MURDERED INNOCENCE
EMILY LOVATO
table of contents
MICHELE AVILA
Michele Yvette Avila, known as Missy to her friends and family, was born in Los Angeles California in 1968. She grew up 20 miles north of L.A. in Arleta with her mother Irene and three brothers; Ernie, Mark, and Chris. She was the focus of two books, a movie starring Patty Duke as her mother, and several TV shows. However, it was not her life that was remarkable but rather her death. At the tender age of 17, just as her life was beginning, she was murdered.
As horrible as any murder is, this one was made more heinous by the fact that Missy was murdered by those she trusted most, her best friends. The same girls whom she had grown up with on their quiet street in Arleta. Girls she had trusted implicitly with her deepest secrets. That is why the story of Missy's murder must start years before it happens when she was just eight years old when the new girl moved with her family into the house right around the corner from her own.
Karen Severson was that new girl and Missy was the first to befriend her.
Shy, awkward Karen moved into the house right around the corner from the Avila house. Missy invited Karen to her home to play dolls and the two became fast friends. They could often be seen walking arm-in-arm to school or jumping rope and sharing secrets under the willow tree in the Avila front yard.
"Then at 11:30 I went to my friends house. We played barbies, then we went swimming. After we had gone swimming, we played barbies again. Then we went swimming for a long time. (My friends name is Karen.)" This quote from Missy's diary on August 31, 1978 is typical of the other entries surrounding it. In fact, throughout the pages shared by Shavaun Avila, Missy's sister-in-law, Karen is mentioned in the same way on all but one page.
While Laura Doyle had been Missy's friend since long before Karen moved in, she was never as close to Missy as Karen had become. Karen often involved herself in anything Missy and Laura were doing. She seemed jealous of the friendship.
In junior high, both girls fell in with a drinking, drugging crowd of kids. Mark Avila, one of Missy's brothers, was quoted by the Los Angeles Times as saying, "She fell in with a bad crowd. She had to have low self-esteem to hang around with people like that."
By the time Missy and Karen reached 10th grade, events had begun to divide them. While Missy blossomed into a green-eyed beauty, Karen gained weight and began her long relationship with the green-eyed monster. It was that very jealousy which led to the sundering of the friendship and eventually to Missy's death.
Karen craved the attention Missy received. More than one person was quoted saying Karen was obsessed with Missy and wanted to be her. However, Missy was the complete opposite of Karen. Missy was outgoing, popular, and pretty. Karen was overweight, shy, and would have been completely unknown to fellow students if not for Missy. This just made Karen angrier. She blamed Missy for her lack of popularity and began trying to sabotage Missy's.
In one incident, Missy was beaten up by a group of girls who believed a rumor that she had slept with their boyfriends. One of the girls told Missy shortly after the attack that it had been Karen who started the rumor. Still fiercely loyal to her friend, Missy refused to believe that Karen would do that. "Missy was so mad at the girl for telling her it was Karen's fault. Missy 'knew' Karen would never do anything like that." Irene Avila would later say. "Missy made great lasagna, dreamed of becoming a physical therapist, and was fiercely loyal to her childhood friends."
In her junior year, Missy dated a boy named Randy. After a month, she broke up with him because he liked to drink and do drugs too much. He soon started dating Karen and they moved into an apartment together. This soon became party central despite the fact that Karen had given birth to a baby girl she named Stephanie after her sister and that infant was present. Missy told her mother of an incident where Randy pulled her onto his lap just as Karen walked in. Missy quickly got up and told Randy she wasn't interested in dating him again. She suggested Karen leave him. "Karen was really upset because the guy she wanted didn't want her," recalls Irene. "He wanted Missy."
In a similar incident, Laura Doyle's boyfriend, Victor Amaya, had broken up with her due to her constant jealousy. "I broke off the relationship because she was jealous of me talking to other girls, including Missy. Laura refused to accept the breakup and became bitter." Victor would later say.
One day, Lauras drives by Victors while he and Missy are holding hands and kissing at the end of his driveway. Enraged, she pulls down her window to tell them that they were caught and call Missy names like 'slut' and 'whore.' Instead of apologizing and denying any feelings for Missy as Laura had expected him to, Victor tells her to go away. "We (he and Missy) argued with Laura at my house in Arleta. Me, my brother Noah and Missy had been standing in front of the house when Laura drove up. Laura wanted to know 'Why is Missy here?' and I ordered Laura to leave. Before she drove away she said 'Im going to kill that bitch!' I didnt take the threat seriously and I never reported it to police.
By September 1985, both Karen and Laura had stopped speaking to Missy. She was divested by the loss of her two closest friends. On September 21st, Karen sees Missy at a local park and attacks her with a beer bottle. She slaps and pushes her former confidant before friends break up the fight. Missy's mother heard of the confrontation but did not later connect it to her daughter's murder. After all, the girls had often quarreled during their long friendship.
"Her only problem, at least on that fateful day was that she was very popular with the boys and this drove Laura Doyle and Karen Severson crazy." Deputy District Attorney Tamia Hope said at the trial. "They started out yelling at her, telling her how mad they were at her, and how she slept with entirely too many boys and messed up entirely too many relationships."
Shortly after that confrontation, the girls apologize to Missy and make up. According to her mother, her excitement was easily noticeable. She is thrilled to have her two best friends back in her life.
On October 2nd, Missy told her mother she was going out with Laura. When Laura got to the house, the girls were laughing and talking about boys. As they drove off they seemed very carefree. I remember how especially pretty Missy looked that day. She was all excited to go. She even turned to me and said I love you which is something she did not ordinarily do. That scene haunts me even today.
They met up with Karen and her roommate Eva Chirumbolo at Stonehurst Park in Sun Valley. From there they drove in two separate cars to Wicky up, also known as Colby Canyon. A spot all three girls were familiar with as it was a popular party spot for teens. A campground in the Angeles State Forest a 45 minute drive from Arleta.
"Karen said that she and Laura 'planned to scare Avila.' I didnt know what they had planned. I didnt know how far this was going to go. Eva would later say at Laura and Karens trail.
What happened next is pieced together by the three girls testimony. When they reach the forest, they park in a dirt lot near a wooded area near the creek. Laura and Karen get out of their vehicles and begin yelling at Missy who is still sitting in Laura's car. Missy begins crying and the girls force her out of the car and begin pushing her around calling her names and accusing her of stealing their boyfriends.
Eva says she decided to get out of the vehicle as by this point the confrontation was becoming increasingly intense. Missy, who had just been laughing and listening to music with who she believed were her best friends was not crying and noticeably shaking with fear. Laura grabs her wrist and forcibly pulls her towards a trail into the wooded area. Missy resists until Karen comes up and pushes her.
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