Diane Downs: A Cold-Blooded Shooting

Could a Young Mother Be Responsible for the Shootings of Her Three Children?

Lori Johnston
38 min readSep 20, 2022
Diane with Danny, Christie and Cheryl shortly before the shooting (photo source)

The evening of Thursday, May 19, 1983 was a normal, if quiet, one at the McKenzie-Willamette Hospital in Springfield, Oregon. The ER’s 4 p.m. until midnight shift consisted of only four people: Dr. John Mackey, Rosie Martin, RN, Shelby Day, LPN, and Judy Patterson, the receptionist. The hospital had three treatment rooms; the ER was almost obsolete in the late spring of 1983. Unlike the larger cities of Portland and Eugene, Springfield was neither trendy nor suffering from some of the problems that plagued cities with twice its population. Bicycling and eating well was of foremost importance in Eugene; if Springfield residents felt the need to work out after putting in a forty (and sometimes fifty or sixty) hour week, they went bowling or dancing at a country western bar. Second only to Portland as the state’s largest industrial region, Springfield liked to boast that a pre-stardom Clint Eastwood had once called Springfield home while working at a local sawmill.

It was nearly 10:30 p.m. and Judy Patterson had grabbed her sweater and purse, preparing to head home, when she was informed by a person in the lobby that someone was outside the front door laying on their horn and yelling for help. Judy ran for Rosie Martin and Shelby…

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Lori Johnston

Writer, reader, margarita drinker. Currently looking for a “dare to be great” situation.