On the evening of November 17, 1973, five teenagers from Sioux Falls, South Dakota were attacked by a group of three murderous brothers at Gitchie Manitou State Preserve just across the South Dakota border in Iowa.

Four of the teenagers were killed, and one was kidnapped and raped. Thirteen-year-old Sandra Cheskey was the only one of the victims to survive the night's horror.

Gitchie Manitou State Preserve / Google Maps
Gitchie Manitou State Preserve / Google Maps
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According to Murderpidia.org this is what happened at Gitchie Manitou State Preserve on Nov. 17, 1973:  Four Sioux Falls, South Dakota teenagers, Roger Essem, Stewart Baade, Dana Baade, and Michael Hadrath, were shot to death at Gitchie Manitou State Preserve, where they were having a party.

Three brothers, David, Allen, and James Fryer, were convicted.

Gitchie Manitou Murders' Victims:
Roger Essem (male, 17), Stewart Baade (male, 18), Dana Baade (male, 14), Michael Hadrath (male, 15)
Sandra Cheskey (female, 13, survived)

Gitchie Manitou Murders' Perpetrators
Allen Fryer (male, 29), David Fryer (male, 24), James Fryer (male, 21)

Gitchie Manitou State Preserve-Google Maps
Gitchie Manitou State Preserve-Google Maps
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Circumstances of the 1973 Gitchie Manitou Murders

The Fryer brothers were in the park trying to poach deer. They came and heard the kids singing around their campfire. The brothers came up with a plan to impersonate law enforcement and steal the campers' marijuana.

At the trial, testimony seemed to say that the Fryers thought narcotics agents were "allowed" to kill drug users.

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Allen, James, and David Fryer got their shotguns and took a position overlooking the victims then opened fire.

Roger Essem was killed immediately. Stewart Baade was wounded. Two of the remaining teenagers took cover in the trees.

The brothers, posing as law enforcement, ordered the teens out of the trees. Michael Hadrath and Sandra Cheskey emerged together and Allen Fryer then shot Hadrath in the arm.

Gitchie Manitou
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Allen and David Fryer forced Dana Baade, Michael Hadrath, and Sandra Cheskey away from the campfire.

Sandra Cheskey was tied up and put in the van the teens had driven to the campsite in. A wounded Stewart Baade was also brought back to the van.

Allen Fryer then drove Sandra Cheskey away in the van, leaving Stewart Baade, Dana Baade, and Michael Hadrath with James and David Fryer.

James and David Fryer then killed the three with their shotguns.

Those three bodies were discovered the next day by a Sioux Falls couple on a drive.  Roger Essems' body was found the next day near the campfire where he died.

James and David Fryer met up with Allen Fryer and Cheskey. Allen and Sandy got into the brother's truck, and the group drove to a farm where James Fryer raped Sandra Cheskey.

The next day, after filling the truck's tank from a large red fuel tank on the farm, Allen drove Cheskey home. He said that Sandra was "too young to get busted".

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Gitchie Manitou Preserve, March 2022 (PHOTO: Natasha-TSM)

Gitchie Manitou Murders: Investigation, Trial, and Outcome

On November 29, 1973, Sandra Cheskey was taken by Lyon County, Iowa Sheriff Craig Vincent to look for the farm where Sandy was raped.

Near Hartford, South Dakota she recognized the large red fuel tank on a farm owned by a local farmer with who Allen Fryers worked for.

1973 Gitchie Manitou Murders – A Crime That Still Haunts Sioux Falls
Mobile Instinct via YouTube
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In an amazing coincidence, Allen Fryer then drove by the Sherrif and Cheskey in the same blue truck that the Fryer brothers were driving the night of Cheskey's rape and the murder of her friends.

Sandy told Sheriff Vincent "That's him. That's the boss". Law enforcement arrested Allen Fryer. David and James Fryer were arrested a short time later.

On June 18, 1974, James and Allen Fryer escaped from the Lyon County Jail. They stole a vehicle and fled until getting arrested in Gillette Wyoming.

James Fryer was found guilty of manslaughter in the deaths of Roger Essem, and the murder of Michael Hadrath and the two Baade brothers.

Gitchie Manitou
Gitchie Manitou Preserve, March 2022 (PHOTO: Natasha-TSM)
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David Fryer pled guilty to three charges of murder, and one charge of manslaughter and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole

Allen was found guilty of four counts of first-degree murder and was sentenced to four consecutive life terms in prison.

James Fryer was found guilty of three charges of first-degree murder and one charge of manslaughter.

The three Fryer brothers are currently serving their sentences in penitentiaries in Iowa.

Legacy of the 1973 Gitchie Manitou Murders

Sandra's life after that night was haunted by a web of anger, guilt, and shame. The Sandra you meet nearly five decades later is a somewhat reserved mother, grandmother, aunt, and friend with beautiful dark eyes and an easy smile.

She has somehow found a way to make peace with her past despite living with many unanswered questions, like 'Why did this happen?' 'Why did I survive?.' 

Sandra inspires those around her to also find their inner strength and move beyond tragedy and limitations.

Sandra Cheskey, Gitchie Manitou Murders
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(R) Patty Dee from 973 KKRC, (L) Sandra Cheskey in 2017 at a signing for the book 'Gitchie Girl' by Phil and Sandy Hamman. [PHOTO: Patty Dee/Townsquare Media][/caption]

The book Gitchie Girl by Phil and Sandy Hamman documents the event which has become the stuff of local legends and scary ghost story-telling sessions.

In 2020 the case was featured in the docuseries Killer Siblings on Oxygen.

MORE: 1893 Murder is the Most Gruesome Crime Ever in Sioux Falls, South Dakota

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Below, find out where 25 of the most infamous crimes in history took place — and what the locations are used for today. (If they've been left standing.)

Worst Places to Live in South Dakota

A surprising town was named the worst place to live in all of South Dakota and the reason behind it is a bit unexpected.

Money Inc. made a list of the 20 worst cities and towns to live in all of South Dakota and no part of the state is left unmarked.

The list focused on a number of key factors, including crime rate, unemployment, low wages, and school funding.

So which city is the "worst" in South Dakota, according to the article? Read on:

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are not my own and are taken from a list provided by Moneyinc.com

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