Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - The King & The Queen - The Unsolved Murders of Dana McKay and Mary Huffman
Episode Date: March 26, 2024An Elvis impersonator and his girlfriend were murdered in their Las Vegas home, leaving behind a chilling mystery that remains unsolved after 30 years. Is there anything more Las Vegas than an Elvis ...impersonator? It was more than 40 years ago that the King, Elvis Presley, died in August of 1977, and shortly after his death, Dana MacKay took up the mantle and became arguably the best-known Elvis Impersonator ever, and from what we’ve read, he was also the very first.While we lost the real Elvis to a drug overdose, we lost Dana in a way that is much more of a mystery, and much more violent. Dana MacKay, the city’s first Elvis tribute artist, and Mary Huffman were shot in what some believe was a contract killing. With business disputes, missing evidence, and potential ties to organized crime, the case is filled with unanswered questions. Was this a robbery gone wrong or something far more sinister? Investigators still need help solving this cold case. Learn the details, the suspects, and why the truth has remained buried for decades.http://sinspod.co/episode21sourcesDomestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag!Apple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.
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Is there anything more Las Vegas than an Elvis impersonator? I don't think so. You see them everywhere on the strip, in at least four separate shows we're aware of, and you can even be married
by Elvis in pretty much any wedding chapel inside or outside of the city limits. It was more than 40 years ago that the king died in August of
1977. Or did he? Well, sadly he did. Shortly after his death, Dana McKay took up the mantle and
became arguably the best-known Elvis impersonator ever, And from what I've read, he was also the very first.
While we lost the real Elvis to a drug overdose,
we lost Dana in a way that's much more of a mystery and much more violent.
Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast where we focus on
cases that deal with domestic violence. I'm your host, Sean, and with me, as always, is
the one and only John.
I am the only John in the room.
One of our listeners commented to us recently that our episode about dancer and choreographer
Debbie Flores Narvaez was the most
Vegas of the episodes we had done so far. But the cold case we have planned for this week,
I think might be the most Vegas, with not only the professions of the victims in this case,
but the other notable Vegas personalities that are involved, and a few key details of how Vegas
grew and changed over the decades. Typically, our listeners know that we focus on cases that deal with domestic violence,
but we both agreed that unsolved cases from Vegas are critical to talk about
and get more eyes and ears and attention on and try and get some new leads.
Absolutely. This is a case of a double homicide, which 30 years later remains unsolved.
So we want to do what we can to support the families who are left behind by this tragedy and help them get justice. Dana McKay and his girlfriend Mary Huffman were murdered in their Las Vegas home in 1993.
Dana was born in Los Angeles on February 12, 1956 to parents Joyce McKay and Sharon Mack McKay.
He had two brothers, Steve and Brian, and they relocated
to Las Vegas in the 1970s. Dana was known for having a huge heart and a great sense of humor.
Dana had an uncanny resemblance to Elvis Presley. We'll post some photos so you can see that for
yourself. Around the time that Elvis died in August of 1977, and according to the Associated Press,
Dana began putting that lookalike face to work in Las Vegas as an Elvis impersonator. In fact, according to one of Dana's friends,
Dana was the first Elvis impersonator in Las Vegas. He said that Dana was an immediate hit
and spawned scores of imitators. Although Elvis died in 1977, his spirit is alive and well in
Vegas. Elvis has always been synonymous with Las Vegas. One of
his most famous movies, Viva Las Vegas, was filmed at the Flamingo Hotel in the early 60s. And that
song, Viva Las Vegas, is played at every UNLV game. He performed regularly at the Las Vegas
Hilton in the early 70s and married Priscilla in Vegas at the Aladdin Hotel, which of course is long gone.
The Vegas Hilton is still there, but it's no longer called the Hilton. It's the Westgate Las Vegas.
According to a local entertainment guide, right now in Las Vegas, there are at least four Elvis
tribute shows happening around town. We also have the Graceland Wedding Chapel, the Viva Las Vegas
Wedding Chapel, where you can get married by Elvis.
