FULL TEXT: The body of Kidnap victim Margaret Wernicker was found
Saturday after a Chicago ex-convict and his 13-year-old girl friend were
captured in West Texas and confessed to four cold-blooded murders since
Wednesday.
Three of the victims, shot in the head after their hands were
bound, were from the Belleville area.
They were Miss Wernicker, 39, and George Ballard, 47, and his
daughter, Carol, 10.
The captives, John Edwin Myers, 32, and Donna Marie Stone, signed
statements that they each fired two shots into the heads of two of the victims.
They were their hostage, Muss Wernicker, and a hitchhiker who was
their last victim before their lurid flight in a stolen auto was ended by an
observant Texas Highway patrolman.
~ BODY RECOVERED. ~
From directions father of five and his runaway consort, a search
party in Oregon County, Missouri, was able to find the body of Miss Wernicker.
The Missouri Highway Patrol said the body was in a field off a
gravel road about seven miles north of Thayer.
A preliminary examination indicated four or five shots had been
fired into her head. The body was under brush about 150 feet from the road.
The statement said Meyers and the girl took Miss Wernicker into
the field and tied her hands.
Donna Marie shot her twice and then Meyers “finished her off” with
two more bullets, according to their statement.
When arrested, Donna Marie was wearing some of Miss Wernicker’s
clothing.
~ HITCHHIKER SLAIN ~
Their last murder was about 10:30 p. m. Friday between Big Spring, Tex., and Midland, where they were halted shortly after midnight by Patrolman Jack Reaves, who recognized the auto from a description broadcast in the Belleville murders and kidnapping.
Their last murder was about 10:30 p. m. Friday between Big Spring, Tex., and Midland, where they were halted shortly after midnight by Patrolman Jack Reaves, who recognized the auto from a description broadcast in the Belleville murders and kidnapping.
A hitchhiker, Lee DeKraai, about 30, of Ottumwa, Ia., was hapless
enough to be picked up by the pair in the Fort Worth area.
As he dozed in the front seat between them, the confession said,
Myers fired a shot into his hand.
The girl was quoted as saying:
“WE both thought he had some money, but he didn’t have a penny.”
Police led to the body said Meyers and Donna Marie both admitted
firing two shots into DeKraai.
The Howard County, Texas, district attorney, Gil Jones, told The
Globe-Democrat that he had filed a murder warrant against Meyers but not the
girl, “because of her age.”
Mr. Jones said that Donna Marie would be held as a juvenile and
his office would file a formal request for her return from wherever she may be
taken after she reaches the age of 18. The district attorney said this will be
done with the intent of also charging her with murder.
He said he would insist that Texas retain custody of Meyers until
he can be tried for murder.
~ CHARGED HERE ~
But in St. Clair County, Illinois, State’s Attorney John M. Karnes filed murder warrants against both Saturday in the Ballard deaths.
But in St. Clair County, Illinois, State’s Attorney John M. Karnes filed murder warrants against both Saturday in the Ballard deaths.
Mr. Karns then departed for Big Spring, Tex., with chief sheriff’s
deputy Maurice Joseph and deputy Robert Mitchell in an effort to obtain
jurisdiction over the prisoners.
A federal kidnap charge also is pending against Meyers and Donna
Marie in the Wernicker case. Warrants were issued Friday after the fugitives
were identified by fingerprints and photographs.
The Texas ending of the lurid case brought to light the motive for
the slaying of the Ballards Wednesday night by a small fishing pond west of
Belleville.
~ WANTED MONEY ~
According to their statement, Meyers and the
girl, who had run away from her grandparents’ home in Edwardsville Aug. 22, had
been camping by the pond and wanted money and a car to go to Arizona.
There, the girl said, they intended to get jobs
picking cotton.
Mr. Ballard, of 1121 Bethesda st., St. Clair
County, and his daughter Carol were fishing there when Meyers and Donna Marie
selected them as robbery targets.
Ironically, after binding the victims and
shhoting them, they obtained only $1.
Furthermore, they couldn’t start Mr. Ballard’s
auto.
Then they walked to the nearby home of Mr. and
Mrs. H. P. Graham, 1801 South Seventy-fourth st., and took Mr. Graham’s car at
gunpoint.
They also forced Miss Wernicker, who had lived
wiuth the couple 22 years, to accompany them.
Miss Weinecker, an employe in the addressograph
department of Stix, Baer and Fuller, made a telephone call to Mr. Graham
shortly after 9 p. m. from a public booth at 823 Market st.
She said the man (Meyers) told her he he was
going to drive about 50 miles to see his father and then surrender.
But the abductors headed south, stopping to kill Miss Mernicker aftertaking $16 from
her.
In Chicago, the girl’s father, James Stone, 35,
and her mother, Norma, 36, parents of seven children, heard the news of their
daughter’s capture and confession with horror.
