Roland Pitre Jr.
I
do not know what to think about Roland Pitre Jr. It is pretty
apparent that he is not a good guy by just his rap sheet but I am
conflicted on just what kind of bad guy he is. He is either a
horrible criminal, since he was caught often; a squealer who will rat
on himself and anyone else he can in a second; or he is just a
remorseless man who commits crimes and basically stands back and
says, Yeah, I did it, just sentence me and let me be on my way. Ok,
the last is just an assumption that I have made just by everything I
read on him. It is likely that no one knows exactly when Roland began
committing crimes or just how many he has committed in his lifetime.
I would not be surprised to know that the only reason we know of the
crimes in which he committed is simply because he was caught and
there are others that he just was never caught for. Then again he
seemed to be such a bungled criminal I am unsure that he could commit
a crime without being caught.
The
first crime that people can prove or know about was in July of 1980.
Thirty-three year old Lt. Cmdr. Dennis Archer was shot three times in
the chest at his Whidbey Island Washington home. Just exactly how
Pitre was caught for this crime is not clear. But, it is likely that
they found their way to Pitre when they discovered that Dennis' wife,
Maria, was having an affair with Pitre. It was said that Pitre was a
Judo instructor and Maria and her children were his students. Pitre
would plead guilty to second degree murder and agree to testify
against Maria, and a friend of his named Charles Guidry, who Pitre
said he convinced to shoot Dennis, at Maria's urging. Both Maria and
Charles would plead innocent and go to trial. Maria would admit to
the affair but claimed she never asked Roland to kill her husband and
if he was involved it was without her knowledge. It was not clear
whether Maria and Charles Guidry were tried together or separately
but regardless the outcome was the same. They were both acquitted. It
seems the jury did not believe Pitre's story. Roland would serve
about six years for that crime.
Prior
to Dennis Archer's murder Roland had been married to a woman named
Cheryl and they had a young daughter named Yvonne. Some reports say
that the couple were simply separated at the time of Dennis' murder
while others say they had officially divorced. I was unable to
determine which was true. However, when he testified against Maria
he would confess that he had obtained a $20,000 life insurance policy
on his young daughter, who was two at the time, and had considered
ways to kill her to obtain the money. He claimed he wanted the money
to help buy things for Maria. He went as far as saying he had
considered staging an overdose of sleeping pills or even pushing the
toddler out of a vehicle and make it look like an accident.
Regardless of this confession while he was in prison Cheryl decided
to reconcile with Roland. One report says that they remarried in
1981 but again I am unsure that was accurate. At any rate in 1987
the couple would have another child, this time a boy.
By
1988 the relationship was over and this time it was clear that they
officially divorced. Just a few months later, on Sunday October 16,
1988 would be the last day that Cheryl would be seen. Roland had the
children for the weekend and he would be the one to report her
missing on that day. There seemed to be no sign of her. It was said
that Roland was very public (making it sound through possibly the
media) vocal about the fact that he felt the police were not looking
for Cheryl very well. Four days later her purse would be found in
Lake Union, several miles from her home. The people who found her
purse attempted to contact her but to no avail. It is not completely
clear if the people who found the purse then called the police or it
just so happened around the same time that Cheryl's car was found in
the same area. The way I understood it the car was taken to a police
evidence garage before it was ever searched. Whether that was
protocol in every case or it simply was not searched until later is
unknown. At any rate when the car was searched Cheryl's body would
be found in the trunk. She had been severely beaten and strangled
with some sort of ligature. Her wrists had been bound by duct tape.
Many
who knew Cheryl believed that Roland was involved but there seemed to
be nothing to prove this and the case went cold. In the meantime
Roland would retain custody of his children with Cheryl and he would
remarry within a year or two. Authorities apparently were aware that
Cheryl had a $100,000 life insurance policy and that Roland was the
beneficiary of both the policy and of her Will. One report stated
that Roland's new wife would adopt his children but the marriage
would not last long. Within a few years they were already separated,
if not divorced. It is unclear whether she retained custody of the
children along with her teenage son from a previous relationship.
By
1993 Roland was living with a new girlfriend. One night in 1993 the
new couple donned masks and entered the home in which Roland, now
ex-stepson, was sleeping. They approached the sixteen year old boy
with the plan to kidnap him at gunpoint. Roland had even made a
“holding cell” for him under the home the couple shared.
Allegedly the plan was to force the boy to write letters to his
grandparents in order to secure a ransom for him. The plan was
foiled when the boy struggled and screamed. Just how the two were
caught was not clear but of course they were and Roland once again
went to prison. I cannot tell you the exact details of his sentence
but let us just say that in 2003 he was still in prison and
apparently had several years to go before there was even any
consideration for a release. Whatever came of the girlfriend is
unknown, at least to me.
But,
sometime in 2003 police were notified that a former inmate “buddy”
of Roland's and another man, Frederick McKee, wanted to talk to them.
This man told the investigators that he had befriended the two men
in prison and that both men had confided in him that they had been
involved in the murder of Roland's ex-wife, Cheryl. After they got
this information from the man the investigators then went and talked
to Roland himself. This is the point in which I was given the
impression that he is remorseless in his actions, will say or do
whatever he can to save his own skin, but in the same respect
basically admit everything and shrug it off. But of course he had a
story to tell, another story that it is unlikely a jury would
believe, just as he had not been believed in 1980.
Roland
would tell investigators that he had struck a deal with Frederick
McKee to have him “attack” Cheryl. Roland had duplicated a key
his daughter had mistakenly left out at his home that went to
Cheryl's home and he gave it to McKee. Roland would claim that the
plan was that McKee would attack Cheryl but he would come in like the
knight in shining armor and “rescue” her from the “big bad
man.” This was his ploy to win Cheryl back, so he says. But, then
he claimed that while he had planned to give his girlfriend an excuse
to leave the house that he had “some sort of blackout” and woke
up the following morning when he “suddenly realized” he “forgot
to rescue her.” He also admitted to taking McKee to a local
hardware store to buy duct tape and rope.
Just
as Roland Pitre was not hard to find, neither was Frederick McKee.
He too was back in prison. This time he was serving a twelve year
sentence for the manufacturing of meth. And, just as the people
Roland accused of being involved in the 1980 murder of Dennis Archer
denied involvement, so did McKee. He seemed to stick with that, for
a while.
In
February of 2004 Roland would officially plead guilty in the murder
of his ex-wife, Cheryl. The following month he would be given a
sentence of forty years. At his sentencing both of his children
spoke and asked the judge to ensure that he never be released from
prison. Yvonne expressed guilt that she had accidentally left the
key to her mother's house laying out, giving her father access. She
also expressed regret when she mentioned he had often forced her to
lie for him or used her as an alibi in many of his crimes and scheme
(there were many more not mentioned here).
In
October of 2004 it seems that Frederick McKee saw no other choice but
to plead guilty. He received a deal for his plea of second degree
murder and received a sentence of twenty years.
It
seems that lately I have been picking cases in which involve states
that do not have the best website when it comes to their Department
of Corrections. All I could determine through their information is
that Roland Pitre is still a guest in one of their prisons. I cannot
tell you if or when he may be up for parole. When it comes to
Frederick McKee, I did not find a record for him. This means he has
either been released, which is entirely possible, or he died while in
prison. It is my sincere hope that Roland Pitre never experiences
again what it means to be free.
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