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<UID>
8902100419
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891008
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 08, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1E
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ALAN R. KAMUDA
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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
THE END OF INNOCENCE;DREAMS DEFERRED
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
END OF INNOCENCE
FRIENDS HAUNTED BY DEATHS OF IONIA TEENS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
IONIA -- He didn't see the bodies. Not when  he arrived. Just the car, a
1972 Chevy Malibu, parked right where the phone call said it was, on a tractor
path just off Frank Road. State Trooper  Jim  Rogers got out of his squad car
and sighed. "Probably some guy fell asleep," he figured. Happens all the time.
It was, after all, Saturday morning, and most people don't leave their
vehicles overnight  in a deserted field with the motor running.

  He approached on the driver's side and peeked in the window,  which, like
the others, was rolled up tight. Suddenly, he felt a shiver. There was a kid
slumped in the backseat and another one slumped on the front passenger side
and the  driver had his head back and eyes closed and, oh, God, he knew him.
Danon  Pierce. Football player. On the high school  team. His folks had that
restaurant over in . . . 

  "No," thought Rogers, the horror leaping into his thoughts. He grabbed
for the door. It was locked. He banged on the window. No response. He shook
the car, and the bodies barely budged. A crowbar, he thought. I'll get one
from my trunk. As he headed back, he pulled instinctively on the Chevy's rear
door and it opened. He crawled inside. The radio  was playing softly. A capped
bottle of  Scotch was on the floor. The kids did not move. He dragged the one
from the backseat out into the grass and laid him down, safe from the fumes.
Then he went back for the other two.
  "I need some help out here!" he barked into his police radio, but even
then, it was too late. They had been there for hours, the carbon monoxide
poison was inside their bodies, finished, victorious, their flesh cold to the
touch. When the other officers arrived, they found Rogers -- who, like the
victims, grew up in Ionia and attended the high school -- standing helplessly
in the field, with three dead teens and a whole world of sorrow.
  This is a story about growing up, which everyone in high school is in a
hurry to do -- but not this way, not this fast. Danon Pierce,  Kevin King and
Chris Sawtell  were three good faces in a small-town mural who were in the
wrong car at the wrong time for the wrong reasons. They had played a  football
game, stayed out late, drank a  little, parked the car and never woke up. And
now there are empty chairs at empty lockers and a team with black arm  bands
and a coach who sighs and tries to find answers; there are grieving parents
and whispering teachers. And most of all, there are the other kids, friends,
who, as you might remember, are the plasma of high school. You've got to have
friends; you die without your friends.
  You die with them, too.
  No one ever figured on that.
I keep thinking, why couldn't they have been with me? Then nothing would have
happened." Bart Cunningham leans back on a steel bar and shoots  a weary
glance across the field, his reddish hair still sweaty from practice. It is
late afternoon, and the sun is moving out of the sky. 
  One day earlier he had attended the funerals of his three teammates, an
event so heartbreaking to this small town it closed the school and a number of
area businesses. Notes were dropped in the caskets, personal messages. The
families wept. The Ionia players  wore their football jerseys and formed a
human wall from the church to the hearses and again from the hearses to the
grave sites, shoulder to shoulder, silent, big adolescent bodies, watching the
coffins go by. Bart helped carry Kevin King's casket.
  "The thing is," he says, almost apologetically, "normally we go to my
father's house after a game. We shoot pool, play cards. It's a regular thing
on  Friday nights. But this time, my sister had the chicken pox, so my dad
didn't want us all around.
  "If they had come over to my house, they'd be alive now. If only they came
over to my house. . . . "
  If only. If only. What happened that night seems to be a road map  of
near-misses, all of which led to that empty field at 4 a.m. If only Bart's
sister didn't have the chicken pox. If only the  guys didn't drink that
alcohol. If only they knew about the rotted exhaust system. If only it wasn't
so cold outside and they didn't roll up the windows, sealing their death.
  "The funerals are over,"  Cunningham says softly, "and I still can't
believe it. I don't know how long it'll be before it hits me that . . . "
  He looks up, then down.
  "I'll never see them again."
