Saturday, July 20, 2019

In the Shadows: Part 7 - Gone


And, so it would appear, Charles F. Rogers got away with it.  He was finally free of his detested parents, and he was someplace where it would be difficult for American law enforcement to track him down or even have him extradited.

The evidence against him was flimsy and circumstantial, anyway.  Most of Charles’ extended family hadn’t seen him for months, even years.  The neighbors didn’t know him at all, and rarely saw him.  Except for the Fluor hiring manager who spoke briefly with the man calling himself Anthony Pitts, there was no one among the public who could conclusively say they had seen Charles in Houston after Fred and Edwina Rogers’ murder.  (There was also the bartender at the Morningside Club, but he may only have mentioned this to the Gardeniers years later.)

Charles had cleaned the house sufficiently as to preclude trace evidence linking him to the deaths.  There would be numerous fingerprints of his around the house, but of course he lived there.  The open back bedroom window from which he’d escaped raised the possibility of someone having broken in.  The .22 Colt used to shoot Edwina had been obtained from a cousin with a lengthy criminal record.  (The gun jammed afterwards, forcing him to improvise and bludgeon Fred to death with a claw hammer.)

Charles spent his first few months in exile living in Chihuahua, an already familiar place from his travels.  There was a minor crisis as 1965 gave way to 1966, when the ’59 Cadillac's regiatration was due to expire.  The car was still registered in garage owner Al Jarvis’ name since Charles drove into Mexico hours after his girlfriend Jean had hastily purchased it in a cash transaction.  Wanting to avoid suspicion from the Mexican authorities, he arranged to have the Cadillac returned to Texas. 

This time Anthony Pitts came through for his longtime friend. Fortunately, this was at a time when you could cross on foot or by car into Mexico and return without a passport.  Since there would be no record of the crossing, there would be nothing to arouse suspicion.  At any rate, Pitts met Charles at the border and the Cadillac was driven to Kerrville.  Pitts later sold the car to a friend. 

Hugh and Martha Gardenier, who extensively researched the Rogers case, were able to tease out a narrative for Charles’ life after Houston but concede that some of what they found might be “innuendo and half-wild speculation.”  Notwithstanding, their research dredged up otherwise obscure connections that reporters and detectives missed in the 1960s which might have led to his eventual arrest.  The nexus between Charles Rogers and his business cronies was, predictably, airplanes.

Even before he had earned his pilot’s license, Charles had purchased his first plane, a 1948 Cessna 140 with the registration number N3745V.  (Remarkably, this aircraft is still in service with a private owner in Northern California.)  The plane didn’t have the range to meet Charles’ travel requirements, so he sold the Cessna to his new friend Anthony Pitts.  (Anthony, himself needing a longer-range aircraft, later traded up to a Texas-built Mooney M-20.)   This transaction became the start of the trail which led the Gardeniers to flesh out the rest of Charles Rogers’ story.

Neither the police nor the news media picked up on the possibility of collusion, or failed to pursue it sufficiently because of their misreading of the suspect.  They assumed that since Charles’ habits were solitary, he didn’t have any friends or associates when in fact he had a sufficiently sizeable coterie who were willing to help out of a jam.  In fairness, even the Gardeniers happened upon the pertinent records only after years of diligent research.

The subsequent activities of Charles Rogers and associates are obscure, though the broad brushstrokes are discernible.  Charles naturally feared detection.  There was a scare sometime in the early 1970s when a Mexican police official, either suspecting Charles of the Ice Box Murders or merely wanting to squeeze a mordida from a gringo businessman, had Charles jailed for a few days.  Charles was rescued by Dan O’Connor, the most mysterious of Charles’ sketchy friends. 

O’Connor had lost track of Charles over the years, but found the dissolute and perpetually broke John Mackie a good source of leads through his own contacts south of the border.  It probably helped that O’Connor still held a grudge over Mackie’s larceny of O’Connor’s mining dredge during the Mexus venture and was suitably threatening toward his ex-partner.

O’Connor naturally expected a return favor from Charles for his help getting him sprung.  (The Gardeniers suggest O’Connor set up Charles to ensure his cooperation.)  The alleged former CIA man had an interest in a potential oil field in Nuevo Leon, and Charles Rogers could be quite useful in realizing that potential.  There turned out to be a large natural gas deposit, and even after the state oil company got its legally mandated cut the discovery was quite lucrative for the two men and their partners

Time passed.  In Houston, detectives remained blocked by an absence of leads.  Unbeknownst to them, Charles prospered.  He hadn’t lost his dreams of wealth, though.  Neither had John Mackie.  In the early 1980s, Mackie obtained a gold mining concession in the mountains of Honduras.  Charles was to supervise the mine’s development. 

The 1980s were a dangerous time in Central America.  El Salvador was wracked by civil war.  Nicaragua’s revolutionary government was under attack by the U.S.-backed Contra insurgency.  Belize was considered safe, but there are hazards sociopolitical conditions have nothing to do with: In March 1984, Anthony Pitts would die there in a plane crash while on a drug run. 

Honduras was also comparatively quiet, but it was an impoverished country with a large gap between rich and poor.  The workforce for Mackie’s remote gold mine were campesinos eking out a bare living. 

It’s hard to say why they took the life of the American geologist.  Perhaps the seemingly mild-mannered Charles Rogers was a harsh taskmaster.  Maybe he withheld or shorted their pay.  Maybe it was opportunistic, a robbery gone wrong when Charles fought back.  The end result was the same.  Sometime in late 1983 or early 1984 Charles’ decomposed remains were found in a remote river bed.   

Charles had been pickaxed to death, an eerie echo of how he had murdered his father.  The Honduran police went with the wage dispute theory as motive.  They contacted John Mackie.  Mackie denied knowing the victim.


To be continued…



© 2019 The Unassuming Scholar

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