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Amish children knew their killer
The Sunday Times ^ | October 8, 2006 | Tony Allen-Mills

Posted on 10/07/2006 4:21:41 PM PDT by MadIvan

Milkman was a popular figure on his rounds

THERE were no children to greet Charles Roberts the last time he collected milk from the Fisher family farm near the Pennsylvania town of Paradise. It was in the early hours of last Monday and the excited young Amish girls who often ran out to greet his arrival were inside asleep.

As a tanker driver for a Lancaster County dairy, Roberts was well known to farmers as one of the few “Englishers” — the Amish term for outsiders — who were allowed to pay regular visits to the community’s old-fashioned farms.

On his daytime rounds he was routinely besieged by inquisitive children who clamoured for lollipops and stories about an outside world that was rarely mentioned by their stern and protective parents.

Roberts finished his night shift at 3am on Monday and returned in darkness to his home in nearby Bart Township. The next time he saw the Fisher children that day, he lined them up against the wall of their classroom and shot them in the back of the head.

The disclosure that Roberts may have known some of the children he murdered in a still-unexplained explosion of violence at the West Nickel Mines Amish school last Monday has added a startling twist to a uniquely American tragedy.

The killings at the heart of the Amish community’s Pennsylvania homeland shattered the zealously guarded serenity of a quaintly archaic religious order that has somehow flourished despite turning its back on modern distractions such as electricity, telephones and cars.

Police initially thought Roberts chose his victims at random, but evidence is mounting that the 32-year-old deliberately targeted the Amish schoolgirls. “I’m sure he knew the girls,” said Stephen Sipos, who lives across the road from the Roberts family. “The milk drivers were always joking around with the kids.”

Among the 10 girls Roberts seized in a planned assault a few hours after he finished work was Marian Fisher, 13, and her 11-year-old sister Barbie, both of whom bravely offered to die in exchange for the lives of the others. A third Fisher sister escaped; neighbours confirmed the Fisher farm was a regular stop on Roberts’s milk route.

As the Amish sought seclusion after the agonies of a public ordeal, there were no easy answers to awkward questions about what provoked Monday’s mayhem, and whether something happened on Roberts’s rounds to propel him to murder the girls.

There were also fears among criminal experts that respect for Amish traditions and the reluctance of Pennsylvania police to intrude may hamper a promised investigation into the motives of a mild-mannered milkman who turned out to be seething with maniacal rage.

After a few hours’ sleep last Monday, Roberts was up at 7.30am helping his wife Marie get their children Abigail, seven, and Bryson, five, ready for school. The couple also had an 18-month-old baby, Carson.

At 8.45am the couple walked the children to their yellow school bus. Paula Derby, a neighbour, said it was unusual to see Roberts on a Monday because he often worked an early shift collecting the weekend milk.

She smiled when Roberts hugged and kissed his children and told them: “Remember, Daddy loves you.” It was a touching gesture from a man whose friends would later describe as a devoted father and husband.

Roberts was due to have a random drug test required by his employer, Northwest Foods. Yet after his wife left for a prayer meeting, he drove to a hardware store and bought steel bolts, plastic ties and wooden planks.

By the time he reached the Amish school in White Oak Road about a mile from his home it was 10am and he was carrying a 9mm semi-automatic pistol, a 300,000-volt stun gun, two shotguns, 600 rounds of ammunition and an assortment of chains and restraining devices.

Police later discovered that he had also brought lavatory paper, a change of clothes and two tubes of the sexual lubricant K-Y Jelly. The only possible conclusion, said Commander Jeffrey Miller of the Pennsylvania state police, was that he intended to “dig in for a long siege”. Police also think he may have been planning to abuse the girls sexually.

There were four adults and 26 children aged between six and 13 in the one-room schoolhouse when Roberts arrived. Beneath the blackboard hung a small sign that read “Visitors brighten people’s days”.

Two of the adults ran away when Roberts appeared with a gun. There are no telephones in Amish schools so Emma Mae Zook, a 20-year-old teacher, ran across fields to raise the alarm. Emma Fisher, nine, slipped out of the classroom, leaving her two sisters behind.

Roberts ordered the 15 boys and two remaining adults to leave. As soon as they were gone he began hammering planks against the door, barricading himself and 10 girls inside. He ignored Marian’s request that he shoot her first and let the others go. “Shoot me next,” pleaded Barbie.

He was still tying the girls’ feet with wire when the first police arrived at 10.45am. Roberts immediately telephoned his wife to tell her: “I’m not coming home. The police are here.”

As his dumbfounded wife struggled to understand what he was saying, Roberts told her he was filled with guilt and remorse because he had molested two younger relatives 20 years ago. He also told her where to find suicide notes. In one of the notes he said he had never recovered from the death of his daughter, Elise, who was born prematurely in 1997 and lived for only 20 minutes.

“It changed my life forever,” he wrote. “I am filled with so much hate, hate towards myself, hate towards God and unimaginable emptiness.”

Just after 11am Roberts answered a call from police. He warned that he would open fire on the children if they did not back away. The police never had a chance to respond. Within seconds they heard gunfire.

