News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon

Hearing digs up Camp Sherman murder case

An echo of a strange and terrible tale reverberated from Oregon State Penitentiary this week.

Roger Dale Beck was to go before a murder review hearing on Wednesday, June 17, to determine the likelihood that he can be rehabilitated at some point, which could potentially alter the life sentence he currently serves for the murder of a woman in Camp Sherman in 1978.

Kaye Jean Turner, 35, left her rental cabin in Camp Sherman for an hour's run on the morning of December 24, 1978. She never returned. Her remains were found the next year, but it wasn't until 1993 that the State of Oregon was able to obtain murder convictions against Beck and John Arthur Ackroyd in separate trials in Jefferson County.

The late Leslie Brown covered the case for The Nugget. In the November 24, 1993 edition, she reported that Beck was "found guilty of two counts of aggravated murder and three counts of felony murder for the 1978 slaying of Kaye Jean Turner near Camp Sherman. The jury deliberated for five-and-a-half hours before reaching its verdict."

Turner worked as a social services manager in Eugene and was staying at Lake Creek Lodge with her husband Noel and a group of friends for the Christmas holidays. An avid runner, she set out for her morning run of about eight miles and was never seen alive again.

Ackroyd, who worked with Beck at Santiam Junction for the highway department, acknowledged that he had seen Turner out running that day. In a macabre twist, in August of 1979 he led searchers to an area where he claimed to have found human remains while walking his dog. Searchers brought into the area found articles of clothing, hair, bones and a Timex watch.

Despite strong suspicions, it was difficult for investigators to build a trial-worthy case against Ackroyd and his suspected accomplice, Roger Dale Beck.

Ackroyd's alibi was a claim to have been in the area poaching with his friend and co-worker Beck on December 24, 1978. Police interviewed both men and others close to the case repeatedly but were not able to make an immediate arrest.

The Turner case heated up again when Ackroyd came under suspicion in the disappearance of his stepdaughter, 13-year-old Rachanda Pickle in 1990. Rachanda was presumed to have been killed, but despite an extensive search in the area of Hoodoo, Potato Hill and Lost Lake, no body was ever found.

But circumstances had changed for the Turner case, and with new witness testimony in hand, police made an arrest.

Ackroyd was speedily found guilty by jury in October of 1993. Beck's trial followed in November 1993.

Key testimony came from Beck's former wife -who had been Ackroyd's high school sweetheart and divorced Beck in 1985.

Brown reported that in the Beck trial, "Pam Beck Ramirez of La Pine sat in the witness chair a few yards from her ex-husband and said Roger Beck had threatened her with the same fate Kaye Jean Turner met in 1978, unless she lied for him... It was fear of Beck that motivated her to lie to police several times in the early years of the Turner investigation, Ramirez declared."

Ramirez's testimony implicated both Beck and Ackroyd in the Turner murder, and she testified that Beck had bragged about the killing several times, especially when drunk.

Both men are in their mid-60s now, and are serving their life sentences at Oregon State Penitentiary.

In another twist in a case full of strange turns, Linn County sheriff's detectives arrested Ackroyd in 2013 for the murder of Rachanda Pickle. No information has been released as to what, exactly, led to the arrest 23 years after Rachanda's disappearance.

According to the Eugene Register Guard, "recent "advances in technology' that were not available in 1990 allowed detectives to gain the information that led to Ackroyd being charged with murdering Pickle."

No trial date has been set for Ackroyd in that case.

The results of Beck's murder review hearing will be released at a later date.

 

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