Scott Fosnaught & Shawn Baur

Early on the morning of 17 July 2002, a motorist traveling down Cashdollar Road in Pennsylvania’s Butler County came upon what appeared to be two lifeless bodies. Emergency personnel arrived shortly thereafter and learned that these were two local teenagers who’d been heading home late on a summer evening. It initially appeared like they’d both been hit by a vehicle and left for dead…

Just before 2:00 AM on Wednesday, July 17th, 2002, a motorist traveled down rural Cashdollar Road in Pennsylvania's Butler County, roughly thirty miles north of Pittsburgh. As they drove down the dark, dusty road, approaching the area where Cashdollar Road ended at Watters Station Road, they came upon what appeared to be two bodies laying lifeless beside it. They immediately called 911 with their cell phone, and emergency personnel responded soon thereafter.

At the scene, first responders discovered that the two bodies were local teenagers, best friends and classmates at a nearby high school. They'd been heading home late on a summer evening when it appeared they'd both been hit by a car and left for dead. But as investigators dug into the specifics of the case, they discovered that the circumstances surrounding this strange incident were more mysterious than they ever could have expected.

More than two decades later, questions linger. How had these two teenagers ended up on the side of that road? And more importantly, who was responsible for putting them there?

This is the story of Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur.


Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur seem to have been the type of friends that you rarely saw apart from each other, to the point where they seemed to be each others' shadows.

Born on the very same week in July 1986, Scott and Shawn lived along Watters Station Road in Forward Township, Pennsylvania, a small town in suburban Butler County. As I mentioned, this was an area roughly 30 miles north of Pittsburgh, not too far away from the Ohio border. There, Scott and Shawn were next-door neighbors and lifelong best friends, who in 2002 were both students at Seneca Valley Intermediate High School. Despite being born just three days apart, though, the two were in different grades; that July, Scott was preparing for 10th grade, while Shawn was himself gearing up for 9th grade.

Best friends that were constantly around each other, both Scott and Shawn were described as having distinct personalities that complimented the other. Scott was said to be quiet, with one of their other friends, Brian Macher, describing him as the type who "wouldn't hurt a fly." Another friend described him as having an infectious smile. Shawn, meanwhile, was said to be more outgoing, more personable and popular with girls, and reportedly dreamed of one day taking over his father's construction business.

Brian Macher's father, David, told reporters that Scott was "one of the quietest kids you'd ever meet" and described Shawn as "a ladies man":

"They hung out everyday here at my house... They liked riding motorcycles together, sitting here on the porch smoking cigarettes. Believe me, we went through some Kool Aid. They were all-around American boys. They loved dirt biking together."

When they weren't in school, the two boys were known to float around the local area, usually finding something exciting to do. They liked to hunt and fish, ride dirt bikes, go swimming, and otherwise just visit with friends every chance they had. In July of 2002, both were fifteen years old and quickly approaching sixteen; Shawn's birthday was on Monday, July 22nd, and Scott's followed just three days later, on Thursday, July 25th. Both were excited to obtain their driver's licenses and begin driving themselves - and their friends - around town. Per Tyler Ireland, a friend of Shawn and Scott's:

"They both talked about the freedom they would have once they got their driver's licenses."

Sadly, though, they'd never get the chance.


On the evening of Tuesday, July 16th, 2002, Shawn and Scott left their homes to go hang out with some friends of theirs. With their sixteenth birthdays coming up the next week, the two had reportedly gone out with some friends to celebrate ahead of time. They told family members that they were going out to a restaurant in nearby Cranberry Township, roughly 9 miles south, but that was a lie. In reality, the two went out with some friends to a pond near an abandoned house, which was where local kids often hung out when they wanted to drink... which is what Scott, Shawn, and their friends did that night.

This impromptu party took place along Watters Station Road, and - as teens do - Shawn and Scott both partook in the evening's festivities. Along with a handful of others, they drank some alcohol, but never seemed to get noticeably drunk. Per a police official, who later recalled to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

"Everything appeared to be OK. They weren't falling-down drunk. They had their senses about them."

After spending a few hours there, the boys then went to the home of a friend of theirs, Danny, who lived along Cashdollar Road. Cashdollar Road, which intersected with Watters Station Road, was a familiar road for both Scott and Shawn, who lived nearby. With it being so close to their homes, they often rode dirt bikes there, and walked it heading to or from nearby friends' houses.

Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur stayed at their friend Danny's home until roughly 1:00 - 1:30 AM, which is when they began heading back to Shawn's home, where Scott planned on staying the night. Despite it being pretty late, the two boys began heading down dark Cashdollar Road, a path they'd walked a thousand times before. They planned to walk down the road and then take a shortcut through a nearby wooded area, which would lead them directly to Shawn's house. Family friend Richard Zoelle later told reporters:

"It is just a short venture from the house to the (Baur's home). They came down the hill to go into the woods, but they never made it to the woods."


At around 2:00 AM, a phone call alerted police to the bodies of the two teenagers found alongside Cashdollar Road, in rural Butler County. This location, next to a sprawling cornfield, was approximately a quarter-mile away from the home of Danny Rice, the friend whose home Shawn and Scott had been at until approximately 1:30 AM.

Lynnea Bailey, the young woman who discovered the bodies at around 1:50 AM, later told reporters:

"The worst thing you usually worry about on that road is deer. I realized right away what I was looking at. This was the creepiest thing I'd ever seen... I came up on them and neither one flinched. I was almost too terrified to stop. My heart was pounding, and I was shaking so bad I could barely hold the (cell) phone to my ear."

Emergency personnel arrived at the scene shortly thereafter, and were directed to the two bodies along the side of the road. By the time they arrived, Scott Fosnaught was already dead. Shawn Baur was barely clinging to life, but was declared dead right after being helivac'd to a nearby hospital. The initial belief was that both had been killed in a hit-and-run accident. But as investigators would soon learn, there was much more to this story than they ever could have expected...


This tragic incident occurred in Butler County, near the borders of Beaver and Allegheny Counties and near the area known as Evans City, roughly five miles north of Route 228. Because it was located in this suburban-yet-rural area near where three different counties met, this case was overseen by state police.

Based on the circumstances of the bodies found at the crime scene, it was believed that 15-year-old Scott Fosnaught had been struck by a vehicle at around 1:30, roughly half-an-hour before the bodies were found by someone passing by. Scott had died as a direct result of the impact, with severe trauma injuries reported to various parts of his body, including a torn aorta and a split kidney. He was already dead by the time emergency personnel arrived at the scene at around 2:00 AM, likely hit by something bigger than a regular-sized car - a truck or a van of some kind. His mother, Ailive Rausch, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in 2017:

"From how it was explained to me, he was hit and drug down the road a little bit, but he died instantly because his heart was severed."

However, 15-year-old Shawn Baur's death was much less clear-cut. While police kept mum about specific injuries for a while, they described it only as "equivocal" to Scott's early on, stating that he'd sustained no injuries below his shoulders. What an autopsy had revealed was that Shawn had only received a head injury, which as noted by police officials, wasn't the type of injury typically sustained by someone hit by a car. Rather, this looked to be two separate hits that had crushed his skull. As a result, he had not died immediately, but was still alive when emergency personnel arrived at the scene. He was transported to Allegheny General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at approximately 3:33 A.M.

Based on these differing details, police found it hard to determine what exactly had happened to the two teens early that July morning. If Scott had been hit by a vehicle - which it appeared like he had - the driver had left behind no evidence of the impact. There were no signs that they'd tried to stop their vehicle from impacting him, nor was there any proof that a vehicle had been damaged. There were no skid marks, no broken glass, and no vehicle parts found near the crime scene. Crime scene analysts would find some grease on Scott and Shawn's bodies, which they would send off for testing, but acknowledged early on was unlikely to result in useable evidence.

For all of these reasons, it was impossible to tell whether Scott had been hit by a vehicle there, or perhaps somewhere else and then dumped. But the two teens had been heading down that road when they were last seen alive, so it made sense... the lack of any actual evidence just clouded things significantly.