When state troopers smashed through the barricaded door, they found the most harrowing of scenes. Roberts had walked down the line of girls, shooting them in the back of the head. He fired 13 shots from his pistol and four magnum rounds, each containing 12 buckshot pellets, from a shotgun. Then he reloaded the pistol and fired a single shot into his head.

Two girls died at the scene and three more in hospital, among them Marian Fisher. A sixth has been taken off life support and is expected to die at home. Barbie Fisher was badly wounded but is expected to survive. The others are in a critical condition.

America has become used to the dreadful aftermath of school shootings — there were two in Colorado and Wisconsin the week before Roberts’s rampage, and President George W Bush has ordered a summit this week to discuss school safety.

Yet many Americans agreed there was something unfathomably cruel about the assault on a community as peaceful and devout as the Amish. People are no longer surprised about eruptions of violence in inner city ghettos or seething suburbs. But this was Lancaster County, home of the horse-drawn buggy and long-bearded farmers who do not wear wristwatches, let alone carry guns.

In reality the Amish are not nearly as otherworldy as sometimes portrayed. Over the years they have made numerous compromises to accommodate today’s world without abandoning their beliefs that life should not be “easy”, and that modern appliances breed laziness and distance from God.

Ironically it was their success as dairy farmers that produced one of the biggest — and most controversial — compromises. As production soared, dairies demanded the replacement of old-fashioned churns with bulk stainless steel tanks. The Amish agreed to install automatic churners — albeit battery-powered — despite traditionalists’ warnings that opening the doors to modern techniques would invite ruin.

Instead the Amish prospered and multiplied — their population has doubled to 180,000 in the past 20 years — but the price they paid was the arrival of outsider dairymen like Roberts.

“The milkman was our contact with the outside world,” said Ruth Garrett, who grew up in an Amish family before being expelled when she fell in love with an outsider.

“He and the (animal) feed man were the people who would come to the farm and the kids would chase them around and you could sit down and ask them what the world outside was like. We were shielded from everything as Amish kids . . . what we knew we learned from the milkman.”

Did Roberts have that kind of relationship with some of the children he killed? Did he give them lollipops and rides in his truck? Did he try to molest one of the girls and become angry when he was rebuffed? These questions have arisen because of what both police and criminal psychologists agree is a mass murderer’s profile that does not yet make sense. Police have investigated Roberts’s claims to have abused two of his relatives when they were four or five years old, and the young women do not remember a thing; nor does any relative believe such abuse occurred.

Psychiatrists acknowledge that the death of his baby may have filled him with anger, but most consider it unlikely he would suddenly explode nine years later without exhibiting any sign of stress.

His cousin, Ben Hildebrand, insisted: “There was not a drop of anger in him.” His wife Marie said in a statement: “The man who did this is not the man I married.”

According to Peter Ash, director of psychiatric services at Emory University, Roberts probably had “a very detailed inner life that simply nobody knew about”.

Some specialists speculated that Roberts may have been molested himself, and that he may have developed fantasies about molesting the Amish girls. In a 1995 study of murder-suicides, Alan Felthous of Southern Illinois University identified a class of “pseudo-commando” killer who may develop a paranoid delusion that a group of people is either “out to get him”, or is secretly taunting him.

Roberts may have fixated on young Amish girls, Felthous said: “It’s conceivable he would direct his hostilities towards them.”

When police revealed Roberts’s relatives were “absolutely sure” they had not been molested by him, Miller, the police commander, said his team would “try to determine what other motive there may have been”.

But other experts said there was little likelihood police would mount an aggressive effort to interview Amish parents about whether their daughters knew Roberts and how he may have behaved towards them.

The murderer is dead and there is no criminal case to prepare. Pennsylvania is immensely protective of the Amish — not least because of the tourism revenues they generate — and is unlikely to countenance further intrusion into a grieving community. It rained heavily in Nickel Mines on Friday. Outside the home of one of the murdered girls, a dozen black buggies were drawn up, signalling that the Amish community was looking after its own. “There is rarely a real inquiry into the motivation of the worst mass shooters,” said Kristin Rand of the Violence Policy Center, which lobbies for gun control. “It is not really a law enforcement function and I doubt we are going to see a proper psychological evaluation.” She paused. “That may be why these things keep happening.”


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: amish; massmurder; pennsylvania
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To: mel
Some of the Amish sell products in the mass market. They are not selling in a market but selling to someone who markets for them.

The milk truck is still familiar in rural areas whre there are dairy farms.

Some Amish may sell their baked goods to local stores.

Without income they could not survive.

They go about their business with little or no regard for those who drive by. They do wave back on occasion.

21 posted on 10/07/2006 5:18:29 PM PDT by OldFriend (Should we wait for them to come and kill us again? President Karzai 9/26/06)
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To: dirtboy

I have to say that crossed my mind too.

It does seem as though he was almost possessed.
when it was so against his character to act like that.
It make you wonder.


22 posted on 10/07/2006 5:19:56 PM PDT by annelizly
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To: ErnBatavia
Despite being asked not to take pictures of the little ones going to the funeral, the media did so anyway.

Their intrustion and their speculation is obscene.

