Murder Of The DeLisle Children
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In August 1989, the four children of Lawrence John DeLisle (born September 6, 1960) were killed when DeLisle drove the family station wagon into the Detroit River in
Wyandotte, Michigan Wyandotte ( ) is a city in Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 25,058 at the 2020 census. Wyandotte is located in southeastern Michigan, approximately south of Detroit on the Detroit River, and it is part of the coll ...
in the United States. DeLisle was found guilty of four counts of first-degree murder after a trial in June 1990. In annual polls of member newspapers by the
Associated Press The Associated Press (AP) is an American non-profit news agency headquartered in New York City. Founded in 1846, it operates as a cooperative, unincorporated association. It produces news reports that are distributed to its members, U.S. newspa ...
, the DeLisle case was ranked as the No. 7 news story in Michigan in 1989 and the No. 6 story of 1990.


Before the murder


DeLisle family

Lawrence DeLisle was a high school dropout who married at age 19. Prior to the murders, he was the service manager at a tire store in Lincoln Park, Michigan, earning an annual salary of $31,000. DeLisle was 28 years old at the time of the murders. His wife, Suzanne DeLisle, was 32 years old. They had four children, ages nine months to eight years. Shortly before the murders, the family moved from a two-bedroom townhouse in
Taylor, Michigan Taylor is a city in Wayne County, Michigan, Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. Its population was 63,409 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census. Taylor is the fifth most-populated city in Wayne County and the 17th List of municipa ...
, to a larger house in Lincoln Park.


Prior suicide in same vehicle

On the night of February 9, 1988, DeLisle's father, Richard DeLisle, drove his 1977 Ford station wagon to Elizabeth Park in Trenton, Michigan. He then shot himself in the head with a .38-caliber pistol. Lawrence DeLisle received the station wagon as a gift from his stepmother after his father's death. Lawrence later told his stepmother that he "felt a closeness with his father when he was in that car."


Murder

On August 3, 1989, shortly after 9p.m., DeLisle drove the family's station wagon, with his wife and four children. They shopped for children's beds, purchased ice cream, and stopped to buy cookies at a drug store located about a block and a half from the Detroit River in Wyandotte. After leaving the drug store, the car raced at a speed estimated at for down Eureka Road, crashed through a wooden barrier, and plummeted into the Detroit River. DeLisle stated after the incident that he had a leg cramp and the accelerator became jammed. His wife stated that she tried to stop the vehicle but was unsuccessful. DeLisle and his wife escaped from the vehicle. A passing powerboat rescued them from the river. The four DeLisle children remained trapped in the vehicle as it sank to the bottom of the river. Between 10:10p.m. and 11:10p.m., divers from the Wayne County Sheriff's Department pulled the bodies of the four children from the vehicle. The four victims were: * Brian DeLisle, age eight years * Melissa DeLisle, age four years * Kathryn DeLisle, age two years * Emily DeLisle, age nine months The parents and children were transported to Wyandotte General Hospital. The children had no vital signs when they arrived at the hospital. Doctors in Wyandotte tried unsuccessfully to resuscitate the children. At 1:30a.m., Melissa was taken by helicopter to Henry Ford Hospital in
Detroit Detroit ( , ; , ) is the largest city in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is also the largest U.S. city on the United States–Canada border, and the seat of government of Wayne County. The City of Detroit had a population of 639,111 at th ...
, and Brian followed by helicopter at 3:50a.m. The resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful, and all four children were pronounced dead.


Investigation and prosecution


Initial investigation

DeLisle told police that, while driving along the river bank, he had suffered a cramp in his leg. He had stopped the car for a few minutes while he bought some crackers and said he felt better afterwards; however, as they drove towards the river his leg became cramped again and jammed his foot into the accelerator. His other foot became stuck between the pedals as he tried to hit the break. Suzanne reached over to try and switch off the ignition, but it was too late and the car crashed into the river. However, police were suspicious of DeLisle's story. He told them that he and Suzanne only made it out of the car after its wheels had touched the bottom of the river, but witnesses to the crash said they had seen him in the water before the car was fully submerged. It was also determined that the car had sunk onto its roof after being flipped over by the current, further contradicting DeLisle's account. DeLisle's car, which could be identified as it only had one working taillight, had also been seen moving slowly down the dead-end street where the crash occurred the night before the murders. Investigators began to suspect that DeLisle had crashed the car intentionally in an apparent murder-suicide.


