Theodore Robert Bundy was executed in Florida’s Prison’s electric chair on January 24, 1989 after brutally raping and killing dozens of young women between 1974 and 1978 (most likely earlier than that). The infamous serial killer was sentenced to capital punishment after brutally killing three young women in Florida (and countless others across the Pacific Northwest) and had been given the death penalty three times before he was finally killed. Bundy sat on death row for almost a decade when he was finally executed at 7:16 AM EST, and the event became a celebration of sorts for Floridians. On January 23, as the condemned man was spilling his guts in a last ditch effort to push off his execution, a crowd of almost 500 gathered outside the Florida Prison chanting phrases such as ‘die, Bundy, die’ and ‘burn Bundy, burn,’ drinking drank beer and holding signs that read ‘watch Ted fry, see Ted die!’ But not everyone was excited, there was also a small group of anti-death penalty protesters that didn’t want to see the event take place.
Bundy in prison with some of his fellow inmates. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.Ol’ Sparky, the electric chair at Florida State Prison. Bundy peering out from behind the bars at Florida State before he was executed. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.A drawing of Bundy walking to the execution chair. A drawing of Bundy on his way to the execution chair. A drawing of Bundy in the execution chair. Photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think like an Elk.’ A drawing of Ted sitting in the electric chair.A picture from a Florida newspaper after Bundy was executed.The crowd outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.The crowd outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.News crews gathering outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.A gentleman wearing a ‘Burn Bundy, Burn’ t-shirt outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution outside Florida State Prison.A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. A picture taken before Bundy’s execution.Some pro-death penalty demonstrators standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.Some anti-death penalty protesters standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.Some anti-death penalty protesters standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.A sign hung in the window of a Florida musical instrument store the morning of Bundy’s execution.A sign hung in the window of The Phyrst, a bar in Florida on the morning of Bundy’s execution. Mrs. Bundy talking on the phone the morning of Ted’s execution. The hearse pulling out of Florida State Prison carrying Bundy’s remains after he was executed.The hearse driving Ted’s remains to the ME’s office after he was executed.A photo of Ted arriving at the Medical Examiners office after his execution.A B&W of Bundy after his execution.A close-up B&W of Bundy after his execution.A picture of Bundy, post-mortem. Photo courtesy of the Florida state Department of Corrections.Bundy after his execution.The top of Bundy’s head after his execution.Bundy’s legs after his execution.An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Greenwood Commonwealth on January 24, 1989.An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Enterprise-Journal on January 24, 1989.An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Elizabethton Star on January 24, 1989.An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Sun Times on January 24, 1989.Bundys death certificate. A mock obituary for Ted Bundy created by ‘theodorerobertcowellnelsonbundy.wordpress.com.’ The description reads: ‘I thought he deserved a proper obituary, not some sensationalized news article about the monstrous serial killer celebrating his death.’ An interesting opinion piece Bryan Kohberger’s mother sent to a newspaper about Ted Bundy’s execution, published by The Daily News on February 16, 1989.
The space was originally known as the Rainbow Tavern. At some point in the 1960’s, it became the Sandpiper Tavern. It switched back to the old name at some time in the 1970’s.The SandPiper as it looked when Ted and Liz met in the fall of 1969.The Fusion Ultra Lounge was the third-last bar to exist at this address. The location picked up a bad reputation for teenage drinking and violence. In February of 2015 everything came to a head when two teenagers were sent to the hospital following a shooting incident. The city of Seattle requested an emergency suspension of the club’s liquor license in response, and shortly afterwards the bar permanently closed it’s doors.Before Ladd and Lass, the spot was occupied by Floating Bridge Brewing. Unfortunately they were forced to close thanks to the financial strain of the Covid pandemic.What the former SandPiper looked like in April 2022.
Denise Lynn Oliverson (née Nicholson) was born on August 10, 1950 to Robert ‘Bob’ Dale and Nina Marie (nee Jackson) Nicholson in Missouri.Mr. Nicholson was born on June 12, 1927 in Saint Joseph, MO and served in the US Navy during WWII. Denise’s mother was born in St. Louis, Missouri on August 15, 1923 and after graduating from high school enlisted in the US Navy. When the war ended, Nina enrolled at Denver Art Institute, where she met her future husband. The twogot married on June 29, 1949 and had two daughters: Denise and her younger sister, Renee. The couple eventually relocated to Colorado and Robert got a job as a commercial artist at The Daily Sentinel. The family settled down in Grand Junction in 1963 after moving from Colorado Springs; after Denise was murdered Mr. Nicholson said he regretted moving there and said that it was ‘a mistake.’
Oliverson had blue eyes, brown hair that she wore long and parted down the middle, and stood at 5’4” tall. She had some lingering facial acne, pierced ears, and a discolored lump on the back of her right hand; she was petite, and only weighed around 105 pounds. After graduating from Grand Junction High School in 1968 she got a job with a company called Ultronix (at least, according to her engagement announcement published in The Daily Sentinel on May 20, 1970). Looking into them, Ultroni was a manufacturing plant that produces electronic resistors, components and log converters but they have since left the Colorado area and moved out of state.
In 1969 Denise was charged with a misdemeanor after being arrested in GJ for marijuana possession, and at some point in the early 1970’s she lived in Spokane, WA with an individual named JC Harrison. Described by her friends and loved ones as being a ‘great, kind person,’ she married Joseph Franklin Oliverson on September 26, 1970. Joe was born in March 1950 in Idaho but his family relocated to Alaska; he was a 1968 graduate of Dimond High School in Anchorage, where he grew up. Oliverson attended Mesa College and when the couple first got married he was employed in Alaska; he eventually relocated to Grand Junction to be with his wife and got a job in insurance and real estate. After going through a rough patch the couple divorced on March 13, 1972. When she was killed Denise was in a new relationship with a man named Raymundo Esteban Romero (who simply went by ‘Steve’). According to her dad, Denise was a frequent drug user and in the early stages of her disappearance he suspected that she may have imbibed in some sort of illegal substances and taken off. Despite a history of running away (she would always return after a few days), Oliversons history in the year prior to her disappearance hinted that she changed a lot and didn’t participate in that behavior anymore. In a letter to Denise dated March 27, 1975 sent from her behavioral health counselor, Lois Kanaly shared that the young divorcee was accepted by the Division of Rehabilitation for services because of her disability, andher anxiety diagnosis was considered ‘a handicap to her employment.’ From there, the letter stated that she had an upcoming therapy appointment on March 31 at 1 PM. At the bottom was a postscript that read: ‘I am pleased. Come in very soon as you can start school this quarter. Enclosed is the Mesa College application.’ Kanaly also advised Denise to look into the schools J.E.T. program. So, obviously Oliverson was in the process of making some big changes in her life, and seemed to be in the process of applying to go to college.
Denise and Steve weren’t together for very long, and seemed to have a healthy relationship at first, however cracks were beginning to show and according to Oliversons friend from high school Marie Parish she wanted him out of her house. At first it appears that she lived at her one bedroom house located on LaVeta Street in GJ alone, but was pressured by Romero to move in with her as a ‘safety precaution’ because of a dangerous former flame. It appears that he was a very jealous and controlling boyfriend and it’s speculated that his motives weren’t entirely gentlemanly and he did it more to get in her house so he could keep an eye on her versus doing it for her safety. Oliverson had a dog named Toma.
On Sunday, April 6th, 1975 Ted Bundy abducted Denise Oliverson at the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction, Colorado. According to the missing persons report dated April 8, 1975, Mr. Nicholson said that the day that his daughter disappeared she stopped by his house with Steve at roughly 1:00 in the afternoon, and from there they went to Lincoln Park. They were taking advantage of a beautiful spring day and were enjoying being outside. Denise saw a friend at the park named Fred Gallegos, but the two didn’t interact. The couple then explored Grand Junction for a bit before returning home. That’s when they got into an argument and around 3 PM Denise said that she was going to ride her bike to her parents house. She left with no coat or personal possessions and Steve said that it’s possible she went back to the park to see her friend. Detectives strongly felt that she was biking down a short path on the east side of the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction when she encountered Ted, which was about 1.7 miles away from her home on LaVeta Street. According to Kevin Sullivans ‘The Encyclopedia of the Ted Bundy Murders,’ several stories about what Denise was doing before she was abducted have emerged or the years since she disappeared, but authorities are certain that she had an argument with her boyfriend and left the one bedroom home she shared with him to go to her parents house, on her a yellow Coast to Coast 10 speed bicycle, serial number 2C174568 to go to her parents house. She never made it.
When Oliverson didn’t come home that night Romero just assumed she spent the night at her parents, as that was a typical occurrence when they had a disagreement. But he immediately became concerned the next day when he called her parents’ house to talk to Denise about coming home and he was told she wasn’t there. Consequently, Mr. Nicholson contacted law enforcement at some point early on April 7, 1975 and reported his daughter as missing; Denise’s parents gave them pictures of her but let them know that they wanted them back. Police didn’t wait to investigate and immediately sprang into action, mapping out the route Oliverson most likely would have taken and searching the road along it. They spoke with members of her family, friends, coworkers, and acquaintances and were told nothing of value. Oliverson’s Dad contacted the FBI for further assistance but was told that they wouldn’t be able to assist in the case unless there was indication that she had been kidnapped or was killed as a result of foul play. At the time she disappeared Denise was employed with Dixson Inc. as an assembler; she wasn’t there for long and only got the position the year before.
On April 7, 1975 an unknown caller from the Denver and Rio Grande Railroads got in contact with the Grand Junction Police Department and told them about an abandoned yellow bicycle that was leaning against a pillar underneath the 5th Street viaduct near the railroad tracks. Retired GJ police officer Lew Fraser was dispatched to the scene at 8:48 AM, and upon arriving he met up with railroad engineer Wilbur M. Class, who shared with him that it had snowed the night before and he had seen what looked like sandals as well as some additional things sitting on the bike’s seat. According to a second railroad employee, the items were scattered haphazardly all over the tracks before he neatly set them out of the way (more on that later). According to Officer Lew there was nothing strange or unusual about the scene that jumped out at him, and it was just another lost bicycle to him. He made a property report, tagged it with a ‘lost and found’ sticker then turned it into the Grand Junctions ‘Old City Shop,’ classifying it as abandoned. When it was eventually determined that the items belonged to Oliverson, LE immediately suspected that foul play was involved but were unable to come up with much else. According to a deep dive by Bundy archivist Tiffany Jean, the investigating officer said in his report that ‘as I was checking it an engineer in a passing locomotive hollered at me and said it had been there since yesterday and that there were some clothes on it and it could have been stolen or something. I checked the immediate area and all I found was a light brown rolled up women’s belt. I checked the bike for stolen and it had not been stolen. Brought the bike to old city shop and filed an abandoned property report and put a found property tag on bike. No further investigation at this time.’
In the early stages of Denise’s disappearance the Grand Junction PD considered Romero a suspect due to his strange and suspicious manner, but nothing conclusive tied him to her disappearance and he was never charged. Law enforcement deemed that he was an unbalanced person but gave him the benefit of the doubt and said that maybe he acted that way because of his girlfriends disappearance. Unfortunately for Oliversons family they were forced to sit back and watch as her case grew cold, and there don’t seem to be any reports of any tips or leads until Bundy confessed on death row in 1989.
After Bundy was thrown into the spotlight because of his arrest in Granger, (retired) GJ Police Chief Ed VanderTook admitted that he was hesitant at first to acknowledge that Bundy was responsible for Oliverson’s disappearance, however after it was proven that credit card receipts placed him in the area he quickly changed his tune. I mean, thinking about it logically, it wasn’t like he could have easily hit her over the head with a crowbar and dragged her away: she was abducted in the middle of the afternoon. I’m leaning towards him using some sort of ruse to lure her back to his car and then he pounced. It’s strongly speculated that Bundy parked his VW underneath the overpass on South 5th Street, as it was a relatively secluded spot in the mid 1970’s. Did he fake a broken arm and tell her he needed help carrying something back to his car? Or perhaps a broken leg, somehow? Did he ask her to place his briefcase in his car then whack her over the head, shove her in then sped off? Or, was he fearless and blitzed her by the bridge, then dragged her back to his Bug, which was waiting nearby? The possibilities are endless, and we’ll never know what actually happened. There’s yet another theory that maybe Denise was experiencing mechanical problems with her bike and that Ted may have come to her assistance.
