Jonelle Matthews: Former governor candidate shot 12-yr-old girl in the head, watched children walk from school [DA]

On Friday, the Weld County Coroner’s Office in Colorado released an unredacted autopsy report, following the indictment of a former Idaho governor candidate for the murder and kidnapping of 12-year-old Jonelle Matthews.

As CrimeOnline previously reported, Jonelle Matthews disappeared on December 20, 1984, after attending a Christmas concert at Franklin Middle School in Greeley, Colorado. A friend and the friend’s father dropped Jonelle off at home after the concert and watched her until she walked inside.

Jonelle’s father and sister were at a basketball game when she arrived home, and her mother was out of town. When the family came home, Jonelle was missing. The shoes she wore at the concert were left behind, along with a shawl and her leotards.

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At the time of Jonelle’s disappearance, Steve Pankey, who ran for Idaho governor for the Constitution Party in 2014, then ran again in the 2018 Republican primary, lived around two miles away from the girl.

In July 2019, 34 years after her disappearance, a construction crew found human remains at an oil construction site over 20 miles away from Jonelle’s home. Officials later confirmed the remains were positively Jonelle’s.

On Tuesday, according to NBC News, Weld District Attorney, Michael Rourke, announced that Pankey was indicted by a grand jury on October 9. Authorities arrested Pankey on Monday in Idaho and charged him with first-degree murder and related charges.

Greeley Police Chief Mark Jones added that Pankey’s arrest was “36 years in the making.”

According to the indictment, Pankey is accused of shooting Jonelle once in the head before hiding her body. The bullet entered the left frontal bone of Jonelle’s skull and exited downward in the back of the head.

Steve Pankey Indictment by Leigh Egan

Authorities said Pankey had knowledge of Jonelle’s neighborhood, even commenting in 1985 that two police officers lived on her street. He also had knowledge of Jonelle, according to investigators, and once attended the same church as the victim and her family.

Pankey watched children walk home from school, the indictment read, but the details, including how investigators knew about it, is unclear.

Pankey, who was also a youth minister at Sunny View Church of the Nazarene in Greeley, previously claimed that he was on police radar because of previous run-ins with the law, but insisted he never harmed Jonelle.

In 1977, Pankey was accused of “date-rape” by a 23-year-old woman. He was prosecuted but the charges were later dropped. Pankey claimed the sex was consensual.

“Once you’re accused of something like date rape, you’re forever stigmatized,” Pankey told the outlet.

Pankey said on the night Jonelle disappeared, he was at home with his former wife. The couple reportedly left for an out of town function the following morning, and when he returned home on December 26, he learned that Jonelle had vanished.

His timeline, however, differed from what his former wife told investigators. Pankey’s ex-wife told authorities that they took an unexpected trip on December 22, 1984, which would have been two days after Jonelle disappeared, according to the indictment.

In this undated photo provided by the Weld County, Colo., District Attorney’s Office, shows Steve Pankey, a former longshot candidate for Idaho governor charged with murder, kidnapping and other counts in the death of Jonelle Matthews, a 12-year-old Colorado girl who went missing in 1984. He was arrested Monday, Oct. 12, 2020, at his Idaho home and being held without bail as he awaited extradition to Colorado, officials said. Weld County District Attorney’s Office via AP)

The former wife also indicated that Pankey searched for news on the radio about updates on the Jonelle, which was something uncharacteristic of him. She said when they returned home, Pankey forced her to read newspaper articles about Jonelle.

Pankey then allegedly “began digging in their yard” and disposed of a vehicle on their property that had “caught fire.”

In 1985, during church service, Pankey allegedly called someone a “false prophet” when they said Jonelle would return home. He was eventually ushered out of the church after becoming agitated.

In 2008, Pankey’s son was murdered. The former wife told investigators she heard him say something odd while at his son’s funeral.

“I hope God didn’t allow this to happen because of Jonelle Matthews,” Pankey said, according to the indictment.

Pankey claimed he didn’t know who Jonelle was until six days after her disappearance when he heard about her through reports and the community.

“I never met Jonelle, I never met her family, I didn’t know she existed or disappeared until Wednesday, December 26 [1984],” Pankey told the Idaho Statesman in 2019.

According to the indictment, Pankey made incriminating and inconsistent statements about the case over the years. He also knew intimate knowledge about the case, including a rake used to cover up shoeprints in the snow.

In this Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, photograph, family photographs of Jonelle Matthews, who went missing just before Christmas 1984 and whose remains were found in Greeley, Colo. in 2019, sit on a table in a home in Greeley. On Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2020, Steve Pankey, a former longshot candidate for Idaho governor, was indicted in the murder of Jonelle Matthews, a 12-year-old Colorado girl who went missing in 1984. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

On August 15, 2019, FBI agents found Pankey at his home in Twin Falls, Idaho, and questioned him. Pankey claimed that authorities asked him to take a DNA test and he complied.

Authorities later obtained a search warrant for Pankey’s home. According to the warrant, investigators wrote that they had probable cause to think that Pankey kidnapped and murdered Jonelle.

Pankey repeatedly searched online for information about Jonelle, then allegedly attempted to hide his online footprints by deleting his search history.

Detectives previously visited Pankey’s former home in Greeley and asked the current owner about the septic tank before digging up three areas in the home’s front yard.

Pankey said in 2019 that he thought authorities would leave him alone after the supposed DNA test. He decided to talk openly about the case after detectives continued to investigate him.

“I’m trying to be transparent,” Pankey reportedly said.

Greeley police said that although Pankey previously cooperated with law enforcement, when they arrived at his Twin Falls home, he became uncooperative. Greeley authorities also said that Pankey was not asked to submit a DNA sample by law enforcement.

“Pankey refused to speak with detectives for reasons unknown. Greeley detectives worked with the Twin Falls Sheriff’s Office and obtained a warrant to search Pankey’s residence which was executed on September 4 with the assistance of the Twin Falls Sheriff’s Office and the Twin Falls Police Department,” Greeley authorities said.

Earlier this week, Pankey’s attorney, Anthony J. Viorst said he expects all charges to be dropped, NBC 9News reports.

“I anticipate he will be exonerated of all charges,” Viorst said.

Check back for updates.

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[Feature Photo: In this Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, photograph, Jennifer Mogensen holds a poster of her adopted sister, Jonelle Matthews, who went missing and whose remains were found recently in Greeley, Colo. Steve Pankey, a former longshot candidate for Idaho governor, has been indicted in the murder of Jonelle Matthews, a 12-year-old Colorado girl who went missing in 1984. AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File]