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Title: Hummel, Alice 10-06-90 WA
Description: Bellingham, Whatcom County


~*Mia*~ - December 21, 2007 07:56 PM (GMT)
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http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/153dfwa.html

Alice Kristina Hummel
Missing since October 6, 1990 from Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington
Classification: Endangered Missing

Vital Statistics

* Date Of Birth: February 18, 1944
* Age at Time of Disappearance: 46 years old
* Height and Weight at Time of Disappearance: 5'7"; 140-240 lbs.
* Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Brown hair; brown eyes.
* AKA: Kristy
* Dentals: Not available

Circumstances of Disappearance

When Alice Hummel vanished from her Alabama Hill home in October 1990, her husband told the couple’s children their mother had left them for California or Texas in search of work. The kids received correspondence from their mother for years afterward, including birthday cards and possibly wedding presents. In 1979, Alice Hummel began receiving disability payments through the Alaska Teachers Retirement System, and by 1990, the couple had moved to Washington. They lived in Bellingham with three children.
When the adult Hummel children were unable to locate their mother in 2001, they filed a missing persons report with Bellingham police, telling investigators what they could remember.
Investigators discovered disability checks for Alice were going into her husband's bank account. Police found him in Montana, where he admitted taking the payments. Hummel told them that he had last seen Alice when he took her to the airport in October 1990, and had last spoken to her in 1991.
After he was caught collecting her disability payments, he told investigators Alice committed suicide.
He sent his children and police a letter saying he'd come home that October day and found Alice had committed suicide. There was a lot of blood and a note saying 'don't tell the children,' so he says he built a raft and brought his wife's body out to Bellingham Bay.
The day before Alice disappeared, one of the daughters told Alice that the husband was molesting her. The children also recalled their father doing some work on the home’s foundation around the time their mother vanished. Police believes when confronted, the husband killed Alice and made up a story to tell his children.
He has since been captured and is serving 27 months for taking those disability payments.
Police say their are several inconsistencies in the husband's story, but he maintains his wife committed suicide. Police examined the house for traces of blood and searched the property with cadaver-sniffing dogs and ground-penetrating radar, to see if Alice had been buried there or entombed in the foundation. No evidence was found.

Investigators
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:

Bellingham Police Department
Detective Glenn Hutchings
360-676-6941
police@cob.org

You may remain anonymous when submitting information.

Agency Case Number:
01B31039

NCIC Number:
N/A

Source Information:
King5 News
The Bellingham Herald
Washington State Missing Persons

Ell - December 29, 2007 09:08 PM (GMT)
Washington (AP) -- Taffy, kite and toy shops along the waterfront in this remote fishing town on the Pacific Coast were shuttered and sandbags were stacked in case of winter flooding when Bruce Allen Hummel arrived in Westport in fall 2004.


"He was just a great guy," said David Rolen, recalling Hummel as a surrogate grandfather.
3 of 3 But even in the off-season lull he made acquaintances easily and quickly found ways to fit in.

Balding and 62, he frequented card night at Senior House, where he endeared himself by helping out however he could. He installed light fixtures and drove elderly people to their doctor's appointments.

He found work as the maintenance man at Westport's low-income housing units, the South Bayview Apartments, where he was quick to fix to a leaky faucet or broken toilet.

The children there adored him. He helped them with their homework and used snacks to create math problems. He chatted with their parents about his days teaching in some of the remotest parts of Alaska.

In a holiday pageant for which he volunteered he sang a "cute little song ... with a rag doll on his knee," Peggy Coverdale recalled. It was his entree into Westport's acting group.

Not everyone was so taken. Hummel frequently showed up at the high school for girls basketball games, where he would berate the referees from the stands. The athletic director, Barb Rasmus, finally made him a scorekeeper in hopes he would stay quiet -- to no avail.

"He had a very, very hot temper," she said. "We had to tell him he couldn't come any more."

At cards, he met a disabled older woman and they soon became close. He parked his trailer in her yard and helped care for her, changing her bandages three times a day after she had surgery.

He also became a surrogate grandfather to her 18- and 16-year-old grandsons. He took them surfing and to Disneyland, and he helped with school projects.

"He was just a great guy," said the older teen, David Rolen, who recalled that Hummel sometimes spoke -- lovingly but vaguely -- of a wife he had somewhere.

That appears to have been Alice Kristina Wehr Hummel. They married in Sultan, on the western slopes of the Cascades, in 1963, when he was 21 and she was 19.

