Sunday, October 19, 2014

Keep Digging

The text popped up on my phone at 5:08 one morning last week. It read, simply but dramatically, “The body is not Bishop!”

It was from my friend Karen, who—when she’s not busy swing-dancing and waltzing and canoeing and hiking and seemingly redefining the phrase “live life to its fullest” (no mean feat for a single mother of three with a demanding full-time job, three dogs, a cat and a semi-long-distance boyfriend)—like me, worries a lot about the end of the world as we know it. Karen’s big thing right now is Ebola. She was up early that day scouring the Internet for the latest on confirmed deaths, government lies and obfuscations, hospital screw-ups, and cruise ship travel by possible carriers of the virus. While scrolling through a list of reasons it’s best never to read the news, she’d come upon an item in which she knew I’d be acutely interested.

I knew the text message meant that the question I’d asked atop my previous post, “The Truth Unearthed?” had been answered by the FBI’s forensics team in Quantico, Virginia. The “John Doe” who’d been buried in a cemetery in Jackson County, Alabama, after having been struck by a car on October 18, 1981, was not, in fact, the notorious fugitive Brad Bishop, aka the Bethesda Bludgeoner. (OK, that’s my aka for him. But I’ve noticed that the British tabloids have been all over this story. Given their me-like zeal for alliteration and indifference to taste and decency, I wouldn’t be surprised if at least one of them has employed the term. Damn the Washington Post and their “journalistic standards.”)

“We were hoping it was him, but we have other leads, the Post quoted an FBI spokeswoman in Baltimore as saying. Here in Montgomery County—where the 39-year-old multilingual State Department employee one spring day in 1976 went to a hardware store, purchased a small hammer, then infamously embarked on a fiendish home-improvement project that consisted of beating his wife, three sons and widowed mother to death—Sheriff Darren Popkin and County Police Chief Tom Manger echoed the FBI’s disappointment and optimism.

The case has been open for nearly four decades now, and even this latest “big break” consisted of nothing more than facial similarities between Bishop and the autopsy photo of the John Doe. But, what is law enforcement going to say? “We’ve got nuthin”? Bishop might, after all, have died under an assumed name overseas, his true identity unknown to anyone with whom he’d dealt. If he is still alive, he may be just another Alzheimer’s patient at an old folks’ home in Croatia, or a retired ski instructor in the Swiss Alps whose longtime companion, a distant relation of Eva Braun, will carry her lover’s secret to her own grave.

It seems hard to imagine, in this era of omnipresent cameras and instantaneous communication, that a still-living Brad Bishop could remain hidden for this long. Plus, does a guy who’s unhinged enough to murder his entire family then just settle down to a quiet life of clock-making? I don’t know. I’m not a criminal profiler, although I’ve watched plenty of them theorize on TV.

I’m more dubious than ever now that this coldest of cold cases ever will be thawed out and solved. Per my post previous to this one, what I’d most like to see at this point is Bishop’s comeuppance—a cold-blooded killer who’s certain he’s gotten away with murder being brought to justice, ideally interrupted mid-sip on a martini by a swarm of gun barrels pointed directly at this wizened face. That would be justice, inasmuch as the word possibly could apply to a killer who’s enjoyed decades of freedom while his family’s been skeletal in the ground.

I suppose I should clarify and concede, after having indicted Brad Bishop so many times over in this space, that he is an alleged killer. He is the Alleged Bethesda Bludgeoner. He never stood trial, after all. Perhaps it was just a monumental coincidence and a huge misunderstanding that Bishop disappeared at exact time of the murders, that items found at the northeast North Carolina site of the family’s half-burned bodies were traceable to him, that more evidence linking Bishop to the slayings were found in the family’s abandoned station wagon in the Smoky Mountains, and that no other suspects ever have been suggested or have emerged. It’s theoretically possible that a wrongly accused Brad Bishop is a latter-day Richard The Fugitive Kimble, still out there trying to ensnare the real killer while the stupid, misguided coppers persist in pinning the rap on him. (Although such efforts can be difficult even for acquitted and unpursued innocents, as OJ Simpson discovered during all those years he spent turning Florida’s golf courses and bars-upside down in a frantic-if-geographically-curious search for the killers of his ex-wife and her friend.)

So, to be fair, it was DNA from an alleged murderer that the FBI compared recently with DNA from that Alabama John Doe. And the 350 leads that the FBI says it’s received since attempting in April to revive interest in the case by placing Bishop on its Ten Most Wanted List are just part of an effort to touch base with a widower who’s got some serious ’splainin’ to do.

