Then There Were Six

  • The bible tells of the prophet Elijah, who, having disposed of certain irritating pagans, feared for his life and fled to the wilderness, where he lay himself down under a broom tree and prayed to die.

    The women raped by Larry Harper in the early 1990s would probably recoil at his name's being even remotely linked to the prophet, but Gina Holder, who attended Bible studies with Harper following his escape from a Texas prison last month, says the convicted rapist knew his Scripture with a prophet's acumen. Holder knew Harper as "Brother Jim," one of seven companions who stayed at the Woodland Park, Colo., RV park that she co-owns. She remembers him in khakis, penny loafers, buttoned-down shirts. "He was very preppy," says another Bible-study participant. "He looked like a Mormon knocking at the door."

    At the last study--a group of 15 nondenominationalists meeting under a pastor's auspices at the RV park--the text was Matthew 12, in which Jesus takes on the Pharisees. "Brother Jim," says Holder, "was thumbing back and forth through the Bible, finding other references that related to the text. All of us, even the pastor, were pretty amazed."

    Harper's biblical dexterity contributed to the claim by the seven to being a traveling Christian group en route from Texas to California. "They listened to Christian music," says Holder. "They called each other Brother. They called my husband Brother Wade." She adds with some ferocity, "They didn't sit out on the park bench and clean their guns."

    Some may argue that solitary confinement is preferable to seven men packed into a 34-ft. RV, two twin beds in the back, 35 guns and ammo strewn about; the coarse companionship of murderers, rapists and the beater of a small child. But the Connally Seven had chosen a spectacular hideaway after one of them allegedly shot a policeman 11 times in Irving, Texas. The RV site was perched high above Woodland Park, with a postcard view of the northeast face of Pikes Peak fading and reappearing behind blowing snow and scuttling clouds. The fugitives had been there for three weeks, paid cash, received no mail.

    At Tres Hombres, a cantina in the heart of Woodland Park, four of the men--Randy Halprin, Donald Newbury, Patrick Murphy Jr. and "Brother Jim"--were just starting to become regulars. "Just regular guys," says bartender Pam Smith. She remembers Michael Rodriguez--who had hired a hit man to kill his wife for $400,000 in insurance money--as being "real nice." He came in for lunch. Smith and her boss Darby Howard remember their tattoos--and, in alleged ringleader George Rivas' case, a fresh-orange hairdo. But Tres Hombres sees lots of people with mohawks and piercings. The Gang of Seven blended in.

    And then Brother Wade and Sister Gina watched the TV show America's Most Wanted and realized who the band of traveling Christians really were. Brother Wade alerted the police, and a SWAT team descended. Three of the escapees were captured at a nearby convenience store. Another surrendered peacefully at the RV. Two were captured two days later at a Holiday Inn.

    But Brother Jim didn't surrender that day at the RV. He watched his freedom unraveling from the shadows of the Pace Arrow motor home. A fugitive who had just surrendered--Randy Halprin--suggested to the surrounding police that Brother Jim would like to call his father. A cell phone was offered, via police bullhorn. There was no response from the man in the Pace Arrow. Then gunshots were heard. When authorities entered the motor home, they found Brother Jim dead, a suicide note placed on the pages of an open Bible.

    A day later, up in the RV-park owner's office, Gina Holder watched from a window. She and her husband will probably snag a part of the $500,000 reward. But she isn't thinking about that now. Sister Gina is doing a five-minute interview--"just five minutes, that's all, five minutes"--and thinking about Brother Jim. "He was sweet, soft-spoken. They talked about how all seven of them traveled around, stopping at motels to take showers. They stayed in our premium site." And how would she gauge Brother Jim's sincerity, the man who left the open Bible as his last testament? "I'm sorry," she says, "I really haven't thought about that yet."

    One wonders what passage Brother Jim marked at the end. When Elijah laid himself down and prepared to die, an angel of the Lord came visiting with freshly baked cake and gave Elijah the strength to carry on. When Brother Jim prepared to die, the angel of death apparently gave him the strength to pull the trigger twice. Both bullets pierced his heart.