Casefile True Crime - Case 261: Shari Smith & Debra May Helmick (Part 2)
Episode Date: September 30, 2023*** Content warning: Sexual assault *** [Part 2 of 2] When nine-year-old Debra May Helmick was abducted from the front of her family’s trailer in Richland County, South Carolina, there were immedia...te concerns that her kidnapping could be linked to the recent murder of Lexington teenager, Shari Smith. Those fears were confirmed when Shari’s sister Dawn received a chilling phone call directing authorities to Debra May’s body. The news that a serial killer was on the loose had South Carolina residents gripped by fear. As the investigation ramped up, a breakthrough clue finally emerged. --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Elsha McGill 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-261-shari-smith-debra-may-helmick-part-2
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Our episodes deal with serious and often-distressing incidents.
If you feel at any time you need support, please contact your local crisis center.
For suggested phone numbers for confidential support and for a more detailed list of content warnings
Please see the show notes for this episode on your app or on our website
Today's episode involves crimes against children and won't be suitable for all listeners
for all listeners. Married couple Debra and Sherwood Helmick worked hard to provide a comfortable life for
their three young children.
In mid 1985, the couple saved enough money to move out of the home they'd been sharing
with relatives and into a space of their own.
The Shiloh Mobile Home Park in South Carolina's Richland County provided modest yet pleasant
accommodation.
With just 13 trailers on the property, there was a relatively close-knit, hard-working community
where residents looked out for one another.
By June, the Helmix had been living at the trailer park for two months.
Although their busy schedules didn't leave them much time for socializing with the
other tenants, they were starting to settle in.
On the afternoon of Friday, June 14, Debra prepared for her weight-racing shift at a local
barbecue restaurant.
Her husband Sherwood hadn't yet returned home from his construction job, so Debra had
a little choice but to bring
her three children along for the drive.
Debra didn't have a car, but her neighbour Vicki was happy to help out.
Vicki agreed to drop Debra at the restaurant and then keep an eye on her kids until Sherwood
knocked off from work.
Just as they were about to leave, Sherwood returned home. Six-year-old Becky still
wanted to go for the drive, but nine-year-old Deborah May and three-year-old Woody decided
to stay home. The youngsters said goodbye to their mother, then went to play outside,
while their father cooled down indoors.
Ricky Morgan lived in a neighbour neighboring trailer four doors down.
At around 4pm, he heard a noise outside and looked out the window.
A silver car that Ricky didn't recognise rapidly pulled into the trailer park.
It stopped near the two homeic children who were playing out the front of their trailer.
A white male got out of the vehicle, leaving his motor running and the door open.
He walked over and began speaking to the two children.
In his hand appeared to be a white bag.
Ricky didn't think much of it, assuming he was a friend of the family.
But suddenly, the man grabbed Debra May around
the waist and raced back towards his car. Debra May began kicking and screaming. The man
threw her into his vehicle where Debra May continued to scream and started kicking the roof.
By the time Ricky realized what was happening, it was too late.
He raced outside, but the car sped past him and out of the trailer park.
Three-year-old Woody desperately scrambled underneath a nearby bush, shaking with fear.
When asked what happened, a terrified Woody later explained. The bad man said he was coming back to get me. Sherwood Helmi could be in just 20 feet away, getting changed in his bedroom, where the
buzzing of his air conditioner unit drowned out the sound of his daughter's screams.
But a friend who had given him a lift home from work was sitting in the front room
of the Helmick's trailer and overheard the commotion. He told Sherwood what was going
on and that the two quickly raced outside, just quick enough to catch a glimpse of the
silver car as it disappeared down Old Percival Road, a long rural stretch running through
the heart of Richland County. They jumped in Sherwood's France car and gave chase, but the vehicle was long gone.
Officers were alerted and a search for the nine-year-old kicked off immediately.
Trailer Park resident Ricky Morgan had gotten a decent look at the kidnapper, describing
him as aged in his early to mid-30s, 5'9 and weighing roughly
200 pounds. He had a brown, receding hairline, short brown beard and was wearing shorts
with a light coloured sleeveless top. The car itself had a red stripes down the
cert and was possibly a 1982 or 1983 model Chevrolet Monte Carlo, or Pontiac Grand Prix.
Tire tracks at the trailer park were consistent with it being a general motor's model vehicle.
Ricky had caught a glimpse of the South Carolina license plate just long enough to see that it started with the letter D.
The Helmix were beside themselves. They had no known enemies and couldn't
think of anyone who would want to harm their daughter. Debra May was an incredibly smart young girl
who was obedient, well behaved and a little shy, not the type to speak to strangers.
Although the Helmix mostly kept to themselves, neighbors described them as a
likable family. No one had noticed any other suspicious behavior around the property.
The only plausible explanation seemed to be that Debra May had been the target of an
opportunistic predator.
For investigators, there were a couple of details that caused particular concern.
Debra May Helmick's abduction had occurred on the two-week anniversary of Shari Smith's
kidnapping, right down to the hour.
The two girls lived roughly 24 miles apart.
Both had been brazenly taken from the front of their own homes while their parents stood
nearby oblivious to what was happening.
Although there was an eight-year-age difference between Shari and Debra May, they shared similar
physical characteristics, both were blonde with blue eyes.
There were immediate concerns that Debra May could have fallen victim to the same fate
as Shari.
At the time of her kidnapping, nine days had passed since Shari Smith's body had been
discovered, and despite their tireless efforts, investigators were no closer to identifying
her killer.
Witness Ricky Morgan was shown the suspect sketch of Sherry's abductor and to notice
similarities to the man who had taken Debra May.
Although the man Ricky witnessed was younger in Stokia, with darker hair and a beard.
