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The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana
The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana
The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana
Ebook198 pages3 hours

The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana

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  • Investigation

  • Composite Sketches

  • Crime

  • Murder Investigation

  • Indiana

  • Police Procedural

  • Whodunit

  • Small Town Mystery

  • True Crime

  • Family Tragedy

  • False Confession

  • Unsolved Mystery

  • Small Town Crime

  • Murder Mystery

  • Red Herring

  • Evidence

  • Justice

  • Unsolved Crimes

  • Cold Cases

  • Reward Money

About this ebook

The cold case that put Speedway, Indiana, on the map. “What may be the definitive public accounting of the murder mystery that still resonates today.” —Fox59
 
The evening of November 17, 1978, should have been like any other for the four young crewmembers closing the Burger Chef at 5725 Crawfordsville Road in Speedway, Indiana. After serving customers and locking the doors for the night, the kids began their regular cleanup to ready the restaurant for the following day. But then something went horribly wrong. Just before midnight, someone muscled into the place, robbed the store of $581 and kidnapped the four employees. Over the next two days, investigators searched in vain for the missing crewmembers before their bodies were discovered more than twenty miles away. The killer or killers were never caught. Join Julie Young on an exploration of one of the most baffling cold cases in Indiana history.
 
“Young doesn’t try to solve the murders. Instead, her goal is to make sure no one forgets the victims.” —IndyStar
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 10, 2021
ISBN9781439667262
The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana
Author

Julie Young

Julie Young is an award-winning author with several books to her credit, including A Brief History of Shelby County, Eastside Indianapolis and The CYO in Indianapolis & Central Indiana. She is a correspondent for a number of local, regional and national publications, including Michiana House & Home, Glo and the Indianapolis Star.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I wasn't alive when the Burger Chef murders occurred, but over the years I've heard the murders come up in conversation and having grown up by Chicago; I wasn't all that familiar with what actually happened. Julie Young does an excellent job of setting the scene and not attempting to "solve" the crime four decades later; she's not trying to do a disservice to the police and authorities who toiled over the case, she's merely bringing it to life and trying to make the most comprehensive outline of what is actually known about the gruesome murders. Four young adults and teenagers were abducted from their work and later found murdered. No one has ever been tried or convicted for their deaths. It's dark and fascinating and I'm glad I actually know about this infamous Hoosier quadruple homicide. As a Franklin resident who works in New Whiteland; it was also fascinating to learn about all the Johnson County connections that I didn't know existed in this case. A must read for true crime fans!

Book preview

The Burger Chef Murders in Indiana - Julie Young

Chapter 1

AN EXCEPTIONAL CREW

The evening of November 17, 1978, was just like any other Friday night for the four young crew members closing the Burger Chef Restaurant at 5725 Crawfordsville Road in Speedway, Indiana. After serving up Big Shefs, Funmeals and other signature fare to their customers, the employees locked the doors at 11:00 p.m. and began to clean the store in preparation for the following day. Nothing seemed amiss as Daniel Davis, sixteen, changed out of his brown and orange uniform shirt in the restroom while his assistant manager, Jayne Friedt, twenty, took the cash from the register drawers and placed it in the safe located in the manager’s office.

Jayne’s career with the fast-food franchise began when she was a seventeen-year-old student at Avon High School. She started working for Burger Chef at the 38th Street and Lafayette Road location before transferring to the Speedway store in the spring of 1978. Everyone who encountered the longhaired dimpled young lady known as Sweet Jayne said she was a happy person who was always ready to tell or laugh at a joke.

She had a zany smile that always reminded me of Lily Tomlin because when she smiled, her eyes would crinkle up into these crescent moon shapes, said Lori Shufflebarger, who was a year behind Jayne in high school and frequently ate lunch with her at the same table in the cafeteria.

Jayne was a well-rounded individual who was involved in a number of activities while holding down her part-time job. She was involved with her school’s yearbook staff, concert band, choir, pep club, drama, gymnastics and more. She also served as a teacher’s aide and library assistant—supervisory positions that no doubt helped her succeed in the workplace. And although she took her managerial job seriously, she was a professional who had the ability to get beyond the small stuff in order to get her work done.

Jayne’s professionalism and work ethic did not go unnoticed. Three months after her transfer to the Speedway Burger Chef, she was promoted to assistant manager. It was a validation for the young woman who hoped to rise through the company’s corporate structure but was often overlooked when it came to advancement opportunities.