They spent much of the 1970s and '80s living or teaching in the Alaskan bush -- Bethel, a hub for dozens of native villages; St. Paul Island, 200 miles into the Bering Sea; Naknek, a salmon fishing outpost.

In 1979, Alice Hummel, then 35, began receiving disability payments through the Alaska Teachers Retirement System, and by 1990, the couple had moved back to Washington. They lived in Bellingham with two of their three children, a daughter of about 13 and a son of about 17. An older daughter had gone to college.

That October brought a twist in the story line. Hummel's wife disappeared.

He told the kids their mom had left them. Ran off to California, or maybe Texas. But it was a lie, one he kept up for many years.

It was not until Alice Hummel's father died a decade later, and the daughters tried to find their mother to let her know, that the children began to unravel the story.

In 2001, the two women -- sharing suspicions about the circumstances of their mother's disappearance -- filed a missing person report with Bellingham police. They told investigators what they could remember:


Dad did some work on the foundation around the time she vanished.


They remembered receiving correspondence purportedly from their mother years after she left; the older daughter thought she'd received a wedding gift from her.


And this: A few days before Mom left, the younger daughter had told her Dad had been "touching me." Their mother said she would make sure it never happened again.

Bellingham detectives immediately doubted the story that Alice ran off, but proving foul play, years later and without physical evidence, was another matter.

They contacted every other state and British Columbia, trying to determine if she had lived or died there. The only trace of her existence since 1990 was that her $1,500 monthly disability payments continued to wind up in Bruce Hummel's bank accounts.

"To have a missing person case come to us in 2001 about a person who's been missing since 1990, and to have the associated deceit -- we had a lot of concerns at the very beginning," said Detective Glen Hutchings.

Bruce Hummel was easy enough to find, living with another wife in Billings, Montana, where, in May 2004, two detectives and an FBI agent traveled to talk with him.

Hummel told them, according to an FBI report, that he had last seen Alice, whom he called Kristy, when he took her to the airport in October 1990, and had last spoken to her in 1991. Though he at first denied it, he eventually admitted signing her name on checks as well as on letters to Alaska state officials.

He also admitted molesting his daughter, the detectives said.

The next day, the investigators returned to question him further. Hummel was gone.

"I apologize for the smoke screen I threw at the three of you but what else could you expect when it is the same story I've been telling for 13 years," began an 11-page, handwritten letter that arrived at the Bellingham police department shortly thereafter. "What I am about to write in the best detail is the absolute truth ...."

Hummel went on to describe coming home from work at lunchtime October 18, 1990, to "a nightmarish scene..."

"I started up the hall toward our bedroom but stopped dead in my tracks as I passed the open bathroom door. I found Kristy laying on her left side with her back toward the bathtub. There was a lot of blood .... I first turned her head to check for a pulse but her rolled-up eyes told me she was dead."

Her left wrist had a terrible gash, he wrote, and in the sink he found a note: "Don't tell the kids."

He honored that request, he said, by rolling up the 200-pound body in plastic sheeting and carrying it to his van. He mopped up the blood with towels, laundered the towels, and dashed to the mall to buy a new bathroom rug -- all in the three hours before their son came home from school.

The next night, Hummel constructed a raft of inner tubes and 2-by-4s; his letter included a diagram. He began rowing out into Bellingham Bay in an inflatable boat, towing his dead wife.

The tube raft capsized and her body, weighted with a stone from the family's rock wall, dangled by a rope in the water like a fishing hook from a bobber.

"I rowed and bailed for an hour and a half at least but the wind got worse and I had to let her body go," Hummel wrote. "I was too tired to cry but I remember saying a silent prayer."

The detectives didn't believe a word.

There was no wind on Bellingham Bay that night, Hutchings said, and there's no way he could have handled a 200-pound corpse without help the way he described.

"You can go through the details and shake your head at how implausible they are," Hutchings said. "But it was somewhat maddening that a father would go for 14 years telling his children they had been abandoned by their mother, and then say, your mom didn't really abandon you."

Police processed the house for traces of blood and searched the property with cadaver-sniffing dogs and ground-penetrating radar, to see if Alice had been buried there or entombed in the foundation. No evidence was found.

A month later, when a forest ranger found Hummel camping in St. Maries, Idaho, the detectives again drove to him, hoping to give him a lie-detector test.

He first asked if he could take the polygraph in Bellingham, then when they all reached the city late in the evening he asked to do the test in the morning. As security, he offered the keys to his van.

