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Shroud of controversy

Detective: Police probe into Earnhardt's death unusual

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Wednesday March 28, 2001 11:00 AM
Updated: Wednesday March 28, 2001 10:02 PM

  Dale Earnhardt Dale Earnhardt died Feb. 18 in a last-lap crash during the Daytona 500. Donald Miralle/Allsport

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- The lead police investigator looking into stock car legend Dale Earnhardt's death said officials from law enforcement and NASCAR hampered his efforts to examine evidence in the accident.

Daytona Beach police detective Robert Walker told the Orlando Sentinel that he was ordered by a supervisor on the night Earnhardt died not to attend the driver's autopsy or to inspect and photograph the racer's wrecked car.

Walker also said NASCAR never told him about the broken seat belt it later blamed for Earnhardt's fatal head injury. Since then, it has locked away the car in North Carolina and kept the findings of its own crash investigation secret from police.

Walker, who has investigated murders and accidental deaths in Daytona Beach since 1991, said he has no explanation for the orders he received.

Death of The Intimidator
  • End of an era: "This is understandably one of the toughest announcements we've ever had to make. ... We've lost Dale Earnhardt," NASCAR president Mike Helton said.
  • Teresa speaks out: A subdued Teresa Earnhardt presented herself to the media for the first time since her husband's death two weeks ago in order to read a statement designed to put to rest the continuing controversy surrounding Dale Earnhardt's death.
  • Help from high place: A bill sought by Dale Earnhardt's widow that would exempt autopsy photographs and videos from Florida's public-records law was filed Wednesday with the support of Gov. Jeb Bush.
  • A matter of record: A national editors group backed The Orlando Sentinel's attempt to gain access to Dale Earnhardt's autopsy photos and criticized state officials for trying to stop release of the pictures.
  • Middle ground: The First Amendment Foundation, a Tallahassee-based organization that advocates open government, suggested a compromise after Dale Earnhardt's widow and race fans attacked The Orlando Sentinel for seeking access to the photos, which are normally public record under Florida law.
  • Forced to meet: Dale Earnhardt's widow and Orlando Sentinel lawyers were ordered to meet to try to resolve their dispute over autopsy photos of Earnhardt, a seven-time Winston Cup champion.
  • Agreement reached: Lawyers for Dale Earnhardt's widow and the Orlando Sentinel reached an agreement Friday that allows an independent expert to view the autopsy photos of the racing legend before they're permanently sealed.
  • Chosen one: An associate professor of biomedical engineering at Duke University was chosen to review the autopsy photos of NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt.
  •  

     

    "I do what they tell me to do," he said. "I don't know why, and I didn't ask. If left to my own devices, I would have gone to the autopsy and photographed the inside of the vehicle."

    Police spokesman Sgt. Al Tolley insisted that no one has told police how to investigate Earnhardt's death. He also said that since the death was accidental, it does not require as thorough a probe as a murder case.

    When Walker arrived at Halifax Medical Center on Feb. 18, Dale Earnhardt had just died. A nurse took Walker to the trauma room where the racer's body already lay covered with a sheet on a gurney. He noticed no marks on Earnhardt's body.

    By 5:45 p.m., according to a hospital property inventory sheet, Earnhardt's racing helmet, racing suit, wedding band and other personal items were released to his widow, Teresa.

    Experts say the helmet is a key piece of evidence to analyze in head injury cases like Earnhardt's.

    Walker said he never saw or examined the helmet.

    "It was gone before I got there," Walker said. "I don't know where it went."

    About 6:40 p.m., two hours after the crash, he found Earnhardt's black No. 3 Chevrolet Monte Carlo atop a flatbed truck in the Daytona International Speedway infield. A tarp covered it. Walker said track officials worried about photographers or souvenir hunters getting near the car.

    He spoke to a police superior, who told him, "There is no need for you to attend the autopsy tomorrow."

    "And I said, 'OK,'" recalled Walker, who would not identify the supervisor. "My superior said it was not necessary to look in the car or photograph it at this time. And I never saw the car again."

    Before leaving the track that night, Walker said he talked to a NASCAR official who was planning to ship Earnhardt's car to North Carolina. Walker said he told racing officials the car needed to remain at the track until the autopsy was completed the next day.


     
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    Florida Senate close to passing autopsy bill
    Earnhardt autopsy report answers, leaves questions
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