How much do we know  about our kids anymore? To ask friends about Kevin, Chris
and Danon is to get a disturbing picture of teenage popularity and
make-believe adulthood. On the one hand, they were good students, got A's  on
their  report cards, belonged to the student council. They were good-looking,
nicely mannered, they liked to laugh and of course, they were football heroes.
Kevin, 17, was the star fullback, Danon,  16, was the center, and Chris, 16,
was the linebacker. They were leaders; on the last night of their lives the
team lost, 46-0, to a rival school, and yet even in the fourth quarter, Chris
Sawtell was  urging his teammates: "Come on! We can still win this thing!"
  They seemed perfect models of small-town adolescence. And yet, they also
liked to drink, even at such young ages. They would cruise  town and make
trips to Lansing or Grand Rapids, and they never had problems getting booze --
beer, wine, Scotch, Jack Daniel's, Southern Comfort, you name it. Good kids.
Smart kids. Drinking shots. This  is a portrait of our youth.
  Bill May was supposed to be with them that night. He had been with them
before, on nights when they went from children to adults, nights when they
drank or rumbled or  raced around town in the Chevy and stayed out until
sunlight. A beefy, strong-looking 16-year-old with a face that seems too old
for high school, he sits now and tries to figure it out. 
  They came  to his house after the game. There was this party, they said,
these two girls were throwing it. "Come on, let's go. It'll be fun. Get some
booze. Get a little buzz." Bill said his shins were really hurting  him; he
wanted to go but he couldn't. Thanks anyway. Next time. And they drove off in
the Chevy.
  It was the last time he saw them.
  "I know what happened that night, because something like it happened about
two months ago," he says now, his voice full of regret. "It was the time we
went downtown in Danon's car. We found a buyer, got some alcohol, then we went
to the back roads and mixed some  drinks, did some slammers.
  "Then we went back into town. Chris was the type who would get rowdy when
he got buzzed, you know? He was just 150 pounds, but it didn't matter. He'd
take you on, even  if you weighed 350 pounds. We were on Main Street, and
these guys pulled by in an IROC-Z, and he yelled something and they stopped.
They got out of the car. Chris said, 'We're gonna rock 'n' roll. Come on.'
  "They started slapping each other, and Chris knocked this one guy down
like a ton of bricks. 'You want some?' he yelled. 'Come on!' Then another guy
hit Chris and he fell into me, so I jumped  in and took care of things. Chris'
lips were all cut up; it looked like somebody took a razor blade to them.
  "Of course, we got in trouble when we got home. We were all grounded. I
think what happened  Friday is that they just didn't want to go home. Not
after that last time. You know how your parents are if you come home late and
were drinking? So they figured they would camp out and go home in the
morning. We're really into the Rambo stuff. We have this field where we stash
our sleeping bags underground, and we hide food in a hollow tree. . . . "
  He pauses. "I bet they wanted to camp out,  but it was too cold, so they
just left the car running with the heater on and you know, they fell asleep. .
. . "
  What makes kids act this way? What is the big hurry to be so grown up?
Bill May  blows a lung full of air and shakes his head. There is a sadness in
his face. The whiskers seem to fall off, and the man-sized body slouches like
a school kid on a swing.
  How did it all come to  this, he wonders? The driving, the drinking, the
fooling around. They were just having fun.
  "We're not saints," he says. "But I lost my two best friends in the whole
word in one night."
The police  have reconstructed the tragic night. The boys were last seen by
their coach and teammates in the locker room after the game, which had been a
disappointment. Kevin was ejected by an official for a skirmish,  and
afterward he was near tears. "It's my fault," he told his teammates. "I'm the
reason we lost. I feel like crap." The others assured him he was not to blame.
  After the game, the kids stopped  at a house, then went to a party given
by Wendy and Kathy Nobis, two girls who also attend Ionia High.  They left the
party and went to a friend's house, then drove around town, went to another
house,  then drove to the Farmers Market on Steele Street, where they were
last seen talking to friends about 3:30 a.m. Somewhere along the line there
was alcohol consumed. But not a lot.
  After that, only  heaven knows. Kevin, Chris and Danon fell asleep with
the motor running, sometime after 4 a.m. on that hidden tractor path off Frank
Road -- which, ironically, is not far from the high school -- a narrow  dirt
street of fields and sprawling trees that grow close to the edge and hook
branches overhead, like soldiers crossing swords. It is dark there, and
remote. A good place to park. A good place to sleep it off. Apparently, that's
what they were doing.