Oliverson was last seen wearing a long-sleeved green Indian-print blouse, a pair of Levi’s, sandals and a silver ring on her right pinky finger. According to (retired) GJPD Homicide Investigator Doug Rushing and his then partner Jim Fromm, many of Denise’s personal possessions didn’t make it to the evidence file: her purse, a light brown rolled up belt, and additional personal items were stolen by a Grand Junction officer, who gave the items to his girlfriend because of their high market value and the fact that they were considered ‘nice items.’ In addition to her personal things and handbag, Denise’s bike was taken to Grand Junctions ‘Old City Shops’ with the intent of being stored under ‘unknown owner,’ but unfortunately (according to journalist Steven Winn and multiple other sources), it vanished from police custody; it was also never dusted for prints. About it disappearing, a Grand Junction LEO commented that ‘kids had access to those racks,’ and in response to this, Denise’s father snapped back that it ‘was ‘the only piece of evidence that they had’ (I will discuss this in depth more later). Also according to Winn, shortly after Oliverson disappeared retired chief criminal investigator for the ninth Judicial District in the State of Colorado Mike Fisher received a call from police in Roseburg, OR about a man named Jake Teppler who he was interested in speaking with about her disappearance. After multiple interviews and a polygraph examination, it was eventually determined that Teppler had nothing to do with her case, and his alibi’s were successfully verified.
At around 11:00 AM on July 16, 1976, a sergeant from the Grand Junction PD was contacted by Robert Nicholson, who told him that he and his wife wanted their daughter’s bicycle returned to them, if at all possible. After some back and forth between internal departments in the Grand Junction PD, it was determined that the bike had been removed from the ‘City Shops’ and it was seemingly common knowledge that it was missing (and most likely had been stolen). After it vanished Mr. Nicholson was never informed of the incident nor was a report ever written and upon further investigation the theft took place sometime between April 7 and May 25, 1975. At approximately 4:00 PM later that same day the sergeant reached back out to Mr. Nicholson and shared with him that his daughters bike was missing and had been for some time. After hearing this Robert became very depressed and said that he should have been told about the theft immediately after it happened. He was given a formal apology from the GJ Chief of Police for not keeping him informed and in the loop and was promised that if the bicycle was ever found it would be immediately returned to him.
Early in the morning a few weeks after Denise disappeared on April 19, 1975 an officer from the GJPD was dispatched to Oliverson’s residence to look into a noise complaint: when they arrived at 5:18 AM, he spoke with the complainant, another resident of LaVeta Street (a Mr. Jeff Burns), who said he heard what sounded like a loud gunshot roughly 15 to 20 minutes before reaching out to LE. Upon first hearing the unusual noise, Burns looked out the window but saw nothing out of the ordinary and went back to bed. A few minutes later he heard a voice whimpering and groaning, and when he looked out his window for a second time he saw a man lying in Romero’s driveway, rocking back and forth while groaning; it was then that he decided to call 911. When arriving on the scene, the responding LEO first checked out the driveway as well as the yard in front of the residence but didn’t find anything out of the ordinary. When they peered in the front door and looked in, he noticed a light on and a dog that immediately got up and started barking at him; it was then that he noticed a man of Spanish descent sleeping on the floor.
The policeman knocked on the door several times and it took a couple attempts to wake Romero up. When he finally opened the door he appeared to be crying and distressed, and the officer explained that he was investigating a reported gunshot as well as an individual lying in his driveway. The man replied that he didn’t know anything about a gunshot but that he was the crying man that was lying in the driveway. When the officerasked if there was anything he could do to help he said no, because the police were unable to find his girlfriend, who was missing and he feared might never be found, and was even possibly dead. The LEO asked why he felt that way, and he replied that it was just ‘a feeling he had.’ Throughout the entire conversation Romero was upset and crying, and overall seemed very disturbed. After being given permission to look around the residence the policeman walked around; he saw nobody else and nothing out of the ordinary. Despite being allowed admittance on this occasion, in a separate event on a different day detectives reached out and asked him if they could look through the house for something that might help aid them in their investigation, but he refused them admittance. Although the LEO did feel that it was most likely Romero that shot off the gun they didn’t see a weapon in the house or feel that he was a threat in any way.
On May 25, 1975 that same officer was requested to do a follow-up visit with Romero after Denise’s father called the department asking if there was any movement on his daughters case. Investigators also spoke with a good friend of hers named Marie Parish, who last saw Oliverson on April 4, 1975. Parish told detectives that she reached out to Romero on April 27, 1975 and asked if there was anything she could do to help with the investigation. She reported that he got angry and said that it was none of her business but if she did learn anything new that she better get in contact with him, and not the Nicholsons. On May 18 she saw Steve riding a yellow boys 10 speed bike roughly three blocks from his house but he refused to look at her; she wondered if it was the same bicycle that Oliverson was last seen riding. She also shared that Romero seemed very possessive and jealous of her friend and the few times they did interact he seemed very angry and had a bad temper. Parish told investigators that Denise was recently hung up on by the young man named Fred that she ran into at the park earlier on the day she disappeared. A few days before she disappeared Oliverson had learned that he had recently gotten married, which greatly upset her. Marie also shared that she had mentioned his name a few times in front of Steve, and it made him very upset.
On May 29, 1975, Grand Junction investigators sat down with another one of Oliversons friends Lynn Kaufman, who shared that on occasion Denise would take off for a while but always came back after a few days. She said at the very least she would contact her mother to let her know she was ok. When asked if she knew where Oliverson might have gone to she replied that she didn’t know why but thought it possible that she may have wound up in California, and she had been there once before and enjoyed it there. Kaufman also said that she never learned how to drive and didn’t have a driver’s license.
On May 27, 1975 investigators spoke with Mr. Nicholson, who shared that his daughters friend Marie would probably be the best person to speak with about details regarding her life. By the time Denise disappeared she hadn’t lived at home for quite a few years and he wasn’t always aware of what she was up to, although she did have the habit of coming to visit every Friday and Sunday. He further told investigators that on the day his daughter disappeared it was on a Sunday and she got there after seeing ‘Tim and Fred Gallegos at Lincoln Park.’ After her sister disappeared Renee Nicholson turned herself in to Pueblo State Hospital ‘for treatment of an unknown ailment’ (I got the impression it was most likely mental health and/or depression related due to Denise vanishing without a trace). The officer reached out to Parish and asked if she knew if Oliverson showed up at the hospital to visit her, and was told no (Jean, 2019). I got the impression that Mr. Nicholson and Steve didn’t get along but it appeared that he was friendly and in contact with Renee. Thanks to Captain Borax (Chris Mortenson) I was able to find a copy of a letter he sent her which was basically just generic, filler sentences (you know, like ‘how are you. I hope you’re doing great, I don’t have a lot to say but I’ll write to you again soon’), but he did attempt to offer her some reassuring words and let her know that he would take care of her house and cats while she was away (it looks like it was sent while she was in the hospital).
On May 28, 1975 law enforcement sat down with Steve Romero, who volunteered that by that date in time Denise had been missing for 52 days. He told investigators that the afternoon she vanished they had gone to a local park and he witnessed her acknowledge a man that he didn’t know and became upset when he refused to talk to her. Oliverson appeared to have developed feelings for this individual, as she became visibly upset when she learned he had gotten married. At one point in the past the two apparently had a sexual relationship, but I don’t know if it went beyond that or if they dated at all. Romero said when they were done at the park (I’m not sure if they were walking or biking) they moved onto exploring the downtown area of Grand Junction before returning home. After the couple got home from their excursion Denise told Romero that she was going out for a bicycle ride and was going to stop at her parents house before coming home; He said it was the last time he ever saw her alive.
The following is an interview that took place on June 3, 1975 between former Grand Junction Police Officer James Fromm and Oliverson’s boyfriend at the time she disappeared, Steve Romero:* (I went ahead and put the important parts in bold).
Officer Fromm: Steve the day that Denise disappeared do you remember what day of the week it was? Steve Romero: It was Sunday. JF: It was definitely a Sunday? SR: Definitely… at 3:30, about 3:30 pm. JF: There was no possible way it could have been a Saturday? SR: No sir, it was a Sunday. JF: Did she take any money with her when she left? SR: She might have had about $8, cause we went to go get her some shampoo for her hair, but that’s all if anything, that’s all, no identification at all. JF: Was she wearing earrings? SR: No she wasn’t, she was wearing only… all the jewelry that I can think she was wearing and maybe I’m not for sure, she was wearing a small band ring. It’s a silver ring. She was wearing it on her… I think it was her right hand. And she might have had a St. Christopher medal on. JF: Around her neck? SR: Yeah, she might have, I don’t know. She had a long shirt. She might have had it on, because it was mine you see and it had my name on it. It was gold. The whole thing is gold, the chain and the St. Christopher medal. JF: It is my understanding that you and Denise were living in the same house is that right? SR: Yes we were. JF: Did you ever go to bed with her? SR: No. JF: Did you ever make a pass at her? SR: Sure. JF: Did you ever go out and get drunk together? SR: Yeah. JF: Party together? SR: Yeah. JF: Did you have another girlfriend Steve? SR: Yeah, I know a lot of girls you know. I don’t know how to say it, I know she wanted someone to help her out with the rent so, and I didn’t want to stay at home anymore, so I moved over there. JF: Are you actively seeing any doctor right now? SR: Not since I got out of the service. I had a foot injury and that was about it. JF: When you were in the service did you see any psychiatrist or psychologist or anything like that? Are you actively seeing one now? SR: No, never, never, never. Never have. JF: Did Denise entertain any boyfriends while you were living with her? SR: I don’t know. I don’t know how to answer that really. She liked other people, she liked other dudes. We’re just good friends. She didn’t like me in particular, you know, not as a boyfriend. We had a mutual understanding. We could communicate with each other. JF: When you were living with her, were there any guys who came over and spent the night? SR: No, but there were some who wanted to. You see, that’s why she wanted me to move in. There was a cat that was bothering her and he was scaring her pretty bad I guess. JF: While you were over there was there anyone going to bed with her that you know of? SR: No, she wasn’t like that. JF: Can you think of anybody she might have taken off with? SR: No. I thought the guy from Delta (Gallegos), but it wasn’t. JF: Did Denise take any other clothes with her when she left? SR: No, just what she had on. JF: Do you remember what kind of day it was? SR: Yeah, it was a nice day then all of a sudden it was really cloudy and ugly. I didn’t report it for about three days because you know, we got into a hassle one time. She went out and told me she was coming home that night and I got worried about her when she didn’t come home that night. So I says, okay, you know, this chick took off on her bicycle and I figures she is 24 years old so she knows what she is doing. So I didn’t bother to report her until the third day. Then I went and told her parents. JF: Did she take off with her girlfriends often and not come back at night? SR: It happened before. I never knew her that well. I didn’t spend that much time with her but she did do it that one time so I figured I won’t call in because she… you know… she might get mad at me. JF: Ok Steve, that will do for now. SR: I’ll be glad to help you out, cause I’m concerned too. If there is anything I can do for you, let me know.
To summarize: it’s strange, in this interview the narrative he tells police seems to completely contradict everything else I heard about this guy. I mean, he denied him and Denise were a couple, and said that they never had sex, and according to every other source I read about this guy and their relationship, that is a complete and utter lie. Romero also said that he only moved in with her because ‘some cat was bothering her’ and he knew she needed help with paying rent, and that he wasn’t seeing anyone and that she wasn’t dating anyone else either.
In the beginning of the investigation authorities originally felt that Oliverson’s boyfriend had murdered her and hid her body in a crime of passion, but witness testimonies claim that they saw Oliverson leave his house and he did not go after her. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation conducted a polygraph examination on Romero on July 21, 1975 in an attempt to determine if he knew what happened to Denise, her location at that current time, or if he knew whether or not she was harmed in any way (by either him or someone he knew). He said that on Sunday, April 6, 1975 he went to the store with Denise to buy more shampoo from a drug store on North Avenue, and from there they went to the park and visited with several of their friends. Romero then said from there they ‘just messed around town’ then went home, and it was then that she told him she was leaving to go for a bike ride. Denise got her yellow ten speed bicycle out from the front room (where she kept it) and left at approximately 3:30 in the afternoon. She said that she was going to swing by her parents house before returning home, and that was the last time he ever saw her. Romero told police that he didn’t know what happened to Denise but that he didn’t harm her in any way but he strongly felt that something bad happened to her. The officer that administered the polygraph said that it was in their expert opinion that the subject was being truthful. After this, the leads went dry and the case quickly went cold.