He also drove a completely different vehicle.
It was believed that Sherry had been forced into her attack as car at gunpoint, yet Debra
May had been physically grabbed.
If the two attacks weren't linked, this prompted another terrifying possibility.
What if Sherry's killer had inspired a copycat?
If the same perpetrator was responsible for both the doctions, police held grave concerns
for Debra Maze
welfare.
They wasted no time in launching a full-scale investigation, with officers from surrounding
counties called into assist, while helicopters surveilled overhead.
If the Smith case had taught them anything, it was that the perpetrator thrived on power
and attention. Investigators therefore anticipated that if the same person was responsible for both crimes,
it was a matter of time before he contacted Debra Maise family.
But there was one issue.
The Helmix didn't have a phone.
If the 9-year-old had been targeted at random, the perpetrator likely didn't know this.
Instead, investigators monitored the phone in the manager's office of the trailer park.
But the days ticked by and the kidnapper remained silent.
When the Smith family found out about Debra M's abduction, the first thing they did was
pray for the Helmix.
They told reporters, we knew when we lost Shari that no one could give us as much comfort
as God.
That was able to strengthen us and we want to pass that along.
Unlike the Smith family, the Helmicks refrained from making any public appeals.
They were too traumatized.
Sherwood was unable to cope with the fact that his daughter had been taken while he was
mere meters away, and he wept uncontrollably.
His wife Debra sunk into a deep depression, blacking out from stress and requiring
medical care. They clung desperately onto the hope that Debra
May would be found alive, but the very real possibility that that may not be the case left
them crippled with the stress. Sure would refuse to let his other two children out of
his sight.
When he finally summoned the strength to speak to a reporter for the Columbia record,
he said,
You've got a wacko out there, and you never know what he might do.
Up until this point, the composite sketch of Sherry Smith's abductor had been withheld
from the public.
Desperate for Leeds, the decision was made to release it for the first time.
It prompted an overwhelming response.
With the abduction of a second young girl from neighboring counties, the already fearful
community became increasingly paranoid.
Everyone was viewed with suspicion.
Police tiplines rang off the hook with locals wanting to report everything from psychic
visions to their own personal theories.
Officers who were already working around the clock to try and solve Sherry Smith's murder
were thrown into a spin with the introduction of a second possibly linked case.
Hours of crucial investigative time went into checking license plate numbers, as tipsters
reported every suspicious bearded man driving a car similar to the one's witness during
the abductions.
Complicating matters further was the fact that both kidnappings and the dumping of Shari's
body had taken place in different jurisdictions, leading
to issues when it came to communication and coordination between the different law enforcement
agencies.
One official appeared on the news, he stressed evident as he told reporters,
We are on an 18 hour work schedule now.
We just can't take really much more.
With the rumor mill swinging into overdrive and wreaking havoc on both investigators and
the public, Lexington County Sheriff James Matt's took a media vow of silence, refusing
to speak about either case until substantial progress was made.
Although investigators were treading with caution in case both abductions were linked,
they still had no evidence to confirm this.
Debra May Helmix case was being treated as a missing person investigation, and hopes continued
to be held that she'd be found alive.
Just like they had with the Smith case, the community rallied behind the
Helmix with an outpouring of support in the form of food and financial donations. It was
impossible for other parents not to put themselves in the Helmix shoes, with the one woman remarking,
every time one of my children walks out the door, I pray to God that they'll come back safely.
Sherwood Helmick told reporters he was optimistic that investigators would solve his daughter's case within a couple of days.
But by the time Sherry's killer made contact with Dawn Smith on Saturday, June 22, Debra May had been missing for eight days.
As soon as the caller asked Dawn Smith if she had, quote, heard about Debra May Hamrick,
investigators listening in hung on to his every word.
Dawn was aware of the young girl's kidnapping, but she responded, no.
Realising he had mispronounced Debra May's surname,
the caller corrected himself and said, Helmic. This time, Dawn responded that, yes, she
did know about Debra May.
Okay, now listen carefully, said her sister's killer. Go one north, well one west, turn left at Peach Festival Road or Bill's Grill, go
three and a half miles through Gilbert, turn right, last dirt road before you come to
stop sign at to not road.
Go through chain and no trespassing sign.
Go 50 yards and to the left go 10 yards. Debra May is waiting.
God forgive us all.
The location the caller had described was in Lexington County, roughly 14 miles west of the Smithsome, and to 30 miles from the Helmix.
The manner in which he'd given directions was so similar to the way he described the location
of Sherry's body, that officers descending on the scene had a little doubt as to what they would
find there. Following the instructions took them to a remote location in the back roads outside the small town of Gilbert, where they located the no trespassing sign as described.
It led Denny Hill that backed on to a wooded area.
At the bottom of the hill lay the body of Debra Maesbody was severely decomposed to the point that her exact cause
of death couldn't be ascertained.
However, the residue of adhesive material in her hair indicated that she too had likely
been suffocated.
The nine-year-old was still dressed in the same clothing she'd been wearing at the time
of her abduction, pinstriped shorts and 11-to-coloured t-shirt.
The level of decomposition meant it couldn't be determined whether she'd been sexually
assaulted, but evidence found on her body indicated there was a sexual motivation to the
crime.
Debra May was still wearing the same pair of cotton underwear she'd been dressed in on
the day of her kidnapping.
But over the top was a pair of adult women's silk bikini briefs.
When criminal profiler John Douglas heard this detail, it gave him further insight into
what kind of perpetrator they were dealing with.
As explained in his book, when a killer calls, Douglas suspected that the killer wouldn't
feel particularly good about taking a child victim.
