RCPD and the Osceola County Sheriff’s Dept. remain in
these locations today.
The MSP post closed to public traffic October, 2011.
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In 1983 there were three separate law enforcement entities
stationed in Reed City within blocks of one another, as well as the Gambles
store on Upton Avenue where Janette Roberson was murdered.
Reed City’s Michigan
State Police Post was 0.7 of a mile from Gambles, the Reed City Police
Department was 0.5 of a mile, and the Osceola County Sheriff’s Department was
0.2 of a mile; two blocks. Someone could literally sprint from the Sheriff’s department
to Gambles in under a minute if they were in mediocre health and inclined to do
so. Three different law enforcement entities within a mile of the location of
the crime scene, which is why they all converged, according to police reports,
on top of one another.
As I researched this case, one of the most common public perceptions
I encountered was that the first responding officers compromised the scene. I
am not one to assume ill of law enforcement strictly on the basis of what
someone else says. I like to read things and research things and see things
with my own eyes—like, oh, I don’t know, New York cops on video killing an
unarmed man for selling untaxed cigarettes.
Generally speaking, cops have a tough, often shitty job, one
the average citizen would do well to not take for granted. It’s all fun and
games to poke fun at the po-po until
such time as you actually need them. So it was with skepticism and a grudging
sense of irritation that I listened to numerous stories about corruption; tale
after tale of Reed City citizens bemoaning speed traps, or how only “certain
names” in town got certain municipal jobs. How special treatment is afforded to
some, while others are blah, blah, blah…
You’ve heard all the stories, I’m sure. If you live in a small town, came from
a small town, or have read anything about small town life, it’s practically a
cliché. This isn’t anything new. It wasn’t far into my research, though, that I
ran across a couple inconsistencies specific to this case. The first involved
the Reed City Chief of Police at the time of the murder.
Phillip Rathbun passed away on November 27, 2013 at 78 years
of age. According to his obituary, he was born April 19, 1935 in Lansing to
Yale Rathbun and Alma Stickney, was raised in Lansing, and married in 1952. He
worked as a pageboy for Michigan’s Governor Gerhard Mennen “Soapy” Williams as
a young man, and eventually joined the Army, serving in the 82nd Airborne
Division. In 1963 he moved with his wife to the Reed City area where they
raised five daughters. At one time, he worked as a butcher at the local A&P.
He and his wife founded and operated the first ambulance service in Osceola
County. Rathbun wore many hats in the community over the years, including chief
of police, city manager, city councilman, mayor pro-tem and volunteer
firefighter. He was police chief for 22 years, seven of those serving
double-duty as police chief and city
manager.
Phillip Rathbun was dubbed “Mr. Reed City” and most people I spoke to
had good things to say about him. In fact, not a person I spoke to had anything but nice things to say about him, personally - except for one person who shall remain nameless, because I suspect that person was feeding me a line of BS, for a reason that I have yet to determine.
Sometimes people just like to cause drama.
From a Cadillac News article written by Matt Seward that ran
on January 19, 2010, the 27th anniversary of Janette Roberson’s
death:
“Every time I go past the gravestone, I
look it,” Rathbun said. “I’ve even done some maintenance on it. One of the
trees on it died, and I cleaned it off. I trimmed some other trees. It (the
murder) is still on my mind; it’s not forgotten, if you will.”
Rathbun was the Reed City Police Chief
at the time of Janette’s murder. He was out of town when it happened, but it
took place while he was in charge of the police department.
“That’s one thing from my career that
sticks out No. 1 in my mind,” Rathbun said. “Not that I don’t have other
concerns, but it bothers me. It has been on my mind and always will until it is
solved.”
Rathbun, who retired from the police
force in 1998, admits that a lot of details have been blurred by time, but some
things still stand out.
“There was some kind of hostility, in
my opinion,” Rathbun said. “It was not just passion. Someone was mad at her.”
When asked if he believes the killer
would be found, Rathbun didn’t hesitate. “Yep,” he said. “Something will drop
out of the woodwork.
“It is something neither one of us
(Rathbun and Pratt) has dropped out of our thinking. I know (Pratt) has not
closed the case on it.”