She fought hard to get her promotion, Jayne’s mother, Carolyn Friedt, said. She always talked about how young boys she trained…received promotions ahead of her. Then management realized what a good worker she was and made her an assistant manager.

Ed Cherne, area manager for Burger Chef, said Jayne more than proved herself on the job. At the age of twenty, she was logging approximately fifty-two hours a week, and when she was at the store, she ran the entire operation. She hired new employees, trained crew members, took inventory, handled money and more. She worked easily with those who were getting used to their first afterschool job as well as seasoned employees who were twice her age.

I can’t really say enough about Jayne, said Cherne. She was always so happy and so darned optimistic. Whenever I’d walk through the restaurant with a frown on my face, she’d say, ‘You’re not smiling today!’ How could someone like that miss?

As Jayne led the others through their nightly procedure, she was unaware that she was in line to receive another promotion—this time to the position of store manager. It was quite a coup to be one of the youngest managers in the company, but she’d earned it. By January, it was possible that Jane would be in charge of her own store, and her current boss couldn’t wait to give her the good news.

Like Jayne, Ruth Ellen Shelton, seventeen, was a poised and professional young lady who was in the fall of her junior year at Northwest High School. When she wasn’t clearing the Works Bar or wiping down Formica tables in the Burger Chef dining room after hours, she was an honor student who took the STEM-related classes that girls in the late 1970s typically shied away from. But Ruth Ellen was far from a typical teenager. That November, she was pursuing a double major in business and math in hopes that her heavy course load would help her get into a good college, where she planned to earn a degree in the emerging field of computer science.

Illustration from a Burger Chef employee hygiene manual depicting nightly cleaning procedures. This literature was distributed to crew members in the 1970s. Author’s private collection.

Classmates said Ruth Ellen was a quiet, studious and creative girl, and when she was not working, hitting the books or engaging in her latest macramé project, she studied voice at Indiana Central University (today the University of Indianapolis) and was active in a variety of youth ministries at the Westside Church of the Nazarene.

She often talked about how much fun she was having with her fellowship group, Ruth Ellen’s mother, Rachel Shelton, said. They were studying the Book of Revelation, and she was really fascinated by that.

Like other girls her age, Ruth Ellen alternately teased and mentored her younger siblings and kept a diary filled with the details of her life. The entry for December 25, 1977, recounted all of the gifts she received but concluded with the realization that she learned how much she loved her mom and dad.

John Shelton said that his daughter was an obedient child at home who always strove to be the best at everything she did. When she recognized a mistake in her computer homework, she insisted on going to school early in order to correct it. She joined the Burger Chef team after a stint at the Dunkin’ Donuts franchise next door but had recently turned in her resignation because she felt she’d taken on more than her fair share of responsibility. Store manager Robert Gilyeat liked Ruth Ellen a lot and didn’t want to see her go. He asked if she might stay on a few more weeks rather than leave the restaurant short-staffed over the holidays, and she agreed.

When Rachel dropped Ruth Ellen off at the store on Friday afternoon, she paused in the parking lot to admire her little girl, who was growing into a beautiful young woman with her whole life in front of her. What a great time to be alive, she thought to herself, putting the car in reverse and pulling away.

Near the back of the store, Mark Flemmonds, sixteen, was cleaning the grill and hanging up his spatulas for the night. The youngest of seven children born to Robert and Blondell Flemmonds, Mark was raised in a devout Jehovah’s Witness household. Although Mark had some trouble adjusting to the rigors of high school and struggled throughout his freshman year, he rallied during the first months of the fall semester and was succeeding as a sophomore. Speedway High School officials were convinced that the friendly boy who took pride in his appearance would make it after all. His father was also encouraged by Mark’s scholastic improvement and allowed him to take a job at the Burger Chef, which was close enough to home that Mark could walk back and forth to work.

Mark enjoyed his position as a short-order cook and readily agreed to switch shifts when his co-worker, seventeen-year-old Ginger Haggard, needed that Friday night off. However, at the last minute, he tried to renege on his agreement, but Gilyeat told Mark that a deal was a deal and that he would be expected to work.

I feel really bad about the whole thing, Haggard said.