In an anonymous letter from an unidentified ‘psychic friend,’ postmarked February 10, 1976, they claimed they saw in a vision that, in addition to being kidnapped, raped, murdered and her remains thrown in river in Dubuque Canyon, Oliverson suffered a violent head wound (by a weapon made of either steel or iron) and her hands were bound in some way (again, using some form of steel or iron) when she was thrown into a river. The psychic also said that a car was also somehow involved in her murder and that her remains would not be found for a very long period of time, if ever. She also said that Denise’s body traveled a long ways downstream from where it was originally thrown in.
Joe Oliverson sat down with Grand Junction law enforcement on May 29, 1975 to go over some details about his ex-wife’s disappearance.He shared that he married Denise in late September 1970 but had divorced her by mid-March 1972; he remarried shortly after it was finalized. In April 1975, Oliverson was employed at a company called Steel Fabricating and the last time he had heard from Denise was about a year prior. He said after their split she always seemed to be in some sort of relationship and always appeared to have a boyfriend, and he knew that she was seeing a guy from either Portland or Seattle but wasn’t sure if he was ever told his name.Joe knew that his ex-wife had a few close friends in Grand Junction and was incredibly trusting, almost to the point of being gullible. He also said that she was a very independent person and was exactly the type that would ‘just take off’ (which strangely enough is the exact opposite of what her friend said about her).
Law enforcement was able to track down Fred Gallego and spoke with him by telephone on May 29, 1975. In the beginning of the conversation when he was asked about Oliverson at first he denied knowing her, then said that he didn’t recall her name (or at least her surname). After the officer refreshed his memory a bit he finally admitted that he did remember her and their fling. Gallego said that when they were together he saw her once or twice every two or three weeks and talked to her for the last time a few months prior to her disappearance in February 1975. He shared that the last time he saw her was the day that she disappeared in the park, but clarified that he had not interacted with her in any capacity. Gallego also said that the reason why he cut off all contact with her was that he had recently gotten married and didn’t want to encourage any future contact with her. When he was questioned if Oliverson had gone back to the park later that day that he last saw her to see him he said no because he never saw her again. Gallego told investigators that he was aware that she had fairly major mental health concerns and always seemed to be looking for an escape from her problems, but he knew that she was talking to a counselor and trying to work through her issues.
Early in the morning on the day his daughter disappeared an unidentified male called his residence and asked if Denise was there. When he answered ‘no’ and asked who was calling, they immediately hung up without answering. The morning after that (Tuesday, April 7) Mr. Nicholson said the same person called again and asked ‘if Denise Oliverson was there.’ Once again, he replied, ‘no, she is not’ and asked who was calling, and it was then that the caller finally answered, ‘this is Steve.’ Later that same day Romero told Robert in a separate phone call that Denise had ‘been hurt by a car.’ Considering this wasn’t true, it’s speculated that Steve said that because he was still incredibly distraught and upset about Denise missing and wanted to make her dad feel pain as well (as if he wasn’t already).
On June 2, 1975 GJ investigators sat down for an interview with railroad engineer Wilbur M. Class, who is one of the employees that found Oliverson’s bike at around 7:30 AM on April 7, 1975. When investigators showed Class the sandals that were found near Denise’s ten speed he positively ID’d them as the ones he saw. Steve Romero also identified them as the pair that belonged to Denise. Mr. Class told LE that the yellow bike wasn’t there the previous day, meaning there was a possibility that he may have overlooked it (which he felt surely was something he would not do). He strongly speculated that someone may have placed the bike there in the dark, late night/early morning hours of April 6th or 7th.
Investigators spoke with a second employee of the railroad named Fidel Lopez that took place on June 25, 1975. Lopez said that while he was switching an engine he noticed a yellow bike and a pair of red sandals laying across the railroad tracks, under the overpass; he retrieved the bicycle then leaned it against a pillar underneath the viaduct, and placed the sandals and other items on its seat. When asked to describe the items and events, Lopez responded that he remembers the bike being yellow and that the shoes were sandals however he didn’t recall on what day he found them (but records within the railroad department showed that he had reported finding the items on April 6, 1975). He specified that he found the bike laying across one rail of the far south railroad track with its front wheel pointing north. Both shoes were found between the two rails on the same track: one was on the east side of the bicycle and the other was on its west side. In his opinion, when he stumbled upon the items they weren’t on the tracks for very long, as they would have probably been noticed right away and removed by someone else. Lopez said he didn’t notice anything that would have made him think a struggle took place in the area and he had not seen anyone in the immediate area.
At the time of Oliverson’s abduction Bundy was a law student at the University of Utah and was living at565 1st Avenue North in SLC. It looks like it’s roughly 285 miles away from his boarding house to the 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction, which is about a four hour and forty minute drive, one way. Per my ‘handy dandy TB job chart,’ it appears he was unemployed in April 1975: the last place he worked was at the Department of Emergency Services in Olympia. He resigned on August 28, 1974. Bundy remained without a job until June of the following year, when he became the night manager in charge of Bailiff Hall at the University of Utah (he was fired the next month after coming in drunk). He was still in a long-distance relationship with Liz Kloepfer, although things were getting ready to fizzle out for the final time (they officially broke up after Ted went to prison for the attempted kidnapping of Carol DaRonch in 1976).
When Denise was murdered in April 1975 Bundy wasn’t on the run for much longer: Utah Highway Patrol Sergeant Bob Hayward pulled him over in Granger at around 2:30 AM on August 16, 1975 after he saw his unfamiliar tan VW Beetle pass by him while he was out on patrol. The officer knew the neighborhood and its residents well and had no memory of ever seeing that particular vehicle before. When Hayward turned on his lights to get a better view of its license plate, the driver turned off their headlights and attempted to flee. The Sergeant began to follow the car, which went through two stop signs and eventually pulled into a gas station. When he asked the driver why he was out driving around so late, Bundy replied that he was on his way home from the Redwood Drive-In after seeing the Towering Inferno but lost his way. Two more officers arrived on the scene, and after noticing that the passengers seat was missing they searched the car (with Bundy’s permission) and discovered some incredibly unusual items: a black duffle bag that contained a pair of handcuffs, an ice pick, rope, a crowbar, a flashlight, a ski-mask, a pair of gloves, wire, a screwdriver, large green plastic bags, strips of cloth, and a pantyhose mask.
In addition to his ‘kill kit,’ LE also found maps, brochures of ski resorts, and gas receipts in Bundy’s glove compartment box. When asked why he had such strange items in his car, Ted told the officers that he was in law school and was studying how to arrest criminals. While they weren’t completely convinced the law student was the ‘crazed mass murderer of young women’ that they were looking for, investigators did know he wasn’t completely innocent and arrested him for possession of burglary tools; they didn’t have enough evidence to detain him and he was ROR’ed.
It didn’t take long after his first arrest that investigators began to connect the dots between the attempted kidnapping of Carol DaRonch and the other Utah and Colorado abductions that were taking place during the same time, and they quickly began to suspect that the young law student was responsible. Perhaps one of the most damning pieces of evidence against Bundy were the handcuffs that were found in his car, which were the same style and brand as the ones found on DaRonch’s wrist after her attack. Additionally, the crowbar that officers found in his ‘murder kit’ was identical to the weapon used to threaten her the previous November, and his tan car matched the description of the one her abductor was driving. There were too many similarities for the police to ignore, but they also knew they needed more evidence to help support their case. A few days after Ted’s arrest on August 21, investigators searched his apartment and found various brochures from the areas where some of the women were missing from, however they failed to search the building’s utility room. Years later, the killer revealed to his lawyer Polly Nelson that he had kept a box of Polaroids of his victims inside that room in a shoebox, which he later destroyed.
On February 19, 1976 FBI forensics laboratories sent a letter confirming that they received a sample of Oliverson’s hair for comparison to evidence taken from Bundy’s Bug but nothing came back a match.She is Ted’s second to last confirmed victim (Sue Curtis was his last) until his second escape in late 1977 (although there are some suspected/unconfirmed victims that disappeared after, including Melanie Cooley, Sandra Weaver, Nancy-Perry-Baird, Shelley Kay Robertson, and Debbie Smith). Less than two weeks after Denise vanished on Tuesday, April 15, 1975 eighteen year old Melanie ‘Suzi’ Cooley disappeared out of Nederland, CO. After class was over for the day Cooley left the high school she attended where she was a senior and was never seen or heard from again. She was last seen by friends hitchhiking nearby campus, and it’s unclear where or when exactly she got picked up as no one saw the vehicle the young girl climbed into that day. Just a few weeks later on May 2, the body of Cooley was discovered fully clothed and frozen by a maintenance worker on Twin Spruce Road near Coal Creek Canyon about twenty miles away from where she was last seen.
According to Kevin Sullivan’s true crime classic, ‘The Bundy Murders,’ when Ted was asked about his possible involvement in Oliversons disappearance during his death row confessions by Detective Fisher, he ‘told me again of his tiredness and his wanting to get back to his cell to rest. I explained simply that he had promised to resolve all the questioned murder cases and now at the last minute he wasn’t keeping his side of the deal.’ As Fisher was walking out of the room the condemned man told him, ‘I’ll get back to you on that, I promise.’ The two men never spoke again. In a last minute, taped confession that took place less than an hour before he was put to death at 6:16 AM, Bundy confessed to Florida State Prison Superintendent Thomas Barton that he killed Denise Oliverson (it’s also listed on her ‘Charlie Project’ page that Dr. Robert D. Keppel, PhD was present as well). He said that he killed her in his car then transported her to the state border between Colorado and Utah and dumped her body in the Colorado River, about five miles west of Grand Junction. We don’t know if she was sexually assaulted, and he never shared exactly how he abducted her or took her life, but he specified that she ‘was not buried.’ In a sad, semi-related note, shortly after she disappeared Oliversons dad shared that she didn’t like water and wasn’t a big fan of swimming.
Bundy also shared that he came across Oliverson when he was returning from his second round of dumping Julie Cunninghams remains. Per Tiffany Jean in her case file of Denise, ‘Bundy claims that he encountered Oliverson as he passed through Grand Junction after he had buried Cunningham about 50 miles to the east’ (I have the link to the webpage below in my works cited). The twenty-six year old ski instructor was last seen the evening of March 15, 1975 after she left her apartment in the Apollo Park neighborhood in Vail. She was on her way to a local bar, and was last seen wearing jeans, a ski cap, brown suede jacket, and boots. On crutches and faking a ski injury, Bundy told investigators that he asked her for help carrying his ski boots to his VW, and when they arrived he knocked her unconscious, drove her to a remote area about eighty miles west of Vail and sexually assaulted her. He then strangled her to death then dumped her body in a shallow grave in a high desert area near Rifle, Colorado. Although Ted confessed to killing her on the morning he was executed, Cunningham’s remains have never been found, and her missing persons case still is considered open with the Vail Police Department.
After Bundy’s confession police said that they didn’t bother going to check out the potential dump site, as fourteen years had passed by and upwards of hundreds of thousands of people have walked through the area, trampling through evidence and destroying anything of possible value. Oliverson disappeared in early April, and according to environmental experts that is the time of year that the ‘runoff of the river would most likely have swept anything in it well downstream.’ It also gave local wildlife a good amount of time to pick apart her bones and disperse them throughout the area. Experts determined that if any trace of Denise were to turn up it would have happened by then.
The following is the transcript of a recording by Bundy regarding Denise Oliverson, dated the day of his death on January 24, 1989 at Florida State Prison; it took place in a five minute conversation roughly 45 minutes before his execution: ‘To the ah… Mike Fisher and the, the Colorado detectives ah… the last girl they wanted to talk about, Denise Oliverson, I believe, I’m not sure… out of Grand Junction that Mike Fisher wanted to discuss… ah, I believe that the date was in April 1975. Ah… the young woman’s body would have been placed in the Colorado River about five miles west of Grand Junction. It was not buried. That’s all the uh… the ones that I can help you with… it’s all the ones that I know about that uh… no missing ones outstanding that we haven’t talked about.’
