Rachel Monroe has two journalistic obsessions: crime and utopia. She’s fascinated by how people deal with extreme situations, when the stakes are high and things fall apart. The two aren’t even so different, she observes: “Utopia always contains within it the seed of disaster or failure.”
Fantasy and crime merged in her April 2015 story in Matter, Medium’s now-defunct publication. It’s a deeply disturbing piece about a middle-aged man who fantasizes about being murdered, and a high-school kid named Mike Baker who decides to oblige him. Monroe became obsessed with figuring out what had happened and why — and confronted the limits to how well we can know someone else’s mind.
I spoke with Monroe about her wild story and life in Marfa, a tiny arts hub in the desert of West Texas. Monroe moved there in 2012 from Baltimore, after finishing an MFA and starting to freelance full time. Since drifting away from fiction, she has written for Oxford American, New York Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and others, often about life in small towns.
The events in the story took place more than 15 years ago. How did you come across it?
It was barely in the news at all, which is so crazy. It was pre-Internet, before people were trolling the wires looking for crazy-sounding crimes. I was reading a book on a camping trip called “Death in Big Bend,” about people who have died in Big Bend National Park. It most mostly exposure and lightning strikes, and then there’s the story of this crazy murder told in this deadpan style. I just wanted to know more. When I came back to Marfa, I found out a friend had gone to school with Mike Baker. I thought, why not write a letter to this guy in prison.
Is that where your ideas generally come from — serendipity?
I became so obsessed with this story that I did anything I could to get a sense of who Shannon Robert— the guy who was murdered — was.
It’s a kind of cultivated serendipity: Keeping feelers out, paying attention, reading a wide range of things, keeping up with those corners of the universe that I think a story might come out of. I end up putting a lot of feelers out that don’t turn into anything. But I do feel like my favorite stories to write and those that are most successful are the ones where there is some real personal affinity — some magic or charisma — between me and the subject. You can’t know that until you’re relatively far in; it’s so hard to predict. The person has to want to tell me their story, have something they want to explain, which Mike Baker definitely did.
This story was insane, but it wasn’t recent or tied to the news. Was it hard to sell?
It was a year between when I sent my first (unsuccessful) pitch and when the piece was published. When I first sent it to a few places, people would say, “That sounds like a crazy story, but we don’t really see what it’s about other than what it’s about.” Or “there’s not really a news peg.” Or “it’s strange and interesting, but it seems cut and dried narrative-wise.” It doesn’t fit into a typical miscarriage of justice or “I was wrong” narrative. Working with Matter gave me some freedom in how to tell the story because they weren’t a long-established place with a set voice and conventions.
What was it like writing a story in which one of the main characters is dead?
I became so obsessed with this story that I did anything I could to get a sense of who Shannon Robert— the guy who was murdered — was. The only things I had about him were from police interviews and one family friend who knew him. I tried so hard to track down other people who had known him, but the police files were redacted. I went on eBay and found a copy of an out-of-print book the University of Idaho had published about his father’s sculptures. Because so much of my information was from Mike Baker and his friends, I tried to make it clear that the portrait of Shannon we were getting was through their eyes and not necessarily an accurate or full representation. I tried to do it in a voice that made Baker become something of an unreliable narrator. It was necessarily an incomplete record, and it’s definitely a strange and tender spot in the story.
Why did you move to Marfa, which is kind of in the middle of nowhere? What’s it like being a freelance journalist there?
After I finished my MFA and was no longer adjuncting, I knew I needed to leave Baltimore. I was a freelancer and didn’t have a partner, so I could live anywhere. I spent close to a year going on road trips and staying with friends and thinking: Could I live here? I thought that I was going to move to Los Angeles, and on my drive out there I stopped in Marfa and really liked it. I was not planning to move to a little town in Texas.
Usually, it’s a blessing. Somewhere like New York always seems like too much competition, too many outside voices. It’s very easy to for me to get all that in my head. It felt good to be away from that and live somewhere that’s a lot cheaper. I feel grateful that I’m exposed to different people who are interested in different topics. For example, I joined the volunteer fire department and have written a number of stories about first responders, which is something I’d never paid attention to. In terms of process, I feel like I have a lot more time in my day. I think I still procrastinate just as much but I get more done. I’ve gotten really attached to the freedom of being here.
My questions are in red, her responses in blue. To read the story without annotations first, click the ‘Hide all annotations’ button.
Have You Ever Thought About Killing Someone?
By Rachel Monroe
Published in Matter on April 22, 2015
On a warm day in March 2000, national park ranger Cary Brown woke up early and decided he might as well go ahead and start his patrol. Big Bend, where Brown was stationed, is located in Far West Texas, with the thin green ribbon of the Rio Grande serving as the border with Mexico. It’s one of America’s least-visited national parks, a remote and sunbaked place whose martian landscape of sharp canyons and sudden outcroppings implies some deep-buried geological violence.
I absolutely love this description. Do phrases and sentences like this come to you in one fell swoop, or do you chip away until you find the exact right word, the poetic phrase?
Sometimes a phrase or an image pops into my brain like a little gift. But it’s rarely a complete thought, so the work becomes figuring out how to stitch the little gifts together into something coherent.
