Johanna Tabitha Virginia Strong Leatherbury.

Johanna Tabitha Virginia Strong Leatherbury was born on May 17, 1953 to Jack and Gayle (nee Strong) in Cedar City, UT. Mr. Leatherbury was born on September 16, 1916 in Eureka, UT and her mother was born on July 21, 1920. The couple were wed on May 22, 1939 in Heber City and eventually settled down in Holladay outside of Salt Lake City. Jack was a graduate of Brigham Young University and worked for the Union Pacific railroad for 43 years. The couple had ten children: six boys (Jack, Charles, Paul, Christopher, Marshall, and Greg) and four girls (Roxanne, Johanna, Suzanne and Jacquine, who died the same day she was born on February 22, 1940).

Johanna stood at 5’3″ tall and weighed 135 pounds at the time of her murder. In 1971, she graduated from Olympus High School and was employed at Ballast Hall, a dormitory at the University of Utah. She was also a member of the Holladay Sixth Ward Chapel, a branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The evening of August 20, 1971 was no different than any other: before she left her family home to go hang out with her friends the 17 year-old said goodbye to her parents and siblings. It would be the last time the Leatherbury’s would see her alive. The night turned into morning, and she never came home. This wasn’t like Johanna at all and her family knew right away that something was wrong. Immediately they began to search the area in hopes of finding her.

Described by one of her brothers as ‘thoughtful and kind,’ Johanna was very well liked by her peers and was deeply loved by family and friends. She always made time to visit her grandfather at the VA, who was an injured World War II veteran and loved spending time with her nieces, who said their aunt would often take them out for coffee with her friends and never treated them like children. Like most teenagers on the cusp of adulthood, Leatherbury liked going out with friends and ‘hanging out:’ on the evening of Friday August 20th, she met up with friends at a popular hangout referred to as ‘The Complex,’ which is best described as a vacant field where kids from the areas high schools went to hang out. Leatherbury had just graduated and was moving on to college (most likely the University of Utah where she worked), and it’s important to keep in mind it was the end of August, which is right before school starts up again. Of the spot, Jack Leatherbury said that it was just a normal teenage haunt, and that the areas two schools (Skyline and Olympus High) were just a five minute, 1.7 mile drive apart so many of the students knew each other from growing up in the same area: ‘the kids from Skyline and Olympus High School all hung out at this area. They played games and did what teenagers do.’

I have two different reports as to where Johanna was last seen: in an article published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 24, 1971, it stated that ‘Miss Leatherbury was last seen Friday night when she drove a friend home.’ However the more frequently given account is that she was last seen getting into a car with two unidentified gentlemen containing an unknown number of people by friends near The Complex (which was located at the intersection of State Street and 2100 South Street) at roughly 11:00 PM on August 20, 1971 (I read one source that said it was as late as 11:25 PM and listed the location at 2500 South State Street and West Temple). No one caught the type of car that Johanna got into, however the public was given a description of two different makes and models that were said to be in the area where she was last seen: on August 26th just days after Leatherbury was murdered LE issued an all points bulletin on two cars and their drivers that were reported to be near The Complex. One of them was a 1959/60 black (or dark green) Chevrolet Impala with an engine that ‘sounded like a washing machine’ that was driven by an approximately 24 year-old male with ‘hair down to his ears.’ The second vehicle in question was a 1970/71 Dodge Charger with white racing stripes painted on the sides and a black stripe on the rear that was driven by a person described as ‘young and blonde.’ Unfortunately, it seems that police were unsuccessful in their search efforts.

The day after Johanna was last seen her older brother Jack heard a report on the radio that immediately alarmed him: ‘it was a bulletin on the radio that said there had been a body discovered in the surplus canal out by the Great Salt Lake.’ … ‘Good Lord, I could tell you where we were about every hour from the day to the time they discovered her.’ Per KSL, her younger sister, Roxanne said that ‘when she didn’t show up, we all began to panic.’ The Leatherbury family’s search attempts didn’t yield any answers; however her body was quickly discovered the next day.

On August 21, sometime between 4 – 4:45 PM the naked remains of Johanna Leatherbury were discovered in a marshy area near the Great Salt Lake by David Russell and Neal Draper. The men happened to be fishing in the canal, which was located about a half mile west of the west stock bridge on the Goggin’s Drain by the Great Saltaire, an abandoned entertainment complex that had been destroyed in a fire in November 1970. Goggins Drain is a bypass canal that drains water from a surplus canal and helps transport water from 21st South to the Great Salt Lake. At first the two fishermen thought they found an old department store mannequin, however after they brought it to shore and further inspected it they quickly realized that wasn’t the case at all: it was the corpse of a young woman.

Because it was 1971 and not 2023 the men had no cell phones, so they drove to the closest town of Magna, UT to inform law enforcement about their discovery. Once detectives arrived on the scene and pulled the body out of the water it was obvious to them what happened to the young woman: she had been shot in the chest and head nine times and stabbed in the chest and stomach four times (I did see it reported she was stabbed five times and another that said was shot only three times). She had also been raped and pistol whipped. In the very beginning, responding officers thought the body may have belonged to 17-year-old Sheri Martin, who disappeared from her POE of Winchells Donut House on August 12, 1971. Martin’s body was eventually found by two hikers 15 miles south of Wendover on September 6; she also died from gunshot wounds.

Captain Pete ‘ND’ Haywood of the Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Department told the public that they’re ‘looking into many leads in the killing of Leatherbury, but we have no suspects at this time.’ Strangely enough, a 20 year-old woman named Leeora Looney disappeared the same evening in August 1971 that Johanna was murdered after she was reported missing from her POE at a doughnut shop in Lakewood. According to court documents, her car and purse were also both left behind, completely untouched. Several witnesses reported seeing two men in the shop just before she disappeared that were later identified as serial killers Sherman Ramon McCrary and Carl Taylor. Three days after Looney disappeared her naked remains were found in a remote field; she had been strangled, raped, and shot in the head. It was later determined McCrary and Taylor were responsible for her death as well as Shari Martins. The McCrary family is suspected of at least 24-26 additional murders (I’ve read varying amounts) and all involved young women that were last seen alive at doughnut shops throughout Colorado, Texas, Florida, Kansas City and Utah between 1970 and 1971. In 1988, 62-year-old Sherman Ramon McCrary hung himself in his cell while serving time in prison; he would have been eligible for parole in 1997.

It wasn’t long before police identified the woman as Johanna Leatherberry. After she was found, SLC deputies thoroughly combed the marshes that bordered the Great Salt Lake for clues. Additionally, on August 22-23 two Utah National Guard helicopters helped in the search and they combed through the area where her remains were found; unfortunately, this failed to find anything of value. Detectives speculated that she was killed early in the morning after she disappeared then was transported to Goggins Drain. After arriving, her assailants dragged her body into the water, where it floated for roughly eight hours before it was discovered. Investigators found multiple tire tracks and footprints near where the remains were recovered as well. On August 26, 1971 detectives executed a search warrant to enter an undisclosed Salt Lake residence, where they confiscated a .22 caliber gun as well as a switchblade, which may have been connected with the crime. Ballistics tests were done on the weapon and comparisons were made with slugs taken from the girls remains. A total of three .22 caliber pistols as well as the knife were sent into the FBI crime lab in Washington DC; also sent in were the victim’s fingernail clippings, hair samples, her Chrysler car, and her purse as well as its contents. Captain Haywood told the media that all possible leads were being investigated and any pistol which deputies came across in their routine duties were being run through ballistics.

At first, the investigation was on a fast track and LE were certain an arrest would quickly be made, however all leads were deemed to be a ‘dead ends’ and fizzled out; the case quickly went cold. Weeks turned into months, which turned into years, then decades. Hopes for a quick arrest vanished after multiple persons of interest were questioned and cleared. In an article published on August 27, 1971, it’s reported that at one point five full time detectives were assigned to the Leatherbury case. They conducted interviews with hundreds of Johanna’s family members, friends, school/church mates, acquaintances, and coworkers, but no one could provide them with anything of value. One of Captain Haywood’s ‘hottest leads’ was a phone call from a man that wished to remain anonymous that claimed he had seen a girl abducted near the County Complex the same night Johanna was last seen. Officers asked the man to call them back and Haywood even offered to protect his identity.

Captain Haywood said that one of LE’s biggest handicaps regarding the investigation was that no one that was with the victim at The Complex the night she disappeared ever came forward to offer information. Because of this, investigators had to keep going back to find individuals to check out certain pieces of information, which took up a lot of valuable time and made their job much harder. Haywood speculated there were at least a dozen kids at The Complex the night Leatherbury disappeared (if not more), but nobody wanted to come forward and volunteer anything helpful. It also made him wonder if maybe there was some form of illegal activity going on that night that nobody wanted to get in trouble for.

