A skull found in a restaurant flower box reignites debate over whether a Missouri man orchestrated his wife’s disappearance.

Smiling Linda Sherman with long black hair

Linda Sherman

Investigator wearing latex gloves testing the found skull

Whose skull was found outside the restaurant?

CASE DETAILS

Linda Sherman with her husband and young daughter

The Sherman Family

In Bridgeton, Missouri, at the Casa Gallardo Restaurant, two women having lunch noticed something strange outside the window. There, in the bushes, was a human skull. Police Chief Walter Mutert described the bizarre scene:

“It’s a very well-manicured area. Plants and gravel and what have you.  And the way it was situated, it would give one the impression that, you know, somebody put it there so you would see it. During that time period, there was the relocating of a cemetery that was in the area, and a lot of bodies were being exhumed, graves were being moved, so it gives you the impression now that this may be a prank, and there would be no reason to suspect that there was any foul play.”

The skull, determined to be from an adult woman, went into the evidence room at the morgue and was soon forgotten. One year later, at a police station 25 miles away, a mysterious letter arrived.  It stated, “The Bridgeton Police have L. Sherman’s skull.”
Dental records showed the skull was, in fact, that of Linda Sherman, a 27-year-old wife and mother who had been reported missing five years earlier, on April 22, 1985.

Don Sherman

Does Linda’s husband know more than he’s saying?

A missing person’s case suddenly became a puzzling murder mystery with many unanswered questions: What motive would someone have for leaving Linda Sherman’s skull outside the restaurant? Where was the rest of her body? And, most importantly, who was responsible for her death?

Linda was only 17 when she married Don Sherman, her high-school sweetheart. When her daughter Patty was born, Linda could always count on her mom to watch the baby while she completed her senior year. Don Sherman said he took a job at a local gas station to support his new family:

“It was hard, but it was rewarding. We were very happy together. The relationship was rocky later on in our marriage, but not in the early years.”

The skull of Linda Sherman on a table in a lab

Where is the rest of Linda Sherman’s body?

Money problems and working opposite shifts at their jobs strained the relationship. During the 10-year marriage, Linda took Patty and moved out several times, but the couple always reconciled. According to Linda’s older brother, Dennis Lutz, Don was obsessed with knowing Linda’s every move:

“Don was very possessive of her. She said, ‘When I get off of work, if I’m not home within five minutes, he wants to know what’s goin’ on, who are you seein’?  What are you doin’ out that late?’ He was always hitting her and things just weren’t right.”

Linda told her family that she was afraid of Don’s violent temper. According to Sam Miller, Linda’s brother-in-Law, Linda once got a restraining order to keep Don away:

“She’d already made the decision to move out. She had filed for divorce. She had definitely made plans to start a new life.”

On April 22nd, 1985, Linda left her night job at around two in the morning. Don Sherman offered his account of that night:

“She didn’t come home from work until about 3:00 in the morning. We got into an argument about the fact that she wouldn’t tell me where she’d been.  And we stayed up until at least 4:00 in the morning discussing that.”

Linda was lying on the sofa later that morning when her daughter Patty left for school:

“She always took me to school, but my dad took me to school that day. And I remember her laying on the couch with her face to the back of the couch. And she didn’t get up. She didn’t get up to kiss me good-bye. She didn’t say anything to me. She was just laying there.”

That would be the last time Patty ever saw her mother. Don claimed that when he returned to the house that afternoon, Linda was on edge:

“When I came back home, Linda was still there. She should’ve been at work by then. And she was mad ’cause she was running late.”

Don says Linda drove off at about 6 p.m., but there are no witnesses that saw her leave.  Linda never arrived at work and never returned home.  Don claimed to know nothing about her disappearance:

“When she didn’t come back, I assumed it was typical of the previous times that she had left and I thought that she took off with somebody.”

Linda’s brother, Sam, said he knew Linda had met a violent end:

“We knew that if she left, there’s no way she’s leaving without the daughter. And the daughter was still at home, and so there was definitely foul play.”

Linda’s parents insisted that Don go to the police station to file a missing person’s report. Meanwhile, Sam and Fran searched frantically for Linda. On a hunch, according to Sam, they headed to the local airport:

“As we pulled into the short-term parking, why, there’s Linda’s car sitting right there. We went to look inside the car and we could see her schoolbooks and her hat and everything.  So we contacted the airport police. And they came, and the car was locked, but they tried the trunk, and the trunk was open. They’d said, ‘Well, we fully expected Linda to be in there.’  And she wasn’t.”

Don claimed he saw Linda with another man in the days after her disappearance. He said that she drove past him in a van and quickly ducked out of sight.  Don’s sighting was the last time anyone reported seeing Linda. Five years later, when the skull turned up at the restaurant, no one even thought it might be Linda’s. In what seems like a bizarre coincidence, Don revealed that the restaurant was one of his favorite hangouts:

“I was at the restaurant that evening, after the skull had been found. I’d heard about it that day, when it happened, but never any connection to it until later on.”