Hutchings kicks himself as he recalls his response: "Bruce, I don't need your keys. If you say I'll see you in the morning, I'll see you in the morning."

The next morning, he was gone again -- along with the van bearing Montana plates that said "LILTRVLR."

The detectives learned from Hummel's wife that he had been bouncing around campsites, rarely staying anywhere more than a day. He told her he was afraid to go to jail and that he had planned to commit suicide.

Instead, he found his way to Westport.

Peggy Coverdale met Hummel when he responded to a newspaper ad for the Christmas pageant. He attended meetings of the theater group, the Grayland Players.

For Coverdale's dinner-theater mystery -- titled "Finnished at the Finnish Inn," after the Finnish cranberry growers who built the community hall -- she needed someone who wasn't known as a Grayland Player to be the murderer.

"He seemed like a mild-mannered, pleasant, helpful type of person," she said. "I thought, oh, he'll fit that job very nicely."

Hummel accepted. He confessed to the dinner-goers that he killed a man who was planning to run off with his character's wife: "I got my revenge. Tell that to the sheriff."

A cast photo shows Hummel standing in the center, smiling in a flannel shirt and blue jeans.

Hummel stayed under the radar until late last year, when he himself tipped the detectives off by registering his van to a post-office box in Westport.

After confirming he was there, the detectives made another try at getting him to talk -- enlisted his younger daughter to wear a wire when they met. But Hummel was suspicious and wouldn't talk, Hutchings said.

Two months later, federal indictment in hand, FBI agents arrested him. He pleaded guilty this summer in Anchorage to 12 counts of wire fraud, acknowledging that his wife has been dead since October 18, 1990, and that he cashed $276,000 of her disability benefits.

Hummel, now 65, was sentenced November 8 to 27 months in prison. He's serving his sentence at SeaTac, Washington. E-mail to a friend

http://www.cnn.com/2007/CRIME/12/28/long.lie.ap/

wv171 - August 3, 2008 10:14 PM (GMT)
With no body, prosecutors try to prove murder
By GENE JOHNSON
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Without a body, traces of blood or other physical evidence, the Whatcom County Prosecutor's Office will try to prove that a former Bellingham man killed his wife 18 years ago.

Prosecutor Dave McEachran filed a charge of first-degree murder this week against Bruce Allen Hummel, whose wife, Alice, disappeared from their Bellingham home in 1990. For years, Hummel lied about the circumstances of her disappearance, telling their teenage children at the time that their mom had left them. Detectives say he even sent them presents purporting to be from her.

It was only in the last few years, when questioned by police, that Hummel admitted she was dead. He then fled, living in campgrounds around the Northwest and eventually settling in the coastal Washington town of Westport, where authorities tracked him down in late 2006. He's currently serving a federal prison term for cashing nearly $300,000 in his wife's disability benefits after she died.

Prosecutors believe he killed his wife because she confronted him about molesting their daughter.


http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/373203_bellingham02.html

monkalup - November 27, 2008 07:22 PM (GMT)
http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/587173.html

POSTED: Saturday, Oct. 04, 2008
Former Bellingham man pleads not guilty to killing wife in 1990
PETER JENSEN - THE BELLINGHAM HERALD

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tool goes here BELLINGHAM - A former resident accused of killing his wife almost 18 years ago pleaded not guilty in Whatcom County Superior Court Friday, Oct. 3.

Bruce A. Hummel was charged with first-degree murder in July for allegedly killing his wife, Alice, who was last seen in their Alabama Hill home in October 1990.

Hummel's trial is set to begin Nov. 24, but that likely will be delayed, said Hummel's attorney, Whatcom County Public Defender Jon Komorowski. Komorowski said his office will need more time, possibly more than three months, to review evidence.

Hummel will remain in Whatcom County Jail. He was extradited from a federal prison in Minnesota, and is almost halfway through serving a 27-month sentence for illegally cashing Alice Hummel's disability checks.

Alice Hummel's body has never been found, but Prosecutor Dave McEachran said he thinks he has enough evidence for a murder conviction.

According to charging documents filed in Superior Court, Alice Hummel's daughter had told her that Bruce Hummel had molested her. That was about two weeks before Alice Hummel disappeared.

After investigators confronted Hummel about his wife's disappearance, he wrote a letter stating that she had slit her wrists and he had dumped her body by himself in Bellingham Bay on a windy night.

But tests for blood in the Hummel home didn't back that up, and detectives say Bruce Hummel could not have handled his wife's body by himself, as he described in the letter. Weather records also show that the night he described wasn't windy.