Chief Rathbun was not noted in the Michigan State
Police report as having been among the law enforcement officers present when
Detective Pratt arrived, yet on page four of the report, he is listed as
one of the people who “it was learned through investigation” had “entered the
immediate area of where the victim was found at least once, and some more than
one time.”
Because the Reed City report—signed by officers Finkbeiner
and Primeau—does not mention their boss’s presence, it’s unclear when he
arrived and left that first time. Or, perhaps, they did mention it, but in the documents I recieved, it was redacted.
Either way, that's concerning.
In the Osceola County report, Det. Sgt. James
Southworth writes that he contacted Chief Rathbun, though it is not stated
where he was contacted, or the time he was contacted.
According to the Wexford County and Cadillac Police reports,
Chief Rathbun returned at some point in the evening, because he was noted on
both reports as being there, and both departments arrived much later in the
evening to assist with evidence collection.
I spoke with Gladys and Terry Kooiker (mentioned in the report excerpt above) on Oct. 6, 2014 at their
home. They were at Gambles on the day of the murder because they needed
something from the store, though neither could remember, three decades later,
what that something was. It’s no wonder. Could have been anything from a mouse
trap to a sink stopper, but whatever the item, its memory would forever be
overshadowed by the events that played out once they entered the store.
Both Kooikers worked for Reed City schools and they’d stopped
that day on their way home. Based on what time school let out, they estimate being
there between 3:30 and 3:45pm. Mrs. Kooiker said they had been inside Gambles maybe
5 minutes, just long enough to find what they needed, and were standing near
the register in the center if the store.
This tracks with the ME report, which
states the body was found at approximately 3:50pm.
Mrs. Kooiker remembers overhearing someone say, “Well, her coat
is here…”
It wouldn’t have been more than a minute or two that Angie
Tillie would run back up the stairs from the basement. They didn’t remember
Angie screaming, but Mrs. Kooiker described her as distraught. Mr. Kooiker didn’t
remember her saying anything, which would tend to corroborate Flossie Earnest’s
recollection of Angie putting her head down on the desk near the register and
pointing to the basement pet store entrance, unable to speak.
Mrs. Kooiker said that it only occurred to her later that
evening, once they got home, that she didn’t remember anyone checking the store
to see if the killer was inside with them.
Mr. Kooiker remembered seeing
Officer Finkbeiner walking down the aisle toward him from the front of the
store, but he did not recall Officer Primeau arriving with Officer Finkbeiner.
In fact, he said that he was not at the front door when Finkbeiner arrived, “with the door already secured at the time”—as
written in the Michigan State Police Report—but was told later to watch the door, by Finkbeiner himself.
According to Mr. Kooiker: “I suspect if Primeau was with
Finkbeiner, he wouldn’t need me to watch the door, would he?” He was clear
about one thing: he was not manning front door when the officers arrived.
This
recollection by Mr. Kooiker is corroborated by Gary McGhee, who was one of the
EMT’s on duty when the call came in. According
to McGhee, the call came in as a heart attack in progress. The Michigan State
Police report also notes this. It’s the reason the call stands out in McGhee’s
mind, all these years later. According to his incident report, the dispatch
came in at 4:06pm and EMTs Gary McGhee and Pam McDonald pulled up in front of
Gambles at 4:08pm. As he was hurrying out of the ambulance, McGhee recalls, “Larry
Finkbeiner was holding the glass front door to the store open and people were
hurriedly exiting the building. It appeared as if Larry was “shooing” people
out of the store. However, this did not seem unusual given the circumstances we
thought we were responding to.”
Heart attack. Remember, they still
think they’re responding to a heart attack in progress.
McGhee believes there were three or
four people, but he cannot be sure of the exact number. “Not a crowd, but three
or four people.” He says he was later asked by state police if he could
identify any of the folks Officer Finkbeiner allowed to leave the store since
he was a local, but could not. He and his partner, Pam McDonald, were busy
grabbing their gear, and if there was a heart attack occurring, clearing the
area would tend to be an appropriate response. It should also be noted that Gary McGhee is the son of the
man who was the Reed City State Police Post Commander at the time, also named
Gary McGhee.
