Killing of Don Henry and Kevin Ives

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Event.png Killing of Don Henry and Kevin Ives (Murder,  Clinton body count?) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Killing of Don Henry and Kevin Ives.jpg
DateAugust 23, 1987
Deaths2
DescriptionThe murder of two kids who likely have witnessed criminal activity.

Don Henry and Kevin Ives were hit by a freight train on August 23, 1987 in Alexander (Arkansas) as they were laying on the tracks. The case is sometimes referred to as the "Murder on tracks case", while this is also a descriptive term for other train related accidents/murders.[1]

The deaths were initially ruled an accident, the result of the boys in a deep sleep on the tracks while incapacitated due to high amounts of THC allegedly present in their blood. The parents of the boys insisted on a second autopsy, and after exhumation it was ruled that homicide was likely. A second autopsy revealed that Don Henry had been stabbed in the back and Kevin Ives' skull had been crushed prior to being run over.

In August 2016, another lawsuit was filed by Linda Ives, citing a violation of the Freedom of Information Act by local and federal officials, or “stonewalling,” in relation to the boys’ deaths.[2] She also runs a website dedicated to the case.[3]

Background

About 4:00 a.m. on August 23, 1987, the crew on board a 75-car, 6,000-ton Union Pacific freight train, more than a mile long and traveling at a rate more than 50 miles per hour, en route to Little Rock, Arkansas, spotted two boys lying motionless across the tracks, about 300 feet ahead.[4] Members of the locomotive crew also stated that the bodies were partly covered by a green tarpaulin,[5] though police disputed the existence of any such tarp and none was ever recovered from the scene. Nearby were a .22 caliber rifle and a flashlight. The boys did not move, despite the sound and vibration of the approaching train, its emergency brakes, and its air horn. More than 1,000 feet of the decelerating train crossed the point where the bodies lay before it came to a stop.

The train's crew reported the incident to railroad and law enforcement authorities. By 4:40 a.m., police arrived on the scene. Police never found a tarp.[6]

The boys had reportedly left home about midnight to go hunting. The gun and flashlight near the bodies suggested they were using a hunting technique known as spotlighting, which involves using a bright light to scan for animals whose eyes brightly reflect the light after dark.

Autopsies

The state medical examiner, Fahmy Malak, ruled the deaths an accident as a result of marijuana intoxication, saying the boys had smoked the equivalent of 20 marijuana cigarettes and fell asleep on the tracks.[7] The parents did not accept this finding and conducted their own investigation.

In March 1988, James Garriot of San Antonio offered a second opinion and was skeptical of the findings about marijuana. A second autopsy by Georgia medical examiner Joseph Burton found the equivalent of one or two marijuana cigarettes, not 20. A grand jury ruled the deaths a "probable homicide."[8] When it was found that Don Henry's shirt contained evidence of a stab wound to the back, and Kevin Ives' skull may have been crushed by his own rifle, the ruling was changed to "definite homicide."[9] Don Henry's father also noted that he did not believe his son would have risked his gun getting scratched by laying it on gravel.

Suspects and theories

One week before the boys died, a man wearing military fatigues was spotted not far from the train tracks. When police officer Danny Allen attempted to stop him, the man opened fire and managed to disappear into the night. On the same night the boys died, a similar-looking man dressed in military fatigues was spotted nearby.[citation needed]

The usual theory given about the boys' deaths, believed by Linda Ives, involves drug trafficking.[10] The theory is that the boys came upon a drug drop from an airplane similar to Barry Seal's operations near Mena and were murdered.

Dan Harmon, a prosecutor of the case, who was later arrested for dealing drugs,[11] is one person implicated in the murder.[12] Keith McCaskle, also implicated in the murder,[12] was stabbed to death by an unknown attacker[13] on November 10, 1988.[14] Several other individuals who came forwards claiming to be witnesses died under mysterious circumstances, most of whom had their autopsies presided over by Dr Malak.

The case was profiled on the television program Unsolved Mysteries.[15][16]

Further reading

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