Posts Tagged ‘ Unsolved crimes ’

DNA Argument in Prisons

Police, prison system at odds over DNA

Musk prisoners refused DNA testing

  • By Ken Kolker

MUSKEGON, Mich. (WOOD) – They included men convicted of murder, sexual assault, home invasion and drug dealing — the 118 state prisoners who had refused to take DNA tests.

They are at the center of a dispute between police and the state prison system over a state law that requires all prisoners to provide their DNA.

“It baffles me why the Department of Corrections set up a policy to allow the inmates to have control over whether they’re tested or not,” Muskegon County Prosecutor Tony Tague told 24 Hour News 8.

Tague authorized search warrants that allowed state police, working with corrections officers, to get DNA samples — swabs from inside their cheeks — from 118 prisoners in the West Shoreline Correctional Facility and the Ernest C. Brooks Correctional Facility, both in Muskegon Heights.

Police were forced to hold down six prisoners who fought them, Tague said.

State police say as many as 6,000 inmates in prisons across the state have refused to take the tests.

“I am convinced that if we do the 6,000 inmates, we will solve numerous brutal serious crimes across the state,” Tague said.

The dispute is over the law that requires DNA samples. Tague says state law is on his side. Prison officials disagree.

“If we changed a simple policy within the Department of Corrections, we could avoid releasing people who have been involved in serious crimes,” Tague said.

Among examples cited by Tague and police:

Mark Ball, whose DNA was taken at his release from prison, linking him to the 1998 rape of a 13-year-old girl in Kentwood. He had broken into her home and raped her as her family slept. He’s now serving 40 to 100 years in prison.

Rodrigo Hernandes, whose DNA was taken as he was released from prison in February 2002. It linked him months later to the 1994 rape and murder of a woman whose body was found stuffed in a 55-gallon drum in San Antonia, Texas, and to the 1991 murder of a homeless woman, Muriel Stoepker, in Grand Rapids.

“Had we had that sample, he would have never been released, so we had a double murderer on the streets of our community for six months who’s now on death row in Texas,” Tague said.

And, there was the case of Nicholas Brasic, a suspected serial killer who died in a Michigan prison and was buried before the state could get his DNA. The Kent Metro Cold Case Team exhumed his body last summer. So far, DNA hasn’t linked him to any other cases.

Today, prison officials told 24 Hour News 8 that Tague and the State Police are mis-reading the law. They say the Attorney General has told prison officials that prisoners are allowed to refuse DNA tests, until just before they’re released.

“It’s not a simple policy decision,” Prison spokesman Russ Marlan said. “If it was, we would have changed the policy and taken these tests by force.”

State prison officials say they are working with state police to change the law.

“We don’t want people to slip through the cracks; we want these tests to be done earlier,” Marlan said.

Source

Give law enforcement every tool we can to stop criminals.

I get so tired of hearing about the rights of criminals.

Considering many serial criminals are arrested for lesser charges at least  once before or during the time that they are killing DNA testing might stop many with the first, or first few murders.

RCMP Needs Help With A 16 year old mystery

Jane Doe

The RCMP want the public’s help in solving the 16-year-old mystery of a woman whose partial remains were found on serial killer Robert Pickton’s farm.

RCMP will be posting an FBI sketch of what the woman may have looked like on their website in the hope that a member of the public may recognize her.

Half of the woman’s skull, with the vertebra attached, was found in 1995 by a man filling a water bottle at a creek in Mission, B.C.

In August 2002, bones recovered at Pickton’s farm in Port Coquitlam were genetically linked to Jane Doe, but charges against Pickton for her murder were dropped.

RCMP Corporal Annie Linteau said she could not discuss the Pickton case and could not point to any new information about Jane Doe that was not part of the Pickton trial.

“This is not a story about Pickton. This is about Jane Doe,” she said Sunday in an interview.

The police have released information about Jane Doe in an effort to identify her, she said.

