#582 - Seven Murders & One Lie - Elkland, Missouri
This week, in Elkland, Missouri, when seven family members are brutally murdered, in two different homes, the lone survivor tells a tale of killing the murderer, after being wounded by him. The killer looks to be a teenager, who just snapped, due to too much responsibility for the family farm. But nothing turns out to be anything like it seems. The truth turns out to be a much more disturbing story, that leaves everyone in complete shock!!
Along the way, we find out that we don't don't know anything about bluegrass music, that you can only put so much adult responsibility on a 14 year old, and that if you're going to slaughter 7 people, and try to frame someone else, you should plan the whole thing a little bit better!!
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Transcript
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Hello, everybody, and welcome back to Small Town Murder Express.
Yay and choo-choo.
Oh, yay, indeed, Jimmy.
Yay, indeed.
My name is James Petrigallo.
I'm here with my co-host.
I'm Jimmy Wistman.
Thank you, folks, so much for joining us today on More Crazy Episode.
You can't get any more crazy.
I don't know how that came out wrong.
On More Crazy Episode.
That is terrible.
On another insane episode of Small Town Murder Express, 10 pounds of murder in a two-pound bag.
And this week, wow, is this a lot going on this week?
It's a wild story.
We will get into that.
First of all, though, shutupandgivemeurder.com is where you get tickets.
First of all, get your tickets for the virtual live show.
It is April the 19th.
It's our 4.20 virtual live show, just like a regular live show, except you can be anywhere in the world you want to be that has internet.
You can get it.
We'll have the pictures and everything else.
We'll wear costumes.
And on top of that, it is 420.
So I have a bunch of crazy pongs and things of that nature to scare the crap out of Jimmy.
It's going to be a lot of fun.
We're going to go hard.
Yeah.
We're going hard.
Can't wait to do that.
And also get your tickets for regular live shows while you're there.
Chicago, May, you are up.
Oh, boy.
St.
Louis the night before is sold out.
Chicago at the Riviera.
Get your tickets.
And for the rest of the year, too, because we got a bunch of them selling out.
San Diego, Grand Rapids, Madison, Portland.
So if you want to go in the second half of the year, I would get them now.
That's shutupandgivememurder.com.
Also, you want Patreon.
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My goodness, patreon.com slash crime in sports, P-A-T-R-E-O-N.
You want this.
Anybody, $5 a month or above, you are going to get just so much stuff, a gigantic back catalog of hundreds of episodes of bonus stuff you've never heard before immediately upon subscription.
Then, new ones every other week, one crime and sports, one small town murder, and you, my friends, get it all.
This week, what we're going to do here for crime and sports, we're going to talk about
some scams in sports and some cheating scandals, but one particularly is the Spanish Paralympic team, where none of them were disabled in any way, shape, or form.
Spoiler alert, they did win gold.
Is that right?
Shocking.
And then for Small Town Murder, we're going to talk about this documentary and also a book that accompanies it called American Nightmare on Netflix.
And it is the craziest story.
I've never been on the edge of my seat so much in the story, wondering what's going to happen.
It's like you think it's a Sherry Papini situation with a faked kidnapping, but then you're like, is it real?
And it goes, it's crazy.
I cannot wait to tell you this story.
Patreon.com/slash crime in sports.
And you get a shout-out at the end of the regular show as well.
Jimmy will screw your name name all up.
Don't you worry about that.
That said, I think it's time, everybody.
Let's all sit back, clear the lungs.
Here we go.
Arms to the sky.
Let's all shout.
Shut up
and give me
murder.
Let's do this, everybody.
Let's go on a trip, shall we?
Yeah.
We are going to Elkland, Missouri this week.
Elkland.
Elk Land, the land of Elk.
Here it is.
Southwestern Missouri, this is.
of
not quite in no man's land here.
It's about 35 minutes to Springfield, but that 35 minutes, it turns real rural.
I mean,
it's a long 35.
There's nothing going on out here in Elkland.
It's definitely farmland out here, a lot of farms, and especially back when we're going to talk about it.
It's about 35 minutes to Springfield, like we said.
Population of this town, 1,956.
Oh.
So not too, too small, but
they're spread out a good
amount, though.
I would say under 2,000 people.
It says in Webster County, median household income here is about $61,467 a year, which is in the ballpark of the national average, but not quite.
It's named after a president, yeah.
Wasn't there a president of Webster?
Not that I know of.
A Webster?
No, no.
A dictionary, but not a president.
Is there a Web?
What the fuck?
No, no, I don't know.
I don't know who you're thinking.
I'm trying to think.
We got a Woodrow Wilson.
That's W's.
That might be the closest.
I'm maybe thinking of that.
And then median home cost here, $232,100 here.
The post office
named Elkland has been in operation since 1870.
Very simple reason why they called it Elkland.
When they showed up, there was Elk here.
So they were like, well, it's Elkland.
Look at that.
Well,
that's it.
I don't know if there's any more elk around here, but it's there.
In 2018, Elkland resident Helen Viola Jackson, get ready to do some math here to figure this one out,
was inducted into the Missouri Walk of Fame because she was notable as the last living widow of a Civil War veteran.
We gave a shit about that.
But 2018.
How the shit was she still alive?
How the hell is that possible?
Did she marry a hundred-year-old man in like 1965 when she she was
yeah i don't understand when she was like 18 i don't understand civil war yeah i don't know how the math works which civil war american the american civil war not
it's crazy i don't understand what the i don't know how that happened i had to have that in there just for the crazy math there and uh it is uh nearby marshfield which we'll talk about in the reviews because that's where the court takes place and it's like seven miles away and kind of where town is basically uh is the home to the only intersection of the Trans-America Bicycle Trail and U.S.
Route 66.
Trans-American.
Oh, yeah, there is a.
Don't get hit by a car on your bike there.
Reviews of this town, and like we said, this is going to be Marshfield, which is right next door.
The reviews really are similar of what they would probably be for Elkland.
Here's five stars.
Marshfield is a small town.
There are three E's in Marshfield.
Everyone knows everything about everybody.
The three E's.
That's clever.
I like that.
I'm going M-A-R-R.
What the hell?
I know.
I was like, how does that work?
We have at least 1,200 in our high school, yet we still are a close community and come together to help people out.
Whether it's churches coming together to make food for those in need, or if it's someone giving a homeless person money to spend.
It's a small town to have homeless people.
Why are there homeless people here?
What's going on?
Can't be that many of them.
You think you could put them up somewhere.
The two guys
you went to high school with, probably, like, help them out.
About 2,000?
Yeah, it's got to be.
Yeah.
Four stars.
People stay.
Okay.
People stay.
Marshfield is known for the town you hate but never leave.
Okay.
Four stars, though.
That's good.
People are friendly, but unless you're involved in a church, there is little community.
Yeah, because it's rural.
I mean, you're out on your own, kind of.
There's not a lot of gathering places here.
Two stars, finally.
Generally an okay town.
Not too grand.
People are incredibly rude and terrible drivers.
Most kids I graduated with said they want to get out of this town, and I've never agreed more.
So it's a small town people move from unless they want to farm or something of that nature.
Or to be part of a religious community.
Or be part of the church.
I don't know.
Things to do here.
We have the Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival, which is in Marshfield.
By the way, it became in 2021, they became sister festivals, which I didn't know they did that.
I know they're sister cities.
Sister festivals with the Peanut Festival in Plains, Georgia, where Jimmy Carter's from there.
Members of the committee and auxiliary traveled to Plains for a ceremony.
They had a whole ceremony there.
Okay.