  "Kids had hung out around there before," said State Police detective Jack
Van der Wal, who found McDonald's fast-food bags and other refuse near  the
scene. What the three boys didn't know, though, was that the tall weeds
beneath the car served as stuffing for its faulty exhaust system, which was
riddled with holes, allowing the fumes to be sucked  in by the heater, through
the rusted trunk and into the car. 
  They were sleeping in a coffin.
  Had that car been registered in Detroit, it never would have passed the
emissions test. But there  is  no such test in this part of the state. So the
carbon monoxide filled the boys' lungs as they slept, attacking the blood
cells, robbing the oxygen. They died with the radio on.
  Chris Sawtell  was wearing his high school letter jacket.
  When Van der Wal inspected the car, he found a duffel bag, a portable
radio, a bottle of Scotch and a bottle of Southern Comfort, still mostly full.
  Toxicology reports show alcohol was in  the victims' systems, but not much.
Danon, the driver, had the least, not even  enough to fail a breathalizer
test.
  "People want to make this all about alcohol,  but it isn't," Van der Wal
said. "It was just a terrible accident. Had they been stone sober, they still
would have died." 
  But would they have been there in the first place? In the days since the
accident,  a 21-year-woman has been arrested and charged with providing liquor
to minors at that party. She was jailed for 10 days.
  Empty chairs at empty lockers.
And the kids are left to figure  this all out. Dead? How could they be dead?
Kevin King, the strong, tempestuous one, who would gather the team together
after victories and lean in, real quiet, then explode in a yowl: "LET'S ROCK
'N' ROLL!" Dead? Chris Sawtell, the guy who made freshman girls swoon, daring,
adventurous, with the easy smile of confidence. Dead? Danon Pierce, who owned
the car but dreamed of motorcycles, and who was  on the student council, and,
according to his coach, Dan Painter, "was always coming up with some idea to
make the school better." Dead? 
  No. Can't be. They were the kinds of kids who worked at the local market
or the local nursery; they waved at honking cars in this small town where
everybody knows everybody else. Friday nights they carried the pride of the
school, which always seems to ride  on shoulder pads at that age, and they
fought hard for it, football, good and real. How do kids like that die? 
  There is no answer. They just do. Brian Snyder  knew Kevin since they were
little  kids. They had grown up in each others' houses, they were on the team
together, Brian was an offensive lineman, and they had this special look
whenever the coach would call "44 Trap." That was Kevin's  play, and Brian's
job was to block the safety. Do it right, and Kevin could spring for big
yardage. He would come back to the huddle and high-five his buddy. Thanks for
the hole. Nice play.
  "It  was really hard to hear that play called today and not see Kevin
there," says Snyder, a husky kid with wavy brown hair and a trace of freckles.
"I never played a football game without him before." 
  He stops and picks at the knee of his pants. His eyes are watery and he
sniffs when he can't help it.  "I don't know," he says. "It's not a lot of
fun seeing the casket come down over your friend's  face, you know? I . . .
haven't really figured this all out yet. . . . "
  There was a favorite photo Brian had of him, Kevin and Bart, posing like
muscle men. It always made him laugh when he saw  it. He doesn't have it
anymore. The day before, he placed it alongside Kevin's body. 
  You hear that, and you see these kids, and you are overwhelmed with a
sense of wrong. They are too young for this. They are too raw for tragedy. In
the inner-city schools of Detroit, death has become a frequent classmate;
there are, tragically, guns and knives and youths who seem anything but young.
But here  in Ionia, where the halls are freshly painted and the gym floor is
freshly waxed and the cheerleaders practice cartwheels in empty corridors, it
seems too remote. Kids here are just having fun, right?  That's what everyone
keeps saying.
  "I know about the drinking and stuff," Snyder says. "But they weren't
doing anything bad. They weren't doing anything everybody else wasn't doing. .
