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Roland Dean SUNDAHL

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

   
 
 
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Attempted rape
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: August 27, 1950
Date of birth: 1930
Victim profile: Bonnie Lou Merrill, 16
Method of murder: Beating with a hatchet
Location: Columbus, Nebraska, USA
Status: Executed by electrocution in Lincoln on April 30, 1952
 
 
 
 
 
 

Roland Dean Sundahl (died April 30, 1952) was an American murderer, electrocuted in Nebraska's electric chair for the abduction and murder of Bonnie Lou Merrill.

Background

Roland Sundahl was married with two young children. Described as a laborer, he was also delineated as being a calm man, not angered easily, and kind to people and animals. However, his family reported that in the year or so before the crime, his health changed for the worst. Suffering from headaches, he became moody and depressed.

Crime

Bonnie Lou Merrill went missing from the Y-Knot Cafe in Columbus, Nebraska, over Labor Day weekend in 1950. She had only been working at the cafe for two days before she went missing, and had not collected her paycheck since her shift on August 27, 1950.

The police, upon investigating the crime further, found out that Merrill had a date with another boy named Ronald Kasper, who was being driven by Roland Sundahl. They met with Merrill at the Y-Knot Cafe, and the trio began to drive around. When the night ended and Kasper left, he requested that Merrill be driven home. Instead of driving her home, however, Sundahl drove Merrill to Lake Babcock, north of Columbus, and made romantic advances towards her. When she resisted them, he choked her, beat her with a hatchet, and hid her body in the weeds. Sundahl told police that after hiding the body, he went to a nearby filing station and slept in his car after downing a cup of coffee.

Subsequent to the disappearance of Merrill, her boss, Jim Cumming, kept all of his employees at his home after their shifts ended.

Trial and execution

Charged with first-degree murder and attempted rape, Sundahl faced a jury of 12 men three months after the crime. An unsuccessful insanity defense was given. A psychiatric evaluation concluded that Sundahl tended to withdraw from people into a "dream world of fantasy." Upon receiving a second examination, however, from a different doctor, it was determined that he knew his ethics and had no history of mental illness. Sundahl, himself, testified at his trial and said that Bonnie's murder was "like a dream" and that he "[couldn't] believe it was possible." Sundahl's mother collapsed in the courtroom on several different occasions, while his wife burst into hysterics and made many outbursts.

After nine hours, Roland Sundahl was found guilty of first-degree murder. He was sentenced to death. Upon hearing the sentence, he put his head in his hands and wept.

Motions for a new trial and a Nebraska Supreme Court appeal were made. They both failed, so Sundahl's legal counsel filed for a stay of the sentence, then a rehearing in the case. Finally, an appeal was made to the U.S. Supreme Court. All three failed.

While awaiting the decision on commutation from the state prison board, Sundahl attempted suicide while in prison by cutting his wrists with a pencil sharpener blade, hidden in his Bible. The blade was hidden by Sundahl cutting a small hole into several pages, and directly above the hole, he underlined, "He maketh me to lie down in green pastures; he leadeth me beside the still waters." Subsequent to the suicide attempt, he was put under 24-hour suicide watch.

His request for commutation was denied and sixteen months after Merrill's death, on April 30, 1952, Sundahl entered the execution chamber. He was seated in the electric chair, made no final statement, and was pronounced dead three minutes after entering the chamber.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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