Sherry Rae Deatrick.

Sherry Rae-Deatrick was born on September 12, 1956 to James and Mary (nee Fetz) Deatrick in New Albany, Indiana. Mr. Deatrick was born on August 20, 1931 and Mary was born on November 28,1935 in New Albany, IN. The couple were wed on March 16, 1956 and had two children together: Sherry and her brother, Timothy. James was employed as a computer operator for the corporate offices of Colgate-Palmolive Corporation and was a member of the Louisville Baseball Veterans Association, and the family was active at the Main Street United Methodist Church.

Sherry graduated from New Albany High School in 1976 and went on to earn her BA in Psychology from the University of Louisville, graduating magna cum laude. She briefly lived in NYC, where she was employed with Brooklyn Legal Services and at an insurance defense law firm while she was attending graduate school.  At some point she married a man named Donald Paul Breitfield Kaler, and when she returned home to Indiana in 1992 she enrolled in night classes at the Louis D. Brandeis School of Law at the University of Louisville, and worked full time while maintaining top grades. In Deatricks first year of law school she earned the Marilyn Meredith Memorial Award for top female student, and she was a member of the Journal of Family Law.

After graduating from law school in 1997 Deatrick worked at various law firms across the United States, and according to her ‘Linked In’ profile, she has worked as an attorney for herself since 2008, and specializes in both Social Security disability and Department of Veterans Affairs appeals. From November 2004 to 2008 she worked as a Project Manager for Tichenor & Associates, where she was responsible for several government contracts, bankruptcy debtor audits, and state healthcare programs. From 1999 to 2002 she worked as General Counsel under Governor Paul Patton in Frankfort, KY.

On her law practice’s (public) Facebook page, ‘Sherry R. Deatrick, Attorney,’ on February 23, 2012 she announced: ‘I am now admitted to practice in the US District Court, Southern District of Indiana.  Looking for office space in my hometown of New Albany.’ And almost ten years later on October 14, 2021 she said; ‘I’m back! I have relocated back home from Florida and I’m re-establishing my solo law practice again. My main focus is on social security disability law and bankruptcy. Serving Kentucky and Southern Indiana.’

Deatrick claims that she had an encounter with prolific serial killer Ted Bundy in the summer of 1974, and although she doesn’t provide an exact date that rough time frame fits perfectly into when he was active. I do want to say that on two separate occasions I tried to reach out to Sherry for clarification on this, but she didn’t see either of my messages. One day during summer school Sherry had gotten into an argument with her fiance and stormed away from him in a fit of anger, and as she was walking she was offered a ride from none other than Ted: “I’d had an argument with my fiancé and as he ­usually gave me a lift home from summer school, I set off home on foot. Then this cute guy pulled up and asked if I wanted a ride.’ She hesitated briefly, as she wasn’t one to take rides from strangers but after the man reassured her that she was safe, and he ‘was an assistant professor at the local school’ and ‘acting out of anger at my fiancé, I got in.’

Sherry told the man her address, which was roughly three miles away from where he picked her up in New Albany, Indiana, but instead of driving her directly home he stopped at a store to buy some beer: ‘he hadn’t asked my age and I wasn’t going to tell him how young I was. As we drank the beers, he said, ‘Why don’t we go for a ride?’’ She agreed. As the pair crossed the Ohio River and drove into a different state she began to feel nervous, and ‘felt a little worried but things were different in the 70’s. People were a lot more free sexually and I was no exception. It was all quite exciting and I decided to follow his lead though that seems pretty stupid now.’

At the time, Deatrick said that she was titillated at the thought of a romantic encounter with a handsome stranger, and called Bundy ‘handsome and ­hypnotic,’ which are words that are frequently used to describe him. After cruising around for about thirty minutes or so they arrived in Louisville, Kentucky, and the young man suddenly pulled off the main drag and into a parking lot: ‘it’s clear Bundy knew exactly where he was headed when he’d started driving. He must have scoped it out before picking me up. At the time I thought the ­location was a bit weird as the new housing estate wasn’t finished but I was quite adventurous.’ ‘Ted’ then led Sherry into a house that was under construction and “I thought it was nice that he was kissing me. I was still mad at my boyfriend and wanted to get back at him so I was up for it. Then all of a sudden, his hands were both going around my throat. I started to say, ‘Wait. Hold on.’

