There is some background information to all this from the 1979 trial testimony of Detective Beasley. Helena showed him a blonde wig and floppy hat and talked about an ice pick:
BY MR. SMITH:
Q Mr. Beasley, have you examined that photograph, or whatever it is, before?
A Yes, sir.
Q When did you have a chance to look at it?
A I saw one in the newspaper like this.
Q Have you had an opportunity to examine that particular item in the past few days?
A Yes, sir; back in the interview room with Ms. Stoeckley and Mr. Segal.
Q All right, now, Mr. Beasley, I will ask you if you will to describe what this object is that you have examined?
A It is a picture of one of the suspects.
Q Is it a drawing?
A Drawing of one of the suspects.
Q Mr. Beasley, does that drawing portray fairly any individual that you ever saw with Helena Stoeckley?
A Yes, sir.
Q Do you know the name of that individual?
A Yes, sir.
Q What was his name?
A His last name was Mazerolle
Q Mazerolle?
A Yes, sir.
Q Do you know his first name?
A Yes, sir; I've got it here.
Q Would it refresh your recollection if I asked you if his name was Allen?
A That's it; Allen P. Mazerolle.
Q Allen Mazerolle?
A Yes, sir.
MR. SMITH: No further questions, Your Honor.
MR. BLACKBURN: Just a moment, Your Honor.
R E C R O S S - E X A M I N A T I O N 11:12 a.m.
BY MR. BLACKBURN:
Q When was the last time you saw Mr. Mazerolle?
A I can look at my records and tell you.
Q Approximately?
A About 1970 -- '69 or '70. I arrested him with about $15,000 worth of LSD.
Q How many times did you see him in your career?
A In my career -- about half a dozen times.
Q Do you have a picture of him?
A No, sir; I don't have one with me. The records don't have them in Fayetteville. They are all misplaced. I don't know where they are. I tried to get one, but I could not find it.
Q The drawing that was exhibited to you by Mr. Smith -- do you know when it was made?
A No, sir.
Q Do you know who made it?
A No, sir; I don't.
Q Well, the time that you had Helena and the three friends in with you at the police station, did you take any pictures of them?
A No, sir; they were never arrested. They do not --
Q (Interposing) I don't want to cut you off. Are you through, or were you through?
A Yeah; I'm through. I was just going to explain why.
Q Yes; go ahead?
A We don't take pictures unless we arrest them.
MR. BLACKBURN: No further questions.
THE COURT: Any further?
MR. SMITH: No, sir.
E X A M I N A T I O N 11:13 a.m.
BY THE COURT:
Q Let me ask you, Mr. Beasley, about several matters that either I didn't hear your answers, or you were not asked. You say you didn't arrest these people? Where did you detain them?
A At Helena's house.
Q Just out there in the driveway?
A Yes, sir; I stayed right out there. We was right out there in the street.
Q You kept them there for about an hour?
A Yes, sir.
Q You called in to the police department and asked them to get somebody on the radio, to get these people to come out there?
A That is correct.
Q After an hour, nobody showed up?
A Nobody showed up.
Q So you let them go?
A That is correct.
Q I assume you did get their names, didn't you?
A Yes, sir; I've got their names in the folder that is missing, Your Honor. We can't locate it anyplace. We have located these records, but that folder is missing.
Q Did you ever turn that folder over to the investigators?
A Yes, sir; it was turned over -- well, turned over to our office. Now, it was 1971 before I got any further contact with the CID and this folder was never requested. Had it been, they could have had it easily.
Q You never volunteered to let them have it?
A No, sir.
Q I see. And do you know whether or not any of these people were ever interviewed by the CID?
A To my knowledge, not one of them. The only one was Helena.
Q I say, do you know whether or not?
A To my knowledge; no, sir, except Helena Stoeckley.
Q Can you recall the names of any of the people that were with her that night?
A There was one name that I can remember -- his name was Greg Mitchell. And the other two I cannot. That name sounds familiar because he was one of the boys that was sort of in charge of a group of the hippie-type people there, and we had a special lookout on him. He lived somewhere here in North Carolina, but we can't find any records on him anywhere in our office.
Q As a result of any investigation that you ever made, do you know whether or not anyone was ever arrested or charged with anything in connection with these crimes?
A Not with the crimes, Your Honor, but the black man -- I signed a warrant for him and he was arrested and released on a $2,000 bond, and we have not seen him since. He never showed up and the case was nol pros'd in Superior Court.
Q What was he charged with?
A Possession of drugs. He was one of the men that I was looking for the day we hit the trailer with the other people that were supposed to have been there. The other three was not there -- or he wasn't there when we raided the trailer.