Laguna man dies after collision with police car
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Mike Swanson
Friends and family from Laguna Beach, Chicago and Germany spent
Wednesday afternoon celebrating the life of Robert Michael Kiermeyer,
a 20-year Laguna resident who died Aug. 7 from injuries sustained in
an early morning car accident near Baker, Calif.
Kiermeyer, 68, was on his way home from a property he owned in
Nevada just after midnight when his 2000 Volkswagen Beetle hit an
unoccupied Highway Patrol car that had reportedly crossed the median
from northbound to southbound traffic during a high-speed pursuit. He
died on a Loma Linda Hospital operating table at 9:50 p.m. after
having suffered a ruptured aorta.
“He’s been my whole entire world,” said Kae Kiermeyer, his wife of
11 years. “Emotionally, I feel like my life’s over right now, but I
can’t help but feel blessed to have known him the way I did.”
Robert Kiermeyer came to the United States from Munich, Germany in
the late 1960s as a butcher, with just 83 cents in his pocket. He
began investing the money he made from his several jobs as soon as he
could afford it, eventually focusing on Laguna Beach real estate in
the ‘80s.
“He was so hard-working that he’d call me on Christmas to go see a
property,” said Mary Lou Mathewson, his Realtor since 1985. “The only
day he wouldn’t call me was on Mother’s Day.
“Sometimes I was his good friend, sometimes I was his enemy,
sometimes I was somewhere in between,” she said. “Robert had a great
heart and it will be missed.”
Several of Robert Kiermeyer’s tenants spoke at the funeral on
Wednesday about how willing he always was to help.
Nikki Fadel moved to Laguna Beach two and a half years ago only
because Robert Kiermeyer provided an affordable place to stay, she
said. After suffering a heart attack and losing work, Fadel said she
fell more than $15,000 behind on rent, but her landlord allowed her
to stay.
“He not only didn’t kick me out, but bought me tools and helped me
start my own business, and I paid him back every penny when I could,”
Fadel said. “He wanted people to build themselves up like he did for
himself. He was a landlord to the working-class people in Laguna
Beach.”
Fadel continues to run the business Robert Kiermeyer helped her
start, Laguna Tile. She said she suspected every restaurant in Laguna
Beach had at least one cook, busboy or low-income employee who rented
from Robert Kiermeyer.
“If he didn’t make so many low-cost renting opportunities
available, so many more people would have to take buses in from Santa
Ana to work some of these jobs,” Fadel said. “He helped make it
possible for low-earning Laguna Beach employees to live in Laguna
Beach.”
Tom Grieve, a Robert Kiermeyer tenant for five years, said some
people may not have liked their landlord because of his “rough German
exterior,” but two things stood out to Grieve:
“He always kept his word and he was always there to help you,” he
said. “You can’t say that about too many people.”
The only other contingent of speakers that rivaled Robert
Kiermeyer’s tenants was from his wife’s side of the family, most of
whom said they’d spent limited time with their in-law, but enough to
see his boundless energy and good heart.
The Rev. Eddie Williams, Kae Kiermeyer’s brother, who traveled
from Chicago to officiate the funeral, said he wouldn’t have minded
seeing his German brother-in-law aspire for a position being sought
by a famous Austrian.
“I feel really badly for the state of California,” Williams said.
“I was going to fund him for governor. He was frugal and he could
talk a lot.”
Longtime friend Waltraud Strafeldas, who emigrated from Germany
with her husband, Rudolf, about 10 years before Robert Kiermeyer,
said after the funeral that one more speech would have made the
ceremony perfect.
“If Robert would have been here, he would have the nicest speech,”
she said. “He always spoke so good.”
Waltraud Strafeldas said during the funeral that she didn’t know
her friend had been married until two years after the fact, but
forgave him once she tasted the food Kae Kiermeyer prepared.
“She cooked such a wonderful dinner,” Waltraud Strafeldas said.
“What do you call it? Soul food? I never had soul food in my life. So
good.”
Robert and Kae Kiermeyer met 12 years ago when Kae rented one of
Robert’s apartments. While working 36-hour shifts in Long Beach and
Anaheim emergency rooms, Kae Williams decided there were only two
places in California she wanted to live: Laguna Beach or Carmel.
Upon arriving at one of Robert Kiermeyer’s Laguna Beach properties
to see about renting, she said she saw “a little, tough-looking white
man” working outside. Upon talking to him, she was shocked to hear he
was the landlord.
“He was intrigued by me right away,” Kae Kiermeyer said. “I could
see it. He rented me one of his places right away and then always
found some excuse to come over, whether it was to talk about
something or fix something.”
They were married less than a year later.
“I’d never dated a man shorter than probably 6-foot-4, and
Kiermeyer’s only 5-5, 5-6,” Kae Kiermeyer said. “There was just
something so alive about him that kept me interested.
“We were just a couple of vagabonds together. We traveled all the
time. We slept late. He was always in my business, but I didn’t mind.
He could do that tantrum thing like no one I’ve ever seen. He was
everything I wanted in a man.”
Kae Kiermeyer said her husband was made for this country, and
unlike many Germans who immigrate, she said, Robert Kiermeyer was
naturalized.
“This country gave him the opportunity to show his brilliance, and
he loved it for that,” Kae Kiermeyer said. “He was no butcher. He was
a businessman and an entrepreneurial genius, and this country allowed
him to show it.”
Friends and family members flew to Chicago yesterday for what Kae
Kiermeyer called “the Williams version of a funeral.” Robert
Kiermeyer’s body will be flown to Munich on Monday, where he’ll be
buried next to his mother.
“We’re going to get together in Chicago and we’re going to sing,”
Kae Kiermeyer said. “Whether we’re happy, sad or mad, we sing, and
we’re going to sing so loud my Kiermeyer’ll be sure to hear.”
In addition to his wife, Robert Kiermeyer is survived by sisters
Annelisse Bauer and Erne Rassl; nieces Monika Bauer and Alexandra
Rassl; and nephew Robert Rassl, all of whom live in Munich.
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