It was at that moment that they heard construction workers calling out nearby: they had returned from a break. About how things played out, Sherry said that ‘he was clearly ­rattled when he heard the ­voices and it was like he’d been shaken out of a trance.’ The man immediately took her back to his Beetle, thus ending their brief encounter: ‘I didn’t understand what had gone wrong. Why had he driven us all this way to make out, and then stopped suddenly? I worried I’d done something wrong?’ After driving back to New Albany in complete silence, ‘Ted’ dropped Deatrick off near her parents’ house then drove away into the night. She never saw him again.

Sherry kept the event to herself, and didn’t tell anyone about what happened to her. It wasn’t until the 1980’s that she read a book about Bundy and strongly felt there was a ‘good chance’ he was the man that she shared a brief romantic entanglement with in the summer of 1974. She speculates that maybe he was in the area looking at law schools to possibly attend: ‘maybe Bundy had gone there to scout it out and ­happened across me walking home. Later I heard Bundy say there were women in Kentucky who were lucky to be alive. I am certain I was one of those women. I fit the profile for most of his victims, walking alone, upset.’ Only in recent years did Deatrick tell her mother, who has since passed away: ‘she was so shocked but grateful I hadn’t been harmed. I hope young girls who read my story now will be more cautious than I was at that age. I was so naive and trusting and it almost cost me my life.’

In addition to being an attorney Deatrick has worn many hats over the duration of her career: she’s been a playwright, gallery curator, theatre critic, award-winning journalist, and (according to one blogger/artist) ‘a creator of whimsical and mysterious artistic creations.’ According to the website ‘annenberg.usc.edu,’ Sherry was at one time an ‘affiliated freelancer’ with the ‘Louisville Eccentric Observer’ that is based out of Kentucky (she was their theatre critic and won three awards three years in a row for her contributions to the paper). During her time at LEO, she largely focused on the arts and wrote pieces about celebrities like John Waters and local curiosities like Specific Gravity Ensemble (a group known for putting on micro-plays in elevators). Also, according to blogger and artist Jeffrey Scott Holland, Sherry at one time had her own art studio called the ‘Deatrick Gallery,’ which was located in Louisville; her medium included mosaics, crochet amigurumi, and ‘paper-mache miniature heads.’ According to the galleries ‘Geocities’ website, Deatrick’s gallery housed the work of several artists, including Jefferey Holland, Lila Afiouni, and Steve Rigot. She also put on a ‘one-woman performance’ named ‘Heads’ at her gallery in 2004, where she also sold her paper-mache heads that were painted bright colors.

I included Ted’s whereabouts in the summer of 1974 below, and nowhere in it does it say he visited the state of Indiana at any point in time. I understand that not every single one of his movements was recorded, but Indiana is many states away from the Rogers Rooming House in Seattle (where he was living at the time), and was a whopping thirty five hour drive away (and that’s just one way, without stops!). One would think he would have used a credit card to purchase gas at some point in the trip, and therefore would have been listed in the ‘1992 TB Multi agency Team Report.’

The summer of 1974 was a busy time for Bundy: in the late spring/early summer on May 30/June 1, 1974 he abducted and killed Brenda Carol Ball after she saw a band play at The Flame Tavern in Burien, WA. On June 11, 1974 Ted abducted then killed Georgann Hawkins from outside her sorority house at the University of Washington in Seattle. A little over a month later on July 14 he abducted and killed both Jan Ott and Denise Naslund from Lake Sammamish Park in Issaquah, and in late summer/early fall on September 2, 1974 he abducted and killed the unknown Idaho hitchhiker during his move from Seattle to SLC. At the time Bundy was also in a fairly committed, long term relationship with Elizabeth Kloepfer and was gearing up for his second attempt at law school in Salt Lake City. He also worked from May 3, 1974 to August 28, 1974 at the Department of Emergency Services in Olympia, WA.