You can run into Elvis at the Welcome Las Vegas sign or down on Fremont Street and get your photo taken with him. His name and likeness are found all over at souvenir shops, and one of the vintage
signs downtown on display, courtesy of the Neon Museum, is from the Normandy Hotel, and the marquee
reads, Elvis slept here. One of my favorite Elvis-themed shows was Million Dollar Quartet, which was at Harrah's for many
years. It's a musical based on a true story and an actual recording that happened in December of
1956, where Elvis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee Lewis were all together at Sun Records
Recording Studio in Memphis. The show still travels around and it's well worth seeing how it might have been for those four to interact and
play together. In 1956, Elvis was huge and Jerry Lee was just starting out and the show does an
amazing job of capturing Jerry Lee's crazy young energy. That show is great and I definitely miss
it. For me, this kind of highlights how timeless Elvis is, because that recording happened in 1956. Elvis was 21, but Dana McKay, he wasn't even a year old yet. Even so, Elvis made an impression on Dana during his life, and he emulated the king for decades. 50 years later, people are still impersonating Elvis. In 2022, we got another Elvis biopic titled Just Elvis, starring Tom Hanks and Austin Butler,
which made nearly $290 million at the box office and was nominated for eight Academy Awards,
including Best Picture and Best Actor for Austin Butler. It's clear that looking like Elvis can be
great for your career. Regarding Dana, he auditioned for but missed out on the role of Elvis in the 1979 movie Elvis.
That part went to Kurt Russell. That movie is directed by John Carpenter. I've never seen it.
Dana did get the chance to play Elvis in the 1980 television movie This Is Elvis. According
to reporting in the Review Journal, while McKay was filming, the Presley family noted how well he resembled and emulated Elvis in his appearance and mannerisms. In 1992, Dana worked on the hard copy documentary called
I, Elvis. The project was mainly documentary footage from Elvis's performances through the
years, but actors portrayed Elvis at different times of his life, and Dana played him at age 35.
One of the things that made Dana so
popular as an Elvis impersonator was that he didn't lip-sync. He sang like Elvis and performed
with a live band. When the Legends in Concert show opened at the Imperial Palace in 1983,
Dana was Elvis. Legends in Concert was the longest-running show in Vegas history,
running for 40 years, moving from the Imperial Palace to
Harrah's to the Flamingo, and then finally to the Tropicana in 2018. It ran there for four years
and then closed. It had a 40th anniversary show at the Orleans in 2023 as its final performance.
It's not currently running on the Strip, but affiliate shows are running on cruise ships
in Branson, Missouri and Myrtle Beach, and it may be returning to Vegas in the near future. Dana married a woman named Alfonso in
1980, and they had a daughter together named Misty. The marriage didn't last very long, though.
In 1984, he married a woman named Linda, but the two divorced in 1986. One article in the RJ stated
that Dana had also had a son who lived in Henderson.
We were able to find some records from the Las Vegas Family Court from August of 1993,
where Dana was determined to be the father of a 9-year-old boy via a paternity test.
According to reports, Misty didn't spend a lot of time with her dad,
with Dana only seeing Misty during summers.
She said that the last time she saw him was at a family funeral where he brought a Marilyn Monroe impersonator as a date. And I think that's a good segue to talk about the other victim in
this case, Mary Huffman. Mary's birth name was Mary Scott. She was born in Oklahoma City in 1944,
and she graduated from Capitol Hill High School in Oklahoma City. Mary earned degrees from colleges
in Missouri and Texas for fashion, modeling, and business management.
She moved to Las Vegas around 1980.
We don't have records about when she married Harold Huffman and changed her name,
but in 1989, at the age of 45, Mary competed in the Mrs. Nevada beauty pageant
and won Mrs. Congeniality and also was crowned Mrs. Nevada.
We also found divorce records in 1992 of Mary Huffman divorcing Harold Huffman.
She had one daughter named Michelle, and she opened her own upscale clothing store called
Encore Fashions, which was located on Spring Mountain Road in the central part of town.
The business was a successful venture for her over the years, and she moved and expanded the
store several times. We have no way of knowing for sure if the woman that Misty saw her father
with at the funeral many years ago was Mary,
but looking at photos of her, even though there's no record that she ever appeared as a Marilyn Monroe impersonator,
her elegance and style gave her that blonde bombshell aura.
But as we always stress, people are never only one thing.
That was true for both Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley, as well as Dana and Mary.
Even though both the victims in this case were known for their roles as an entertainer and a beauty queen,
the two of them are much more than that.
Our reporting will only ever capture a sliver of who they were
and what they meant to their friends, families, and loved ones.
Dana and Mary lived together in a very cool home that they nicknamed Mini Graceland, naturally,
which is a really appropriate name.