No one made a connection until a year later, when the mysterious letter arrived at the Vinita Park police station. Lieutenant Michael Webb interpreted the display of Linda’s skull as a brazen message from her killer:

“I was rather astounded. It was obvious to me that someone wanted us to know that we had obviously missed something and was trying to tell us that Linda’s remains had been recovered.”

Don Sherman said he was just as incredulous as anyone:

“It was scary. And somebody that put those remains here at the restaurant obviously knew me, or knew that I hung out there. We’re not talking about a place that I casually visited. We’re talking about a place that I would visit two, three times a week.”

Was it possible that the killer placed the skull there to threaten Don?  Or did Don have a reason to put it there himself? Some speculated that Don wanted to remarry and needed proof that Linda was dead.  Only one thing is certain: for Don, the skull provided the perfect piece of evidence. But for Linda’s daughter Patty, the find was devastating:

“When the skull was found, I just kinda lost all hope in life.  I didn’t know that she was dead.  I guess there was always some hope that she had just left.”

For Lt. Michael Webb, the evidence pointed in only one direction:

“The only suspect that I’ve been unable to eliminate is Don Sherman. At this point in time, he has never been ruled out as a suspect.”

Don’s daughter Patty doesn’t see how it can be any other way:

“In my heart, I think that he might’ve done it. You know, I can’t think of anybody else who would’ve.”

And Don Sherman has never stopped proclaiming his innocence:

“I had nothing to do with Linda Sherman’s disappearance or her death. I still think that she left with someone and obviously met with foul play and died.”

Police hope new technology in soil sampling will someday lead them to Linda’s body and, eventually, her killer.


Watch this case now on Amazon Prime in season eleven with Robert Stack and in season one with Dennis Farina. Also available on YouTube with Dennis Farina. Various seasons available now on Hulu.

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34 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    I didn’t know Don was later murdered by his next wife. That kind of fills in many missing pieces. Because at least two people where involved with Lindas disappearance. (The way the car was left at the airport. And Don being spooked about the skull found at a restaurant him and Linda liked.)

    Reply

  2. Anonymous

    Anytime you have an abandoned car it usually means two people where involved. Not so much today because we have more public transportation. But back then you actually had to have a second person drive you away from a car. Because there would be several witnesses that would see you walking away. So I don’t think Don was lying about someone possibly trying to intimidate him with the skull showing up. (Even though it probably was a prank like the detectives suggested.) Everything else from Don I’m skeptical on. This guy kept close tabs on his wife. He knew what see was doing every second she did it. But after her disappearance he seems to have known very little about her movements. There is just not enough evidence. The boxes seen put in a trunk need to be found. I’m skeptical if they ever will be.

    Reply

  3. Ginger

    instead of saying my wife he says

    And Don Sherman has never stopped proclaiming his innocence:

    “I had nothing to do with Linda Sherman’s disappearance or her death. I still think that she left with someone and obviously met with foul play and died

    yeahhhhhhhhhhhhh righttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt he did it no doubt

    Reply

    • Anonymous

      He may have had someone do it for him. There is evidence that a second person was involved. But the white van account is not verifiable or trustworthy. She couldn’t even go to the bathroom without complaints. But he seemed at leisure seeing her with another man in a van.

      Reply

  4. TwistedTwit

    Don did it because he was a violent, controlling man, and Linda wanted to get away from him. He killed her while they ‘discussed’ why she got home 5 minutes late. Hope he rots in hell. Poor Patty, God bless her!

    Reply

    • Anonymous

      He had to have had help. Maybe another lady he latter married. (Bonded for life because of murder.) His next wife Linda was convicted of murdering him.

      Reply

  5. pawel

    I think she shouldn’t have been sleeping around.

    Reply

    • Mr. T

      If that is your thought, it would be in your best interest to just not think then. So because the husband aka the prime suspect said she was seeing another man, that is the best explanation given? Your misogyny is both disgusting and disturbing. Seek help and I can only hope you never have a daughter. Pity the poor girl if you do…

      Reply

    • Anonymous

      It takes one to suspect one. Usually the people that complain a spouse is cheating are the ones that are cheating themselves. I think Linda was faithful.

      Reply

    • you are rude

      weird.

      Reply

  6. C white

    The police didn’t even do forensics in the house looking for blood or anything? The police are always so incompetent in these unsolved cases.

    Reply

  7. taylor

    to think i was related to this bastard is absolutely disgusting. not only did he kill his husband, but molested my innocent boy cousin. he deserves to rot in hell.

    Reply

  8. UM fan

    What a sad story. It seems obvious to me that she was already dead on the couch when her daughter left. And I think that is what Patty suspects as well. I heard that Don has passed away. I don’t see how this case will ever be solved but I hope Patty finds peace and happiness in her life in spite of these tragic circumstances.