Source and a lot of information on Pickton

Article on the release of the photo

Another article on the Jane Doe

One or two? Not enough information yet.

Barbara Breidor, Kim Raffo, Molly Dilts, Tracy Roberts

I have a habit of getting little obsessions and since this is my blog I am going to indulge myself here. I am sorry if I ramble and also sorry for how long this will be. Maybe it will end up as a few separate posts. *

For the last few days and nights I have been reading whatever I can find on the 4 murdered women found in New York 12/15/10 and the 4 dead women found in New Jersey 11/20/06. I have been trying to figure out if in my opinion there is one or two serial killers to blame. I keep bouncing back and forth due to lack of information in both cases.

I have went back and found as many article as I could on the New Jersey case but even with many years passing the police have released little. What I have been able to find out is:

  • All four women were facing the same direction, east, looking towards the boardwalk and the casinos. Although it was called a dump site the women had been placed there not simply thrown there like trash. I suppose the speculation about the killer carrying and placing the victims in a way that led to the all facing east could be valid but I don’t think that was the case. I think that they were placed there and their heads were turned to face the casinos on purpose. It brought to my mind Edmund Kemper who placed one of his victim’s in the yard facing his mom’s window. I do wonder if the killer wanted these women to look over at him as he did his work on the boardwalk.
  • All four were barefoot, no socks and no shoes. Although I saw reports of people talking about the prostitutes in that area running around without shoes this was late November in NJ. I think it would have been too cold for this to have been the case. It could have been a way for the killer to slow down any escape attempt but I tend to lean with those that think the killer had either a foot or a shoe fetish.
  • Two were strangled with either a cord or a rope. The other two were too decomposed to give a definite cause of death but I am willing to  guess that all were killed in the same manner.
  • All the woman were addicted to drugs or alcohol before they were killed. They were found to have very high amounts of the drug of their choice in their systems. I find this interesting since it implies that the killer could have given the women those large amounts as a way to entice them and or sedate them. It is not often that ‘working girls’ can afford very large amounts of their drug and in this case all 4 were able to obtain large enough amounts that it was notable by the police and the press. It also makes me wonder if he knew them or if he at least spent enough time with them to know their vices.
  • The women were all dumped (placed) within about a month and 1/2 of each other. They seemed to have been killed and discarded in a short time. The dump site was found was found within 24 hours of the last victim being put there.

Molly Dilts last seen 10/07/06

Barbara Breidor last seen 10/17/06

Tracy Roberts last seen mid November (07-15) 06

Kim Raffo last seen 11/19/06

Bodies discovered 11/20/06

  • The women were discovered in shallow running water, probably an attempt to wash away any evidence. It seems to have worked.

Once the bodies were found the killer seemed to have stopped killing.

Maybe it was that the bodies were found. It scared him. Made him stop for a while and he had to get his satisfaction just reading reports and following the investigation through the press. If he was like many other killers he knew a cop or a reporter or maybe someone that was in that area that would have been there when the police were there. He got his thrills that way, vicariously. It was enough to quell his want. That would only last for so long.

Then other things popped up and he did just stop killing. He might have, I know it is a popular idea that serial killers can not just stop but that is not entirely true. Just like the rest of us, serial killers have lives and sometimes their lives ‘interfere’ (for lack of a better word) with things like killing. Maybe he got a new job, had a new baby, got married, had a death in th family or any other ‘normal’ thing. The things that would normally take our time away from the internet, shopping, bar hopping, socializing; take a serial killer away from his fantasies, his ‘hunting’ and his killing.

All of that is possible. It is also possible that he did stop because his dumping and hunting grounds were discovered. Maybe he did stop the killing and enjoyed his ‘fame’ and the fact that the cops had no clue. He probably still stalked & hunted but because the police were so close he new that he he could not act on his desires. He also learned from his mistakes. He evolved and in doing so found a new way to hunt and a new place to dispose of his victims.

