Casefile True Crime - Case 251: The Caldwell Farmhouse Murders
Episode Date: June 17, 2023*** Content warning: Child victim, animal cruelty *** When single mother Nadja Medley met an older man named Mike Bullinger, she finally found happiness after a difficult few years. As well as being ...a fun, kind-hearted partner, Mike was a wonderful father figure to Nadja’s 14-year-old daughter Payton. In May 2017, the three of them moved from Ogden, Utah, to a farmhouse Mike had just bought in Caldwell, Idaho. But when a woman by the name of Cheryl Baker arrived unannounced at the property one day, tragedy ensued. --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Erin Munro Creative direction – Milly Raso Production and music – Mike Migas Music – Andrew D.B. Joslyn Sign up for Casefile Premium: Apple Premium Spotify Premium Patreon For all credits and sources, please visit casefilepodcast.com/case-251-the-caldwell-farmhouse-murders
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El museo Picasso Málaga presenta Picasso escultor,
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Well folks, here's my new backyard, said 47-year-old Nadia Medley as she filmed her surroundings
with her smartphone.
It was Wednesday, May 10, 2017, and Nadia stood alone in the middle of a sprawling paddock
on the rural outskirts of Cordewell, Idaho.
Nadia slowly panned her phone, capturing the overgrown grass and wildflowers that encircled
her.
In the distance were trees and the fences of neighboring properties.
There wasn't a cloud in the blue sky, and all was silent aside from the gentle sounds
of birds chirping.
Kind of liking this just a little bit, Nadia remarked. She honed in on a rundown fence with broken wires that needed fixing.
Nadia explained that rebuilding it was one of the projects she had to work on.
Add her fate was one of her three pet dogs sniffing and chewing on grass. Dogs are the only thing that's grazing now, Nadia joked,
but that will change.
The land had so many trees that the house
where Nadia lived wasn't visible from where she was standing.
The pleasure she took in the peaceful country home
was evident in her voice as she narrated her video tour of the property.
Nadia filmed the farm's henhouse where their chickens were kept, before pausing on a small building further away.
Hey Shed, she explained.
Yep, baby, we're loving it. Just one week earlier, Nadia had moved to the court well farm from her previous home
in the city of Ogden, Utah.
She kept her friends back in Utah, wrapped a date on her new life in Idaho via her Facebook
page.
There, they could watch the video Nadia filmed of her new back yard.
It looks right down your alley, a friend commented. That's so pretty, wrote another.
It's a ton of work Nadia admitted, but added that she was loving either her already.
A few days later, Nadia posted a photograph of her front yard being pelted with rain during
a storm. On Thursday, May 18, one of Nadia's dogs clambered onto a tree with her as she
took a break from all the yard work. She shared a photo of this too, writing, this silly dog climbed a tree with us today.
A month into her time in Caldwell, Nadia completed a survey of 34 questions about her likes
and dislikes.
She posted the results to her Facebook page.
Question 25 asked, Are you where you want to be in life?
Nadia's answer to this was simply yes. Nadia was originally from Germany. She had
immigrated to the United States on her own, where she met and married an American man named
Todd Medley.
The two worked together in a pet store.
They also bred small animals at their home to make extra money.
In 2002, the couple had their first child, a girl they named Peyton.
Almost a decade later, in 2011, Nadia gave birth to her second child, who died shortly thereafter.
Three years later in 2014, while Nadia was still dealing with the loss of her baby,
Todd suffered a heart attack and died. With no other family in the United States,
apart from Todd's relatives who lived interstate, Nadia and Peyton grew
extremely close. They bonded over their love of animals and did fun activities together,
such as swimming and picnicking. Nadia described Peyton as one of her favorite people.
When two short stories that Peyton had written were published in her school's annual writing
anthology,
Nadia was incredibly proud.
Despite her deep connection with her daughter, Nadia still struggled.
Utah felt like a strange place to her at times.
Nadia loved the state's natural beauty, but as a staunch atheist, she found its overwhelmingly
religious culture quite foreign.