The Cherry Blossom Festival is open to the public, and most events that do not include food or a performance are free.
You know, just standing there and doing nothing.
That's free.
The Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival is an annual three-day event in the spring that celebrates the city of Marshfield and the state of Missouri.
Descendants of presidents of presidents are invited to come share their stories.
Like we said, they said, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Cleveland, Ford, Webster, these are just a few of the presidents that have been represented at the cherry blossom festivities.
Celebrities with ties to Missouri are also invited.
They're not going to show up.
Some fucking clout and
validate us.
Please come through.
Even relatives of celebrities.
Is like your brother have like a show on HGTV.
Great.
Come on in.
Paul Rudd got a cousin.
Who gives a shit?
We don't know.
He's from this area.
Then also there's the Starvey Creek Starvey.
Gross.
Which is like, I'm short for starving, like feeling a little starvey right now.
Starvey Creek Bluegrass Festival.
So we got that.
And there's four bands I have listed here.
The Little Roy and Lizzie Show.
That's a band.
The Seldom Seen,
like you're painting a scene.
Okay.
The seldom scene and Dave Adkins.
We bring Dave in for special events like this.
The Lonesome River Band
and then the Larry Stevenson Band will also be performing.
You can't have a festival without the Larry Stevenson band.
Let's be realistic here.
Yeah, there's not a lot going on in this town here, I would say.
But I don't know.
People seem to like it, I guess.
That said, let's talk about some crazy goddamn murder that happens here.
Wow, is this insane?
All right, let's go.
1987 is where we're going to do this.
Everything kind of takes place in 87.
Let's just do 87 here.
Let's start with a man, James Jim Schnick.
S-C-H-N-I-C-K.
Schnick.
Now, Jimmy Schnick here, he's in his 30s.
He's got a dairy farm.
He's running a dairy farm.
The Schnick Dairy Farm.
That's right.
Apparently, the Schnick family has been a part of the community for 250 years or so.
They've been been around this family.
Yeah, they've been a lot of farming going on in this area.
Jim worked for the volunteer fire department as well.
And the postmaster, Jim Jacobs, recalled that he once had been a member of the Lions Club as well.
Oh, look at that.
So Jim Schnick is getting, he's trying to find all the social things he can.
A newspaper article said, Elklin is the sort of town where everybody knows everybody else, which is just what the reviewer said, too.
It has two gas stations, a Lions Club chapter, and a Masonic Lodge.
You join one or both, or the volunteer fire department.
That's what you do for socializing because there's nothing else going on here.
No.
He's got a wife, Jim does.
Sure does.
Named Julie Elizabeth, and her non-married name is Buckner, maiden name of Buckner, B-U-C-K-N-E-R.
And she will later be Schnick here.
So Julie Schnick.
Julie Schnicks comes from from this area as well.
Her family has a farm a couple miles away.
Her brother runs a farm.
And then her parents also have a farm that she grew up on.
So this is families of farmers.
All dairy farming people.
Her parents are Alfred and Elizabeth.
Now Julie and Jim have two kids.
They have eight-year-old Jamie at this point and six-year-old Mindy.
So these are their kids.
Now
they live on their own little dairy farm.
Jim, Julie, Julie, two kids, Jim, Julie, Jamie, Mindy.
And then there are is the Buckners.
These are Julie's relatives, Julie's brother and his family.
Cousins and such.
No, no, just her brother.
I mean, they live around, but her brother, Steve,
lives a couple miles, about six miles away on his dairy farm.
Yeah.
So, and with his family.
So they're all, they're kind of, you know, right next.
Six miles is nothing when we're talking farmland.
So.
Brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, whatever.
Yep, that's that.
He's also a dairy farmer, another dairy farmer.
So this brother is Stephen James Buckner, goes by Steve.
He's 35 years old.
He's got a wife named Jeanette Ann Buckner.
It used to be Bernhard.
Changed it to Buckner.
She's 36.
They got married in 1970.
They have four kids with them living in this house, too.
Wow.
Yeah.
They have Stephen Kirk Buckner.
He's 14, goes by Kirk.
So it goes by the middle name, so it's not confused with his dad's name, I would assume.
So he's 14.
Then they have Dennis, who's eight.
Then they have Timothy, who's Timmy, he goes by.
Timmy, six.
And then they have a two-year-old, Michael Brian Buckner, as well.
God damn.
This family.
All boys.
All boys, which, if you run a dairy farm,
that ain't bad, actually.
It's called employees.
It's called a workforce, is what you're raising here.
That's called all shifts covered.
They're slowly turning Amish is what they are.
Like, let's just make as many kids as we can to deal with this farmland.
So, yeah, all these kids live here.
And so there's six people living in this little farmhouse.
And
they kind of extended themselves.
Steve extended himself a little bit buying more farmland.
So he buys more land.
And
due to this, he's having a hard time paying the bills.
It's not easy.
After they pay for
food and feed and all that kind of shit, there's very little money left over.
There's
not a lot of just discretionary spending.
The kids don't go out to the movies.
They don't go get new school clothes every year.
There's not a lot of money going around here.
Even though Steve has this over 100 acres, by the way,
this dairy farm, even though he has this, the money's so tight, he has other jobs he has to do.
One here, I guess he had just purchased about 110 acres over the last few years, and that's where this is coming from.
So he basically leaves his wife and sons in charge of the dairy while he struggles to make a living
selling feed and cattle semen.
He's a semen dealer.
Yeah.
Semen salesman.
That's me.
I sell semen right there.
But the residents of the town say basically this meant that everything fell on 14-year-old Kirk's shoulders.
We'll talk about his wife and Kirk's mom, but at the same time, the other kids are kind of too young to really.
Eight is the oldest kid.
Eight is a terrible employee.
They're awful.
They're just not good at shit.
You know, never mind child labor for morality reasons.
Also, they're just bad at it.
They're just not good at farming.
Well, didn't they have one older than eight?
They have 14.
Kirk is the 14-year-old.
So everything falls on Kirk's shoulders because
no, the other ones are too young, and we'll talk about mom in a minute here.
But they say, so not only that, Steve is also,
he operates a business that artificially inseminates cows.
So, okay, he'll sell you semen.
Yeah.
And you can artificially inseminate the cows, and he also replenishes storage tanks on nearby farms with liquid nitrogen that's used to keep bull semen cold.
This guy knows his fucking jizz, man.
His farm jizz.
He could write an encyclopedia of farm jizz, this guy.
And the temperature with which to
keep it fresh.
Yeah, he knows everything.
He is the fucking jizz sage over here.
That's him.
So the Kirk, like we say, the 14-year-old, things fall on him.
He's a freshman at Marshfield High School.
He's entered calves in the local fair, stuff like that.
He's a farm boy.
He's a a little farm kid.
He almost drowned two years earlier in 1985 in a local pond.
His friend Bill Shoemaker ended up getting a medal from the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission for saving him and pulling him out of the water.
Apparently, yeah, this was two summers ago, where Shoemaker, Kirk Buckner, and a guy named Darrell Carr, they were fishing on a pond on the farm of Dean Dugan in Elkland.
And Buckner went for a swim and almost fucking drowned, apparently.
It was July of 1985.
And
Bill, his friend, said, I knew he couldn't swim, so I just went out there and got him.
And a neighbor said, if it wasn't for little Billy, Kirk would be gone.
He'd be dead.
Almost lost him.
Can't he swim and he got in a pond?
How dummy.
Dude, there's swimming holes and everything else.
How do you not know how to swim?
I don't know.
He goes,
fucking dumbo impressing friends and shit.