With Shari Smith, he could convince himself that the two had some kind of reasonable relationship.
Without this delusion, he would likely feel somewhat ashamed of his actions.
Douglas believed it was likely that the adult underwear belonged to another of the killer's
victims.
By putting them on Debra May, it was possible he was trying to diminish his guilt about
attacking a child.
The call placed to Dawn Smith was traced to a payphone outside a Kentucky Fried Chicken
fast food restaurant in the South Carolina town of Sumter, roughly 72 miles from where
Debra May's body was found.
As was the case with all his previous calls, the killer had left behind no discernible
clues.
But with the addition of a second body and a second crime scene, investigators
were able to piece together a few more details about the perpetrator.
The remote location where Debra May's body was found added further weight to the belief
that the killer lived locally. Like the Masonic lodge where Sherry's body was dumped, this wasn't the kind of location one would just stumble upon by accident.
Furthermore, the fact that he'd scattered his crimes among three different counties supported the theory that he had knowledge of forensic proceedings.
Investigators believed he'd intentionally spread his offenses between jurisdictions, knowing it would hinder the investigation.
By this point, 22 days had passed since Sherry Smith had been abducted.
In that time, the perpetrator had successfully pulled off a second abduction and two murders.
He'd made multiple calls to Sherry Smith's family and one to news reporter Charlie Keys.
Yet, despite unrelenting efforts made by multiple law enforcement agencies, including the
FBI, no prime suspects had emerged.
On his latest call to Dawn Smith, the killer didn't disguise his voice. This indicated two possibilities.
Either he was getting sloppy, or he was getting cocky.
The Helmix were saved from having to view their daughter's body by identifying her based on her clothing instead.
As soon as Deborah Helmix saw the pink hair clip she'd placed
in her daughter's hair before leaving for work on the day of the abduction, her worst nightmare
was confirmed. As the grieving parents came to terms with their loss, a press conference
was held for police to break the news to the public. Shara for James Metz reluctantly confirmed what everyone had been fearing since Debra May
was taken.
A serial killer was on the loose.
Metz urged parents to remain vigilant, saying,
I don't want to frighten anybody, but as your sheriff, it is my duty to tell you that
you should exercise extra caution during these trying times.
The suspect sketch was revised to reflect the sightings from both kidnappings and was published
in all the local papers. It showed a white, heavy-set male aged between 28 and 35, with long-ish
hair and a dark beard.
Although if Profileur John Douglas' assumptions were anything to go by, the perpetrator's
physical appearance would likely have changed since his crimes breed kicked off.
He might be losing or gaining weight, looking un-camped, and could be drinking heavily.
If members of the public were paranoid before, they were now well and truly petrified.
Panicked parents vied for a spot in a community program about child safety, while concerned
citizens sought out self-defense classes, and continued to report even the most remotely
suspicious activity.
People called the police to voice concerns
that their families could be targeted next.
Tip line switchboards were completely overwhelmed
with unsubstantiated rumors,
with police becoming so inundated
that they threatened to prosecute anyone
who deliberately hindered the investigation.
As journalist Margaret O'Shea rode in the state newspaper.
Other crimes have shocked the public conscience, and other murders have provoked community outrage.
But none have so completely gripped the Middellands in intense pervasive fear as have the
abductions and deaths of Shari Smith and Debra May Helmick.
The terror has circumscribed to the lives and thoughts of thousands,
consumed with the stark and dreadful knowledge that a bold killer or killers were at large.
No driveway, no front yard, no pool or pond,
no place where children play could be assumed to be safe anymore.
Despite the killer claiming a second victim and the ongoing concerns that Dawn Smith
could be targeted next, the Smith family agreed to go ahead with the staged memorial service
for Shry's
birthday as planned.
On Tuesday, June 25, undercover officers strategically placed themselves around the cemetery, while
covert security guards lay in wait in case anyone tried to cause any harm.
When the service ended, Dawn took one of Sherry's cherished stuffed koalas and placed it on her grave.
Various members of the press were there to report on the event in the hopes the media attention would re-engage the killer to make further contact.
Speaking afterwards to the Columbia record, Bob Smith said the only way they coped was through
their belief in God.
Hilda ratted,
it's even harder today knowing that this is the day you gave birth and she's not here with
you.
Knowing she's not ever going to be here with you again.
The following day was Debra Ma's funeral.
Over 300 people gathered to mourn the loss of the smart young girl who dreamed of becoming
a teacher or school principal.
The presiding minister told those in attendance.
This is a very difficult time for all of us.
We are afraid, angry and confused.
We are all sad and broken.
We are afraid for our children.
We don't feel safe in our front yards.
We distrust every stranger.
We ask, when will it end?
Convinced that the killer could be among the crowd, playing clothes officers were positioned
around the cemetery while a police helicopter circled overhead.
Meanwhile, Sherry's gravesite was surveilled around the clock, and the licence played of
every vehicle that passed by was taken down.
But the trap didn't appear to be working. No one made any attempt to take
the stuffed koala, nor had the killer made a peep. All that didn't matter.
On the same day that Debra May Helmick was late to rest, specialists were finally able
to run Sherry Smith's last Willan Testament through
an electronic detection apparatus, known as an ESDA machine.
With the use of graphite, an ESDA can pick up images that aren't visible to the naked eye,
such as indentations left on paper.
The ESDA revealed several latent impressions on Sherry's last will and testament.
On the same pad she'd used to write her letter, someone had written what appeared to be a
grocery list.
But that wasn't all.
There was a string of numbers.
Looking closely, investigators realized what they were looking at. A phone number.
Case file will be back shortly.
Thank you for supporting us by listening to this episode's sponsors.