In the same conversation Ted also volunteered that he abducted Susan Curtis from BYU on June 27, 1975 and gave investigators information as to where they would be able to find her body. Gas receipts placed Bundy in Grand Junction on the day that Denise disappeared: he put $3.16 in fuel at a gas station in Grand Junction on his Chevron card right before he abducted her. That same credit card was used to pay for fuel in Aspen and Vail on days his other victims Caryn Campbell and Julie Cunningham (respectively) were abducted as well. It was FBI agent Bill Hagmaier that Bundy confessed his total kill count to: eleven young women in Washington state, eight in Utah, three each in Colorado and Florida, two each in Idaho and Oregon, and one in California. The Oliverson family found out with the rest of the world that their daughter was murdered by the serial killer: they heard it on the news after he was executed.
In May 2019, the Grand Junction PD changed Denise’s disappearance from a missing persons case to a homicide after they reviewed Bundy’s confession tapes and talked to investigators that spoke with him while he was on death row.
In an interview with The Coloradoan in 2019, former Grand Junction detective Jim Fromm said ‘at the initial time we started the investigation, we didn’t believe that she was anything other than a missing person. And the more people we interviewed, the more concerned we got. It just, it did not make sense.’ With the news of Oliverson’s case closing, Julie Cunningham’s murder is now the only unsolved case directly linked to Bundy in the state of Colorado. A friend of Oliversons from high school named Linda Pantuso told the Coloradoan in the same article that she remembered hearing about her disappearance from Nina Nicholson, who she worked with: ‘We were just in the bathroom one day and I asked how Denise was doing. She went, ‘You haven’t heard? She’s been missing.’ I was just in shock. She was just a really great person.’
Dubbed by locals as ‘The Year of Fear,’ 1975 was a rough period for Grand Junction when it came to missing and murdered women: in addition to Oliverson, on July 28 twenty-four year old Linda Benson and her five year old daughter Kellie were brutally murdered in their residence at the Chateau Apartments. Just as a (strange) side note, according to the website cavdef.org, there is also a possibility that Bundy was present when the young mom and her child were killed: when a neighbor of Benson named Steve Goad saw him on TV after he was arrested in August 1975 he recognized him as a man that was in the apartment complex’s parking lot the evening Benson was murdered. In 2009 DNA linked serial rapist Jerry Nemnich to their murders. Strangely enough, she was friends with another Grand Junction woman that got murdered on August 23 in 1975: Linda Miracle. Twenty-four year old Miracle and her two young sons were killed by a neighbor, Ken Botham Jr. after he killed his wife at the home they shared. On December 27, Deborah Kathleen Tomlinson (not to be confused with Deborah Lee Tomlinson, who disappeared with a friend on her 16th birthday in October 1973 from Creswell, Oregon) was killed in her apartment complex in the 1000 block of Belford Avenue in GJ. She was found lying partially nude in her bathtub and had been sexually assaulted, bound and strangled. In December 2020 using DNA technology investigators identified Jimmie Dean Duncan as the man who killed Tomlinson.
In 2013, the Grand Junction PD collected DNA samples from Denise’s mother just in case they ever found remains. About his daughter missing, in 1986 Mr. Nicholson said ‘people need to finalize it in their minds, otherwise they’ll be bouncing back and forth. You don’t have a funeral, you can’t have a funeral. When the body is never found. A tragedy like this just tears the whole family up. I’ll never be the same. You raise a child, of course she wasn’t a child anymore. She was a young woman. It’s quite obvious when he got away from Glenwood Springs that he’s sick There’s something wrong up in the attic. There’s always the possibility that he’ll get out and do it again. They say he’s an intelligent young man, but it was channeled in the wrong direction. In the worst way’ Robert Nicholson also felt that Bundy ‘definitely’ should have been executed, and he was ‘just happy he’s been executed because it should have happened a long time ago.’
Denise’s father died at the age of 74 on October 2, 2001 in Grand Junction. Her mother passed away at the age of 94 on December 28, 2017. Nina remained a generous and kind woman despite the plethora of tragedies that took place during her life, and she loved to dance and was fascinated by Koala bears. Always hospitable, she wanted to make sure everyone around her was taken care of. Sadly, right before she passed Denise’s sister Renee died in the summer of 2017. Described in her obituary as a ‘gentle and loving soul,’ as a young woman Renee studied to be a dancer but was very ill in the final few years of her life, which restricted her activities. She died at HopeWest and Hospice Care Center on August 24, 2017. It looks like Steve Romero married a woman named Sandra on February 17, 1982 but they divorced just a few years later on May 22, 1984. He remarried a woman named Wilma on August 17, 1977 and died on November 3, 1996. Although her case has officially been closed, as of January 2024 no trace of Denise Lynn Oliverson has ever been found.
* Thank you to Archivist and Bundy researcher Tiffany Jean for the transcript of this interview.
Denise’s sophomore year picture from the 1966 Grand Junction High School yearbook.Denise’s junior year picture from the 1967 Grand Junction High School yearbook.Denise’s senior year picture from the 1968 Grand Junction High School yearbook.Denise Oliverson.Denise Oliverson.Oliverson and an ex-boyfriend. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD.Some photography negatives of Denise. Courtesy of Captain Borax.Denise Oliverson on her wedding day.Oliverson’s mug shot after she was arrested in 1969 in Grand Junction for a misdemeanor after being caught with marijuana.A missing persons bulletin for Oliverson. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD. A missing persons bulletin for Oliverson. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.Oliversons wooden clogs that were found near the 5th Street viaduct close to her yellow bike. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.The bottom of the pair of Oliversons sandals that were collected at the abduction site. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Oliversons underwear that were collected at the abduction site. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Denise and Joe’s engagement announcement published in The Daily Sentinel on May 20, 1970.Denise and Joe’s wedding announcement published in The Daily Sentinel on September 30, 1970.An article about Joe Oliverson visiting with his family published by The Herald-Journal on February 16, 1972.An article about Oliverson missing published by The Daily Sentinel on June 24, 1975.An article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Daily Sentinel on October 13, 1975.An article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The High Point Enterprise on October 26, 1975.An article mentioning Denise Oliverson published by The Greeley Daily Tribune on October 27, 1975.An article mentioning the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Greeley Daily Tribune on October 31, 1975.Oliverson is briefly mentioned in an article about Bundy’s victims published by The News-Press on June 26, 1979.An article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Daily Sentinel on The Daily Sentinel on July 22, 1979.Oliverson is briefly mentioned in an article about Bundy’s victims published by The Spokesman-Review on August 22, 1979.Oliverson included in a list of Bundy’s victims published in The Tallahassee Democrat on October 2, 1980.Part one of article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Daily Sentinel on February 23, 1986.Part two of article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Daily Sentinel on February 23, 1986.Oliverson is mentioned in an list of Bundy’s confirmed victims published by The St. Petersburg Times on July 8, 1986.A poor quality picture of an article mentioning Oliverson that was written right before Bundy was executed. Published by The Standard-Examiner on January 27, 1989.An article about Bundy being executed that mentions Denise at the very bottom published by The Tribune on January 27, 1989.Oliverson is briefly mentioned in an article written about Bundy’s victims published by The Waycross Journal-Herald on January 28, 1989.An article about the disappearance of Denise Oliverson published by The Daily Sentinel on January 31, 1989.A picture of Denise Oliverson from the first part of an article published by The Daily Sentinel on May 29, 2011.Part two of an article published by The Daily Sentinel on May 29, 2011.A blurb about Oliverson published by The Windsor Beacon on February 17, 2019.Three retired investigators that worked Oliversons case. From left: Ron Smith, James Fromm, and Doug Rushing.Oliversons one bedroom residence located at 1619 LaVeta Street; she lived here with her boyfriend, Steve Romero. Photo courtesy of OddStops.Oliversons mailbox, at 1619 LaVeta Street.The inside of Denise’s house on LaVeta Street as it looks today.The inside of Denise’s house on LaVeta Street as it looks today.The inside of Denise’s house on LaVeta Street as it looks today.The side yard of Denise’s house on LaVeta Street as it looks today.Robert and Nina Nicholsons home, located at 801 Ouray Ave in Grand Junction. Photo courtesy of Google Maps.A bike ride from Denise’s residence to her parents house should have taken 20 minutes. A route from Denise’s house to Lincoln Park to her parents house should have taken her a little over 25 minutes. A possible route Bundy make have taken to the South 5th Street bridge n Grand Junction, Colorado.Bundys whereabouts on April 5, 1975 when Oliverson disappeared according to the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’The former Chevron station where Bundy filled up the day he abducted and murdered Denise in Grand Junction.Denise and her husband listed in the Grand Junction City Directory in 1971.Joe and Denise Oliverson’s marriage certificate from September, 1970.Excerpts from Denise’s journal. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD.Excerpts from Denise’s journal. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.A letter to Denise from her counselor, Lois Kanaly. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.A letter from Steve Romero to Denise’s sister, Renee. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax and The Grand Junction Police Department.Documentation related to Denise’s missing persons case from the Grand Junction PD. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Documentation that Denise’s property was checked into evidence at the Grand Junction PD. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.A letter from the Grand Junction Chief of Police to Pitkin County Sheriff asking for assistance. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.A letter dated February 19, 1976 from FBI forensics lab confirming receipt of Oliverson’s hair samples for comparison to evidence taken from Bundy’s car. Photo courtesy Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.Some of Denise’s artwork. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.A notation regarding Bundy’s Chevron receipts.Hand drawn map that came with the ‘psychic letter’ showing where Oliversons remains could be located. Courtesy of the Grand Junction PD/Tiffany Jean.An older photo of the bridge where Ted Bundy abducted Denise Lynn Oliverson. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.A reporter standing underneath the South 5th Street Bridge with a bike much like the one Denise was last seen riding.Some more recent graffiti underneath the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction.Some more recent graffiti underneath the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction.Some more recent graffiti underneath the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction.The underneath the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction.The underneath the South 5th Street Bridge in Grand Junction.A shot of the Colorado River about five miles west of Grand Junction where Bundy says he dumped Denise Oliversons body.An x-ray of Denise Oliversons teeth. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Another x-ray of Denise Oliversons teeth. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Another x-ray of Denise Oliversons teeth. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Another x-ray of Denise Oliversons teeth. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.Denise’s mother, Nina Marie (nee Jackson) Nicholson.Another shot of Denise’s mother, Nina.Denise’s parents engagement announcement published in The St. Joseph News-Press on June 12, 1949.Denise’s fathers grave site. Photo courtesy of findagrave.A notice in the newspaper about Nina Nicholsons death published by The Daily Sentinel on December 31, 2017.Denise’s moms obituary published by The Daily Sentinel on January 19, 2018.Renee Nicholson’s sophomore year picture from the 1971 Grand Junction High School yearbook.Renee Nicholson-West’s obituary published by The Daily Sentinel on September 12, 2017.Denise’s ex-husband Joe Oliverson’s junior year photo from the 1967 Dimond High School yearbook.An article about Denise’s husband being appointed as a ‘general life insurance agent’ in Grand Junction published by The Daily Sentinel on April 3, 1974.An quick blurb about Denise’s ex-husband Joe Oliverson being getting a job at Bray Real Estate in Grand Junction published by The Daily Sentinel on July 22, 2007.Raymundo Esteban (also known as Steve) Romero in 1970. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.Fred Gallegos from the 1969 Delta High School yearbook.Linda Benson.Linda Miracle and her two sons, Troy and Chad.Miracle’s obit published by The Daily Sentinel on October 29, 1975.An article about some of the 1975 murders in rand Junction published by The Fort Collins Coloradoan on October 26, 1975.Patricia Botham.Ken Botham Jr.Deborah Kathleen Tomlinson.
Donna Ann Lass was born on November 3, 1944 to James ‘Peter’ and Frances (nee Kukar) Lass in Beresford, South Dakota; when she was born her mother was 43 and her dad was 47. Mr. Lass was born on August 25, 1897 and was the second of three children. He served in WWI and spent most of his career farming in the areas of Beresford and Worthing in South Dakota. He married Frances Mary Kukar in Aurelia, Iowa and the couple had eight children together: two boys (Raymond and Eugene) and six girls (Donna, Marjorie, Mary, Karen, Joan, and Patricia). Mrs. Lass was born on November 24, 1900. They eventually divorced, and on October 18, 1951 James married his second wife, Petrine Horstad, in Worthington, MN.