Not long after sunrise, on the park’s main road, Brown pulled over a pickup with a suspicious tarp-covered load in its bed. There were two men inside the cab. When he peeked under the tarp, he found blocks of marijuana, about 400 pounds of it. As Brown started to arrest the driver, the passenger reached under the seat, grabbed a bottle of water, and sprinted off into the desert.
A group of rangers set out on horseback to look for the runaway drug smuggler later that morning. Deep into the search, in a remote part of the park near Dagger Flat, one of them spied an incongruous scrap of color in the desert. When they got closer, they could make out a red blanket and, nearby, a human skull and upper torso protruding from what looked to be a hastily dug grave. The search for the runaway was immediately called off. All the park’s investigative resources were diverted to the new body.
“It’s amazing that we found him at all,” Brown told me. “Nobody ever goes out there, it’s the most remote part of the park. Maybe years later somebody would’ve stumbled on some bones, but they would’ve been all strewn out. We were lucky. He had only been dead around six weeks when we found him.”
Did it take some convincing for the ranger to talk to you?
I live near Big Bend and knew some rangers who knew him, and I think that personal connection helped.
The man was still wearing the clothes he had died in — a denim shirt with the word “Magic” embroidered over the left pocket. At the bottom of the grave was a pair of green, black, and purple Nikes, size 13. Investigators collected scattered bones, cigarette butts, and a shovel from around the site. Several things about the scene seemed strange to Brown. The body was partially wrapped in chicken wire. Even more inexplicably, there were aluminum stakes driven into the ground around the grave, even though the land’s slope made it exactly the wrong kind of place to pitch a tent.
This close to the border, most violent crimes are at first considered drug-related. But the carefully staged scene — the deep grave, the blanket covering the body, those mysterious tent stakes — didn’t resemble a typical drug murder. And while visitors to the park occasionally died of natural causes in remote areas, that didn’t seem to be the case here, either.
The depth of the grave pointed to an intentional death. Perhaps it could’ve been a strange, ritualistic suicide — except for one problem. “It was obvious he didn’t bury himself,” Brown said.
Did you mean to set this up as a sort of murder mystery? It reminds me of the opening scene in a “Law & Order” episode (which is a compliment).
I love “Law & Order!” I’ll know I’ve made it when a story I’ve written gets the L&O treatment. It’s a bit of a bait-and-switch. It starts out as a murder mystery, but then the story ends up being something very different than a whodunit, I think.
***
If he had known then what he knows today, thanks to more than a decade spent among the perverts and neo-Nazis and idiots and masterminds of federal prison, Mike Baker would have been able to tell exactly what Doc was the first time he set eyes on him. That’s one thing you can say about being locked up: It’s a great way to learn about human nature. But back then — San Antonio, the summer of 1997 — Baker was fresh out of Christian school, where they taught you parables and prophets — nothing actually useful, like how to spot a creep or tell when a situation was getting out of hand. If they had, maybe things would’ve turned out differently; maybe Baker wouldn’t have taken even a single step into Doc’s cluttered apartment, with its distinctive, unwashed-laundry smell. He’d have turned around and found someone else to buy him cigarettes, or just stolen the fucking cigarettes for God’s sake.
Do you try to adapt your narrative voice to reflect the characters in your story even when you’re not quoting them?
It’s definitely not a technique that works for every story, but it seemed important to do in this case. So much of the information about what Doc was like comes from Baker and his friends, and is colored by what happened afterward, and it seemed important to imply that we’re seeing all this through their eyes, and that we should take all the info we get from them with a certain amount of skepticism. Plus, Baker has such a distinct and funny writing voice in the emails he sent to me; I think this was also my attempt at paying tribute to that.
His then-girlfriend is the one who introduces them.
Why do you switch to the present tense here?
Hmm, good question. I guess it sounds as though Baker is telling us a story.
Him and Doc. It’s funny how their names are linked together now, because of what happened later — how a crime can tether you to the exact person you want to get the farthest away from. Back then Baker was 17 and scary-smart in a way that made him feel invincible. (These days, in prison, he subscribes to the Mensa magazine and spends his afternoons working through a quantum mechanics textbook recommended to him by UCLA physics professor/Big Bang Theory science consultant David Saltzberg.)
So one day, Baker wants to buy a pack of cigarettes. His girlfriend says she knows this older guy, Doc — he’s weird, but he’ll buy you whatever you want. He’s a medical student and always has lots of pills, too. His mission in life, he likes to say, is corrupting the youth of America. Doc’s apartment is in the same low-rent complex where his girlfriend lives with her brother, and she’ll go over there to hang out sometimes, when she doesn’t feel like being at home. Doc even gave her a key.
So the two of them let themselves into Doc’s apartment. It’s a hoarder’s paradise, full of random clutter — plastic models of skulls and scuba gear and Native American dolls. One lone poster on the wall: “My Own Private Idaho.” A narrow path through the boxes of junk to the TV and a single La-Z-Boy recliner. After a little while, Baker and his girlfriend get used to the smell.
What was your process for eliciting these details?
I was lucky in that Baker describes his memories in specific, sensory details. Most of these details are from him – though a few, like the “My Own Private Idaho” poster, are from police reports or the other people who hung out with Doc back then.