Habits are part of who we are and shape us into who we're becoming. Some are good and some are not so good.
Breaking those bad habits can radically change your life for the better,
and that's why we're glad to have FUME sponsored this episode.
FUME is an innovative, award-nominated device that helps you break bad habits.
Instead of electronics, fume is completely natural.
Instead of vapor, fume uses flavoured air.
And instead of harmful chemicals, fume uses all natural, delicious flavours.
Your fume comes with an adjustable air flow dial and is designed with movable
parts and magnets for fidgeting, giving your fingers a lot to do, which is helpful for
de-stressing and anxiety while breaking your habit.
If you're using fume for the first time, you'll be pleasantly surprised by how flavourful
and fresh it is. It's also incredibly well designed with real wood and light weight,
so it not only tastes good, but looks good too. Holding yourself hostage with your bad habits is
the worst crime you could commit. It's time to break bad habits, and our sponsor Fume can help.
Fume has served over 100,000 customers and has thousands of success stories, and there's
no reason that can't be you.
Join Fume in accelerating humanity's breakup from destructive habits by picking up the
journey pack today.
Head to TriFume.com and use code CaseFile to save 10% off when you get the journey pack
today.
That's try FUM.com and use Code CaseFile to save an additional 10% off your order today.
Thank you for listening to this episode's ads.
By supporting our sponsors, you support CaseFile to continue to deliver quality content.
The discovery of a latent phone number on Sherry Smith's final letter was a major breakthrough,
but there was just one problem.
Only nine digits of the 10 digit phone number were visible.
Investigators could make out the first three digits, 205. This was the interstate area
code for Alabama. The next three digits were 837, which was the local exchange for Huntsville, and Alabama City roughly 380 miles west of Lexington.
But of the last four digits, only three were visible.
This was only a minor setback.
Investigators realized the missing number
could only be one of 10 options.
They tried every possible combination
and cross-checked each one against phone records to identify
if any of the Huntsville numbers had communications around the Lexington County area.
One of them had.
One investigator dialed the number.
A friendly sounding man answered. He sounded like he was in his 20s or 30s, but his voice didn't match the killer.
He said his name was Joe Shepard, and that he was stationed at an army base, which he hadn't
left in recent weeks.
But when asked if he knew anyone in South Carolina, Joe said yes.
His parents lived in Saluda County.
50-year-old Ella Shepard was an electrician.
He and his wife Sharon lived near Lake Murray
less than 10 miles from the home of Shari Smith
and just two miles from the location
where Debra May Helmix body was found.
Investigators immediately descended on their home, but as soon as they met the couple,
it was blatantly obvious that Ellis didn't fit the profile of Shari and Debra May's killer.
For starters, he was older and didn't match the suspect description. Secondly, he had a squeaky clean criminal record
with no prior run-ins with the law.
Thirdly, he and Sharon were happily married,
going against the belief that the perpetrator would be a loner
with the history of failed relationships.
Although the shepherds were caught off guard by the police presence, nothing in Ellis's
demeanor indicated that he was nervous.
When asked if they knew about the recent abductions and murders happening in the area, the couple
said yes, they were aware of them, but they'd been out of town at the time that each incident
had occurred, and they didn't know all of the details.
They could think of no reason why their son's phone number could have appeared on the final
letter written by one of the victims.
The investigators described the behavioral profile of the killer to the shepherds, and
implored them to think if there was anyone they knew who fit that description.
The two exchanged and knowing glance.
Over the past month, Sharon and Ellis had been away traveling.
One of Ellis' electrical assistance had been house-sitting for them during that time.
The couple had left him a list of phone numbers on yellow legal paper that he could call
in case of an emergency.
One of those numbers was for their son, Joe.
As the shepherds considered the criminal profile, they realized just how many of those factors
matched their house sitter.
But it wasn't until they were played a recording of the killer's voice that they knew for
sure.
30 Son of a Bitch, Ella said.
That's Larry Jean Bell.
36-year-old Larry Jean Bell was a South Carolina local.
Just like the profile anticipated, it once been married with a child, but the
relationship ended in divorce, after which Bell's ex-wife and son relocated into state.
Bell had previously served in the Marines, but was discharged within a year after he accidentally
shot himself in the knee while cleaning his gun. Since then, he'd had a range of jobs, including prison
guard, airline reservations clerk, and electronic contractor.
A search of Bell's background revealed that 10 years prior, he had approached a young woman
at Knife Point and tried to force her into his car. A passer by heard the woman screams
and called the police, who arrested Belle as he tried
to flee.
Belle pleaded guilty to assault and battery and was sentenced to five years in prison,
a sentence that was ultimately suspended in favor of him paying a $1,000 fine.
Eight months after this failed attack, Belle was in Colombia when he saw a woman slip and
fall.
In the process of helping her to her fate, Bell flashed a gun and tried to force the woman
into his car.
Again, she fought back and Bell was arrested.
He played a guilty to assault and battery and was sentenced to five years in prison.
A mandatory psychiatric report concluded that the likelihood of Bell reoffending was very
high.
In one counseling session he told the psychiatrist,
I feel uncontrollable urges to attack females and want help before I really heard someone. Regardless, two years into his sentence,
he was released. A couple of years later, in 1979, a 10-year-old girl began receiving
obscene phone calls in which the caller detailed various sex acts he wanted the two to perform
together. He seemed to know where the girl lived and threatened to stop by her house.
The girl's mother eventually recorded the calls, and they were traced back to Belle.
Again he pleaded guilty, but was only given a two-year suspended sentence.