Detectives said it was unlikely that a body dumped in the bay wouldn't have turned up, even if weighted down.


monkalup - November 27, 2008 07:27 PM (GMT)

monkalup - April 18, 2009 01:29 AM (GMT)
http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/874320.html

POSTED: Friday, Apr. 17, 2009
DNA from envelopes may be key to Bellingham murder investigation
PETER JENSEN - THE BELLINGHAM HERALD

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tool goes here For years after Bellingham resident Alice Hummel disappeared in October 1990, the only way her three children knew she was alive was the letters and gifts she purportedly sent them.

Their father, Bruce Hummel, told them their mother had moved away from their Alabama Hill home to find a job in California and then Texas.

Bellingham police detectives and Whatcom County Prosecutor Dave McEachran now believe that Alice Hummel never left Bellingham, but was instead murdered by her husband - and they want to use DNA samples from an envelope containing one of those letters to prove it.

McEachran charged Bruce Hummel with first-degree murder in July 2008, and Hummel is currently in Whatcom County Jail awaiting trial. Alice Hummel's body was never found.

Detectives believe Bruce Hummel sent those letters and gifts to his children as a means of covering up the killing, according to court documents.

"We're looking at some documents, and we're looking for DNA evidence on those documents," McEachran said.

Bellingham Police Sgt. Les Gitts, the department's evidence supervisor, removed a stamp from an envelope containing one of those letters and swabbed the back of it for DNA samples, according to court documents.

Gitts also swabbed the back of the envelope, where it would have been licked to seal it, for DNA.

Last week, Whatcom County Superior Court Judge Charles Snyder approved a motion to allow detectives to swab the inside of Bruce Hummel's mouth to get a DNA sample for comparison, McEachran said.

Tests will now be run to see if the samples from Bruce Hummel's mouth match those from the envelope, McEachran said.

Reach PETER JENSEN atpeter.jensen@bellinghamherald.com or call 360-715-2264.

monkalup - August 14, 2009 12:57 AM (GMT)
After nearly 19 years, WA man on trial for murder
Jurors in the Whatcom County Superior Court trial of a man charged with murdering his wife have been given two alternate explanations for Alice Hummel's disappearance in October 1990.

BELLINGHAM, Wash. —
Jurors in the Whatcom County Superior Court trial of a man charged with murdering his wife have been given two alternate explanations for Alice Hummel's disappearance in October 1990.

Prosecutor Dave McEachran told them Tuesday that Bruce Hummel's wife disappeared after she confronted him about an allegation that he had molested their daughter. Public defender Jon Komorowski said Alice Hummel vanished after she decided to abandon her family.

Bruce Hummel was charged with first-degree murder in July 2008; his wife's body has never been found. Hummel was brought back to Bellingham from a prison in Minnesota, where he was serving a federal sentence for cashing Alice Hummel's disability checks.

After she disappeared, Hummel told their children she had simply run off, and the children didn't report her missing for more than a decade.

The trial is expected to last two weeks.

---

Information from: The Bellingham Herald, http://www.bellinghamherald.com
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/loca...ummeltrial.html

monkalup - August 22, 2009 06:15 AM (GMT)
1990 Bellingham murder case goes to jury
PETER JENSEN - THE BELLINGHAM HERALD
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Even without Alice Hummel's body, Whatcom County Prosecutor Dave McEachran told a jury Wednesday, Aug. 19, he was confident he had enough evidence to convict her husband, Bruce, of murder.

Bruce Hummel's attorney, Jon Komorowski, director of the Whatcom County Public Defender's Office, said that a major portion of McEachran's case - how, when and where Bruce Hummel supposedly murdered his wife - hinges on the testimony of a methamphetamine-addicted snitch who admitted under oath his word couldn't be trusted.

Each lawyer presented his case to a Whatcom County Superior Court jury Wednesday during closing arguments of Bruce Hummel's trial on a charge of first-degree murder.


The jury will begin deliberating Thursday morning.

McEachran said the lack of a body was not important.

"This is a no-body homicide," McEachran said. "The body of Alice Kristina Hummel was not found. In the state of Washington you do not need a body. That's not the law here."

He said Bruce Hummel's motive in murdering his wife was to cover up the alleged molestation of his daughter and to continue to cash Alice's disability checks.

Their youngest daughter told Alice her father was sexual abusing her a week before Alice disappeared, McEachran said.