Officer Finkbeiner was the only law
enforcement officer McGee remembers seeing as they arrived at Gambles. He also
recalls seeing Angie Tillie as they entered the store and she was “visibly
upset.” He and his partner were told nothing. No one spoke a word to them as
they were led down to the basement by Officer Finkbeiner. They walked down the
stairs behind him, “…stepped to the right a little, down an aisle” and through
the pet department, where they followed along the far right wall to the back of
the room. According to McGhee, Officer Finkbeiner pushed open a door at the
rear of the room and just inside was a woman “…lying beneath a rack of animal
cages that was elevated off the floor.”
The birds were squawking like crazy, that’s
another thing he remembers, because it added to the surreal nature of the
scene. While McGhee jumped into action, his partner froze in the doorway behind
him. It took him a couple seconds to realize he wasn’t being assisted. He
looked up and saw Pam McDonald unable to move because she also expected to find
a heart attack victim, not a gruesome murder scene. She was crying and shaking.
McGhee told me, “I feel bad about it
now, but I screamed at her to go upstairs.” It was clear to him she wasn’t
going to be able to help. He said the victim was not breathing when they found
her and that her body was “cool, not cold” so he believed it had not just
happened but had been a little while.
I said to Gary, “The report says, Attendants at the scene: Gary McGhee, Tom Stanfield,
and Pam McDonald. Reed City Hospital, Dr. White at 4:13. The victim was on
telemetry. What does that mean, telemetry?”
“People can only legally/officially be
declared dead by a physician. As paramedics, we make an assessment of the
patient including obtaining an electrocardiogram (ECG). We then call the
hospital and speak with a physician. The physician then, based on our reported
findings, “pronounces” the patient deceased. The medical examiner is then
notified if indicated and may or may not come to the scene. In Osceola County
at the time, I was a Medical Examiner Investigator, appointed by the Medical
Examiner. As such, in certain types of deaths (i.e. auto accidents) where the
cause of death is obvious, we were trained to perform certain examinations and
tests, complete specific forms, and then submit them to the Medical Examiner
without the Medical Examiner actually having to come to the death scene.
However, because of the situation, I requested that the medical examiner (Dr.
Williams) actually come to this scene. I remember that he was there before we
left at 5:26pm which is consistent with the report.”
“In this situation, as documented, I
made my assessment at 4:10pm which included obtaining an ECG which depicted the
total absence of any electrical heart activity. This time would have been
recorded (printed) on the ECG tracing obtained at the time. I then called Reed
City Hospital on the “bedside” telemetry (UHF) radio we used at the time, and
spoke with Dr. Catherine White (D.O.)—who was the physician on duty at Reed
City Hospital Emergency Department. This contact was made, as documented, from
the victim’s side in the basement at 4:13pm and the victim was “officially”
pronounced deceased at that time. The actual time of death was obviously some
time before that—but not too long, based on my findings. Dr. White never came
to the scene.”
Then he said, “Did the reports mention
anything about the blood I stepped in?”
“Huh?”
That was all I could muster.
It was clear that McGhee was chagrined
about it, even three decades later.
“Please remember, I have been involved
in fire & EMS for over thirty six years. I am nearly fifty-four years old
now. This incident occurred over thirty years ago, when I was relatively young
(twenty-two) and a relatively inexperienced paramedic. What I did—or observed
then—may not have been as good as it is now. I know my documentation was not
nearly as thorough then as it is now. My memory of the incident is also
limited. I received my paramedic degree in June 1981 and started at Osceola
County EMS in October that same year, without any prior experience at the
paramedic level. The blood spot/puddle was located outside the entrance to the
back room through which I entered, maybe eight to ten feet. Definitely closer
to the entrance to the back room than to the stairway. I admit that I did not
see it when I was walking toward the doorway; I was not looking for anything
like that since I thought I was responding to a heart attack victim. I did not
see the blood until when I was leaving the room to go back upstairs. It was
then that it became evident that the initial assault most likely occurred
outside the room where she found and that she had been dragged or otherwise
moved to where the body was located. The blood was still wet. I did not know
for sure that I had stepped in it while walking toward the entrance to the back
room but there was the possibility, since I walked right through the area where
it was located.”
