Brother-in-law recalls incident involving
missing boy
Herman relative regrets not acting
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
TIM POTTER
The Wichita Eagle
This story originally was published in The Wichita Eagle on Feb.
14, 2009.
In hindsight, Adam Herrman's adoptive
brother-in-law says, he feels guilty for not calling police about an
incident he says he witnessed a year or so before the boy
disappeared.
Back then, the brother-in-law said,
he was upset and confused - but did not call authorities - over an
incident at a Derby house where Adam lived with his adoptive parents
before moving to Towanda.
Adam, who was 10 or 11 at the time,
grasped his arm and asked for help, the brother-in-law said. His
first name is Steven; he asked that his last name not be used to
protect his children's privacy.
Late last year, Steven learned that
Adam has been missing since 1999. The discovery that he has been
missing for a decade has triggered an investigation in which the
Butler County prosecutor has said that Adam's adoptive parents, Doug
and Valerie Herrman, are suspects and that murder charges are
possible, based on an underlying crime of a child abuse.
Doug and Valerie Herrman and their
lawyers say they are innocent.
'Steven, help me'
Steven, now 40, said the incident
occurred at a duplex in the 300 block of South Willow. He said he
was visiting his in-laws' duplex and went to use a basement
bathroom. But the light wouldn't turn on because the bulb had been
removed.
As he was closing the bathroom door,
from inside the bathroom, a small hand grasped his arm, he said.
"Steven, help me," the person said,
in a flat tone, he said.
Steven said he realized it was Adam.
He said he had Adam move over to a
lighted area in the basement and told him to sit in a recliner.
Steven said he saw a yellowish bruise
around Adam's eye and scratches of more than an inch long on the
boy's face. The scratches appeared to be healing.
He didn't visit the house very often
and didn't remember seeing injuries on Adam before, he said.
Describing his feelings at the time,
Steven said, "I just didn't understand. Why's he asking for help?
Why's he in the bathroom" - in the dark?
"Maybe I should have sat down and
talked to him a little longer," he said.
Steven said he told Adam to stay
there and went outside to talk to Doug Herrman, who was working by
the garage.
Steven said he was upset. He said he
told Doug Herrman something like, "You need to fix this, or I'm
calling the police."
Days later, Steven said, Doug Herrman
told him that he, Valerie and Adam were attending counseling
sessions and that everything was OK.
Steven said that at the time he felt
assured that the situation was resolved.
Later, when he saw Adam, "He looked
fine."
'She's very caring'
Some of Valerie Herrman's close
relatives have accused her of abusing Adam over the years.
She told The Eagle that she sometimes
kept Adam in a bathroom, on the advice of a psychiatrist, after he
threatened the family.
Her attorney, Warner Eisenbise,
declined to comment on Steven's account of his visit to the Derby
duplex.
Eisenbise defended Valerie Herrman,
saying, "I've gotten to know Valerie very well. She's very
emotional. She's very caring." He said he expects there could be
character witnesses who would say that "she baby sat their children,
and she was wonderful. She's not the evil person" that some of her
relatives have described, he said.
Dan Monnat,
whose law firm is representing Doug Herrman, also declined to
comment on Steven's account but defended his client. "Doug Herrman
is innocent of causing any harm to Adam Herrman,"
Monnat said.
At the storm shelter
Months after the incident at the
duplex, Steven said that he and his wife, Crystal, who is the
Herrmans' oldest biological child, moved to a Towanda mobile home
park. The Herrmans had moved there from Derby, and Valerie Herrman
managed the park.
Steven and his wife lived a few lots
from the Herrmans.
Steven said he remembers tornado
sirens sounding twice while they lived there. The first time, he saw
Adam with others gathered in the park's storm shelter. The shelter
sat next to the lot where the Herrmans' manufactured home sat.
Weeks later, when the tornado siren
sounded again, Steven said he didn't see Adam at the shelter. He
said someone asked Valerie Herrman where Adam was. She said Adam was
at home because he was "being bad," Steven said.
Steven said it angered him because he
thought Adam would have been at risk if a tornado hit.
In an Eagle interview, Valerie
Herrman said Adam ran away in the first week of May 1999 after she
spanked him with a belt. Adam was 11 at the time. The Herrmans have
said they searched for Adam but couldn't find him. Valerie Herrman
said they didn't report Adam missing because they feared the
spanking would have caused authorities to take him and his younger
siblings into state custody.
Relatives have said that the Herrmans
explained Adam's absence by saying that he had gone back to state
custody.
In late 2008, Steven's wife, Crystal,
took her concerns about Adam's welfare to authorities in Sedgwick
County. She had searched the Internet but had not been able to
locate Adam. After authorities checked, they determined that Adam
has been missing since 1999.
Steven said that after his wife
brought her concerns to authorities, he told investigators about the
incident at the Derby house.
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