By the time of the Smith Helmick attacks, Larry Jean Bell had spent the past three years
living with his parents on Scholl Island in Lake Murray. He rarely saw his 12-year-old
child, and made ends meet by doing casual electrical jobs for various contractors.
When Ellis and Sharon Shepard asked the bell if he wanted to house it while they travelled
for six weeks, he jumped at the chance.
But when Bell picked the couple up from the airport upon their return, they were a little
taken aback.
In the short amount of time they'd been away, Bell had lost about 10 pounds, had stopped
shaving and looked generally exhausted and unkempt.
He seemed a bit out of it.
All he wanted to talk about was the kidnapping and murder of Sherry Smith.
Sherrin had asked him to save any news about the case so she could catch up on the events
when she got home.
But to her surprise, Belle had gone above and beyond, clipping newspaper articles from
every newspaper in the area.
When the shepherds saw the revised sketch of the suspect, they paused.
It looked remarkably similar to Larry Jean Bell.
They considered for a moment whether he could have something to do with the crimes, but quickly
shook this thought off.
Although Bell could be of its strange and spaced out at times, they believed that there was
no way he was capable of anything so heinous.
Bell was generally a quiet reserved person who'd never given
them or anyone else any cause for concern. Neighbors knew him to be kind and
gentle, the type of guy you could count on for help and who made a great fishing
buddy. As one former co-worker later told the Charlotte observer. Bell was always smiling and laughing. He was the most
likable person you ever knew.
Ellis Sheppard tried to dismiss the idea that Bell could be involved in the recent murders,
but the similarities he bore with the suspects get nagged at him.
Late one night, Ellis felt compelled to check on his gun. He kept
a loaded pistol at home and had told Belle about it in case he needed it for protection
while they were gone. But the gun wasn't there. Ellis called Belle and asked about it.
Belle explained that he'd kept the pistol under the mattress of the guest bed
he'd been sleeping in. Larry went into the guest room and lifted the mattress. There,
lay a copy of Hossler magazine. On the cover was a blonde woman dressed in bondage ear
and placed in a crucifix position. Beside the magazine was Ellis's gun. He picked it up. It had been recently fired.
On the morning of Wednesday June 26, 1985, Larry Jean Bell made his way to the Shepherd's House
to begin a day of electrical work.
He was driving a grey Buick Riviera, a car that didn't match the vehicle used in either
abduction.
As he approached an intersection, a police car cut him off and an officer placed him under
a rest without incident.
Inside his vehicle, officers found a double-edged knife on the passenger seat.
Bell appeared to be caught off guard, but not completely surprised, asking simply, can
I call my mama?
Bell was taken into custody while search warrants were executed at the Shepherd's
home.
The guest room that Bell had been staying in
was meticulously clean.
It appeared to have been recently dusted and evacuoned
and the bed linen was freshly washed.
But when investigators removed the sheets,
a special laser machine determined
that the mattress top up was stained
with a mix of urine, semen, and blood.
The blood was type A, the same type as sherry smiths.
Red fibers were also found.
These were compared to red fibers found on sherry's body
and determined to be a match.
Forensic investigators spent 12 hours
painstakingly examining the property.
In the bathroom, they found six blonde hairs confirmed to be a match to sharies.
A search warrant was also executed at the lakefront home of Bell's parents, who were upstanding
well-regarded citizens in their local community.
Unsurprisingly to investigators, Bell's bedroom was meticulously organized.
He had a large pornography collection with a focus on BDSM.
A search of his dresser drawers revealed a bag of women's underwear, with one pair of
silk briefs similar to those that Debra May Helmick had been dressed in.
Also found was a sheet of postage stamps featuring commemorative duck decoys.
The same as the stamp used to mail Shari Smith's last will and testament.
Meanwhile, police combed through the surveillance photos taken from Sherry's grave.
In one, they saw a car parked on the roadside right near the grave.
The driver never got out of the car.
As search of the license plate revealed, the car was registered to none other than Larry Jean Bell. Case file will be back shortly.
Thank you for supporting us by listening to this episode's sponsors.
Thank you for listening to this episode's ads.
By supporting our sponsors, you support CaseFile to continue to deliver quality content.
The circumstantial evidence against Bell was stacking up, but to secure a conviction, investigators
were hoping for one thing in particular, a confession.
But upon questioning, Bell repeatedly denied any involvement in the murders of Shari Smith
or Debra May Helmick.
He told interviewing detectives,
This Larry Jean Bell didn't do it. It's the bad Larry
Jean Bell. I know for a fact that Larry Jean Bell did not do that to these poor
women. I'm not lying to you. I'll do everything I can to help you, but I can't
confess for someone else. When pressed further, Bell said. All I know is that the Larry Jean Bell sitting here
couldn't have done such a thing.
But there's a bad Larry Jean Bell that could have.
He then made an odd request.
Could he meet with Shari's family?
Hilda and Dawn courageously agreed
and were taken into the interrogation room.
Bell began to mumble that the person sitting before them could not be capable of such
quote, ungodly things.
While he admitted to feeling some form of guilt, he made no confession.
Bell told Hilda, If I'm directly responsible for this crime, I do apologize if I've brought tragedy into
your lives and tragedy to myself.
I don't know what to say to you.
I just can't believe I've done those terrible things.
The mother and daughter made it very clear to Bell that they knew he was the man responsible
for killing Shari.
His denial filled dawn with disgust.
At the very least she hoped he'd be man enough to own up to his actions and apologize.
Regardless, Hilda told him, I don't hate you. There is not enough room in my heart for more pain."
After interviewing friends and family members, investigators could find no evidence to indicate
that Larry Jean Bell and Sherry Smith were known to one another prior to May 31, 1985.
It appeared that Sherry had simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time.