Sherry Deatrick is the fourth living victim I’ve written about since I started writing about Ted Bundy (I briefly forgot about Susan Roller/’Sara A. Survivor’). The first was Sotria Kritsonis, who claims she escaped an encounter with Ted in the winter of 1972 after he asked if she wanted a ride while she was waiting at a bus stop on Rainer Street. The two drove around for a while, and after he realized she got her hair cut short he got angry and threw her out of his car. Kritsonis claims she saw him the following year on TV and immediately knew it was him… but it couldn’t have been Ted, because he wasn’t arrested for his crimes against women until August 1975, and he didn’t purchase his tan VW until the spring of 1973. Now, I suppose it’s possible she saw the news story about how he got caught wearing a disguise while infiltrating an event for the Washington state Democratic party, but I highly doubt it.

Rhonda Stapley is one of the more ‘out there’ living Bundy victims, and by this I mean she has been featured in various television specials and mini-series about the serial killer. Stapley was a twenty-one -year-old pharmacy student at the University of Utah when she claims Ted pulled over and asked if she wanted a ride back to her dormitory after a painful dental surgery in the fall of 1974. Like Kritsonis, she was sitting at a bus stop, and not long into the drive he looked at her and said, ‘do you know what? I am going to kill you now.’ He then knocked her unconscious and drove to a secluded canyon just outside of the city, where he beat and sexually assaulted her over and over again for hours before she was finally able to escape by jumping in a nearby stream. She eventually made her way back to the University of Utah, and because she was worried that her mother would pull her from school Rhonda kept the event to herself until 2011,: ‘I imagined people whispering, ‘that’s that girl who was raped.’ I didn’t want attention. I still don’t.’

Susan Lorrayne Roller (who writes under the pseudonym Sara A. Survivor) is an alleged repeat victim and long-time acquaintance of Bundy during the time he was active (and possibly before) in Washington state. She claims that she was friends with Georgann Hawkins as well, and where I couldn’t find any proof of any friendship (as in, pictures of them together) they were Pierce County Daffodil Princesses a year apart (Susan in 1972, Georgann in 1973). Roller claims that she dated Ted briefly before he began to routinely mentally and physically abuse her, and that he also stalked her during their time together at the University of Washington.

Roller has published three books about Bundy: the first is a memoir published in July 2016 and only a limited number of copies were printed (it has since been completely pulled to be ‘rewritten’); her website has disappeared as well because the domain wasn’t properly maintained. The second and third books are more based in facts, and are directly related to the Bundy investigation. In ‘Defense of Denial: Ted Bundy’s Final Prison Interview, 1989’ (published on April 5, 2016), Sarah released some interviews between Ted and Bob Keppell that supposedly provides evidence there were additional victims, and shows proof that police kept information related to the case from the public. Her third book, ‘Reflections on Green River: The Letters of, and Conversations with, Ted Bundy,’ was also published on April 5, 2016 and is ‘a collection of actual documents related to the interviews that took place between WA State authorities in 1984 and 1988 that were released to Roller after years of coming forward.’

James E. Deatrick died at the age of fifty-four on November 24, 1985, and Sherry’s mother Mary died at the age of 78 on March 26, 2014 at Floyd Memorial Hospital in New Albany, IN. Sherry is 67 years old (as of February 2025), and is a widow currently living in Largo, Florida. Her husband Donald Paul Breitfield Kaler died on January 30, 2000 at the age of forty-four, and according to his obituary, he was a US Army Veteran and a licensed attorney; he worked as a commercial insurance underwriter for the Kentucky Farm Bureau. Her brother Timothy A. Deatrick lives in Port Saint Lucie, Florida with his wife, Sandra.

Works Cited:
Deatrick, Sherry. (April 2, 2020). ‘Hypnotised by a Handsome Stranger.’ Taken February 25, 2025 from vtfeatures.co.uk
Deatrick, Sherry. (April 2, 2020). ‘True Life Lucky Escape: Hypnotised by a Handsome Stranger.’ Taken February 24, 2025 from vtfeatures.com
‘Deatrick Law Firm: Sherry R. Deatrick, Attorney at Law.’ Taken February 25, 2025 from piattorneylist.com/online/memberDetail38461.htm
Holland, Jeffrey Scott. ‘Unusual Kentucky: Sherry Deatrick.’ (June 7, 2010). Taken February 25, 2025 from unusualkentucky.blogspot.com
Punteha van Terheyden. (July 27, 2019). ‘Hitching a ride with handsome stranger Ted Bundy nearly cost me my life.’ Taken February 24, 2025 from ‘The Mirror.’
geocities.ws/deatrickgallery/deatrick.html

