Marked for Death Read online




  Marked for Death

  Brian J. Karem

  For, Pam, Zachary, Brennan, Wyatt, and the family.

  With a special thank-you to Dr. Michael Slack,

  who helped save Wyatt’s life.

  Contents

  Author’s Note

  Introduction

  1. You Bitches Will Never Get Away with This

  2. Small Town

  3. A Real Sharp Chick

  4. Think Ink!

  5. It’s Hard to Handle This Fortune and Fame

  6. Sarah Smiles

  7. Don’t Talk About It

  8. A Germ of an Idea

  9. Killing Him Softly

  10. In the Cooler

  11. Hungry Mouths Talk

  12. So What’s in the Trunk?

  13. The Bitch Is Following Me Again

  14. Where’s My Dad?

  15. She Looked Good in a Jaguar

  16. I’m the One You’re Looking For

  17. Don’t Kill My Dog!

  18. I Know This Was Right

  19. Like Summer Camp

  20. An Infested Wound

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Author’s Note

  For many years Laren Sims adopted a variety of personalities. The most common was Elizabeth Barasch, a name she stole from a fellow inmate in prison. She shortened the name to Elisa and married twice under that name. There were dozens of other aliases, but in telling this story it would become very confusing to use them all interchangeably. I have instead opted to use the name “Laren” to describe her in her early life before she went on the road and on the run. I have used “Elisa” to cover the time when she was on the run and living in Las Vegas and later in the Sacramento area. Finally, I returned to calling her “Laren” when she was captured and back in jail in Florida.

  I hope this cuts down on the confusion for the reader.

  Introduction

  Regarding many of the events that occurred in this book, there remains no effective way of determining the veracity of certain factual claims. Laren Sims was a parasitic chameleon who lied with an ease that many who investigated her had never seen before.

  She was a real-life Zelig with dark overtones; a con artist who eluded the law successfully for a decade and managed to persuade two intelligent and respectable men into marrying her even after she got caught red-handed stealing money from both of them.

  She was described as breathtakingly beautiful, while others didn’t think she was much to look at. However, everyone who knew her said she was conniving, clever, intelligent, and able to con anyone. In the end, her greatest con job may have been on herself.

  As the final events of her life unfolded, her third husband, Larry McNabney, was dead. She had confessed to his murder, and then took her own life in a jail cell not fifteen minutes from where she lived as a girl. The only other person to witness most of the events prior to and including Larry’s poisoning on September 10, 2001, was Sarah Dutra, Laren’s secretary.

  A younger, apparently more lethal version of Laren Sims, according to her prosecutors, and as stunning, Sarah is currently serving more than eleven years behind bars for her participation in Larry’s death.

  Any claims she makes of a factual nature are even more suspect than Laren’s. So again we must conclude that all claims of fact are not as they seem. There are, however, certain undisputed facts. Larry McNabney is dead. Laren Sims is dead. Sarah Dutra is in jail. The only survivor of those turbulent times is Laren’s daughter, Haylei Jordan, who made a fresh start in Florida.

  With that said, there are some logical conclusions we can draw about what happened. Laren Sims’s latest host, who had been her husband, divorced her and wanted her out of his life. She needed someplace to land, and Larry McNabney was a man with some local celebrity and, more important for Laren, money. Perhaps she went looking specifically for Larry. It would be within her character. Then again, there is no way of knowing if their meeting was anything more than a random twist of fate.

  But the facts clearly show that once Laren found Larry, she sank her teeth into him and didn’t let him go until he was dead.

  She used a variety of tools to control people, and those tools enabled her to take advantage of him. Nothing Laren Sims did from the time she fled Florida had the ring of honesty to it. Everything she said and did had an ulterior motive to it. She was a talker, and she had sizable female attributes. She also didn’t hesitate to use everyone around her, even her daughter, in a bid to get what she wanted. Her narcissism knew no bounds.

  Eventually, using and shedding aliases with the ease and frequency of a master magician, Laren would work her way back to Florida from California while the police were engaged in a nationwide hunt for her. Part of it was fear, no doubt. But she didn’t run for the border, and she never tried to flee the country when it was well within her ability to do so.

  Controlling events to the last, she headed home, perhaps for the sake of her daughter. And maybe she wanted to run home to Mom and Dad too, that in the end her family was all Laren ever wanted, recognizing the value of her upbringing when it was too late.

  Prosecutors and police, among others, believed that Laren had an ulterior motive in mind even then. It remains a possibility, but in any case, in the end Laren was stripped to the bone. She was spent. Stripped of all pretense, of all luxury, she was reduced to living in homeless shelters and upon the kindness of strangers. And by then she had nothing more in mind than to get her child to safety. Or at least I choose to believe so. Again, with so many conflicting stories spun about Laren Sims, it’s hard know what the truth was. Maybe she went home to get a rest, dump her daughter off, and then flee again.