Daniel returned from the restroom and got to work bagging up the garbage before taking it out to the dumpster. He was a junior at Decatur Central High School who loved to laugh, tell jokes and have a good time. He was relatively new to the Friday night shift, having been moved to the closing crew after Speedway High School senior Diana Dillon left her position the week before.

Daniel Davis took my place, she said. There’s no question I would have been there. That was my shift.

Daniel had a passion for photography and often developed his pictures at home in his own darkroom. He was also fascinated with aviation and planned to enlist in the U.S. Air Force after high school. Like the other three, he was a model employee who never gave Gilyeat any trouble. In fact, the manager said all three of the students easily worked between twenty and thirty hours each week while maintaining their grades, and they had earned his trust. When he thought about it, he could not remember a time that any of them had been late for their shifts. They were truly an exceptional crew.

Illustration from a Burger Chef employee hygiene manual that was distributed to crew members in the 1970s. By the time of the murders, the employee uniform had changed in terms of color and design. Author’s private collection.

They were kids who were out there trying to take responsibility, Cherne said.

But that night, they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Chapter 2

A ROBBERY GONE WRONG?

Just after midnight on November 18, Brian Kring drove by the Crawfordsville Road Burger Chef on his way home for the night. The seventeen-year-old was an employee of the franchise, but he was not on duty when he pulled into the parking lot and cut his engine. There were no other cars in the parking lot, but he saw that the interior lights were on, indicating that a few of the crew members were still inside the store cleaning. He decided to go in, visit with his friends and help them close the store before heading home to his parents.

Knowing the front doors would be locked, Brian walked to the rear of the building to knock, but to his surprise, he found the door ajar. That’s weird, he thought, entering the restaurant. He called out a greeting, but no one responded. The place was eerily silent as he made his way through the kitchen to the front counter, where he found the cash register drawers lying empty on the tiled floor. Concerned, he went into the manager’s office only to discover that it looked as if it had been ransacked. All of the evidence suggested that the Burger Chef had been robbed, but where were the employees?

Brian’s eyes fell onto a jacket that was crumpled on the floor as if its owner had abandoned it. He recognized it immediately as the jacket he remembered seeing Ruth Ellen Shelton wearing on Friday. Why would she leave it behind on such a chilly November night? Fear crept over his body as he reached for the phone in order to dial 911. He told the dispatcher who answered about the open door, the empty cash drawers and the chaos in the manager’s office. The person on the other end of the line promised to send someone right away and instructed that he should stay put until they arrived. Brian thanked the operator and hung up, but he couldn’t shake the horrible feeling that his co-workers may have been kidnapped.

When the Speedway police arrived, they found few clues. There were two empty currency bags and an empty roll of adhesive tape next to the open safe in the manager’s office, but the safe still contained over $100 in rolled coins. Store manager Robert Gilyeat arrived on the scene and tallied the receipts from the evening. He estimated that nearly $600 in cash was missing from the store in addition to the four employees.

Rear view of a Burger Chef restaurant in Cookville, Tennessee, showing the kind of door Brian Kring would have found ajar when he stopped by the Crawfordsville Road store just after midnight on November 18, 1978. Courtesy of Kyle Brown’s Burger Chef Memories website.

With no signs of a forced entry or struggle, the police wondered if the robbery was an inside job. Maybe the crew went to a nearby under-twenty-one club or out for a joyride on the company’s dime. It wasn’t unheard of for Burger Chef employees to pick up a pizza or donuts to eat as they closed, but to steal money from their employer and go out on the town? That seemed highly unlikely to Gilyeat given the stellar track record of his crew, not to mention the fact that the two girls left their jackets and purses behind. Girls don’t usually leave without those items unless they are forced to. Gilyeat knew his employees to be a responsible group of kids. They would never rob him or leave the restaurant with the lights blazing and the back door standing open. There had to be another explanation.

Diagram of a Burger Chef restaurant floor plan after the company switched from the Open Kite design to the W-II plan in the 1970s. Author’s own work.

Police officers questioned Brian about the open door, and he explained that the door was to remain locked at all times unless one of the crew members was taking the trash to the nearby dumpster. He couldn’t be sure of course, but perhaps when one of the employees opened the back door to remove the trash, someone muscled their way in.

It was a definite possibility. Late-night closings and early-morning openings at area fast-food franchises provided plenty of opportunity for armed robbers in the 1970s, and central Indiana was not immune to the phenomenon. On September 26, 1972, a scar-faced bandit armed with a

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