When Doc finally shows up, Baker is surprised: He’s older than a medical student should be, in his early 40s, and looks like a slightly more overweight version of Mr. Bean. He’s also one of those people who strikes you right off the bat as strange. In 2015 parlance, he’s probably “on the spectrum.” Smart-weird. The kind of guy who has a piece of the Arctic tundra in his freezer, and excitedly takes it out to show you. Baker’s girlfriend gets a kick out of him.
Your writing in this piece often sounds conversational, in a good way. Did you try to tell it like you were talking to a friend in a bar? Did you read it out loud?
I definitely didn’t read it out loud – I think I would drive myself crazy! The conversational voice was there from the very beginning, maybe because Baker and I had a very chatty email correspondence going for over a year by the time I was writing this.
This all happened a long time ago, at a time when Baker was smoking a lot of weed. All the strange interactions he had with Doc over the years have blurred together. At a certain point, things began to feel inevitable, all Baker’s small choices gaining momentum until it felt as though there were no more choices to make. And while he insists that he has no regrets about what took place later — it happened the way it should have, the way it had to — maybe if he’d made a different decision that afternoon, he wouldn’t be in prison right now. Because it can all be traced back to that very first time they met, when Doc turned to him and asked, straight-faced, as if it was the most normal thing in the world: “Have you ever thought about killing someone?”
***
When he first met Doc, Mike Baker was already, at age 16, something of expert in the messy, gray areas of life. Mike’s dad was a Korean War vet and an accomplished pilot, the kind of guy who was invited to give lectures on Air Force bases. He has a small airport named after him in Nebraska.
When Mike was 6, his parents split up and he moved with his mom to San Antonio. John Baker wasn’t much for talking on the phone, but he sent his son books — mostly spy thrillers — which Mike devoured. John would sometimes make elliptical allusions to a period in his life when he was involved in, shall we say, classified operations, and Mike was smart enough to fill in the blanks himself: CIA, obviously.
And so the novels his dad sent, with their twisty tales of conspiracy and counter-conspiracy, were like missives from his father’s secret life, a world of good bad guys and bad good guys, with an unspoken code of behavior that had little to do with what was, strictly speaking, “legal.” The good guys needed the bad guys, and vice versa. They were players in the same game.
Why did you think this part of his backstory was relevant?
Baker referenced his dad so many times during our correspondence that it seemed clear to me that their relationship was a big factor in how Baker saw the world. He also described his exploits in terms of books and movies a few times. Both factors – the mythology he built up around his father and his fondness for theatrical crime/spy stories – seemed important in shaping how he saw himself, and maybe in why he made some of the choices he did.
Along with the books, Mike’s dad also sent tuition money for the private Christian schools that Mike’s mom couldn’t afford. Mike and his friend Travis were always the kids with Payless shoes in a sea full of Air Jordans. At school, they scrapped with the rich kids; on the weekends, they escaped to Travis’s family’s ranch in the country where they shot guns, set things on fire, and played games like what if you were running from the cops and had to survive on only your wits. Over the summer, Mike’s dad would visit, scold Mike for his uncut nails, and then buy him Umbros, or whatever else the branded object of desire of the moment was.
So Mike grew up with both an inclination toward mischief and a deference to protocol. It was like: Be bad, but be bad skillfully.
You use italics quite a bit in this story. Is that common for you? What do you think they’re useful for?
It functions differently in different places. Sometimes it’s to approximate a quote when someone told me more or less what they said, but not the exact words. Sometimes (as in here), it contributes to that conversational tone you were pointing out.
He grew into the kind of teenager who listened to Metallica but tucked in his shirt. When he got pulled over, he was always polite. He liked cops — the smart ones, at least. “I got arrested quite a few times,” he told me, mostly for drugs later on. “I never minded. The cops and I had a good time.”
This section and the one above don’t have a lot of quotes. How did you decide which ones to include?
That’s a good question. Partly it was for statements that Baker made that I couldn’t confirm with anyone else – I wanted to make it clear that the info was coming from him, that it was his version of what happened.
Mike and Travis got — well, not exactly kicked out, but not invited to return to a couple of schools. When Mike was 16, he went to public school for the first time. Tom C. Clark High School was one of the biggest schools in San Antonio; there were a thousand in his grade alone. Kids at Clark dyed their hair blue, they did drugs — they sold drugs. At this point Mike hadn’t even smoked weed. Luckily, though, he was a fast learner. These days, from prison, Mike remembers those years as a kind of glorious, unsupervised utopia: computers and cars and drugs and girls, the world opening up before him, dazzling in its possibilities for trouble and fun. Soon he was getting high every day and basically failing out of school. It was the best time of his life, like something big was about to begin.
Did he put it this way, or were you taking poetic license?
He said it was the best time of his life; he also talked about this period of his life so often, so rhapsodically, that I felt justified in describing it this way.
***
Pretty soon a whole crew of them is hanging out at Doc’s once or twice a week: Travis and his little brother; blue-haired Rodney and his girlfriend; Dan*; and, of course, Baker. (Baker’s girlfriend got too troublesome for her brother and was shipped off to her sister in Arizona.) An adult-free zone is a precious thing when you’re 17 — and despite being in his 40s, Doc often seems like a teenager in an adult’s body, impulsive and uncensored and not great at taking care of himself. He’s been in AA for over a decade, but he’ll do everything else: LSD, nitrous, coke, mushrooms, weed, Ambien. He buys the teens Boone’s Farm wine and whip-its, shows them disgusting pictures in his med school textbooks. When Travis mentions he might want to be a dentist, Doc puts him in a white lab coat and sneaks him into the cadaver lab, where they take an up-close look at teeth and jaws.