    Reply

  9. UM slacking

    Please tell me technology helped solve this case

    Reply

    • Jason

      Well, Don, the police’s prime suspect died in 2015.

      Reply

    • Patricia Cooksey

      I was just cruising in hopes to find a/some of my paternal side. “Cousins, Aunts, Uncles, etcetera. I am a Sherman via Missouri and in hopes to find a paternal cousin. Can anyone help? My paternal Grandmother’s name is Goldie Anderson-Sherman-Creamer. ❤ May there be perhaps 0ne…at least one of my cousins with the birth name “Sherman”?
      Any Pendergraft could stand up for my sweet “Aunt Wanda”….she has passed now but she was the glue that held us together ❤ oh how I miss her, bless her heart, and she is still the glue ❤
      Dear Auntie, I miss your calls every weekend!!! And I thank you for being our glue…sweet angel

      Reply

    • Anonymous

      Don’s master mind is in jail for killing him. Killers that are together for murder, when they break up, there is usually a death involved. I had a dream about Don. He showed me my romance life and told me to go to the grave. No one is perfect. But Don was likely involved in a homicide. He had more knowledge than what he lead on. So we have a suspect deceased. Another suspect is being rehabilitated and hopefully will turn her life around. The case at this point is at a stalemate.

      Reply

  10. Jason

    I always thought the utter lack of empathy or emothion for his “wife” was a dead give away that the husband did it. She prob threatened to leave him, he killed her, left her on the couch to cover his tracks for the child, and buried her somewhere. THEN, met someone new, realized he needed proof of her death (she was still considered “missing”), dug her up, and placed her skull where it would be EASILY spotted. Bam, new wife, new life, no crime. EVEN HIS OWN DAUGHTER THINKS HE DID IT. We need Dr Cyril Wecht on this. Just my two cents.

    Reply

  11. thinkingoutloud

    it’s obvious he killed her and disposed of her body. they fought alot and he was violent so maybe one night he got a little rough and accidentally killed her and left her on the sofa so their daughter could see she was still there even tho she was dead and later on he claims she left for work and never returned. only strange part is how the school ended up where it did

    Reply

  12. Jim early

    It doesn’t look good for the husband, but it seems maybe that they need more experienced investigators on the job. No matter what anyone thinks, the last thing we need to do is imprison someone without proof.

    Reply

  13. Anonymous

    Why did he refer to her by her full name? Why didn’t he just say Linda or my wife. It’s as if he just forgot about her and tried to disassociate himself from her. She was the mother of his child.

    Reply

  14. Jodi

    My heart goes out to the family. I seen the story about Linda Sherman on an old re-run of unsolved mysteries in April of 2016. I have children and whether my I or my husband takes them to school I get up to say goodbye even if I’m not feeling well and if i don’t get up my kids won’t leave without coming and waking me even if its just to whisper goodbye and give me a kids on the cheek. I also do agree that she was probably already dead while laying on the couch when her daughter went off to school.

    Reply

  15. Anonymous

    It seems to me that she was already dead when her daughter left for school. At 6 pm her husband supposedly returned home and she was running late for work but no one scene her leave and she didn’t show up for work. Where did her daughter go after school was she not there with her dad at 6 pm.

    Reply

  16. Bernard Short

    I remember watching this episode back on The Unsolved Mysteries DVD set called Bizarre Murders which features this case from the show that featured the discovery of a woman’s skull found in a flower pot next to a local bar where this woman’s husband once hung out at because I remember they’ve interviewed the Daughter & her Father during the time of that case which is still opened because they were reinactments where actors were portraying the husband & wife having fights in the home with they young daughter overseeing it & all because I remember the daughter was talking about the day when she was then going to school then seeing her mother sleeping on the sofa with her face turned away from the view & all & from there I would say that this woman was already dead during that child’s departure from the house because she believes that her father may have kill her mother then later disposed of the body but I’ll find that out later on when I watch the show again on The Escape Channel because someone’s going to have their day in Prison I mean Prison Prison.

    Reply

    • Anon

      Punctuation dude

      Reply

    • My thoughts exactly

      I think she was dead on the sofa OBVIOUSLY by her abuser the ex husband.. He was fighting with her at night and was the last one to see her that morning. They didn’t need hard evidence they had enough to show probable cause and motive. He liked it when they found her skull I believe he still has other parts that he’s hiding very close to him because he was possessive with her…

      Reply

    • Mr. T

      Seeing as how Don, the primary and only suspect, passed away in 2015 and never faced charges, he got away with it. Too many people think karma is somehow a real thing and that we all reap what we sow but such is wishful thinking to make ourselves feel better. In reality, bad people get away with stuff all the time. Good people sometimes meet grisly fates. Karma sounds great in theory but it really is just wishful thinking in the end.

      Reply

  17. Deidre

    Have they found anything additional about this case?

    Reply

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