In high school, Donna was a member of the Future Homemakers of America and sang in the mixed chorus. In an interview during her senior year, she shared that her future plans were ‘to go college or be a nurse,’ and after graduating from Beresford High School in 1962 (there were only 52 kids in her graduating class!) she went on and earned her RN. Described by friends as ‘quiet and shy,’ Donna had blue eyes, was 5’4” tall, and had light brown hair that she dyed blonde and wore short and parted on the side. At the time she disappeared in the fall of 1970 she weighed 139 pounds, wore contact lenses, and wasn’t in a committed relationship; she wore size eight shoes and a size 13 dress. Donna didn’t smoke or imbibe in any drug use, and drank infrequently and very little. She was Roman Catholic and attended church every Sunday at St. Mary’s of the Pines. According to her sister Mary, she had perfect teeth and took excellent care of them. She had pierced ears, a white gold wrist watch with a ‘small chain’ and wore a ring on her right ring finger. Lass was reportedly saving for a trip to Europe she planned on taking in 1971.
In May of 1970Donna had moved from 4122 Balboa Street in San Francisco to Stateline, Nevada, settling down in the South Lake Tahoe area. She previously worked as a nurse at the Letterman General Hospital in the Presidio Army Base (it’s worth mentioning that the base was north of the site where Zodiac victim Paul Stine was murdered). After relocating she briefly resided with friends Ann and Larry Lowe before getting her own place at the Monte Verde apartments; when she disappeared on September 6 she had only spent one night there. Mrs. Lowe worked with Donna from 1967 to 1969 in Santa Barbara but relocated to South Lake Tahoe with her husband, and it was her that encouraged Donna to move there. After Lass disappeared the young couple set their plans of moving and returning to college aside so they could stick around and help LE with the investigation.
In early September 1970 Lass had recently moved into her new apartment located on 3893 Pioneer Trail Road, which was just a three minute drive from her new POE. On June 6 she started her job as a nurse at the Sahara Tahoe Casino in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada (now called the Golden Nugget Lake Hotel & Casino). On September 5, 1970 Donna was scheduled to work an overnight shift at the first aid station from 6:00 PM to 2:00 AM, although her last notation in the nursing log was right it was scheduled to end at 1:50 AM (I’ve see a lot of back and forth about the exact time, I’ve seen it vary from 1:15 to 1:50). A pen mark dragged from the last letter of the final word she wrote (which was ‘patient complains of’) and went all the way down to the bottom of the page. I did read on a Reddit comment that Donna’s sister Mary said that the handwriting didn’t belong to her. That entry was for a San Francisco resident named Joan Bentley, who was also the last confirmed person to see Donna alive (at approximately 1:15 AM). A Websleuths user suggested that the ‘drag mark of her pen indicates being grabbed from behind, by perhaps the person who tore out two pages of her notebook, which may have held his name, and then adding the name Joan Bentley.’ I think they were on the right track, however Joan was a real patient that LE spoke with. Ms. Bentley shared with them that she enjoyed making small talk with her pretty young nurse, who appeared to be in a good mood and was ‘very congenial.’ Donna shared with her that she was looking forward to skiing that upcoming winter and that she enjoyed her new job and had plans on staying there for a while.
After Donna left Mrs. Bentley she was never seen alive again, and reportedly no one ever saw her leave the Casino grounds. Her red, 1968 Chevrolet Camaro convertible was found undisturbed in its assigned parking spot at her apartment building, although it’s speculated that she walked to work that day, as it was just a 8-10 minute walk away. If Lass walked to work the night that she disappeared it was less likely that her left behind car would attract attention from concerned coworkers. Donna’s vehicle was completely paid for and it appeared that she had an impressive wardrobe and little to no debt. Her uniform was found stuffed in a bag in the nursing office and had mud all over it, and it’s speculated that she may have changed into a blue pants suit with white stripes and a rust colored raincoat. Does Donna changing out of her work outfit and into her street clothes hint at a planned meet-up with someone after her shift was over, maybe a date? Was it with the same person that would ultimately take her life? Since Lass was abducted at the end of her scheduled shift when she wouldn’t be missed as much, was this evidence that her abductor knew her routine and schedule? On a semi-related note, in a press release from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department, in the weeks prior to Lass’ disappearance two female employees at the Sahara Tahoe were physically assaulted in the parking lot, although there were ultimately no connections established between the incidents.
Unfortunately police didn’t seem very interested in investigating Lass’ disappearance and her case wasn’t taken very seriously in its early stages. On September 25, 1970 Sargent Bezanson from the South Lake Tahoe PD reached out to her friend and former roommate/coworker from San Francisco Jo Ann Goettsch, who shared that she made plans with Lass to visit on September 7th but when she arrived was unable to get in contact with her. The friends made plans for Goettsch to meet up with Lass at her POE and from there she would follow her back to her new place. I should note, there does seem to be some uncertainty on the exact date Goettsch arrived: I’ve seen it reported as the 7th or 8th, but according to a PI report (more on that later) it’s the 7th so I’m going with that. After Donna vanished without a trace, multiple members of her family as well as her friends, acquaintances, and coworkers were interviewed and polygraphed, but unfortunately nothing of value was obtained. After she vanished Lass’ family flew in from Sioux Falls for a week to help look into her disappearance (her sister Mary stayed for two). According to her loved ones, Donna had a lot of friends and ‘would never just run off without telling someone.’
After searching a bit for Donna with another friend, Jo Ann eventually went spoke with one of her coworkers Victor Johnson, who was unable to provide much helpful information about her missing friend. The two stayed with him until around 4 AM, and he kept repeating over and over that he knew nothing about where Lass was or what happened to her. After no luck in finding her friend, Goettsch booked a motel room for that night and drove back to San Francisco the following day. After interviews with friends, family, and acquaintances of Johnson, investigators determined he had an ‘evasive manner,’ which left him as the individual they felt was most likely responsible for Lass’ disappearance as far as motive, opportunity, and reason were concerned. Despite multiple interviews and a polygraph examination, the suspect was never charged in relation to Donna’s disappearance.
Investigators spoke with Dorothy Cullison, who was employed at a local storefront called ‘Tahoe Paradise. Sheshared with them that she saw Lass the day after she was supposedly last seen on September 7th at roughly 3-4 in the afternoon. She was walking south on Pioneer Trail and was in the company of a young, clean shaven blonde man. Mrs. Cullison was unable to give LE any additional information regarding either individual, however she was insistent that the woman she saw was Donna Lass. She also claimed that they briefly spoke as well. If this is true, then Mrs. Cullison would be the last known person to see Lass alive. According to PI Miller’s report (again, more on that later), on October 21, 1970 the South Tahoe PD spoke with Joe Hershey from the Des Moines FBI office, who reported that he helped expedite a civilian stop order for Lass’ ‘file in Washington.’ Roughly a week later on October 27 a long distance call was made from LE to Jeremiah Murphy, a lawyer in Sioux Falls. Mr. Murphy shared that he was in contact with former FBI Director Herbert Hoover with the request that he help intervene on behalf of the Lass family in order to put the case more in the spotlight; no return call was ever received, however it does appear that Hoover did at one point attempt to help with her case (although I’m not exactly sure what he did).
On September 21, 1970 law enforcement contacted Tahoe National Bank, where Lasshad an account and spoke with Clarise Chapman. Mrs. Chapman reported that theyreceived no checks from Donna after September 1 and flagged her account for activity. She also had an account at the Bank of America in Tahoe, and there was no suspicious activity related to that one either (it was flagged as well). Additionally there was no suspicious activity before or after September 6, 1970 that had shown up on her credit card; her drivers license was flagged for activity as well.
George Victor Johnson, a security guard that worked with Donna during her final shift at the Casino, shared with investigators that he interacted with her on multiple occasions the evening she disappeared. Despite no criminal record, there is a notation in the private investigator’s report that he was ‘unstable and a heavy drinker, also not to be believed all the time.’ Another new acquaintance of Donna’s from the casino said that they were friendly and went out for drinks on occasion after work but she didn’t consider her a ‘close friend.’ The unidentified woman also shared that she saw Lass on September 9, 1970 when she went with Lass and another friend Dwight Stogsdale to take a third friend named Teke Holland to San Francisco to join the Army, but investigators determined that she had her dates incorrect and meant to say September 2nd. Additionally, two days before the friends went to San Francisco Lass was seen with two males that were employed at Barney’s Department store. Mrs. Tooker, who worked for the Lake Tahoe Ambulance company, looked into her log from September 6 to the 23rd and didn’t come across any reports of Jane Doe’s that matched Lass’ description.
The Lowe’s shared with law enforcement that the last time they saw Donna was on September 4, 1970 at around 11:30 PM. They also said that she was newly acquainted with a young man named ‘Dave’ that was employed at a local Chevron Station in Stateline. She reportedly went to see him a few times while on her way to work dressed in uniform, and that he went to her POE to visit with her on multiple occasions, but the pair never dated. The couple also volunteered that their friend dated a Maitre D named Ramon Vasuez that also worked at her POE. Apparently at one point during their time together the young man ‘went in for a kiss’ but was rejected; he did apologize to her the next day. Vascuas told investigators that he saw her ‘several times’ that Labor Day weekend but was ‘very busy at the time.’ He also said that he ‘never took her anywhere outside of their place of employment’ and his relationship with her didn’t go beyond a friendly occasional drink and conversation after their shift ended. Just as a side note, I was reading some comments from an interview posted on YouTube that an amateur true crime sleuth did with Larry Lowe, and some viewers pointed out that they felt his demeanor was suspicious and that he appeared to be visibly nervous. Although another commented that these were signs of Parkinson’s disease, so who knows? Lowe was looked into by LE but was eventually cleared.
Before she disappeared Lass briefly dated a writer from Keno, Oregon named Tony Chapman. When LE tracked him down Chapman shared with them that he never really ‘dated’ her but they did get together a few times to talk after she got out of work (on occasion they would end their night at around 5 AM). They went out on three different occasions but never even kissed. The last time he saw Donna was on September 2, when he and another friend named Vern Lauflin went out with her after work for about two hours.
There was a popular rumor floating around (and it was reported on by The Bee) that the day following Donna’s disappearance an unknown male made sinister telephone calls to her employer and landlord claiming that she had returned home to South Dakota due to a family illness (or emergency, I’ve seen it reported as both) and would ‘not be available.’ However, it was eventually determined that no such call was ever received by the landlord, and it cannot be confirmed nor denied whether or not a misleading call was ever received by her employer. Where this story originated from has yet to be identified, and there was no illness in the Lass family at that time. On page three of the Millers PI report there is a notation that a security guard named Gordon Petrovich at the Sahara received a call from a ‘Mr. Davis’ related to Lass. Petrovich claimed that he left a note on the security desk regarding the call; he did not recognize the voice and didn’t remember what time the call came in. When investigators searched Donna’s apartment it was tidy and undisturbed with no signs of a struggle, and there was a pile of neatly folded clothes on her bed, waiting to be put away. The only unusual thing worth mentioning about the scene was there was a light left on in her bathroom. All of her personal belongings were left behind, including her purse, expensive clothing, and cosmetics bag. No fingerprint samples were taken from Donna’s apartment or vehicle.
A security guard that worked at the same casino as Lass filed a missing persons report for her three days after her disappearance. Less than a month after she disappeared on October 2, 1970 her sister Mary Pilker contacted a Private Investigator named John Miller to help look into her sister’s disappearance. According to the PI report, earlier in the day Lass disappeared she walked through her new apartment with both its old and new managers of the complex (a Nick Davis and Frank DeSimone, respectively) and completed a general move-in checklist. The two men reported her living space was neat and clean, with her bed made and her nurses hat on her dresser. On September 11 DeSimone went into her apartment and noticed it was in similar fashion to the first time he was there, and the only thing unusual was that the bathroom light was left on. After Donna disappeared Sargent Turker picked up her mail at the post office and gave it to Pilker, who drove her car back to California, taking with her Donna’s possessions from her apartment: ‘we drove her convertible home, packed all her things, and we were scared the whole way home.’ A few personal items that belonged to Donna were discovered in a shallow grave, but where that site was and what those items were I don’t know.