. . "
Where  do we stand on all this? The lenient will say, "We all did the same
thing in high school. Alcohol didn't kill them. The car did." The more
conservative will wring their hands. "What are teenagers doing  out at that
hour, driving around with liquor bottles, sleeping out all night? They weren't
even 17 years old."
  And out on Frank Road, there is now a gate across the path where the boys
were found.  Leaning against it is a wooden board, a tombstone of sorts,
reading "RIP" and carrying a heart and a message of love from fellow students.
There are roses and private notes, and most every day some girls  from the
school come out and tend to the site, straightening the flowers and crying in
the shade of the large branches.
  Empty chairs at empty lockers. Once upon a time, the three used to talk
about  opening their own business. Chris would be the lawyer and Danon the
operator and Kevin, well, he would find something to do. Once upon a time,
before they could drive, they snuck the Chevy out and their  football cleats
accidentally ripped a hole in the carpet, and they had to run and get some
glue and pray Danon's mom wouldn't notice. Once upon a time, they used to
sleep under the stars in sleeping bags, as far back as seventh grade, just go
walking in the woods like those kids in "Stand By Me," come back into town for
food and soda and then be gone again, on a teenage adventure.
  And once  upon a time, they took the Chevy out to the gravel pits with a
.22-gauge borrowed from a father and were target shooting when a bullet
ricocheted off the fender and narrowly missed Danon's hip. They  laughed, as
kids will do. From that point, they called the car "the Gold Bullet."
  Can irony get any more painful than that?
This Friday is homecoming for Ionia. It will be the first football game  on
the home field since the night of the accident. The players will wear black
arm bands. They will dedicate the performance to their missing teammates.
  And survivors such as Bill May -- who could  have been with them that
night -- will try to figure out whatever happened to simple old high school.
"I tell everyone now not to drink," he says. "I'm never gonna drink again. I
think we were kind of starting to have a problem, you know? We'd get a fifth
of this or that and just drink it for the feeling of being drunk. Not anymore.
I'm never touching a drop again."
  "I just wish I could have  been with them," says Brett Krause, a
red-headed senior lineman who worked this summer with Chris at the tree
nursery.  "I wouldn't mind if they had a good time. I'd be there, sober, just
to make sure  they were safe. Better to be home and drunk than not to go home
at all."
  "I wish," Bart Cunningham says, "that my sister never had the chicken
pox."
  Where is the moral of this story? Where  is the silver lining? These were
good kids, smart kids, well-liked and healthy. Were it not for a rolled-up
window or a rusty trunk they would still be alive. They were not drunkards.
They were not drug  addicts. It was an accident. And yet the image is
haunting, our children, out there, in cars, behind bottles, acting like adults
when they are really still forming, still stretching their flesh. Where  is
the silver lining?
  There is none.
  "I've been sleeping about three hours a night," says May, who may never
stop missing these guys. "I keep having this dream. We win the game, and we're
all  celebrating. Everybody's in the huddle, holding their helmets up.  And
then we're at my house, and Chris, Danon and Kevin are there, just like that
night. I get out of the shower, and this time they  talk me into going with
them. We  all get into the Chevy. . . .  
  "And as soon as the doors close, everything goes black."
  He stops talking and stares at the field. A fall breeze blows his  hair
up,  then drops it gently on his forehead. It is October now, and nobody here
is as young as they used to be. Jesus. Is anybody?
CUTLINE
Friends painted the boys' jersey numbers on a tree.
Kevin  King
Chris Sawtell
Danon Pierce
 Bill May: "I'm never gonna drink again. I think we were kind of starting to
have a problem, you know?  . . .  Not anymore. I'm never touching a drop
again."
 Brett  Krause: "I just wish I could have been with them. I wouldn't mind if
they had a good time. I'd be there, sober, just to make sure they were safe.
Better to be home and drunk than not to go home at all."
Bart Cunningham: "If they had come over to my house, they'd be alive now. If
only they came over to my house. . . . "
Flowers and balloons decorate Danon Pierce's grave.
Rhonda Comstock, 17, (standing)  and Michelle Patrick, 16, visit the gate near
the site of the accident every day after school. Below, messages from
classmates cover one of the signs left at the gate. 
Signs, flowers and funeral flags  mark a gate near the site where Kevin King,
Chris Sawtell and Danon Pierce died.
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