Yeah, why are you going out past where you can stand up?
So, yeah, I guess that's, I guess,
you know, that's what happened there.
Bill said that he said there wasn't much else to say about it.
We were friends.
It was just something between us.
And he said, quote, I'd do it again.
That's nice.
I wouldn't let it, I changed my mind.
I'd let him drown this time.
So, Kirk carries a lot of weight on his shoulders.
The weight of a full-grown family with a farm.
It's all on him.
He often handles both the early and late milking of more than 40 cows.
So that's morning and evening milkings.
All by himself.
He does the family shopping.
What?
And for the most part, is in charge of caring for all three of his younger brothers, including the two-year-old.
What do mom and dad do?
Well, dad is out
semen.
He literally is out of town all the time.
They say, like, he's not home very often because he's out working.
He goes to like distant farms to set up their, you know,
to get their semen fridge going, up and and running.
So they said Kirk would return each afternoon from classes at the vocational agricultural program at Marshfield High School, which makes sense for a kid like that.
He's going to be a farmer.
I mean,
he's already a farmer.
He's going to get better and better at this.
He's just going to have to do it.
The newspaper article says, though, that he would come home, quote, to one of the town's few unkempt houses
where his heavy-set mother, Jan, 36, presided amid the squalor.
Two pilots.
It's basically,
wait till you hear the next line.
It's basically who's eating Gilbert Grape is going on around here, except no one has Down syndrome.
What's eating?
Not who's.
Oh, who's eating?
What's eating?
Sorry.
30-year-old irrelevant movie.
I got the title wrong.
This is a guy who mispronounces Pamela, and he's going to fucking correct me.
I know what it sounds like.
Somebody
going down on Gilbert Grape's mom.
Who's eating Gilbert Grape or
Gilbert Grape?
Or maybe that.
Who knows?
Who's eating John Grape?
Gilbert Grape, actually.
Was he Gilbert?
I think so.
I don't remember.
I don't fucking remember.
Yeah, because I can see Leonardo DiCaprio calling him Gilbert.
Yes, yeah, that's right.
Gilbert.
And I remember my grandmother being very sad and then being very happy when she saw Titanic because she said, oh, Oh, my, that boy, he's not,
he's okay.
She doesn't understand, she didn't understand acting, and she thought he was really
pretty good acting.
Yeah, she was so happy when she saw Titanic.
My, that's the boy.
Oh, my yo, I'm so happy.
He was a handsome young boy, and he couldn't, you know, he had the problems.
I remember him saying Gilbert, though, saying the B with his top teeth on the bottom lip, not Gilbert.
Gilbert.
Yeah, yeah.
When he was sad, I hated it.
So the cardicle goes on to say, two piles of garbage lay just outside the door.
Candy wrappers and old boots were strewn out in front under a five-foot maple tree where a ramshackle ladder of two by fours had been nailed to the trunk.
Here's a quote from an Elkland resident, quote, she weighed 300 pounds and never took a bath.
Then he said, quote, don't quote me by name.
I've got to live here.
That's what he said to the newspaper.
Never took a bath.
That's the main problem.
She's a pig.
You can be heavy set, but fucking bathe yourself.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah, Jesus.
Fuck.
So another neighbor said his dad was never home.
It got too much for Kirk.
You take a 14-year-old and have him go to school and take care of a bunch of kids and milk the cows, and that's day after day.
I think the boy just had nothing to look forward to.
That's how I feel.
So Kirk has got problems.
Sometimes he'd have to miss school because the farm work was too overwhelming, so he couldn't go to school that day.
Jesus Christ, if I don't get them, they're going to be all chafed.
So other times he would visit neighbors asking them for odd jobs to earn money because he needed money.
So he's doing all this and trying to find odd jobs, too.
This is way too much responsibility for a 14-year-old by far.
It's crazy.
But he never apparently, he would never bitch to adults.
That's the thing.
He would only complain to his friends once in a while, but he wouldn't ever complain to the people who could change the situation for him.
Although, I don't know what could be changed.
It's a tough life.
They're trying to make ends meet.
There's really, dad can't go, well, I'll come home and take care of everything because then they lose the farm completely.
They have nothing.
Can you give me a slimmer, abler-body mother to take care of my brothers so that I can do this shit and at least that.
One friend,
one of the guys he was fishing with, actually, that when he almost drowned, said he complained about milking, getting up so early.
And then another kid here said, Kirk's father and mother just sat around the house and he was out feeding the cows, milking them.
He was, they said, you know, this week coming up that he was cutting stuff and told us he was tired.
One kid said, a bunch of times last summer, Kirk told us, I'm just sick of doing everything around here.
And what ends up happening is the dairy business suffers, you know, because a 14-year-old isn't capable of running his own dairy farm while he's got school during the day, too.
Unfortunately, yeah.
That's tough.
And said it was just too much for a 14-year-old to handle.
The milk, because the conditions of the farm were deteriorating because he couldn't keep up with everything, the milk was given a C grade by inspectors.
Oh, no.
Meaning a major loss of income because they pay you based on the quality of it.
Yeah, you got to have grade A milk.
Yep.
So there were rumors that foreclosures were in the works on the farm and everything like that.
So
it's a lot.
Neighbors near here believe that this kid just, it's a lot on him.
One neighbor said more can be put on a person than he can take.
And she describes their house as a dirty wood frame house that the Buckners called home.
She said he didn't have the kind of life that other children have.
He didn't have the money other children had to spend.
And other neighbors just said he ran everything.
And
one neighbor said, you don't turn a farm over to a kid.
I saw him working all day long.
He did all the milking.
He was worked to death.
I just think that Kirk had to work harder than a 14-year-old boy should have to work.
You just can't do that to a kid.
So Kirk's life is shit, basically.
It's hard, man.
It is a hard.
This kid's going to look like he's 45 when he's 21.
He's one of those kids just from being.
working and being beaten down.
So September 24th, 1987, Kirk goes to the local service station that evening and to borrow a car jack from the service station.
Such a small town, the service station lets you borrow tools.
That's how small of a town it is.
Oh, Kirk, yeah, sure.
Just bring it back tomorrow.
So everybody describes Kirk as when he's not farming, he likes to hunt and fish.
Sure.
They say he was friendly, but sometimes he kind of moped around.
One person, one of the kids he was fishing with, said that he was kind of weird, but then when asked what specifically he was weird with, he said, I don't know.
Just, you know,
general.
General.
You know, he's always farming and stuff.
That's just weird.
It's pretty weird.
The last time, this is the Thursday night, is when he was putting, he put gas into the farm, into the family farms tractor at the gas station, got an automobile jack, and
another neighbor then observed him chopping greens for the cows to eat.
Okay.
He's busy.
So he made a big pile of them to eat.
Now, the next day, the next morning, I should say, September 25th, 1987, early in the morning, like a farm, early farm morning here,
there is a phone call from the eight-year-old, from Jamie.
This is Jim and Julie's kid, Jamie, not Kirk's brother.
That's the Buckner family.
So that's the Schnicks now.
Jamie Schnick calls up
his grandparents.
Alfred and Jean, that's his mom's parents there,
to come over to the house because something was wrong.
What is wrong?
Well, let's see here.
Alfred and Gene show up about 6 a.m.
And
they find James, Jim Schnick, lying in the kitchen with blood all over the place.
He's got a gunshot wound to his abdomen and lower leg,
lying on the kitchen floor.
Now,
they said
when they got there, the first cop that arrived said that Schnick was just berserk.
He kept saying, don't hurt me, don't hurt me.
He fought us, then laid on the floor and passed out, apparently from shock.
