Warning: Graphic content, readers’ discretion advised. This article contains a recollection of crime and can be triggering to some, readers’ discretion advised.

Authorities say Wesley Shermantine and Loren Herzog, dubbed the “Speed Freak Killers,” wantonly murdered many throughout California’s rural Central Valley before their arrest in 1999. Now, motivated by a bounty hunter’s promise to pay, one of those convicted killer’s is breaking his long-held secret and leading investigators to burial sites that have yielded hundreds of human bones.

The Speed Freak Killers is the name given to serial killer duo Loren Herzog and Wesley Shermantine, together initially convicted of four murders — three jointly — and suspected in the deaths of as many as 72 people in and around San Joaquin County, California based on a letter Shermantine wrote to a reporter in 2012.

They received the “speed freak” moniker due to their habitual methamphetamine abuse. Herzog committed suicide in 2012. Shermantine remains on death row in San Quentin State Prison, in San Quentin, California.

 

Loren Joseph Herzog December 8, 1965 – January 16, 2012

Wesley “Wes” Howard Shermantine Jr. born February 24, 1966

 

Shermantine amd Herzog grew up in the town of Linden, California, and lived on the same street as each other.
Both boys were friends with one another because there were not many other children in their neighbourhood to play with, and it appears that they did not have any other friends throughout high school and into adulthood. Shermantine’s father was a successful local contractor and real estate developer who frequently “spoiled” Wesley with gifts and money throughout his life.
Shermantine and Herzog were both avid hunters and fishermen who spent much of their childhood exploring the San Joaquin County countryside. Herzog and Shermantine both graduated from Linden High School in 1984. Herzog and Shermantine took pleasure in bullying other people, as well as drinking alcohol and using drugs, especially methamphetamine, in their apartment in nearby Stockton, California.
During this time, Herzog had a brief affair with a young woman named Kim Vanderheiden. The citizens of Linden, a small town with fewer than 2,000 people, 95 miles east of San Francisco, were long aware of the duo’s reputation as methamphetamine users and were both known to be regulars at the Linden Inn, a bar owned by the father of Kim and her 25-year-old sister Cyndi Vanderheiden of Clements, California.

 

Shermantine amd Herzog

 

Cyndi went missing after leaving the Linden Inn with Herzog and Shermantine on November 14, 1998. Investigation into Vanderheiden’s disappearance continued into 1999, and Shermantine was the prime suspect. In mid-January 1999, Shermantine’s car was repossessed and subsequently searched by the San Joaquin Sheriff’s Department. Blood from Vanderheiden was discovered in the car, and while DNA test results were being confirmed, the sheriff’s department focused on Herzog, Shermantine’s friend and suspected accomplice who was extensively questioned.

Cyndi Vanderheiden disappeared from Clements on Nov. 14, 1998.

 

Herzog ultimately divulged incriminating details such as describing how Shermantine had shot a hunter they ran into while on vacation in northern Utah in 1994. Utah police confirmed that a hunter had indeed been killed, but his murder was still classified as unsolved. Herzog also said Shermantine was responsible for killing Henry Howell, 41, who was shot dead and found parked off the road on Highway 88 in Alpine County near Hope Valley with his teeth and head bashed in. Herzog said he and Shermantine passed Howell parked on the highway, and Shermantine stopped, grabbed Howell’s shotgun, killed him, and stole what little money he had. Henry Howell was shot dead on Highway 88 near Hope Valley in September 1984.

Additionally, Herzog gave specific details about how Shermantine killed Robin Armtrout, 24, whose nude body was found stabbed nearly a dozen times on the east bank of Potter Creek near Linden. Herzog and Shermantine were arrested by the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department and charged with several counts of murder each on March 17, 1999.

 

Robin Armtrout’s body was found near Linden in September of 1985.

 

In 2001, a jury found Shermantine guilty of four murders: those of Vanderheiden,the robbery-murder of drifters Howard King, 35, found shot to death on Roberts Island on Nov. 27, 1984  (no image ) and Paul Raymond Cavanaugh, 31, whose bodies were found shot to death in a car off a remote road on Roberts Island on November 27,1984(no image)

 

and 16-year-old Chevelle “Chevy” Wheeler, who disappeared in 1985 from Franklin High School in Stockton after telling friends, she was leaving school to go with Shermantine to his family’s cabin in San Andreas.