The headquarters of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were in Utah, and many
of Nadia's neighbors in Ogden were church members.
Finances were also a difficulty.
Todd hadn't left behind any money when he died, and now Nadia was a sole provider.
She began working as a massage therapist at an Ogden Spa.
One day in 2015, a man in his late 50s arrived for an appointment. His name was Mike Bollinger, and despite the age difference, Nadia fell to spark right away.
Mike was warm and charming with a white smile. Both loved hiking and exploring the great outdoors.
Mike was also an atheist, and his values aligned with Nadia's.
The two soon began dating.
Nadia's friends were thrilled for her.
It was clear that Mike had brought happiness back into her life.
He was also great with Peyton, sometimes picking her up from school or taking her out for
lunch.
He became something of a father figure, teaching Peyton outdoor skills like shooting or playing
with her in the autumn leaves.
Peyton seemed to adore Mike almost as much as her mother, and soon she'd started calling
him dad.
Mike, Nadia and Peyton attended concerts and festivals together, went to the baseball, and
hiked and camped in Yellowstone National Park.
Because Mike worked as a pilot, he often had to travel for a few days at a time.
He made up for his absence by taking Nadia and Peyton on vacations or other adventures that Nadia documented on her
Facebook page.
By the beginning of 2017, Nadia and Mike had been together for almost 18 months.
Things were going so well that Nadia felt ready to ask Mike an awkward question.
Her single income wasn't a lot and she was having trouble
making her mortgage payments. Nadia had seen Mike's paycheck and knew he made more than
$10,000 a month, so she wondered if he might be able to help her out financially.
Mike was troubled by the question. He had divorced his wife a decade earlier and an idea was the first woman he'd been involved
with since then.
Becoming financially entangled with another seemed far too serious for him and he worried
that the relationship was moving more quickly than he was ready for. After a conversation about the matter, the couple broke up.
Mike had recently been offered more consistent work based out of Boise, the capital city of Idaho.
He'd purchased a rundown farm in the city of Caudwell about 28 miles west of Boise.
The property was around one and a half acres and it had a fully equipped farmhouse that was built in
1964. From the outside, it looked like a modest weatherboard home, but it had four bedrooms and two
bathrooms as well as a spacious kitchen.
As he was nearing retirement age, Mike thought the property would be a scenic spot to live
out his golden years.
The farm needed lots of work, but it was a project Mike was keen to take on.
Yet, not having Nadia in his life made Mike realize what he'd be giving up if their
relationship didn't progress further. But not having Nadia in his life made Mike realize what he'd be giving up if their relationship
didn't progress further.
Despite no longer being a couple, they had stayed in touch and still spoke regularly.
Both of them missed one another and found being a part very difficult.
Within a few weeks, they decided to get back together.
Proving how serious he was about their relationship, Mike asked Anadia and Peyton to live in
Cordwell with him.
Nadia accepted his offer.
She looked forward to settling in the countryside and starting a new phase of their lives as
a family.
The setting also suited the animal-loving Pey patron, who would have plenty of room for all
her pets, which included dogs, cats, rabbits, chickens, birds, fish, and one snake.
She and Nadia planned to raise livestock and keep horses on the land. In late March 2017, Nadia shared the news of her upcoming move interstate on Facebook,
posting,
Here we come.
Just over a month later, on Thursday, May 4, 2017, Nadia and Peyton headed north to join
Mike in Idaho.
With spring in full bloom, the cordwell farm was green and covered in wildflowers.
Nadia and Peyton loved it from the moment they arrived.
They and Mike spent a lot of time outdoors, working on the repairs that needed to be done
around the property.
Nadia posted photos and videos of her country life online while encouraging her friends
to visit any time.
On Friday, June 9, Nadia was scheduled to drive to Utah to pick up some horses for the farm. But she never arrived.
Wondering what was going on, the horse sellers tried calling her cell phone. There was no answer.
It all seemed a bit strange, but as the sellers didn't know Nadia well, they didn't think much of it.
As the sellers didn't know Nadia well, they didn't think much of it. As well as being an enthusiastic social media user, Nadia was reliable and replied to messages
quickly.