Oh, he's doing that shit.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah, when people go into shock and they don't know that it's somebody like an AMT trying to help them and they're just
can't take anything they say and like value it and say it for anything that matters because it's just lunacy.
No, their mind is completely fucked at that.
Yeah, shock will screw your whole head up now.
Yeah, blood loss.
They look around and Gene Buckner, the
Gene Buckner here, the mom, Julie's mom, went into the bedroom and found Julie
in her bed with two bullet wounds in her forehead.
Dead.
Dead.
Mom's dead.
Yeah.
Julie was only 30 years old here.
I guess she was shot twice at close range in the forehead as she slept.
Never knew.
She's still in her sleeping pose.
Never knew what happened.
Now, Now,
back out in the living room, a few feet from where Jim Schnick was freaking out and going berserk and going in a shock, Kirk's body is laying there.
He's dead.
Young Kirk.
He doesn't even live here.
Nope, 14-year-old Kirk.
He'd been shot three times.
Whoa.
Kirk in the chest, neck, and back, and he'd been stabbed twice.
What the fuck?
Kirk is very dead.
A.22-caliber revolver is found in Kirk's right hand as he lay there dead.
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So they, Alfred Buckner, this is Julie's dad, the grandparents here, they asked what happened.
And once Jim Schnick got, you know, his shit together a little bit, he said, Kirk came in the door shooting.
Really?
Kirk snapped.
Yeah, he said, Kirk snapped, came in the door shooting.
So the police arrived here, Webster County Sheriffs, they arrive.
And luckily, the two Schnick children, Jamie and Mindy, this eight and six-year-old,
they slept, they're sleeping still.
Unharmed.
Completely unharmed, sleeping in their beds.
Well, not sleep.
They were sleeping.
One
called everybody, but they were fine.
They slept through this all.
The first shots were heard in the area at 4.55 a.m.
Okay, so a couple hours ago.
And an hour ago.
They weren't at this house either.
We'll talk about that.
Oh.
Yeah.
Around 7.15 a.m.
The cops are obviously going, looking through this scene.
There's two dead people, two kids, and a wounded man.
They said, well, Kirk came from his house.
We have to go tell his house what the fuck's going on.
Yeah.
Those cows, their udders are going to burst otherwise.
Oh, boy.
They've got to be in gorge by now.
So they send one of the cops to the Buckner home to
do a notification and kind of see what the hell's going on over there.
So inside the home, here is the description here from a newspaper.
The inside of the home is cluttered.
Dirty clothes cover the floor and uneaten food spoils on the kitchen table.
Apparently Kirk didn't have time for his housework that day either.
Also, like he didn't have time to vacuum and shit because he's doing everything else.
The body of Michael,
the baby,
found in a play pen in the living room where he was sleeping among a pile of stuffed animals.
It's fucking horrible.
Timmy and Dennis Buckner are still in their beds.
Each had been shot twice in the head.
What the shit?
All the kids are dead in the house.
They're all dead.
They're all dead.
I mean, the whole family, they're all dead.
Yeah.
Everybody's dead.
That was, we'll find out here.
So, yeah,
that's the three young children there, and then Kirk's dead in the house over here.
So all four of their kids are dead.
Right.
Dennis and Timmy were asleep together on the top top of a bunk bed when they were shot.
God damn it, that's fucking horrible, man.
They said a pillow sodden with blood sat propped up on the headboard, which was decorated with a garbage pail kid detail.
Very 1980 decal.
A crayon rendering of a giraffe signed Timmy hung on the wall.
Ah, Jesus.
Both were shot in the head two times each, the sheriff said.
Then they think Kirk walked down to the barn where his mother was milking.
Really?
Apparently, she was out there, and she is dead, also shot out by the barn.
They find her out there.
Yeah.
Which is obviously crazy.
She'd been shot once in the head.
So now everybody is dead.
One guy's wounded.
We haven't found Stephen Buckner yet.
Where's Dad?
Where's Dad?
Well, they ended up finding him on a road.
Selling semen.
He was just roadside semen.
He had a styrofoam cooler, and he was just like, who needs it?
They find him on a gravel road near a cemetery, right by a cemetery that runs between the Schnick and Buckner farms.
There's a gravel road that connects them.
He's dead there.
He is dead.
He was shot as he sat in the cab of his pickup truck, they said.
Oh, God damn.
He'd been shot twice in the head, and his body was dumped near the local cemetery.
They said because there's blood all in the pickup truck.
So he was shot while he was in the cab, but
his body is dumped
kind of on the outside gates of a cemetery.
Well, that's wild.
When you get a chance, put that in the ground, too, if you can.
16-year-old did this, huh?
That's what they assume.
So in the pickup cab was the uniform and the red helmet that Stephen Buckner wore as a member of the Volunteer Fire Department.
He also had a shotgun, a box of shells, and a hunting knife in there.
What?
Yeah, he had to be shocked.
Where he was found is exactly pretty much halfway between the two homes.
So this is a fucking, this is insane.
This is nuts, man.
This is two families.
There is seven.
There's seven dead people right now, including the
murderer here.
So, it's a lot going on.
But that's not the end of this by any stretch.
Can't be.
So, the news media hears about this.
Slaughter at two farms.
They go bonkers.
I mean, fucking bonkers, man.
It's a lot.
So, this is how they think it went down based on everything and based on what Jim Schnick told them and based on what the scenes tell them here.
They seem to think the boy just snapped.
Kirk, he snapped.
He couldn't take it anymore.
He said, fuck it, I'm done.
Killed his mother, they think first outside,
then went in and killed his two brothers, then his little brother, and then Steve, they think somehow was either coming home from something or about to leave to go somewhere.
And he went out and shot him in the truck, drove the truck to the cemetery, dumped him off there.
That's what they think, which is about three miles away.
Then
he had driven to the Schnick farm with his dad's truck, covered in blood,
killed his aunt.
And before he got to the kids or anything else, they think that Jim, because Jim said that he was unaware that anything was going on in the house, he came in from his morning milking and took off his boots
and sees what was going on.
It was just before 6 a.m.
It was dark in the house.
And apparently Kirk came up and fired at him.
And that's when he said that hit him in the leg.
And
so he got a hold.
He stumbled into the kitchen because it's small, grabbed a knife and just lunged at Kirk
from a close range and stabbed him in the chest, which actually pierced his heart.
Wow.
Then after two stab wounds and weakened him, obviously, Jim says he grabbed for the gun and shot him.
He said, I don't know, at least twice I shot him.
Okay.
And leaving powder burns
on his stomach as well.
Yeah.
A bullet in Buckner, this Kirk's neck.
So there's a bullet in his neck and another that entered his side, pierced his lung and heart.
Okay, so
two that are good.
His heart's been pierced twice here.
So he was very dead.
Now they said about Kirk's gun that that he had in his hand, they said he had to reload at least once.
They described the weapon as a little cheapy 22 Saturday night special that had been registered in Jan Buckner's name in 1981.
It's his mom's gun he took.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Now they said, we think Kirk Buckner killed his three brothers first.
They said, maybe possibly starting with Michael, who was found in the playpen in the living room.
And the cop said, I don't understand.
Oh, this is one of Kirk's friends actually said this.
I don't understand about the two-year-old.
Kirk was so close to him.
He played with him all the time.
He's like, why would he kill his little brother?
He can't even be a witness.
Like, you could kill people in front of a two-year-old.
It doesn't matter.
So they said it wasn't until
Jim Schnick had been admitted to the hospital in Springfield that
he learned that his wife had been killed.
