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Dana Ewell

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American triple murderer
Dana Ewell
BornDana James Ewell
(1971-01-28) January 28, 1971 (age 53)
Sunnyside, California, U.S.
Criminal statusImprisoned (in protective custody)
Conviction(s)3 life sentences without parole
Criminal chargeTriple murder (parricide)
Details
VictimsDale Ewell (father)
Glee Ewell (mother)
Tiffany Ewell (sister)
DateApril 19, 1992
Location(s)Fresno, California, U.S.
Date apprehendedMarch 2, 1995
Imprisoned atCorcoran State Prison

Dana James Ewell (born January 28, 1971) is a convicted American murderer who was sentenced to three life sentences for ordering the killing of his father, mother, and sister in 1992.

Background

Dana Ewell was the younger of two children born to Glee Ethel (née Mitchell) (b. 1935) and Dale Alan Ewell (b. 1932). Dale Ewell was a United States Air Force veteran turned multi-millionaire businessman who specialized in the sale of small airplanes with his company, Western Piper Sales, Inc. Glee Ewell had devoted much of her life to philanthropy and public service, briefly acting as a Spanish translator for the CIA in the 1950s and later holding a seat at the State Bar of California committee that evaluated prospective judges.

Dana Ewell graduated from San Joaquin Memorial High School in 1989. His sister, Tiffany Ann (b. 1967), a few weeks shy of her 25th birthday at the time of her death, was a graduate student, while Dana Ewell himself had earned a finance degree from the Santa Clara University (SCU).

Dana Ewell's parents had substantial investments in the stock market and local farmland. Although the family was financially well off, the elder Ewells lived a relatively modest lifestyle and avoided flaunting their wealth, which was estimated at $7–⁠8 million (equivalent to about $14.8 to $16.8 million in 2022).

During Dana Ewell's time at college, he had been attributing his father Dale's accomplishments to himself, and he was posing as a wealthy entrepreneur when he actually had no business experience. A Santa Clara newspaper and SCU's yearbook both had printed stories on Ewell in 1990, depicting him as "a self-made millionaire” who was enjoying the luxuries afforded by his nonexistent business success. After learning about Ewell's lies, his parents modified their estate plan. Extended family believed that Dale Ewell planned on ending his financial support for his son after his college graduation, a possible motive for the murders. Dana Ewell was pursuing a career in investment banking at the time of the murders.

Murders

Dale, Glee, and Tiffany Ewell were murdered on Sunday, April 19, 1992, in their Fresno home. At the time of the murders, Ewell lived at the family home but was away with his girlfriend for the Easter weekend. The bodies were discovered two days after the murders, when Ewell notified family friends in Sunnyside that he was unable to contact his parents. Glee Ewell was shot four times while Tiffany and Dale Ewell were each shot once.

After the murders, police spent four days at the Ewell home investigating the crime scene. The case was investigated by Fresno County Sheriff's Office homicide detectives John Souza and Chris Curtice. They suspected the killer had been hiding in the house, waiting for the family to return. The murders appeared to have been planned and executed with care. The shooter retrieved the discarded shell casings after firing the fatal gunshots. The shooter's aim was good, as he had missed only one of the multiple shots that were fired. A box of 9mm ammunition, purchased by Dale Ewell in the early 1970s, was found in the home and were believed to have been used to kill the family. The bullets recovered from the victims' bodies showed signs of the gun having been fitted with a homemade silencer. While the home appeared to have been searched for valuables, Detective Souza, who had extensive experience investigating burglaries, concluded the scene had been staged in an attempt to make the murders appear as if the family had interrupted a thief.

Investigation

Police looked into the victims' background and found possible motives for the crime. In the 1970s, Dale Ewell had sold airplanes for a California man named Frank Lambe who had been convicted for drug smuggling, after which Dale took over the business. Dale Ewell had also been involved in a troubled real estate development deal with his brother Ben, which threatened to cost investors millions in losses. Investigation ruled out these factors as possible motives for the murders.

