Clark Elmore
Suspending
Death
by
Robert A. Waters
“During
my term, we will not be executing people.” Washington
Democratic governor Jay Inslee.
On April 17, 1995, middle school student Kristy Lynn
Ohnstad disappeared. The fourteen-year-old resided with her mother,
Sue Ohnstad, and Sue's live-in boyfriend, Clark Elmore (AKA James
Dickey) in Bellingham, Washington. At the time, Elmore had lived
with Sue for ten years, and they'd had a child, Kayla, together.
Kristy's mother reported her missing when she didn't
return home from school. The day after she vanished, a passer-by
found Kristy's backpack in a ditch near Samish Way.
When questioned by investigators, Elmore denied knowing
what happened to his stepdaughter. He stated that he dropped her off
in front of a convenience store near her school on the morning she
disappeared. Elmore stated that several “kids” were there
waiting for school to start. (When interviewed, the students denied
seeing Kristy that morning.) Elmore told investigators that he and
his common-law wife had been having problems with the “rebellious”
teen and that he thought she had been seeing boys behind their backs.
Detectives observed that Elmore was extremely “pale
and shaky” during much of the interview, but after searching his
van, they found no incriminating evidence and let him go.
Late on the evening of April 21, searchers located
Kristy's body south of Lake Samish. Court documents state that “at
7:30 a.m., on Saturday, April 22, 1995, investigators from the
Sheriff's Office and the Bellingham Police Department met to process
the crime scene. They found Kristy's body laying face down on the
ground beneath a plastic tarp. Her shirt was pulled over one
shoulder and she had a plastic bag over her head. Other than the
shirt and socks, she was naked. When investigators removed the bag,
they found a black belt around her neck and a metal spike protruding
from her ear. Animals had removed portions of her ears. Two red
flecks of paint were recovered from the body. The flecks were
eventually traced back to a red toolbox Elmore kept in his van.”
When Elmore was informed that Kristy's remains had been
discovered, he fled to Oregon.
Two days later, Elmore returned to Bellingham and
confessed to the rape and murder of Kristy Lynn Ohnstad.
Washington Supreme Court briefs described Elmore's
confession: “Elmore explained that on Monday morning, April 17, he
stopped Kayla off at daycare and returned home about 8:20 a.m.
Kristy was complaining about going to school and had missed her bus.
When Elmore told Kristy she was 'grounded forever,' she commented
about Elmore molesting her. When detectives pursued the subject,
Elmore acknowledged molesting Kristy when she was 5 years old. He
said that after the incident, whenever he tried to discipline Kristy,
she threatened to turn him in for molestation....
“When
Kristy mentioned the subject on this day, Elmore told her to 'shut
up.' They got in the van and drove toward Kristy's school. Along
the way, Elmore snapped. Instead of dropping Kristy off at school,
he continued driving. Some 20 minutes later, he reached the far end
of Lake Samish, where he pulled the van onto a secluded dirt road and
parked. Elmore unbuckled Kristy's seat belt and warned her it was
time she learned to do as he told her 'or she'd get seriously hurt.'
Elmore grabbed Kristy by the shirt and pulled her to the back of the
van. He told her to take off her clothes or she was going to get
hurt. She refused and Elmore forcibly removed them. Kristy cried
and pleaded but Elmore raped her...
“After
raping Kristy, Elmore placed his hands around
her neck and manually choked her. He then wrapped Kristy's belt
around her neck and cinched it tightly. Afterward, he took a
nine-inch metal, needle-like tool and forced it into Kristy's left
ear approximately five-and-a-half inches, piercing Kristy's brain.
Elmore thought Kristy was still making noises so he covered her head
with a plastic bag and repeatedly bludgeoned her skull with with a
sledgehammer until he was sure she was dead. Elmore then dragged
Kristy's nude body into the woods, covered her with a plastic drop
cloth, got back into his van and drove away.”
Elmore later pleaded guilty
to aggravated first degree murder and rape. He was sentenced to
death.
After 30 years, his appeals
finally ran out.
But instead of an execution,
Elmore received “leniency” from the governor. For at least four more years, he can
breathe safely.
Whatcom County prosecutor
Dave McEachern met with Inslee in an attempt to get him to
change his mind. The Washington Spokesman-Review reported
that McEachern “implored the governor to focus on how the girl
suffered.”
In the end, justice doesn't
matter when philosophical ideology overrules the legal system.
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