When her friends stopped hearing from her, they wondered if something was wrong.
Peyton's friends noticed that she'd fallen silent too.
The last time she'd replied to a text message was on Thursday, June 8.
As she was ordinarily glued to her phone, this seemed rather rod.
Still, it was the summer, and she'd just moved to a new place, so they wondered if maybe
she was just busy working outdoors
and caring for her animals.
Mike's family hadn't heard from him either.
He had two sons from a previous marriage and neither had spoken to him in days.
When more than a week had passed with no word from the cord well farm, authorities were asked to perform a welfare
check.
Deputies from the county sheriff's department arrived at the property on Monday, June
19.
The area was eerily quiet.
There was also a foul odor in the air.
The deputies entered the farmhouse, calling out to anyone who might be inside,
but there was no reply.
Although there were no people in the house, the deputies did find the bodies of several dead dogs, cats and pet birds. It appeared as though the animals had starved to death.
Other pets, including some rabbits and a snake, were still alive.
Outside, the deputies checked the handhouse.
It was full of dead chickens.
They too had apparently died of starvation.
Not far from the handhouse was a hayshad. The worst smell seemed to be emanating from
there. Inside, the deputies discovered a blue
tarp covering something on the floor. Underneath were the bodies of three people decomposed beyond recognition due to the summer heat.
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By supporting our sponsors, you support CaseFile to continue to deliver quality content. When a teacher by the name of Cheryl Baker was in her late 40s, she caught a flight to Alaska
and found herself seated next to a very engaging man. Gerald was warm and friendly and the
two hid it off. They wound up exchanging phone numbers and began dating when they were both back at
home in Utah. In 2010, when Cheryl was 50 and Gerald was 53, they married. Cheryl, who
was artistic and creative, made her own wedding dress.
The two had a lot in common. Both enjoyed travelling, hiking, and horseback riding.
Cheryl practiced Hinduism and attended the Sri Ganesha Temple of Utah.
Gerald took an interest in the faith and would go to the temple with her.
He even ended up learning Sanskrit, a classical language of South Asia, so he could better
understand the Hindu texts.
But the couple had their differences too. Gerald knew a lot about surviving in the wilderness,
and would sometimes act as a guide for hunting parties.
Cheryl hated guns, and would have to leave the room whenever Gerald returned from one of these trips.
She couldn't stand being in the same space while Gerald cleaned his firearms.
Overall though, the couple's friends and family were struck by how happy they seemed.
In 2016, six years after their wedding, Cheryl and Gerald went on a rafting vacation together.
When they returned, Cheryl was glowing as though she'd just been on her honeymoon.
She raved about what a wonderful time she and Gerald had together.
At around this time, Cheryl was in her late 50s and had been a teacher for almost four decades.
In 2017, she toured at Greenwood Charter School in Harrisville, a city just a few miles north of
her home in Ogden. Gerald worked as a charter pilot, so he was sometimes away for days at a time,
but he'd been offered a more stable job based out of
Boise in Idaho.
The couple began to think about their future and what they wanted their retirement to
look like.
They decided to buy a rural property.
Bixing it up together would be a fun project after Cheryl left her teaching position in
Utah.
The couple purchased a farm in the small town of Caudwell on Thursday, May 4, 2017.
The plan was for Cheryl to move there right away and start working on things that needed
fixing, such as the plumbing and painting.
Meanwhile, Cheryl would keep living at their house in Ogden and
get it ready to be sold.
The couple stayed in touch during their time apart, and on Saturday June 3, they travelled
to New Mexico together to attend the wedding of one of Gerald's relatives. Several days
later, on Tuesday June 6, 57-year-old Cheryl worked her final day at the Greenwood Charter School.
She was leaving the job to start preparing for her retirement.
By this time, Cheryl and Gerald had owned the farm in Caldwell for a month, but she still hadn't seen it in person. Now that she was no longer working, it seemed like the perfect time to surprise Gerald
within impromptu visit.
Cheryl wanted to see the farm for herself and also spend some time with her husband.