According to KTSU, today the vacant lot where Leatherbury was last seen is now occupied by The Salt Lake County Clerk’s Office and an assisted living development. One odd fact about this case is that her wallet and checkbook were found on the roof of the World Motor Motel which was located at 1900 South and State Street in SLC. Eventually, two juveniles (one of them was an industrial school escapee) came forward that had items in their possession that belonged to Johanna; they were questioned, cleared, and released. The boys admitted to rifling through her Chrystler early on Saturday, August 21st and stealing her purse, which she left behind on the backseat. The two then went through the bag, throwing its contents on the roof of the motel; they threw the purse itself in some nearby bushes. LE found the belongings thanks to a breeze that blew several of Leatherbury’s papers off the roof of the motel, which alerted them to the location of the items as they combed the area for evidence. Detective Haywood said that Leatherbury’s vehicle was found a couple blocks away from The Complex parked on Westminster Avenue between State Street and 200 East near the Salt Lake County Complex in the early morning just hours after she disappeared.

A night watchman from the Morton Salt Company told LE that he saw a brown International Harvester Scout driving in the area where Johanna’s remains were recovered at around 5 AM on August 21; this is the same time that investigators suspect her remains were dumped. When detectives located the vehicle’s owner and spoke to him, he was cleared as well. Captain Haywood said of the killer, ‘there’s no doubt in the world that this is a crime committed by a local person.’ The SLC Chief of Detectives seemed to back him on his claim, saying that Leatherbury’s body was found in ‘practically an unknown spot’ and that the individual would have had to had to have known the area ‘intimately’ to find his way in and out on the three trails leading to the area. One of those three paths was useless and led directly to a muddy mess.

On September 5, 1971, Haywood announced that he saw links between Johanna’s case and the brutal murders of William Rulon Shaw and a young delivery driver named Mike Bown. Shaw was a 65 year old florist that was killed three days after Johanna on August 24, 1971 after he was shot during a robbery of his shop. Michael Preston ‘Mike’ Bown was a 23 year-old deliveryman in Provo and was shot in the back of the head on September 2, 1971 while dropping off bread at Natter’s Market on South 700 East Street. The bullet struck him in his left cheek and exited through his right eye, killing him instantly. Another employee, 33 year-old Carolyn Kingston was also shot in the head through her right temple but survived. The suspect got away with less than a hundred dollars. There was a second delivery man on the scene and I read conflicting reports that either the suspect’s gun jammed or that he ran out of ammo, but regardless as to what happened that person’s life was spared that day. According to him, the robber was between 18 to 20 years of age, had curly hair, was short and well groomed. Left behind at the crime scene was a gold Timex watch with a dark blue face and a blue and gray striped nylon band. The timepiece used Roman numerals rather than numbers and is strongly believed to have belonged to the suspect. Additionally, there were reports of a 1959 Black Chevrolet Impala four-door sedan at the scene with its engine running, much like the one seen the night Johanna disappeared. Haywood said that he saw similarities in the deaths of Bown, Leatherbury, and Shaw: they all involved a .22 caliber pistol and that the ‘mode of operation’ in the Bowe and Shaw homicides were similar.

At the time Johanna was murdered Bundy was living in Seattle at the Rogers Rooming house on 12th Avenue and was in a long term relationship with Elizabeth Kloepfer. He was also an undergraduate psychology student at the University of Washington (although he was in between semesters at the time, as it was the middle of August). At the time he was a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company, which was a family-owned medical supply company (he was there from June 5, 1970 to December 31, 1971). One of the first things that jumped out at me regarding Johanna being a possible Bundy victim is the fact that she was shot multiple times. None of Ted’s victims were ever shot, and aside from Carol DaRonch’s claim that he pulled out a gun during her attempted kidnapping I never heard of him using such a weapon in any capacity. The only other unconfirmed victim I wrote about that suffered from gunshot wounds is Susan Wickersham. On July 11th, 1973 at 11:30 PM, the 17-year-old dropped the family car off at the restaurant her mother was working at in Bend, Oregon then left to wait across the street for some friends to pick her up. When they never showed up, she decided to walk home instead and was never seen alive again. Wickersham’s skeletal remains were found in the woods by a man collecting firewood on January 20, 1976. Examination of her skull by the state medical examiner’s office determined she had suffered from a gunshot wound to the head. Personally, I don’t think Bundy killed Susan and it seems like her family doesn’t either (I briefly spoke with one of her SIL’s on FB and she agrees with me).

Officials in charge of Leatherbury’s murder said that most of the files related to the case were damaged by flooding at the police station years ago. Despite going cold, her case is still considered ‘active’ and officials exhumed her body in 2017; the results of this examination have not been shared with the public or even her family, which deeply upsets them. Johanna’s niece Sandy said that they ‘weren’t privy to hardly anything. We appealed for the file, and we were denied.’ … ‘She deserved more. She deserved to have whoever did this to be caught.’ … ‘We just didn’t have any follow-through. There was no follow-through. It was just put up on the shelf and left.’ … ‘I am so angry and frustrated because there was a door being slammed in our face all of the time.’ However, a spokeswoman for the Unified Police Department named Melody Gray disagreed with that statement, explaining that the case is still active and that they ‘have a full-time cold case investigator and he has actively been working this case including right now.’

A newsletter for the police society VIDOCQ dated December 15, 2015 mentions a presentation the organization put on regarding the case of Johanna Leatherbury (looking through their website I couldn’t find any additional information on her). In the article, Deputy Police Commissioner Bill Gill reported that Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Todd Grey was able to secure a sample of Leatherbury’s DNA as well as her mandible for further testing. The same article mentioned that the group was going to speak with a serial killer named ‘Robert Lee Sales,’ who was serving time at the Utah State Prison for murders similar in nature to Leatherbury’s. Incarcerated since 1973, Sells raped and murdered multiple young woman around Johanna’s age in the early 1970’s. He was convicted of the murder of JoAnn Poulsen from Corinne, UT, who was recovered from the PineView Reservoir on September 26, 1971. Oddly enough she disappeared on August 21, 1971, which is the same day that the remains of Leatherbury’s were recovered.

About her sister, Roxanne Leatherby-Brough said that Johanna ‘was a good kid. She tried hard to please other people, help us all. I don’t know. I miss her a lot.’ The remaining members of the Leatherbury family haven’t gotten much information related to Johanna’s case over the years, and unfortunately both of her parents died before seeing their daughter’s killer brought to justice: Gayle passed away at the age of 64 on November 6, 1984 and Mr. Leatherbuty died at the age of 73 on May 6, 1990. Their son Jack said he watched as the gruesome details and gnawing unknown tore his parents apart, and because of the death of their daughter they both went to their graves completely changed people. A few of Johanna’s siblings have passed away as well: her brother Paul died at the age of 55 on November 23, 1997 in Murray, UT (which is coincidentally where the Fashion Place Mall is located, which is where Carol DaRonch’s attempted abduction took place). According to his obituary, he was a past President of the Utah Arabian Horse Association and he loved his horses, fishing, and traveling. He had a great zest for life and was known to those who loved him as ‘the world’s greatest salesman.’ On July 5, 2012 Greg Leatherbury died of complications from diabetes at the age of 61. He was known to loved ones as ‘the great organizer’ because he excelled at planning events and activities, including an annual Father’s Day Open Golf Tournament. Charles Leatherbury died at the age of 73 on December 27, 2018; he was in the US Army and fought in the Vietnam War.

Because of their extreme dissatisfaction with the way law enforcement handled the investigation, the Leatherbury family recently joined forces with the Utah Cold Case Coalition to help get answers in Johanna’s case. The coalition is a Utah based organization that helps to bridge the gap between police and the families of cold case murder victims. Two of Johanna’s nieces, sisters Sandy and Cindy, said they were told that information related to their aunt’s case could not be shared because it is still an open and active investigation. Cindy Leatherbury-Grange commented that: ‘we really have felt the case was solvable, but now it’s so many years past.’… ‘We’re wondering if these people are dead, what has happened. Thirty years ago, we might have had a chance.’ The coalition’s co-founder Jason Jensen is certain Johanna’s killer is local to Salt Lake City. In a post on their FB page about the Leatherbury case, the ‘Cold Case Coalition’ commented that: ‘it’s been exactly 48 years since Johanna Leatherbury was found dead in a drainage ditch near Saltair in Salt Lake County. She had been raped, shot, and stabbed. 48 YEARS.  Yet Unified P.D. won’t release any records because it’s ‘still an open case’s This is the same response we get from Unified in every case. If you haven’t solved the case in nearly half a century, can someone else have a try?’