Hence the reason I still wonder if the two ‘dumping’ grounds are connected to the same killer.

There are many differences, some very important, that have me sitting on the fence. I can not say that he did start stalking on Craigslist so that his victims were not locals. I can not say that he did choose another place to place his victims.

I do not think that he just died or was arrested the day after the bodies were found.

I actually think that the ‘dumping grounds’ show that is very well could be 2 killers.

There were a few suspects in the New Jersey case but none were firm. Terry Oleson was the most ‘popular’ suspect. He was charged with video taping his ex’s daughter. I just do not think it was him. He might have been a slime ball but I do not think he was capable of these murders. Whatever else he did, on the limited information that I have I doubt he had anything to do with these killings.

I will go into the New York Victims soon. Then compare contrast and maybe then I can give an honest opinion without boncing back and forth.

This is over 1,000 words now and other things call so I will have to do that later.

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Suffolk County Police Commissioner Says No Jack the Ripper in NY

A woman last seen running in terror from a Long Island, N.Y., house in May is not one of four bodies dumped along a New York beach over the last two years, a forensic analysis has concluded.

Police speculated that Shannan Gilbert, 24, might be among the victims whose remains were found last week along a road that runs beside Gilgo Beach — a discovery that has prompted fears a serial killer might be on the loose.

“The Suffolk County Medical Examiner’s Office has determined through analysis of forensic evidence that none of the human remains found in Gilgo Beach during the past week are that of Shannan Gilbert,” police said in a prepared statement. “Suffolk County Police Homicide Squad detectives have notified Gilbert’s family. The investigation into the disappearance of Gilbert is still ongoing.”

Earlier, police swarmed around the home where Gilbert last was seen in May and confiscated an SUV from the property.

Despite the search around the home of Joseph Brewer, Suffolk County Police Commissioner Richard Dormer said he had no suspects in the deaths of the four women.

The commissioner also tried to downplay fears that a serial murderer was on the loose.

“I don’t want people to think that we have a Jack the Ripper running around Suffolk County with blood dripping from a knife,” Dormer said. “This is an anomaly.”

This morning, authorities closed a 10-mile stretch of Ocean Parkway near Brewer’s Oak Beach, N.Y., home. At least 20 police cars and 10 cadaver dogs arrived and began combing the area in a search for more bodies.

“We’re going to expand the search throughout that community over the next few days,” Dormer said. “We want to make sure we didn’t miss anything.”

Police are also trying to determine the identities of the skeletal remains, a job that could take weeks or months.

Dormer said identifying the bodies “is of the utmost importance for the investigation.”

Forensic psychiatrist Michael Welner said that the high level of decomposition will make identifying the cause of death difficult.

Two Possible Victims Were Prostitutes Who Met Clients on Craigslist

Police say Gilbert met her clients on Craigslist and Brewer told Newsday that he had hired Gilbert for a “date” and that she was at his house for a party when she became agitated and left.

Brewer told WABC, “The truth will come out, the truth will come out. The police know everything.”

Police won’t say how Brewer’s home, just miles from the crime scene, is connected to the investigation, but on Wednesday night they towed away an SUV from the premises.

Brewer’s neighbors said Gilbert was last seen running for her life from the home.

Guy Coletti lives three miles from where the bodies were found. He remembers seeing a woman he believes was Gilbert on the night of May 1.

“She said ‘Help me’ … and she just looked like she was spaced out,” Coletti said.

Coletti said Gilbert came to his house and claimed someone was after her. Coletti called 911, but before police could respond, he said Gilbert fled, tumbling down his front steps and vanishing into the weeds around his house.

Gilbert’s family said that she made a frantic 911 call herself and even named her alleged attacker. Police won’t comment on whether the call was made.

Is Maine Woman Among 4 Bodies Found?

Police are investigating whether Megan Waterman, a single mother from Maine, may be another of the victims.