A picture of Deatrick from ‘The Mirror.’
A picture of Sherry Deatrick from her sophomore year from the 1972 New Albany High School yearbook.
Deatrick.
A picture of Deatrick I found on Pinterest.
A picture of Deatrick taken from the website ‘UnusualKentucky.blogspot.’
A picture of Sherry with her husband, Don. Photo courtesy of Facebook.
Deatrick.
A picture of Sherry and her mother Mary taken sometime in the 1990’s. Photo courtesy of Facebook.
Another picture of Sherry with a male friend. Photo courtesy of Twitter.
A recent picture of Sherry with a male friend. Photo courtesy of Twitter, because I refuse to call it X.
Another recent picture of Deatrick. Photo courtesy of Twitter.
Information related to Sherry’s law practice, taken from the website ‘UnusualKentucky.blogspot.’
The spread Deatrick did titled ‘Hypnotised by a Handsome Stranger.’
The layout of an article Deatrick did with the UK magazine ‘The Mirror.’
A comment from a Reddit post asking why a picture on Pinterest was for a woman named Donna Collins but it’s really for Sherry Deatrick.
A paper-mache head that blogger Jeffrey Scott Holland purchased after attending Deatricks one-woman show at her gallery in 2004.
Another piece of Sherry’s artwork, photo courtesy of geocities.ws/deatrickgallery/deatrick
Sherry mentioned in a list of people that passed the Kentucky bar exam in July 1997 published in The Courier-Journal on November 3, 1997. ·
A newspaper blurb mentioning Deatrick getting a position with the Louisville office of Dinsmore & Shohl LLP published in The Courier-Journal on December 3, 1997.
Deatrick’s name in an article about a lawsuit published in The Lexington Herald-Leader on January 19, 2005. 
Bundy’s whereabouts in the summer of 1974 according to the ‘FBI TB MultiAgency Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in the summer of 1974 according to the ‘FBI TB MultiAgency Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in the summer of 1974 according to the ‘FBI TB MultiAgency Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in the summer of 1974 according to the ‘FBI TB MultiAgency Team Report 1992.’
A possible route Bundy could have taken going from Seattle to New Albany, Indiana.
Deatricks fathers obituary published in The Courier-Journal on November 24, 1985.
Sherry’s husband Donald’s obituary published in The Courier-Journal on February 2, 2000.
Deatricks mother’s obituary published in The Courier-Journal on April 2, 2014.
Mary Fetz’s yearbook photo from the 195 New Albany High School yearbook.
A picture of Sherry’s mother.
Mary Deatrick.
A kind word about Deatrick’s mother taken from her memorial page on dignitymemorial.com.
Sotria Kristonis.
Susan L. Roller.
Rhonda Stapley.

‘The Idaho Hitchhiker,’ AKA the Snake River Jane Doe.

During his death row interviews in January 1989 Ted Bundy confessed to Idaho Investigators Randy Everitt and Russ Reneau that he killed a young hitchhiker in Idaho on September 2, 1974 near Treasure Valley by the Eisenmann exit on the I- 84 on the outskirts of Boise. The handsome twenty-seven-year-old was in the process of relocating from Seattle to Salt Lake City for his second attempt at law school when he stumbled upon the girl who he said had light brown hair, was between 16 and 18 years old, around 5’6″ tall; she was carrying a green backpack and wore a ‘simple beaded necklace with black and light-colored beads resembling spaghetti.’ Bundy said he strongly suspected that she was a runaway from Boise and was making her way to Montana or Wyoming, but he never gave investigators her name as he claimed to not know it. 

Upon leaving the I-84 (as he remembered it) in ‘the outskirts of Boise’ Bundy noticed a young woman hitchhiking at the top of the on ramp of the 1-84, which ran through a neighborhood he said was filled with ‘ranch style suburban houses.’ Ada County Sheriff’s deputy Tim Cooper said that he initially felt there were some inconsistencies regarding the description he gave of the area and 84 but eventually realized the area was under construction at the time he would have passed through in early September 1974. Judging from Ted’s recollection of ‘ranch styled houses’ on the edge of Boise, Cooper strongly feels that he picked up his young victim by the Eisenmann Rd exit located southeast of the Boise airport.

