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The Boys on the Tracks
Book Excerpt: A new look at the 1987 deaths of two Sal County Teens.


  By Mara Leveritt
November 29, 1999

n By all accounts, the engineer did a masterful job of bringing his train to
a stop. It had taken a screaming, screeching half mile. By the time the
engine shuddered to a standstill, Conductor Jerry Tomlin was on the radio
notifying an approaching train on a parallel track to stop because some boys
had been run over. He also called the dispatcher. "Have you got injuries?"
the dispatcher asked. "No," Tomlin said. "We've got death. I'm sure we've got
death. They passed under us. It has to be death."

The three men in the union pacific locomotive, all railroad veterans, were
holding themselves together, trying to cope with a sudden nightmare at the
end of a routine run. It was a little after 4 A.M. on Sunday morning, August
23, 1987. They were coming north from Texarkana, pulling a rattling mile of
freight and empty cars. The trip toward Little Rock was uneventful, the
weather mild, the temperature about 80 degrees. Later, each would remember
the night as having been particularly dark.

For miles they'd felt the landscape rise beneath them as the engines hauled
the train up from south Arkansas's tree-farm flatness into the rolling
countryside surrounding the capital. At the slumbering town of Alexander,
about 25 miles south of Little Rock, the train topped a moderate hill known
locally as Bryant Hill, then descended quickly into bottomland, a low-lying
stretch of topography prone to flooding in heavy rains. But high water was no
problem tonight. All that Engineer Stephen Shroyer had to worry about on his
descent was keeping his train in check and making sure it stayed within the
federal speed limit of 55 miles per hour. He was still braking the train hard
as it approached the Shobe Road crossing.

Shroyer sounded his horn as required. There was not a car, not a person, in
sight.

>From his place in the lead engine's right-hand seat, Shroyer concentrated on
controlling his speed. Beside him on the left, Danny DeLamar, the brakeman,
helped. Behind DeLamar, Conductor Jerry Tomlin completed paperwork for the
trip. By now their train had traveled about a half mile past the crossing at
Shobe Road. They were approaching a small trestle over a trickle called
Crooked Creek. It was not even a trickle on this dry August night.

"Our headlight was on the 'bright' position," DeLamar later recalled, "and I
noticed down the rail in front of me, some 10 or 15 cars away, there was a
dark spot on the rail. I looked hard at it, and towards the last, I stood up
to see what it was." Shroyer also stood up. So did Conductor Tomlin.
The men knew from experience that when a bush or other debris is picked up by
the light, the spot on the rail will often appear dark. Any obstruction is a
concern. The men peered intently ahead. In the same, heart-stopping instant,
they realized what they were seeing.

"When we were approximately 100 feet away from this dark spot, Engineer
Shroyer yelled out, 'Oh, my God!' He hit the whistle and the emergency brakes
at the same time," DeLamar recalled. "We could tell there were two young men
lying between the rails just north of the bridge, and we also saw there was a
gun beyond the boy who was lying to the north. There was something covering
these boys from their waist to just below their knees, and I'm not sure what
this object was. They were both in between the rails, heads up against the
west rail, and their feet were over the east rail. Both were right beside
each other and their arms and hands were to their sides, heads facing
straight up. I never noticed any movement at all."

At 55 miles per hour the crew had fewer than five seconds to respond.
Reflexively Shroyer shoved the brake forward to its emergency position. The
move is a desperate one, producing such sudden jerking and slacking that the
engineer risks losing control.

Steel wheels scream on steel tracks. If the braking continues long enough,
the wheels will be ground flat on the bottom. For at least four seconds the
train resisted Shroyer's efforts, banging and screeching, wailing its violent
approach to the motionless figures ahead. The brakes exhaled a gasping whoosh
of air. The cars vibrated.

The tracks vibrated. The horn never went silent. And still, to the crewmen's
mounting horror, the boys did not jerk, did not open an eye, did not move a
muscle.

Tomlin dropped his paperwork and lurched forward between Shroyer and DeLamar
to get a better look. "When we recognized that it was two people," he
recalled, "I hollered, 'Big hole!' which means for the engineer to set the
brake in emergency. I saw two boys lying side by side, like soldiers at
attention. There was a dark-headed boy to the south -- that was the one we
were going to hit first -- and the second boy had lighter hair. They were
covered up to around the waistline with a pale green tarp, something like a
boat cover. They looked like they had lain down there and pulled this cover
up on them like a blanket, but part of it was off. I noticed they never
moved. Here we were, bearing down on them, and there was no movement of their
heads. They made no attempt to rise.

"And there was that rifle. It was lying flat on the ground, the barrel part
near the boy's head, the stock under the cover."