In an article published by ABC4, Johanna’s family got an email from a Salt Lake detective in mid-February 2022 with news they’ve been waiting many, many years to receive: ‘They have identified new DNA from the crime scene and he was securing funds to send it to their lab for testing and hopefully he’ll be able to use genetic genealogy.’ Jensen commented that this new evidence could be a variety of things: ‘if it was an article of clothing or something that was handled by an investigator 30 or 40 years ago chances are great that it’s an incidental from an investigator. But if it’s something concrete like semen, then it’s going to be the bad guy.’ This technique is quickly becoming very common with law enforcement and helps to identify familial DNA, and from there authorities are able to narrow down the search in hopes of finding a possible suspect. The article said it would be months before LE got the results of the DNA analysis and considering it’s now the end of 2023, I’m leaning towards them not finding anything of value from the sample. As a side note, in early 2023 Rita Curran’s killer was found in the same manner, and it was determined that her neighbor William DeRoos killed the pretty young teacher in her bed on July 19, 1971 in Burlington, VT.

Johanna Leatherbury.
Johanna Leatherbury.
Leatherbury’s sophomore year picture from the 1969 Olympus High School yearbook.
Leatherbury in a group picture for chorus from the 1969 Olympus High School yearbook.
Johanna Leatherbury’s senior picture from the 1971 Olympus High School yearbook.
Investigators standing at the site where Leatherbury’s remains were discovered.
A screen grab of crime scene photo’s related to Johanna Leatherbury’s murder.
Another screen grab of crime scene photo’s related to Leatherbury’s murder.
Where the Leatherbury family lived, located at 2919 Ward Way in Holladay, Utah.
Where Johanna attended church, the Holladay Sixth LDS Ward Chapel (located at 3070 Nila Way in Holladay, Utah).
Johanna’s birth announcement.
An article I found on WebSleuths about Leatherbury that had no publication information..
An article about the murder of Johanna Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on August 23, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 23, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Herald-Journal on August 23, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 23, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 24, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Herald-Journal on August 24, 1971.
An newspaper blurb mentioning a service for Leatherbury published by The Daily Herald on August 24, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on August 24, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 24, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Daily Herald on August 25, 1971.
A short listing of Utah deaths featuring Johanna Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 25, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The American Fork Citizen on August 26, 1971.
An article about Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 26, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Daily Herald on August 27, 1971.
An article about the murder of Johanna Leatherbury published by The Herald-Journal on August 27, 1971.
An article about Johanna Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 27, 1971.
Her belongings were discovere after a breeze blew several papers off the roof of the World motel as they combed the area nearby for eidence.
An article about the murder of Johanna Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on August 27, 1971.
An article about the investigation on the murder of Johanna Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on August 28, 1971.
An article about the investigation on the murder of Johanna Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on August 31, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on September 2, 1971.
About two weeks after Leatherbury's murder two more people were murdered over a robbery gone wrong. The assailant ot away with less than $100 and  two peopkle lost their lives: Michael P. Bone and
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on September 4, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on September 4, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on September 5, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Herald-Journal on September 6, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on September 8, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on September 8, 1971.
Leatherbury mentioned in an article published in The Salt Lake Tribune on November 22, 1971.
An advertisement for ‘secret witnesses’ that mentions Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on December 2, 1971.
An opinion piece about secret witnesses that mentions Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on December 6, 1971.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on December 30, 1971.
An newspaper blurb about secret witnesses mentioning Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on January 15, 1972.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 1, 1972.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on September 10, 1972.
An article about unsolved crimes mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on January 1, 1973.
An article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on January 1, 1974.
The second page of an article mentioning Leatherbury published by The Deseret News on September 16, 1985.
An article after Bundy was executed that mentions his possible link to Leatherbury’s death published by The Salt Lake Tribune on January 24, 1989.
An article after Bundy was executed that mentions his possible link to Leatherbury’s death published by The Salt Lake Tribune on January 25, 1989.
A picture mentioning Leatherbury possibly being a victim of Bundy published by The Salt Lake Tribune on January 25, 1989.
An article about a website featuring true crime sites mentioning Leatherbury published by The Daily Herald on October 30, 2000.
An article about a website featuring unsolved crimes mentioning Leatherbury published by The Toole Transcript-Bulletin on November 9, 2000.
Jack Leatherbury in his senior year of high school.
Jack Leatherbury’s World War II draft card.
Jack Leatherbury’s freshman picture from the 1937 Brigham Young University yearbook.
Jack Leatherbury’s senior picture from the 1941 Brigham Young University yearbook.
Jack and Gayle’s marriage announcement published in The Pleasant Grove Review on June 16, 1939.
Jack and Gayle in the 1940 census.
The birth announcement for Johanna’s oldest brother Jack, who was born on Valentine’s Day in 1941.
A newspaper blurb mentioning the Leatherbury’s visiting Gayle’s parents. There’s a lot of weird little things like this in newspapers I’ve noticed. This was published in The American Fork Citizen on October 1, 1943.
It looks like at one point the Leatherbury’s thought about divorcing. This was published in The Salt Lake Tribune on February 12, 1947.
Gayle Kathryn Strong Leatherbury.
Jack Leatherbury’s photo from the 1957 Olympus High School yearbook.
Paul Leatherbury’s photo from the 1958 Olympus High School yearbook.
Charles Leatherbury’s photo from the 1964 Olympus High School yearbook.
Paul Leatherbury’s photo from the 1965 Olympus High School yearbook.
Greg Leatherbury’s photo from the 1965 Olympus High School yearbook.
Marshall S. Leatherbury’s photo from the 1965 Olympus High School yearbook.
Roxanne (l) and Suzanne (r) Leatherbury’s junior year pictures from the 1971 Olympus High School yearbook.
Greg Leatherbury’s wedding announcement published in The Salt Lake Tribune on February 3, 1974.
A photo from Greg Leatherbury’s 2012 Obituary.
Johanna’s brother Jack in a screen grab from a news clip about his sisters death that aired on August 22, 2022.
Johanna’s nieces.
An obituary for Johanna published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 24, 1971.
An announcement for funeral services for Johanna published by The Salt Lake Tribune on August 24, 1971.
An obituary for Gayle Leatherbury published by The Daily Herald on November 9, 1984.
An obituary for Gayle Leatherbury published by The Pleasant Grove Review on November 14, 1984.
An obituary for Johanna’s father Jack Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on May 8, 1990.
An obituary for Paul Leatherbury published by The Salt Lake Tribune on November 25, 1997.
Johanna’s grave site; she is buried next to her little sister, who sadly died the same day she was born in 1940.
Gayle and Jack Leatherbury’s grave stone.
Paul Leatherbury’s grave stone.
Charles Leatherbury’s grave stone.
Jack Leatherbury’s pedigree. I know it’s cut off on the right side, I was unable to find the rest of it.
The Leatherbury’s are mentioned in a document I found on Ancestry titled: ‘Remington’s of Utah: with their ancestors and descendants from ‘Section IV. Descendants of Jerome N. and Lydia RB Remington.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1971 when Leatherbury was murdered according to the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
A Google maps route from the Rogers Rooming house in Seattle where Bundy was living at the time to where Johanna was last seen in Utah.
A picture of a car similar to Johanna’s white Chrysler.
Where the ‘Complex’ once was located, which was where Leatherbury was last seen before she was murdered on August 20, 1971.
The intersection where the ‘Complex’ once was located, which was where Leatherbury was last seen before she was murdered on August 20, 1971.
The intersection where the ‘Complex’ once was located, which was where Leatherbury was last seen before she was murdered on August 20, 1971.
The town of Magna, which is where the two fishermen that discovered Johanna’s body had to travel to in order to report their discovery to police.
An aerial view of the Goggins Drain outside of SLC in Utah where Johanna’s remains were found.
The World Motor Hotel.
The former site of ‘The Complex.’
The Great Saltair.
 A brown International Harvester scout.
A 1960 black Chevrolet Impala like the one that was reportedly seen the night Johanna was killed.
A Timex watch much like the one found left behind at Michael Bowe’s murder.
In a letter dated December 15, 2015 Deputy commissioner Bill Gill said that Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Todd Grey said they were able to secure a sample of Leatherbury's DNA  as well as er jaw for further testing. He also said they had an interview with Robert Sales, who is serving time at the Utah State Prison for a murder similar in nature to Leatherbury's.
A brief mentioning of Johanna Leatherbury VIDOCQ Society newsletter. According to their website, ‘for more than 25 years, the VIDOCQ Society has provided pro bono expert assistance to law enforcement agencies across the United States as they work to solve their cold case homicides.  The Society does not conduct independent investigations; we act as a catalyst and assist law enforcement agencies only at their invitation.’
William Rulon Shaw.
Michael Preston Bown.
Acccordingg to
A picture of Robert Lee Sales published in The Ogden Standard-Examiner on January 18, 1974.
Robert Sales victim, Joann Poulsen.
Roylene ‘Roydie’ Alexander, who was murdered by Robert Sales at the age of 17 on June 15, 1972.
An article about Robert Sales being charged for the murder of Roylene Alexander that was published by The Salt Lake Tribune on February 22, 2003.
An obituary for Sheri Martin published by The Deseret News on September 11, 1971.
Leeora Looney.
Raymond Carl Taylor (l) and Sherman McCrary (r). Carolyn Elizabeth McCrary is being escorted in background. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Pictures of the McCrary family and Raymond Taylor after they were arrested.
An article about the McCrary family published by Deseret News on December 6, 1973.
Norman Daniel ‘Pete’ Hayward, who served as the Salt Lake County Sheriff for 12 years and was employed with the Sheriff’s Office for over 44 years. 
A distant cousin of Johanna’s left a comment on her ‘findagrave’ page.