  Even the honorable Bernard J. Garber, of the Superior Court of the State of California in San Joaquin County, thought it was problematic, at best, to discover the truth behind any of Laren’s actions. He viewed a videotaped confession after she was arrested in Florida, but didn’t allow it to be introduced as evidence in the state’s case against Sarah Dutra. His decision was based on the fact that it was hearsay evidence, and because of Laren’s lack of credibility. “You talk about a life being a lie,” he said, “that was Elisa McNabney.” Judge Garber was referring to one of Laren’s many aliases.

  He viewed the tape and found that some facts checked out, but when it came to the actual events of the murder, “where [Laren] directly implicates the defendant [Sarah Dutra] in the actual killing of the victim, I have wondered and wondered was that true. And my answer is: I don’t know.”

  His most damning judgment was equally harsh: “They say that a dying declaration is admissible because most people aren’t willing to meet their maker with a lie upon their lips. I don’t think that would apply to Elisa McNabney.”

  So if I fall victim to believing one of Laren’s lies, I will not be the first, and probably not the last. But I’d like to think that with all she did, she had one decent act in her. I want to believe she ultimately gave up and turned herself in while trying to get her daughter to safety.

  I hope for her daughter’s sake Haylei believes that too.

  You Bitches Will Never Get Away with This

  September 10, 2001

  Larry McNabney knew he was being murdered for close to the last twenty-four hours of his life, and as those hideous and horrendous final scenes played out, he also knew the torture of being unable to do anything about it.

  Compounding his agony, both physical and mental, was the fact that he knew that not only was he dying, but that his own wife was killing him. Elisa, a beautiful woman almost eighteen years his junior, had slowly and proficiently poisoned him.

  She had help, and Larry knew who that was too—his own secreta
ry, Sarah, a woman he had never liked. The two women coldly laughed at his futile struggles to save himself and made fun of him as they watched his life slowly but surely ebb from his lethargic body.

  They had all traveled to Industry City, California, outside of Los Angeles, a place that accurately conjures up in the imagination a rustic yet dusty blue-collar town. Larry had gone there with his wife, his secretary, and his beloved quarter horses for a horse show that week. He loved the time he spent on the road with horses Skye Blue Summer, Ima Town Celebrity, and the award-winning two-year-old Justa Lotta Page. His growing infatuation with his quarter horses not only made him beloved on the circuit and a minor celebrity, but he was becoming an owner of champions of the breed. Larry and his horse trainer and good friend Greg Whalen were so proud of what they’d accomplished they’d recently discussed trying to win the world title. It was the latest turn in the life of a person who was described by his former partner as a “magic man.”

  Larry McNabney had overcome adversity all his life. He’d battled his own personal demons, which came with the death of his father and older brother. He’d defeated bouts of depression and alcoholism to become a well-known, well-heeled lawyer who wined and dined with the rich and the powerful and became one of them. Yet, even as a member of the elite, he did not become an elitist. He counted people from all walks of life as friends, among them judges, politicians, police, bartenders, clients, and other lawyers.

  But in the end the trappings of the good life and the accolades he earned could offer him no help when he needed it most.

  He sat in a heap in the backseat of his own red pickup truck and glanced over to see his wife, Elisa, talking to his secretary Sarah as she drove away from Industry City to points unknown. It was the ultimate humiliation. He was an inanimate object sitting there. He tried to speak but could only slur the words. He tried to move, but could only flail about uncontrollably. The horse tranquilizer his wife and secretary had been feeding him from a Visine bottle, one drop at a time, was sapping him of his strength, energy, coordination, and ability to fight back. The only thing left was his will to live. As he looked around, he let out a gasp and a moan. Perhaps he saw the new shovels in the back of the pickup, a chilling indication of what the two women had in mind for him.

  “Can you imagine the torture Larry felt at that point?” his ex-wife JoDee Bebout later said. “He was a vivacious man, and he was reduced to moaning for help while the people who supposedly cared for him the most laughed about killing him.”

  Larry’s wife and secretary had begun hatching their plan before the trip to Industry City. Later there would be speculation that they had already begun to slowly poison him, weeks, even months, before they finally gave him the fatal dose. In any case, once Larry and Elisa were there for the horse show, the final curtain came down. Sarah drove down from the Sacramento law office on September 10 and joined Elisa. Together, while Larry dozed in his modest hotel room—in a typical middle-priced room with beige and tan window and wall dressings—they stood over his sleeping body and in a nonchalant, almost cavalier fashion talked about killing him.

  “We said that nobody would miss him because everybody hated him, and we said if we kill him, nobody’s gonna miss him…” his wife would tell later police.

  Sarah, the secretary who had convinced Elisa that Larry was evil incarnate, talked about smothering him with his pillow while he slept. But the women thought he might wake up and overpower them. They also rejected using a gun. It was too messy—and not very ladylike. Elisa would tell police that she didn’t like the brutality of a gun, so they settled on slipping him the horse tranquilizer. It seemed a peaceful, easy way to kill someone.

  “We went down to my trainer’s truck, and I got the medicine bag out, and I got the tranquilizer out of it, and I got a syringe, and I went back over to my truck and said I don’t know how we’re gonna do it to him,” she said.

