.
It has become apparent to me, mostly through trial and error,
that I am happiest when I help someone else be happy.
End quote.
With every bone in my body,
I believe that David Wheeler meant exactly what he wrote in that statement.
In his final moments, he had to have believed
the two teenage boys who asked him for water
would be happier if he gave them some.
So he chose to help them.
He chose to be kind.
Let that be the overarching theme you take away from this story.
Because it's the one thing that could define the legacy you leave behind.
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.
Instagram at ParkPreditors.
I think Chuck would approve.