However, when it came to the death of Shawn Baur, it seemed like he had not been hit by a vehicle, suffering only two different head injuries that had crushed his skull. There was no trauma reported to the rest of his body, yet his had been found beside his best friend Scott's along the side of the road. What circumstances could have created these conditions, with both of them suffering such different fatal injuries? Had Shawn witnessed Scott get hit by a car, and was then killed as a result? Or had the opposite happened? Had Shawn been killed, then Scott run down by a vehicle? Or had Scott been hit, and Shawn hit by something extended out of the vehicle? Even police admitted that the possibilities were endless, with State Trooper Cheryl Michaelski admitting during an early news conference:

"Was he struck by an automobile? Was he struck by something else? Was he thrown and hit something? There are lots of possibilities here."

While the loved ones of Scott Fosnaught were at least settled by the idea that he'd died immediately, Shawn Baur's death was less sudden - and surrounded by mystery. There was no telling how he'd received those head injuries, which police officials noted were not common in accidents involving people hit by a car. Shawn's mother, Patty Baur, later told reporters:

"They think someone ran over Scott - like it was a slow moving car - but I don't think (the vehicle) hit Shawn."

His father, Barry Baur, also stated:

"My son didn't have a mark on him... They can't find nothing up there. They can't find a piece of nothing on the road."

Family members were haunted by the reported discovery of blood roughly 180 feet away from where the boys' bodies were found, indicating that's where Scott had initially been hit before being dragged. However, despite the body crossing nearly 200 feet afterward, there were no drag marks found on either of the victims' bodies - no brush burns or anything indicating that they'd been dragged down the road. This just added to the overall confusion of it all. If they'd been hit and dragged, why didn't the evidence at the scene back it up? Not only the distance between the blood and the bodies, but the injuries to Shawn, as well.

Police officials asked residents to report any suspicious vehicles in the area, and keep an eye out for any vehicles that had new or unexplained damage. They also asked for any potential witnesses that had been in the area between roughly 1:00 and 2:00 AM on the morning in question to reach out to them, with Cpl. Raymond Melder telling reporters:

"We have a 25-minute window right now where we don't know what occurred."


In the days and weeks ahead, the investigation into the mysterious deaths of Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur would continue to be overseen by the Pennsylvania State Police, who questioned motorists, scouted locations near the crime scene with helicopters, and even went door-to-door through the area in an attempt to rouse information. They would act upon tips received, interviewing potential persons of interest and analyzing at least ten vehicles, but were unable to find evidence linking them to a potential suspect.

Meanwhile, the families of the two deceased teenagers struggled with their sudden and unexplainable loss. In a single act, two sets of parents had lost their children, and their remaining loved ones were now deprived a brother, a cousin, a nephew, an uncle, a neighbor, and a friend.

Following their deaths, the two boys were both buried at the Evans City Cemetery, where their mothers spoke at a press conference staged by state police two months later. Reading from a prepared statement, Shawn's mother, Patty Baur, spoke:

"Knowing that our boys died as the result of an accident and were not intentionally killed would be a great comfort to our families... If the person responsible came forward and described how this accident occurred before being identified by the police, then we would know in our hearts how sorry this person was."


A couple of months later, police made an arrest in this case... although it wasn't the type of arrest that anyone had expected. Or, for that matter, really desired.

On Monday, September 16th, 2002, police arrested Riley Schneider, a 21-year-old resident of nearby Cranberry Township. Schneider was alleged to have bought the alcohol Shawn and Scott had consumed the night of their deaths, which were reported to be some bottles of rum and vodka, and was charged with corruption of minors and giving alcohol to minors.

After this arrest, police indicated that additional arrests were expected. They would come, but again, weren't the type of arrests that anyone really sought after.

In April of 2003, 36-year-old Linda Rice, the mother of Shawn and Scott's friend Danny, was charged with the same charges as Riley Schneider: corruption of minors and furnishing alcohol to minors. She was accused of driving Shawn and three other minors to a liquor store and then buying them some alcohol. She pleaded guilty to the charge that August, and after some setbacks, was sentenced to probation the following March (2004).

Despite police indicating that these arrests were part of their ongoing investigation, many in the area believed these arrests to be little more than sideshows: an attempt by police to show that they were doing something about the reports of underage drinking on the night of the boys' deaths. It had long been alleged that Scott and Shawn were inebriated at the time of their deaths, but according to the toxicology reports, neither was overly intoxicated in any way. Those same reports would also confirm that neither had consumed any drugs or any other illicit substances before their deaths, which seemed to quiet the rumors that they'd been involved in some strange drug deal-gone-wrong (the type of theory that infects almost every unsolved case and is usually based on little more than fearmongering).

