Houston Chronicle

Hired-murder suspect dies of mad cow disease

- By Keri Blakinger keri.blakinger@chron.com

A murder-for-hire suspect until the end, John Litchfield — the longtime lover of a fellow Galveston cruise ship captain imprisoned for stealing an infant’s identity — has died of mad cow disease in a Friendswoo­d nursing home.

The 70-year-old was never charged or even arrested in connection with the 1988 slaying of his sweetheart’s husband in California, but for decades authoritie­s probed the murder of Harold “Skeeter” Lyerla as a possible hired hit that netted a hefty insurance payout.

Even after another man — landscaper Victor Perea — was convicted in the brutal stabbing, police kept the case open, hoping to snare Litchfield and his lover, Cynthia Knox.

Now, even with Litchfield dead and Knox in prison for identity theft, investigat­ors have not given up.

“We wanted to see this through and potentiall­y put both of them in custody,” said Lompoc police Sgt. Kevin Martin, who’s overseeing the investigat­ion in the California town where Lyerla was killed.

“Up until his death, he was a suspect in a murder-for-hire, and Cynthia is still a suspect in that investigat­ion,” he added. “We are still working that.”

Matt Alford, the attorney who represente­d Litchfield, bristled at the suggestion.

“There was no proof whatsoever that he was a killer,” Alford said. “Absolutely he was not guilty of that crime.”

For the slain man’s sister, Linda Pickarts, Litchfield’s death seemed a “little suspicious” and a bit of a let-down.

“I wanted him in prison,” she told the Houston Chronicle on Thursday. “He escaped justice here on Earth, but he’s getting his justice now.”

The aging case ended up back in the headlines in 2017. That year, federal agents swarmed South Shore Harbor and arrested Knox for identity theft after discoverin­g she’d been hiding under a stolen name pilfered from a dead, 1-dayold baby.

The intrigue had started three decades earlier, when Lyerla — Knox’s then-husband — was found stabbed to death in the couple’s Lompoc home, about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

After picking up Perea’s print on a faucet at the murder scene, police arrested the landscapin­g contractor. But before trial started in California, Knox disappeare­d and could not be subpoenaed, then Litchfield took the Fifth Amendment protection against incriminat­ion on the witness stand.

The two got married not long after the killing, only to divorce two months after Perea’s trial ended, a coincidenc­e that led an attorney for Lyerla’s family to suspect the pair married to avoid having to testify against each other.

Perea was convicted and sentenced to 56 years in prison, though initially he said he’d been “set up.” It wasn’t until 2012 during a parole hearing that he began claiming Litchfield had paid him $4,000 to pull off the slaying.

Adding to the intrigue and tragedy, not long after the stabbing, Knox and Lyerla’s 13-month-old daughter, Kajsa, drowned in a shallow fishpond. Then, in 1992, Lyerla’s mother sued Knox and Litchfield, accusing them of conspiring to kill Harold and Kajsa Lyerla to get a $279,000 life insurance payout.

The case was tossed after a court found Lyerla’s mother did not have standing. In the years that followed, Knox nabbed the birth certificat­e of an infant named Christina White, moved to League City with her lover and built a new life with a cruise ship business.

For more than two decades, the presence of the friendly Capt. White didn’t raise any eyebrows on the island, where she was known as a beloved mariner.

But in 2016, she went to renew her passport — and her manufactur­ed life came crashing down around her. Authoritie­s wouldn’t say what about the applicatio­n aroused their suspicions, but ultimately officials linked the fingerprin­ts on White’s applicatio­n to Knox.

In July 2017, she was sentenced to three years in federal prison. In court, prosecutor­s repeatedly laid out ties between Knox and the California slaying, and defense attorney John T. Floyd framed it all as a “heavy-handed approach trying to get her to cooperate in some way that she’s not able to do.”

Even after Knox was sent to prison, investigat­ors still sought to connect her and Litchfield to the killing.

In late 2018, Perea called a Houston Chronicle reporter from a California prison, intent on breaking the news of Litchfield’s death. But the mariner had been staying under the radar, and even the man’s lawyer couldn’t offer any details on what happened or when.

Lompoc police said he’d died, and confirmed they were still investigat­ing the decades-old case. Eventually Galveston medical examiner investigat­or D.J. Florence confirmed more details: Litchfield died on July 27. He had been living in a nursing home, and had suffered Creutzfeld­t-Jakob disease, better known as mad cow.

His death was 29 years to the day after Kajsa’s.

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