 

In 2001, a jury found Shermantine guilty of four murders: those of Vanderheiden, the robbery-murder of drifters Howard King, 35, and Paul Raymond Cavanaugh, 31, whose bodies were found shot to death in a car off a remote road on Roberts Island on November 27, 1984, and 16-year-old Chevelle “Chevy” Wheeler, who disappeared in 1985 from Franklin High School in Stockton after telling friends, she was leaving school to go with Shermantine to his family’s cabin in San Andreas.

During his trial, numerous witnesses testified that they had been brutalized by Shermantine. He was accused of severely raping or sodomizing five different women, including a babysitter who claimed she was attacked when she went to get money he owed her. Shermantine’s sister disclosed that she had been also sexually assaulted by the two One woman claimed that after rear-ending her car, he held her hostage with a knife when she pulled over to exchange insurance information. She leaped out of his moving vehicle and made it to safety. Shermantine’s ex-wife also spoke of how he had abused her severely for years, even while she was pregnant and held their kids in her lap. Shermantine was sentenced to death and is on death row at San Quentin State Prison.

Herzog was charged with five counts of murder in 1999: those of Vanderheiden, Howell, Cavanaugh, Armtrout and King.In his 2001 trial, a jury found him guilty on three murder counts (Vanderheiden, Cavanaugh, and King), the lesser charge of accessory to murder in the Howell count, and acquitted him on the Armtrout count. Herzog was given a 78-year sentence.

 

Serial Killers Loren Herzog and Wesley Shermantine

 

An appeals court overturned all of Herzog’s convictions in August 2004, ruling that three of Herzog’s four confessions were coerced. In the case of the fourth, that of Vanderheiden, a retrial was ordered. This retrial never took place. Rather, a plea bargain was reached, and Herzog pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and furnishing amphetamine in the Vanderheiden case and to being an accessory to murder in the Cavanaugh, King, and Howell cases.
Accordingly, Herzog’s sentence was reduced to 14-years, with credit for six years served. With credit off his sentence for good behavior, Herzog served 11-years in prison and was in a position to be paroled by 2010.
Opposition to the inevitability of Herzog’s parole was extremely vocal, especially from victims’ families.That no California county wanted to take him for parole led the California Department of Corrections to parole him to a trailer stationed outside the front gate of the High Desert State Prison in Susanville, California in Lassen County in September 2010.

Herzog committed suicide in January 2012, hanging himself inside his trailer. He did so shortly after bounty hunter Leonard Padilla informed Herzog that Shermantine was planning to disclose the location of a well and two other locations where the duo buried their victims. Previously, none of their victims’ bodies had been found. Both men had maintained that the other did the killing in all cases and emphatically denied any culpability

 

In February 2010, while Shermantine waited on death row, his sister Barbara received letters from him identifying the locations of victims in an abandoned well on Flood Road near Linden, California. She turned these letters over to the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department.
The Sheriff’s Department followed up on the lead, but in an interview with the property owner, the owner stated that the wells in question were sealed before the victims disappeared. No further action was taken at that time.

More came about in February 2012, based on bounty hunter Padilla’s promise to pay Shermantine $30,000 for information. A map drawn by Shermantine and additional information given again led authorities to the same Linden, California well site that he had mentioned in 2010. More than 1,000 human bone fragments were recovered. The bones were tested by the California Department of Justice for DNA profiling.
In March 2012, the FBI’s Evidence Recovery Team was asked to assist with the overall investigation, in part because of how the excavation of the Linden well was handled. The identity of the remains recovered in the well was announced to the public on March 30, 2012. They were those of two Stockton, California teens missing since the mid-1980s: Kimberly Ann Billy, 19, and Joann Hobson, 16. The remains of an additional victim and an unidentified fetus were found in the well.

 

Wesley Shermantine: ‘Speed Freak Killer’ leads police to remains of victims he murdered decades ago

Kimberly Ann Billy,19

Joann Hobson, 16.( no image )

 

Former Shermantine property
Two separate burial sites in Calaveras County, California were also investigated in February 2012 based on a letter Shermantine wrote to Padilla that detailed possible locations of victims. Shermantine indicated sites near property formerly owned by Shermantine’s parents.Bodies from these two sites were recovered and identified as those of and Vanderheiden. No other additional remains were discovered.
Shermantine was briefly released from death row into police custody in September 2012 to lead authorities to four additional abandoned wells where he stated more victim remains would be found, all near the town of Linden, done because Padilla had paid Shermantine an additional $28,000. In early January 2013, the FBI began excavating a well site, which they hoped would yield more victims’ remains.

