Crime: Secrets in the Sand Time Magazine Friday, November 26

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Crime: Secrets in the Sand
Time Magazine
Friday, November 26, 1965
To the bored, vacant-eyed teen-agers who hang out at the drive-ins and juke joints along Tucson's East
Speedway Boulevard, Charles Howard Schmid Jr., 23, was known as a swinger. A well-muscled onetime
state high-school gymnastics champion, Smitty always had wheels, money, tall tales and an inexhaustible
supply of available girls' phone numbers.
Schmid went to bizarre lengths to build his image. He added 3 in. to his meager (5 ft. 3 in.) frame by stuffing
rags and folded tin cans into his black leather boots. He dyed his hair raven black, wore pancake makeup,
pale cream lipstick and mascara. As for the cash, which he got in a generous weekly dole from his mother,
Schmid bragged to the boys that it came from smuggling cars into Mexico, to the girls that it came from
women whom he had taught "100 ways to make love."
Skeleton Search. Last week, because of his pathological penchant for bragga docio, Schmid was in jail,
charged with the murders of two daughters of a Tucson surgeon. Along with two friends — one a 19-yearold girl — he was also accused of murdering a third girl. Police, who had found the two sisters' skeletons on
the desert, last week were still searching for the third.
The murders came to light when Richard Bruns, 19, told police that Schmid had shown him a grave in the
desert outside Tucson in June 1964, a month after 15-year-old Alleen Rowe disappeared from her home.
Last August, said Bruns, a few days after Gretchen Fritz, 17, and her sister Wendy, 13, had failed to return
home from a drive-in movie, Schmid took him out on the desert again, showed him the Fritz girls' corpses—
only one was even partially buried—and boasted that he had killed them. Acting on Bruns's story, Tucson
police rounded up John Saunders, a 19-year-old high-school dropout who had moved to Connecticut, and
Mary French, another 19-year-old dropout who was living with her family in Texas, brought them back and
got their grisly stories.
Drive in the Desert. According to their statements, Schmid, who was dating Mary French, and Saunders
were at Mary's house the night of May 31, 1964, when Schmid idly wondered if they could kill someone and
get away with it. He suggested Alleen, a bright, pretty student who had once stood Saunders up for a date;
the others agreed. Mary French persuaded the girl to go for a drive with them. She was taken about five
miles into the desert, where Schmid and Saunders walked her down to a dry stream bed and hit her on the
head with rocks until she died. Then, Mary related, Schmid walked back to the car, got a shovel from the
trunk, and told her to follow him. She did, found Alleen face down and bleeding, and helped bury her.
Next day Mrs. Norma Rowe reported her daughter missing, gave police the names of Schmid, Saunders and
Mary French as possible sources of information. The three were questioned repeatedly, but police finally
became convinced that Alleen had simply run away from home—a not uncommon occurrence among teenagers in Tucson's fast-growing, mobile society where few families stay long enough to put down roots.
The Silent Set. When the Fritz sisters dropped out of sight, the police figured they were runaways also,
even got reports they were in Mexico. Not until Bruns told his gruesome story did they suspect foul play. As
for Schmid, since his arrest he has, for once, had nothing to say.
Almost as fantastic as the murders themselves was the disclosure that at least 30 teenagers, all friends of
Schmid's, had apparently heard him brag about the crimes—and said nothing. Confided one 16-year-old
coed at Tucson's Palo Verde high school: "A lot of people knew, but it was already too late. Telling would
just have made it tough on everyone."
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