Published March 16, 2013, 07:44 AM

Dead woman’s fiance was a wanted criminal

Crystal Schulz was a trusting, friendly woman who was quick with a smile, according to a family member, a friend and some co-workers. “I don’t think she had an enemy in the world,” said Shannon Bartscher, manager of the Casey’s General Store in Mitchell, one of two places in Mitchell where Schulz worked.

By: By Tom Lawrence, Forum News Service, The Jamestown Sun

MITCHELL, S.D. — Crystal Schulz was a trusting, friendly woman who was quick with a smile, according to a family member, a friend and some co-workers.

“I don’t think she had an enemy in the world,” said Shannon Bartscher, manager of the Casey’s General Store in Mitchell, one of two places in Mitchell where Schulz worked.

But the man Schulz apparently fell in love with, and shared her home with, Kent Gene Davidson, was a wanted criminal with a long record of arrests and convictions in South and North Dakota. Davidson, 36, is now in custody and is being questioned in connection with her death.

Schulz, 26, was a Mitchell native and a 2005 Mitchell High School graduate.

Her body was found Thursday in a shed in rural Chamberlain, S.D., three days after her family became alarmed when she seemed to have vanished. She died Monday, according to a death notice submitted to The Daily Republic of Mitchell.

Few details on her death, which has been labeled a homicide, have been released by authorities. No one has been charged for the death.

Davidson, it was learned Friday, had been a wanted man the last five months, since he walked away from a South Dakota Department of Corrections transitional facility in Rapid City in October.

Lived together

in Mitchell

The couple lived a block from Longfellow Elementary School. The house was quiet Friday, but a welcome sign was still posted on a wall near the front door.

Tim Hartman, who lives across the street, said Schulz’s parents lived in the house before they moved to Chamberlain. Their daughter then was the primary occupant, Hartman said, but he saw Davidson appear a few months ago.

This week, he didn’t see either one of them, he said. But Hartman said police officers were at the house, and a Mitchell Police Division memo said the house was searched twice and she was listed as a missing person on a national database.

The police were also looking for Davidson, and for Schulz’s car, the memo states.

The couple had been involved since last fall.

A Dec. 2 post on Crystal Schulz’s Facebook page says this: “he asked and i said YES..... i love you kent Davidson.” On his Facebook page, Davidson lists Oct. 28, 2012, as their anniversary date. That was 17 days after he disappeared from the Rapid City DOC unit.

Just after 5 p.m. Thursday, the state Attorney General’s Office issued a news release calling for the public’s help in locating Davidson for questioning in a Brule County homicide.

Davidson grew up in North Dakota, according to his Facebook page, which lists him as having attended Beach High School. According to Dickinson High School records, he attended DHS for his freshman and sophomore years, and part of his junior year from 1991 to 1994. He did not finish his junior year and left the school in February 1994, according to school records.

He also lived in Winner, S.D., Shepherd, Mont., Jamestown, and other places, according to an online search of known addresses for him.

Davidson states that he is a “Former Shift Supervisor at Ruby Tuesday of Bismarck” on his Facebook page, and also said he studied at Bismarck State College.

Criminal history

Davidson had another, darker side.

He was given a five-year sentence after pleading guilty to forgery in Tripp County in August 2010. Two other charges for third-degree burglary were dropped.

He also had two speeding ticket convictions and one for driving without wearing a seat belt.

On April 25, 2011, Davidson walked away from Unit C, a minimum-security unit at the State Penitentiary in Sioux Falls. He was caught in Sioux Falls and returned to custody three days later.

Davidson was charged with one count of first-degree escape, two counts of second-degree escape, and as a habitual criminal for the escape. Three of the four charges were dismissed after he pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree escape on Sept. 6, 2011.

He was given a five-year sentence to run concurrently with his sentence on the forgery conviction.

But on Sept. 14, 2012, Davidson was deemed eligible for the Department of Corrections’ Community Transition Program. He was transferred from the Sioux Falls prison to the Black Hills Correctional Transition Center in Rapid City, a minimum-security facility that opened in May 2012 and offers work release and other options for many of its 200 or more inmates.

Davidson faced at least two more years on parole, according to Mandy Nielsen, a DOC corrections specialist. His earliest release date was April 28, 2014, but he would remain on a suspended sentence for two more years, Nielsen said.

On Oct. 11, 2012, he disappeared from parole supervision.

“He is an absconder,” Nielsen said.

He was listed as fleeing, or absconding, from the facility, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. That warrant was served when he surrendered Thursday night in Sioux Falls after a standoff with police, and he is being held in the Minnehaha County Jail, according to a county corrections officer.

Davidson has multiple convictions in North Dakota, with three felony convictions, on charges of theft, forgery and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, as well as 18 misdemeanor convictions on charges ranging from shoplifting to contempt of court to forgery.

A friend of Crystal Schulz’s who requested anonymity said Friday that Schulz did not know about Davidson’s criminal past.

When he was being sought Thursday, authorities said he was “considered armed and dangerous.”

Davidson has several tattoos, including a skull, roses and dagger on his upper left arm; a skull, scorpion, the letters “ELR,” a heart and the word “forever” on his right arm; and a scorpion on the back of his neck.

He was spotted Thursday afternoon at a residence in Sioux Falls. Soon the apartment was surrounded by state Division of Criminal Investigation agents, with assistance from Minnehaha County Sheriff’s Office personnel and the Sioux Falls Police Department SWAT Team.

He surrendered shortly after 10 p.m. Thursday.

According to Marsha Schulz, Davidson was driving her niece’s white, 2005 Chrysler Sebring when he was being sought for questioning. He was held on a warrant for violating parole and was only listed as someone who was wanted for questioning in the homicide.

Marsha Schulz said she believes Davidson killed her niece.

“I just hope he says why,” she said. “Give the family some closure. Why?”

Marsha Schulz said her heart went out to Crystal’s mother and brother. Aggie Clements and her two children were very close, Marsha Schulz said. She said she wasn’t certain of the relationship Crystal Schulz had with her father.

The family has asked for donations to a memorial fund at any branch of the Fulton State Bank.

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