The Autopsy of Caryn Campbell.

This is the complete autopsy of Caryn Campbell. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.

Page one of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page two of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page three of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page four of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page five of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page six of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page seven of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page eight of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page nine of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
Page ten of Caryn Campbell’s autopsy.
A shot of the remains of Caryn Campbell in the snow. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
The skull of Caryn Campbell. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.Thank you to my friend Samantha Shore for letting me know the identity of this victim.
Vince Lahey holding a crowbar over Campbells autopsy photo. Photo courtesy of Erin Banks.

William Earl Cosden Jr.: Part Two, Victims.

Written by Teri Phillips-Offield.

Intro: Jessica told you about the monster behind these heinous crimes, and now, I am going to tell you about the victims. I think it is important to know about their lives and not the fact that they died, but that they lived. The victims are the ones who should be remembered.
I feel that his sisters were among his first victims along with Helen Pilkerton. They suffered abuse at his hand and also were used to lure unsuspecting victims. To my utter disbelief, there were not much information for the beautiful lost souls, and none for the hitchhikers they fell victim to him. I want them to know that I, a complete stranger, do not know who you are or where you are, did not forget you.
I also feel that if his parents would have not covered for him and turned him in, many lives would have been saved. This is my opinion but after hearing the whole story from his sisters, my opinion is that they didn’t protect them and then did not protect the poor innocent girls from this monster.
Ted Bundy was suspected of Kathy’s death, but DNA proved to be William Cosden Jr. He was in prison for attacking Beverly Pearson already hiding right under their nose. It took 28 years and DNA evidence to find the truth. Here is the havoc this man created and the grief he inflicted on the families of his victims. I will start with his earliest victims, his sisters, and then go on to victims he raped, and killed, and finally Kathy Devine, his final known victim. A story full of senseless killings that never should have happened if he would have stayed in jail where he belonged.

Early Victim, Helen Pilkerton: Cosden was sent to a mental hospital in Maryland for killing a woman in 1967 and was serving a three to four-year term at the McNeil Island Corrections Center near Tacoma for a 1976 rape and murder conviction.  Her name was Helen Patricia Pilkerton.  She was an employee of the Lexington Park Motel and was just 20 years old.  Helen Patricia Pilkerton was born on May 24th, 1945, in St. Mary’s, Maryland, her father, John was 22 and her mother Helen was 21.  She had one brother and four sisters.  She died on April 16, 1967, at the age of 21, and was buried in Hollywood, Maryland.  

Helen was found in a stream by two teenage girls and her body was badly beaten.  Cosden had just returned from active duty in Vietnam where he was discharged due to violent behavior. The family of the victim had to sue the Military because of the outrageous leniency of the sentence. To my utter disbelief, Cosden was free after 6 years to rape and kill again. Deputy Prosecutor Philip Harju said, “He is an obvious danger to society.”  Yet, he was released to rape and kill again.  The story should have ended here, better yet not allowed at all.

His sisters, Karen and Susan: They were told their brother was away at a hospital and so his sisters thought he was all better when he came home. There was no warning from their parents whatsoever. They never told them why he was away and never took steps to protect them. He would get in constant trouble at home and in school almost like he invited the punishment. He always had to be in control. His sisters wished their parents were more aware. He loved to torment his sisters and animals. He got pleasure in making his sisters cry. When Karen was 4, he started sexually abusing her. He warned her he would hurt the whole family if she told. The same thing happened to Susan in a few years. He took steps to encourage them to not be close.
When Susan was 8, her brother can downstairs all dressed up to go out. The next morning, she woke to find the sheriff at the kitchen table. They came for her brother. He had confessed to his father that he had killed a woman the night before. The sisters were beginning to see just how evil he was. He did four years in a mental hospital. Four years. His parents told the girls he had went to get well and he was well. That very night he came home, he sexually assaulted his sister.
He was also a firebug and burned down the family home. His mother suspected it was him but did nothing. Again. The cause of the fire was listed as electrical. A house down the block burned too. He seemed to get away with everything. He would also burn his truck to cover evidence.
Then one day the paper was showing about a body found. He got more and more agitated as the paper was read and screamed at them to stop reading. This turned out to be Kathy. He would go to “help” people on snow days when in fact he was looking for prey. One day after a snow day he was arrested for rape.
In 1986, Susan came across his file that showed he was going to be released, she freaked out. She went to the police department to talk about her abuse. The detective she talked to said he believed her brother killed Kathy and would not retire until he found out. Susan told her story and wanted to make sure he didn’t get out. DNA tests were done, and he was convicted. She even flipped him the bird as they were sentencing him. Her family was actually mad at her for doing this. Susan, you are a hero to me.
In 2015, he died alone of a heart attack. They had to deal with the effects of their traumatic past as adults, with one of the sisters even nearing death. Despite the difficulties, the sisters band together to discuss the harm done to them and make an effort to make things right. About a week after filming, Sisters in Silence, Karen Harris passed away following a battle with lung cancer. RIP Karen.

Hitchhikers: Restover Truck Stop in Tumwater, just off Interstate 5, focal point for hitchhikers where he worked there, and his father owned. As I pointed out, Susan says her brother Williams Cosden Jr. would use her as bait to pick up women hitchhikers. The women would feel safe getting into his truck with a little girl there. He would tell his mom he was taking Susan to get ice cream and then take her to pick up hitchhikers. Once the girls were in the truck, he would lock Susan in the back. Many hitchhikers would disappear during this time. We may never know all his victims and which ones were Bundy’s. I apologize for not finding any names of the hitchhiker victims, it makes me wonder how many girls are in unmarked graves all over because of men like Cosden. I wonder if these families ever knew what happened to their daughters. My heart goes out to these families. I hope they found some kind of closure.

Beverly Pearson: On November 30th, 1975, 24-year-old Beverly Pearson stopped to get gas. As she was filling up, she encountered Willian Cosden Jr. She recognized him, but finished getting gas and drove away. On her way home, she lost control of her truck and pulled over. She noticed that Cosden pulled over right behind her. She told him she was fine, but when she went to get back in her truck, he hit her with a rubber mallet. He then forced her into his truck and kept threatening her and she kept saying to not hit her again.
He pulled over at a wooded area and sexually assaulted her. She remembers thinking to try to get him to talk. Her step father was a police commissioner and taught her to try and get anyone who attacks you to talk. She asked him personal questions and told him if he let her go, he could come visit her at home. It worked and he took her back to her truck. She immediately called the police and Cosden was picked up Cosden was found guilty and was sentence to serve a 49-year sentence. Because of her bravery, he was off the streets.