Many investigators believe that Bundy’s confession about the unknown Idaho hitchhiker is legitimate and may be one of his more honest moments, as he was largely truthful when discussing other confirmed homicides during his final days, including Lynette Culver, who is the killers only confirmed Idaho victim and whose remains have also never been recovered. During the hour long conversation, he told LE that the young girls green backpack did not go into the river like everything else that belonged to her, and it went with him to SLC, where he tossed it out his VW’s window near some garbage dumps (as it wasn’t strange to see discarded items scattered around the area). While being questioned by Idaho investigators, Bundy said that he could no longer remember her name and after he killed her he burned her identification card.

There’s some discrepancy in what happened immediately after the murder took place: the ‘TB MultiAgency Team Report’ says nothing about Ted returning to the area to dispose of the body on September 3rd, as it was never mentioned to Everitt and Reneau during their interview on January 22, 1989. However, according to Polly Nelson, the following day her client returned to the body and took Polaroids of the remains then dismembered her and dumped the pieces in a nearby river that is strongly believed to be the Snake River, a major waterway in the Pacific Northwest that is about 1,080 miles long.

Elizabeth Kendall gave some details about her personal recollection surrounding when Bundy left for law school on September 2, 1974 in early September 1974 in her 1981 book, ‘The Phantom Prince:’ that morning, her friend Mary Lynn Chino made everyone a big breakfast on her houseboat before he left for Utah, and during his drive Ted called her in the late afternoon/early evening from Nampa, ID to tell her that he loved her. She mentions that they had picnicked there on one of their vacations to Utah: ‘he called me again from outside of Salt Lake City to tell me where he was, and he called me from his apartment to tell me how much he loved the place I had found for him. We talked several hours a week, running up huge phone bills.’ Nampa was slightly over twenty-two miles from Boise, which would have put Bundy in the middle of the city in slightly over thirty minutes after he spoke with Kendall.

It’s worth noting that according to the ‘1992 TB Multiagency Team Report,’ Bundy stopped for gas the fourth time on September 2, 1974 somewhere within the city of Boise, although I do want to point out that Kevin Sullivan refers to different locations that Ted got gas that don’t quite match the 1992 TB MultiAgency Report: he said that he stopped for fuel the third time within ‘the Boise city limits’ and got fuel for the fourth and last time in the early hours of September 3rd in Burley, Idaho.

According to Russ Reneau, when he showed up to talk to Bundy in Starke, Florida ‘it was the first time I’ve ever been invited by a serial killer himself to come talk with him.’ … ‘It was clear that he was fatigued. I saw signs of stress and, through all of that, he was polite and actually amiable.’  … ‘In spite of his friendly persona, it was clear to me that we were dealing with an evil, a truly evil man.’  During their conversation the condemned man also gave very precise details about how he raped then killed Lynette Culver of Pocatello on May 6, 1975 and volunteered details that only her killer would have known. Regarding Culvers murder Reneau said that he strongly believed Bundy was responsible: ‘I feel like what we came away from out of that interview was able to bring closure to one Idaho family. That is always a good outcome.’ About both girls murders Tim Cooper commented that: ‘it begs the question why would he lie about our Jane Doe case and then tell the truth about Lynette Culver.’ 

Lynette Culver was born on July 31, 1962 in Renton, WA and was killed by Ted Bundy on May 6, 1975 in Pocatello, ID. She was last seen leaving Alameda Junior High School during her lunch period boarding a bus, and after abducting her he brought the 12-year-old back to his room at the Holiday Inn, where he sexually assaulted then drowned her in the bathtub before eventually disposing of her body in a river north of Pocatello (possibly the Snake). In the time following her disappearance, police assumed she was a runaway, however as time went by, they received no reports of any sightings of her they began to lean towards foul play. During his Idaho confession in January 1989 Bundy confessed to killing a young girl that matched Culver’s general description. According to (retired) Idaho Attorney General Jim Jones, he was ‘frankly astounded by the detail that he was able to provide with respect to Lynette, and of course we had a total absence of detail on the other one he confessed to the hitchhiker.’

