Crime & Safety

43-Year-Old Bucks County Murder Mystery Solved

German national known as "The Captain" shot and killed a man in 1980 in Nockamixon Township: Bucks Detectives.

Peter Eric Marschner and Leslie Schmidt.
Peter Eric Marschner and Leslie Schmidt. (Bucks County DA's Office)

DOYLESTOWN, PA — A 43-year-old Nockamixon Township murder mystery involving an international boat thief, a drug operation and mishandled money, has been solved.

German national Peter Eric Marschner, also known as "The Captain" for his propensity for stealing yachts and boating equipment in the Caribbean, shot and killed 34-year-old Richard Wesley Wheeler in September 1980, Bucks County authorities revealed today.

Detectives said Marschner, who changed his name after fleeing from authorities, shot Wheeler four times and hid his body on a wooded property off Center Hill Road about a mile south of the intersection with Kintner Hill Road in Nockamixon. Wheeler’s body was located on Sept. 18, 1980.

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The exhaustive investigation, pieced together by Bucks County Detective David Hanks and Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Christopher Cleveland, determined Marschner killed Wheeler under orders from another man, Leslie Schmidt, because Schmidt felt Wheeler mishandled a large sum of money Schmidt had entrusted Wheeler to manage.

Both Marschner and Schmidt have since passed away--Marschner in 2006 and Schmidt in 2022.

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"The Bucks County District Attorney’s Office considers the case solved due to the deaths of all the participants involved," prosecutors said. "Additionally, the office has consulted with the victim’s family, and they are grateful that this crime is now solved."

The investigation built a timeline of events that ultimately solved the cold case, authorities said. The final piece to the mystery was accomplished earlier this year when investigators were able to track down the shooter.

The investigation found that the three men - Wheeler, Marschner and Schmidt - met while incarcerated in Danbury Federal Prison in Danbury, Conn.

Marschner, a German national known as “the Captain,” had a history of stealing yachts, boating equipment and money from harbors in the Caribbean Islands.

Marschner was sent to prison in May 1974 for two years for stealing a 41-foot sailboat in Martinique. After he was released from prison, he was supposed to be deported to Germany, but he found his way back to the Caribbean Islands by working as a crewman on a private yacht.

The yacht was in St. Lucia in February 1977 when the owners went ashore for the night. The next morning, Marschner, all the money onboard, $10,000 worth of boating equipment and a motorized dinghy were missing. A month later, Marschner stole a 43-foot sailboat from a harbor in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. After an extensive manhunt, Marschner was arrested by French officials in May 1977.

Marschner eventually pleaded guilty to grand larceny and interstate transport of stolen goods, landing him in Danbury Federal Prison, where he met Wheeler, a marijuana dealer who escaped a California prison, and Schmidt, a Bucks County methamphetamine dealer.

While incarcerated, the three men conspired to set up a methamphetamine lab in Upper Bucks County once they were released from prison.

Wheeler was the first to be released in November 1979. Later that year, Schmidt was released on a 30-day furlough.

During his time out of prison, Schmidt introduced Wheeler to a friend, who leased Wheeler the property in Nockamixon Township. Schmidt also provided Wheeler $250,000 that was to be used to care for Schmidt’s family while Schmidt finished serving the remainder of his sentence.

In July 1980, Marschner was released from prison and was taken by U.S. Immigration officials to JFK Airport in New York City to be sent back to Germany. During the confusion caused when his deportation flight was cancelled due to mechanical issues on the plane, Marschner managed to
escape and walked away from the airport.

Wheeler was living in this camper on the Nockamixon property in 1980.

Wheeler had begun work for the methamphetamine lab on the Nockamixon Township property and was living on a camper on the property. Schmidt was still in prison but was financing the drug operation, investigators discovered. Marschner re-connected with Wheeler in Bucks County and became Wheeler’s personal bodyguard and driver.

At some point, Schmidt and Wheeler had a falling out over their business venture. Schmidt believed Wheeler was mishandling the $250,000 Schmidt had given Wheeler, and he was using the funds for himself and not for Schmidt’s family.

Because of that belief, Schmidt ordered Marschner to kill Wheeler, the investigation concluded. Wheeler was shot four times, sometime between Sept. 8 and Sept. 18, 1980.

After the killing, Marschner, who was 42 at the time, fled in Wheeler’s pickup truck to New Jersey.

In 1983, investigators spoke to witnesses, concluding that Schmidt hired a “German guy to pull the trigger.” Further, the gunman was someone Schmidt had met in Danbury Federal Prison, investigators learned.

Throughout the case, investigators have tried to locate Marschner, who disappeared after killing Wheeler.

Earlier this year, investigators examined Marschner’s criminal history and discovered he was arrested in 1982 on drug conspiracy charges in New York and identified himself as Charles McLaren. The fingerprints from McLaren’s arrest in 1982 matched those of Marschner’s arrest in 1977.

The investigation found that Marschner had been living as Charles McLaren, with a new name, date of birth and social security number. After being released on the drug conspiracy case, he moved to New Jersey, got married, had children and ran a successful limousine service in New York City.

This case was investigated by Detective David Hanks with the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office, Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Christopher Cleveland and Bucks County Deputy District Attorney Megan A. Hunsicker.

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