On the afternoon of Shari's disappearance, Bell had been in downtown Lexington, dropping
his mother at a doctor's appointment. He had likely caught sight of Shari as she got
into her car after her France pool party and made the decision to follow her home from
there.
Although Bell had probably been fantasizing about pulling off such a crime for a while, the attack was somewhat opportunistic. When Sharia arrived at her house and got out of her car
to check the mail, Bell likely approached her, brandishing a gun and demanded she get into his car.
Bell likely approached her, brandishing a gun, and demanded she get into his car. Back at the Shepitz house, he answered a call from a friend who worked as a waitress at a local restaurant.
Bell's parents had just arrived for dinner, and she invited Bell to come join them.
Bell said he'd rather stay in and watch the college world series baseball game instead.
At this point, investigators believed Shari was tied to the bed, terrified.
A night of sexual assault likely preceded Shari's eventual murder at 4.58am, the time that
Belle told the Smith family their souls became one.
During the search of Bell's bedroom, officers found a business card for a top-soil company located on Old Percival Road,
directly across from the trailer park where the homeic family lived.
The company belonged to Bell's sister, Diane.
Diane and her husband occasionally hired Belle
to do some work for their business. Investigators theorized that Belle had caught sight of 9-year-old
Debra May Helmick while working for his sister and had targeted her because of her blonde
hair, and the fact should be easy to control.
From the outset of the investigation, criminal profilers believed the serial killer would keep
trophies of his victims.
Despite extensive searches of Bell's home and vehicle, nothing belonging to Shari Smith
or Debra Mayholmeck was found.
But there was no denying Larry Jean Bell's obsession with the two cases.
Not only had he kept the extensive collection of newspaper clippings for Sharon Shepard,
a neighbor recalled that Bell had been eager to bring up Sherry's kidnapping the day after
it happened.
He claimed to be a good friend of the Smith family and had made the odd comment, she's
dead now. The neighbor hadn't thought anything
off at the time, but he did notice one thing. Bell had always sported a full beard. The
day after Shari's kidnapping, he was clean-shaven.
Questions remained regarding the vehicles used in the abductions.
The only car linked to Bell was the great Buick he'd been driving at the time of his arrest.
Two days prior to this, a cranberry-colored Buick regal had been found abandoned in a hotel
car park.
A search revealed it had been reported stolen in April, and the thief had never been apprehended.
But there was no evidence inside to link it to Bell.
Nor could investigators find the silver-colored General Motors vehicle used in the abduction
of Debra May Helmick.
However, when Bell was arrested, officers searched his car and found a license plate in
the trunk that didn't
match those on display.
The witness to Debra Mazibduction recalled the kidnapper's license plate beginning with
the letter D. The plate inside Bell's vehicle, red, DCE, 604. Number 104
News that an arrest had been made in the Smith-Helmic case was met with mixed reactions.
While members of the community breathed the collective sigh of relief that someone had
finally been held accountable, those who knew Belle were in disbelief.
Neighbors and former colleagues struggled to comprehend that the friendly and likable
person they knew could be capable of such crimes.
Many were convinced that police had caught the wrong guy, but investigators had no doubts.
After sorting out some complex jurisdictional issues, Larry Jean Bell was officially charged
with the kidnapping and murder of both Sherry Smith and Debra May Helmick. Both cases would be tried separately. Both carried
the possibility of the death penalty. But there was something else that investigators
needed to get to the bottom of. While Bell was being transported for one of his court hearings, he turned
to one of the accompanying officers. Bell said that he wanted to speak to law enforcement
in Charlotte, a city in the neighboring state of North Carolina, saying,
I want to tell them some things about a missing girl named Sandy. 26-year-old Sandy Cornette was an insurance adjuster and a part-time model who lived in East
Charlotte.
On Sunday, November 18, 1984, Sandy had dinner at home with her fiance, who then left
to spend the night at his own home.
When Sandy failed to shower but worked the next day with no explanation, police went
to her house to conduct a welfare check. The house was empty, but the television was
on. The contents of Sandy's purse had been dumped under her bed, but nothing was missing
besides a single ATM card. And there was no sign of a break-in or a struggle.
Based on clothes missing from her cupboard, it was deduced that Sandy had been wearing
a navy blue velua jogging suit at the time of her disappearance.
Police considered whether she could have been attacked upon returning home from a run,
but those who knew Sandy said she often wore her running clothes when lounging around
the house.
However, they also said she was not the type to ever open the door to a stranger.
This raised the possibility
Had Sandy been abducted by someone she knew.
For days, investigators searched the surrounding areas, but no sign of Sandy Cornette was found.
A trace was put on Sandy's missing ATM card, providing what appeared to be a breakthrough,
when it was revealed that the card had been used several times at a bank in Charlotte
by a man and woman.
These suspects weren't identified, and Sandy's case eventually went cold.
That all changed as Larry Jean Bell unpromptedly began telling the accompanying officer.
On Monday, God is going to reveal to me where Sandy Cornette's body is.
He said her hands would be folded in prayer position, just like with Shari Smith.
An interview was arranged between Belle and authorities in Charlotte, during which he
ranted for 12 hours, saying that he was the most gifted man in the world, and that God
zapped messages down to him.
He claimed everything he knew about Sandy Cornette was revealed to him by God.
Investigators did some digging and realized that at the time of Sandy's disappearance,
Larry Jean Bell lived just four miles from Sandy's home in Charlotte's Mint Hill District.
The two were vaguely known to one another, having met at a party years prior through a former
boyfriend of Sandys who worked with Bell at Eastern Airlines.
Just a few weeks after Sandy vanished, Bell moved away.