After looking into the confession Idaho investigators determined there was no missing person report that matched his supposed victim and nobody was ever recovered. Of the confession of the Idaho hitchhiker, Reneau wondered ‘did he fabricate it? I’m not sure, or was he simply withholding information in the hopes that we would extend his life? I’ve never been able to resolve that in my mind over the years.’ … ‘I was expecting someone that I could read better. He was not nervous at all during the interview I had with him, much different from any other homicide suspect I’ve ever interviewed.’ 

In a podcast with Ada County Sheriffs department, Deputy Lauren Monte sat down with Cold Case Investigator Detective Tim Cooper and went over details related to the Snake River Jane Doe. About the necklace the victim was wearing, Detective Cooper clarified that the ‘kinds of whatever it was they were more like long, little sections of spaghetti with a with a strings F through it and they were black and well black and a lighter color.’ 

About the Snake River Jane Doe, Tim Cooper said that what Bundy ‘had to say about Jane is credible, and a lot of that has been that we have from the audio is her description and again what sparse details that he could recall. He said that he thought she was from Boise, from Ada County, and hat she was maybe trying to get to Montana. He estimated her age to be younger, maybe not even 18 yet. He provided a clothing description and description of her. Mr. Bundy indicated that he was traveling eastbound on Interstate 84 in what he believed to be Ada County or the Boise area, on the outskirts. It sounded like, from what he said of Boise, when he first encountered our Jane, who appeared to be hitchhiking or standing alongside the highway as if she needed a ride. I picked up a young woman who was hitchhiking, traveling. Well, I was traveling east at the time. She was standing… it wasn’t downtown, but it was further out of the city. It seems like they were like ranch style suburban houses. He pulled over and offered her a ride, which she accepted and she got into his notorious yellow Volkswagen Beetle and away they went, eastbound on I-84. Based on the description that Mr. Bundy provided, and this isn’t 100%, but we have to go off of what details we have. I’ve looked at old maps and old photos of the interstate from that era and have tried as diligently as I can to form an idea of where she was picked up, and I think the closest that I’ve been able to get to is possibly in the vicinity of Eastbound 84 at Eisenman Road. In that area, this is on the outskirts of Boise, there were and still are in fact some ranch style homes that are visible from that particular exit, and this would not have been the case at many of our other exits that would have been considered outskirts, like Vista or Broadway. So that seems to fit very closely, but again it’s not for sure but this may be where he picked up Jane Doe. It sounds like his confessions have come under quite a bit of scrutiny. … ‘I do believe the confession is reliable, and I understand why his confession may come under scrutiny, or may have in the past. I think it’s likely because some felt that Bundy was lying to get a state of execution at that time. The problem with that is, the Governor of Florida was publicly adamant that no stay would be given in the weeks leading up to Bundy’s execution date, which is actually I think what prompted Mr. Bundy to talk about these unsolved cases, as he stated he wanted to absolve himself of sin before his death.’