  But the crafty, inventive secretary had a keen idea. “Sarah said put it in the Visine bottle,” Elisa explained.

  So, as Larry slept, they squirted three drops of highly potent horse tranquilizer into his mouth. Elisa said she “freaked out” as the liquid came out slower than she expected. “I was squeezing and I thought it’s not coming out, it’s not coming out, and I saw a drop go and a drop go…” Eventually the strain was too much for her, and she handed the bottle to Sarah who, Elisa says, calmly administered a few drops more.

  Then they decided to watch their handiwork. For a while they were almost convinced Larry was dead, but he wasn’t. Although Sarah and Elisa tell different stories, they both agreed that they initially failed to kill Larry; they only doped him so strongly that he resembled a zombie. Elisa said he begged to die, and then, she claims, he got violent and began to threaten her. In her confession, she seemed to use this as justification for killing him. Though it seems illogical to think that someone could go from being a zombie to being violent, Elisa also neglected to mention that if indeed he became violent, it was probably because he was scared and desperately clinging to life. To Elisa and Sarah, Larry’s violence was just another indication of “what an asshole he was.”

  Much later, when she was facing the possibility of life behind bars, Sarah told a different story, pinning the responsibility for everything on Elisa, saying she was in fear of her own life from Elisa McNabney. Neither story fits the facts, nor explains some key events that happened that week.

  Those people who knew Larry and saw him at the horse show said he hadn’t been himself the entire time he was there. Adding fuel to the speculation that the two women had been slowly poisoning him for some time, some of his friends and acquaintances say that in fact Larry hadn’t been himself for weeks before the horse show. All independent witnesses agree that on Sunday, September 9, 2001, Larry was drinking heavily at dinner. He had successfully battled alcoholism for years, so his friends were distressed to see him so obviously and staggeringly drunk. They concluded that something must’ve been wrong.

  Indeed, he may have already been poisoned by the time he got to Industry City and checked into his hotel, slowly poisoned, as the prosecutors suspected, for days or weeks prior to the day he died. The poison may have been slipped into a drink or administered by drops in his mouth as he slept in his hotel room, as his wife later said, but whatever the truth might have been, Larry seemed more and more lethargic, and those who saw him on September 10 said he appeared disheveled and disoriented.

  When he awoke in his hotel room after being poisoned, Elisa said that he began to moan and gasp, saying, “I’m dying. I’m dying.”

  But apparently he wasn’t dying fast enough for Elisa or Sarah, because they administered more horse tranquilizer even after he woke up. They gave him drop after drop on into the night. The next morning, September 11, 2001, as they watched the World Trade Center buildings topple in New York City, they decided to get Larry out of the hotel.

  But in his state of lethargy, Larry was difficult to move. He was a tall man, trim from years of physical activity, but solidly built, and the two women, slim and not particularly athletic, needed help. So Sarah, under Elisa’s guidance, rented a wheelchair and brought it up to the hotel room.

  In a bold and audacious move, the women plopped Larry—who was in no condition to argue—into the wheelchair and rolled him downstairs to the pickup truck. Their trek took them out of the hotel room, down the hall, into the elevators, and out the front door. If anyone asked, the women were perfectly willing to say that Larry was drunk and had fallen off the wagon again. No one stopped them, and they managed to get him into the truck.

  Then they took off.

  They must have been quite a sight to see. The driver, Sarah, in her early twenties, was a young, vivacious blonde who had more than a passing resemblance to the actress Jennifer Aniston. Sarah’s best friend and confidante, Elisa was in her mid-thirties, a gorgeous brunette, at the time, who it seemed could change her hair color and hair length at will. Some said she changed her looks like others c
hanged their underwear. A tall, leggy woman with large breasts, she dressed professionally and always looked well put together. “She had a sassy flair with a lot of class,” one of her husband’s law clients said.

  In the back of the truck, groggy, frumpy, and dressed in anything but the manner of a well-known, well-groomed lawyer, was Larry.

  They drove for hours, making their way toward Yosemite National Park. On the drive north they continued to administer the horse tranquilizer to Larry until Elisa saw some “white stuff” on the edge of his mouth. They stopped for gas at one point and switched drivers. Elisa remembered Sarah trying to hold Larry in the backseat and then finally hanging him on the truck’s clothes hook as he desperately fought to get into the front seat and gain control of the pickup.

  Elisa said Larry was struggling because he hated Sarah, but prosecutors would say it was something much more personal, that in all likelihood he was fighting for his life, and losing to two very conniving, beautiful, and ultimately lethal women.

  When they got to Yosemite, a park Sarah had visited many times as a child, she pulled off the main road and found a wooded area far from the beaten path. No one else was around, and the quiet forest with its tall trees and leafy, soft soil provided the perfect cover for what the two women had in mind. Elisa later told police that Sarah got out of the truck, grabbed one of the shovels, and had started to dig a hole near the pickup truck, when she stopped her. Larry, hanging on the clothes hook in the truck, was still alive and still struggling.