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Article Title:
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In Broad Daylight? Getting The Story

Article Description:
====================

Ken McElroy was shot to death on the main street of Skidmore,
Missouri, on the morning of July 10, 1981. He was sitting in his
pickup, his wife at his side, when two gunmen across the street
opened fire. Forty-five men witnessed the killing.  After three
grand jury investigations, including a federal probe in Kansas
City, no indictments were issued. Twenty-five years later, still
no one has been charged.


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844 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-02-06 10:48:00

Written By:     Harry N. MacLean
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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In Broad Daylight? Getting The Story
Copyright (c) 2007 Harry N. MacLean
In Broad Daylight
http://www.inbroaddaylightbook.com



Ken McElroy was shot to death on the main street of Skidmore,
Missouri, on the morning of July 10, 1981. He was sitting in his
pickup, his wife at his side, when two gunmen across the street
opened fire. Forty-five men witnessed the killing.  After three
grand jury investigations, including a federal probe in Kansas
City, no indictments were issued. Twenty-five years later, still
no one has been charged. McElroy was the "town bully," who had
terrorized all of northwest Missouri for twenty-five years. The
consensus in the community was that since the law couldn't
handle McElroy, there was little choice but to take care of it
themselves.

The story of Ken McElroy's reign of terror, his killing, and the
ensuing silence was the subject of my first book, In Broad
Daylight. (The book won an Edgar Award and was made into a
movie.) I am often asked how I managed to get the story, to
convince the townspeople to open up, when there were killers
still in their midst and the locals were so determined not to
give them up. After all, Rolling Stone and Playboy did stories,
and they were for the most part shallow, sensationalist pieces.
Sixty Minutes got on it early, but the story was not in depth.
Another book was written, and it was so bad that it passed
largely unnoticed. The people didn't trust outsiders, and I was
an outsider.

One thing that helped was that I was from a small town in north
central Nebraska, and I mentioned that whenever I got a chance.
Another was that I assured the locals that I wasn't out to solve
the crime; I had no intention of naming the killers in the book.
Which was true; the first time around I really wasn't that
interested in establishing the identity of the killers. In fact,
there never seemed much debate as to who were on the guns. From
the day I arrived, I heard the same two or three names.

Another key thing was the amount of time I spent in the town.
Most media types blew in, dug around for a week or two, and then
split for New Jersey or LA, or wherever they were from. I was
there off and on for five years. People got used to seeing me
around. It's hard to shut the door in someone's face when
you've talked weather or bean prices with him at the coffee shop
or sang hymns next to him in church. The people began to take me
seriously.

I also had a lot of conversations with the locals in which
McElroy's name never came up. If I were at a tractor pull or a
bake sale, I would get into the flow of the event and never
mention the killing. Sometimes the locals were the first to
mention it. At a dog show at a small town east of Skidmore, a
fellow came up to me and whispered that over by the edge of the
water was McElroy's wife's father, whom I had never met. Others
became interested in the book and provided what assistance they
could, albeit often scrumptiously.

The real break came, however, when I was adopted by the Goslees,
a successful and highly respected local farm family. A common
technique of anthropologists studying foreign cultures is to try
to connect with one of the leaders of the community. If the
chief, or one of the deputies, accepted you, others were suddenly
a lot more willing to talk to you. There were four Goslee sons in
the area, and they all had separate groups of friends, and they
all introduced me to them with a stamp of approval. By the way, I
did a lot of work in the bars; booze does loosen people's
tongue. The only problem was, I had to get loaded right along
with them.  Try typing up your notes at 2 a.m., after a long
night of beer and shots at the local tavern.

By the time I left, I felt more a member of the community of
Skidmore than I did my own town of Denver. I go back often to see
friends and acquaintances. If there was one lesson I learned, and
would pass on, it's that most people don't like being rude to
others. It was up to me to find a way that allowed them to be
nice to me. By the time I left that little town I was selling
tickets to the Mother's Day bizarre and judging dance contests
at the annual Punkin' Show. It was a long way from when from
when I first showed up and doors were slammed in my face and
curses muttered behind my back.

I listened and took notes and came back a month later and asked
more questions, and came back six months later and asked more
questions. Patience and persistence were the key. That and the
realization that nobody in this world believes that they're
listened to enough. People know when you're really listening to
them, and I listened.




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MacLean is the author of "In Broad Daylight", which 
tells the story of the unsolved killing of the 
bully in Skidmore Missouri. Learn more at: http://www.inbroaddaylightbook.com




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