Sometimes they’ll all get high and put in one of those Faces of Death VHS tapes, watching car accidents and failed surgeries and assassinations, all the creative ways a human body can be ruined. During the day, at school, in that alternate universe of lockers and homework and pep rallies, they talk about him — their odd friend. “Baker and I thought Doc was really strange,” Rodney told investigators later. “We basically talked about his weirdness.”
Doc doesn’t reveal a whole lot about his past, but over time Baker and his friends get a sense of the rough outlines. He grew up in Idaho, where his parents were artists and professors, kind and nature-loving people, beloved by their neighbors. Doc took a different tack, studying physics, eventually making good money as a geophysicist for an oil company. For a while, his life seemed set: He had friends his own age, went camping, traveled to Hawaii and Peru. Then the Gulf War happened, the oil market contracted, and Doc got laid off. He decided to become a doctor — more for the money, prestige, and job security than for any longstanding love of medicine. While taking chemistry prerequisites at the University of Texas in Austin, he started going to raves with his undergrad classmates. On the phone with his sister, he called them his “little friends.”
Did you talk to her?
No, we weren’t able to find her. This is from a transcribed conversation she had with police during the original investigation in 2000.
And evidently, Baker and his high school friends are becoming Doc’s newer, littler friends. It’s a funny kind of relationship — everyone is using everyone else. The kids get the drugs and alcohol; Doc gets the audience and companionship he seems to crave. But that doesn’t mean they aren’t friends, after a fashion. Doc will drive halfway across town to give Baker a ride when he’s stranded somewhere. He tutors Travis in calculus for free. “He was cool,” Travis told me. “It was good to have a conversation with someone who was actually smart, not like uhhhhh guns are cool where’s the weed.”
There’s another reason Doc likes having a bunch of high school boys hang out at his apartment. Spending time with Doc requires a certain tolerance for hearing him talk about his fantasies — S&M ropes-and-domination stuff, mostly. A recurring fantasy involves Doc being choked from behind by a muscly alpha-male type. Once, early on, Doc puts his hand on Travis’s thigh. An obvious invitation. Travis plucks the hand off, Nope, and Doc doesn’t try again — except for this one other time when Travis tells a story about a wrestling match he’s just won, all the grappling and sweat, and Doc is like, you have to let me — and Travis again has to be like, dude, NO.
Why don’t you use quotes/dialogue here?
It’s such a distant memory that trying to reconstruct exactly what Doc said seemed like too big a leap. Instead, this is an attempt at approximating the way Travis told me the story nearly 20 years after the fact.
Sometimes Doc will also go to a very dark place. He has a thing about wanting to die, and wanting his death to become a snuff film. Some of the other kids who hear that are out the door and refuse to come back. It’s creepy. But the rest of them develop an attitude that’s basically like: Whatever, it’s just Doc. It’s not exactly normal — nothing about Doc is normal — but it becomes part of the background noise, the price of entry for spending time at Doc’s. Like that faint persistent stink. It’s amazing what you can get used to after a while.
How did you try to verify the facts about Doc’s background?
We tried to be really careful – I cross-checked everything that Baker said with the three of his friends I also interviewed (a few didn’t want to be quoted but spoke on background), and/or found corroboration in the very thorough investigation file. If there was something I couldn’t get someone else to confirm, I tried to make it clear that it came from only Mike (or only Travis, or whatever.
)
***
Here’s how I remember 1999: Britney Spears, millennium panic, everyone playing that Prince song on repeat as if it was going to expire at midnight on New Year’s Eve.
Why did you lead this section with this first-person memory?
It’s funny, I can’t entirely explain why, but from the earliest draft this is how this section started –for some reason, it felt right. Perhaps because, as you note below, I was trying to remember (and encourage the reader to remember) that these were high-school kids and, for me at least, basically my age. And also it’s a way of grounding the reader in time in a way that’s slightly more interesting than the typical “On a [weather] [day of the week] in [month, year].”
For Doc, 1999 was the year of things getting worse. He was in his early 40s, overweight, balding, and in debt. He spent a lot of his time with high school students who made fun of him. He had a spiel that he’d slip into when he got high: I’m all used up, I’m a hag, my life is worthless. The guys were sometimes like, No, man, you’ve got so much to live for but then sometimes they’re like, Whatever, shut up, Doc.
Were you trying to use your language to drive home that these were high-school kids?
Probably in an unconscious way. I think I was trying to capture the hubris of adolescence – how, when you’re 16, crazy things happen and you’re just not wise enough to look at them and say: hold on, wait, this is insane.
In Doc’s third year of medical school, he develops a bad habit of asking patients questions that the attendings deem inappropriate. He takes it hard when he fails his psychiatry rotation — it’s a blow to his confidence, and also to his finances. He has been living off his med school loans, occasionally borrowing money from his parents so his electricity doesn’t get cut off. Plus, there’s the tension of leading what amounts to a double life: No one from his family or med school knows about his after-hours life — the teens and the drugs and the dark sexual fantasies. Only a handful of friends even know that he’s gay. When he talks to his parents on the phone, it’s all Yes, school is tough, but it’s going well, even though by September 1999 he’s stopped showing up to class entirely.