If that roadside drifter in Alabama had turned out to be Brad Bishop, however, the book would’ve been closed on him, and on a case of presumed guilt. Ebola still would be frightening, to be sure. Wars still would still rage all over globe, atrocities still would abound, environmental calamity would keep looming ever closer. But at least I could’ve run by that house on Lilly Stone Drive and thought, “So much for that alleged homicidal asshole.” Now I wonder if I’ll be able to say that anytime earlier than 20 years from now—when I’ll figure that Bishop probably didn’t live to be 100, and when I myself will be 76 years old.

By which time, if I’m still alive, I’m sure to find Bishop’s default death by old age to be pretty unsatisfying. Especially as I’ll be dealing with my own infirmities, and all the manifestations of impending Arageddon about which I’ve so cheerily written in this space. (If, that is, Karen’s fears prove unfounded and Ebola doesn’t wipe us all out first.)

So, one final note, and then I’ll drop this subject. I promise! Unless and until there’s bona fide news.

This morning I spotted a handmade sign at the entrance to Lilly Stone Drive, advertising a neighborhood Halloween “Spooktacular.” Not at the old Bishop place--despite its provenance, ghost potential, and suitability to Nerf-hammer party favors! Talk about an opportunity lost.

Monday, October 13, 2014

The Truth Unearthed?

I swear, I had the best of intentions to break blog silence of more than a month by writing about something upbeat. Or, at least not so damn dark.

I mean, last time I wrote about my firm belief that that everything we cherish about human life soon will cease to exist—possibly within our lifetime. Surely within the lives of the children of those who took the losing gamble of bringing kids into a doomed world.

After that post, I’m sure my readership (I like that word because it suggests a vast following) was screaming into their computer screens, “Lighten up, man! We expect end-times talk from guys with signs on street corners—or from that buzz-kill trio with megaphones outside Nationals Park this past season. Stick with what you do best, Ries: complaining about shit in a self-effacing but amusing way, with a stray optimistic thought sometimes thrown in.”

I heard you, imagined voices! I really did. In fact, I had a post planned in my head that would talk about all the senior citizens I’ve volunteer-visited over the years. About how I never really know what they’re all about, because by the time I enter their lives their memories are failing and/or the narratives they’ve constructed over the decades have calcified into their own reality. A reality that may be the truth, but that in many key respects probably isn’t.

So, OK, it wasn’t going to be a happy piece, exactly. But it was going to have a bittersweet tone. Note that “sweet” is part of that.

What had brought all of that to mind was the recent experience of my friend Bob. Or, rather, his recent experience as told by him.

Bob is 92, and in many respects his mind remains sharp—as evidenced by the fact that he’s always asking me if I’ve yet ordered on Amazon that CD or transistor radio or talking watch for him that my younger and theoretically sharper brain has completely forgotten about. Bob recently lost his only surviving sibling, a sister who was only 80, to brain cancer. He’d known she was dying, and had spoken to her on the phone many times during the months of her decline. But, as Bob tells the story, he didn’t learn of her death until two days after the fact—and then was prevented from attending the service, which was local, by his sister’s only child. This woman is in her 50s. Bob describes her as “liking  to control things.”

According to Bob, the daughter wouldn’t tell him where the service was being held, even after he told her he could get a ride. He then appealed to his late sister’s husband, who Bob has long characterized to me as reticent and ineffectual. The brother-in-law shruggingly responded, Bob said, that he was “between the devil and the deep blue sea” in this matter—the implication being that his own daughter was the devil and that he risked sleeping with the fishes were he to tell Bob where and when the funeral service was being held.

My first and natural instinct was to mourn for my elderly friend who’d lost his last remaining family member and closest confidante—they spoke at least weekly on the phone, and she sometimes came to visit, bearing new shirts and pants and other items that her nearly blind and ambulatorily unsteady brother couldn’t shop for himself. Not only had he lost her, but he’d had no closure on her death—no funeral service, no chance to mourn with a community of family and friends who’d loved his sister, too. Not even a program or memorializing obituary to which he could cling. If the latter existed, I couldn’t find it anywhere on the Internet.

Bob was able to cull from the brother-in-law that his sister’s ashes had been scattered on a section of Delaware’s Rehoboth Beach that is reserved for such purposes. So, no cemetery to visit, either. I’m loath to drive Bob anywhere because he’s so feeble, and I haven’t done so for years. But I would’ve gladly driven him to his sister’s grave site, were she to have had one.