Kathy Devine: I got most of Kathy’s story from Jessica because she wrote it better than any article I read. According to Jessica, Katherine Devine was born to Sally and William L. Devine in Seattle in King County, Washington, on December 25, 1958. She was a Christmas baby. Her family remembered how the kind-hearted teen thought she was destined to become a Minister after being born on Christmas Day. Kathy regularly brought home stray animals and homeless children living on the streets to take care of them. She had a big heart and always sought to help the less fortunate and helpless individuals.
Witnesses last saw the 14-year-old teen hitchhiking in Seattle near North 91st Street and Aurora Avenue North. Her mother stared Kathy had just broken up with her boyfriend and was headed south to visit relatives in Rockaway, Oregon. Her family had reported her to the authorities as a runaway. Little did they know that was the last time their daughter would be seen alive. On December 6, 1973, a young couple stumbled across the remains of the 14-year-old girl in Margaret McKenny Campground in Thurston County.
The victim’s throat had been slashed, and she was lying face down. An examination further revealed she had been brutally sodomized and strangled to death. According to police reports, the officers found the victim’s pants were deliberately torn. Authorities figured that since the place was deserted and it would take a local to know their way around the campground, the killer must be local. The decomposed remains were not immediately identified until Kathy’s sister Sherrie Devine, then 16, saw a television news program in Seattle of the discovery and recognized an embroidered patch on the pair of jeans the victim was reported wearing.
Witnesses saw Cosden come in the night of the murder with stains on his clothing. The witnesses called police. After leaving the truck stop, Cosden’s truck caught fire and was destroyed three miles from the truck stop. During initial interviews with police, Cosden denied ever seeing Kathy Devine.”
Kathy was first thought to be a victim of Ted Bundy. When Ms. Devine disappeared in 1973 Ted was attending the University of Puget Sound Law School and lived within two miles from where she was last seen. Everyone knows he drove the yellow, cream-colored Beetle for years before his arrest, but supposedly his brother owned a white pickup truck. During his death row confessions before his execution in 1989, Bundy told law enforcement that he picked up a hitchhiker in 1973, killed her then left her body close to where Kathy’s remains were found in Olympia, however he couldn’t remember the exact location. He denied having any involvement with Devine’s murder. But this makes me wonder if he did indeed kill Kathy. Cosden was surprised to be convicted and Bundy admitted to killing a hitchhiker and they only found Kathy at that site.
Kathy’s ex-boyfriend was a suspect but passed the polygraph. Another man said he saw the whole thing but was very uncooperative with police. While searching his house, a lot of newspaper articles about Kathy were found along with a blood-stained knife. When they brought him in, he denied all charges and said he could explain. He said the knife was for hunting and after testing, the knife did indeed have animal blood on it. He was cleared of the charges.
An anonymous man called detectives and suggested they investigate Cosden. The man said he looked in the back of Cosden’s truck and found a blood-soaked sleeping bag along with a single shoe. He was looking in Cosden’s truck because he claimed he was a co-worker and Cosden was stealing from him. Before the police had a chance to investigate Cosden’s truck “mysteriously” caught in fire. Remember, Kathy was found missing a shoe. The shoe found on Kathy matched what the man described but they never got the evidence since it burned.
The police went to the jail to confront Cosden and he denied it even though they have DNA proof found on Kathy. Luckily, they had enough to convince a jury and his sister, Susan helped, and he was convicted.
He lived in the area at the time of Kathy’s disappearance and murder. According to witnesses, William was seen wearing bloodstained clothes at the Truck Stop on November 26, 1973. He worked at the truck shop owned by his father and was reportedly working an early morning shift. After leaving the truck stop, Cosden’s truck caught fire and was destroyed three miles from the truck stop.
Additionally, witnesses claimed to find what appeared to be bloodstains inside William’s truck late on November 25, the very day Kathy was last seen alive.

William Cosden was already in prison for sexually assaulting Beverly Pearson when he was convicted of Kathy’s death. it was be the oldest open murder case in the state to have been solved by DNA “fingerprinting,” authorities said.
After Cosden was finally convicted of his daughter’s murder, Mr. Devine said: ‘It’s finished. There’s a justice system, and it works.″ ‘It doesn’t bring Kathy back, but it sure does help. “It was very creepy,” Sherrie Devine, the victim’s older sister, said of the court appearance. Devine’s mother, Sally, said she was nervous about seeing Cosden for the first time. “It would have been worse if we would have had to look directly at him,” I cannot help thinking that if the justice system kept this monster behind bars after his first murder and rape in 1967, Kathy would still be alive. And why weren’t his sisters protected from this monster? They were just little girls.

Conclusion: It took many years to finally catch her killer, but finally the family has answers and hopefully a little bit of peace. Such an unnecessary waste of her and of  the beautiful souls who left this world too soon. My heart goes out to everyone whose life was touched by William Cosden Jr. I want to thank Jessica for not letting these girls be forgotten and reminding us they did live and not only die. And Charlene and Sherrie, you should have never had to endure this kind of horror in your family. My heart goes out to you and much respect for coming out the other side of this tragedy. A long as Jessica and I are here, we will not let her be forgotten.

McNeil Prison.
William E. Cosden Jr.
Cosden.
Kathy Devine.
Kathy Devine.
Devine.
Kathy and one of her sisters.
The remains of Kathy Devine.
The bell-bottom blue jeans with a dragon patch on the pocket that Kathy was wearing when her remains were recovered.
The mock-suede coat with fur trim that Kathy Devine was wearing when her remains were recovered.
The ‘waffle-stomper” boots Kathy was wearing when her remains were recovered.
Beverly Pearson.

Cites:

Katherine Devine Murder: Where is William Cosden Jr Today? Update (thecinemaholic.com)
Life term for man whom DNA linked to murder (seattlepi.com)
Closing ceremony, tour of McNeil Island prison (seattlepi.com)
Evil Lives Here, Sisters in Silence. Season 13, Episode 10.
Katherine Devine Murder: Where is William Cosden Jr Today? Update (thecinemaholic.com)
Katherine Merry “Kathy” Devine. | Another Bundy Blog. (wordpress.com)
Most pictures were taken from Another Bundy Blog: Kathy Devine
Facebook page Cowards ad Killers
Man sentenced to life in prison for 1973 murder | The Seattle Times
Historical Newspapers from 1700s-2000s – Newspapers.com
On the case with Paul Zahn, Season 12, Ep 4, Waving Goodbye.
Other info, Another Bundy Blog. (wordpress.com)
https://www.heraldnet.com/news/rapist-charged-in-1973-killing/

William Earl Cosden Jr.: Part One, Background.

Written by Jessica J. Jurewicz-Woods.

William Earl Cosden Jr. was born on December 19, 1946 to William Earl Sr. and Janet (nee Bakke) in Baltimore, Maryland. The couple were married on June 6, 1945 and eventually settled down near Seattle in Washington and had two girls and two boys: Karen (Harris), Susan (Keller), William Jr. and Timothy. Mr. Cosden worked as a mechanic and owned a truck stop near Olympia, WA. After high school (I’m not sure if he graduated and I couldn’t find the name of the institution he attended), ‘Billy’ joined the Marines and fought in the Vietnam War. Not long after arriving back in the US, he was charged with the murder of Helen Patricia Pilkerton. The 22 year-old disappeared on April 16, 1967 and her body was eventually found by two teenage girls in a stream by Flat Iron Road in the Great Mills area of Baltimore. Two court appointed psychiatrists testified in court that the war vet ‘lacked the substantial capacity to appreciate the consequences of the crime. Circuit Court Judges Perry Brown and J. Dudley Diggs determined that the then twenty-year-old Cosden was ‘insane at the time of the murder,’ which saved him from ‘hard time.’ He was sentenced to reside at  the Clifton T. Perkins Hospital in Jessup, MD until ‘he no longer constitutes a danger to others or himself under the dictates of the law.’ Regarding the verdict, Judge Diggs said that ‘the facts substantiated by the State prove that the defendant (Cosden) is really but not responsible for his actions because of mental illness.’ Just as a side note, this really passes me off. If the judges realized who exactly they had in their custody and sentenced him to prison it may have prevented the death of Katherine Devine and the brutal rape and assault of Beverly Pearson.

Four years later Cosden was released from the psychiatric hospital and moved to Washington state to be with his family. He began working at his father’s business, the Restover Truck Stop in Tumwater, which happened to be a popular hangout for hitchhikers. On November 25, 1973, Katherine Merry Devine vanished without a trace while attempting to hitchhike about 200 miles away to her cousin’s house in Rockaway, Oregon. The next day, a coworker noticed bloodstains in Cosden’s truck, which coincidentally caught fire immediately after. Although LE had their suspicions about Cosden being involved in the 14 year old’s death, they had no proof tying him to the crime.

William managed to fly under the radar until 1975, when he was arrested for the brutal assault and rape of Beverly Pearson (in some older newspaper articles she has the last name Frederick). Early in the morning on November 30, 1975, thirty year-old Cosden brutally raped and assaulted the 24-year-old, who was a customer at his truck stop. The weather that night was snowy and driving conditions were treacherous, and he asked the pretty young pharmacy technician if she’d like him to follow her home to make sure she got there safely. She politely declined his offer however he insisted. At some point during their drive, Billy purposely drove his truck into a ditch then pretended to need help getting it out. After Beverly got out of her car to check on him, Cosden subdued her by hitting her on the head from behind and threatening her with a rubber mallet. Pearson told him that she would ‘do anything if he wouldn’t hurt her’ and at one point during the assault Billy grabbed her by the throat and asked how she was going to explain her ‘new bruises.’ After raping her twice, he took her to his property in Maytown. During the drive, Beverly tried to jerk the wheel in an attempt to make him lose control, and even tried to escape by trying to open the door and crawling out. She was unsuccessful.

The attack took place in a secluded wooded area near Maytown Road. Miraculously, Beverly was able to convince her attacker to let her go and he was arrested a few days later, just hours after she made the report to police. Pearson told the sheriff’s department that she was assaulted by a man ‘named Bill at the Lathrop Road Truck Stop.’ FBI Agent Myron Scholberg said the victim’s hair was found on Cosdens overalls and in his truck, which helped officially link him to the crime. A second federal agent named Allison Semmes positively identified stains that were left behind on Beverly’s underwear and panty hose as Cosdens sperm; the same substance was found on the overalls he was wearing that night. Strangely enough, when law enforcement examined his truck they were unable to find any identifiable fingerprints.