“My gut tells me that Megan is no longer with us,” Lorraine Ela, Waterman’s mother, said. “It’s been heartbreaking the past almost six and a half months.”

Waterman’s mother said her daughter worked as a prostitute and was also known to use Craigslist. Megan was last seen on June 6 at a hotel in Hauppauge, N.Y., a town near Gilgo Beach where the bodies were discovered.

“Me and my family have tried talking to Megan about the dangers of advertising on Craigslist. She didn’t listen to us,” Waterman said.

New York Bodies Linked To Atlantic City Case?

Police also told ABC News that they are looking at a possible connection to the 2006 unsolved murders of four prostitutes 160 miles away in the boardwalk area of Atlantic City in 2006. They were found lying in a drainage ditch.

“We have been in contact with authorities in Suffolk County. … It would not be fair for us to comment on their investigation,” Atlantic County Prosecutor Ted Housel said in a statement to ABC News on Wednesday.

“We’re dealing with four women that were disposed of, and it would appear at least one of them has connections to prostitution, so the similarities to me are striking and very eerie,” Leonard said.

Source and more including video coverage.

>>Sorry just cut and paste, had a hard day and I am beat.<<

Serial killer series prompts police to re-open investigations

Police in Ohio and Indiana have launched new murder investigations after a Scripps Howard News Service investigation revealed dozens of clusters of unsolved killings of women nationwide that are likely the work of serial killers. Also, authorities in Nevada acknowledge they are hunting a serial killer, although the public has not been told that the unsolved murders of up to seven women are connected. Through analysis of over 525,000 murders in America, Thomas Hargrove created a database that crime experts say is the most complete accounting of homicide victims ever assembled in the United States. Using the Freedom of Information Act, Hargrove obtained details about 15,000 murders never reported to the FBI. Hargrove also created a Serial Killer Detector, a computer algorithm that flags potential serial killings. Using the Detector, readers and viewers can sort through a database of 185,000 unsolved murders to determine for themselves if serial killers are at work in their communities.

Source

This is the site for the Serial Killer Detector from Scripps News.

I am a bit skeptical about the SK Detector. I think intentions are good but I wonder how much can really be gained. I have to admit that I do not know enough about computer programs to really know how useful it could / will be.
According to this it has already helped maybe.
I tried to get results for New Orleans and it was confusing at best.

Serial killers may be responsible for unsolved murders in the Bay Area

http://www.abcactionnews.com/video/videoplayer.swf?dppversion=6448

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. – 35 years after the terrible fact, Nancy Kehoe of Pinellas Park still wonders and grieves over the abduction and murder of her 19-year-old daughter Cynthia.

“She had a lot of plans, a lot going on at that time,” says Kehoe, struggling to finish the sentence.

As a new employee at the Lil’ General convenience store on 54th Avenue in Pinellas park, 19-year-old Cynthia Clements was working the overnight shift alone. Pinellas County detectives believe that on that Labor Day in 1980, she was forced into a car and driven away.

“No evidence at the store. No sign of any struggle. Her purse was still left behind,” said Pinellas County Sheriffs Detective Mike Bailey.

When Cynthia’s decomposed and apparently strangled body was found six weeks later in the woods off Bryan Dairy road, there was still no suspect. Today her murder remains one of 39 cold cases for the Pinellas County Sheriffs Office.

“These are the cases I bring home with me and I sit for hours in the middle of the night and read these cases,” says Detective Bailey.

Bailey believes the brazen yet apparently calculated abduction of Cynthia Clements suggests the work of a serial killer.

“I think they’re a little more common than people realize”.

Florida has it’s notorious roster of serial psychopaths- Danny Rollins, Aileen Wuornos, even Ted Bundy carried out his vicious work in Florida. ( See a photo slideshow of Florida’s serial killers .)

But an in-depth Scripps Howard investigation found the Bay Area has clusters of unsolved murders that could also be the work of serial killers.