That was all there was to see. Then the sight was gone, vanished beneath the
train. "We could hear them hit," Tomlin continued. "You can hear it even when
you hit a dog. It's mostly a thud and then you hear some rocks flying
because, if what you hit is still under the train, you're scooting it along."

With his hands on the controls, Shroyer felt the impact like a body blow, one
from which he'd never quite recover. "I was standing and continued to blow
the horn until we had impact," Shroyer recalled. "There were the two boys and
then the weapon, all very one-two-three. And there was a piece of green materi
al, very light, very faded. It looked well worn, laying out on the boys, and
it looked like it had blown back, partly exposing them. The first boy had on
a shirt, blue in color. The second boy did not have a shirt on. From my
observation, they were both in a totally relaxed position. There was never
any movement. There was no flinching, even with the whistle, and the train
bearing down on them. Their feet were on my side of the engine, extending
across the rail, and I remember noticing their feet were in a totally relaxed
position. That's the thing that caught my thoughts, was how completely
relaxed they were. And the thing that caused me so much problem afterward was
the fact that they didn't flinch, didn't jerk, didn't move at all -- either
one of them -- with all of it happening, all that noise, all of it coming
down on them."

Shroyer's attention was riveted on the boys. "I never took my eyes off them,"
he said. "What had caught my attention at first was a big brilliant flash.
Apparently that was my headlight striking the barrel of the gun. The next
thing I was totally aware of was the chest and the head of that second boy,
the one without the shirt. And from then on, I never took my thoughts off of
him. What I focused on were his chest and his head -- and how relaxed he
looked. To me he looked as relaxed as a boy sunbathing on a beach."

The image of two boys appearing so calm as death was about to roll over them
was almost more than the men could absorb. Yet the one thing more certain
than the boys' immobility was the impossibility of stopping the train.
Shroyer recognized the onrushing inevitability in a nauseating wave of
despair.

"Your immediate thought is, My God, please get out of the way! And you can't
stop," he said. "You can't stop a train that fast, and it's a hopeless
feeling."

Shroyer was enough of a veteran to realize that he, like his train, was
verging out of control. "When we hit them, they rolled with us," he said.
"They stayed with the engines for a while. My immediate reaction was that I
was traumatized. My thoughts, and everything else, you know -- my God, you
know -- I was holding on. I was thinking, Please, this is not really
happening.

"I allowed my engines to lock up and felt my train operation just going to
hell. When that happened, I immediately realized I had to get back to the
business at hand. I had to get my train under control again. And I did. But
when it happened, there was nothing we could do. I just know that, without a
doubt, if willpower could have had anything to do with it, that train would
have stopped. We would not have run over those boys."

When a train hits an object on the tracks, one of two things usually happens.
Either the scoop on the front of the engine, commonly called the cowcatcher,
will toss the object violently aside, or the object will be sucked up under
the engines, tumbled a while, and be tossed out. By the time it's ejected,
the struck object has picked up the speed of the train.

As their train slowed to a stop, the crew could imagine the destruction their
locomotives had wrought on the human flesh beneath them. The boys' legs,
which had been draped across the rail, would have been severed immediately,
sliced off by the first right wheel, somewhere between the knees and the
ankles. Because the heads and torsos were between the rails, the train had
most likely cleared them, resulting in the bodies being rolled, which fit
with what the men had heard--and felt. After that, pieces of bodies would
have been spit out from beneath the engines, probably in all directions.

Once the train had stopped, the crewmen wasted no time. Shroyer would stay
with the radio to keep in touch with railroad officials. Tomlin and DeLamar
would walk back to confront the mayhem. "If you start to get sick, go right
ahead," Tomlin told DeLamar as the two picked up their flashlights and
climbed out of the engine.

About thirty-five cars back they located the first pieces of body, a trio of
dismembered toes. Over the course of the next hour or so, they found evidence
of the carnage scattered along a quarter mile of track. The single biggest
body part they found was the chest and head of the second boy, the one
without a shirt. The body of the first boy was considerably more chopped up.

In those eerie first few minutes before the police arrived, while the crewmen
struggled to control their emotions, a disturbing half thought lurked at the
edge of their minds. It was a barely formed thought, one almost too
troublesome to admit. But here it was: the boys had not moved or flinched.
And now, though neither man spoke of it, they noticed something else. The
scene was a bloody mess, but there was something wrong with the blood.

Like many Arkansans, Tomlin had hunted since childhood. He'd seen many a
fresh-killed deer, field-dressed dozens of them. He knew how animals bleed,
especially when they've just been killed; he knew how fresh blood flows.