At Cosdens’ trial, a nurse that treated Pearson the night she was assaulted testified that she had ‘bruises and reddened areas around her head and shoulders’ and a Doctor said her injuries were consistent with the results of wounds caused by a blunt object. Dr. Torre Nielson (a Psychiatrist for the defense) said that ‘the performance of two sexual acts in succession in cold weather was highly unlikely.’ He also said that it’s common for a man to experience impotence when thinking of his wife and child. A Seattle based pathologist told the jury that based on lab tests done at around 9 AM later the same day the attack took place, no intercourse had occurred in the previous 12 hours.

While testifying in his own defense, Cosden said when Beverly first saw him early that morning she waved to him, flirting as if they knew each other and happily accepted his offer to follow her home because of the weather. The defendant said that Pearson deserted her pickup in the middle of the intersection at 101st Ave and Case Road, backing it up into the wrong lane then leaving it to get in his vehicle ‘to talk.’ He went on to say that she sat in the middle of his seat, wrapped her arms around him, and asked him to drive them to a place where they could ‘be alone.’ William testified that she talked about her divorce and that he never threatened her or hit her in any capacity. He took her to some property he owned in Mayfield and at no point during their time together did Pearson try to get away from him or leave his company; he also said that at any point if she changed her mind about being with him he would have stopped everything and taken her back to her pickup. He shared with the jury that he never threatened her with a gun ‘hidden under the seat, as she had testified’ and didn’t even keep a weapon in his truck. The married man also claimed that he completely turned down her advances, and that he couldn’t partake in sex with Beverly because all he could think about was his wife and child. When asked how he felt about what happened, Cosden said that he ‘felt like a damned fool.’

Cosden also testified that Beverly drove to his house on January 5, 1976 looking for him. After she pulled away, he immediately called his Attorney Don Taylor and told him about the incident.

On February 18, 1976 William Earl Cosden Jr. was sentenced to 32 years in prison for the rape and brutal assault of Beverly Pearson. He was up for parole in 1990 however the board denied his release, saying he was not safe to be released into the community. Apparently Cosden had quite a temper and on two separate occasions he was brought back to prison after being thrown out of pre-release housing units. In 1999 he was up for parole again but was denied.

In 1986, Thurston County Detective Mark Curtis got a court order for Cosdens blood, but because the technology wasn’t available at the time the sample sat in evidence for so long that he forgot it was even taken. Because of some grant money available through the WA state Attorney General’s HITS program, Curtis was able to take part of the DNA sample to compare to Devines. In 2001, a comparison was done and the test came back a match: William Cosden Jr. killed Katherine Merry Devine. After the successful identification, Detectives Joe Vukich and Brian Schoening went to the prison Cosden was being housed at on McNeil Island and questioned him about his involvement with the murder of Devine. He claimed to know nothing about it.

In 2002 the rest of the DNA sample Cosden provided in 1986 was used in a second analysis, and there was no doubt about it: he was the man that killed Kathy Devine. Detectives David Haller and Tim Rudolf went to talk to Cosden about the positive identification; this time he said he may have had sex with her but didn’t kill her. He was furious when detectives arrested him for the 1973 murder, despite already being in prison. Thankfully, prosecutors were able to argue that Kathy’s DNA was a match to the blood found in his truck and on his clothes. William Cosden Jr. was 55 when he was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole in June 2002. Former Deputy Prosecutor Philip Harju said that he was ‘an obvious danger to society,’ and former Thurston County Superior Court Judge Daniel Berschauer agreed with his assessment before passing on the life sentence.

William Earl Cosden Jr. died at the age of 69 in 2015 while incarcerated outside of Seattle, Washington. William Cosden Sr. passed away on December 8, 1983, and Mrs. Cosden died on May 3, 2014 at the age of 88. Susan Cosden-Keller began her career as a teacher but went back to school for her nursing degree. Karen Cosden-Harris worked as a reading specialist at Evergreen Elementary School in Washington. Timothy Cosden was a massage therapist until recently, when on October 5, 2022 his license was suspended after he was accused of sexual assault (Bilbao, The Olympian).*

On Easter Sunday 2023, an episode of the Discovery Plus show ‘Evil Lies Here’ premiered that featured William Cosden Jr.’s two younger sisters. Karen and Susan also fell prey to their older brother, who made them keep his secrets to themselves. The two women lost touch over the years, each one becoming busy with their own careers and lives all while trying to heal and move on from their painful childhoods. But after Karen received a terminal diagnosis of stage four lung cancer, they reunited on the show to talk through their shared trauma in hopes of healing and coming to terms with what happened to them in their younger years. Karen Cosden-Harris sadly passed away on November 4, 2022.

* Bilbao, Martin. ‘Thurston County Massage therapist, 68, suspended for alleged sexual assault.’ October 12, 2022. https://www.theolympian.com/news/local/article267212417.html