In September 1970 when Lass disappeared it looks like Bundy was employed as a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company, a family owned medical supply company; he worked there from June 5, 1970 to December 31, 1971. In mid-1970, he re-enrolled in the undergraduate psychology program at the University of Washington and was living at the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue. Additionally he was in the early stages of a long-term, committed relationship with Liz Kloepfer at this time, so he had a lot of established roots in the general Seattle area. Although attractive, Lass didn’t really fit Bundy’s typical victim profile: she had blonde hair that she wore short, which obviously doesn’t fit the whole ‘long brown hair parted down the middle’ narrative we are all familiar with (which I think it all just a coincidence and was simply a popular hairstyle in the 1970’s). She was also 25, which (although not entirely out of the question) is definitely on the older end of Bundy’s victims. Additionally, she was taken from her apartment that was in no way related to a college campus. But at the same time, we have to keep in mind that Donna was attractive and well educated, which we ALL know is absolutely Bundy’s type.
When analyzing the logistics of Bundy killing the pretty young nurse, the scene of the abduction was about 12 hours and 55 minutes away (or 764 miles, one way) from where he lived in Seattle… but let’s think about it, he had a lot on his plate at the time Donna disappeared, did he really have time to drive all the way to Nevada to commit a murder? Well, in this instance, it turns out he may have: although not on the ‘the FBI TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ according to Redditor ‘triddy6,’ Ted got a speeding ticket in Lake Tahoe a week before Lass was abducted. At first I was hesitant on believing this, because I could’t find it anywhere else, then I found the following in Rob Dielenbergs ‘Ted Bundy: A Visual Timeline,’ for the date August 20, 1970 ‘Jerry Thompson logged a call from Detective Pat O’Neil from the Sheriff’s Office in Sacramento, California on October 21, 1975. He informed Thompson that Mr. Bundy had a traffic citation on August 20, 1970 in Marin County, the Bay area, and he was driving an old white pick up truck. Liz stated that ‘he purchased a white Ford pick up truck he has presently in the SLC area around one year ago before he left for SLC.’ (Ira Beal report post Liz Kloepfer interview, September 17, 1975).’ So he was at least in the same area in the general time frame that she disappeared. A few entries down in the same text, on September 4, 1970 it’s reported Bundy returned home to Seattle with Liz after returning from vacation: they traveled all over the place, first to the Watastch Mountains in Utah, then to Ogden, then to Yakima, WA then Baker, Oregon then back to Ogden again. His whereabouts for September 6, 1970 seem to be unaccounted for. September is the most popular time of the year to go to Lake Tahoe, and it is a popular area that skiers flock to as well, and we know at least one of Bundy’s victims was abducted from a ski resort (Caryn Campbell on January 12, 1975 from The Wildwood Inn in Snowmass Village near Aspen). Playing devil’s advocate, we know he was an avid night person and had no problem driving long distances when looking for prey. As we know he didn’t mind traveling far to help throw police off his trail, and it didn’t hurt that he was aware that police agencies were reluctant to share information with each other. Was Donna just another one of Ted’s ‘murders of opportunity?’ It’s worth noting that not only do we have confirmed kills from Washington, Colorado, Utah, Oregon, Florida, and Idaho, I’ve also written about numerous other states he could have been active in as well (New Jersey, Arizona, and Vermont). I will say that September 1970 is definitely on the early side of when Ted may have started killing: he told psychologist Arthur Norman that he killed two girls in New Jersey in 1969 (most likely the Garden State Parkway Murders, Susan Perry and Elizabeth Davis), but when he was doing his death row confessions he told Dr. Keppel that he committed his first murders in 1972. Before his execution Bundy was never questioned about Lass’ disappearance.
It’s often wondered if Lass is the final victim of the Zodiac Killer, and she is included in the list of his potential 37 victims. Although I’ve seen that number as high as 48, law enforcement have only confirmed four attacks took place: five victims were killed and two survived. I mean, the Zodiac wasn’t known to abduct his victims, but he was known to contact LE to taunt and anonymously take responsibility for his crimes, as he wanted recognition for what he did. There was a possible link though to Donna and the very first majorly suspected Zodiac suspect: William Joseph Grant,who (like Ted Bundy) got a speeding ticket in his white Chevrolet at roughly the time Lass disappeared. Grant (who is referred to as ‘Andrew Todd Walker’ in Robert Graysmith’s true crime classic, Zodiac) was fifty-seven in September 1970, had glasses, and wore his dark hair combed into a pompadour. He served in the military from January 1942 through November 1945 and allegedly taught cryptography and received code training. Walker lived in Suisun, California and was employed as a real estate salesman in Fairfield. According to a report by the Solano County Sheriff’s Office, he was seen ‘hanging around the rest stop area on Hunters Hill engaging in homosexual activities.’ Sergeant Les Lundblad, who investigated the Zodiacs first confirmed ‘Lake Herman Road murders’ that occurred in the outskirts of Benicia, spoke with the suspect and noted his ‘hostile manner towards a CHP officer.’ Sergeant Lundblad reported Walker to authorities after he played a game of ‘cat and mouse’ with his vehicle on a freeway one evening. One-time California Highway Patrol Officer Lyndon Lafferty was the first to suspect Grant, and he later published his own book titled ‘The Zodiac Killer Cover-Up (aka The Silenced Badge).’
Another serial killer suggested in the strange disappearance of Donna Lass is Joseph James DeAngelo, who is also known as the Golden State Killer. Looking into DeAngelo it appears that he began ransacking homes in 1968 but he didn’t begin his murder spree until April 1974, plus he operated mostly in California’s Sacramento County, so Donna disappeared quite a bit before he started.
A popular name I saw thrown around in relation to the disappearance of Donna Lass was Richard Joseph Gaikowski. A newspaper editor at the time of the Zodiac murders in the late 1960’s, Gaikowski was initially considered a person of interest largely because of his training as a medic in the Army. This is because victim Paul Stine’s shirt was ripped, which was a common bandaging technique taught to medics in the military. In addition to this, Stine’s sister also remembers seeing him at her brother’s funeral. He also had a tendency to shorten his surname to ‘Gike’ or ‘Gyke,’ the latter of which was used in several Zodiac cyphers. Police dispatcher Nancy Slover, who the Zodiac spoke with after his attacks on Darlene Ferrin and Mike Mageau (Ferrin was killed but Mageau survived), claimed that the voice of Gaikowski matched that of the caller. Strangely rough, in 1971 Gaik was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward, and the Zodiac communications ceased for roughly three years. Redditor ‘AllyNC’ commented that he ‘had a widows peak, knew about codes, and had been questioned by police.’ Nothing official has ever linked Richard Gaikowski to Donna Lass’ disappearance.
On March 22, 1971, Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ received a postcard (with no postmark) from a person claiming to be the Zodiac and insinuated that Donna Lass was one of his victims (Avery was a well known reporter that frequently wrote about the murders). The postcard was an altered advertisement for ‘Forest Pines at Incline: Lake Tahoe’s Forest New Condominiums located in Include Village, Nevada.’ The correspondence contained five phrases glued onto the advertisement: 1. ‘Sierra Club’ 2. ‘Sought Victim 12’ 3. ‘Peek through the pines’ 4. ‘pass Lake Tahoe areas’ 5. ‘Around in the snow (pasted upside down).’ The meaning behind the messages have yet to be determined. It’s thought that it was designed and sent by the Zodiac sometime in between March 19 and March 21, 1971, and was mailed out either on March 22/23.
The Pines postcard never made any direct reference to Lass, and only hinted at a possible connection through the ‘Lake Tahoe’ and ‘Sierra Club’ references. If she was murdered by the Zodiac and this was set by him then the correspondence may hold an important hidden message… or, it may simply be a hoax. Additionally, if the postcards creator was in fact the Zodiac, then there’s always the possibility that he was a resident of the South Lake Tahoe area at the time of Lass’ abduction and that he was connected to her somehow or knew her in some way. The authenticity of the correspondence has divided the true crime community ever since it was received, but according to the creator of the website ‘zodiackiller.com,’ ‘in 1999 a retired detective revealed to me that a former Zodiac investigator had admitted to forging the Lass postcard.’ I want to point out that I only found this information in a single source, and there was nothing of substance to back that up. I mean, there’s so much back and forth with this case, who knows what’s truth and what’s fiction.
Donna’s sister Mary got a strange Christmas card on December 27, 1974 with the signature ‘Best Wishes, St. Donna and Guardian of the Pines.’ The card’s picture was an array of snowy pine trees on a beautiful winter’s day, and its postmark was 940, meaning it was mailed from San Mateo County or an adjacent section of Santa Clara County. Pilker immediately turned it over to law enforcement, and it was eventually determined to be a fake. It was a hoax sent from a couple who read about the Lass case, and had no connection to the Zodiac.
Before she moved to Nevada Lass lived in the same area where the Zodiac operated out of, and even worked at a hospital in Presidio Park close to where their final (confirmed) victim Paul Stine was killed on October 11, 1969. Did he stalk Lass while she lived in San Francisco but maybe she moved away unexpectedly and prematurely, and he followed her to Nevada to finish what he started? I did read somewhere that if Donna was killed while employed on a military base then her case may have become Federal and would have been under a microscope even more. But on the flip side, there is always a chance that the Pines postcard wasn’t sent by the Zodiac, and was designed by a different assailant in an attempt to deflect attention away from the South Lake Tahoe region and towards the San Francisco Bay area where the Zodiac operated out of?
The search for Donna Lass would be negatively affected by the poor weather conditions in the months following her disappearance: South Lake Tahoe experienced record breaking amounts of snow in November and December 1970. From the onset, former South Lake Tahoe PD Chief Ray Lauritzen said that: ‘we don’t know where we’re going to begin. There’s a four or five foot pack of snow out there and it’s still snowing heavily.’ The Pines postcard made a reference to snow, in an almost sinister way by putting the phrase ‘around in the snow’ at ground level and upside down. By doing this, the creator may have hinted that Lass was buried under snow. A newspaper article stated that ‘the site depicted on the ‘Pines Card’ was from an advertisement published last Sunday by several newspapers. It was an artist’s rendition of houses among the trees at a Boise Cascade Company project at Incline Village, where construction has just begun on the development. While much of the Sierra area is under several feet of snow, Incline Village has only two feet on the ground. Police went to the area to determine if a search is possible.’ Chief Lauritzen added that ‘there’s no point to a search at this time. It’s unlikely a victim would be uncovered before spring.’
In his book ‘Zodiac,’ Robert Graysmith interviewed Jo Anne Goettsche, a former roommate of Donna Lass when she was living at 225 Malorca Way in San Francisco. They worked together at Letterman General Hospital at the Presidio Army Base, and lived together until June 1970 when Donna moved to South Lake Tahoe. Just as a side note, the ‘Presidio’ is close to where taxi driver and Zodiac victim Paul Stine was killed on October 11, 1969, and it was where a man that was strongly suspected to have been the Zodiac, was seen walking away immediately afterwards. Goettsche said that she and Donna used to go flying with two men from Riverside when they lived in San Francisco (a bit more on that later). There’s also a comment on a podcast about the Zodiac made by user ‘Sandy Betts’ that Lass ‘feared the dark, and would stay up all night gambling. Before walking home. But then we have the PI who said she walked home when it was dark.’ I didn’t listen to the podcast itself but this is the only source I’ve come across that mentions Donna gambling, but maybe it was fairly new behavior, as she had only recently begun working at a casino. Maybe she was just experimenting.
In August 2000 former detective Harvey Hines began to investigate the abduction of Donna Lass. Retired from the Groveland, California police force since 1992, Hines had an avid interest in the Zodiac case and has studied it since 1973. He even became friends with the Lass family, and along with Mary and Don Pilker (Donna’s nephew) became convinced the Zodiac was responsible for Donna’s disappearance. In an interview with The Tahoe Daily Tribune, Hines stated that ‘there was a lot of evidence inside Sahara Tahoe Casino that she left directly from there. She was a very personal person and she left a lot of personal items behind; an opened letter, a dirty uniform and on her log, a pen was dragged from the last word she wrote to the bottom of the page.’