“I remember telling Officer Mike
Primeau when I got back upstairs that I might have stepped in the blood on my
way into the room. He told me that they might need my boots then to match/rule
out against any footprints that they might find during the investigation. In
light of this, I called my fiancée and she brought me another pair to the
store. She came to the front door of the store and handed them to me through
the open door. She did not enter the store. I did not take my boots off until
she arrived with the other pair. Admittedly, probably a mistake. I took my
boots off and they were placed in a paper bag. I remember that it had to be a
paper bag. I don’t know for sure what happened to them thereafter. I left the
store with my other boots on. I remember getting my boots back a few days
later; they were at the EMS office when I returned to work one day.”
I felt bad for the guy. He was obviously
horrified it had occurred in the first place, but to my mind, he wasn’t at
fault. He was following directly behind a police officer.
“Officer Finkbeiner led you down there,
right?" I asked. "Did he even know the blood was
there? Did you see boxes blocking the aisles, or any reason why he would have
led you directly through an area with obvious blood on the floor? Presumably
there were other ways to get to the back of the store.”
“I do not remember there being anything
blocking our path to the back room. I did not see the blood on the floor until
I was leaving the back room. It was only then that I suspected the initial
assault may have occurred there, and also realized—to much embarrassment—that I
may have walked through it on my way into the room.”
When asked, McGhee was not sure if Officer
Finkbeiner had been down to the basement before EMTs arrived, or if he was
seeing the body for the first time with them. One has to wonder, though, how
Officer Finkbeiner would have known exactly where to find the body if he was
just going down there the first time with the EMTs and nobody exchanged any
words. McGhee said there was no discussion as they walked from the front door
where Finkbeiner had been “shooing people from the store” while he led them
downstairs.
Did Finkbeiner know they had a murder at this time? Presumably he
would have heard the same dispatch from his patrol car radio that everyone else
heard: Heart attack in progress.
When did Officer Finkbeiner become
aware they were on a murder call and not a heart attack? His report states he
arrived and entered with the EMTs. If that is true, how did he know exactly where
the body was? Even if an employee had told him it was in the basement, how did
he know where, exactly? Did one of
the employees tell him before the EMTs pulled up, before he was shooing people out of the store?
He led EMTs in a
straight path directly to the back room and opened the door. The Reed City
report states Officers Finkbeiner and Primeau arrived at 4:04pm. According to
their report, the EMTs arrived at 4:08. That’s four minutes of unaccounted for
time. Did he spend it all shooing people out of the store, or did he go downstairs
and view the body, alone or with others, prior to EMTs arriving?
According to
the Reed City report that Officers Primeau and Finkbeiner signed, “Upon arriving at the scene, PO observed the
Osceola EMS vehicle also arriving at the scene. Undersigned officers, along
with the EMS attendants entered the building (Gambles) thru the south door or
what is called the front entrance.”
Four minutes between the times the Reed
City report says their officers arrived and when EMS states they arrived. Did
he stand out on the sidewalk and shoo customers out for four whole minutes? The
city report clearly states they all arrived at the same time.
Asked if he recalled any other law
enforcement officer arriving, McGhee said, “I do remember Mike Primeau being in
the basement where the body was located while we were still down there, but I
am not sure when he arrived. He definitely came in after me. Osceola County’s
Jim Southworth was there, and I remember him being in the basement while I was
assessing the victim. Once it was determined that the victim was deceased, I
left the basement and went back upstairs where I remained until I was
authorized to leave. I don’t recall going back downstairs at any time until we
went back to pick up the body for transport to Grand Rapids. Officer Mike
Primeau accompanied Tom Stanfield, (the replacement for Pam McDonald) and me in
the ambulance when we transported the body to Blodgett Hospital in Grand
Rapids. This was to preserve the chain of evidence. He also returned to Reed
City with us in the ambulance and we took him back to the Gambles store when we
arrived back in Reed City. When we arrived at Blodgett, the receiving
pathologist (or assistant) did a visual examination of the body with me, Tom,
and Mike Primeau present. It was from that examination it was determined that
there was an item with a particular shape that was used in the assault. We
returned to the Gambles store to drop Officer Mike Primeau off and advised the
investigators that were still present what to look for as a possible weapon. It
was early morning, as documented, 1:00am.”
Reporters in the foreground, along with (from center)
Officer Larry Finkbeiner, Deputy Terry Oyster, and Det. Sgt. George Pratt.
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Simplicity is the keynote of all true elegance.
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