But this blood wasn't like that. As a matter of fact, "There was very little
blood," Tomlin later recalled. "Even with all those wounds, with everything
cut up. We had reached the bodies within 10 minutes after impact. You would
think that if the heart had been pumping when we ran over the boys, then the
blood would have naturally flowed out. But it wasn't flowing. There was
hardly any blood at all. And the color of it bothered me, too. It was night,
and we couldn't tell for sure, but the blood we saw was not red -- not as red
as you would think blood would be on a fresh kill like that. It was dark,
more of a purplish color."

For Tomlin, the blood suggested something odd. "out there that night," he
said, "I kind of smelled a rat."

The site where the bodies lay scattered that exceptionally dark August
morning was in a rural, unincorporated area under the jurisdiction of the
Saline County sheriff's office. Deputies responded to the dispatcher's call.
By 4:40 A.M., 13 minutes after the crew reported the collision, Deputy Chuck
Tallent and Lt. Ray Richmond, head of the department's criminal investigation
division, arrived at the span of tracks just past the trestle alongside some
woods. Tallent set to work diagramming the scene, mapping out the locations
of various body parts and other pieces of evidence as they were discovered.
Soon an Arkansas State Police trooper arrived, then officials from the
railroad, then an ambulance.

The investigators' arrival did little to calm the crew. The train men had
hoped to make their reports, then leave the matter to the authorities.
Instead, as they spoke to the police they found their misgivings heightened.

The crew did not realize it at first -- no one did -- but hope for an
accurate reconstruction of the scene ended within minutes of the deputies'
arrival. In diagramming the site, Tallent made an immediate and crucial
mistake. He chose as his reference point the corner of one of the train cars
and mapped everything in relation to that.

Hours later, when the train was allowed to move forward after most of the
evidence had been bagged and removed, that reference point was lost forever.
The diagram of where each piece of evidence was found became virtually
worthless. It was a costly mistake, one that, when it came to light several
months later, undercut public confidence in the deputies' investigation and
exposed the sheriff's office to ridicule. So did the decision, made soon
after the deaths, to let a second train that had been waiting pass, further
disturbing the scene.

To the even greater astonishment of the crew, Tallent and Richmond appeared
to be treating the deaths as an accident despite the railroad men's urgent
accounts of having seen the boys lying side by side, unmoving, as the train
approached. The deaths did not look like an accident to the crew. As Tomlin
blandly observed, "One boy not moving -- maybe. But two? I have some trouble
with that."

Still, the crew had to acknowledge that accidents involving trains did
happen, and so did suicides. They all knew there had been at least two
suicides by train in Saline County within the past eight years. Such things
happened. The crew let the police do their job.

But the treatment of the deaths as suicides, or an accident, was unsettling
to others as well. Hours earlier, Trooper Wayne Lainhart of the Arkansas
State Police had investigated a report of two shots having been fired in the
area. His look-around had turned up nothing.

Now, though the deputies had jurisdiction, he also responded to the scene and
heard the train crew's statements.

Lainhart's assessment, as he later recalled, was that aspects of the
situation didn't seem quite "kosher." Part of what bothered him was the
deputies' apparent disinterest in the possibility of murder. According to
Lainhart's training, any unnatural death should be investigated first as a
possible homicide so that evidence can be preserved and the most serious
possibilities eliminated before less serious ones are considered. The
practice is standard police procedure. But not all police, especially in
small, rural sheriffs' offices, receive the training offered state troopers.
Lainhart let the deputies handle their investigation. Still, it disturbed him
to see such a basic rule so quickly abandoned, and in such a strange case.

Lainhart mentioned his misgivings to the deputies, noting that he doubted the
deaths were an accident, but he did not press the issue. Nor did the two
emergency medical technicians who arrived on the scene a couple of minutes
later and who immediately found causes of their own for alarm. One of those
EMTs was Billy Heath, who later talked to a state police detective. "Mr.
Heath stated the bodies looked more like mannequins, that there was very
little blood at the scene, and that the blood at the impact site was very
dark," the investigator noted. "Mr. Heath stated the blood was just too dark
for him to consider normal. Mr. Heath stated he did not see any bright blood
and that, in his opinion, there should have been some fresh blood at the
scene."
The other attendant, Shirley Raper, reached the same conclusion. "We grabbed
our paramedics' equipment and took off down the tracks," she later told the
state police. "Billy reached the first body, and he told me to stop and not
to come any closer. I just observed the one body and it occurred to me right
off that it was strange, because of the lack of blood and the color of the
body parts and the color of the blood. The body parts had a pale color to
them, like someone who had been dead for some time."