Shermantine declined to speak further to authorities. On February 22, 2013, the FBI announced that it had ended the search for victims based on Shermantine’s information. Two sites he had indicated had turned up nothing, and “other directions from him were misguided”.Shermantine also claimed to know the locations in the Cow Mountain Recreation Area of bodies of victims killed by other death row inmates. Lake County sheriffs were skeptical that any bodies could be successfully recovered in the large park so no searches were conducted.

 

remains linked to “Speed Freak Killers’ found

 

Since 2012, several victims’ families and elected officials have alleged that the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office (SJCSO) interfered with and deliberately hampered the continued search for additional possible victims of the “Speed Freak Killers.” In 2010, Shermantine wrote a letter to California State Senator Cathleen Galgiani revealing the locations of the remains of additional victims.
In 2012, Galgiani sponsored the use of taxpayer funds to search for additional victims of the pair and sought to simplify protocol granting incarcerated persons like Shermantine permission to participate in search excursions.Galgiani turned the letter over to law enforcement and later alleged that missing person records related to the “Speed Freak Killers” case had been deleted, hampering the further investigation.

In 2014, the mother of a missing woman filed suit against the SJCSO for mishandling the remains found in the Linden well. In 2015, a retired FBI agent corroborated her claims, alleging that the SJCSO deliberately used a backhoe to dig up remains, mangling them to prevent identification, so that the absence of certain files would not be discovered. In 2018, the Sheriff-elect of San Joaquin County announced that the “Speed Freak Killers” case would be re-opened.

 

 

FILE – In a Sunday, Feb. 12, 2012 file photo San Joaquin Sheriff detectives Paul Hoskins, left, and Lindsay Smith sift for human remains that were excavated from an abandoned cattle ranch near Linden, Calif., in this Sunday, (AP Photo/The Record, Craig Sanders, file)

 

The total number of mutual victims of Herzog and Shermantine remains unknown and speculative. Both were convicted in the murders of four people and are believed to be responsible for the deaths of at least 19 people.

Both men targeted random victims and killed for “fun and sport”. They would go out “hunting,” shooting individuals to death and, in some cases, kidnapping women, raping them, and stabbing them to death. Afterwards, in Calaveras County, they would dispose of their dead bodies in mine shafts, isolated hillsides, and beneath trailer parks.
Prior to his arrest, Shermantine frequently told relatives and acquaintances that he had “made people disappear” around the outskirts of Stockton.
In a confrontation with one woman he tried to rape in a trailer park, Shermantine allegedly told her after he had pushed her head to the ground: “Listen to the heartbeats of people I’ve buried here. Listen to the heartbeats of families I’ve buried here.” Shermantine stated there could have been up to 72 victims in a statement he sent to a local Sacramento news station in March 2012.
Yet he asserted that he would withhold the information unless Leonard Padilla gave him the $33,000 he demanded. “I really want to believe in Leonard, but I have these doubts he’ll come through, which is a shame because I’ve been holding the best for last,” Shermantine wrote.The following is a list of their known victims and several other missing people who have been mentioned as possible victims:

 

Ruth Ann Leamon ,16

16-year-old Ruth Ann Leamon disappeared from Modesto, California in 1982 after she became acquainted with two men, both in their thirties, on August 19. Three blocks from her house, at Teresa Street and Carver Road was where Leamon decided to meet the men later that evening. She left her Clayton Avenue apartment that day about 8:45 p.m. and was last seen leaving. She said she was travelling on foot to Sam’s Food City to get a soda. In reality, Ruth did show up at the shop, but she quickly left. Ruth was never again seen.

The two men who were supposed to meet Ruth the night she disappeared were questioned by authorities, but both of them denied any involvement in her case. Herzog and Shermantine are thought to be suspects in Ruth’s case. Ruth and a female acquaintance travelled to the Calaveras County Frog Jump with Herzog before she vanished.
According to Herzog, he and Shermantine were driving a truck on September 1, 1984, along Highway 88 in Hope Valley, California, several miles south of Lake Tahoe and west of the Nevada border in a remote location, when they passed a vehicle parked on the side of the road. The vehicle’s driver, Henry Lee Howell, 41, from Santa Clara, California had pulled to the side of the road because he was intoxicated. Shermantine stopped his truck, got out, and allegedly shot Howell with a shotgun.

Two months after the murder of Howell, on November 27, 1984, Herzog and Shermantine were out driving around together again on Roberts Island, California located just southwest of Stockton, when they passed a parked 1982 Pontiac. Herzog told detectives that they turned around, approached the car and grabbed their shotguns as they exited the truck.