"The seeds of this crime occurred well before 1990," McEachran said. "They were laid with the acts of molestation. Alice Hummel did confront the defendant and that precipitated her death."

Donald R. Cargill, 41, testified previously that he shared a cell in the Whatcom County Jail with Bruce Hummel, and that Hummel told him he overdosed his wife with barbiturates while they were in bed.

McEachran said Bruce Hummel then covered up the murder by telling the children their mother moved to California to start a new job and abandon the family. The children received letters and packages purportedly sent from their mother for years following her disappearance.

"He conducted a scheme that was extremely elaborate," McEachran said. "It's the defendant trying to cover his tracks. It was an elaborate scheme so that nobody would say, 'Where's Alice?'"

McEachran said a letter Bruce Hummel sent to Bellingham police detectives saying Alice killed herself showed the extent he was willing to go to keep her murder secret.

In the letter, Bruce Hummel describes finding his wife with her wrists slashed and how he dumped her body in Bellingham Bay to keep their children from finding out.

Detectives' testimony and weather records contradicted the letter's account.

"This story is another concoction," McEachran said. "It reads like a cheap dime-store novel."

Komorowski presented an entirely different account to the jury.

Alice Hummel disappeared because she assumed a new identity and abandoned her children and husband because she was unhappy with their dysfunctional family life, Komorowski said.

No trace of Alice Hummel has been found since October 1990, despite nationwide records-database searches.

Komorowski said that is because she assumed a new identity. He had presented a criminal investigator, Daniel Peyovich, to testify on how easy it was to do that in 1990.

Komorowski said McEachran's portrayal of Bruce Hummel as a cunning mastermind of an elaborate cover-up was false.

"The evidence shows Bruce is not very bright," Komorowski said. "Not only is he not very bright, but the evidence shows that when he's under a great deal of pressure he makes things up."

He said the letter was a result of Bruce Hummel being under pressure to explain his wife's disappearance to detectives.

"They wanted him to change his story," Komorowski said. "He came up with some stupid cockamamie story. It's baloney, but it doesn't make him guilty of first-degree murder."

Komorowski said McEachran's case hinges on Cargill's account of Bruce Hummel killing his wife, which he said is contradicted by testimony from the Hummel children.

"He's the foundation of the entire state's case," Komorowski said. "Without Donald Cargill they have no method of death. He's the only one who can talk about how a crime took place. You have to believe beyond a reasonable doubt. You cannot trust Donald Cargill."

Komorowski said it could not be proven that the gifts, packages and letters were not sent by Alice Hummel, and cited that fact as proof that she was alive in 1991.

McEachran spoke to the jury last and downplayed Cargill's role in the case. He said Bruce Hummel admitted his wife was dead when he pleaded guilty to federal charges of wire fraud from cashing the disability checks.

"The whole plea is based on the fact that she's dead," McEachran said. "I'm not asking you to take Don Cargill home with you after this case, but I am asking you to listen to what he had to say. Don't let (Bruce Hummel) get away with first-degree murder."

Reach PETER JENSEN at peter.jensen@bellinghamherald.com or call 360-715-2264.
http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/1034939.html

monkalup - August 22, 2009 06:17 AM (GMT)
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/loca...ummeltrial.html
Former WA man convicted of murdering wife
A Whatcom County Superior Court jury has convicted a 67-year-old former Bellingham man of first-degree murder in the October 1990 disappearance of his wife.

The Associated Press

BELLINGHAM, Wash. —
A Whatcom County Superior Court jury has convicted a 67-year-old former Bellingham man of first-degree murder in the October 1990 disappearance of his wife.

Prosecutor Dave McEachran told the jury that Alice Hummel disappeared after she confronted her husband about an allegation that he had molested one of their daughters. The defense said the woman vanished after she decided to abandon her family.

Bruce Hummel was brought back to Bellingham from a prison in Minnesota, where he was serving a federal sentence for cashing Alice Hummel's disability checks. Her body was never found.

Jurors deliberated for most of Thursday before returning their verdict. The Bellingham Herald says they declined to talk to reporters, as did defense lawyer Jon Komorowski.

McEachran says the three Hummel children, now grown, are "extremely relieved" by the verdict.

The prosecutor says Hummel is looking at a sentence between 34 and 45 years. No sentencing date has been set.

The backbone of the case was a nine-year investigation by Bellingham police detectives, who began looking into Alice Hummel's disappearance after her oldest daughter filed a missing person's report in 2001.




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