Although Dana Ewell's alibi for the time of the murders included having spent the Easter weekend with his girlfriend and her family in San Francisco, some 200 miles away, authorities came to focus on him after eliminating other possible culprits. Extended family members, like Ewell's uncle, reported that after his family's death, Dana was inordinately fixated on the details of his parents' will and testament, and was "visibly shaken and angry" upon learning he would be unable to access most of his family's wealth until his thirties.

Dana's parents estate plan created a legal trust that locked up most of their assets upon their death. A trustee was required to pay for Dana Ewell's care and expenses until the age of 25, while from 25 to 30 he was to receive dividends from investments, but had no access to the principal. Dana Ewell would receive half the principal at age 30, and the remainder at age 35. However, Ewell was the immediate beneficiary of over $300,000 in life insurance payments that were not subject to trust restrictions or probate court oversight.

Joel Patrick Radovcich, a college friend of Dana Ewell, abruptly dropped out of college shortly after the murders, and he came under suspicion. Ewell was described as being obsessed with money and social status, and Radovcich was preoccupied with guns and explosives. Ewell had come under suspicion only days after the murders when Detective Curtice had walked Dana through the crime scene, and thought his reactions to the crime scene highly unusual, later recalling his impressions as "that kid's dirty".

Dana and Radovcich attracted additional suspicion by occupying the Ewell family home only a few weeks after the murders. The pair were reported to have made many cash purchases for items such as helicopter flight lessons (despite Radovcich being unemployed) and communicating via a complex system of pagers and pay telephone calls, seemingly designed to avoid being overheard. The police kept Ewell and Radovcich under close surveillance for several months. In one instance, a detective wore a recording device and stood close to Radovcich at a pay phone in May 1993, overhearing him make comments such as "they don't have evidence. They will try to catch you in a lie."

Forensic analysis found the murder weapon was a high-end 9mm specialty rifle manufactured by Feather Industries in Trinidad, Colorado. Company records showed one such rifle had been purchased by Ernest Jack Ponce, a friend of the Radovcich family, shortly before the murders. Ponce admitted buying the rifle for Radovcich, but denied knowing it would be used for a crime. Ponce also concealed evidence after the murders, making him an accessory. He was granted immunity from prosecution and agreed to testify against Ewell and Radovcich, who were arrested on March 2, 1995.

Trial and conviction

James Oppliger and Jeffrey Hammerschmidt of the Fresno County District Attorney's Office prosecuted Ewell and Radovcich in a jury trial that lasted more than eight months. Prosecutors argued that Ewell was motivated by greed, and that he promised Radovcich a share of his family's wealth. Ewell and Radovcich were represented by separate attorneys who took different strategies. Ewell's attorneys, Ernest Kinney, Pete Jones, Mike Castro and Galatea DeLapp asserted their client was innocent. Radovcich's attorney, Phil Cherney, believing the evidence was so overwhelming against Radovcich that a guilty verdict was probable, made his main goal avoiding the death penalty.

Jurors deliberated for 11 days. Although they considered Ponce's testimony unreliable and suspected he was more involved with the murders than he admitted, they found Ewell and Radovcich both guilty of three counts of first degree murder. The two men were subject to stricter sentencing due to aggravating circumstances: multiple victims, murder for profit, and murder committed by lying in wait. The jury was deadlocked during the sentencing phase of the trial, and the judge declared a penalty phase mistrial. On July 20, 1998, the judge delivered default sentences of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

Ewell is in the Protective Housing Unit of California State Prison, Corcoran, along with other murderers requiring isolation from the general prison population.

Television

The case is covered in the Forensic Files episode "Two in a Million" (season 11, episode 40, aired April 18, 2007), The New Detectives episode "Family Plots" (season 5, episode 9, aired January 25, 2000) and the Dominick Dunne's Power, Privilege, and Justice episode "Tailspin" (season 3, episode 5, aired September 5, 2003).