As Doc feels his life spinning out of control, he gets increasingly fixated on the snuff film–suicide idea. He asks Baker and Travis and Rodney: Would you? For money? The guys all say a variation of: No, of course not, no, I will not kill you for money, fuck no. But Doc has an engineer’s mind, and is skilled at thinking his way through problems. What if he could find someone to do it for free? He puts an ad in San Antonio’s underground gay newspaper, using carefully coded language — occult, autoerotic asphyxiation. When Baker comes over, Doc gives him the latest update: This guy is going to fly in from California to do it; no, that fell through. But this guy who works at Kinko’s is going to do it; no, that didn’t work out, either. It must have been frustrating. All those other problems, and then not even this going in his favor. His death is the last thing he’ll ever have; of course he wants to get it right.
***
Incidentally: Autassassinophilia, or the sexual fetish of wanting to be killed, is quite rare. There was that German cannibal, who posted an internet ad “looking for a well-built 18- to 30-year-old to be slaughtered and then consumed” — and actually found one, and also a famous case of consensual homicide in Maryland (that one also started with an internet ad). Last fall I called up Dr. Fred Berlin, director of the Sexual Behaviors Consultation Unit at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, to ask him about it. “Auto what?” he said. “Actually, your predecessor, John Money, coined the term — ” I started to explain. “Well,” Dr. Berlin said, “he coined a whole lot of terms.”
This is funny, in a pretty disturbing section. Were you trying to get some humor in there?
Yes, for sure. Humor and horror may seem so different in some ways, but they really are adjacent emotional states, I think.
Being turned on by your own death is a fetish that causes both moral and legal problems.
Was it clear that Doc’s wanting to be killed was a sexual fetish? Not just a form of suicide?
Well, he certainly seemed to talk about it in sexual terms. But I don’t think anything about this situation was clear.
People who are into the more torture-y kinds of S&M can make the case that they’re consenting — indeed, inviting — their own abuse. But can you consent to your own death? Kind of — attempting suicide may be religiously proscribed, but it isn’t illegal. But assisted suicide is a trickier question, even when it’s done for socially sanctioned reasons, such as cases of terminal illness. A handful of states have legalized physician-assisted suicide; others classify it as first-degree murder. Add sexual compulsion to the mix and the waters get so muddied it’s hard to see anything clearly.
Autassassinophilia, as defined by Dr. Money, is a reciprocal fetish — it’s not just the victim who’s deriving pleasure from the experience, but the attacker as well. Then it’s no longer a case of humanitarian intervention, but something selfish and sick — even if the outcome (a person who wants to die is dead) is the same. Courts have a hard time knowing what to do with such circumstances. The German cannibal was at first convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 8.5 years; in a 2006 re-trial, the charge was upped to murder, and he was re-sentenced to life in prison. Robert Glass, the man who killed the Maryland woman, died in prison near the end of his two-year sentence for manslaughter. Both men expressed remorse; the German cannibal is now a vegetarian.
Also darkly funny. Where did this detail come from?
From a news article I read about the case.
Baker: [Doc] started getting a little more edgy-pushy about the killing issue. Several times he called to say “Goodbye,” a couple of times he stopped by my mother’s house and dropped off crap (I say crap, because that’s all it was [i.e., Bible covers, feather boas, books (awful books), and misc. junk, all in the same box, too]).
Travis: The last time I saw him, before he disappeared, he was like, “Yeah, I found somebody else to do it.” I was like, “Oh, okay, whatever, it sucks that you’re gonna go.” He was a med student, man. He had stuff to offer the world. He was only 38 or whatever. [Actually, he was 43.] So I was like, that sucks. But okay. Then after a while I didn’t hear from him.
Why did you bring in their unfiltered voices here instead of weaving it into your own description? Also, was it intentional to not identify the source? I’m assuming interviews, but seeing italics makes me wonder if it’s from a court transcript, a letter, etc.
Baker’s is actually from the confession he wrote out for investigators back in 2003. Travis’ is a quote from my conversation with him. Looking back at this piece now, I can see myself taking a step back as we get closer to the actual murder. I didn’t know exactly what happened that day, and I also didn’t feel as though I could truly understand what was going on in their heads at the time; having them tell it in their words seemed right somehow. I didn’t think my presence was necessary here.
***
And so it happened that one day, not long after the non-event that was Y2K, Baker and Doc drove west from San Antonio, leaving after midnight, arriving at Big Bend National Park at dawn. Doc drove Baker’s car; Baker curled up in the backseat, trying to sleep. The rising sun illuminated the rough face of the desert, the long spine of the Chisos Mountains in the distance, and beyond that, Mexico. The desert air was clean and clear in January, no humidity at all, everything sharp-edged in the morning light, looking exactly like what it was.
The descriptions in the previous two sentences are beautiful. How do you think your background in fiction and poetry bleeds into the way you write?
Probably! For a long time I thought I couldn’t be a journalist because I like doing these indulgent lyrical riffs too much. It also helps that I spend a lot of time in this part of the country, so the descriptions feel right at hand — I don’t have to force them/reach too hard for them.