The Cosden family; it appears ‘Billy’ is incorrectly listed twice. Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
Beverly told the six man, six woman jury that she was on her way home from a dinner date when she stopped for gas as the Cosden family truck stop at around 1:30 AM. She also told them that she remembers seeing him once before the assault. He asked her how the road conditions were on the freeway and how her pickup truck handled in the snow. He offered to follow her home in his truck and she accepted his offer but intended to just 'leave it at that.' At some point on the drive Cosdens truck slid into a ditch
William Cosden Senior’s background. Photo courtesy of MyHeritage.
Janet Cosden. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William Cosden Sr. and his wife, Janet. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William and Janet Cosden. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
‘Billy’ as a child. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Janet Cosden holding one of her children. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
The Cosden family. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
An early picture of the Cosden family. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
A B&W of some of the Cosden family. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Janet Cosden holding Karen. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Some members of the Cosden family. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William Cosden’s two sisters, Karen and Susan. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
The Cosden family around the dinner table. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
The Cosden family; William is standing in the back. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Some of the Cosden family. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William Sr. and Janet. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William Sr. and Janet. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
William Cosden Sr. and Janet. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Janet in her later years. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Janet Cosden. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Timothy Cosden in the 1972 Olympia High School yearbook
Karen Cosden in the 1975 Olympia High School yearbook.
Karen Cosden in the 1976 Olympia High School yearbook.
Susan Cosden in the 1980 Olympia High School yearbook.
Susan Cosden’s senior picture in the 1983 Olympia High School yearbook.
Susan in a group picture in the 1983 Olympia High School yearbook.
A still of Susan Cosden from the TV show ‘Evil Lives Here.’ Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
Susan Cosden. Photo courtesy of Facebook.
Karen and Janet on her wedding day. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Karen with her husband. Photo courtesy of the Cosden family archives.
Karen Harris.
A still of Karen Harris from the TV show ‘Evil Lives Here.’ Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
A still of both Cosden sisters from the TV show ‘Evil Lives Here.’ Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
The Cosden’s first home.
A newspaper clipping announcing William Sr. and Janet’s nuptials.
An article mentioning William Sr. and Janet vacationing in Hawaii published in The Honolulu Star-Bulletin on June 26, 1978.
An article mentioning Susan Cosden published in The Olympian on April 16, 1983.
An article about William Cosden Jr.’s sister Susan getting married published in The Olympian on June 15, 1986.
An article about William Cosden Jr.’s sister Karen published in The Olympian on September 11, 1994.
An article about Karen Cosden’s son published in The Olympian on May 3, 2009.
William E. Cosden Sr.’s military registration card.
Williams brother Timothy’s marriage applications from 1972.
A newspaper clipping about Timothy Cosden getting charged with rape published by The Olympian on July 11, 1974.
A newspaper clipping about Timothy Cosden’s wife Margaret having a baby, published by The Olympian on August 25, 1975.
An announcement for William Cosden Jr’s. application for a marriage license published in The Olympian on October 10, 1971.
William Cosden Jr’s. application for a marriage license.
Cosdens marriage certificate to Rita Kirkpatrick.
The annulment certificate for William and Rita Cosden. Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
Rita Susan Kirkpatrick-Cosden’s 1964 Rochester High School yearbook picture.
Rita Susan Kirkpatrick-Cosden’s 1965 Rochester High School yearbook picture.
Rita in a 1965 photo; she worked for her schools yearbook.
Rita in a 1966 photo, she was as typist for her schools yearbook.
Rita in another photo from the 1966 from her schools yearbook.
Cosdens marriage record to Nancy Patton from 1978.
One of Cosden’s earlier mugshots.
One of Cosden’s earlier mugshots.
Some of Cosden’s earlier mugshots.
A 2002 mugshot of William Cosden Jr. after he was arrested for the 1973 murder of Katherine Devine.
A mugshot of Cosden in his later years.
Another mugshot of Cosden in his later years.
William Cosden’s burnt truck. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
The back of William Cosden Jr’s. burnt truck. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
The inside of Cosdens burnt truck. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
An evidence photo of a footprint found at the crime scene where Cosdens truck was set on fire. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
An evidence photo related to the murder of Kathy Devine. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
An evidence photo related to the murder of Kathy Devine. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
An evidence photo related to the murder of Kathy Devine. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
An evidence photo related to the murder of Kathy Devine. Photo courtesy of Discovery+.
One of the waffle stomper boots Kathy was wearing when she was murdered.
Some police sketches related to the murder of Kathy Devine.
A picture of law enforcement with evidence from Kathy Devine’s case.
Detective David Haller, who worked Devine’s case. Photo courtesy of ‘On the Case with Paula Zahn.’
Detective David Haller at Margaret McKenny Park, where Kathy Devine’s remains were found. Photo courtesy of ‘On the Case with Paula Zahn.’
Philip Harju, who was Thurston County’s Chief Criminal Prosecutor at the time of Cosden’s arrest for the murder of Kathy Devine. Photo courtesy of ‘On the Case with Paula Zahn.’
A still from an original broadcast about the murder of Kathy Devine.
A still from an original broadcast about the murder of Kathy Devine.
A map of where Kathy Devine was last seen and where her body was found.
An article about Cosden getting arrested for the murder of a woman named Helen Pilkerton published in The Evening Sun on April 17, 1967.
An article about Cosden getting arrested for the murder of a woman named Helen Pilkerton published in The Morning Herald on April 17, 1967.
An article about Cosden getting arrested for the murder of a woman named Helen Pilkerton published in The Baltimore Sun on April 17, 1967.
An article about Cosden published in The Evening Sun on December 9, 1968.
An article about Cosden being found insane published in a Maryland based newspaper on October 19, 1967.
An article about Cosden being hit by a car published by The Olympian on March 25, 1972.
An article about Cosden being hit by a car published by The Olympian on June 7, 1972.
An article about the birth of Cosdens child published by The Olympian on July 23, 1973.
An article mentioning Cosden receiving threatening phone calls published by The Daily Chronicle on February 18, 1975.
An article about Cosden’s rape case going to the jury published by The Olympian on February 10, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 11, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 12, 1976.
An Olympia Doctor named Terrance A. chulte testified that he foundn sperm 'almsot iedately' when he examned a sample of clothing the woman was wearing.
Part one of an article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 13, 1976.
Part two of an article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 13, 1976.
He said he drove to some property he owns near Maytown and stopped the truck and they talked. As they were talking she started unbuttoning her blouse and told him that 'this is just like playing strip poker.' He claims he responded to her that he "just can't.'
An article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 15, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case published by The Olympian on February 17, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case going to the jury published by The Olympian on February 18, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case going to the jury published by The Olympian on February 19, 1976.
In an article published by The Olympian on February 27, 1976, Cosden experienced back pain after falling in his jail cell from his bunk.
An article about Cosden falling in his jail cell published by The Olympian on February 27, 1976.
An article about Cosden’s rape case going to the jury published by The Olympian on March 16, 1976.
An article about Cosden published by The Olympian on March 20, 1976.
An article about Cosden published by The Olympian on March 21, 1976.
An article about Cosden published by The Olympian on July 25, 1977.
An article about Cosden appealing his conviction published by The Olympian on May 5, 1978.
Part one of an article about William Cosden’s 2002 trial published by The Olympian on March 14, 2002.
Part two of an article about William Cosden’s 2002 trial published by The Olympian on March 14, 2002.
Thurston County Superior Court Judge Daniel Berschauer
Part one of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on July 31, 2002.
Part two of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on July 31, 2002.
Part one of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on March 12, 2002.
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Part two of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on March 12, 2002.
Part one of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on July 30, 2002.
Part two of an article on Cosden published in The Olympian on July 30, 2002.
An article on Cosden published in The County Times newspaper on August 15, 2013.
A screenshot of an article on Cosden murdering Pilkerton; I apologize for the poor quality, the fact that I was even able to find this is a miracle. Photo courtesy of A&E.
Helen Pilkerton’s grave site. At the time of her murder Helen was employed at the A & E Motel in Lexington Park, MD.
Beverly Pearson.
Beverly Pearson.
A still of Pearson. Photo courtesy of ‘On the Case with Paula Zahn.’
Another still of Beverly Pearson on ‘On the Case with Paula Zahn.’ I love pink, it’s definitely her color.
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Where Cosdens truck slid into a ditch early in the morning on November 30, 1975. Case Road at 101st Avenue in Olympia, WA.
William Cosden Jr. at his arraignment for the murder of Katherine Merry Devine.
A photo from an article discussing the trial of William Cosden Jr. for the murder of Kathy Devine, photo courtesy of Charlene Devine-Gonzales.
Kathy Devine’s other and sisters at Cosden’s murder trial.
Mrs. Devine at Cosden’s trial.
Margaret McKenny Park where Cosden left Kathy Devine’s remains.
A sign for the Cosden family truck stop.
A photo of the Cosden family’s truck stop.
A photo of the Cosden family’s truck stop.
William E. Cosden Sr.’s death certificate.
Cosden seemed to settle into life at the Washington state Penitentiary where he was housed. In early 2002 he was arrested in connection to the murder of Katherine Devine. The case went to trial in May 2002 and
William E. Cosden Sr.’s obituary published in The Olympian on December 8, 1983.
Janet Cosden’s obituary published in The Olympian on May 8, 2013.
Janet Cosden’s obituary published in The Olympian on May 14, 2013.
Mr. and Mrs. Cosdens joint gravesite.

Sharon Pulaski.

Sharon Pulaski was born at some time in 1963 to Andrew and Sophie (nee Urbanski) Pulaski in Alden, NY. The couple were married in Cheektowaga on November 7, 1959 and had three children: two boys (Andrew and Brian) and Sharon. Mr. Pulaski served in the US Army, and the family eventually settled down at 1369 Townline Road on the Lancaster/Alden border. Sharon graduated from Alden High School in 1980, but aside from that little is known about her background. I found some pictures of her on classmates.com, and going through her high school yearbook I was able to see that she participated in a number of different extracurricular activities, including poetry workshop, photography club, and science club. From what I’ve gathered (through comments on social media posts about her), the Pulaski’s were a very close-knit, loving Roman Catholic family that were private and mostly kept to themselves. They were very involved with their church and helping people in the local community.

Sharon had green eyes, brown hair, was 5’4″ tall, weighed 130 pounds and wore corrective lenses. She had a two inch long scar on her right shoulder, a tattoo of a heart on her right arm, and was last seen wearing white sneakers, blue jeans, and either a black or white shirt. On October 7, 1983 Sharon gave birth to a son named Steven, who she raised at her parent’s home up to her disappearance. Strangely enough, I went to high school with him and graduated the year before him. We were in different social circles and I didn’t hang out with him but I remember he was nice and very passionate about his faith.

Before she left, Sharon told her mother that she was running to the store but would be back in fifteen minutes. Mr. Pulaski reported to law enforcement that his twenty-four year daughter had left home on July 20, 1987 and never returned home; she has not been seen or heard from since. Sharon left the residence in her vehicle, a blue 1985 Plymouth Reliant with NY tags, license plate number 6679-BLZ. Just a few months later in August of 1987 Pulaski’s vehicle was pulled over in California, however she was not one of the four people inside. To be fair, she was reported missing in New York and it was the 1980’s. There was a good chance the officer had no idea the vehicle’s owner was missing. But wouldn’t it be suspicious regardless? A car with New York plates gets pulled over across the country and its owner isn’t one of the four occupants inside? Obviously it was eventually figured out (as we know about it), but I wonder if the cop that pulled the car over even bothered getting the names of the people inside? Was this situation ever revisited and were they questioned? For some reason a police report was never filed and the individuals were never taken in for questioning. In September 1987 Pulaski’s sedan was found abandoned in Seattle.

After I posted on a few Alden, NY Facebook groups asking for more information about Sharon, I had a few people reach out to me that knew her. Additionally, going through the comments, a few acquaintances of hers said that they had absolutely no idea where she went and didn’t even have so much as a working theory as to what happened to her. According to a post about Sharon on the Facebook group  ‘Jane Does and Missing 1970’s-1980’s,’ she did on occasion take off for short periods of time but always came back… until she didn’t. An individual by the name of Andrew Pulaski commented that ‘she’s my aunt, she disappeared the day of mother’s baby shower, according to my parents she said she wasn’t able to attend that day and when they came back home she was gone but all of her son’s documents (SSN, birth certificate, medical docs) were left neatly on the bed.’ I also got some information about Pulaski from a childhood friend of mine, Michael Mack. He said his mom Karen (who I also know, as they lived down the street from my family for many years) grew up with her. When I spoke to her a few days later she confirmed that they were best friends until she disappeared. Just like everyone else I spoke with, Karen had absolutely no idea what happened to Sharon or where she went. It’s as if the earth just swallowed her up.

