Because Kissler's narrative meshed with the basics related by the anonymous caller, and the previous statements of Perez and Marshall, the detectives brought Mark Perez back for a second interview. They were especially interested if he knew anything about the alleged shooting the night Rush played the Tacoma Dome. Mark Perez remembered the date perfectlyâMay 18, 1984âbecause it was three days after his birthday. Perez didn't attend the concert, but Paul St. Pierre and Andrew Webb did.
“I was sick and missed work on the eighteenth,” Perez told Yerbury, “because of an ear infection and high fever. I was awakened at three
A.M.
by a loud noise that sounded like somebody kicked in my front door. The noise was loud, and I heard Chris say, âFuck! Goddamn it, Paul, what the fuck did you do?' Paul said, âI had to; he was going to stab me with a knife, so I had to shoot him.' Then Chris came into my bedroom and asked, âWere you sleeping?' I said I was and he said, âOh, well, never mind.' Andrew came in and asked me if I heard anything; then Paul came in and said, âCome on, Mark, get out of bed and come see this.' Andrew said, âAre you crazy? Come on, get out of here.' He pushed Paul out of the room and said to me, âNo, no, stay here, don't move; the less you see and the less you know, the better off you'll be.' He stressed this several times. He told me to just go back to sleep like nothing had happened.”
The next morning, Perez noticed that the living room carpet had been cut up, and the carpet mat had two large, round bloodstains approximately 3 1/2 feet from each other. According to Perez, Paul St. Pierre told him that he and Andrew Webb picked up a guy hitchhiking, invited him to party at the house, and then, later, Paul shot the man in the head. According to Mark Perez, Chris St. Pierre told him, “This guy's body was over here and part of his head was here, and his brain could be seen, and there was a bullet hole in his head, and it looked like half his face was blown off.”
“He also told me,” related Perez, “that they just rolled up his body in the carpet and dumped it way up by the mountainsâthey drove about three hours. He said, âWe hid the body so good, it'll take 'em ten years to find the body, if they ever do.' No one mentioned the incident again. Within a few days, I moved out of the house. My personal belongings were still there, but I didn't spend any nights there.”
Detective Price remembered a Missing Persons case of a young man who inexplicably vanished after his mother dropped him off not far from the Tacoma Dome. A quick check of police files confirmed the date of his disappearance as May 18, the night of the Rush concert. The young man's name was John Achord.
According to a Tacoma Police incident report, Mrs. Opal Bitney, mother of John Lynn Achord, contacted the Tacoma Police Department on Monday, May 21. “I spoke to her personally,” said David McNutt, communications officer with the Law Enforcement Support Agency. “We live in a rather enclosed environment down there, so our conversation was purely by phone. She called to file a Missing Persons report on her son, John Achord.”
Born in 1961, John Achord was a student at Tacoma's Bates Vocational School. He stood six feet two, weighed 165 pounds, and had short, curly dark brown hair, a mustache, hazel eyes, a one-inch scar above his right eyebrow, and a severely scarred right shoulder.
Mrs. Bitney explained to police that John Achord was in an automobile accident in 1980. His injuries were of such severity that Achord had to learn to walk and talk all over again. Achord not only made the best of his situation, he improved upon it. Inspirational in accomplishment, and cheerful by attitude, the residual moderate brain damage primarily affected his memory. He was not dangerous or troublesome in any way. Able to care for himself, and in good physical health, he did not drink or use drugs. Open and friendly, John Achord would readily accept rides from strangers.
On May 18, his mother dropped him off at South Twenty-seventh Street and Pacific Avenue, not far from the Tacoma Dome. From there, he would walk to the Rush concert. Achord was carrying perhaps $50 and a concert ticket, which he had bought in advance from the Bon Marche outlet of Ticketmaster. He was last seen wearing a green fatigue jacket, white knit shirt, and blue jeans.
“The family did everything possible to create public awareness of his disappearance,” said Yerbury. “Virtually every business and building in Tacoma had the âMissing' poster of John Achord.” One such business was a Mt. Tahoma 7-Eleven store.
“Andrew and I stopped to buy some cigarettes at that Seven-Eleven,” recounted Andrew Webb's former wife, Anne, “and as I was leaving the store, I noticed a flyer on the window. It was all about John Achord being missing. I was standing there reading it, and when Andrew saw what I was looking at, he suddenly got all upset and angry and insisted we leave immediately. I told him I wanted to finish reading the poster, but he was so uptight I just stopped reading and we left.”
“They also had one of those posters up at Gene and Ray's Tavern,” said Mark Ericson. “That really gives me chills. I would maybe have a beer after work with Chris, Andrew, or Paul because Chris worked for me and they lived right next door to the shop. I mean, we would be there right in front of that poster about John Achord and the whole time they knew what had happened to him. I don't know how they could have done that.”
“Based on the Missing Persons report,” Detective Yerbury said, “it certainly seemed as if John Achord could be the unfortunate gentleman reportedly shot by Paul St. Pierre. At that point, Detective Price and I figured we had enough cause to seek a search warrant.”
Judge James Healy signed a search warrant on June 18, 1984. The warrant commanded “a diligent search of [house number] Pacific Avenue to retrieve a broken toilet lid, blood, hair, tissue trace evidence, a black handled, two edged hunting knife, bullet fragments, carpet samples, a large caliber handgun (possibly a .45 cal. automatic), evidence of burned shoes and trousers, and papers and documents attesting to persons living at the residence.”
“Also included in the search warrant,” noted Sergeant Parkhurst, “were two vehiclesâa 1957 Ford station wagon, green and white in color, and a white 1967 Mercury.” Parkhurst and Lieutenant Moorhead decided the warrant would be served on June 19. Prior to heading over to Pacific Avenue, they called a conference in the County-City Building with Detectives Price and Yerbury, and Officers Brame, Cook, and Getz. “During the conference,” Parkhurst later explained, “a plan was devised on how the residence should be approached and searched.”