The home is still there,
although the area has been built up quite a bit in the past 20 years. At the time,
it was on the edge of town, but now I'd say it's more in the center of town.
Mary moved in and became part owner of the house with Dana. It's just south of Spring Mountain,
which is the Chinatown area where there are some great sushi go-round places that we
visit a lot. You can find the property on Zillow, and we'll be sure to share that link along with
some photos of the house. It's been maintained really well. It's located at 3624 Edmond Street.
It's 3,900 square feet and has four bedrooms and three bathrooms and a really nice pool
and over an acre of land, which is absolutely enormous for Las Vegas, especially in that area. It's listed for just over $2 million,
but at the time in 1993, it was referred to as their $450,000 home, which seems adorable now,
given what has happened with home prices. Even adjusting for inflation, the home has doubled
in value since 1993. It was described as a fixer-upper,
but Dana was good at remodeling, and looking through the photos on Zillow, you can tell it
has been updated much more recently. It has a great view of the Las Vegas Strip from the top
floor, which has a recording studio and picture windows. While it's true they lived there together,
strangely, Mary often claimed to be Dana's wife, although they were not legally married.
But Dana definitely had girlfriends, and it's unclear if Mary was aware of that.
As it often happens, markets tend to get saturated, and by the early 1990s, Las Vegas was awash in Elvis impersonators.
So even though Dana was the original, he started finding it harder and harder to find work.
Because of that, he decided to pursue another passion of his, money. Actually,
it was landscaping, but in the early 1990s, there was a lot of money to be made in landscaping,
specifically palm trees. There's some debate as to the origins of how palm trees came to be in
Las Vegas. We've learned that members of Nevada's Moapa Paiute Native American tribe will claim
that palm trees have existed in and around the Warm Springs in the Moapa Valley around 60 miles north of Las Vegas for about a thousand years,
while the more commonly held belief is that Mormon settlers brought them to Nevada from Arizona
closer to 125 years ago. Generally, though, they are not native to this area. Regardless,
they weren't very prevalent in the city of Las Vegas, which you can see if you look at photos
from the 80s and earlier.
When the Mirage Resort Hotel and Casino opened in November of 1989, Steve Wynn spared no expense and surrounded the massive volcano on their property with palm trees, and this seems to be when they started becoming popular.
Dana knew about this trend, and he also had a guy. He was friends with a palm tree grower in California who could supply him with palm trees at a discounted price, and he planned to move the trees here and
sell them to high-end homeowners and hotels for a big profit. There was a plan by Clark County
officials at the same time to plant a large number of palm trees right in the middle of Las Vegas
Boulevard, the Strip. Dana really wanted that contract with Clark County. And although he
had the trees, which was immediately obvious if you have ever looked at his home back then,
they were everywhere. But he didn't have the equipment and financing to get the job done.
Luckily, he knew a guy. His friend Tim Stonestreet, who used to run a car dealership
called Stonestreet Motorcars, would join him in his palm tree business. The two
of them formed Paradise Plants in December of 1992, and Stone Street spent upwards of $100,000
in 2024 for landscaping equipment like a backhoe, 40-foot storage trailer, and crane equipment.
Armed with the trees and all of this equipment, they were confident they'd get the contract with
Clark County. Things did not work out, though. Within five months, the company and their business and personal relationships were dissolved,
and they were bitterly working it out the old-fashioned way in court. Dana, who represented
himself at one point, told the court, in retrospect, it appeared that all Tim was trying to do was
obtain my contacts for trees, learn my expertise, and establish his own palm tree company. Tim was represented by the law
firm of Goodman and Chesniff. For people who live in Las Vegas, the name Goodman is probably quite
familiar. That's Oscar Goodman, who went on to be the Las Vegas mayor from 1999 through 2011.
He was succeeded by his wife Carolyn Goodman as mayor, and she's still the mayor in 2024,
and he currently serves as the first gentleman of Las
Vegas. The Goodmans probably weren't a podcast episode or maybe a whole season because of their
interesting history. Oscar Goodman was a defense attorney known for defending some of the most
notorious figures in organized crime in Las Vegas history. One of his notorious clients was the
Chicago mobster Anthony Tony the Ant Spilatoro,
who was known to have a short and violent temper. In the 1995 movie Casino, the character of Nicky
Santoro was based on Spilatoro and was played by Joe Pesci. That's the do I amuse you character.