On Thursday June 8, she let some friends know that she was headed up to the farm.
The next time anyone heard from her was several days later on Sunday June 11.
One of Cheryl's friends received a strange text message from her.
It read,
Take care of my dogs, I don't know if I'm coming back.
When Cheryl's brother heard about this message, he wasn't concerned.
Cheryl and Gerald loved to travel, so perhaps they went on a last minute camping trip somewhere.
But another week went by with no word from the couple. Meanwhile in Coldwell, police had received multiple calls requesting welfare checks on Mike
Bollinger and Nadia and Peyton Medley.
The three lived on a farmhouse not far out of town and no one had heard from them for
10 days.
When deputies arrived at the farm, they were met with a grizzly scene.
Multiple pets had died of starvation after being seemingly abandoned.
Hidden under a tap in the hayshed were three bodies, believed to be those of the three missing
residents.
All had been killed with a single execution-style gunshot to the head.
Identification at the scene wasn't possible. The summer heat had sped up the decomposition process
considerably, and the trio had likely already been dead for at least a week and a half.
One of the bodies appeared to be that of a woman in her late 40s.
Another belonged to a teenage girl.
It seemed fairly certain they were Nadia and Peyton Medley.
But the third body wasn Gerald Michael Bollinger, but he typically went by Mike.
Born in Wyoming in 1957, he grew up surrounded by wilderness, which fostered his interest
in the outdoors.
His family belonged to the Church of Jesus Christ of Valadade Saints, also known as the
LDS or Mormon Church.
It is a branch of Christianity that was founded in the United States.
In 1976, when he was 19 years old, Mike traveled to Manila in the Philippines for his LDS
mission. Serving as a missionary is considered a right of passage for young LDS members and is a
way for the church to recruit new members all over the world.
When Mike returned to the United States, he began studying at an LDS college in Idaho,
where he met another young church member named Jacqueline Garcia, who went by Jackie.
The pair married at the ODS Temple in Salt Lake City, Utah in 1978.
Almost immediately, Jackie knew she'd made a terrible mistake.
The newlyweds argued a lot, and during one fight, Jackie was sprawled across the floor
while Mike loomed over her.
Jackie saw how angry he looked and asked, you wanted to hit me didn't you?
Mike simply replied, yes.
Eventually he began acting on this desire and beat Jackie often.
At times, she feared Mike was going to kill her.
He also regularly cheated on her and lied constantly.
Jackie tried everything she could think of to fix things.
She contacted Mike's parents to tell them what was going on.
She called a domestic violence hotline.
She sought couples canceling through the church and sent Mike to therapy aimed at abusive
men.
But Mike refused to change his behaviour.
Eventually, Jackie went to her church bishop and asked for help getting a divorce.
A divorce was granted and in 1988 the pair went their separate ways.
Jackie was granted sole custody of their two sons, but they still visited their father
on occasion.
When the boys returned home to Jackie after a stay with their father, the younger one told
his mother that Mike had hit him.
Jackie called Mike and told him he was not to hit their children.
Mike said nothing, but the next time his son's visited, he sat them both down and said that whatever
happened at his house was to stay at his house.
was to stay at his house.
Not long after he and Jackie were divorced, Mike Bollinger remarried.
His second wife was a woman whom he'd been having an affair with.
Then, years later, Mike met a teacher named Cheryl Baker on a flight to Alaska. Cheryl had no idea that Mike was already
married when they started dating. When his wife found out he was cheating, that married
gendered as well. Then Cheryl married Mike in 2010, oblivious to everything that had
been going on at his end. Mike moved into Cheryl's home in Ogden.
As far as anyone could tell, they had a very happy relationship.
Cheryl never shared any complaints or concerns about Mike at all.
Despite his past as a faithful LDS church goer, with Cheryl he embraced Hinduism like she
did.
Mike travelled a lot for work, but the couple also found plenty of time to enjoy their hobbies
together.
Then, in 2015, Mike met the recently widowed Nadia Medley at the massage parlour where
she worked.
Mike then initiated an affair with Nadia.