Hines firmly believes that Lass was abducted from her place of employment right at shift change: according to her friends and colleagues, she was a conscientious and reliable worker and would never just take off. This coupled with the strange pen mark (and unusual handwriting) on the nursing log suggests that she was either physically assaulted here, or was possibly distracted and lured away with the ruse of needing help in the casino’s car park (where she was most likely abducted from). Despite the overwhelming evidence that suggests Lass walked to work the evening she disappeared and never left the Hotel on her own, many true crime fans strongly feel that she may have made her way back to her apartment in her Camaro, where her abductor was waiting for her. Or, maybe he followed her from the hotel to the Monte Verde apartments and attacked her there, or even en route. Hines strongly speculated that Lass was buried on the Donner Ski Ranch, which was actually searched after an anonymous tip was mailed in about a suspected dump site. Bomb sniffing and cadaver dogs were taken to Mount Diablo near Donner Canyon to comb the area, but came up with nothing. The following is from an unreleased, 120-page investigative report completed by Hines: ’after studying the card, I drove to Nordin, located on old Highway 40, north of Lake Tahoe, and found the SIERRA CLUB. I learned the club was not called the Sierra Club. It was named the Clair Tappaan Lodge and it was a private club for Sierra Club members only. I believed if I followed the directions on the postcard I would find Donna Lass’ grave. I believe she was buried near the Sierra Club and most likely on the Donner Ski Ranch. I would later have the pictures of the Sierra Club developed. Then using a copy of Zodiac’s card, I cut out the phrases he had pasted on his card. Using these phrases, I overpasted them on the copy of the Sierra Club picture. It was strikingly similar to the original card.’
On April 20, 1970, a cipher was sent to the San Francisco Chronicle that contained only 13 letters, widely known as the ‘My Name Is…Letter.’ Hines felt that he successfully solved it, revealing the name ‘Lawrence Kane.’ Looking into him, Kane worked with Donna at the Letterman General Hospital at the Presidio Army Base, and lived next to her in San Francisco. He was a known peeping Tom and was in the Navy. According to Redditor ‘MozartofCool,’ he moved to Nevada around the same time as Lass and even got a job at the same hotel that she was employed at. Hines also claimed that Kane sold Arizona real estate from an office located across the street from the apartment building where Donna lived.I couldn’t find any proof of any form of relationship between the two, but there is a theory that he became obsessed with her after seeing her when they worked together in California, and ‘grabbed her when he knew she would be alone.’ The former detective drew additional parallels to Kane and the Zodiac, including similar penmanship styles and physical appearance. A former military man, Kane suffered a traumatic brain injury in 1962 and as a result was diagnosed as being able to control his urges and related to ‘self-gratification.’ Nothing of substance ever linked him to the disappearance of Donna Lass. Zodiac killer or not, Kane was a career criminal, even going so far as to rob a bank at one point in his life. Reading through the Zodiac Reddit pages, it seems that he is one of the more heavily discussed suspects. An interesting tidbit about him: in 1992 suspected Zodiac victim Kathleen Johns picked his photo out of a line-up and identified him as the man who attempted to abduct her and her baby in March 1970.
In a YouTube video made by the creator ‘BlackBoxOnlineRadio,’ user ‘captainj1339’ mentioned a possible suspect of James Richard Curry. Curry was a rapist and serial killer that murdered either four or five people in California and Nevada from 1982 to 1983. A few days after he was arrested he hung himself in his cell. He was most famous for posthumously being Id’ed as the killer of Mary Silvani, who was formerly referred to as the Sheep Flats Jane Doe. Looking into him it does appear Lass’ disappearance took place quite a bit before he was active, as his earliest suspected murder took place in 1978. Another YouTube video discussed another potential Zodiac suspect I never heard of before named Don Harden. A school teacher by trade, Harden broke the Zodiacs first (and longest) cipher, the 408 code (sent on July 31, 1969). The code was split into three pieces of equal length: two were mailed to newspapers in San Francisco and one to a paper in nearby Vallejo. He demanded they be printed or he would go on a ‘kill rampage.’ I mean, most of the information I found related to Harden was related to the fact that he solved the cipher, and there’s just a few small niche groups of amateur Zodiac researchers that suspect he created the cipher and is also the best suspect. It doesn’t hurt that his wife Bettye was a graphologist. Yet another new name I came across is Joseph Stephen Holt, a murderer and suspected serial killer who in 2019 was posthumously linked via DNA to two murders committed in South Lake Tahoe that occurred between 1977 and 1979. He was a real estate agent and died in 2014 without ever being considered a suspect. Since he was identified, authorities have been investigating whether he could be responsible for more violent crimes that were committed in the state, including the disappearance of Donna Lass.
I came across another potential suspect one night scrolling through Facebook looking for anything additional I might have missed. A Facebooker named Randall Higgins claims that it was his father, Robert Melvin Higgins that was the Zodiac and the killer of Donna Lass. On his page he goes over a few reasons why he feels this is the case, it’s all mostly cipher related and how he feels they’re particular to his Dad and his life (I’ll include screenshots below), but in a different post he claims that his dad became a much kinder and more caring person after he quit using amphetamines in 1980. Higgins also said that both of his parents were users of the prescription drug Thalidomide, which he felt might have contributed to his Dads altered mental state and what turned him into the Zodiac. He said his mother took the drug for 2-6 weeks when she was pregnant with him but his Dad took it anytime he could get his hands on it. Looking into it, Thalidomide is used to treat and prevent ‘erythema nodosum leprosum,’ a painful skin disease associated with leprosy and when paired with dexamethasone treats multiple myeloma. It works on the immune system and helps to reduce inflammation. So, I don’t really understand the need to take it with such urgency, it’s not a narcotic and won’t get you high. I was also able to find a TikTok video Mr. Higgins made where he broke down his rationale as to why he feels his dad was responsible for Lass’ death: apparently the weekend she disappeared in September 1970 he sat his entire family down and told them that he was going to Modesto to help take care of his adoptive parents, as his ‘father’ had recently been diagnosed with colon cancer. However Higgins suspected that his father never made it to Modesto and instead went to South Lake Tahoe and killed Donna Lass. He also said his father is DB Cooper so… I don’t know. At this time I’m taking this guy’s tale with a grain of salt.
On one of my final days of doing research, I came across a YouTube Channel of a PhD named ‘David Gold’ who claims to have found the body of Donna Lass in an unmarked grave on some uninhabited land in Lake Tahoe. Looking into this guy, he’s absolutely hellbent that the Zodiac killer is a Alcatraz escapee named Frank Morris as well as DB Cooper, the guy who hijacked a Boeing 727 aircraft on November 24, 1971 (but oddly enough, he isn’t the only person that feels this way). It appears policing agencies didn’t take his claims very seriously and never even looked into the site. The grave, decorated with an array of glued together rocks and pine cones, was obviously deemed not to be the final resting site of Lass, as it was recently announced that her remains were actually recovered in early 1986 (but more on that later). As of January 2024 there is nothing linking Morris or Cooper to the disappearance of Lass (or any other Zodiac murder).
One time Orange County Sheriff’s Inspector Stanley Parsons said that ‘if the Zodiac claims he killed the missing nurse at Lake Tahoe, and if in fact he did slay her, then there is a very good chance he also killed Miss. Hakari and Miss. Bennalack.’About six months before Lass disappeared on March 7, 1970 23 year-old Judith Hakari had just finished her shift at the Sutter Memorial Hospital in Sacramento. It’s suspected she was abducted shortly after pulling into the parking lot of the Markston apartments where she lived at around 11:30 PM. The young RN had made plans to see her fiance, Raymond Willis, who was planning on meeting her at her home at around 11:45 PM. Willis waited for Hakari and became concerned when she didn’t show up. It was around 1:45 in the morning that he walked around the complex’s parking lot to check if her Mercury Cougar was there. It was, and after seeing it parked in its usual spot he immediately contacted the police. Upon investigating, Hakari’s vehicle showed signs of a struggle: the passenger’s side door was left open, her keys were found on the floorboard, and ripped up strips of a Cannon-brand towel were strewn all over the inside. Her remains were discovered roughly 40 miles from her apartment by hikers in a shallow grave near Ponderosa Way in Weimar on April 25, 1970. The pretty young nurse experienced an absolutely brutal death: her nose was smashed in repeatedly and her hyoid bone was fractured. Her jaw was broken in two places and she had several teeth knocked out. She had also been strangled and raped.
Twenty-seven year old Nancy Bennallack was found stabbed to death in her residence at the Tahitian Apartments on October 25, 1970.She lived just one block away from the Markston Apartments where Judith Hakari lived before she vanished. The attractive young court reporter lived alone in an upstairs apartment and was last seen alive by her fiance on October 25, 1970 at approximately 11:30 PM. When she didn’t come into work the next morning, her coworker called her son to check on her. The friend’s son explained the situation to Nancy’s apartment manager, who was sympathetic and gave him a spare key. After letting himself in, the young man came across a gruesome sight: Nancy had been brutally murdered andwas stabbed so viciously that she was nearly decapitated. In 2021 advancements in genetic genealogy helped to identify Bennallack’s killer as Richard John Davis, who lived in the apartment building across from her. Sadly, Davis will never face justice because he died of an alcohol related illness on November 2, 1997.
On July 24, 1977, Brynn Rainey vanished after she was last seen at the Bittercreek Saloon in Stateline, Nevada. Originally from Ohio and employed at the Sahara Tahoe Casino, when the 27-year-old didn’t arrive at work for her usual shift the next day she was reported as missing. After walking through her apartment, investigators determined that there were no signs of a struggle and nothing had been stolen. Rainey was missing for slightly less than a month when a horseback rider found her remains in a shallow grave near a South Lake Tahoe horse riding area called Stateline Stables on August 20. From the small amount of forensic evidence investigators were able to gather from the scene, it was determined that she had been raped and then strangled to death. Less than two years later on June 30, 1979 Carol Andersen traveled from her parents house in Stateline to a party at Regan Beach, which was close to South Lake Tahoe. When her good time was over she declined a ride home from her friends, and it’s speculated that the 16-year-old most likely walked for a bit before eventually thumbing a ride from a passing motorist. The following morning, someone driving by the Pioneer Trail (which is where Donna Lass lived before she disappeared) came across her lifeless body; her killer made no effort to conceal her corpse. After her remains were sent for an autopsy in Sacramento, the coroner determined that she had been bound, gagged and strangled to death by her assailant. Although these murders happened near to where Lass had recently moved to there was nothing linking them to her disappearance.
A name that came up fairly frequently in my Lass research is Charles Hollingsworth, a doctor with a successful practice that lived in South Lake Tahoe. In fall 1970, Dr. Hollingsworth was recently divorced with two young daughters, and his marriage had recently fallen apart after years of infidelity. His ex-wife remarried, but he found himself alone and experiencing financial concerns; members of his family shared that they felt he may have had undiagnosed Manic Depression. On October 26, 1970, Charles left his practice after a disagreement and was never seen or heard from again. His vehicle was found abandoned in a desolate area 24 miles away from where he was last seen; inside it were several of his personal belongings, including a gun and his running shoes. It’s strongly speculated that his case is somehow related to the disappearance of Donna: at one time they may have worked together at Letterman Hospital when she was still living in San Francisco. Charles was also a known gambler, and it’s speculated that he spent a good amount of his spare time at the casino where Lass worked. As I mentioned earlier, the young RN enjoyed going flying with her friend Jo Ann, and Charles had his pilot’s license and owned his own plane (although there is no proof they were ever on an airplane together). Aside from this, they both worked in the medical field and Donna’s new apartment was less than a mile away from where Charles lived (she resided at 3893 Pioneer Trail and he lived at 3840 Pioneer Trail), there really isn’t anything substantial tying the two disappearances together.
In July 2007 the Sierra Sun reported that amateur Zodiac sleuth Clifton Calvez went to South Lake Tahoe PD and told them that he may have located the final resting place of Donna Lass using satellite imagery. After initially being dismissed because of the ‘Angora fires’ that were taking place at the time, Calvez said ‘screw it. I was fed up,’ and took off to check out the site on his own. He brought with him two disposal cameras he bought from a local pharmacy and a printout of the Google Earth map he used in his investigation. A retired colonel in the Air Force, Calvez admitted that he wouldn’t mind receiving the monetary reward for solving the Lass disappearance. According to the article, ‘as he ventured into the woods, Calvez said he saw a baboon and satyr etched into the bark of two trees. The baboon is the guardian referenced in the message to Lass’ sister in the Christmas card that read: ‘Best Wishes, St. Donna & Guardian of the Pine.’ After relentlessly contacting authorities and media representatives via phone calls and emails, investigators gave in, and went to check out the site with him. Retired Lieutenant Marty Hale with the South Lake Tahoe PD said investigators remained interested in what Calvez had to say and were ‘planning on seeing what leads we have there.’