Single mother Linda Slaten was found strangled in her Lakeland home in 1981.

In 1982, the body of 16-year-old Leandra Hogan was found in a wooded lot off West Hillsborough Avenue.

It’s difficult for local law enforcement to link their unsolved murders to serial killers because they can’t always see the big picture.

Crime analysts say serial killers often travel from state to state leaving behind bodies, but no witnesses.

Enter VICAP.

“We don’t look at every homicide. We just look at the random, motiveless homicides that are most likely to be serial”.

Special Agent Michael Harrigan heads up the FBI’s Violent Criminal Apprehension Program. VICAP, as it’s known, maintains a database of serial killers and crimes they make available to local agencies at no cost. VICAP also tracks the victims of serial killers, 70% of whom are women.

The VICAP program also provides FBI expertise on profiling killers and identifying suspects. FBI Special Agent Mark Hilts says sexual assault in some form is a hallmark of serial killers. The killer either simply wants to eliminate the witness after committing a sexual crime, or the murder itself provides the sexual component.

Sexual assault was suspected in Cynthia Clement’s 1980 murder. A known serial killer, James Winkles, admitted to the abduction murder of another 19-year-old girl, Elizabeth Graham, just 9 days afterward.

“There were a lot of girls who came up missing and murdered. And it seemed like it just kept happening,” remembers Cynthia’s mother, Nancy Kehoe.

Detective Bailey says Winkles, who died in prison, (see below) is just one of several potential suspects. But even if the case was solved today, Nancy Kehoe says her life as she knew it is gone for good.

“It destroyed us. He may have well killed all of us because it destroyed us.”

James Winkles is dead.

James Delano Winkles, who was on death row for murdering two Pinellas County women, died Thursday of what appeared to be natural causes, the Florida Department of Corrections said.

Winkles, 69, was convicted of the 1980 murder of Elizabeth Graham, a 19-year-old dog groomer, and the 1981 murder of Margo Delimon, 39, a Clearwater real estate agent.

Winkles, who lived in Pinellas Park at the time of the murders, abducted the women and raped them over several days before killing them.

The murders went unsolved for almost two decades, until Winkles confessed. Serving a life sentence for the 1982 kidnapping of a woman in Sanford, Winkles contacted Pinellas sheriff’s detectives in 1998 and offered to provide information about the two murdered women.

He pleaded guilty to both killings. His lawyers asked for a life sentence instead of the death penalty, arguing that he was in poor health and would soon die in prison.

Winkles had boasted that he abducted, raped and killed 62 women, including 41 in Pinellas, information that detectives were never able to corroborate.

In interviews with the St. Petersburg Times in 1998, Winkles said he contacted detectives about the Graham and Delimon deaths because he was feeling guilty.

“I got away with stuff for so long,” he said. “Things I’ve done make Ted Bundy look like a choirboy.”

The families of the murdered women could not be reached for comment Saturday.

Lt. Michael Madden, who was a homicide detective at the time, said Winkles continued to contact detectives even after the Graham and Delimon cases were over.

“He would tell us that he was ready to talk. We’d go visit,” Madden said. “He would put us off and say he wasn’t ready.”

That went on for years.

Note from me: It is a game that so many killers play. It keeps them in control. It allows them to relive the killings to get attention and to get attention. It is NOT a sign of remorse or guilt.

“There’s still an amount of frustration because we believe that he was involved in other homicides that we still have questions about that he would never answer,” Madden said.

Winkles bragged about his killings but asked for mercy for himself when it came time for a judge to decide if he should be executed for the murders of Graham and Delimon.

He told the judge in 2003 that he wasn’t the same person and didn’t expect to live long anyway because he was suffering from heart problems and high blood pressure.

“I’ve grown morally,” he said. “I wish I could turn back time and undo what I have done.”

