Ottawa Citizen

Mother drove 3 kids off cliff, police say

- CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR.

Investigat­ors have spent a year mulling every possible reason Noel Bankhead’s SUV might have sped over a 50-foot cliff and plummeted into an Idaho reservoir on a Tuesday morning in June, killing the mother and her three children.

Maybe the red Land Rover had some sort of safety recall or mechanical failing? Perhaps Bankhead had a medical emergency — a seizure or stroke that caused her to lose control of the vehicle? Had she been impaired by alcohol or some medication she’d taken that morning?

One by one, investigat­ors ruled out all of those reasons. Last week, they released their final conclusion: Bankhead purposely drove the red SUV into the water.

But instead of closing the case, the police conclusion elicited a new, bigger question for the Boise-area community mourning the sudden and tragic loss of a family: Why?

Bankhead left no suicide note. And investigat­ors say her mental state around the time of the murder-suicide remains a mystery.

But, as police described, her final actions were very clear: “Witnesses ... told investigat­ors Noel Bankhead was driving her Land Rover northbound on Idaho 21, slowed down, turned onto Spring Shores Road, positioned the car toward the cliff, and suddenly accelerate­d,” the Ada County Sheriff’s Office said on its blog. “Investigat­ors found no skid or brake marks where the SUV went over the edge.

The crumpled hulk of the SUV sank 12 meters underwater. The occupants — Bankhead, her daughters Anika and Gwyneth Voermans, ages 13 and 8, and Bankhead’s 11-year-old son Logan Voermans — died from a combinatio­n of blunt force trauma and drowning.

The investigat­ors were never able to get informatio­n from the water-damaged event data recorder, which would show speed, braking, accelerati­on and any engine fault codes. Even the people at Land Rover’s European offices were unable to recover the informatio­n.

Bankhead had gone through a divorce about two years before the crash, but there was little available publicly to show she was on the cusp of joining the sorority of mothers who’ve driven their children into bodies of water.

A study in the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law found that 80 per cent of parents who had killed their children had ongoing mood or thought disorder, and 70 per cent of mothers had previous contact with a psychiatri­st or mental health profession­al.

Bankhead’s ultimate motives may have died with her.

She was the oldest of eight children whose obituary described her as “a full-time working mom who loved to host family gatherings and wear beautiful dresses. Noel loved her children.”

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