In this Friday, Feb. 17, 2012 photo, a bulldozer and a front loader move soil back into a pit after where bones and debris were excavated over the past week from an old well on Flood Road east of Linden, Calif. The site is suspected to be a dumping ground for the victims of two California serial killers Wes Shermantine and Loren Herzog, the “Speed Freak Killers” who are suspected of murdering as many as 20 people in the 1980s and 1990s. (AP Photo/The Record, Craig Sanders)

 

Herzog said that Shermantine shot and killed the driver, Howard Michael King III, 35, while he sat behind the wheel, and then dragged the passenger, Paul Raymond Cavanaugh, 31, out the passenger door and shot him at point-blank range. The tire tracks found at the scene were eventually revealed to match Shermantine’s vehicle, which was the red pickup truck that witnesses later claimed to have seen in the vicinity of Roberts Island before King and Cavanaugh were killed.
Kimberly Ann Billy, 19, disappeared from Stockton, California on December 11, 1984. 16-year-old Joann Hobson disappeared from Stockton on August 29, 1985. In February 2012, acting on Shermantine’s directions, authorities found over 300 human bones and some personal items in an abandoned well in Linden, California. Billy’s bones were in the well, as well as those of Hobson.

On September 8, 1985, Herzog and Shermantine met Roberta Ray “Robin” Jones Armtrout, 24, at a park in Stockton. They were supposed to go out drinking together, but instead they headed to a farm close to Linden, not far from where both men lived. Shermantine “got carried away” at some point and started raping and beating Armtrout. After stabbing her more than a dozen times, he dumped her naked body on the bank of Potter Creek. Investigators noticed that most of the stab wounds were in the back and chest regions when a dove hunter subsequently discovered her naked body. Her mother last saw Armtrout getting into a red pickup truck with the two men.

 

In recent weeks, the authorities have unearthed more than 1,000 bones near Linden, Calif., including some at an abandoned cattle ranch.Credit…Craig Sanders/The Record, via Associated Press

 

Chevelle Yvonne “Chevy” Wheeler, 16, skipped school on Wednesday, October 16, 1985, and was last seen getting into a red pickup truck outside Franklin High School in Stockton. She had told a friend that she was going with a male acquaintance named “Wes” to Valley Springs, California. She asked her friend to tell her father about what she had done if she did not return by the end of the school day because she appeared hesitant about making the trip.

The friend did inform her father when Chevy did not show up, and her father then called the police. Shermantine was instantly identified by authorities as the prime suspect since he was familiar with the Wheeler family. Shermantine was found to be the owner of a red pickup truck. Blood and hair samples taken from a cabin Shermantine owned in San Andreas matched Wheeler.
Susan Robin Bender, 15, left her family’s home in Modesto on April 25, 1986 to stay with friends in Carmel, California. She was last observed making a phone call at the former Greyhound bus depot on 10th Street and G Street in Modesto. Susan was seen entering a full-sized, olive-green 1977 Ford van outside of the station. Susan has never been seen again. Auhtorities investigated Herzog and Shermantine as possible suspects in 2012 but were unable to find a link. Foul play is suspected in her case.

Gayle Marie Marks, 18, accompanied her mother to the San Joaquin County Mental Health Department in Stockton, California on October 18, 1988. Marks then walked alone to the local DMV on Parks Street to get an identification card. She made it to the DMV because a few days later, her card was mailed to her address. After leaving the DMV, Marks contacted her mother and left a message. She has never been heard from again. Shermantine and Herzog were investigated in relation to her case in 2012.
47-year-old Phillip Cabot Lloyd Martin was a transient who was last seen in north Stockton, California on September 30, 1993. On that day, he forgot to pick up his daughters from school, and no one has seen or heard from him since. Martin’s daughter told authorities that her father had worked with Shermantine, and that as a young girl, she had chosen him from a line-up of pictures. His daughter said she believed Martin, Shermantine and Herzog used drugs together. Martin’s case remains unsolved.

A view looking down Flood Road at the property where multiple murder victims may have been dumped. The well in question is located by the eucalyptus grove near the road (left). San Joaquin County officials continued to sift through the contents of an old abandoned well near Linden, Calif. Sunday February 12, 2012 for the remains of victims of two serial killers.Brant Ward/The Chronicle

 

Tracy Diane Melton, 32, disappeared from Stockton, California on May 6, 1998. A bone fragment located in Linden, California in 2003 was identified as hers in April 2011, but her family was not notified until January 2012. Evidence pointed to Shermantine and Herzog as suspects. Vanderheiden, who was killed by the pair, vanished a few months after Melton, and detectives have never ruled out the pair in Melton’s case.
Cynthia Ann “Cyndi” Vanderheiden, 25, disappeared from Clements, California on November 14, 1998. In 1999, Herzog and Shermantine were charged together with her murder as well as other deaths. Vanderheiden’s skull was found in a ravine in San Andreas, California in February 2012.