August 10 interrogation of DeLisle

On August 10, DeLisle and his wife were picked up by police at 7a.m. They were transported to
Lansing, Michigan Lansing () is the capital of the U.S. state of Michigan. It is mostly in Ingham County, although portions of the city extend west into Eaton County and north into Clinton County. The 2020 census placed the city's population at 112,644, making ...
, to meet with the Michigan State Police. Lawrence was given a polygraph examination and interviewed by police officers through the day. He was formally placed under arrest and in handcuffs at 6:05p.m. and was then transported to the Wyandotte police station. Between 10:45p.m. and 1a.m. the next day, Wyandotte police sergeant Daniel Galeski resumed the interviews which elicited videotaped statements that some characterized as a confession. DeLisle told Galeski that he had been preoccupied for weeks with his debts and bills. He also described his hatred toward the car in which his father shot himself without saying goodbye. DeLisle also complained about his wife and home life: "That's all I wanted. Clean house. Sex now and then. Happy kids." He insisted that he loved his wife and kids, but "I just wanted it to be over... The constant repetition. Same thing day after day." With respect to the day of the incident, DeLisle told Galeski that he "just couldn't" apply the brakes as the vehicle headed toward the river. He continued, "I didn't want to. I don't know why... I didn't mean to hurt my babies... I didn't even realize they were in the car. My mind just went blank." DeLisle also stated that he had previously held a lighted candle to a leaking gas line connected to the home's gas dryer. He held the candle there for half an hour but nothing happened. Of that incident, he said, "I just wanted to be free... blow up everything in my past." At the end of the interview with Galeski, DeLisle stated that he did not even want to go to trial: "Just throw away the key." After reading the transcripts of Galeski's interview with DeLisle, author and journalist Mitch Albom was reminded of
Henry David Thoreau Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817May 6, 1862) was an American naturalist, essayist, poet, and philosopher. A leading Transcendentalism, transcendentalist, he is best known for his book ''Walden'', a reflection upon simple living in natural su ...
's line, "The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." Reviewing the various factors that weighed on DeLisle's mind, Albom wrote that he finally understood Thoreau's words and concluded, "It scares the hell out of me."


DeLisle charged with murder

On August 11, 1989, DeLisle was charged with four counts of first-degree murder and a fifth count of attempting to murder his wife. At the time the charges were announced, Sergeant Galeski told the press that DeLisle confessed that he "intentionally pressed down on the accelerator" and drove into the river to "get rid of his present burdens... his children and wife."


Motion to suppress "confession"

DeLisle's attorney, Frank Eaman, filed a pretrial motion to suppress the statement DeLisle made in the interrogation by Galeski. Eaman contended that the tapes of the interrogation were nothing more than "the ramblings of a tortured and tormented man." DeLisle claimed that his statements to Galeski were the result of "brainwashing". In the days after the accident, he said he felt deeply guilty for the deaths of his children and was subjected to news crews camped on his porch and threatening phone calls. He also said he had only two or three hours of sleep during the nights leading up to the interrogation. DeLisle further claimed that police pressured him to admit he had acted intentionally and suggested that; (i) he could get a lenient sentence if he "told the truth", (ii) he may be suffering from a split personality, and (iii) there was a demon inside him. DeLisle also claimed that during the long drive from Lansing to Wyandotte, Galeski blasted the air conditioning and refused to give him a blanket. The defense presented testimony from a psychologist that the police tactics had "loosened DeLisle's grip on reality." On December 21, 1989, Wayne County Judge Robert Colombo Jr. ruled that the statement was inadmissible, finding that the police had used improper psychological techniques in eliciting it. Despite being found inadmissible, media outlets filed a motion seeking access to the tapes of the interrogation. The motion was granted, and the tapes were played for media representatives and reported to the public in January 1990. The Michigan Court of Appeals in May 1990 affirmed Judge Colombo's ruling that DeLisle's statement was not voluntary or admissible.


