A Family Affair – The Murder of Jerry Heiman

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6th March 2021  •  3 min read

Barbara Opel enlisted her 13-year-old daughter and a group of her teenage friends to murder a man who had taken her family under his wing.


A Family Affair - The Murder of Jerry Heiman

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Barbara Opel enmeshed herself in her children’s lives to an extremely unhealthy degree. Her 13-year-old daughter, Heather Opel, had been encouraged to date from a young age. Each year, when valentine’s day rolled around, Barbara hosted a party and supplied the guests with alcohol. Barbara and Heather’s father had long divorced and she kept him from the children. They also had another 11-year-old son together while Barbara had a 7-year-old daughter from another relationship.

Barbara and her children were taken under the wing of terminal cancer patient, 64-year-old Jerry Heiman. Jerry had hired Barbara to care for his 89-year-old mother, who had Alzheimer’s disease. Jerry converted the basement in the home for Barbara and her children to live in while providing care for his mother.

However, shortly after Barbara and her children moved in, she started to plan something extremely sinister. Jerry had recently come in to $40,000 from the sale of a house and Barbara decided that she wanted that money and in order to obtain that money, Barbara decided that she needed Jerry to be dead.1

Barbara didn’t want to murder Jerry herself so she turned to Heather’s boyfriend, 17-year-old Jeffrey Grote. At first, Jeffrey refused to kill Jerry but when Barbara promised to buy him a car and pay a group of his friends to help, he changed his mind. Barbara enlisted Jeffrey, Heather, 14-year-old Kyle Boston, Kyle’s 13-year-old cousin, and 14-year-old Marriam Oliver to carry out the murder. On the 13th of April, 2001, the group of teenagers hid in Jerry’s house and waited for him to come home. As soon as he entered the home, the teenagers set upon him.

One of the teenagers cracked Jerry over the head with an aluminium baseball bat. He fell to the floor and begged for mercy but his pleas fell on deaf ears. The three teenage boys hit Jerry over and over again with baseball bats while Heather and Marriam took turns in stabbing Jerry with a 10-inch kitchen knife. As the attack was unfolding, Barbara was in the basement. Mid-way through, Marriam became squeamish and retreated but Barbara yelled at her: “Get up there and do what you’re supposed to do! You’re supposed to be Heather’s friend. You’re supposed to be there for her!”2

To make sure that Jerry was dead, he was cracked one final time over the head, splitting his skull open. Afterwards, they dragged Jerry’s body to his own car while Barbara ordered them to mop up the blood. Barbara then ransacked the home. They then drove Jerry’s body to a lonely spot on the Tulalip Indian Reservation and dumped it. After the deed was done, Barbara treated the teenagers to dinner and accommodation at the Rodeway Inn, all of which was paid for with Jerry’s credit card.

After committing the murder, Barbara then used Jerry’s check book to rent a truck which she then packed with all of Jerry’s valuable belongings. They left Jerry’s mother home alone in her blood-spattered wheelchair. She would be found a week later by concerned relatives who hadn’t heard from Jerry; she had been reduced to eating newspapers for sustenance. 3

Police would be alerted to Barbara when it was discovered she had rented a truck with Jerry’s check book. She tried to claim that Jerry was alive and well and was simply out of town. Her 11-year-old son, however, informed the police of the truth and would lead them to Jerry’s body. All of the teenagers involved in the murder readily confessed to their role. Police would also find a note written in Heather’s diary which read: “So my mom said if I helped kill Jerry I can go get one,” in reference to a new dirt bike that she had her eye on.

During the murder trial, Barbara had tried to claim that Jerry had become abusive towards her and she had wanted to teach him a lesson. She claimed that her plan was to have the teenagers beat Jerry up but not murder him. She contended that the teenagers had concocted the murder themselves. However, all of the teenagers would tell a different story and contend that they had been paid by Barbara.

Ultimately, the jury would reject Barbara’s defence and would determine that she was the mastermind of the brutal murder. She was found guilty and sentenced her to life imprisonment. Jeffrey Grote pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 50 years in prison. Heather Opel pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 22 years. Kyle Boston was sentenced to 18 years. His unnamed cousin was tried as a juvenile and released when he turned 21. Marriam Oliver was sentenced to 22 years.

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Footnotes:

  1. Tyler Morning Telegraph, 9 April, 2003 – “Woman Convicted of Masterminding Murder”
  2. Daily News, 17 August, 2008 – “She Made Them Killers”
  3. Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 25 April, 2001 – “Teens Hired to Kill Man”

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Dee
Dee
3 years ago

So messed up that a single grown woman ruined so many lives of children and their family! What an absolute sad story.

Hunter Green
Hunter Green
2 years ago
Reply to  Dee

Knowing a couple of the kids, now adults… they Have grown from this!

Erin
Erin
3 years ago

I really wish Emily would do more write ups. The podcast is great, but it’s the articles that got me into morbidology and what I can most conveniently consume.

Ellen
Ellen
3 years ago

This is disgusting of how far someone who would go for greed.

Riley Walz
Riley Walz
3 years ago

‘Police would also find a note written in Barbara’s diary which read: “So my mom said if I helped kill Jerry I can go get one,”’

So is Barbara the daughter, or the mother?

Jenifer Porter
Jenifer Porter
3 years ago
Reply to  Riley Walz

Barbara is the mother, Heather is the daughter – Heather is the one who wrote in her own diary about helping to kill Jerry and could then get a dirt bike

Laurel M Luna
Laurel M Luna
3 years ago

Hopefully Barbara is sitting in a tiny cell where she can’t manipulate anyone else again for the rest of her life, but chances are, not having the death sentence, she is probably in general population. It’s the little ones, the 11yo and his little sister are hopefully in a loving household and obviously under an excellent child psychologist. She’s a female Charles Manson, and those children were bullied. They were probably more terrified of Barbara and probably in shock. And yes they needed to be punished, but OMG these children were traumatized and probably PTSD all through their trials. And… Read more »

Katie
Katie
2 years ago
Reply to  Laurel M Luna

She’s actually a great lady, I had the pleasure of meeting her in prison an she’s one of the nicest caring people I’ve ever met in there. She works in the kitchen an lives in general pop while participating in many programs the prison offers

Amanda
Amanda
4 months ago
Reply to  Katie

Nice ppl don’t set up a murder she’s Charles Manson jr

Jesulover4life
Jesulover4life
2 years ago

How could she lie about a man who helped her and her family and then she had the guts to bribed kids to kill the man for her, to me that’s just sick. May he rest in peace and may his family have comfort.

Kiyana T
Kiyana T
3 months ago
Reply to  Jesulover4life

hi

Neide V. Melo
Neide V. Melo
1 year ago

Gente como Barbara Opel, sociopatas
Não se recuperam, devia ter recebido pena de morte porque nunca será um ser humano funcional. Sou totalmente a favor da pena de morte para psicopatas e sociopatas, não é uma doença, não tem cura!

Amanda
Amanda
4 months ago

Kids shouldn’t get out they are psychopaths for agreeing to it

Further Reading:

Gwen Araujo and the Panic Defence
Freedom Behind Bars – The Ashlee Martinson Case
The Weepy-Voiced Killer – Paul Michael Stephani
Who Killed Heaven LaShae Ross?
The Happiest Man on Death Row – Joe Arridy
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