It was not believed that any of the people the boys had been with in the hours before their death - mainly their friends, whom they'd partied with at an abandoned property nearby - were suspects in their case. Mainly because very few of them were of legal drinking age and had access to a vehicle, but also because the party they'd all been at ended hours beforehand. Scott and Shawn had then gone to a friend's house afterward, where they spent a few hours before walking home. Besides, none of their friends were reported as having a reason to hunt them down... they were just 15-year-olds, not part of an aspiring gang or anything. As far as I know, investigators never found any evidence linking anyone in the boys' social circle to the crime itself.

However, when it came to the ongoing investigation, it seems like police were struggling to make any inroads whatsoever. State police repeatedly told reporters that they were waiting for the results of some forensic tests to come back, and when they did (weeks after the crime), State Trooper Cheryl Michaelski said to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

"From those examinations we believe that we do have enough evidence now that will aid in identifying the person or persons involved."

Yet that seems to have gone nowhere. By the Fall of 2002, state and local police admitted that they had no active leads in the case, and coverage of the story began to die off in the local press. What had once been covered on a daily basis was soon relegated to weekly pop-ins. Before long, even that would begin to slow.

In August 2002, roughly a month after the deaths of Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur, Cpl. Raymond Melder told the media:

"I haven't given up hope by any means. It's just one of those cases. We have no witnesses or anything that ties any vehicle or people to this at this point in time. As time goes on, it's a little harder, but we're still working it."

Local continued to yearn for answers, if only for their own peace of mind. After all, while it appeared like Scott Fosnaught had been hit by a vehicle, the circumstances surrounding Shawn's death were more dubious. And even then, both of their deaths had gone unanswered for... the person or persons responsible were still out there, likely within the community.

Posters were placed throughout the local area, throughout Evans City and Forward Township, among other areas in Butler County. A billboard near the crime scene was erected, which - along with the posters - advertised a five-figure reward for information that had been raised by family members and some other prominent members of the community. Yet, nobody would come forward with the information needed to help bring the case forward.

In January of 2003, roughly six months later, State Trooper Mark Ponsoby, the lead investigator in the case, told reporters:

"We're as frustrated as the parents. There's not a day that goes by that I'm not doing something related to this case."

Following a meeting with police officials that same month, Shawn's mother Patty Baur stated:

"How can someone do this and not come forward? It makes me believe this can't be a hit and run."


Because of the location of the crime, it was believed that a local was responsible.

The area where Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur were killed was far from any major towns or roads, with Evans City located roughly four miles northwest, and Cranberry Township roughly nine miles southwest. If you look up this location - near where Cashdollar Road and Watters Station Road intersect - you'll notice that it's kinda in the middle of nowhere. It's not near any other major roads, really, and as it was, wasn't a heavily-travelled location. The only people that ever really came through here were locals on their way to or from work, so it stands to reason that the only people that'd be there after 1:00 AM, when this crime took place, would have been the same. Especially since there weren't any streetlights on the road, so it was dark and pretty hard-to-find.

So for this reason, it has been believed that a local was responsible for killing Scott and Shawn, as it was unlikely for an out-of-towner to have just happened upon them. In this location, at that time of night, police reckoned it had to have been someone familiar with it. But even then, it remains unknown what, exactly, led to the deaths of the two best friends.

Some have theorized that Shawn and Scott had been inebriated at the time of their deaths, and that led to them encountering their killer along the road. But perhaps this encounter started as a complete accident. After all, this was an unlit road, and the two victims had been drinking alcohol just beforehand, so it stands to reason that they may have been hit accidentally. But the mysterious circumstances surrounding Shawn's death - his head injuries - made it seem less likely that he'd also been a victim of a car accident. And to that end, the person responsible for hitting Scott with their vehicle never came forward, indicating that they'd gone through some effort to avoid culpability after the incident.

Police have long-since theorized that Scott had been hit by a vehicle, perhaps accidentally, and that Shawn had been hit by something else. Possibly by something protruding from a vehicle, like a side mirror, or perhaps even something held out of a window. That theory would point to Scott's death being accidental, but hint at Shawn's death being intentional.

