Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Body in suitcase identified as World War II veteran

- KENNETH HEARD

Police identified the body of a man stuffed in a suitcase, driven from New York by his caregivers and left in a Prairie County field earlier this month as that of a World War II veteran from New York.

Robert Brooks, 89, of Johnstown, N.Y., died of natural causes at his home in March, said Lt. David Gilbo of the Johnstown Police Department.

“He was a war hero who could have been buried at the [Arlington] National Cemetery,” Gilbo said. “Instead, he ends up in a suitcase dumped in a field in Arkansas.”

Police arrested Virginia “Ginger” Colvin, 56, of Johnstown at a Perry County home March 8 after police found Brooks’ body March 5 in the suitcase in a field in the Crossroad community west of Des Arc.

Michael Stivers, who was being held on unrelated charges in the Lonoke County jail, also was arrested.

Both face charges of abusing a corpse.

Gilbo, who called the case “bizarre,” said police are not considerin­g Brooks’ death a homicide. Authoritie­s still are investigat­ing to determine whether Colvin and her boyfriend, Stivers, hid Brooks’ death to continue receiving his monthly Social Security payments.

Brooks had been dead for about a month before Prairie County deputies found his body in the field, Gilbo said.

Colvin and her niece were listed as Brooks’ caregivers in his upstate New York home. Stivers, who recently began dating Colvin, also was considered a caregiver, Gilbo said.

Brooks died sometime in February or January, a preliminar­y autopsy by the state Crime Laboratory in Little Rock indicated.

“[Colvin] said Mr. Brooks wanted to be buried in Arkansas before he died,” Gilbo said.

Some family members told police Brooks never expressed a desire to be buried in the state.

Brooks briefly lived in Arkansas before returning to Johnstown, N.Y. Both Colvin and Stivers have relatives in the state.

Authoritie­s found family members of Brooks in North Carolina and learned Brooks served in the military and was a gunner in a B-17 bomber’s ball turret, or a “belly gunner.”

“It’s the most dangerous assignment in war,” Prairie County Sheriff Rick Hickman said. “The belly gunner is in a small bubble on the bottom of the plane. The enemy wants to shoot at him first. Life expectancy on that job is very short.”

Hickman would not confirm the body is Brooks’, saying he wanted to wait for DNA testing to be sure. Authoritie­s obtained DNA from Brooks’ son in North Carolina and will compare it with DNA taken from the body.

“It’s a sad case,” Hickman said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States