He said he just came in and struggled.
He had no idea about his wife, kids, anything.
He never got past being shot in the living room, basically.
So he's listed in fair condition in the hospital.
So everybody's going, why?
Why?
Why do this?
Why kill everybody?
Run away if you have to.
Don't kill everybody.
So they don't know.
They say that it's a financially strapped family.
He carries too big of a load, and maybe he just snapped.
They don't know.
The Webster County Sheriff Eugene Fraker, who's the first guy on the scene and the guy who's going to stick with this case throughout it, says he was not the macho type, not the Rambo type.
He was a very meek child.
Some people keep it bottled up inside, I guess.
There may be something more behind it.
Hopefully, we'll find out in the next few days.
Now, grandpa, who was Alfred, who found all this mess, he was the one who found his dead daughter, which is horrible.
Yikes.
He's now lost a daughter, a son, a daughter-in-law, four grandsons, because he's, you know, all these people are dead.
All these people are his.
family, you know.
He said Kirk was your average 14-year-old.
Didn't know he had any problems.
He didn't voice any complaints.
He said, Kirk was raised on a farm.
He also bailed hay and raked all summer for some of the neighbors and me.
So he said he was used to hard work.
That wasn't, it wasn't like he was, you know, coddled and then all of a sudden they said, no, now you're working 14 hours a day on a farm.
Like, so he could handle it.
He said, as for the boy's relations with his father and uncle, he said the Sunday before we were all out on a private picnic together, all played ball.
Kirk, his brothers, his cousins.
None of this makes sense.
He didn't seem mad at anybody he said he joked and kidded with his father he thought the world of his little brothers that's what makes it so hard to understand i wish i had some idea it would help my mind these people just don't know how to deal with this he said he can't condemn his grand his grandson you can't condemn him he said i thought a lot of the boy i have no ill feeling and um yeah one of the neighbors said when something like this happens we pull together
He said, it may sound strange to you, but in Elklin, they just throw down some coffee cans on a cafe counter and people put money in to help with funeral costs.
We're taking care of things the best we can.
We're trying to be a family here.
So Kirk, remembered, as a mild-mannered kid who liked to hunt and fish like everybody else around here.
A cattle breeder who lives in the area named Archie said, Kirk asked me last week to take him dove hunting.
I was too busy.
Makes you feel like a heel.
Makes you feel pretty bad.
Pretty bad.
Another neighbor said, it's unbelievable.
It doesn't seem real that that that many lives could be gone.
He always acted as if he wanted to do something for somebody or himself.
He was just a boy trying to get through life.
I don't know what snapped in him.
We never will.
Or maybe we never will, they say.
A lot of these people here,
one kid, the Daryl Carr who was with him, and that's the kid who, by the way, said he was a little weird.
And then they said, how?
And he said, I don't know.
He said the next day at school, he was mad at the kids because all the kids are talking about this.
And he said, I I told the kids at school to shut up.
I told them he wasn't the one who did it.
I just walked out of school.
When I came home, I saw what was happening around here, and I just started crying.
So he can't take it that his friend that he likes, you know, did this.
Another friend also left school.
He had planned to go hunting with Kirk today.
They had plans.
He says, quote, he had a new gun and he wanted to show it off.
Kirk did?
Kirk did.
I think he did.
Showed it off.
Yep.
He said, it surprised me a lot.
There had to be more to it than anybody thinks right now.
The principal of the high school said, of course, the kids were shocked.
It's been traumatic for some.
Most of the older students didn't know him, but most of the freshman class did.
One of his best friend said that they drifted apart.
It's the one who saved him from drowning
in the recent months, but he said, not for any real reason.
We just kind of got with other guys.
That sounds different than he wanted it to come out, I think.
And he was like, hey, don't print that if you could.
Let me say that again.
They're like, no, no, that'll work.
It was live.
It's already up.
He said, but we still saw each other and said hi and stuff.
He said, Kirk stopped by from time to time to see him, and the talk would turn to hunting, which was Kirk's big passion.
He said, he'd always ask me to go out coyote hunting.
He said we'd go out late at night and listen for the coyotes and track them down, but they never actually went.
Now,
on the last day before this, the 24th, the day before the murders, Kirk, for some reason, went to hang out with his friend again that he hasn't hung out with in a while, Bill.
He said he was acting real weird.
He hung around me all day.
We even went to lunch together, and we hadn't done that in a long time.
But he said they didn't talk much the whole time.
They hung out all day, but didn't talk much.
And he said he was puzzled by Kirk's sudden interest in being his friend again.
He didn't understand it.
And then he came back to school the next day and learned that Kirk slaughtered his family that morning.
So he didn't understand it at all.
He said, I'm going to miss him.
He was a a good friend.
I have a lot of good memories with him.
He said, and then the article says, then Bill, quote, left to ride his motorcycle.
He said he wanted time to think.
He's 14.
Just me in the wind.
Just me in the wind on my motorcycle when I'm 14.
What the hell is happening here?
Down a gravel road.
Now, the junior high principal, the school he went to, the junior high before high school, said the killings were out of character for Kirk.
He said, I knew him pretty well.
He didn't get in trouble.
He was one of the kids I enjoyed talking to because I felt that I was getting through to him.
He described him as a country boy and not a top student, but one that would, quote, give you an honest effort in class.
Not the brightest bulb, but he'll try hard.
He'll try hard.
If B is what he gets, that's the best he can do, and that's fine.
The boy's doing his damn best.
He's doing his level best.
That's what I say.
So another
Bill Roberts, a teacher who taught an agricultural class that Kirk was in, said he also knew the boy from the county fair where he had shown cattle.
He said, he was your average kid.
You wouldn't pick him out of a crowd as someone different from other students.
And he said, I didn't see any behavioral changes in him over the last few weeks.
He said, I didn't see anything building up in him at all.
So they're trying to figure this out.
Like, is there an escalation?
Has he been saying, I'm going to shoot my fat mother in the forehead when I get home and, you know, fuck my other family too?
The school superintendent said, there's just no answers.
That's what's so surprising to the principal, his his teachers, and the students.
There was nothing to show a reason for this.
He was no problem at school.
Okay, now, Jim's at the hospital.
Yeah.
Turns out his wounds are not that severe.
No?
Nope.
Turns out he's got pretty much a graze to his abdomen, and he's got a gunshot in the leg.
Now, one of the deputies that comes in, and again, small town, this is a problem.
One of the investigating deputies, this is one of the first two officers to arrive at the scene and the guy guy who went to the Buckner house and found all of them, Deputy Roe.
He shows up at the hospital to question Jim, accompanied by his wife.
He brings his wife.
His wife?
No, no.
Jim's wife is dead.
This guy brings his wife to a
to this.
No.
And Roe told him, I'm your friend, but I'm here as the deputy sheriff, so I got to talk to you here.
And they said he seemed alert and conversant.
He proceeded
with the interview in which he said that he had been assaulted by an intruder, which he found out was Kirk.
He also said that he has been having, not Kirk, Jim has been having an extramarital affair
going on.
So, you know, he thought maybe it was somebody who was mad about that, but it wasn't.
And he's had a long-standing feud with Steve Buckner, and we'll find out why that is in a minute.
But he gave his accounts
the same thing.
He said, he came in and he shot at me, and that was that.
So
when paramedics arrived at the Schnick home and they found the pistol in Kirk's right hand on the floor, the thing that perplexed them was Kirk was left-handed.
Most people shoot with their
dominant hand.
So they're like, that's odd, but you know, who knows?
They said it's quite possible.