Trial and conviction

In December 1989, the court released DeLisle on bail of $25,000 pending trial. In the lead-up to the trial, DeLisle's attorneys repeatedly moved for a change of venue on the grounds that widespread media coverage of DeLisle's inadmissible confession had made it impossible for an impartial jury to be seated locally. However, the court ultimately decided that a fair trial was possible; although all twelve jurors who were ultimately seated had admitted prior knowledge of the case, seven remembered no more than that a crash had occurred, and five remembered the confession but stated that it would not affect their judgement. DeLisle was tried in June 1990. For the first time in Michigan judicial history, photographers and television camera crews were permitted to take photographs and video from an enclosed booth at the rear of the courtroom. A motion by defense counsel to move the trial out of Wayne County was denied. A further defense motion to have the case decided by the judge was also denied. The trial lasted five days. DeLisle's wife Suzanne testified that her husband's leg had cramped before they stopped for snacks and that he had pulled over to rub the leg for several minutes. She further testified that, after they left the drug store, her husband cried out in pain, saying, "Oh my God! My leg's cramping up." She testified that he then reached down and pulled his leg a couple inches off the accelerator, but the car nevertheless continued to race into the river. Suzanne also told the court that the car's engine had "raced" on several prior occasions while the car was in drive. A neurologist testified that a sudden leg cramp could have caused DeLisle's leg to jam into the accelerator, and mechanic James Cokewell testified that there were several faults with the DeLisle's car which could have led to uncontrollable acceleration. Witnesses for the prosecution included accident reconstruction expert Irving Rozian, who testified that a slight indentation on the left front wheel of the station wagon indicated that the car had struck the kerb at a slight angle to the right before going in the river. Rozian testified that this was consistent with DeLisle having changed direction in order to drive between the barricade posts into the river. The prosecution also called the boatman who had pulled Lawrence and Suzanne DeLisle from the water, who testified that DeLisle had said "something to the effect of, 'Oh my God, what have I done?'". The jury deliberated for only eight-and-a-half hours before finding DeLisle guilty. One of the jurors noted that the jury concluded that the wife was trying "to save her husband" and her testimony was found to be contradictory.


Sentencing and trial judge's doubts about guilt

On August 1, 1990, DeLisle was sentenced to five mandatory life terms without the possibility of parole. DeLisle read a statement at the hearing in which he stated:
A father's job is to protect his children and I failed. I panicked. I froze. That is my guilt, not murder... I was paralyzed with shock and unable to react. That is my crime.
DeLisle's wife also spoke at the sentencing, reaffirming her belief that her husband did not murder their children. While giving the sentence required by law, Judge Colombo stated at the time that the sentence bothered him because "I don't know if he's guilty" of first-degree murder, adding "I just don't know."


Appeal

DeLisle appealed the verdict, asking that he be granted a new trial. Among other things, DeLisle's counsel argued that the trial court's decision to allow the confession tapes to be released to the press, even after the confession was ruled to be coerced and inadmissible, was a grave error that tainted the jury pool. Five of the twelve jurors admitted knowing about at least some of the suppressed evidence from the alleged confession. The Court of Appeal split with eight judges voting to affirm the conviction and seven voting to grant a new trial. Six of the dissenters opined that the lower court "actively and intentionally fostered the unfair publicity" by releasing the inadmissible confession to the media.


Aftermath

Suzanne DeLisle divorced Lawrence after the trial and later remarried. At a parole hearing in March 2024 a letter from Suzanne was read in which she stated her belief that he had killed their children and tried to kill her, alleging she had been gaslit into believing in his innocence during the trial. In 2014, DeLisle spoke from prison to a WWJ news anchor. DeLisle asserted that he was a "good, kind and innocent man" who was "unethically crucified by defamatory media reporting." He continued to assert that a leg cramp and a sticky accelerator were responsible for the vehicle's plunge into the Detroit River. As of August 19, 2024, DeLisle remains incarcerated at the
Lakeland Correctional Facility The Lakeland Correctional Facility is a state prison for men located in Coldwater, Branch County, Michigan, owned and operated by the Michigan Department of Corrections. The facility was opened in 1985 and has a working capacity of 1500 pris ...
in
Coldwater, Michigan Coldwater is a city in Branch County, Michigan, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 10,945. It is the county seat of Branch County, located in the center of the southern border of Michigan. The city is surrounded by Co ...
.


See also

* List of homicides in Michigan


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:DeLisle children murders 1989 in Michigan 1989 murders in the United States August 1989 events in the United States Deaths by drowning in the United States Filicides in the United States Mass murder in Michigan Wyandotte, Michigan Events in Wayne County, Michigan Mass murder in 1989 Mass murder in the United States in the 1980s