Cheryl's loved ones were adamant that she had no idea Mike was being unfaithful.
Nadia's friends were equally certain that her strong morals meant she would never have
become involved with the married man.
They knew that Mike must have lied about his marital status in order to form a relationship
with her.
Plus, she had posted openly about her relationship with Mike on Facebook a number of times.
If they had been having an affair, surely she wouldn't have done that.
Given what a small community Ogden was, it was remarkable that no mutual acquaintances
of the two women had seen the posts and said something about the matter.
However, it also appeared that Mike and Cheryl weren't social media users.
Although Nadia shared photos and videos of Mike, he wasn't tagged in any posts.
Only later would it come out that Nadia had mentioned a couple of mild concerns to her
friends.
She thought it was strange that Mike never stayed over at her place, and she'd only
visited his house once.
At the time, they put this down to the fact that Mike said it was his first relationship
in 10 years.
Perhaps he felt shy or thought it wasn't appropriate to stay at Nardias with her teenage daughter
in the house.
Nardias' house in Ogden was just eight miles away from Sheryls. A couple of years later in early 2017, Mike convinced Sheryl to buy a farm in Cordwell with
him, saying it could be their retirement home.
Sheryl borrowed money against the house she already owned to finance the purchase, which
was made in her name.
The same day that the purchase of the farm was finalized, Nadia and her daughter Peyton
moved to Caldwell.
Investigators couldn't understand why Mike would move Nadia and Peyton into a home that
was owned by his wife, who thought she would be joining him there soon.
They wondered if Mike's plan had been to kill Cheryl
after using her to buy the cord well property,
so he could form a full-time family with Nadia and Peyton.
Perhaps when Cheryl had decided to make an unannounced visit,
this plan had been foiled.
The cord well property was large, but it was an isolated.
There was another house about 50 feet away on one side, and a second about 30 feet away.
A neighbor said she'd heard what sounded like a woman screaming in the middle of the night,
sometime between June 6 and June 10.
But she couldn't be sure if it was a person or an animal, so she hadn't reported it to
the police.
Others thought they'd heard gunshots on or around June 10.
They hadn't thought anything of it at the time, as it wasn't unusual to hear shooting
in the rural area.
DNA confirmed that the three bodies found in the farm's
hayshared were those of Cheryl Baker and Nadia and Peyton Medley. The last time anyone
had heard from Nadia or Peyton was on Thursday June 8, the same day that Cheryl drove to the
farm. Detectives suspected that Cheryl had arrived at a time when Mike wasn't around.
Finding Nadia there instead, Cheryl began to talk to the other woman, and the two of them
figured out that they had both been manipulated and lied to by the same man.
Then Mike returned home and became enraged upon realizing his deceit had been found out.
Maybe Cheryl had threatened to divorce him, leaving him with no assets as both property
deeds were in her name.
He then shot dead all three women, including the teenager who viewed him as a father,
to avoid the consequences of his actions.
But then there was the strange text message Cheryl had sent to a friend on June 11, asking
for them to look after her dogs because she might not return.
Investigators believed Mike might have sent this message from Cheryl's phone.
The fact that he was nowhere to be found indicated he had
gone on the run, and he had a 10-day head start on investigators.
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Mike Bollinger's photograph was shared widely throughout Idaho and Utah in the hope he
might be recognized.
He was 60 years old, 140 pounds, and 6'1 with grey hair and brown eyes.
Soon, tips were flooding in from people who had seen him.
On Saturday, June 10, Mike had breakfast in Nampa, a city just 10 miles southeast of Caldwell.
Then he drove his pickup truck all the way back to Ogden, Utah.
He went to a local dealership where a 2007 Ford Focus that he and Cheryl had owned was
being serviced.
Mike picked up the car and began to drive it instead of his truck.
On either June 11 or June 12, a surveillance camera in Swan Valley, Idaho, captured Mike
entering the city.
He had driven back to the state he had fled.
The day after that, another surveillance camera caught the moment that Mike paid an entrance fee
to the Bridget-Teton National Forest, located east of Idaho in Wyoming.