 

Original sketches of the man seen kidnapping Garecht

 

In August 2012, Shermantine wrote a letter to The Stockton Record after Herzog committed suicide in January 2012, in which he pointed out that Herzog bore a resemblance to the composite of the person who kidnapped “that Hayward girl.” Commenting on the likeness Herzog bore to Garecht’s kidnapper,

 

witness Katrina Rodriguez commented: “I thought then and I think now he could be the kidnapper… I think there are features that look very much like the man…It seems like a strong lead.”

 

At Shermantine’s direction, law enforcement began excavating an abandoned well in rural Linden, California in February 2012, where Herzog and Shermantine disposed of their victims.Thousands of bone fragments belonging to five different individualswere recovered from the well, some of which were believed to potentially belong to Garecht.However, DNA profiling completed later that year excluded Garecht as a possibility; the bones believed to have been hers were determined to be those of 19-year-old Kimberly Billy, who had disappeared in 1984. In January 2013, further excavations of abandoned wells in the area were completed, but yielded no further remains.

In 2015, a legal motion was filed by attorney Mark Geragos[ on behalf of a detective who was informed by a San Joaquin sheriff’s deputy that a pair of Mary Jane shoes discovered in one of the Linden wells bore similarity to the shoes Garecht was last seen wearing.[43] According to the detective, San Joaquin police refused to show him the shoes, both physically as well in photographs, and the shoes had not been examined by the Hayward Police Department. In December 2020, suspected serial killer David Emery Misch was arrested for Garecht’s murder after he was linked to the crimes via fingerprints left on Michaela’s scooter at the abduction site.

 

Michaela Joy Garecht (January 24, 1979 disappeared November 19, 1988) was nine years old when she was abducted in Hayward, California, in broad daylight at the corner of Mission Boulevard and Lafayette Avenue.

 

TIMELINE
Nov. 14, 1998.

Cyndi Vanderheiden is last seen alive in a car going through the driveway behind her Clements home after being at the Linden Inn the previous night with Loren Herzog and Wesley Shermantine Jr. Her car was found later that morning at Glenview Cemetery in Clements. Her body has never been found.

March 18,1999

Herzog, left, and Shermantine are arrested for the murders of
Vanderheiden and other victims.

Feb,14, 2001
Shermantine is convicted of four counts of murder by a Santa Clara County jury.

March 9,2001
Shermantine is sentenced to death by the same jury.

Oct.23, 2001
A different Santa Clara County jury convicts Loren Herzog of three counts of murder and being an accessory to a fourth murder.

Dec.10 ,2001
Herzog is sentenced to 78 years in state prison.

May 9 , 2002
Herzog is stabbed in the upper abdomen by another inmate at High Desert State Prison in Susanville.

Aug.18, 2004
The 6th Appellate District Court overturns all four of Herzog’s convictions and orders a retrial on the Vanderheiden murder. The appellate court ruled that Herzog was “coerced” while being questioned by San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department investigators in 1999, but determined he was not coerced when questioned about the Vanderheiden case.

Nov.24, 2004.
Herzog accepts a plea deal that reduces his 78-year sentence to just 14 years in prison, but he is told he will received credit for time served and good behavior.

Aug.19,2008.
Peter Fox, Herzog’s lawyer, is appointed San Joaquin County public defender.

July 15,2010.
Herzog is scheduled to be released from state prison July 25 in San Joaquin County.

July 28,2010
Herzog’s parole is postponed after state officials discovered a clerical error that doubled the days of credit for time served in county jail. Herzog’s new release date is scheduled for September.

Sept.17,2010
Herzog is released from prison and is paroled to High Desert State Prison in Lassen County. Originally meant to be paroled in San Joaquin County, a firestorm of opposition from local lawmakers, enforcement officers and citizens eventually led to parole officers deciding not to let Herzog return to the county. He has a trailer specially built for him on the prison grounds, but must maintain strict curfews as well as abide by a strict no-contact list.

Jan.16, 2012.
Herzog is found dead at his trailer on the High Desert State Prison property. Though the death is being investigated as a possible suicide, an official cause of death will not be determined until after an autopsy is conducted.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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