Oscar appears in the movie Casino as Ace Rothstein's attorney, played by Robert De Niro, who was based on Lefty Rosenthal, whom Goodman defended in real life. You can't make this stuff up, and you see why he needs his own podcast. and at one point Las Vegas Metro arrived at Dana's house to repossess all of the equipment
Tim had bought it was being stored on Dana's property but Dana refused to let them take it
apparently Dana had some information on Tim that he thought would help him win the case and he told
Coker about it unfortunately that evidence would never be revealed because Dana was murdered before
he could reveal it on October 2nd, a neighbor of Dana and Mary's realized
they hadn't seen the couple for a few days, so they went over to the home. They noticed the door
was open, so they went inside. In the front entryway, they discovered 37-year-old Dana and
49-year-old Mary were dead on the floor. It appeared that they had just returned from grocery
shopping. Several items such as laundry detergent, steaks, bananas, and a box of Junior Mints were lying on the floor near them. The steaks had gone bad. The couple had
been dead for at least a day. In an article in the Toronto Sun written in 2020, Dana's daughter,
Misty, shared that she clearly remembers hearing her grandmother crying when they received the news
that Dana had been murdered. Misty said, it was this cry that I can't even explain to you. It was
so terrible. Anyone who has ever heard a mother mourn for her child knows what I'm talking about.
Las Vegas Metro Police began investigating their murders.
Mary had been shot once, but Dana had been shot seven times.
Their house had been broken into through a back door, and one of the rooms in the house had been ransacked.
The police believed that they had been killed sometime between September 30th and October 2nd.
Normally on our podcast,
we don't wanna talk about rumors or speculation,
but when we are talking about a cold case
and where there might be folks out there with information,
we wanna make sure we cover everything.
Dana's friend and business partner, Danny Coker,
said one of the first theories the police had
was that maybe
Dana was killed in a drug deal that went wrong. The Las Vegas Sun reported that it was said that
perhaps Dana was involved with drug trafficking and that he had been associating with dangerous
individuals involved in the drug trade. However, Dana was not known to use drugs at all, and he
wasn't even much of a drinker. And when police searched the house,
no drugs were found, and there were no drugs in Dana's system. Police also theorized that perhaps Dana and Mary had come home from grocery shopping and interrupted the burglary in progress. Although
the house had been broken into, it was not clear that anything was stolen. Jewelry and cash were
lying around the house in plain sight. None of it was missing. The only thing that anyone noticed was missing was a single manila folder.
Friends recalled that Dana always kept this manila file folder with him.
Inside, he kept his financial records and notes about his landscaping business,
as well as information relating to his house, his music career, and other personal information.
One detective told the Toronto Star,
That was the only notable thing that was missing.
Somebody wanted that folder, and somebody wanted Dana.
Since that was the only item missing,
and the two had been shot at close range,
an alternate theory emerged that this was possibly a hired hit.
Danny Coker told Channel 8 News in Las Vegas
that Dana had received death threats before the murder.
Shortly after the murders were discovered, the owner of a home security company told the Las Vegas Review
Journal that he had spoken with Dana several times about putting in an alarm system. He had
tried three times to set up an install appointment, but Dana never gave his final okay. But he did
recommend the alarm company to several friends who did buy alarm systems. Another interesting
piece of information that came out after the murders came from a woman who said she was a girlfriend of Dana's.
She told the television show Hard Copy that on what she believes was the day Dana was killed,
she was driving and someone in a car next to her pointed a gun at her.
She said she ducked down and sped away.
Around two weeks after Dana and Mary's murder,
Tim's Stone Street was awarded the assets of the dissolved company. I know for our listeners, that's going to raise some red flags and eyebrows.
It definitely did for people close to the couple. And it's important to note that Tim had a pretty
tight alibi. He was in Aruba during the murders and he was cleared by the police. Danny Coker
believed quite strongly that Tim was responsible for the murders and has been very vocal about Tim had no comment.
Tim's Stone Street is still living in the Las Vegas area and owns a construction company that builds custom homes, many in the Summerlin area.
The aftermath of Mary and Dana's murder left their parents distraught
and struggling with their grief. Dana's family and Mary's family argued over their children's
estates, with the McKays claiming that the Huffmans had taken many of Dana's things,
including a black jumpsuit once owned by Elvis that had been given to him by the Presley estate.
The case ultimately had to go to the courts to decide what would be done with the couple's property. We don't have the details of how it was all resolved, but I can tell
you that it took more than three years of litigation before their estates were settled.