Winkles, who was imprisoned at Union Correctional Institution in Raiford, died at 6:25 a.m. Thursday, said Gretl Plessinger, a spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections. A medical examiner will determine the cause of death, she said.

No one had claimed his body by Friday, she said. If Winkles’ body is unclaimed, he would be buried in the inmate cemetery at the correctional facility.

Another note from me. He does seem to be a strong possible killer for Cynthia Clements.

An older article and video on James Winkles :

Kidnapper linked to old slayings
By MARCIA CRAWLEY and STEVEN DEGREGORIO

ST. PETERSBURG – Pinellas investigators are trying to separate fact from fiction in the case of a Florida prison inmate who claims to have kidnapped and murdered 26 people from 1967 to 1982.
<img src="serial killer” alt=”James Winkles” />

Much of James Winkles’ story appears fabricated – there’s little to indicate the supposed victims existed. But in at least two unsolved murders, authorities believe Winkles is telling the truth. And Pinellas County sheriff’s Detective Marty Hart says his office will seek murder indictments in January.

Nineteen-year-old Elizabeth Graham of St. Petersburg disappeared Sept. 9, 1980. A year later, Clearwater real estate saleswoman Margo Delimon, 39, vanished. Winkles, now 58, later became a suspect in the cases. But there was no direct evidence, and no charges were filed.

Winkles was arrested Jan. 7, 1982, near downtown Orlando after kidnapping a Sanford real estate saleswoman. He pleaded guilty to aggravated assault, armed robbery, kidnapping and grand theft auto. He has been in prison ever since and is not eligible for parole until 2013.

Now, he’s talking. In extensive interviews with authorities as well as WFLA reporters, Winkles has given new information about the two slayings.

He told Pinellas detectives that a skull found in 1981 and turned over to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement was that of Graham. Recent DNA tests confirm his story, detectives say.

Winkles came forward after 18 years of silence, he says, because he fears that he won’t live out his prison sentence. He says he has high blood pressure and heart disease.

(Note from me: He just wanted his 5 seconds of fame, attention and to be able to relive his murders before his death. Again, it was not remorse or guilt that led to his confessions.)

When he decided to talk, he was moved to the Pinellas County Jail. Now he is in the Polk Correctional Institute in Polk City.

Friday, WFLA reporters told Pinellas officials that Winkles claims to have buried a metal box containing pictures of some of his victims. Investigators dug Friday night at the location Winkles identified but found nothing.

Pinellas officials also plan to subpoena copies of taped interviews WFLA reporters conducted with Winkles. WFLA plans to cooperate.

Winkles gives these accounts of the two slayings:

When Graham disappeared, she was working as a dog groomer, going to customers’ homes. Winkles made an appointment by phone and put a gun to her head when she arrived.

“I handcuffed her hands behind her back,” he said in a recent interview. “I blindfolded her. I put her in the back floorboard of my vehicle.”

Graham wasn’t his intended victim, Winkles says.

“The actual abduction was supposed to be somebody I’d seen a couple of weeks before and really took a shine to,” Winkles said. “But she got sick or something the day I was supposed to get her and Graham showed up. Graham was actually a victim of circumstance.”

Winkles took Graham to the Clearwater home on 63rd Street North he shared with his grandmother, he says.

“When I went in I took her straight to my bedroom and told her stay there and remain quiet and I went in there and told my grandmother and my aunt who was there at the time that I had a guest,” he said. He said he later fired his gun twice inside the house to show Graham he was serious.

Winkles held Graham hostage for four days, forcing her to dress up in women’s outfits he kept at the house. He says he repeatedly raped her, but assured her that she would not be killed.

Later, he decided she would be able to identify him if he released her, so he gave her a “heavy dose” of sleeping pills and then shot her in the head three times. He buried the body in woods near the Pinellas County landfill and Gandy Boulevard. Later, he returned to the grave and removed the head, taking it to Lafayette County in the Florida Panhandle. There, he says, he dumped the head in a river. Divers found it a year later.