In an unusual move, and one they knew could be controversial, the two
paramedics attached what they titled a "note of interest" to their official
report on the incident, a report prepared within hours after leaving the
scene. The note read, "Blood from the bodies and on the body parts we
observed was a dark color in nature. Due to our training, this would indicate
a lack of oxygen present in the blood and could pose a question as to how
long the victims had been dead."
While the train crew, the state police trooper, and the two paramedics all
expressed misgivings, Tallent and Richmond proceeded to treat the deaths as a
probable accident or a double suicide. Only one officer vigorously objected.
Deputy Cathy Carty surveyed the scene, listened to the train crew's account,
and heard the paramedics' misgivings. She then confronted her superior
officers, protesting their disregard of the possibility that the boys had
been murdered. She was infuriated when Richmond ordered her and other
deputies to treat the case "like a traffic fatality." Later Carty recalled,
"I told the coroner, 'We either have two of the damnedest suicides I've ever
seen here or we have a double homicide.'" But Carty's objections were to no
avail. The scene was investigated in the manner of a traffic accident, and
the bodies were sent to a funeral home, since traffic accidents did not
require an autopsy in Arkansas. Within hours, however, Tallent changed his
mind and redirected the bodies to the state crime lab where they would
undergo autopsies.

That came as good news to the train crew. But their long night was not over.
By the time the sun was rising and the investigation, such as it was, was
winding down, they were to be unsettled by yet another peculiar aspect of
this sickening morning. A disagreement arose over the piece of faded green
tarp that Shroyer, Tomlin, and DeLamar had seen on top of the boys. For
reasons that none of the crew could fathom, the police appeared reluctant, if
not actively resistant, to accept their unanimous reports that such a
covering had existed. The crew could not imagine why their statements on such
a neutral piece of information would be met with disbelief.
Tomlin was especially unnerved by the reaction. He had walked the tracks with
his flashlight, looking for that tarp, and had found it.

Having apparently blown off the boys upon impact, it had landed at the base
of the trestle. Shining his flashlight on the tarp, he had pointed it out to
Deputy Tallent.

"He denied that later," Tomlin recalled. "He said I didn't tell him about
finding the tarp, but I did. And I told him where part of it was, at the
bridge bulkhead. I remember it as well as I remember him. I'm pretty observant
. I catch most stuff. I remember seeing that tarp as well as I remember how
Tallent was dressed that morning. He had on a navy blue or black ball cap
that said SALINE COUNTY DEPUTY. He was wearing cowboy boots and blue jeans.
He had on a belt buckle that also said SALINE COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE. He had
a package of cigarettes rolled up in his shirtsleeves, like a sailor going on
leave. And he had his pistol, an automatic, stuck in the back of his pants,
like Magnum, P.I."

Inexplicably, Tomlin felt that much of what the train crew had told the
deputies was being dismissed. The reaction perplexed and angered him. "We all
saw the tarp," he said. "They were definitely covered up from their waist
down to their feet with it. But he told us it must have been an optical
illusion. Just like the gun. When he first arrived and we told him there'd
been a gun, he acted like he didn't know what we were talking about. Then
when we were walking along the tracks the deputies asked me where this
'alleged gun' was. We had to take them and show them where it was. We'd
already found that, too."

The cool and minimalistic police approach contrasted sharply with the
out-of-control and gruesome quality of the scene, and that sense of
dissonance that had left so many unsettled on Sunday returned with a
vengeance the following day. On Monday, after an account of the deaths made
the television news and the papers, relatives and curiosity seekers flocked
to the tracks. There, one of them discovered a severed foot lying in the
gravel. To the train crew, still stung by the attack on their
professionalism, such carelessness by the deputies seemed unconscionably
unprofessional.

"I'm just an old country boy," Jerry Tomlin later complained. "I was born at
night, but I wasn't born last night. And I can tell you, I didn't think too
much of the investigation. The deputies' attitude was more like 'Let's get
this cleaned up and get back to the coffee shop.' I don't know. People don't
realize what a mess it was. Maybe they were in shock. Maybe they had weak
stomachs. Maybe they just didn't want to face it. Whatever it was, I sensed
all along that they were not out there looking for clues."

For Shroyer the night would leave a permanent scar. "I was rattled," the
engineer later told an investigator. "There's no question, I was rattled. I
was sick of everything that there was about the whole situation. But I
maintained my professional stance. When my superintendent arrived, I
halfheartedly apologized for being shaken. I told him I didn't understand why
it was affecting me so deeply, except for the fact that it was kids. And the
situation was just not right. And it disturbs me to this day. It really does.
The thought of it, of what happened to those kids, why they were there, what
was going on… I've lived with it. I've looked at it. And it does not add up."

The deputies admitted to being somewhat bewildered by the events. Two days
after the deaths, Chief Deputy Rick Elmendorf told the local newspaper, "We
are trying to come up with any feasible reason for something like this to
happen." And he added, "We haven't ruled out anything except foul play."


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