It's pretty hard to pick up a gun in either hand when you're dead, is what the guy said.
So the cops.
He's like, who knows?
So they're questioning all of Kirk's, everybody's relatives here.
And like I said, there's nothing weird.
The only other question they have, guns in the wrong hand, and how the fuck does a, Kirk weighs 91 pounds.
How does a 91-pound boy load his over 250-pound father into a pickup truck and dump him in a cemetery?
How the
fuck do you do that?
That's, I mean, maybe some farm equipment.
Who knows?
So the editor and publisher of the Marshfield Mail newspaper said it was quite, it's quite quite easy to believe the story that Kirk Buckner has done it.
It looked like the boy did it.
It looked pretty conclusive.
They do an autopsy on Kirk.
They find out that he'd been shot through the heart, stabbed through the heart.
They said either wound would have been almost instantaneously fatal.
So the gunshots were not necessary.
Didn't have to do it.
No.
Now, two days after the murders.
Two days after,
things start to get a little bit weird.
Number one, Jim, they found out that his his wounds were not severe enough to even,
his wounds were only severe enough to warrant an overnight stay in the hospital and release him the next morning.
But he told doctors he didn't want to be released.
He wanted to stay.
Keep me.
Yeah.
Keep me.
Once he was released from the hospital,
he went to
his wife's parents' house
who were taking care of the kids at that point.
So he moves into their house.
On October 1st, 1987, Jim talks to the cops again because they're like, now that you're, you know, out of a hospital bed here, let's do this.
So he does, and he gives a pretty similar account, but a little more elaborate of what happened from the first account.
Now, during this time, he's on medication using a walker because he got shot in the leg.
He complained of pain, but he told officers he'd be no problem going to talk to them.
So he was permitted to prop his leg up and stop for water, go to the restroom and all that kind of shit here.
It lasted about two hours, the interview.
They wanted to ask him to, they wanted him to do a polygraph examination.
Would you just do that?
And he said, yeah, but can we do it a different day?
Because I'm in a lot of pain.
I've been sitting here for two hours.
Can we come in and, you know, my leg hurts, basically.
So they said, yeah, yeah, we'll do it in a few days then.
No worries.
It's at this point that the Freaker, he is the cop who showed up first.
He starts being a little suspicious.
Well, Mosy now, huh?
Yeah, he said, at the time, when I found him in the shot in his own kitchen floor, he said that,
he said he, it's a little thing that didn't seem like a big deal at the time, but now looking back, he said he was overacting.
Oh, he said he was thrashing about wildly as if delirious from grief and his wounds.
Two men had to pin his arms to the floor while a paramedic worked on him, and when they let go, he continued to writhe, but never tried to get up.
Yeah, that's weird.
That's weird.
He said he was thrashing about, but it was like a little bantam rooster wanting to be held back from a fight.
I've never seen that before.
I don't know what that means.
I've never been in a cockfight.
I haven't been live at a cockfight, so I'm not sure what that means, but I'm sure it's not good.
He said another thing that he said Jim's voice was very weak.
He said that didn't seem unusual at the time, but then when the medical report came in that he wasn't shot that much, he wasn't that injured.
Shot that much.
Shot that much.
He said the
abdomen was a flesh wound.
He said a bullet in your leg doesn't make you lose your voice.
Oh, is that what?
What is he doing?
He's like, That's weird.
He said, I got shot.
He's like, I'm shot.
Yeah, I'm weak.
I'm weak.
So at that point, he called the Missouri Highway Patrol Criminal Division and asked for help.
And the guy, the sergeant there who got the call said, I was wondering when you were going to call.
So they said, piece by piece, the evidence came in and it became more apparent that what we first assumed was wrong.
A lab the lab report discovered a crucial piece of evidence in the pocket of James Schnick's clothes, and that is a.22-caliber.
They found
evidence that he had dealt with the pistol.
They don't say what it is.
We don't know if it's a round or something, but that he at some point had the.22 pistol.
He had had access to it.
The gun was in Kirk's wrong hand, and of course,
basically, the father was 30 feet off the road.
Oh.
So someone would have had to drag his 200 and
75-pound carcass 30 feet off the road.
Now, October 5th, 1987, the funerals all take place.
Jim's too fucked up to go to the funerals, obviously.
He's too injured here.
This is polygraph time.
Uh-oh.
So
he is told of certain physical evidence that was inconsistent with his initial account and that they don't believe him.
So then he gives two completely different accounts that are different from each other and different from his first accounts.
In one version, he claimed to have been abducted by Kirk and Steve.
Okay, now it's getting crazy.
In the next account, he claimed that Kirk kidnapped him.
He was kidnapped by a 90-pound child.
So he takes the, they're sitting him down for the polygraph.
He's in a wheelchair complaining of pain, but he agrees to take the polygraph here.
They explained the polygraph test, telling him that it could be terminated at any time and and he's free to leave whenever he wants.
He read aloud a form consenting to the polygraph, waving his Miranda rights, signed the form.
Then as they're starting to attach the shit to him for the polygraph, he says, Don, I think we better stop.
I don't think I want to take the test.
I'm just so scared.
I don't want to do it.
So this cop talks to the other cop who'd been monitoring this interview, and they agreed that they don't believe his stories at all.
No.
So he comes back and they say, look, you got inconsistencies in your earlier stories.
We don't think you're being truthful.
If you want us to believe anything you fucking said, you better hook up to the machine.
So he said, let me tell you a different version of what happened.
Version number four or five now.
I'm not sure.
And they said, well, that sounds pretty goddamn incredible.
And he said, okay, here's what really happened.
And then told a completely different version of it.
Oh, my God.
At that point, they're starting to look at each other and go, do we just put the cuffs on him now?
Why is that?
Or what the fuck did he do?
Apparently, at that point,
they said, we think you did all of this and
start going through it with him.
And he would confirm the statements as they would do it.
Yep.
Yep.
Then he started to recount to them how he killed all seven of them.
Oh, my God.
Yep.
He killed everybody.
Why?
They said, he told us he did it.
He set it up to make people think his nephew did it.
That's fucked up, man.
But why?
They said, once we had the statement from him, there was no sense in putting him on the machine, on the lie detector.
So he repeated it again, then gave a final statement on videotape after being mirandized again.
And throughout the time, access to water, bathroom, allowed to take his medication.
This is how they think it really happened.
They think that
Kirk went to the Schnick house at about 4 a.m.
armed with the 22 just because he had it on him, because he had it on him around the farm.
There was a struggle.
Or they think that Stephen came over there armed with the 22 because they have had a beef.
Okay, we'll talk about that.
Or he came over to help with something or who the fuck knows why.
They don't know why.
But there was a struggle.
He killed Buckner, Stephen, and dumped him at the cemetery, then continued on to the Buckner house and killed the whole family.
Kirk was the only one dressed, probably doing chores, and police say now that he might have died trying to save his family.
They said he probably tried to protect his family.
He took care of those children.
He loved his brothers.
They presume that Julie Schnick is the last one to die.
And he didn't kill his own kids either.
He left his two kids alive.
Jamie and Mindy were alive in there.
So he said he killed Steve Buckner at his house, then went to the Buckner house where he killed Jan Buckner, then all four of the sons, then returned home with Kirk's corpse in the car.
Yeah.
And killed his wife.
And he said, they said, well,
what was your big beef with Steve?
What happened?
They said, well, when Steve and Julie were kids, Steve raped her.
So he killed him because of the grave.
And his four children.
Him and anything that sprung forth from his loins, apparently.
And that created marital problems for both families.
And he was mad that Steve neglected his four sons.
