Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Charlie Neitzel

The night Tyler Peterson shot and killed six people, he intended to have seven victims.

The lone survivor of Peterson's killing spree, Charlie Neitzel, is talking. He gives a glimpse of the horror that took place in Crandon, Wisconsin a little over a month ago.

Neitzel was interviewed by Mike Nichols of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Nichols writes Neitzel's account of the terrifying events.

[Charlie Neitzel] lived only by pretending to die and, although he has no idea why he survived, some good is coming of it already.

He lived to tell about it.

"I haven't had any dreams about it," he said. "I don't really think about it. I try not to."

But he has talked to the victims' families, who wanted to know if their kids suffered.

And, although he is still in considerable pain from three gunshots and five surgeries, he told the real story of Tyler Peterson - one that has already partially morphed into fiction in some quarters - in an interview Sunday.

What's true is that for many years, Tyler Peterson was a friend.

"We were friends through grade school and high school a little bit," said Charlie, 21.

Even after high school, they used to ice fish together. He and Aaron Smith, one of the victims, had actually chatted with Peterson for a couple hours while they sat in their trucks outside a Crandon bank just a couple nights before the killings.

The night it actually happened - Saturday, Oct. 6, and Sunday, Oct. 7 - Charlie had been elsewhere. He didn't show up at the small party at Jordanne Murray's house until probably after 2 a.m.

Two of his best friends, Bradley Schultz and Smith, were there. So were Katrina McCorkle, Lianna Thomas and Lindsey Stahl, who was only 14.

He wasn't there but 15 or 20 minutes when Peterson showed up, saying he and Murray were supposed to hang out that night.

"She said, 'Well, plans have changed and now I have different people over and I want you to leave,' " Charlie said.

Only Peterson didn't want to leave.

"She said she was going to call the cops and he said, 'I am the cops.' "

He started swearing at her, said Charlie, and some of the others yelled back, "telling him to leave, telling him that he was being a psycho, a stalker boyfriend, because he pretty much was."

Charlie has read in the newspapers that "the reason he did it was because we were calling him names, like a 'dirty pig' or something. That's the biggest crock of (expletive) I've ever heard."

That never happened, he said.

Peterson "was a crazy psycho," Charlie said, "when he came flying in that door."

It was strictly a verbal altercation, he said, until Peterson pushed Murray and hit one of the other girls and then, before anyone else could intervene, ran out the door.

When he returned, we all know by know, he had an AR-15 rifle, and he kicked in the door.

So the victims called Peterson "psycho" and "a stalker boyfriend," but not a "dirty pig."

I'm in no way excusing Peterson's slaughter of six people, but by Neitzel's own words, they did call Peterson names.

It's "the biggest crock of (expletive) [he's] ever heard" that they called Peterson a "dirty pig."

OK. But "psycho" and "stalker boyfriend" qualify as derogatory terms. Of course, what they called him is irrelevant. Nothing they could call him would have given Peterson reason to take their lives.

Peterson's comment, "I am the cops," is chilling.

What happened next, Charlie said, just seemed unreal, like it couldn't be happening. Charlie was in the kitchen, but the house is wide open.

Tyler Peterson, a kid he'd known since fifth grade, a Forest County sheriff's deputy who also worked as a cop, just started shooting.

And he never said a word.

"The whole time," said Charlie, "he didn't talk."

It happened so quickly, nobody had time to even react.

Charlie said he can't talk about everything. He lived in West Bend and attended St. Mary's School through fourth grade. But he had been best friends with Bradley Schultz and Aaron ever since moving to Pickerel and starting in the Crandon-area schools in fifth grade. He knew almost everyone who was killed.

When their families ask if their kids died quickly, he said he tells the truth.

"All the parents, I can't even imagine what is going through their minds if they didn't know what really happened, didn't know if their kids were slaughtered or if they got shot once, got killed instantly," he said.

The truth is, he said, "one of the kids did kind of suffer a little bit. But everybody else was pretty much killed instantly."

He himself, he said, was "terrified."

Peterson shot him in the leg first, and he went down.

"I tried to stand up and my leg just, like, snapped . . . I was standing there on my one leg and I looked at him. I was screaming at him not to shoot me. I was like, 'Tyler, There's no reason you have to shoot. Don't (expletive) shoot me! We've been friends forever.' "

When Peterson paused, Charlie said, he went for the gun - and Peterson shot him in the elbow.

"I fell on the ground. I curled up in the corner and I just played dead," he said.

Peterson was probably 6 feet away when he shot him the last time, firing a round into his shoulder.

That time, Charlie said, he didn't even move.

Not until Peterson turned around, reloaded and walked out the front door.

Emotionally, Charlie said he is doing OK so far.

I don't know how that's possible.

How could Neitzel being doing OK emotionally after what he experienced?

...He wants everyone to know how thankful he is. Cards and e-mails have arrived from all over the world. Some say, "Glad you are alive"; some, "Praying for you," and he appreciates that.

As for why Peterson decided to kill seven people - and succeeded in ending the lives of six - Charlie said he cannot know.

"I guess nobody will really know why he did it," Charlie said. "The only person that can really know is him, I guess."

Then again, maybe it's simple.

"He's a cold-blooded murderer," said Charlie. "That's all there is to it."

I really don't know how Neitzel can go forward after this.

I would be haunted by the images. I know it.

But I would also be so grateful that I made it out of that house alive.

I can't help but think that Neitzel has a purpose. Perhaps he survived so the story of what happened that horrible night can be told. The grieving families can know what their loved ones went through in their final moments. As awful as they were, it must be of some comfort to know.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

i think that charlie has probably suppressed the memory to some extent. I am sure this is not something he wants to remember. and also` dr.s might have him on meds to help him cope. this is only the beinging of a completly diffenet life now for charlie. he faces so many changes. My heart goes out to you Charlie

Mary said...

Supposedly, time heals all wounds.

It's going to take a lot of time for Charlie to heal. I can't begin to imagine.

Unknown said...

Thank God that my cousin played dead! His faking his death is what saved his life! His recovery from his injuries will be painful but he has the support of his family to help him with his recovery. God Bless - Your Cousin Kris on your Grandma Diane's side of the family

Mary said...

It is a miracle that he survived.

God bless him.