Incidentally, during the case, the Huffmans were represented by Bruce Woodbury.
One of the main highways in Clark County, the I-215 is named for Bruce Woodbury. He is a
prominent attorney and a former Clark County commissioner. We told you there was a lot of
Las Vegas being crammed into the episode this week. Mack, Dana's father, also stated that he
felt his son's spirit was haunting the house after their two violent deaths. He stated that he wasn't
sure if Mary was also haunting the house, but he was certain that Dana was.
Mack gave a statement to the Review Journal a year after the murders, saying he had been disgusted by the corruption of the attorneys in Las Vegas and that most of the police are utterly worthless.
As Sean mentioned at the beginning of the episode, this is currently a cold case.
This should come as no surprise when you learn how woefully understaffed
the Las Vegas Metro Police Force was in the early 1990s. At the time, the population of the Las Vegas
metropolitan area was 779,000, with over 27 million tourists visiting yearly, while there were only
1,300 officers in all of Las Vegas Metro. Now, it's 2.9 million in 2024. There were 9,421 violent crimes reported in 1993,
and only 20.7% of those resulted in arrest or prosecution. That was the lowest clearance rate
in the country at the time for any city over 250,000 residents. Experts said that crime in
Las Vegas was particularly hard to control because Las Vegas was, and is really, an extremely rapidly growing place where millions of tourists drink, gamble, and spend money 24-7, 365.
Initially, a $25,000 reward was offered, and the police received tips from all over the country, some of them from self-described psychics. At the time, officers noted the facts of the case were sure
to spawn wild conspiracy theories like the existence of a serial killer targeting Elvis
impersonators. We're really unclear on that one because there was no rash of Elvis impersonator
killings. Another asserted theory was that Elvis Presley himself committed the crime,
presumably from beyond the grave.
Two years after the murders in 1995, the reward was increased to $100,000 and a billboard was put up on Sahara in Maryland. Of course, the billboard had a picture of Dana on it, who was the spitting
image of Elvis. So you can probably guess what happened. People started calling in sightings of other Elvis
impersonators all over town, trying to get the reward money, which was not at all helpful.
In 1994, a Las Vegas Metro detective told the Review Journal that due to McKay's business
dealings, half of the valley is a suspect. As you might expect, Dana's daughter Misty
had a hard time coming to term with her father's murder.
She was only a teenager at the time, and she told the San Bernardino Sun that it only made it more difficult that tabloids were so focused on the sensational aspects of the case,
between the gangland-style execution and the fact that Dana was an Elvis impersonator.
She and her father hadn't been close since their parents had split up, but she still felt the loss.
She said,
It really hurt because I never got the chance to get close to him.
The media attention was a lot to deal with, and Misty's mother said, many nights I heard her cry herself to sleep. Misty would deal with her pain by listening to her dad's old Elvis records.
She looked up her father's name in 2008 and found an article saying that he was killed in a robbery
gone wrong. She immediately called the police because she knew that wasn't what happened,
and the case was reopened.
Detective George Sherwood shared with the Las Vegas Sun
his comprehensive investigation efforts,
including conducting numerous interviews,
making multiple trips out of state,
and visiting various prisons to talk to key suspects,
one of whom is incarcerated for life due to involvement in a contract killing.
He mentioned his plans to submit evidence for genetic analysis
and disclosed that he is pursuing three distinct leads.
Although he had been cleared of suspicion because he was out of state and out of the country at the time,
Tim Stonestreet, who had a lot to gain when Dana was killed, refused to speak to investigators.
Instead, his lawyer told police they should focus on Dana's drug connections. Sherwood told Channel 8 that there were strong indications this was
a murder-for-hire plot because someone was, quote, lying in wait for them. Misty has said,
I know exactly who did it, and I know the cops know exactly who did it, but he's allowed to get
away with it because of his connections. And my dad was telling people before he died, if something happens to me, this is, but investigators believe that with more input from the public, the case can be solved.
Anyone with information is urged to call Metro's Homicide Division at 702-828-3521.
We want to take a moment to thank Haley Gray for her research on this story.
She can be reached through her website at hayleygrayresearch.com.
We'll be back next week with another episode focusing back on the important topic of domestic
violence. Until then, we'll remind you that what happens here happens everywhere. Thanks for listening.
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Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, is research written and produced by your hosts, Sean and John.
The information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording.
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