So he said, I'll just kill them all instead.
So then why kill your own wife?
That's the thing, man.
why did well that's where the money comes in that's she has a fifty thousand dollar insurance policy she's the only one that has one too now the webster county sheriff eugene fraker said publicly quote the buckner boy is innocent of everything he had no part in this he had nothing to do with it So the motive is the thing that they can't figure out.
All they can figure out is there's a fucking bad blood and there's a $50,000 insurance policy on Julie's life.
The cop said, love's a funny thing.
I don't know if we'll ever know exactly what happened.
They said he didn't really explain it why it happened.
He only explained that it happened.
They even said, I don't know if it was a long-range plan or what.
There is the wills and insurance to consider.
There are several motives, but I don't want to comment on them in detail.
Yeah, because what if he did this like
the Beltway killer who just killed all these people just to kill his ex-wife?
That's what I mean.
In this particular instance, his actual wife.
His actual wife.
So I'll kill all all these kids too.
We don't know.
They said the most tragic thing would be if we didn't clear Kirk Buckner's name.
Yeah.
So in court, Jimmy, he shows up, holy fuck, wearing overalls in court.
No.
Oh, dude.
I'll post it on social media.
You absolutely want to see this.
It is our second time of someone knowingly that we know wore overalls in court, but he shows up in court in fucking overalls and a white t-shirt.
It's not a good look for court.
That's a man that is counting on you to set him free so he can get back to work.
Yep, that's it.
I got stuff to do this afternoon, so I figure if I could leave.
He's up for the death penalty, by the way.
And the prosecutor said, if there ever were a death penalty case, I would think this would be the one.
This is it, man.
Yeah, he killed fucking four kids, for Christ's sake.
Monster, killed a two-year-old.
They said in a little town like this, everyone's a relative.
Everybody was kind of relieved to find out the boy didn't do it.
Nobody really wanted to find out about Mr.
Schnick because he had a lot of friends, too.
Nobody wanted their friend to be the one responsible for it.
They say, though, they think it's most important that the boy who was killed not be branded a killer.
Please don't do that.
They keep saying in the paper.
Please, please, we're sorry.
There's an article from the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch here that says the freshman and junior varsity football teams of Marshfield High School were playing a road game at Bolivar, Missouri Monday night when word spread that police had mistakenly blamed Kirk for killing his family.
The students relayed their feelings.
The principal said, most of them said, basically, we told you we didn't do it.
Yeah.
A lot of the people, the kids, they were like, what the fuck?
The principal said, my own gut feeling about it is the students never really did believe Kirk did it.
One neighbor said that she never believed Kirk murdered six people and got killed.
She said that never, ever.
She said, I thought I'd feel a lot better about this knowing that he didn't do it, but I really don't.
She said, it's bad enough the whole thing happened, but Kirk won't be blamed for it.
That's good.
It's just awful to think what Kirk went through before he died.
Yeah, no shit.
Now, this is their next-door neighbor to the Buckner family.
She says she didn't believe it and never would believe that he did it.
She said, I knew his whole family.
I knew how they were when they were together.
There was no way he was capable of this at all.
So they said they felt some relief when a Missouri Highway Patrol officer came to question her a few days after the killings, and the investigation implicated Jim Schnick instead.
And she said, I was so relieved that somebody was checking into this and not just forgetting it and just saying, well, the killer's dead.
Fuck it.
That's what happens.
Now, his best friend, Kirk's best friend, B.J.
Lawson, said he hopes that Kirk's name is finally cleared.
Now, he said, they just knew he couldn't do nothing like that.
He said, because he never lost his temper.
The maddest he ever got, he'd say a couple cuss words and that's it.
He said, everybody knows he didn't do it, but people who didn't know him, they probably thought he was some kind of weirdo.
He was an all-around nice guy.
He'd do anything for just about anybody nice guy so trial comes up here here we go for jim four of the murder counts are dismissed by the state before the trial with no explanation
so the charges are julie kirk
and the two-year-old those are who he's charged with killing that's it which makes two of the others or
they're all in the same do you think someone different killed the other kids in the bed and then somebody else killed the kids in the living?
It's a crazy thing.
I don't know why that is, but that's how it goes.
Now, the testimony here, you get the wife of the deputy who went to visit him in the hospital and questioned him.
She testifies.
She's way too involved in all this shit.
I don't want to know.
This is crazy.
They said, do you consider yourself to be a friend of James Schnick?
And she said, yes.
So there was that.
Also, firefighters here saying that Schnick was one of their best volunteers.
They said Schnick got most of the donated items sold at an auction last year to benefit firefighters.
Oh, well, let's just let him go then.
He bought everything?
Because he's such a good guy.
He collected the items.
He got the donated.
Oh, he went and brought them to be.
He brought them to be.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, he's a good job.
So he did his job.
Yeah.
So what are we doing here?
Let's let him go.
John Arthur Sparkman of Republic, that's a town, said that Schnick lived with his family at one time.
Sparkman's son and Schnick worked cattle and hogs together.
He said, Jim was a good worker.
I never had any questions when I loaned him my trucks and machinery.
Great.
He killed fucking four kids.
What are we talking about?
Return the shit he borrowed, James.
But Jesus Christ, you lend this guy a weed whacker.
It's coming back full of
blockbuster late fees, James.
He's a good man.
He's a good guy.
He's coming back with the oil mixed properly and everything.
It's filled up, gas and oil mixed.
He said, would that they said that he wasn't an asked this one guy and he said he wasn't an affair aware of an affair that Schnick had because he said, were you aware of it?
And they said, would that have changed your opinion of him as a father if you knew about it?
And the guy said, yes, it would have.
I don't know
what difference that makes, but
verdict comes in here, less than two hours of deliberation.
Not much.
He's found guilty of all three counts of murder.
Okay.
So now we go to sentencing.
But there's four others.
Four murders or three, seven murders.
And he's four others, yeah.
Three.
So they get a psychologist here in the sentencing stage to testify that Jim Schnick is unlikely to do this again.
Oh, yeah, because he killed everybody he's related to.
The fuck else is he going to shoot?
Nobody left.
So they said this psychologist did a battery of psychological tests on Schnick that showed he suffered from organic brain damage that hampered his verbal reasoning, comprehension, and memory.
They said, the records show that Schnick
suffered from traumatic head injuries at some points in his life here, which I don't know if that's just farm work or what.
You get kicked in the head by an animal every once in a while.
I don't know.
So Foster, who that's the guy who did this all, the doctor, who's chief of psychology at the Federal Medicine Center in Rochester, Minnesota, interviewed him for hours, interviewed all his friends and everything like that.
He says that Schnick denies and represses the killings.
He didn't do it.
He doesn't know what you're talking about now.
He doesn't get it.
Yep.
He describes, I call it lying, is what that is.
I call it lying.
It's a different name.
It's not a psychological medical term, but I think it works.
Lying.
Yeah.
He describes Schnick as a very compulsive person who likes an orderly life, has strong-held moral values.
That's why he cheats on his wife and shoots his fucking, shoots a two-year-old.
Whole family, yeah.
Very high moral standards here and helps others.
He said, in Mr.
Schnick's case, the acts of that night were so far removed from his life, his earlier life, that he repressed the acts.
He was repulsed by the axe, as was I.
Well, I would hope you would be.
They said, nobody I know reveled in it.
No, he then said it's unlikely that Jim will display this behavior again.
And, you know, he won't kill seven people again.
So, you know, that's all.
He said he he had the conditions.
He had Schnick's family background.
He said disagreements with his brother-in-law.
