Ken McElroy
The Law’s No Help
On the night of May 29, a month after the candy incident, McElroy and Trena once again parked outside the Bowenkamp home. As Lois Bowenkamp watched through a window, Ken McElroy walked to the front of the truck holding a shotgun. He aimed at the house, raised the barrel slightly in the sky, and fired two shots.
Mrs. Bowenkamp watched as McElroy calmly returned to the truck and drove off. Thirty minutes later, he drove by again and fired another shot. The next morning, Lois Bowenkamp drove to the Nodaway County Sheriff’s Office in
Cronk did not file a report. He did not interview McElroy. He did not seek witnesses. He did nothing.
Two nights later, McElroy returned and fired more gunshots outside the Bowenkamp home. Hunkered down inside, the couple must have felt they were on their own. They were being harassed, intimidated, threatened and even assaulted, according to definitions in
They were relatively new to the town, having arrived eight years before. Bo Bowenkamp, almost 70, was easing into retirement. He was 6-foot-5, but quiet and demure. His wife, 20 years younger than Bo, was a native of Skidmore. She could be feisty and outspoken.
On the evening of

Bowenkamp replied, “Ken McElroy.”


- Keep an Eye on Him
- McElroy’s Style
- The Last Straw
- Murder in Broad Daylight
- On the Night Shift
- He Loved Children
- Power over Women
- Another Teen Love
- Saved by the Law
- Invincible
- Intent to Kill
- A Mysterious Shooting
- Fighting over Candy
- The Last Word
- The Law’s No Help
- The Art of Intimidation
- At Last, a Trial
- The Town Reacts
- Show of Support
- The Investigations
- Aftermath
- Skidmore Shrinks
- *New Chapter: Twenty-five Years Later
- *New Chapter: Bowenkamp's Daughters Speak Out
- *New Chapter: The Real Story about the Candy
- *New Chapter: Raging Media Torrent
- *New Chapter: Tarnish and Regrets
- *New Chapter: Vigilantes or Necessary Justice?
- Bibliography






