This is just my own personal observation, but I find that investigating agencies are far less likely to take a missing persons case seriously if they feel the individual left in any way on their own accord. I even look at Bundy cases, like Brenda Ball and Donna Manson, who were both frequent hitchhikers and would often take off for brief periods of time before eventually turning up again. LE was extremely hesitant to even link Balls disappearance to the other Ted murders that were taking place all over the Seattle area at the time (although it was her skull that was the first one discovered at Taylor Mountain on March 1, 1975). I wonder if that’s why I couldn’t find any articles or news reports on Sharon, because they thought she was a runaway. Fourteen year old Brenda Joy Baker also comes to mind, as her disappearance didn’t make the news until her body was discovered (for my non-Bundy readers, she was a frequent hitchhiker that ran away from home on multiple occasions and was last seen getting into a pick-up truck in May 1974).

Looking into it there were quite a few possible routes to get to the golden state from Alden. One incredibly frustrating part of all this is the lack of information out there. California is a large state… Where exactly was her car pulled over? It’s at least a day and a half trip, and that’s driving straight through. I think there’s a few different possibilities that could have happened to Sharon… maybe she got tired of small town living and simply left? That theory reminds me of Nancy Perry-Baird out of Utah, who vanished without a trace from the gas station she worked at on the 4th of July in 1975. Like Pulaski, Nancy also had a young son, roughly the same age as Steven. But why would anyone willingly leave their child behind? And Perry-Baird was GONE gone (just like Sharon). Or was there maybe a more sinister aspect to her disappearance? Perhaps she picked up a hitchhiker that pulled a weapon on her, taking control and subduing the young mother? Or did she plan on taking off only for a few days but something happened along the way that prevented her from returning home. One possible suggestion I read on a FB post was maybe she fell in with the wrong crowd, which somehow resulted in her untimely demise? But where would she be after all this time? According to Karen Mack, NO ONE has any clue what happened to her. Her disappearance came completely out of left field to everybody and made absolutely no sense.

In a write-up for Pulaski on the Facebook page ‘Jane Does and Missing 1970’s-1980’s,’ someone commented that serial killer Tommy Lee Sells was in the general western NY area just before Pulaski disappeared in 1987, and sure as shit they were right. Also referred to as The Coast to Coast Killer, Sells killed twenty-eight year old Suzanne M. Korza on May 2, 1987 after getting in a fight with her fiance and leaving a Lockport bar. Eight years later her skeletal remains were found at the base of an escarpment near Niagara Falls. Susan was from Lancaser, NY and strangely enough went to the same high school as my Mom (St. Mary’s, but Suzanne was a couple of years younger than she was). Korza’s official date of death is listed as September 5, 1995, which was the date she was found. Her case went unsolved until 2004, when Sells confessed to her murder while he was waiting to be executed for the murder of a young girl in Texas.

On December 31, 1999 Sells entered a Del Rio residence and sexually assaulted 13-year old Kaylene Harris. He sexually assaulted then killed the teenager, stabbing her sixteen times and slashing her throat. He then cut the throat of her friend, 10 year old Krystal Surles, who luckily survived the brutal attack. Unfortunately, Sells was a lot like Henry Lee Lucas and liked to confess to murders and crimes he didn’t commit (he claimed to have killed over 70 people). Regardless of what the number really was, he was found guilty of killing Harris on September 18, 2000. Two days later he was sentenced to death. Because of his link to Lockport (which is about 45 to 55 minutes away from Alden), Pulaski and a second unidentified missing woman were deemed to be possibly linked to Sells. Interestingly enough, Facebook user Kelly Rosemellia commented that the serial killer being considered a potential suspect in Sharon’s disappearance was just a crackpot theory dreamt up by some lazy detectives that didn’t feel like investigating her disappearance properly. Additionally, most people from the general Alden area that knew Pulaski don’t buy the theory that Sells had something to do with her disappearance.

Just a few months after Sharon disappeared on October 15, 1987, Sells drugged Stefanie Stroh with LSD before he strangled her to death. Stroh was hitchhiking home to San Francisco after a year-long trek through Europe and Asia. The day the 20-year-old disappeared Stefanie was seen standing next a road with her thumb out in Winnemucca, Nevada. After accepting a ride from the serial killer, Sells killed her. He then encased her feet in concrete and dumped her remains in a desert hot spring. Her body has never been recovered. Sells was executed by lethal injection at the age of forty-nine at 6:14 PM on April 3, 2014.

According to one Facebook user whose parents lived across the street from the Pulaski family, ‘We weren’t close, but they seemed like a nice hard working family. I asked my parents if they recalled anything about the event. They do remember her leaving and never returning. And my Dad recalled that their family received a call saying they found her car down south. Our family just assumed that she ran away to start a new life. I don’t recall ever seeing any news reports or articles about her saying that she was missing.’

I had a new friend reach out to me about the fact that Sharon’s father was a member of the Knights of Columbus. Per his obituary, Andrew Pulaski specifically was a Fourth Degree member of the Father John Schaus Council of the K of C’s, 4652. The Fourth Degree is the highest degree of the order and members who reach this elite status are addressed as ‘Sir Knight.’ In 1985, Pulaski was given the title of man of the year by the Holy Name Society and was even named knight of the year by the Father Joseph Schaus Council in 1987. I mean this makes sense, as the Pulaski family was very active at their home parish of St. John the Baptist out of Alden. Looking into it, the Knights of Columbus is the world’s largest Catholic family fraternal service organization, with 1.7 million participants. It provides its members and their families with volunteer opportunities in service to the Catholic Church, their communities, families and young people. This new friend however suggested a more ominous, ritualistic aspect surrounding the society, and even suggested that they possibly had something to do with Sharon Pulaski’s disappearance. I mean, no secret society is going to admit to being a secret society. Of course they’re going to say they don’t have anything less than the very best of intentions. On a semi-related note, I had a friend from elementary school whose mother accidentally walked in on a Masons meeting one night and saw something… dark, and not exactly right (I don’t know if she had to use their bathroom or needed directions or what exactly). My GF said it was almost as if her mom walked in on a ritual of some sort… thankfully she realized that she shouldn’t have been there and quickly left.

After graduating from high school in 2002, Steven went on to attend ECC for a bit before eventually getting hired at FedEx. Unfortunately, while looking for information about his mom I learned he died sometime in 2020. I couldn’t find any sort of obituary for him. Sharon’s dad Andrew passed away on May 11, 1989 in Buffalo, and her mother died on February 15, 2013. Her brother Andrew lives in Alden and Brian resides in Lancaster. If Sharon was alive in November 2023 she would be sixty years old.

Sharon Pulaski. Photo courtesy of Daniel Patrick Hurley.
Sharon Pulaski from the 1978 Alden High School yearbook. Next to her is her brother, Andy.
Sharon Pulaski in a group photo for ‘science club’ from the 1979 Alden High School yearbook.
Sharon Pulaski from the 1979 Alden High School yearbook.
Sharon Pulaski in a group photo for ‘poetry workshop’ from the 1979 Alden High School yearbook.
Sharon Pulaski in a group photo for science club from the 1979 Alden High School yearbook.
Sharon Pulaski in a group photo for photography staff from the 1979 Alden High School yearbook.
Sharon’s senior picture from the 1980 Alden High School yearbook. Photo courtesy of Daniel Patrick Hurley.
Sharon Pulaski.
A photo of Pulaski from her drivers license.
An announcement that Sharon had a baby published by The Buffalo News on October 18, 1983.
Sharon’s fathers obituary. Photo courtesy of The Buffalo News.
Sharon’s mothers obituary. Photo courtesy of The Buffalo News.
Andrew Pulaski’s grave site.
A Facebook comment from the child of a former neighbor of Pulaski.
1369 Town Line Road, Alden NY. Photo courtesy of Google Maps.
A blue 1985 Plymouth Reliant much like the one Pulaski drove.
Andrew Pulaski in a group picture for Harkness from the 1978 Alden High School yearbook.
Steven Pulaski.
Sharon’s son, Steve.
I pulled this from Steves’ Facebook.
Tommy Lynn Sells, AKA The Cross Country Killer and The Coast to Coast Killer. Sells was an American pedophile, family annihilator, necrophiliac serial killer, serial rapist, abductor, and robber that took credit for murdering over 70 people. He said, ‘I am hatred. When you look at me, you look at hate. I don’t know what love is. Two words I don’t like to use are ‘love’ and ‘sorry,’ because I’m about hate.’
Suzanne Korcz. Lockport Detective Lieutenant Rick Podgers said that Sells ‘told authorities he jumped onto a freight train, going north until he couldn’t go any farther. He said he got off somewhere near Niagara Falls and it ultimately led to a murder. . . . He said it happened in the mid-80’s and it was a white female. His story has some similarities to the death of Suzanne Korcz.’ Despite being a frequent and habitual liar, law enforcement said they feel he is telling the truth because he shared information about Suzanne Korcz that would be tough to know unless he was involved.
A few possible routes from Sharons house in Alden, NY to California.