I’d better get to the point, because right now I’m telling you about what I was going to write about today, and I haven’t yet gotten around to what I am going to address.

To make a long story shorter, I e-mailed a niece of Bob’s—the daughter of a brother of his who died 30 years ago—to inform her of her aunt’s death and her uncle’s loss, if she didn’t know already. Which I figured was distinctly possible, given that this niece, too, lives locally, but she’s seen Bob in the flesh exactly once, to my knowledge, in the many years I’ve known him. In fact, I had served as go-between for that lone meeting, which struck me as odd at the time. But, whatever.

So, the niece e-mailed me back. She’d had no idea her aunt had died. She thanked me for letting her know. She said that she would write “Bobby” a note of condolence. Within her short reply, she also referenced her family’s indifference to her “outreach” efforts in the years since her father’s death. She alluded to “strange family dynamics.”

No kidding! It was then that I fully realized something that I’d already been thinking about at some level: I know nothing about the Bob who preceded our acquaintance. I know the outlines—his long marriage; how he tended to his wife in her Alzheimer’s years; his career as a bank teller and later, in semi-retirement, as a seller of fine pens; stories here and there about his family and his schooling; hobbies such as his lifelong love of watches. (I’ve worn a hole in the carpets of a jeweler in Alexandria buying new batteries for his vast array of timepieces. Or, I did, until his eyesight deteriorated to the point where he no longer can tell when time stands still.)

But what do I really know about Bob? About his familial relationships, for instance? How do I know that he didn’t somehow make himself persona non grata with his sister’s family? Why, for that matter, has the one niece with whom I’ve communicated largely snubbed Bob in the years that I’ve known him? I used to simply assume that she’s a self-centered bitch. But perhaps Bob had been among those family members who’d been insufficiently “there” for her upon her father’s death and had then rejected her overtures.

Twice in e-mails this niece has written to me “He’ll always be Bobby to me.” Why? What does that mean? So, I asked her. In an e-mail, I also asked if she has any idea what the real story might be about the alleged funeral-service snub. I conceded that it’s really none of my business, but added that I’d like to be able to sort out—or at least have some insight into—an elderly friend’s past, for a change.

I’ve run into this many times, and it always drives me a little crazy. Why? Yes, my wife is right—I’m nosy as hell. But also, I like these people. I care about them. But I see only a single puzzle piece of their totality. I wonder what the big picture once looked like. I wonder what my elderly friends loved and loathed in their prime, what they cared about the most. Who they were, when they were fully themselves—as opposed to the diminished and circumscribed fragments of themselves that I now see before me.

Just to name a few of them, there was Helen, who’d been a nurse and a doctor’s wife and an avid tennis player and swimmer, but whose divorce, progressively debilitating MS, and bouts with cancer had rendered her bitter and cantankerous (to be kind) by the time we met, but who lit up when talking about the fine arts and her travel days, and who always thanked me for coming. There was Phyllis, who’d put her heart and soul into raising her three boys, but couldn’t remember much about them to tell me. They and I finally met at her memorial service, where they regarded me warily, as if fearing I was about to become rich in a recently rewritten will.

There was Marianthe, who’d run a Greek restaurant in DC back in the day with her late husband, and who was mortal assisted-living enemies with Augusta, whose son in California either was a saint or a bastard, depending on whether Augusta or the man’s son was telling the story. And there was Jean, who’d once helped Rachel Carson research Silent Spring, and who dreamily invited me to her family’s island retreat on the St Lawrence River at a time when it was clear that she herself never would see it again.

Bob’s niece didn’t reply to my e-mail. Which was neither surprising nor in any way offensive, given the buttinsky nature of my request.

Anyway, what all this is meant to say is that I’d planned to make this entire blog post about the strangeness of time, age, perception, family, and the role of the volunteer. It wasn’t going to be an uplifting piece, but I was going to end it on a note of my affection for all the seniors I’ve known in this capacity. I was going to emphasize that I think of each of them often, and always fondly--for who they were in our specific context, not for who they may really have been over the course of their lifetime. Even though, yes, I always end up wishing I’d known more about all that stuff.   

Which would’ve made for, as I noted several hundred words ago, a bittersweet post. But at least not a dark one, coming on the heels of my subtly titled “Sing a Song of Armageddon” entry.