After waiting around for about an hour waiting to get permission to dig from the California Tahoe Conservancy, they started digging. Investigators dug a good four feet into the ground looking for the remains of Lass but sadly found nothing (except for a pair of sunglasses). It was then that Calvez shared that he knew of a second possible site nearby where Lass could have been buried, but this also resulted in nothing. Investigators quickly called off search efforts. Using a house built in 1976 as a reference point, Calvez still believes the young RN is buried somewhere in the same general area, and: ‘I was disappointed, but even at this point I think that’s the place. Somewhere around that tree, no doubt about it.’
On December 31, 1985 a jawbone complete with all of its teeth was found by a fisherman in a drainage ditch as he was traveling towards Lake Valley Reservoir near the I-80 and Highway 20, near the Yuba Gap in Placer County. During a follow-up search of the area conducted by (retired) deputy Lowell Carleton in January 1986, the rest of the skull was discovered near where the mandible was found. No additional body parts or evidence were found at the time. After its discovery investigators kept the skull stored away, waiting for the day where forensic technology would be able to identify the remains. In recent years the sheriff’s office teamed up with the Placer County District Attorney’s office to form a cold case team, and they sent the skull to the California Department of Justice for genetic testing. In December 2023 it came back a match to Lass after a DNA profile was created in 2018 when Mary Pilker gave investigators a sample.
So what took so long for the skull to be identified as belonging to Donna? South Lake Tahoe Police Chief David Stevensen said that at that time it was found DNA evidence just wasn’t advanced enough to get a sample. Despite the positive ID, LE aren’t any closer to solving who it was that took the young nurse’s life,anddidn’t share if they think foul play is suspected or how Lass died. South Lake Tahoe police are still actively investigating the case.
One interesting thing I came upon in my research is a comment in a YouTube video by the creator ‘BlackBoxOnlineRadio:’ user ‘colonelreb12014’ said that in an interview on the Peter Turner podcast with the Case Breakers, it was shared that Donna Lass reportedly dated and then dumped their Zodiac suspect Gary Poste’s brother. Some background: in October 2021, a team of cold case investigators calling themselves ‘The Case Breakers’ named US Air Force veteran Gary Francis Poste as the Zodiac killer. The video’s creator replied that he heard the same thing but had to wonder about the authenticity because the same group reported that victim Paul Stine owed Poste some money and that’s why he killed him. The creator said they were going to look into this further but I never saw anything additional from them about this. Despite their ‘discovery,’ the Zodiac investigation remains open to this day.
Interestingly enough, at one point Mary Pilker wondered if maybe Phillip Craig Garrido was responsible for her sister’s disappearance. Although Garrido infamously kidnapped Jaycee Lee Dugard in June 1991 (which is almost 21 years after Lass disappeared), he had an extensive criminal history that began well before then. A frequent drug user (primarily crystal meth and LSD), in 1972 he was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, but the case fell apart after she declined to testify. The following year, Garrido married his high school classmate Christine Murphy, but they later divorced after claims that he was abusive. Murphy also alleged that her husband kidnapped her when she attempted to leave him. While incarcerated at Leavenworth Prison in Kansas, Garrido met Nancy Bocanegra, who was there visiting her uncle, who was another prisoner. He and Bocanegra were married at Leavenworth on October 5, 1981. In 1976, Garrido kidnapped 25-year-old Katherine Callaway in South Lake Tahoe. He then drove her to a warehouse in Reno, Nevada where he brutally sexually assaulted her for five and a half hours. When a cop noticed an unusual vehicle parked outside the unit as well as a broken lock on the warehouse door, he knocked and was greeted by Garrido. The young woman then emerged and asked the officer for help. He was immediately taken into custody and was convicted of felonies in both federal and state courts.
In a 1976 court-ordered psychiatric evaluation, Garrido was diagnosed as a ‘sexual deviant and chronic drug abuser.’ A court appointed doctor recommended he undergo a neurological examination because of his chronic drug use, which may have been ‘responsible in part’ for his ‘mixed or multiple sexual deviations. During the examination, he shared that he enjoyed masturbateing in his vehicle on the side of elementary and high schools while watching young girls. The diagnostic tests came back that he had a: ‘normal neurological examination.’ On March 9, 1977 he was given a 50-year federal sentence on June 30, 1977, and was sent to Leavenworth Penitentiary; he was released only ten and a half years later on January 22, 1988. From there he was sent to Nevada State Prison, where he served only seven months of a five-years-to-life sentence and was granted federal parole on August 26, 1988. Upon his release, Garrido wore a GPS-enabled ankle bracelet and lived with his wife and elderly mother, who had dementia. In an interview with the ‘Reno Gazette Journal’ on April 5, 2014, Pilker said ‘as soon as I heard the Dugard case last week I thought that this could have something to do with my sisters disappearance.’ As of January 2024 nothing has ever officially linked Lass to Philip Garrido. He was apprehended along with his wife on August 26, 2009 and was sentenced to 431 years to life in prison. Nancy was sentenced to 36 years to life in prison.
Just as an interesting side note, according to true crime researcher TomVoigt fingerprint comparisons were made in February 1989 after Bundy was executed which eliminated him as a person of interest in the Zodiac murders. I’ve seen whispers and rumors about Ted being a possible suspect in the slayings, which took place in 1968-1969… but I guess this confirms it.
Both of Lass’ parents have passed away, as well as the majority of her siblings. Mr. Lass died at the age of 75 on March 30, 1973 and Frances passed away on August 5, 1982; she lived in a nursing home for the last seven years of her life. Donna was listed as a survivor in her dads obituary but was listed as deceased in her mothers. Her brother Raymond died on July 18, 1988 at the age of 69. He was a Master sergeant in the US Marine Corps in World War II and is buried in Riverside, CA. Marjorie (Bellach) died at the age of 77 on July 31, 2006. She loved spending time with her daughters and enjoyed cooking, gardening, and babysitting her grandchildren. Eugene Lass died on March 5, 2014 at the age of 90. He worked in farming and trucking, and enjoyed being outdoors. Mary (Pilker) passed away at the age of 85 on November 17, 2019. Like Donna, she was a nurse and got married to her husband Zane on August 29, 1959. They had four children together before he passed away from cancer only five years later on December 29, 1964 (Mary’s life is especially tragic). Karen (Lounsbery) passed away on February 10, 2020 at the age of 77. After graduating from cosmetology school, she ran a salon out of their home for several years. She raised a family with her husband Gary, and everyone loved her snickerdoodles and pie.
Donna Lass’ freshman picture in the 1959 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass in a group photo for debate club in the 1960 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass in a group photo for ‘inexperienced debators’ from the 1960 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass’ junior picture in the 1961 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass in an officers picture for the Future Homemakers of America from the 1961 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass’ senior picture in the 1962 Beresford High School yearbook.Donna Lass’ activities from her four years at Beresford High School from the 1962 yearbook.Donna Ann Lass.Donna Lass.Donna Lass at the age of 25; photo taken in 1970.Donna Lass.Donna Lass.A picture of Donna Lass using age progression technology. An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on September 22, 1970.An article about Donna Lass’ disappearance published by The Sacramento Bee on September 24, 1970.An article about Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on September 26, 1970.An article about the search for Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on September 28, 1970.An article about Donna Lass published by The Lead Daily Cal on October 6, 1970.An article about Mary Pilker beginning the search for her sister published by The Argus-Leader on October 9, 1970.An article about Mary Pilker continuing the search for her sister published by The Argus-Leader on October 17, 1970.An article about a reward for Donna published by The Sacramento Bee on February 6, 1971.An article about Donna Lass published by The Oakland Tribune on March 26, 1971.An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna published by The Times Standard on March 26, 1971.An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna published by The Bryan Times on March 26, 1971.An article about Donna Lass published by The Napa Valley Register on March 26, 1971.An article about Donna Lass published by The Bulletin on March 26, 1971.Part one of an article mentioning Lass published by The Times Standard on March 27, 1971.Part two of an article mentioning Lass published by The Times Standard on March 27, 1971.An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on March 28, 1971.An article mentioning Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on July 18, 1971.A blurb about a reward for information leading to the whereabouts of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on February 17, 1972.An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Peninsula Times Tribune on March 27, 1972.An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Times-Advocate on March 28, 1972.An article mentioning Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on August 8, 1972.An blurb pleading for information leading to the whereabouts of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on August 17, 1972.An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on April 26, 1975.An blurb about a reward for the recovery of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on August 31, 1975.An article about the skeletal remains of Donna Lass being found published by The Press-Tribune on January 2, 1986.An article about Donna Lass’ skull being recovered published by The Press-Tribune on January 23, 1986.An article about Donna Lass published by The Modesto Bee on September 2, 2000.An article mentioning Donna Lass published by The Los Angeles Times on September 2, 2000.An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on November 16, 2000.A missing persons poster for Donna Lass featuring information about the Zodiac. It was created by a friend of the Lass family in 1997 as an attempt to draw the killer out.A press announcement regarding the identification of Donna Lass’ skull that was published by the city of South Lake Tahoe PD in late December 2023.The Lass family’s ‘MyHeritage’ page.A map of Lass’s POE compared to her new apartment.The front of the ‘Pines’ Postcard sent to Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ on March 22, 1971.The ‘Pines Postcard.’ The text on the card read: 1. ‘Sierra Club’ 2. ‘Sought Victim 12’ 3. ‘Peek through the pines’ 4. ‘pass Lake Tahoe areas’ 5. ‘Around in the snow (pasted upside down).’ The ‘Pines’ postcards that was sent to Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle.’ The postcard was produced by the Zodiac killer, according to the California Department of Criminal Identification. It was delivered to the San Francisco Chronicle, addressed to reporter Paul Avery. The cross and circle is the symbol used by the Zodiac and the assumption is tat he may have buried a 12th victim under the snow near Lake Tahoe.The original, untouched advertisement.The envelope for a letter to Donna’s sister Mary that was mailed in 1974. A Christmas card sent to Mary Pilker that was mailed in 1974 that was a suspected correspondence from the Zodiac Killer.A Zodiac cipher from June 26th 1970. where he claims 12 victims. It was sent to the San Francisco Chronicle and the cipher at the bottom was never decoded.A breakdown of Lass related Zodiac information.Donna Lass Code Solution.The Monte Verde apartments.The Monte Verde apartments.The Monte Verdi apartments. Photo courtesy of ‘ZodiacKiller.’The Monte Verdi apartments. Photo courtesy of ‘ZodiacKiller.’The insides of a Monte Verde apartment.South Lake Tahoe police officer Chuck Owens digs into earth where a Zodiac researcher believes Donna Lass was buried by the serial killer in 1970. The early July 2007 dig did not reveal any human remains. Photo taken on July 27, 2007 and is courtesy of Sierra Sun News Service.Another picture from the 2007 dig site. Sierra Club stone cross.A red,1968 Chevy Camaro much like the one Lass drove.The Sahara Tahoe Hotel & Casino.Bundy’s whereabouts in fall 1970 according to the ‘1992 FBI Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’Richard Joseph Gaikowski.Lawrence Kane.Joseph Stephen Holt.James Richard Curry.Donald Gene Harden.An older picture of Zodiac suspect, Don Harden.A photo of Robert Melvin Higgins and his family (he’s the adult male). Photo courtesy of Randall Higgins.The first part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.The second part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.The third part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.James P. Lass’ WWI registration card.The Lass family in the 1950 census. It looks like Donna was child number 7 of 8.An Obituary for James P. Lass published in The Argus-Leader on March 31, 1973.An advertisement for an auction regarding the estate of James Lass published in The Argus-Leader on September 9, 1973.An Obituary for Frances Lass published in The Argus-Leader on August 8, 1982.A birth announcement for Raymond Lass published in The Argus-Leader on March 21, 1919.Donna’s sister Mary Pilker.An obituary for Donna’s sister Mary Pilker published by The Argus-Leader on November 20, 2019.Marjorie Marie (Lass) Bellach.The wedding announcement for Marjorie published in The Argus-Leader on December 2, 1948.Marjorie Marie (Lass) Bellach. She passed away in 2006.Eugene Lass, who passed away in 2014.Karen Katherine (Lass) Lounsbery. She passed away in 2020.The one time speculated gravesite of Donna Lass, thanks to amateur Zodiac researcher David Gold. Looking into him, most of his material is nonsense. The crucifix on the site where David Gold at one time speculated where Donna Lass’ remains were buried.Judith Ann Hakari.Nancy Marie Bennallack.Brynn Rainey.Carol Anderson.