City Confidential ("Fatal Inheritance"), American Justice ("Millions of Reasons to Kill"), and Solved also did episodes on the case. In Ice Cold Blood also aired an episode about the case (“Deadly Greed” season 2, episode 14, aired June 3, 2019).

The series Behind Mansion Walls covered the case in "The Perfect Crime" (season 1, episode 2, aired on June 13, 2011). It is also covered in the It Takes a Killer episode "Spoiled, Rotten, and Ruthless", and the Vengeance: Killer Millionaires episode "Trust Fund Terror."

ABC30 Fresno and ABC Localish Studios co-produced an hour-long documentary film on the Ewell family murders, "Murdered for Millions", which first aired in May 2022. A postscript in the film states that Dana Ewell applied for executive clemency in January 2022.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ewell v Scribner 1:06-cv-00186 AWI MJS (HC) Archived 2013-12-31 at the Wayback Machine, US District Court for Eastern District of California (2011)
  2. ^ "Son, Friend Convicted of Killing Parents, Sister". Los Angeles Times. The Associated Press. 13 May 1998. Archived from the original on 25 April 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  3. ^ Arax, Mark (22 March 1993). "CALIFORNIA ALBUM : Slaying of Family Remains a Mystery : Fresno police have mostly discounted possible ties of wealthy businessman to drug dealing or disgruntled Filipino investors. They now focus on the lone surviving son". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 15 May 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  4. https://www.classmates.com/people/dana-ewell/4000179921056 Archived 2022-01-13 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Crime and Punishment: Millions of Reasons to Kill Archived 2020-12-24 at the Wayback Machine, narrated by Bill Kurtis, accessed 14 October 2017
  6. Arax, Mark (21 March 1995). "Game of Dare Ends Between Detectives, Wealthy Suspect : Crime: Son of Fresno millionaire is charged with hiring hit men to kill his family. He maintains his innocence". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 30 March 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  7. ^ "'Forensic Files' Season 12 Episode Guide", TV Guide, archived from the original on December 22, 2015, retrieved December 19, 2015
  8. "Dana Ewell - Inmate Classified Pen Pal Profile". INMATE Classified Penpals in Prison. Archived from the original on 2022-03-14. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  9. Beitiks, Kathleen O. (May 1997). "Wheels of justice grind slowly in Ewell murders". California Bar Journal. Archived from the original on 2012-04-01. Retrieved 2012-03-25.
  10. ^ "Dana Ewell biography". Biography.com. A&E Television Networks. Archived from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved December 19, 2015.
  11. ^ Abrahamson, Alan; Arax, Mark (16 May 1995). "Fresno Murder Probe Leads to Key Evidence in Reseda". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 September 2024.
  12. Vincent J. Schodolski. 2 Cops Work 5 Years To Prove Son Had Family Killed Archived 2024-05-11 at the Wayback Machine . The Chicago Tribune, May 19, 1997. Accessed 10 October 2017
  13. "NORTH STATE DATELINES". SFGATE. 1998-06-07. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  14. ^ "True-crime documentary of Fresno's Ewell family who were 'murdered for millions' to air". The Fresno Bee. May 23, 2022. Retrieved November 9, 2022.
  15. Erik Hedegaard (November 21, 2013). "Charles Manson Today: The Final Confessions of America's Most Notorious Psychopath - Rolling Stone". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on November 23, 2016. Retrieved November 22, 2016. Right now, he has only about 15 other prisoners to contend with, among them Juan Corona, who murdered 25 people in 1971; Dana Ewell, who ordered the murder of his own family in 1992; Phillip Garrido, the rapist who kidnapped 11-year-old Jaycee Lee Dugard and held her for 18 years; and Mikhail Markhasev, who was convicted of killing Bill Cosby's son, Ennis.
  16. "Some things to know about protective housing units in California prisons". Fox News. February 16, 2015. Archived from the original on November 18, 2019. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
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