Damon “Chub” Anderson has died

2008 Photo of Chub
Damon 'Chub' Anderson, 2008

I am sorry to report that my collaborator of the past five years, Chub Anderson, died today, November 24, 2010, at 6PM. He had recently stopped his dialysis treatments and signed a “do not resuscitate” order. In his sixty-nine years Chub had packed in enough adventures, and misadventures, for several lifetimes.

Chub Anderson and Sheriff Wayman, 2009, Part 3

Part Three of a Serious Dialogue…

This video was made as Chub and the former Sheriff were aging and battling health problems. They were both facing the possible end of the road in their lives and the tone of their conversation reflects that. The feeling throughout their meeting was very respectful, without any anger or recrimination towards one another.  They were able to thoughtfully discuss many details about the Mullendore murder, including some false leads such as the much discussed bone chip that some claim had landed on Chub’s hat.

Check out the most recent installment in my profile of the Sheriff which gives you a greater understanding of the character of this man who has been haunted by the two crimes he could never solve.

Then keep your eyes peeled for a new posting next week from my travels under Down The Road as I take a side trip to Branson, MO to check out this year’s Christmas events.This is one of my favorite places to visit and I am sure that many of you are already familiar with it. If you haven’t been there the holiday season is one of the best times to go.

Chub Anderson and Sheriff Wayman, 2009, Part 2

The Conversation between Chub and Sheriff Wayman Continues…

In the first segment of the recorded conversation between former Osage County sheriff George Wayman and Chub Anderson, the sheriff refers to a “deal” which had been offered to Chub shortly after the murder by J.D. Slinkard who was an investigator for Osage County at the time. Slinkard’s typed document sits in the murder case file at the sheriff’s department, the paper yellowing with time, still waiting for Chub’s signature.

As the author of Footprints in the Dew I have tried hard over the last five years not to become a character in this story but as you will see this week I’m put right in the middle of it all by Sheriff Wayman.

Continue reading

Lansing Prison Visit, Part 2

Continued from Lansing Prison Visit, Part 1

Click the image to see the full-sized original article

Welcome back to Part II of “Buffalo Dale Behind The Walls…”. Before we get to “D” block I want to remind you that my paperwork hasn’t been processed yet and there’s a few more hoops to jump through before I get my second interview with Mr. Anderson. Also at this point in time I had not read “In Cold Blood” or seen the new movie about Truman Capote and these things will have some meaning as we continue our tour.

Continue reading

Breaking News

Welcome back. With each week I’m learning more about the workings of this website. Thanks for your patience and all of your kind comments. Right now I’m working on a press release regarding the lifting of a Multicounty Grand Jury gag order that was imposed on me last January. With the help of several talented friends, I am positioning the press release to be sent out nationwide in a week or so. The distribution of the press release will coincide with the posting of the first installment of a series of film clips of a meeting between retired Osage County Sheriff George Wayman and Chub Anderson.

George was the Sheriff at the time of E.C. Mullendore’s murder and had interviewed Chub right after the murder. Then Chub hired attorney Pat Williams to represent him and refused all further interviews. Williams was the law partner of soon to be Oklahoma governor David Hall.

The film was shot at Chub’s apartment in March 2009 and this was only the second meeting between Wayman and Chub since 1970. There were four people present, Chub, George, Osage County Detective Bart Perrier and myself.  George had asked me to arrange the meeting and he and Chub both agreed to let me film it. I could have sold tickets!

While you’re waiting to see this fascinating conversation between the old lawman and the elusive Anderson, watch for part 2. of my series on Lansing Prison which will be posted this week.

Lansing Prison Visit, Part 1

Welcome, its week 4 for this new blog site and I’m just getting the feel of the thing. I could start with the Grand Jury and how that ended up or the role of a private investigator who the Wall Street Journal called “the best in the west.” Or I could start with the numerous lawyers, both past and present, who have been involved with the case not to mention the nationally known TV personality who is still trying to get the story and the law enforcement officers who want to put a close to the case. I could also start with Chub’s four wives and his numerous girlfriends. But maybe I should just start at the beginning at Lansing Prison.

The location is in front of the same cell which housed Richard Hickock before he and Perry Smith were hung for murdering the Clutter family in Kansas. Its twelve o’clock and I am standing in maximum security with Warden Assistant Brett Peterson as the cell doors open and out walks inmate #86529, Damon Chub Anderson.

Click the image to see the full-sized original article

Thanks for taking another ride with me down the trails I travel and for all the kind comments you have sent. I am encouraged onward by your words. This week will be the start of a four-week adventure that will take you behind the walls of the oldest penitentiary in the Kansas/Oklahoma territory — dating back to the days when Oklahoma sent their inmates to Kansas to be imprisoned.

You’ll be with notorious inmates Richard Hickock and Perry Smith and hear how Truman Capote moved around freely behind the prison walls. You’ll also learn how life is for Chub Anderson and his strange crossing of fate with Hickock and Smith. You’ll visit the old prison cemetery which Walter Cronkite comes to every year and learn why and meet a Supreme Court Justice along the way. We’ll go on location to what was the largest cultivated marijuana crop field in the state, find out how it was discovered and interview several of the people involved including the growers. You’ll meet Rudy Briggs who was one of the first sheriff’s investigators on the scene of the Mullendore murder and follow his steps around the country in this made-for-the-big-screen real-life mystery.

So fill up your canteen and come along with me to Lansing, Kan., for the first installment of the Original Buffalo Dale Behind The Walls.

Continue reading

KOTV Tulsa News Channel 6, Buffalo Dale Interview

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c9u0DjAN_uc

The Chub Anderson Story

Chub Anderson and Buffalo Dale Lewis

This story is about the most famous unsolved murder in the southwest and the life of the man who still holds the key to that murder. On September 20, 1970, E.C. Mullendore III, the heir to the three hundred thousand acre Cross Bell Ranch empire in Oklahoma was murdered in his own home. The only other person with him was ranch employee Damon ‘Chub’ Anderson who was also shot. At the time of his death Mr. Mullendore held the largest life insurance policy in the United States. As the result of mistakes made during the investigation no one has ever been charged in the murder despite the involvement of numerous law enforcement officials, lawyers, investigators and TV personalities.

After the murder articles appeared in the Wall Street Journal, The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution, The Daily Oklahoman, The Tulsa World and The Tulsa Tribune as well as in all the local papers. Television stations across the region also sent investigate reporters to the area but with little result. Through the years the story has continued to fascinate the public and both the national and the regional media have covered possible new leads in great detail. Most recently the murder has become the topic of several internet blogs with people from across the country logging on and offering their theories of the crime.

Chub Anderson’s life in the years following the murder became a legend of its own. In 1980 he was arrested for growing the largest marijuana crop in Oklahoma history and this arrest was followed by a string of indictments involving other crimes. Then in 1990 when he was arrested for cultivation in Kansas, Anderson became a fugitive from justice and eluded capture for 17 years. He was on the Ten Most Wanted list in the State of Kansas and was also frequently mentioned as a prime suspect in the Mullendore murder although no charges were ever filed. In June 2006 a sick and penniless Anderson was apprehended in Helena, Montana where he had been living under the name of Jack Evert, a deceased World War II veteran.

I am a columnist for a local newspaper in Oklahoma and when Anderson was arrested I decided to follow the case. After a fluke introduction in the judge’s chambers during his sentencing I began visiting him on a weekly basis in Lansing State Prison forming a bond that has strengthened since his release in early 2007. Together we have been working on a book which focuses on his experiences and the pivotal unsolved murder of E.C. Mullendore –- an event that has shaped his life for the past 41 years.