The theft element of Sandy's disappearance didn't fit with Bell's ammo, but he was able to give accurate details about the ATM with
the drools that had never been released to the public.
Bell quickly rose to the position of Prime Suspect, but investigators failed to find any
concrete evidence linking him to the crime.
But Sandy Cornette wasn't the only one.
During his 12-hour interview, Bell hinted at having knowledge about two other cases involving
young women.
Although he didn't mention the individuals by name, investigators looked into other unsolved
cases from around Charlotte at the time Bell lived there and found two that matched his
ammo. 21-year-old Denise Portch lived with her husband at an apartment complex in Southwest Charlotte,
where she also worked as the residential manager.
At 8pm on Monday, July 21, 1975, her husband returned home from a day out to find a note
from Denise from earlier, saying she was going to show an apartment to a prospective tenant.
The television and air conditioner were still on.
Denise's purse was inside, and her car was still parked outside.
But there was no sign of Denise herself, nor was there any sign of a struggle.
The years went by without a single trace of Denise surfacing, or
anyone being held accountable for her disappearance. At the time, Larry Jean Bell lived just 300 yards
away. On Thursday, December 18, 1980, the body of 17-year-old Beth Marie Hagen was found dumped in the woods near Mint Hill.
She had been strangled with an electrical cord.
Bell lived just one mile away.
Not only did this put him within the vicinity of both unsolved crimes, but like Shari
Smith and Debra May Helmick, Denise Pch and Beth Hagen were blondes who fit Bell's preferred victim type.
In September 1985, acting on a tip-off, police searched a sand pit at the topsoil company on Old Percival Road owned by Larry Jean Bell's sister and brother-in-law.
Suspissions were raised that the bodies of Sandy Cornette or Denise
Porch could be found there. The search turned up nothing. Not a single piece of evidence was found
linking Bell to either of the three cold cases. By the time Bell's trial for the kidnapping and murder of Sherry Smith commenced in February
1986, public interest in the case hadn't dissipated.
Curious members of the public lined up outside the courthouse of vying for a seat inside,
with two women even breaking into a fight. Bell arrived with a shaved head and a homemade badge pinned to his shirt that read,
I am the victim, I am innocent.
Bell's defense lawyer didn't deny that his client was responsible for Sherry's kidnapping,
but said there was no proof that he was guilty of murder. Either way, the lawyer argued that Belle should be found not guilty due to mental illness.
According to the lawyer, the multiple calls that Belle had made to the Smith family were
proof that he was mentally unstable, delirious, and out of touch with reality.
He asked the jury, how many rational people who had abducted someone and who
may have caused a death would call the family collect so the call could be traced.
The prosecution argued that anyone out of touch with reality would be incapable of tormenting
Sherry's family the way that Bell did. They believed that Bell's mentally unstable behavior was all an act, and that securing
a conviction of not guilty on account of mental illness would be a victory for Bell.
As one psychologist who had spent significant time with Bell testified, he wasn't mentally
ill.
He simply had no conscience and derived sexual pleasure from the pain of
others. The prosecution lawyer asked the jury, the question is simple, whether or not Lary Jean
Bell could follow the law, or whether or not Lary Jean Bell would follow the law. From the outset of the trial, Bell's conduct in court was unpredictable and disruptive.
He often interrupted proceedings by calling out nonsensical comments.
When one psychiatrist testified that he was a sadistic sexual deviant, even though it
was in his defense, Bell turned to the press rose and said,
if you all believe that, Mona Lisa is a man.
In a risky move for the defense, Bell also took the stand.
He wouldn't sit down, saying, there are no chairs at the gates of hell.
He refused to answer even basic questions such as his age,
instead repeatedly saying, silence is golden. At one point he told the press, I'm so confused,
ain't we haven't fun. Later he turned to the jury and said, Food for thought. Gifted, dumb, or a fruitcake. You pick one.
But if the defense hoped that putting Bell on the stand would prove to the jury how irrational
he was, their plan failed. After closing arguments, it took the jury less than an hour to deliver their verdict.
Guilty on both counts.
Outside court, a reporter asked Belle how he felt about the verdict.
He responded,
Silence is golden, my friend.
Belle's sentencing took place two days later.
At one point, he turned to Dawn Smith in court and asked,
''Dawn, will you marry me my singing angel?
Look into my eyes, my holy angel.''
He told the jury,
''From the top of my head to the tips of my feet,
I'm lasting for Dawn Elizabeth Smith.
I'd like to take her hand in holy
matrimony. That's the only thing I'm guilty of.
The prosecution had implored the jury to impose the death penalty, saying, if this isn't
the type of case in which the state should seek the death penalty and expect the death penalty, then there is none.
The jury agreed.
For the kidnapping and murder of Shari Smith, Larry Jean Bell was sentenced to death.
It was over a year before the family of Debra May Helmick finally got their day in court,
and it couldn't come soon enough.
Young Woody Helmick continued to struggle in the wake of his sister's murder.
He was plagued by nightmares caused by witnessing the kidnapping,
and it was constantly terrified that the bad man would come back to get him.
He refused to go anywhere alone.
The Helmix had no doubt that police had caught the right person. As reported by the Columbia
record, when Woody saw Larry Jean Bell in court during the Smith trial, he turned to
his mother and said, he's the man that took Debbie.
The Helmix prepared themselves for Bell's court rheumatics after he once again pleaded
not guilty to Debra May's kidnapping and murder, but they needn't bother.
In contrast to his previous trial, Bell remained silent throughout the proceedings and showed
no emotion. The defense didn't call any witnesses, introduce any new evidence, or put Bell on the stand.
Again, it took the jury just one hour to find Larry Jean Bell guilty on both counts, and
again, he was sentenced to death.