Had Shawn witnessed Scott get hit by a car, and then been attacked to silence the only witness? His father, Barry Baur, would speculate to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in 2017:

"I think Scott was hit by a truck and then someone didn't want a witness so my son was hit over the head. He was a fighter and he would have fought back if he could've but there were no marks on his hands."

However, despite the head injuries Shawn had sustained not appearing to be related to a car accident, it remained a distinct possibility. Perhaps both had been hit by the same vehicle, but Scott had received the brunt of the impact and Shawn had been hit by a side mirror, or been impacted in some other way. Maybe Scott had been hit into his best friend, resulting in Shawn then being thrown to the ground with extreme force... resulting in two major head wounds? Maybe the driver of the vehicle had themselves been impaired and then panicked, fleeing the scene and then refusing to come forward after finding out that the two boys had died.

To this day, though, it remains unknown who was behind this tragic incident. And because they've yet to be identified, their potential motive or reason for hitting Scott and Shawn also remains unknown. Speaking to the Post-Gazette in August 2002, Cpl. Raymond Melder stated:

"I don't know that we're going to be able to satisfy that short of identifying the person or persons involved."

Had this been a tragic accident? Followed by the driver panicking and then fleeing the scene? Or had this been intentional, done by someone trying to hurt Scott and/or Shawn? Certain members of their family think that that it had to have been the latter - an intentional act done by someone with hate in their heart - but until Scott and Shawn's killer is identified, they'll never be able to know for sure what happened... or why.


Two years after Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur were killed, state police Lt. Robert Lizik told reporters with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

"There's always someone who knows something. They may be assuming we already know it... There's someone out there who has information we can use. We want to hear from them."

State troopers continued to encourage anyone in the area that had seen or heard something suspicious to come forward, even if what they had seen or heard was something as small as a vehicle disappearing. Maybe it was someone's vehicle that they regularly used, which had since been mysteriously sent away for repairs or had otherwise gone missing. They also asked for residents to be on the lookout for anyone that had exhibited strange changes in their behavior; perhaps having become more emotionally volatile, or erratic. Anything like that.

While they've not spoken much about the case in recent years, police officials continue to theorize that the person or persons responsible were local to the area... a theory that is shared by the families of the two victims. But while they had long wanted to find the person(s) responsible and make them pay for what they'd done - what they'd taken from them - they more than anything just wanted to know what happened. Per Shawn's father, Barry Baur, on the 10-year mark of the case in 2012 to the Post-Gazette:

"It's not even so much who did it, but what happened. It would give us some peace."

At that time, more than a decade ago, police insisted that they were continuing their investigation into the unexplained incident, and were still receiving the occasional tip (mainly through anonymous letters and phone calls). But family members believed that a deathbed confession may be their only hope.

Patty Baur, Shawn's mother, told reporters with WTAE:

"It does consume you, but you want to go on with your life and think of all the good memories that we had with him. And we could have had a lot more if his life didn't come to an end so sudden."

Speaking to the Post-Gazette five years later, in 2017, Scott's mother Ailive Rausch stated:

"Sometimes I can't believe it's been as long as it's been. Sometimes, it seems like it was forever ago. Sometimes, it seems like it was six months... In my heart I don't know that this is ever going to be solved."

In 2022, two decades after her son's sudden loss, she told CBS News:

"Once it is solved, this will all end. We can finally grieve our children."

Scott and Shawn's family members, friends, and other loved ones continue to mourn their loss more than two decades later, holding annual vigilis along the road where they were killed back in July of 2002. Despite the lack of any tangible leads 22 years later, they continue to hold out hope that answers can still be found in the unsolved deaths of these two lifelong best friends, who will forever be remembered as their teenaged selves.

Pennsylvania Crime Stoppers continue to offer up a $20,000 reward for information, and anyone with information is encouraged to reach out to Pennsylvania State Police at (724) 284-8100. You can also submit information anonymously at 1-800-4PA-TIPS.

As of this episode's recording, the stories of Scott Fosnaught and Shawn Baur remain unresolved.


 

Episode Information

Episode Information

Writing, research, hosting, and production by Micheal Whelan

Published on July 16, 2024

Music Credits

Original music created by Micheal Whelan

Outro/theme music created and composed by Ailsa Traves

Sources and Other Reading

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