Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Robison family murders
The Robison family murders, also referred to as the Good Hart murders, were the mass murders of Richard Robison, his wife Shirley Robison, and their four children, Ritchie, Gary, Randy, and Susan. Their killing took place in the late afternoon-early evening of Tuesday, June 25, 1968. The upper-middle-class family from the metropolitan Detroit area of Lathrup Village, Michigan were shot and killed while vacationing in their Lake Michigan cottage just north of Good Hart, Michigan and near the Straits of Mackinac. This case remained unsolved after a 15-month investigation by the Michigan State Police and the Emmet County Sheriff's Office. However, when the investigation was completed in December 1969, evidence pointed to one person, the embezzling employee of Richard Robison, Joseph Raymond Scolaro III.
Crime scene: An initial barrage of five gunshots aimed at Richard Robison was fired through a back cottage window pane by an assailant armed with a .22 caliber ArmaLite semi-automatic rifle. The assailant then burst through the unlocked back screen door of the cabin and began to fire a .25 caliber Beretta automatic pistol killing all of the family members with point blank shots to the head. Susan and Richard Robison were also bludgeoned with a Stanley hammer found at the murder scene. Shirley Robison's body was intentionally posed so when the crime scene was discovered it would lead the police to think that the crime was part of a sexual attack. The bloodied wood floor of the cabin was covered with only one size pair of footprints leading investigators to conclude that one person carried out the attack. The six bodies were locked in the summer cabin for over 27 days before being discovered. The heat of the floor gas furnace, over which three of the bodies had been stacked, and the heat of the July sun caused massive deterioration of the bodies.
Investigation: By the second week of the investigation, which had begun on Monday July 22, 1968, the Michigan State Police and the Emmet County authorities suspected Richard Robison's employee, 30-year-old Joseph R. Scolaro III. He had not been seen or heard from for over twelve hours on the day of the murders, and his alibis for that time period were all proven invalid. He had also purchased both of the murder weapons determined by police forensic tests to have been used in the Robison family murders, specifically, a .25 caliber Jet-Fire automatic Beretta pistol #47836, and a .22 caliber AR-7 ArmaLite semi-automatic rifle #75878. The four .22 caliber spent shells found at the cabin murder scene were forensically compared by their ballistic markings to several .22 caliber evidence shells known to have been fired by Scolaro at a family firing range in 1967 at which time Scolaro used his missing .22 caliber ArmaLite rifle #75878. The two sets of shells were found to be an exact match. Although Scolaro claimed to have given this weapon away, a neighbor had told police he had seen the .22 caliber AR-7 rifle in Scolaro's house not long before the Robison's were killed. Scolaro's missing .25 caliber Beretta automatic pistol #47836, which he also claimed to police to have given away prior to the June 25, 1968 murders, was matched forensically in similar class characteristics to a second identical .25 caliber Beretta pistol #47910 that he produced for police on the second day after the bodies were found in Good Hart. Both guns had been purchased by Scolaro on the same day, February 2, 1968. Also found at the murder scene were several SAKO .25 caliber spent cartridges, a rare 1968 Finnish brand sold only for the limited time of a few weeks in Michigan (January–February, 1968) prior to the murders. It was documented by investigators that one of the actual few SAKO ammunition purchasers in Michigan had been Joseph Scolaro III - February 2, 1968. Scolaro's two alibis that he had given away both of the missing murder weapons and the SAKO ammunition prior to the June 25, 1968 killings were also proven invalid. They were one more part of his elaborate scheme to obstruct the investigation of the crime. During the lengthy murder investigation it was determined by a forensic accountant that over $60,000 dollars was missing from the two combined businesses of Richard Robison. The two Robison businesses had been left in the care of the suspect Scolaro prior to the murders. The two investigating police agencies involved in the case presented their combined Evidence Case Report CR 4114-08-785-66 to the jurisdictional prosecution on December 17, 1969. The detailed report implicated Joseph Scolaro as the sole perpetrator of the mass murder crime. In mid-January 1970, Emmet County prosecutor Donald C. Noggle decided not to bring charges against Scolaro at that time citing the lack of the two missing murder weapons and /or the lack of fingerprints of the suspect at the crime scene.
Outcome: During the course of the investigation, the suspect Scolaro failed two lie detector tests and was judged inconclusive as to the truth in a third test. He was also noted as trying to deceive the polygraph interviewers in his pre-test interviews. Four years later, a newly elected chief prosecutor in Oakland County, L. Brooks Patterson, believed the Robison crime had originated within his jurisdiction and reopened the prosecution. When the prime suspect Scolaro learned of the impending charges and arrest, he committed suicide on March 8, 1973. Scolaro left behind a typewritten note on which he said--'I am a lier (sic-liar)--a cheat—a phony', plus a list of people he had swindled in multiple business schemes. He then added a handwritten note to his mother on the same sheet of paper saying, 'I had nothing to do with the Robisons—I'm a liar but not a murderer-I'm sick and scared-God and everyone please forgive me'. Since Michigan law does not permit an open murder case to be officially closed, the suicide of the prime suspect Scolaro left the case placed in the 'inactive file' and thus many questions unanswered. Over many years other crime theories have surfaced; however, to date, none have ever been substantiated. Those who personally knew Mr. Robison were quoted in the two police reports filed on the case as saying they had never known a better family man, friend and/or business partner. In their minds the case was and is closed.
Recent developments: In February 2010, Aldred 'Al' Koski of Royal Oak, Michigan died after dedicating over 40 years of his life to the Robison family murder case. Koski was a veteran Detroit newspaper and radio reporter who had been compiling information for a non-fictional Robison murder case book during those 40-plus years after the killings. His tentative title was SIX + ONE. Many pieces of his work were given to the Emmet County Sheriff's office in 2004.
Labels:
criminal justice
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