As Bell sat on death row appealing his sentences, police received a tip off from a young man who
claimed his conscience had been eating away at him for years.
According to this informant, in 1984 at the age of 15, he and a friend were hitchhiking
along the Interstate 85 Highway in Cherokee County, Georgia.
Larry Jean Bell picked them up and took them to a location four miles off the highway.
Bell allegedly led them to an abandoned well where he showed the teenagers two dead bodies.
According to the informant, Bell warned,
According to the informant, Bell warned, if you don't do what I say, that's what will happen to you.
Investigators weren't sure what to make of the claim,
but the timeline matched with Sandy Cornette's disappearance,
so they weren't taking any chances.
If Bell was indeed responsible for Sandy's death,
they needed to work fast to secure a conviction before his execution.
Despite eight years passing since this alleged incident, the young man was able to retrace his steps through the rural dirt roads and thick woods of Cherokee County.
He couldn't recall the exact location of the well, but remembered that it was near an old ranch-style farmhouse and a wooden bridge.
Leading a search party of 30 officers, dozens of abandoned wells were located, and through
a process of elimination, investigators honed in on one.
Water was pumped from the well, and a high-tech camera was used to search within, but no human remains were found.
Throughout his time on Death Row, Bell's questionable behaviour continued.
One psychiatrist once found him naked and washing himself with water from the toilet bowl.
He claimed to be the second to Jesus Christ and that he bathed
in his own urine because it was holy water. He told another psychiatrist that there was a bird
in his cell who had been sent to him by God. According to Bell, he could memorize even the most
complex medical textbook in one night.
As the years went on, concerns were raised that Bell would be found incompetent for execution
due to mental illness.
Once he'd exhausted all appeals, a competency hearing was held to determine whether he was
mentally fit.
The judge concluded that Bell was able to control his mental illness and exaggerate his problems
when it benefited him, and therefore was competent for execution.
Sheriff James Matt's told reporters for News 19.
He ruined the families of two beautiful young ladies.
He ruined the community of Lexington and greater Columbia.
Larry Jean Bell deserves to die, and he should have died a long time ago.
Bell was given the option of lethal injection or electric chair. He chose the electric
chair, reasoning that there were similarities between the wood of the chair and the wood
of the crucifix.
The execution was scheduled for Friday, October 4, 1996, just over 11 years after his arrest for
the murders. Sherry Smith's family chose not to attend, but several of Sherry's friends gathered
outside the prison gates holding candles in her memory.
Debra May Helmick's mother told News 19 reporters that she felt she owed it to her daughter to
be there.
While she genuinely believed that Larry Jean Bell was mentally ill, she also believed
he knew right from wrong and wanted to see him punished for the pain he'd caused her
family. Bell gave no last words. If he knew anything about the crimes against Sandy Cornette,
Denise Porch or Beth Hagen, he took that knowledge to the grave.
For the Helmic family, life was never the same after the day that Deborah May was kidnapped.
Her sister Becky, who on the day of the abduction had chosen to drive to work with her mother
instead of staying behind to play with her siblings, continued to carry guilt for not
being there for Deborah May.
In the lead-up to Belle's execution, Becky wrote a statement about the impact of Bell's
crimes, saying that Debra May was a sweet innocent girl who had never been beyond her childhood
years.
Becky explained, she had so many hopes, plans and dreams for the future. They just all shattered right in front of my five-year-old eyes.
The girl's father, Sherwood Helmick, began drinking heavily to escape his overwhelming grief.
He'd spent hours just sitting and staring at photos of Deborah May.
Shortly after he's dored as murder, Sherwood lost his job all together.
He had a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized
where he received a treatment
to overcome his alcohol abuse.
His wife worked part-time in a struggle
to keep up with the bills and to keep food on the table,
but it wasn't enough and the hall mix
eventually lost their home. But the but it wasn't enough, and the hallmicks eventually lost their home.
But the surrounding community wasn't going to let them go down without a fight. Residents
of Lexington and Richland counties rallied together to raise money to help the hallmicks
get back on their feet. A chairperson for the fundraiser committee told the Columbia record,
A chairperson for the fundraiser committee told the Columbia record, Debra May Helmick is not the only victim here. Her family still suffers every day.
They shouldn't have to worry about whether they have a roof over their heads too.
Conditions improved for the Helmicks, but sure wouldn't Debra's marriage didn't survive,
and they divorced in a lead-up to Bell's execution.
Debra May's mother found comfort in her daughter's favorite doll named Scotty, whom she began sleeping
with in the wake of the crime. She told a reporter for the state,
it's not like having her with me, but it's the next best thing.
In Sherry Smith's last will and testament, Sherry had assured her family, some good will
come from this.
The Smith's clung to this sentiment.
For them, that final letter provided more closure than any legal outcomes. Sherry's father Bob continued to serve as chaplain for the Sheriff's Department.
At one point, he accompanied officers when they had the unfortunate task of
notifying another couple that their daughter had been killed.
When the agonized father of the victim realized who Bob was, he threw his arms around him.
Bob tearfully told a reporter for the prison fellowship that the two had an immediate bond,
saying,
God had me there for a reason.
In the years following Shari's murder, her sister Dawn went on to win the Miss South Carolina
Beauty Contest. She became a public figure, spreading
her message about the importance of keeping faith no matter what life throws our way.
Later appearing on the True Crime TV show, I witness, Dawn said,
In her final moments, Sherry didn't choose fear. She chose faith and courage.
Losing Shari made me realize every day
that what I have is a gift God's given me.
And I have a decision.
What am I going to do with it?
I am going to choose faith. you you