The Denver Post

Pankey probed in 1984 killing

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BOISE, IDAHO» A former candidate for Idaho governor says he’s under investigat­ion in connection with the 1984 killing of a 12-yearold Colorado girl.

Steve Pankey, who ran as a Constituti­on Party candidate for governor in 2014 and again as a Republican in the 2018 primary, told the Idaho Statesman last week he is under investigat­ion in the death of Greeley resident Jonelle Matthews.

Pankey said he reached out to the newspaper because he is a public figure, and he wants his story to be heard in case he is arrested. He said he’s concerned that police mistrust him.

“I’m trying to be transparen­t,” he said. “I have nothing to hide.”

Jonelle was reported missing Dec. 20, 1984, after returning home from performing a Christmas concert with her classmates. Her body wasn’t found until this year, when constructi­on workers excavating for a pipeline in a rural part of Weld County uncovered her remains.

Pankey and his former wife lived about 2 miles from Jonelle’s home when Jonelle disappeare­d in 1984. On the night she went missing, Pankey said he was home with his then-wife, their 1980 Toyota Corolla already packed for an earlymorni­ng trip the next day to visit family in Big Bear Lake, Calif.

They returned home to Colorado on Dec. 26, 1984, Pankey said, and heard the news of a missing child on the radio.

“I never met Jonelle. I never met her family. I didn’t know she existed or disappeare­d until Wednesday, Dec. 26 (in 1984),” Pankey said.

Pankey said he’d had previous brushes with the law in Colorado, charged with what he called a “date rape” in 1977 at age 26. He said the sex was consensual and the charge was later dismissed by prosecutor­s. He also said he’d been charged with several other misdemeano­rs over the years — including battery and harassment by phone — but won after going to trial multiple times.

The Statesman was unable to verify those claims because Colorado courts do not have an online records system, and requested copies of documents related to the criminal charges had not yet arrived via the U.S. Postal Service on Friday.

In a prepared statement released Friday, the Greeley Police Department said although Pankey had made repeated efforts to talk to detectives throughout the investigat­ion, he refused to talk to detectives when they visited him in Twin Falls, Idaho, on Aug. 15.

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