OK, I guess at this point I sort of have written that post, anyway. But now—and this part will end up being way shorter than I’d planned it to be when I first sat down—here’s what’s topmost on my mind today, blog-wise.

Last Thursday, the media again dug up Brad Bishop. Literally, sort of.

Surely you remember him. He’s the guy who, in 1976, bludgeoned his wife, three sons and widowed mother to death in their Bethesda home, piled the bodies into the family station wagon, burned them in a shallow grave in northeastern North Carolina, later abandoned the car in the Smoky Mountains, then infamously vanished into history. Given that he was a State Department diplomat who spoke five languages and was an avid outdoorsman, the thinking was that he might have hidden at first in a remote area of Europe and later built himself a life overseas.

I first wrote about him in June 2012, then returned to the subject in April of this year, when the FBI moved to heat up a very cold case by placing the now-78-year-old fugitive on its Ten Most Wanted list. I admit to having a morbid fascination with killers, particularly those who pile on the bodies. It bums Lynn out and can put a real damper on cocktail-party conversations. I often run by the former Bishop house, which is just a few miles from my own, and I think about the murders, and Bishop, a lot. Part of me enjoys imagining the scene of the Smartest Man in the Room being ripped off of his comfy fireside chair in an Alpine ski lodge by an Interpol SWAT team, being extradited back to Maryland, standing trial, and ultimately spending what’s left of his dotage being anally penetrated in prison.

But then, last week, a Washington Post headline screamed (OK, it didn’t scream, but I nearly did when I read the story), “Exhumed Body in Alabama Could Be Notorious Bethesda Fugitive Brad Bishop.” In a nutshell, a recent re-airing of the case on CNN led to a tip that a “John Doe” who’d been struck by a car and killed in Jackson County, Alabama, on October 18, 1981, looked remarkably similar to Brad Bishop. The John Doe’s autopsy photo was pulled, and the likeness was deemed compelling enough to dig up the casket. Forensic samples were sent to the FBI lab in Quantico, Virginia. Where, within a few weeks, we’re told, the case of the fugitive Brad Bishop may at last be solved.

Even if it is not resolved, in some senses. If the body is Bishop’s, we’ll never know why he did it, or where he spent those five years between the killings and his own death. For years I knew the street on which the Bishop residence was located but not the house number. And I’d long thought that this was a head-scratching case of responsible-family-man-inexplicably-turned-savage-murderer. But then all of a sudden my Google searches started turning up results they never used to. The house number suddenly was everywhere. (Prompting me this spring to drive over there, take pictures, and make Lynn eye me more nervously that she had before.) Also, the Internet now is rife with mentions of Bishop’s having been under psychiatric care in the years before the murders. And also, of his having been a huge narcissist whose own mother once had scolded him at a dinner party for his rudeness toward others, and had warned him of a “comeuppance” that she might have lived to see, if her rude son hadn’t first crushed in her skull with a household tool.

So, if the body exhumed in Alabama—which belonged, according to eyewitnesses, to a shambling, middle-aged-looking man who was wearing several layers of clothing at the time he was killed—does prove to be that of Brad Bishop, it shouldn’t come as any huge surprise. Alabama isn’t terribly far from the Smoky Mountains, and the journey from one place to the other may have been roughly as linear as might have been a mentally ill man’s journey from respectability, to homicidal rage, to cognitive descent into foggy homelessness and heedless perambulation.

But I have to concede, I’ll feel some disappointment if that proves to be the case. Not that I’ve ever felt that Brad Bishop deserved the decades of freedom I’ve imagined for him. But, rather, because I relished thinking of him sitting pretty, smugly convinced that he’d gotten away with murder, only to find that all his linguistic brilliance and cunning couldn’t save him from justice in the end. (And I do mean “the end.” See that earlier prison reference.)

Last week’s Washington Post story quoted a now-retired State Department colleague of Bishop’s, Roy Harrell, on the matter of “comeuppance.” He says he was sitting at the dinner table with Bishop and his family in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in 1965 or 1966. The final line of the Post article was this:

“Regarding the possibility of Bishop being run over by a car, Harrell said, ‘I would think that this is what his mother referred to as his comeuppance.’”

Maybe. But I personally think she would have preferred my scenario—self-proclaimed criminal mastermind rotting in prison (there being no death penalty in Maryland)—rather than the image of some addled bum shambling aimlessly down the road one second, dead the next.

See? That’s dark. But nowhere near as dark as Armageddon. The Bishop story may even have a happy ending, depending on how you define such things.