Search team fails to find teen's body in Moorpark
Article from: Pasadena Star-News Article date: October 10, 2008 Author: Brandon Lowrey; Janette Williams More results for: Roger Dale Madison
MOORPARK - After five days of digging, authorities Friday called off the search for the remains of 16-year-old Roger Dale Madison.
Officials said his bones will rest beneath a Ventura County freeway, where Sylmar serial killer Mack Ray Edwards secretly buried Madison 40 years ago.
Roger's little sister, Sharon Barlow, now gray and in her 50s, laid a bouquet of red roses by the edge of the open pit alongside the freeway and cried as police and digging crews, helmets at their sides, bowed their heads.
It is the closest thing to a burial ceremony her big brother will have.
For Los Angeles police Detective Vivian Flores, who has spent three years trying to find the bodies of Edwards' young victims, it was hard to call off the search.
"It's been a long journey for me, too. I worked hard," Flores said, her voice cracking and tears flooding her eyes. "I couldn't sleep at night if I didn't try. If this was your child, you would want me to do the same thing. And I would."
Pasadena author Weston DeWalt's researched the child victims of Edwards and helped authorities pinpoint the area where the killer told police he'd dumped Madison's body.
DeWalt said the cadaver dogs continued to "hit" on the site, but the digging was called off, for safety reasons, when it got too close to the freeway. Authorities believe Madison was buried at ground level and then covered under about 20 feet of fill rock brought in for the freeway's construction.
After the excavation reached ground level, DeWalt said, the cadaver dogs were still "hitting" on the area.
"But there was no sign of Roger," he said. "The theory is that he may very likely be buried under the freeway, and as his body decomposed, that decomposition was carried by old tree roots into the area where the dogs were hitting."
It wasn't safe to dig any any further toward the freeway, he said.
"It was a pretty sad time for everybody, but his sister was extremely grateful and shook hands with everyone. It was a very emotional experience."
About 75 people took part in the dig, DeWalt said, and the excavation reached down as far as 22 feet, covering an area of 55- feet-by-40 feet.
Edwards, who had been a construction worker, told police decades ago that the spot where he buried Madison had been paved over.
The serial killer was the friendly and straight-laced son of an Arkansas policeman. He learned to operate heavy machinery in the Army. In 1954, he settled in Sylmar and joined a private construction company that often did work for Caltrans.
Edwards naturally charmed children and had long known the Madison family. He even taught Roger Madison to drive.
In 1968, he took the boy into a Sylmar orange grove and invited him to play a game for money. As part of the game, Edwards tied up the trusting youth, then stabbed the helpless boy to death.
He picked up Roger's body the next day and buried him at an active construction site where he was working in Moorpark.
"It was so hard," said Barlow, who was 11 when Edwards murdered her brother. "My dad felt guilty. ... It was never the same."
Edwards later admitted to six murders in the 1950s and '60s, including Madison's, and told police the killings were sexually motivated. He later told a jailer the number of victims was closer to 20.
In 1972, Edwards hanged himself with a television cord on Death Row.
After Madison's slaying, the Madisons picked up and went to Arkansas and continued to move around at least once a year, Barlow said.
And when she recently got the call that police were preparing to dig for her brother, she was overcome with excitement.
"I know he's there and I understand why they can't dig any further," she said, adding she would consider the site, alongside the southbound offramp at Tierra Rejada Road, a makeshift grave for her brother.
Flores said her biggest advancements on the case came from her work with DeWalt, who was chronicling another family's struggle with a son's unsolved disappearance 50 years ago.
The missing boy, 8-year-old Tommy Bowman, turned out to be another of Edward's victims, according to one of the murderer's prison letters DeWalt discovered in the course of his research.
Over the next couple of days, crews will push the dirt back into the hole. Though Madison's remains were not found, Flores said the dig was far from a failure.
"We set up protocols to move forward in finding clandestine graves," she said.
She added that though she is finished with Edwards' cold cases, other detectives will be looking into three more places where they believe he buried other children.
brandon.lowrey@dailynews.com
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