Doc had some pretty clear ideas about where and how he wanted to die. The area around Austin and San Antonio didn’t strike him as an appropriate setting — it was just flat, characterless fields; sprawl, strip malls, and cows. But the Big Bend region had a rugged drama that reminded him of his childhood in the mountains of Idaho.
He was also firmly fixed on a method of death. There’s no polite way of putting it: Doc had decided that he wanted to be filmed as he was staked down and cut open. His very own Face of Death, caught on camera. This was a crucial but problematic part of the fantasy. It tended to turn prospective killers off. Doc was worried that once they were out in the middle of the desert, Baker would just shoot him dead — or, worse, drive away and leave him to wander the desert until he succumbed to a slow, unwitnessed death by starvation. But Doc had thought this through, too. He put a thousand dollars in his apartment mailbox. He filed the head of his little mailbox key so it was as small as possible. Then he encased it in some plastic tubing and swallowed it. In order to get the money, Baker would have to get the key. And in order to get the key, he’d have to cut Doc open.
Baker saw all this — Doc filing the key; Doc loading the shovel and pickax into the trunk of the car — but still, somehow, the idea that he would actually kill Doc seemed impossible. Even as they got in the car and headed west, he was still thinking about the whole experience like a rehearsal for a play that would never actually be staged.
I feel like we made a leap here. I don’t have a sense why Baker agreed. And I didn’t know he was doing it for money. Talk about that. Was it deliberate?
There are a few competing accounts. The investigators seemed to think Baker did it purely for the money – that’s maybe the easiest/cleanest explanation. Back then, Baker told investigators that he did it because Doc had been harassing him and he didn’t know what else to do. Now, 15+ years later, he says he did it because Doc was a pervert and deserved to die. But he also told me that there was a part of him that never actually thought it would happen, that they weren’t actually going to go through with it. So, I’m not sure there is a clear explanation—that might account for the sense of a leap. One more mystery.
There was no one at the park’s entrance gate. Doc signed in anyway, identifying himself as “sol. hiker” and his destination as “Dagger Mountain.” They drove 20 miles into the park, until they reached Old Ore Road, a rarely traveled unpaved road that heads out to one of the park’s least-explored corners.
After a few miles, Doc pulled over, and the two men walked even farther into the desert, over ground that was too rough for the car. Baker thought that it looked like an ugly, lonely place to die. “I see pictures of Big Bend in Texas Monthly and it’s green, there are flowers. But I don’t remember seeing anything green anywhere in that park,” he told me later. “Just yucca or something poking the shit out of me over and over again.”
Baker followed Doc through the desert until they reached the place Doc was looking for. It was clear that he’d been here before; the grave was already marked out and half-dug. A handful of tent stakes had been driven to the side of the small sloping hill. Baker sat there, smoking weed to dampen his hangover and rising panic, as Doc dug the grave deeper.
Here’s the thing: Baker loved shooting guns, but had gone deer hunting only once in his life. He’d been fine with killing the deer; it was the part that came after — dressing the carcass — that undid him. There was no way he was going to have anything to do with the intestines of a human being.
Baker’s memory of what happened next is not exactly clear. At some point, he says he told Doc the disemboweling was a no-go. They started arguing about it — Doc standing in his fresh-dug grave, sweaty and pissed off; Baker feeling queasy and annoyed, sick of the whole scene on a few different levels.
Baker: There was a pickax sitting there and I distinctly remember looking at the pickax and instantly turning away. Because I’d have to pull it back out… Then I grabbed the shovel and hit him in the head with it as hard as I could. I remember expecting him to drop like they do in the movies. I hit him twice. Right on top of his head, as hard as I could. It was like — nothing. He was bleeding profusely. But it didn’t phase him. That fucked me up. You see all these goddamn movies — you hit someone with a broomstick and they fall over. I put everything I had into hitting him with that shovel. And — nothing.
Why did you include his words here verbatim? Because there was no way to paraphrase them, or because it’s just so disturbing?
Partially because it’s disturbing; partially because I didn’t want to have to authorially intrude to either validate or disclaim Baker’s account. This is what he says happened, and that’s really all we can know.
Defeated, the two men walked back to the car. It was 450 miles to San Antonio; this time, Baker drove. Next to him, Doc sat quietly, brooding and dripping blood on the passenger seat. The drive back seemed endless to Baker, all that West Texas scrubland stretching on for miles, with nothing to rest your eye on. Baker stopped for lunch at Subway, but when Doc staggered in — woozy, dirt-stained, blood crusting on his head wound — Baker noticed the other customers start to stare. He hustled Doc back into the car and kept driving. When they made it back to San Antonio, Doc seemed depressed. “I really hadn’t planned on coming back to town,” he told Baker. Now he had to start the whole process over again.
***
On April 5, the El Paso Times ran a small story with the headline “Half-buried Body at Big Bend Baffles Police.”
Why did you switch away from Baker’s perspective here and not go directly into the second (successful) murder attempt?
Structurally speaking, it serves as a cliffhanger. We know that Doc ends up dead, and that Baker probably had something to do with it. The reader probably thought Doc was going to die at the end of the previous section, but he didn’t. So the question remains — what exactly happened? I wanted to delay the reveal as long as possible. And also, this structure mimics the investigators’ discovery of what happened.