East of Idaho in Wyoming. The Bridger Teton National Forest is a 3.4 million acre forest that sprawls across Western
Wyoming.
It sits adjacent to the Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks and is a haven for outdoor
enthusiasts who love camping and hiking. On Wednesday, July 12, approximately one month after the triple homicide, Mike Bollinger's
2007 Ford Focus was discovered parked at the Forest's Pacific Creek Campground.
It was a remote campsite, and it seemed the car had been left there for some time.
Investigators were aware that Mike was a competent outdoorsman who would have no issues
with trekking into the nearby wilderness.
His experience as a pilot might have meant he was also familiar with the forest from the
air.
Law enforcement used police dogs, infrared technology and helicopters to scour the area.
It was difficult to rain to navigate on foot due to the rocky ground and thick vegetation.
Because Mike was considered armed and dangerous, searches were on higher alert the entire
time, just in case he tried to ambush them.
Local communities and subdivisions were also checked, as were abandoned farmhouses.
But no trace of Mike Bologna was found.
One week after the Ford Focus was discovered, park rangers in nearby Yellowstone National
Parks spotted an SUV being driven by a light-haired man.
The vehicle was similar to the sort law enforcement thought Mike might have acquired if he'd left to Bridgetietan National Forest.
Two Ranges pursued the SUV in two separate vehicles, forcing the driver to pull over.
Also in the car was a woman and a seven-year-old girl.
The rangers blocked in the vehicle and soon more law enforcement officers arrived.
After about an hour, they permitted the driver to show them his identification.
His name was Brett. The passengers in the car were his wife and daughter and
they were on vacation from Missouri. The officers explained that they were looking for a wanted
killer and showed Brett a photograph of Mike Bollinger. Brett couldn't see any resemblance
except that they both had a light grey hair.
The family were permitted to leave.
News later broke that they were planning to sue the officers, alleging that they had
held them at gunpoint for an hour with no explanation.
Other sightings of the wanted fugitive continued to trickle in.
Someone thought they'd seen Mike driving in Salt Lake City.
After Mike's Ford was found, a river guide in Idaho spotted some man by Henry's fork,
a tributary of the Snake River.
The guide thought the man were behaving suspiciously.
One of them looked like Mike.
None of these sightings could be confirmed.
Investigators considered the possibility that Mike had taken his own life somewhere deep
in the forest.
However, they wondered why he would travel so far from home in the days after the murders
if he'd planned on killing himself.
Why not do so at the farm back in Cordewell?
Perhaps he had hitched a ride with another car out of the forest and left his Ford focus
abandoned there to shake the police off his tail.
In an interview with newspaper The Idaho Statemen, Mike's first wife, Jackie Garcia, described
Mike as a prolific liar and possibly a sociopath.
Another person who knew Mike but wished to remain anonymous agreed.
Quote, if you know about sociopaths, you know they're unlikely to kill themselves.
He would have to feel guilty, and he doesn't have a conscience.
A friend of Nadia Medley also spoke to the newspaper, saying she felt Mike was too
ego-tistical to take his own life.
In late 2017, a family was hiking in Bridgeteet on National Forest near the Pacific Creek
Campground.
They came across a junction where two trails met.
Standing there was a disheveled man who looked to be in his early 60s.
He was alone and looked ill-equipped to be hiking in winter.
He had no backpack, water or safety protection, and his face was very weathered.
The man passed by the family and kept his head down the entire time.
When investigators heard about the interaction, they suspected the man could have been Mike
Ballinger.
Months went by with no further developments in the case.
Then in mid-2018, a gun was found in Pacific Creek.
It was closer to Yellowstone National Park than the Bridgetete on Forest, and was fully
loaded.
Investigators wondered if it belonged to Mike, but it was in good condition and didn't
look as though it had been exposed to the elements.
More than a year after the murders in August 2018, authorities regrouped and carried out
another search of the Briditteiton forest.
Roughly 20 investigators from multiple agencies split into four groups to cover a four-mile
radius of wilderness north of the Pacific Crate Campground.
