Former Youth Pastor Dies in Jail After Being Charged With Wife’s 2006 Zion Death
A former Las Vegas youth pastor has died in custody just days after being charged with murdering his wife nearly 20 years after her fatal fall at Zion National Park.
David Vander Meer was arrested and charged in connection with the 2006 death of his wife, Bernadette Vander Meer, who fell from Angels Landing during an anniversary hiking trip in Utah. Her death had originally been treated as an accident, but investigators later reopened the case after new information raised fresh questions about what happened.

Bernadette, 29, died on August 22, 2006, while hiking with her husband at one of Zion National Park’s most famous and dangerous trails. Angels Landing is known for its steep cliffs, narrow ridges, and long drops, making the original accident ruling appear possible at the time.
According to court documents cited in reports, Vander Meer told investigators that he was setting up a camera for sunrise photos when he heard his wife scream as she fell. Her body was later found at the base of the trail.
For years, the case remained closed. However, authorities said the circumstances had always raised suspicion. Nearly two decades later, investigators reopened the case after receiving new tips, including claims from people connected to Vander Meer’s church and personal life.
Prosecutors alleged that Vander Meer had been involved in a sexual relationship with a girl connected to his youth ministry and had expressed that he could only be with her if his wife were no longer alive. Reports say the relationship ended shortly before the anniversary trip to Zion.
Investigators also pointed to financial issues as part of the alleged motive. Court filings said the couple’s life insurance coverage had been increased before Bernadette’s death, and Vander Meer later received a payout of more than $567,000.

Vander Meer was charged with murder and insurance fraud in Utah and was being held in Nevada while awaiting legal proceedings. Before the case could move forward, he died in jail from self-inflicted injuries, according to reports. Authorities have not publicly released detailed information about the circumstances of his death.
Because Vander Meer died before trial, he was never convicted of the charges. The allegations against him will likely remain legally unresolved, even though the investigation brought new attention to a case Bernadette’s family and others had questioned for years.
The case has shocked many people because of the long gap between Bernadette’s death and the criminal charges. Cold cases often take years to reopen, especially when an early death investigation is classified as accidental and physical evidence becomes harder to review over time.
Bernadette’s family has said they long believed there was more to the story. Reports say her relatives and former coworkers had raised concerns about the circumstances surrounding the fall, including questions about the couple’s relationship and Vander Meer’s behavior after her death.

The case also highlights how new witness statements and financial records can change the direction of an old investigation. Even when years have passed, police and prosecutors can revisit a death if new evidence suggests the original conclusion may have been wrong.
Vander Meer’s death in custody means there will be no criminal trial to test the allegations before a jury. That leaves many unanswered questions about what happened on Angels Landing in 2006 and whether Bernadette’s death was truly an accident or something more sinister.
For now, the story stands as a tragic cold case with a shocking ending: a young woman’s death, years of suspicion, a reopened murder investigation, and the accused husband’s death before the court process could be completed.
Authorities and court records may still provide more details, but the case is no longer expected to proceed in the same way after Vander Meer’s death.