Before long, investigators had determined that the body belonged to a San Antonio medical student named Shannon Roberts. Roberts’ father had reported him missing in early March, shortly after he’d paid two months of rent in advance. When investigators started interviewing Roberts’ friends, they learned that he’d been talking about wanting to be killed for a long time; he’d mentioned it to a friend in Oregon as many as 15 years ago. In recent months, his death fantasies had become more urgent and real-seeming. Roberts’ history seemed to point toward suicide.
The investigation easily could’ve gone nowhere. There were no witnesses, no useful DNA, no way to determine cause of death, precious little physical evidence. But there was one thing working in the investigators’ favor: Because the crime took place in a national park, federal authorities had jurisdiction. That meant the FBI, with all its money and resources, took charge of the case. FBI agent Steve French partnered with Cary Brown, the friendly, dogged park ranger. They were joined by Texas Ranger Dave Duncan — a quiet, analytical man who proved useful to have around. “The FBI is not well thought of in some of the local jurisdictions,” Brown told me. “Some of these sheriffs’ departments, if I walk in the door, all they’ll tell me is where the men’s room is. But when you’re a Texas Ranger, doors open. Dave was our door-opener.”
What parts of the story came from law enforcement records? Was a lot of detailed information public?
The case file was provided to me by Big Bend National Park, after I filed a FOIA request. It was incredibly detailed. The investigators had to piece together a lot of information about Doc’s life in order to figure out what happened. Because of the peculiar circumstances of Doc’s death, the detectives had to delve pretty deep into who he was, what made him tick — that was a big help. It was definitely much more detailed than other police files I’ve looked at: They interviewed his friends, family and co-workers. Once they narrowed in on Baker, they interviewed many of his friends, too. There was also a copy of a journal that Doc’s mother kept during the course of the investigation. That was pretty heartbreaking to read.
As investigators continued to interview Roberts’ former co-workers and med school classmates, one nickname kept coming up over and over again: Sweet Thing. From what they could piece together, Sweet Thing was Roberts’ boyfriend. Roberts was clearly obsessed with the young man and talked about him all the time, but the relationship had to stay secret — Sweet Thing had a girlfriend and didn’t want anyone to know he was involved with Roberts, too. For the investigators, he quickly became both Roberts’ probable boyfriend and the chief suspect in the murder: a local kid named Mike Baker.
Back in Idaho, Roberts’ mother kept careful notes in neat, forward-slanting cursive, trying to piece together what had happened to her eccentric, brilliant, troubled son. After the autopsy, she planned to scatter his ashes in a meadow on top of a mountain, the same place where his grandparents’ ashes were scattered. The last time Doc had visited Idaho, in 1997, he and his father had hiked up to the meadow and found the bear grass all in bloom. There was no official service. Doc’s parents told their friends that their son had fallen while hiking.
***
The investigators’ first interview with Baker took place at his mother’s house. Cary Brown recalls Baker as charming, nonchalant, and intelligent. For the most part, the interview was routine. Baker admitted that Roberts, who he called Doc, was “a friend,” but said that he hadn’t seen him in a while. He denied having a sexual relationship with him, and the investigators decided to drop that bit for now. When Brown asked Baker if he’d ever been to Big Bend before, the young man said that he’d gone once or twice when he was a kid, on a family trip. “No, we’ve never been there,” his mother corrected him. Baker gave her a funny look. It was the smallest thing, but Brown remembers flagging it in his mind: There’s something this kid isn’t telling us.
A scrap of evidence would later confirm Brown’s suspicions: After the presumed date of Doc’s death, his debit card had been used to buy concert tickets and a room at the New Orleans Hilton during Mardi Gras. That hotel room had been occupied by Mike Baker and two friends. If nothing else, the investigators now had Baker on debit card fraud. But at this point, the case against Baker was just speculation. No physical evidence tied the young man to the scene.
To Baker, after the initial flurry of interviews in the spring of 2000, it seemed as though the case had gone away. In the intervening years, his life straightened out somewhat. He got more serious with his girlfriend. They moved in together, bought a purebred husky named Jinx. He got a good computer job and began taking classes at Southwest Texas University in San Marcos. He was still both using and selling drugs, but he was less reckless, he says, more businesslike about it.
Then, in 2002, more than two years after Doc’s death, Baker was in his dorm room in San Marcos, rolling a joint and talking on the phone to his father when there was a knock on the door. “Who is it?” he shouted. “FBI,” a voice said, loud enough that Baker’s dad could hear. “I’ll call you back later,” Baker’s dad said, and hung up. When Baker opened the door, he saw the men who had questioned him two years before. They wanted to talk again.
Was it hard to get Baker’s parents to talk to you? How did you approach those interviews?
His dad is dead; his mom finally agreed to meet with me. We talked for a while, but none of it was on the record.
The trio of investigators — park ranger Brown; FBI agent French; and Texas Ranger Duncan — knew by now that no useful DNA evidence had been found at the scene. The only way they’d be able to determine what happened to Doc was if Baker told them. “He’s a smart guy, he was real tuned in. You kind of felt like you had to talk to him as a peer,” Brown told me later. “It felt like a real game with him — who was going to outsmart who.”