Winkles recently took a team of forensic experts to where he says he buried the body. They dug and found nothing.

He says he kidnapped Delimon in much the same way: He made a Saturday morning appointment with her to discuss real estate, then drove her to the same woods off 49th Street, saying he wanted to build a cabin there.

He told her he was “really attracted” to her and that she was being kidnapped. He handcuffed her and took her to his cousin’s house.

Over the next four days, while Delimon’s family frantically searched for her, Winkles repeatedly raped her, he says.

He also drove her around in his car, watching her closely.

“I terminated her, obviously, because we had been all over the damn place and she knew exactly where that safe house was at,” Winkles said.

“I overdosed her with sleeping pills and it took her a long time to die.”

He says he first buried her body in woods near the St. Petersburg Clearwater Airport. Two weeks later, he moved the body to Citrus county and buried it on the bank of the Withlacoochee River.

About a week later, a couple who were fishing found parts of the body. It took another two years to identify the remains as those of Delimon.

Jennings, Louisiana Murders

Tonight I decided to tackle this page on my Real Life Monsters site.
Big mistake.
I have been working on it since about 4 Sunday afternoon. It is now 12 and 1/2 hours later and I am again frustrated and confused.
I first heard about the ‘possible serial killer’ in 2007. I thought the news said Jefferson Parish (it is Jefferson Davis; much further away), meaning next door so I paid closer attention. That first time I tried to find information on the case and I kept running into brick walls. This time was no different.
It was the murder of Whitnei Dubois that started me following the case. She was a pretty girl, a young mom who choose a hard path. Yeah, she did drugs, sold her body and partied a lot.
She was also, as I said, a mom, she was also a daughter, a friend to some, a human being and she was found dead right around Mother’s Day.
Whitnei was also the first time the sheriff’s department admitted a possible connection between the others that I knew of. She was the 4th victim in a string of 4 (then) murders in small Louisiana town.
There are strong connections between all of the girls, 8 in total at the time of this writing. There are some people that claim it is really 9 nine now due to a cold case.
They all came from the ‘wrong side of he tracks’ literally.

Jennings is split in half by the railroad. One side has a 50’s feel, mom and pop stores, cute-ish home, Happy Days in the South could have been filmed there.
The other side of the tracks is a more bleak look. A Hell of a lot less money, much more drinking and drugging (openly), gangs and all that comes from poverty.
I am not a bleeding heart liberal. I do not think poverty is a black hole from which there is no escape. I do not ‘excuse’ wrong doing because you are poor. I do admit it is a long hard road. I do think society makes it harder than it needs to be. Really, all I am saying is that these girls were doing what they felt they had to.
Nothing that they did deserved being murdered over.

8 women and girls murdered.

Loretta Lewis

Ernestine Patterson

Kristen Lopez

Whitnei Dubois

Laconia Brown

Crystal Zeno

Brittney Gary

Necole Guillory

The public is getting little to no information which is horrible. Ignorance leads to fear.
Whitnei Dubois’ sister, Brittany Jones, has said: “All we know is that she was found naked on a dirt road, decomposed.”

I did find many sites that had a lot if information. Still, they are limited by what the police are willing to share, which is little. It was only recently that the local police admitted a serial killer was responsible and that was weakly.
Media coverage is spotty at best. No one seems to pay attention until another dead girl is found.

I have links.
There are some YouTube videos.
So much is hinted, hushed, opinion, but that is all the public really has.

Check out the Jennings Page.

More on this later.

Lisa

Rodney Alcala Photos

Police Departments are asking for the public’s help in identifying women, young men, and children in dozens of photos seized when detectives searched a storage locker that Rodney Alcala rented in Seattle.
Images were shot before July 1979.
If you know who these people are, contact
Huntington Beach police detective Patrick Ellis, at 714-375-5066, or email at pellis@hbpd.org.

My arrangement of the photos