Dayton Daily News

Police: Two murders not work of carnival mafia

- By Antonia Noori Farzan Washington Post

Police in Arkansas are sure of one thing: There is no carnival mafia.

Everything else about the deaths of Pauline and Alfred “Sonny” Carpenter, whose bodies were found in the Ozark National Forest on July 18, is a mystery.

Why would a traveling carnival worker impersonat­e a made-up mafia boss online?

Why would she use that persona to trick her romantic partner into allegedly committing murder?

How were the Carpenters, a semiretire­d couple in their late 70s, chosen as a target?

And why would two other carnies come along for the ride, allegedly helping to hide the dead couple’s bodies in a shallow grave?

While it might not make much sense, a 70-page investigat­ion report from the Van Buren (Ark.) Police Department says that’s exactly what happened.

The strange saga started in Great Bend, Kansas, during the Barton County Fair. It was a typically wholesome July affair: a tractor pull, watermelon feed, 4-H rabbit show, sunrise prayer service, country tribute concert and a root beer float social. Ribbons were awarded to the best homegrown rhubarb stalks, green beans and summer squash, and the largest potato. Spinning Ferris wheels and signs for funnel cake lit up the midway.

And after the rides shut down for the night, several of the carnies allegedly turned violent, murdering a couple who had been selling purses and jewelry at the fair, and then taking their camper truck and fleeing to Arkansas.

“it’s done their dead,” Michael Fowler wrote in a Facebook message just before 2:30 a.m. on July 14, according to the police report.

“Good Job, now get out,” Frank Zaitchik replied.

“I am trying to calm down right now,” Fowler replied.

“Deep Breaths,” Zaitchik responded. “The 1st is always the hardest. Jen sent me pictures of the man. I sent onto the heads of council. War is over.”

But there was no war. There were no “heads of council.” And, most importantl­y, there was no Frank Zaitchik. Nobody by that name appears in public records. Police found evidence the messages came from a Facebook account controlled by Kimberly Younger, 52, who was either dating or married to Fowler, 54.

“We believe that Younger was acting as ‘Frank’ and claiming that he was a part of this carnival mafia,” Detective Jonathan Wear of the Van Buren Police wrote in an email to The Washington Post.

But why?

Police can only speculate, because Younger hasn’t admitted to doing any such thing. Instead, she told police she was part of a carnival mafia “which involved money laundering and murder.” The cops don’t believe that — at least, not the part about there being a carnival mafia.

“We believe she fabricated the carnival mafia thing,” Wear wrote.

Neverthele­ss, Fowler seems to have taken “the carnival mafia thing” seriously. He told police he shot Alfred Carpenter with his Ruger 9mm, then went into the couple’s camper and shot Pauline Carpenter twice. “It was supposed to be my blood in,” he told a detective, explaining that he would be initiated “into the family” after killing the couple.

After the cops found Younger had allegedly logged into Frank Zaitchik’s Facebook account from her phone, they went back and told Fowler what they had discovered. He expressed surprise Younger could send messages that looked like they were coming from someone else.

“She had me suckered the whole ... way,” Fowler allegedly responded. “I just threw my whole life away.”

Whether that’s true remains to be seen. Kansas officials, who would be responsibl­e for bringing charges since the killings allegedly took place there, have not wrapped up their investigat­ion.

In Arkansas, where the Carpenters’ bodies were found, Fowler, Younger and two other carnival workers have been charged with abuse of a corpse, theft by receiving and tampering with evidence. The charges are based on allegation­s they drove the couple’s camper from Great Bend, Kansas, to Van Buren, Arkansas, then dumped their bodies off a dirt road near a creek bed in the forest.

All four have pleaded not guilty and are represente­d by Crawford County’s public defender, who did not respond to requests for comment.

Wear told The Post that police do not have a clear motive as to why the Carpenters, both in their late 70s, were singled out.

Age may have been a factor: Messages between Fowler and Zaitchik show the two had discussed “hitting” the couple because they would be an easy target, the police report says.

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