The interview started just before noon at the station. The four men sat in the bare, windowless interrogation room. The investigators told Baker they knew about Doc’s problems — his huge loans, his struggles in med school, his despair about aging, and his longstanding interest in suicide. All they wanted, they said, was for Baker to tell them what happened, so they could wrap up the case and provide closure to Doc’s family.
This time, Baker was more forthcoming. He said that he knew that Doc was obsessed with committing suicide, but denied that he’d been involved in any way. He again denied having any kind of romantic or sexual relationship with Doc. If anything, he said, he’d found Doc both embarrassing and annoying, and he’d been trying to distance himself from him. But Doc was impossible to ignore — when Baker didn’t answer his pages, he’d start calling Baker’s mom, asking where he was.
Duncan told Baker that he had evidence that proved that Baker knew more about Doc’s death than he was letting on, something that could possibly result in felony charges. Duncan wrote the mystery charges on a piece of notebook paper and placed it facedown on the table. Baker eyed the paper. “That little note Dave turned upside down on the table, that was the key to it,” Brown said.
The investigators told Baker that they’d recommend that prosecutors drop the additional charge — the mysterious thing written on the piece of paper, still facedown on the table — if he’d cooperate in helping them close the case of Doc’s death. Still wary, Baker asked why he hadn’t been read his rights; Brown told him that he hadn’t been arrested, and he was free to go at any time. “It would be stupid for me to leave,” Baker said.
At this point, the four men had been in the cramped room for a couple of hours. They took a break; Duncan brought Baker a Coke.
What sources did you use to reconstruct this scene?
It’s all in the report the investigators prepared after the interrogation – the Coke, the “jumping into cold water” quote, everything.
When the questioning resumed, Baker started talking. Admitting what really happened, he said, was “like jumping into cold water.” And then he described that first trip to the park — the swallowed key; the grave; the shovel; how he’d tried, but failed, to bash Doc’s head in. When they made it back to San Antonio, he said, Doc had given him $1,000 for the lame attempt. And that was all he knew about the death of Shannon Roberts.
The story was shocking, but something was off; the room didn’t have the feeling of a person who had just confessed. Baker seemed “disturbed and thoughtful,” Duncan wrote in his report later. There’s more that you’re not telling us, Duncan said. Baker’s mind was still on that piece of notebook paper: It’s about the debit card, he ventured. Duncan congratulated him and flipped the paper over: DEBIT CARD ABUSE, it read. The card fraud was a possible felony charge, investigators told Baker, but assisted suicide was a Class C misdemeanor in Texas. (Strictly speaking, this is true — but only if the assist doesn’t result in serious injury or death. If it does, then it’s a felony.) They told Baker they’d recommend that the DA drop the felony fraud charges if he came clean about what had really happened between him and Doc.
Baker’s a smart guy. Was he really convinced that a debit card fraud charge was worse than murder? Or do you think he, consciously or not, wanted to come clean?
Who knows? I hesitate to speculate what his motivations were.
That’s when Baker set back in his chair and told them all about the second trip to Big Bend.
***
In the days after the two men returned from the shovel incident, Baker said, Doc kept “giving [him] shit” about the botched murder. He also promised Baker more money — $4,000 — if he’d try again get the job right this time.
In early February, Doc and Baker made the 450-mile drive from San Antonio to Big Bend for the second time. Again, they hiked out to the gravesite. Doc got in the hole and began digging; by this point, it was deep enough that it reached up to his chest. Again, Baker told Doc he wasn’t going to disembowel him. “He started getting irritated,” Baker later wrote in his confession. “From the hole, he started grabbing at me with the pickax he had. I honestly don’t remember everything that took place but eventually I ended up with some rope that he had bought to be tied down with and choked him with it. After that I started filling in the hole.” Doc hadn’t liked the idea of being gnawed on by coyotes after his death; as a precaution, he’d bought chickenwire to keep his body protected.
What happened to filming it? Did he break his promise?
They dropped that idea pretty early on in the process. Baker was smart enough to know that filming a murder was not a good idea.
Baker partially covered Doc’s body with the wire, then placed the red blanket over him. Jets kept flying overhead, and he felt as though every one was surveilling him.
You did a great job of getting in his head. Did you have to go over this scene many times with him? Did you ask him directly what he was seeing and hearing, or did this detail come up naturally?
We spent a lot of time talking around the murder – what happened right before, what happened right after. I think we were both nervous about talking about the actual event.
Driving out of the park, Baker felt both panic and relief. He had an early MP3 player that held only a handful of songs, and he remembers listening to two over and over again: Faith Hill’s “Breathe” and Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car.” Back in San Antonio, he went to Doc’s apartment to retrieve his payment from the mailbox using a spare key. It turned out to be less than $2,000. “[I] figured that would be the end of it,” Baker wrote in his confession.
***
In May 2003, Mike Baker was arrested and charged with first-degree murder in the death of Shannon Roberts. If Baker was lucky, his lawyer told him, he was looking at life in prison.
While all that was being worked out, Baker was housed in the Reeves County Jail in Pecos, a rough, hot West Texas town 400 miles from San Antonio. He spent his 10 weeks there planning his escape. While his jailbreak couldn’t exactly be called a success, even now Baker is still proud of the plan he cam