There breathless coverage of the school shootings in Columbine, then Baiely, CO are part of why these things continue to happen. There is too darned much publicity. Too much interviewing teens on TV.

23 posted on 10/07/2006 5:20:25 PM PDT by OldFriend (Should we wait for them to come and kill us again? President Karzai 9/26/06)
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To: mel
This is a little off topic, but I wonder how the Amish feel about being such a tourist attraction. I went and gawked myself.

Bart Township is away from the main Amish tourist areas just to the north. These people are more old-order that quietly existed in a backwater until Monday morning.

24 posted on 10/07/2006 5:20:56 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: browardchad

Your sick speculation about the wife is disgusting.


25 posted on 10/07/2006 5:21:50 PM PDT by OldFriend (Should we wait for them to come and kill us again? President Karzai 9/26/06)
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To: browardchad
Ask the wife. She knows. And she may be just as sick as her husband, for all his supposed outward veneer of normalcy, obviously was.

Do us all a favor and wait until we find out there was any kind of evidence that she was aware of something that wrong with him.

Cripes, the PA State Police have been all over this one, and we have not heard boo that anyone had an inkling of what lurked beneath this man's outward persona.

26 posted on 10/07/2006 5:23:41 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: MadIvan

Odd it happened the day he was going to be tested for drugs.


27 posted on 10/07/2006 5:25:51 PM PDT by syriacus (MSM says - Michael Kennedy "had an affair" with a 14 yo; yet Mark Foley is the "pedophile.")
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To: Txsleuth
what those poor girls had to have gone through...especially if they DID know him..and had thought of him as a "friendly" person.

These small children had more gumption than I can imagine. When he asked them to pray for him, they asked why he couldn't pray for them. When it became clear that he meant to kill them, two stepped forward and demanded to be shot first.

28 posted on 10/07/2006 5:26:30 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: syriacus
Odd it happened the day he was going to be tested for drugs.

That to me is the wildcard. It will be interesting to see the toxicology results when they come in.

29 posted on 10/07/2006 5:27:14 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: Guenevere

I totally forgot about that book, but it really does seem realistic given this situation, doesn't it? that book gave me chills.


30 posted on 10/07/2006 5:28:44 PM PDT by xsmommy
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To: annelizly
It does seem as though he was almost possessed. when it was so against his character to act like that. It make you wonder.

It sure as heck makes me wonder. And I'm not normally inclinded to think in such a manner.

31 posted on 10/07/2006 5:29:41 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: dirtboy

Wow, excellent point....God won


32 posted on 10/07/2006 5:31:25 PM PDT by Kimmers
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To: syriacus
Odd it happened the day he was going to be tested for drugs.

I found that curious.

33 posted on 10/07/2006 5:32:03 PM PDT by grimalkin (Politics are very much like war. We may even have to use poison gas at times. - Winston Churchill)
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To: dirtboy

Brave girls... unselfish girls...and probably very certain of their faith.


34 posted on 10/07/2006 5:33:54 PM PDT by Txsleuth (FREEPATHON TIME----You need FR, you know you do, so how about donating??)
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To: Kimmers

The crazy thing is, from what little we can glean from his last moments, Roberts hated God and wanted to punish him .. but the response of the Amish to this tragedy has done more to inspire a jaded nation as to the power of faith than anything I can recall in recent memory, including 9-11.


35 posted on 10/07/2006 5:34:33 PM PDT by dirtboy (Good fences make good neighbors)
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To: The Bronze Titan

"One has to ask oneself: Do you REALLY believe in Good and Evil?"


God is good....but Islam believes that God is good and evil and he can change his mind....


36 posted on 10/07/2006 5:34:36 PM PDT by Kimmers
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To: MadIvan
It is a tragedy that any one should die at the hands of another.

But the line about gun control just gets me.

What about strict punishment for gun crimes. And the death penalty for murder with one year to appeal
37 posted on 10/07/2006 5:34:55 PM PDT by Creationist (If the earth is old show me your proof. Salvation from the judgment of your sins is free.)
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To: browardchad
From everything I've read, this was a good woman....a Christian woman...

..maybe she married an unbeliever....

...but she sounds solid to me.

She was group leader for her Mom's In Touch.group.
I have done the same thing....involved with Mom's In Touch

One doesn't become involved with groups like this unless there's a devotion, a commitment.

Stop speculating, please.

It would seem the BTK's own wife and family had no idea what they were living with!!--As soon as he was exposed for the demon he is, they broke all ties with him.

The devil is the author of deception.

38 posted on 10/07/2006 5:36:17 PM PDT by Guenevere
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To: grimalkin

I read a comment by the killer's wife's aunt that she(the aunt) did not believe that he was going to hurt the children. HURT!!!!! the lunatic shot 9 little girls with a 9 mil and a shot gun,5 have died. I hope she keeps that comment to herself or someone needs to put a muzzle on her.


39 posted on 10/07/2006 5:38:58 PM PDT by katman206
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To: xsmommy

I was hesitant to turn the next page....but I did, and I'm glad I read the book.


40 posted on 10/07/2006 5:39:02 PM PDT by Guenevere
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