They started at the junction where a family had spotted a suspicious looking man at the
end of 2017.
Kadava dogs went with them.
If Mike was still in the forest, investigators doubted that he was still alive.
It had snowed towards the end of 2017, and the snow line was right by the Pacific Creek
campground.
Mike would have had to survive a bitterly cold winter
without any proper gear or provisions.
Even for an experienced hunter and guide like him,
that would have been extremely difficult.
The forest was also home to grizzly bears,
wolves and mountain lions.
If Mike hadn't taken his own life for diet from the elements, there was
every possibility that he'd been killed by a predatory animal.
Searchers didn't recover Mike's remains, however, they did find some other kind of evidence.
They wouldn't say publicly what this evidence was, but they told the media it indicated Mike had never
left the forest and had died in there.
They put out a bulletin advising people visiting the forest throughout the summer and fall
to keep an eye out for anything that looked like scutted clothing or human remains.
If Mike had died during the winter, then wildlife would have scavenged his remains when the
snow thawed.
Nothing of significance was ever recovered.
Enough evidence was found in Mike's abandoned Ford Focus and at both of his properties,
to confirm he was responsible for killing Cheryl Nadia and
Peyton.
Detectives have not publicly disclosed what that evidence is.
Mike Bullinger has formally been charged with three counts of first-degree murder, yet
as of late 2022, law enforcement remains confident that he is no longer alive.
Mike Bollinger was described as a chameleon who could mold himself to be whatever a particular
woman wanted.
With his first wife Jackie, he was an LDS churchgoer like she was.
When he met Cheryl, he began attending a Hindu temple with her and even learnt Sanskrit.
Then with Nadia, who was an avowed atheist, he said he didn't believe in God either.
Those who met Mike described him as warm and charming. He had a charismatic personality and was romantically involved with many women.
Someone did if he had found another woman to con and was living in hiding with her
somewhere. Others speculated that maybe Mike had used his pilot's license to fly out of the
country and start a new life overseas, though no evidence has been found to support this.
Cheryl Baker is remembered as a kind, gentle and creative woman, as well as an excellent
teacher.
For over 30 years, she worked at the Utah School for the Deaf and Blind, teaching children
with hearing impairments.
Sometimes, she bought school supplies and clothing for students who couldn't afford them,
and she also searched
for funding grants for the school.
In 2011, her hard work was recognised when she was awarded teacher of the year by the
University of Utah College of Education.
Her final job at Greenwood Charter School saw her teaching art classes.
This was a perfect fit for Cheryl, who was a talented artist herself.
At the Utah School for the Deaf and Blind, a memorial bench has been installed in Cheryl's
honor.
Two months after the murders, Nadia Medellis' brother-in-law, Mark Medellis, visited the farmhouse
where she and Peyton were killed.
He had to sort through their personal belongings and found the ordeal very upsetting.
Mark has described Nadia as independent and stoic, with the deeply nurturing side.
This side was most evident when she was caring for her many pets and in house she was raising her
daughter, Peyton. When Nadia and Peyton were killed, Mark Madley had been in the process of
rebuilding his relationship with them. He lived in to stay but had recently been getting to know
his niece, Bedar, via phone calls and emails. In one interview, he stated,
It felt like Peyton and I were just starting to get to know each other, and then this happens.
It's a hard pill to swallow.
Peyton had her own YouTube channel where she posted videos about her life.
In one, she painted her mother's face blue and purple with glitter to resemble the galaxy.
In her final video, which was posted around in New Year's of 2017, she talked about how
she wanted to do things that would make her happy and encourage the viewers to do the
same.
Do something that will impact your life for the better.
Don't just wait for the right moment because guess what?
There will never be a right moment.
We don't have enough time in this world
to just keep waiting for the right moment
because eventually we'll just give up
what we wanted to do once he important
will loss the interest and we'll just live our lives
not knowing, you know, that we did that. We'll just live our lives and the what ifs. And
that's not okay. You need to put yourself out there because we have one shorting life.
And no matter what you believe happens afterwards. We have one life and you need to live it the
way you want to. you