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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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1994-03-25
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<text id=89TT2242>
<title>
Aug. 28, 1989: A Father Lifts His "Burdens"
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 13
A Father Lifts His "Burdens"
</hdr><body>
<p>A tale of tragedy turns into a multiple murder
</p>
<p> The dazed father's story sounded plausible. On Aug. 3,
Lawrence DeLisle, 28, took his family for an evening ride along
the Detroit River. The two older children, Bryan, 8, and
Melissa, 4, sat in the back of the family's 1977 Ford station
wagon. Snuggled beside them in a child's safety seat was
Kathryn, 21 months. While DeLisle drove, his wife Suzanne, 32,
sat in front with nine-month-old Emily, also in an infant's
seat.
</p>
<p> As their car neared the river on Eureka Avenue in
Wyandotte, a Detroit suburb, DeLisle complained of leg cramps.
He backed the car away from the street's dead end, stopped to
buy some crackers and said he felt better. Shortly before 9:20
p.m., he drove toward the river again. Suddenly DeLisle felt a
cramp in his right leg, which stiffened, jamming his foot
against the accelerator. As he tried to hit the brake with his
left foot, his shoe wedged between the pedal and the
accelerator. Frantically, Suzanne grabbed for the ignition key
and gearshift to stop the speeding vehicle.
</p>
<p> It was too late. The car crashed through a wooden barrier
at an estimated 45 m.p.h. As witnesses watched its one working
taillight disappear in water 30 ft. deep, first DeLisle and
then his wife splashed to the surface. Luckily, two men in a
powerboat saw the couple and pulled them to safety. Divers hit
the water six minutes after police were called, but none of the
four children could be revived.
</p>
<p> Acquaintances described DeLisle, who earned $31,200 a year
as a service manager for a tire store, as hardworking and quiet.
His wife, who had studied criminal justice in college, was
rarely seen without the children. Wyandotte police chief Edward
Rothermal assured the Detroit Free Press, "This was a loving
couple, good family people." Hundreds of area residents left
toys and flowers at the accident site, in memory of the lost
children and in sympathy for the parents.
</p>
<p> But Wyandotte detective sergeant Dan Galeski found problems
in DeLisle's story. The father reportedly said he got out of a
car window only after the wheels touched the bottom of the
river. In fact, the current had flipped the auto onto its roof.
Some witnesses said they saw DeLisle in the water while the
taillight was still visible. Others reported that a day earlier,
a car with one taillight had moved slowly along the dead-end
street.
</p>
<p> During a lie-detector test, DeLisle broke down, admitting
that he had deliberately driven into the river. Why? According
to Galeski, he wanted "to get rid of his present burdens: his
wife and his children." DeLisle, who owes some $13,000 in bills
and loans, was charged with four counts of murder and one of
attempted murder.
</p>
<p> As anger at the father was added to sorrow for the
children, Wyandotte residents last week were still visiting the
site on Eureka Avenue. One young woman carefully placed four
tiny stuffed animals beside the growing mound of pink carnations
and red roses.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>