Donna Marie, who looks years older than she is,
was considered too young to go on dates.
Meyers, a friend of Mr. Stone and a resident of
the same apartment building, apparently followed when the Stones took Donna
Marie to Edwardsville recently and left her with her grandparents.
According to the FBI Meyers had been imprisoned
three times previously.
His record shows while in military service in
1948 he was charged with being absent without leave and striking a senior
officer and sentenced to three years six months in the United States
disciplinary barracks at Portsmouth, N. H.
In August, 1949, he was sentenced to one to three
years in the state reformatory at Lincoln, Neb., for auto theft. He was
released Sept. 5, 1951.
He was sentenced for child abandonment in 1954 in
St. Cloud, Minn. Meyers said he served two years.
The killers were described as calm and relieved
at the conclusion of their long and bloody flight.
[“Cold Blooded Pair Admits 4 Murders – Girl Fired First At Kidnap
Victim,” St. Louis Globe-Democrat (Mo.), Sep. 3, 1961, p. 1]
***
BELLEVILLE, Ill. — Donna Marie Stone, 14, who
accompanied her married lover on a cross-country crime spree, today '¡pleaded
guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the slaying of a man I and his daughter
and was turned I over to youth authorities.
Miss Stone had been charged with murder in the Aug. 30,
1961, shootings. She changed her plea just as her trial got under way and Judge
Richard T. Carter placed her in the custody of the Illinois Youth Commission
for confinement at Geneva “until discharged.”
Under Illinois law minors can be held by the youth
commission without a definite length of sentence.
The prosecution had summed 31 witnesses for Miss Stone’s
trial for the murders of George Ballard, 41, Villa Hills, Ill., and his
daughter, Carol, 10.
Two of them were heard before she changed her plea. A.
Gordon Dodds, superintendent of schools at Edwardsville, testified the girl had
an I.Q. of 107, “slightly above average.”
The other witness, the Rev. Eugene Lamport, pastor of the
First Christian Church of Edwardsville, testified Miss Stone had had a good
moral reputation.
Miss Stone had accompanied John Edwin Meyer, 33, whom she
I met after her family moved to Chicago, on the weekend crime tour. Meyer was
convicted in Big Spring, Tex., of the murder of a hitchhiker and is under the
death sentence.
Ballard and his daughter had been bound with plastic
clothesline and each was shot in the head. Miss Stone had been vacationing with
her grandparents in Edwardsville when Meyer, an ex-convict, picked her up a
few days before the slayings.
Asst. State’s Atty. Charles Hamilton said Meyer and Miss
Stone had signed confessions to the effect that Meyer shot and killed Ballard
and his daughter. He said that in the statement, Miss Stone admitted tying the
hands of the victims.
[“Girl, 14, Pleads Guilty to Voluntary Manslaughter – Donna Marie
Stone Is Placed In Custody of Illinois Youth Commission,” The Daily Register
(Harrisburg, Il.), Aug. 20, 1962, p. 1]
***
Donna Marie Stone (13) & John Edwin Myers (erroneously “Meyer”)
(32)
CHRONOLOGY
Aug. 30, 1961 – Emge Lake, Belleville, Ill. Double murder. George Ballard
(47), Carol Ballard (10 or11);
Aug. 30, 1961 – Margaret Wernicker (39), kidnapped. 8 pm,
Belleville. Murdered later. Stone fired 2 shots before Meyer fired 2 shots; Thayer,
Missouri.
Sep 1, 1961 – Arthur Lee DeKraai
(Dekrarri , DeKaari) (33), near Dallas. Each fired 2 shots.
Sep 2, 1961 – pair arrested Big Spring, Texas. Margaret Wernicker body found.
1962 – Myers sentenced to death in Texas, overturned.
Aug. 22, 1962 – Stone, reduced sentence manslaughter, plead
guilty. indeterminate sentence; Illinois State Training School for Girls,
Geneva.
Feb. 25, 1964 – Myers found guilty of murder of Carol Ballard.
Sentenced to death
Meyers, death sentence, Illinois.
Apr. 9, 1964 – Myers sentenced to death second time. In Illinois.
1968 – Donna Marie Stone paroled. (source: St. Louis Post
Dispatch, Sep. 5, 1976, p. 17A)
1976 – Myers resentenced 75-150 years.
***
***
***
***
***
***
***
More cases: Youthful Borgias: Girls Who Commit Murder
***
More cases: Serial Killer Girls
***
***
***
***
***
More cases: Youthful Borgias: Girls Who Commit Murder
***
More cases: Serial Killer Girls
More: Serial Killer Couples
***
[291-12/31/20; 488-8/8/21; 600-11/5/21;1452-1/23/22]***
No comments:
Post a Comment