It was ten minutes before 9:00
A.M.
when Tacoma Police arrived. There was no one home, but police knew that Chris St. Pierre worked next door for Ericson's, and had done so since high school.
Chris St. Pierre had been nearly in tears ever since he arrived for work. Mark Ericson later commented, “I kept trying to reassure him that everything was going to be OK. I asked, âChris, what is your problem?' He said, âWe're just all going to go to jail. Paul just fucked it up for everybody.' No matter how much I attempted to reassure him that everything would turn out OK, Chris just kept saying, âYou don't understand, you don't understand.'
“It was bright and early when the cops showed up,” Ericson said. “It was such a nice day that I had the back door to the alley open. I just happened to walk to the ramp, look over, and there were all kinds of cops and plainclothes police. I figured maybe they were doing some follow-up on the shooting of Andrew Webb, maybe they needed to ask Chris some more questions since he was the one who called the cops in the first place.
“I said, âChris, you got company over there.' He had his white coveralls on, and he stopped what he was working on, hung his head down for a second; then, without saying a word, he just walked out that door. He had that kind of faraway look in his eyes. I never saw Chris St. Pierre face-to-face again. He walked out that door as if he were walking right out of this life.”
As Chris St. Pierre approached the house, Detective Yerbury greeted him. “I read him the search warrant and advised him of his rights,” the detective recalled, “and then Officers Cook and Brame secured Chris St. Pierre in an unused bedroom while the evidence search was conducted.”
Parkhurst, Moorhead, Price, Yerbury, and Identification Technician Doug Walker began an extensive search of the living room area. “Several blood spots were noticed on the stereo and speakers,” said Parkhurst. “We photographed them in detail, and the stereo and one large speaker were taken into evidence.”
The search temporarily ceased when Chris St. Pierre volunteered the location of the .45-caliber pistol listed on the search warrant. “After Paul St. Pierre shot Andrew Webb,” Yerbury explained, “he hid the gun. It was no secret that he stashed it somewhere; the secret was where he stashed it. Chris St. Pierre told us that his brother called him on the phone at work earlier that morning and told him where to find the forty-five.”
Officer Brame stayed with Chris St. Pierre while Parkhurst and Cook looked for the weapon. “Chris, who was seated on the floor, looked up at me,” said Brame, “then dropped his head and stated something to the effect, âI just don't want to see anybody else hurt with it.' ”
The .45, according to Chris, was hidden in a pile of bricks in a neighbor's yard just south of the house. Sergeant Parkhurst knew that Bill Ericson, father of Mark Ericson, owned that property as well. “I contacted Bill Ericson,” reported Sergeant Parkhurst, “and presented him with the consent-to-search warrant, and explained the details concerning what officers were looking for and what they had been told. He was informed that he did not have to allow us to search if he didn't want us to.”
Bill Ericson authorized the search and Officer Cook located the weapon. “Sergeant Parkhurst and I went to the adjacent yard and observed a pile of stacked tile roofing,” reported Cook. “As I walked along the side of the tile, I observed a forty-five-caliber semiautomatic handgun on the ground between two stacks.” The gun was cocked when Cook found it, with one cartridge in the chamber. “I unloaded it,” Cook recalled, “by grasping the handle grips and the grooved area at the side. There was no clip. Identification Manager Walker photographed the weapon before taking it into evidence.”
Returning to the living room, officers noticed that the carpet and pad had been cut, new carpet installed, and the covering around the baseboards had been removed. “There was a sticker on the pad that appeared to be new,” said Parkhurst. “After rolling the pad and the carpet, we could see the oak hardwood floor, which looked like it had been recently sanded.”
“The sanding was so severe,” commented Yerbury, “that it was to the point that it almost caused a depression in the wood, and the wood was definitely lighter in these areas. Walker then checked these areas with a Hemo Stik Test, and it proved positive in all five areas. The bloodstains on the living room floor certainly corroborated the statements we'd received; so at that point, we arrested Christopher St. Pierre and charged him with rendering criminal assistance.”
Meanwhile, Mark Ericson wondered what in the world was going on next door that required Chris St. Pierre to be gone so long. “He was in there for hours, and then the detectives come over to me and asked if I'd come out and answer some questions. I said, âSure. âWhere's Chris?' They said he was inside, and that he was cooperating with them now. Cooperating with them? I mean, I had no idea what was happening. Then they did let me know that this is seriousââWe're investigating a homicide,' or something like that. He said, âYou ever noticed that the carpet had been cut out underneath from the table in the living room?' I didn't go in there very often and I didn't notice the carpet.
“By this time, I'm thinking, Paul must have done something stupid,” recalled Ericson. “Chris should have gone to the cops earlier. He's an accessory now, but at least he's cooperating. He should've got himself a lawyer.”
According to Yerbury, Christopher St. Pierre was advised off all his rights, including his right to a lawyer, and was repeatedly told that he need not speak to the detectives or answer any questions. When they arrived at Tacoma Police Central Station, Yerbury and Price again advised him of his rights, and St. Pierre signed the form indicating he fully understood.
Christopher St. Pierre, with full knowledge of exactly what he was doing, addressed the following words to Detective Robert Yerbury of the Tacoma Police: “I might as well tell you everything. I'm dead or I'm going to prison.” Yerbury asked St. Pierre to reveal everything, beginning with the night Andrew Webb and Steve Wood got into a fistfight at the house on Pacific Avenue. The recently arrested St. Pierre stared at the floor, took a breath, and began his bone-chilling narrative.