All of this perfect storm of shit probably wouldn't ever happen again.
So, you know, he's fine.
Probably.
You know,
I can't.
I'm not a genie here, but, you know, I can look into my crystal ball and figure it out.
What do I look like here?
So, in describing his past, the psychologist said that Schnick's father and brother weren't loving and supportive.
Oh,
so kill everybody.
That makes sense.
Schnick, who had learning problems since birth and but a higher-than-average mechanical aptitude and ability, sought approval by hard work and high moral values.
He said that Schnick left home as a teenager because of a strict father, and he also describes him as a hard worker who frequently helped others, including strangers.
One boyhood friend with whom Schnick had double-dated recalled times when Schnick helped stranded motorists.
Oh,
well, then
let's just put him back out on the street.
He helped change attire, jumped a car.
Wow.
He also said that Schnick wouldn't fight back in disagreements, but would go elsewhere and seek attention and approval through aiding others.
That's what he said.
Rather than fight, he'll go off and try to help people and make himself feel better.
Most people have outlets to express their anger, but Schnick felt cornered by pressure and didn't have any way to cope with it, the psychologist said.
He also goes on, and this is kind of true: unlike other mass killers who this guy's examined, he said, this guy has no background of abuse or crimes.
He's not a criminal.
He has no background.
So that makes him much more dangerous.
Much more.
Because it's why?
There's not even a predictor.
It's just out of nowhere he did this.
He said, I will have to say something that's unusual with Mr.
Schnick is he doesn't have the antisocial behavior of many serial killers.
The defense attorney here has said that he has the capacity to lead a productive life in prison.
She believes that in the work ethic philosophy and relationships, Schnick would make a good role model for other prisoners because they love people
who kill babies.
That's still, who doesn't look up to that guy?
You know what I mean?
Well, he might, he probably has the most bodies of anyone in there, so maybe they will look up to him in prison.
Who knows?
They'll certainly hold him on a pedestal.
Wow.
They said, I don't know if they'll be raping him atop that pedestal, but something will be going on.
They said that the doctor said, My concern would be his naivete.
Even despite the acts for which he's been accused, he's still naive in many ways.
Now, closing arguments here.
The prosecutor said that
Alfred and Gene Buckner, they no longer have their entire family.
Said these families have suffered losses that can't be compensated for, losses they'll have to live with for the rest of their lives.
They said they won't have any holiday family, nothing.
Alfred and Gene Buckner will never be familiar with the idea of having their daughter or son walk up to them and hug them.
They'll never know the satisfaction of their daughter coming up and saying, I love you, or their son saying, I love you.
The victims had both hopes and dreams.
Anyone who would kill an infant under these circumstances deserves the most serious punishment provided by law.
They said that his helpfulness, that's all good and dandy and his tire changing and everything, but they said that agony suffered by the survivors can't overcome a hundred lifetimes of good deeds.
Yeah, I don't care how many tires you change.
You're not doing doing this.
No,
you don't think so?
His lawyer argued for life in prison, saying the murders represent a terrible loss to the area, but said, but Alfred and Gene Buckner have two grandchildren left.
He didn't kill all of them.
They said,
the children have a father left, and those children love their father.
She said that vindictive punishment wouldn't be appropriate.
She said, there's no mercy in this courtroom for James Schnick.
There's no mercy in this courtroom because life in prison for James Schnick will be extremely hard.
They said maybe he'll be a role model, put him in prison.
Said that I would ask you, then the prosecutor rebutted by saying, I would ask you, what mercy did he show Kirk Buckner?
What mercy did he show Michael Buckner?
What mercy did he show for his own wife?
He's been portrayed as a man who loves kids.
He should be portrayed as a man who killed four kids, including three who are sleeping in their beds.
Eight men, four women on the jury.
They decide because the jury recommends to the judge, and then the judge has final say in Missouri back then.
So they say they recommend death.
Oh, the jury recommends death.
The judge has final say, though, here.
They said the judge will consider it, and it'll come back in a couple of days.
Now, they come back.
If he is sentenced to death, he'll be the 57th man on death row in Missouri State Penitentiary.
No one had been executed since 1965 in Missouri, though.
This is 87.
The judge says, you, sir, may fuck off.
Death penalty for you, sir.
You got him.
I don't know.
I mean, this, like I said, if there's a death penalty, killing a sleeping two-year-old is pretty bad.
It's pretty fucking bad.
We got 20 years of people in line ahead of you, so just go sit down.
So the defense attorney said, I was trying to
prepare for other things instead of the ultimate outcome.
So in 1990, by the way, there's a fucking big accident here
with their family, too.
Aline Schnick, the driver of a car, apparently ran a stop sign at the intersection of Missouri Highways 13 and 215.
And
she was killed and other members of the killed.
Sharon Schnick's children,
Katerina Schnick, 19 months old.
Jennifer Schnick, five years old.
Oh, my God.
Kimberly Ducker, nine years old, all killed in this accident.
The Schnick family is killing.
The Schnick family family is getting wiped the fuck out.
1991, he appeals.
He said he was deprived of his freedom because he was in the hospital, and thus Miranda was required.
The law says, no, you were a victim at the time you were in the hospital, and just because you couldn't move because you were in the hospital doesn't mean you were held.
You could have told the cops to get the fuck out of your room, and they would have had to go.
End of story.
So,
also, jury selection.
Okay.
They asked, the defense attorney asked a juror or a potential juror during Voidier, do you think because they are law enforcement officers, they're entitled to more believability than others?
This guy said, not necessarily, but you know them and the job they've done, and you believe them before you would a stranger, because he knew one of the cops.
The potential juror knew the Roe guy who went with his wife to the hospital.
There's 1,900 people here.
You're going to know somebody.
That's the problem.
The Missouri Supreme Court, based on that, overturns the conviction,
reverses it.
Then on May 1st, 1992, Jim pleads guilty to the three counts of murder and is agreed to that he is sentenced to, you sir, may still fuck off, three life sentences consecutive, no chance for parole.
You're going forever.
And also, part of the plea agreement is that he will never be prosecuted for the other four murders as well.
In 2000, there's a book called Murder in the Heartland that comes out that has, I guess, a bunch of different stories, and this is one of them.
The only way you can get it is $75 for a used paperback on Amazon.
Jesus.
That's bonkers.
Then in 2016, a book called No Justice, The Jim Schnick Story, an in-depth investigation reveals the innocence of a man sentenced to die for
seven
familicide murders in Webster County based on a true story.
Someone wrote a book,
257-page book, that's only in like two libraries in Arkansas because I tried to find it, saying he's innocent.
And Arkansas people are buying it.
Holy shit.
May 11th, 2024, so not even a year ago,
at the South Central Correctional Center in Licking.
That's his town.
Licking, Missouri?
Licking, Missouri.
It's better than than licking Arkansas, I guess.
I don't want to lick Arkansas.
You don't know where Arkansas has been.
James Schnick, 73, pronounced dead.
Oh, he
beat the sentence.
He beat it.
Well, he got life, so that was it.
All of the dead family members, by the way, the murdered family members are buried at the Timber Ridge Cemetery in Marshfield.
And there you go, everybody.
That's Elkland.
Holy shit.
That's a fucked-up story.
Let me tell you something.
That's too bad, is what that is.
That's horrifying.
Look,
being a cynic and thinking
beyond it all,
I think he was killing her and had to make it look like it was anybody but him.
Absolutely.
He's going to have
that new woman move right in.
And kill them all.
Fuck.
That's great.
He said, I'll kill everybody.
That'll make me look insane.
Or that'll make me look not guilty.
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