The following is an excerpt from Polly Nelson’s book, ‘Defending the Devil’ about how Ted confused to her killing the unknown Idaho hitchhiker, and where I’d normally paraphrase large sections like this I decided to include it in its entirety: ‘he had been driving around in the hills of Idaho, getting to know the area, looking for safe sites to take a victim. He was a meticulous researcher. It was an important part of a ritual so elaborate that, when I asked him about reports that he had killed over one hundred people, he actually chuckled and shook his head at the naivete of non-murderers: ‘They have no idea what it takes to do one, what it takes out of you.’ I asked him if the figure of thirty-five, which I’d seen in other accounts, was correct. He paused, stared at me, and scanned his censor to decide whether to admit to such a detail, because that was where he had always drawn the line before. He had freely implied everything, but never outright admitted one detail, like some superstitious child’s idea of what could be held against him. He finally nodded and mumbled, ‘yes.’  While driving, he spotted a hitchhiker, a girl around fifteen years old. He had not planned to do anything while scouting, but there she was. He checked the rearview mirror for other cars. None. She got in and started talking to him. He had to act fast: he did not like his victims to talk, he did not want to get to know them, he did not want to know they were real. He reached back for his tire iron and hit her over the head. She slumped in the seat, but awoke soon afterward, moaning. He knocked her out again. I noticed for the first time how strong Ted’s arms were. He had his elbows on the table and his forearms outstretched toward me as he talked. His arms were firm and sinewy, with bulging veins. His hands were large and bony. I looked at his face. Ted’s skin was darkening as he spoke. He was on a roll now, in a sort of trance, recalling every detail as he reviewed the fifteen-some-year-old film in his head, frame by frame. No detail was too small to recall, everything was important, everything had meaning. He was like a reverent disciple describing a spiritual revelation. Ted was no longer censoring himself; he had slipped into a warm wave of memory and was transported. For the first time ever, I was afraid of him, acutely aware of how swiftly he could reach me with his hands if he wanted to, of how it would be too late by the time the guards on the other side of the glass reacted. It was the absolute misogyny of his crime that stunned me, his manifest rage against women, that left me no place to retreat to. He had no compassion for this victim at all. It wasn’t that Ted took sadistic pleasure in telling his story, it was just that he was totally engrossed in the details. His murders were his life’s accomplishments. To him, each recollection was a profound illustration of his skill, his willingness to go forward, his good luck. There had been no guarantees — to Ted, each completed murder had seemed like a small miracle. He drove across the state line to a secluded place in the woods that he was already familiar with. He led the girl out of the car, assuring her that no harm would come to her. He made her strip and kneel on her hands and knees while he took Polaroid pictures of her. (For Ted, another small miracle had been that when his apartment had been searched upon his first arrest in Utah, the investigators had failed to check the building’s utility room. When he was released on bail for the attempted abduction of Carol DeRonch he retrieved the shoebox of photos he’d hidden there and destroyed the most graphic and conclusive evidence of the true depth of his depravity). She cried. He could see the look of terror in her eyes, her eyes begging for mercy. He kept reassuring her. He didn’t like to see their hurt, he said, he didn’t like to see his victim as a person: he wasn’t the kind of person who would harm another. On several occasions, Ted had told me, ‘believe me, Polly, I am not the kind of person who would hurt a fly. I never even hit a man. Except once, on the playground at grade school, and I didn’t even want to do that, but the other kid forced me. I felt terrible afterward, disgusted with myself.’ Then he got behind her, slung a noose around her neck, and strangled her as he raped her. He’d continued to reassure her he would let her go, and she had seemed to believe him. He said he’d felt a little sad that he could not let her go, that he had to kill her, but she would be able to identify him, of course. Afterward, he pulled her body deeper into the woods and, the next day, drove back to take more pictures and to cut her body into pieces (Defending the Devil, 257-259).’

It is important to point out that Bundy’s retelling of events taken from Nelson’s book is dramatically different from the one he told Idaho investigators on January 22, 1989 in Starke, Florida. For example, Nelson states that her client confessed to her that he’d been ‘driving around the hills of Idaho, getting to know the area, looking for safe sites to take a victim,’ however this is not what he told Russ Reneau. Also, during his hour-long conversation with Reneau, he made no mention of coming back to the body the next day, and said that he immediately placed her in the river.

In the days after Bundy’s death row confessions, Pocatello police strongly felt that he was responsible for Lynette’s murder, however more recently investigators have challenged this, as they feel she was the first of a string of abductions and homicides that occurred in the area between 1978 and 1983. After Lynette disappeared Patricia Campbell and Tina Anderson were both taken in July 1978, and their bodies were found in October 1981 in Malad City, Idaho. Christina White was last seen on April 28, 1979 during the Asotin County Fair in Asotin, WA. At 2:30 PM, she called her mother from a friend’s house to say she was feeling sick from the heat and was last seen sometime between 7:00 and 10:00 PM, and when her mom went to pick her up she wasn’t there. Twenty-two year old Kristin Noel David was last seen alive on June 26, 1981, while bicycling southward on US Highway 95 towards Lewiston, Idaho. A little over a week later on July 4, her dismembered remains started to turn up along the Snake River roughly six miles west of Clarkston, Washington. The next young woman that vanished was twelve year old Linda Smith, who was taken from her bedroom on June 14, 1981; her remains were found in May 1982 below Hospital Way in a hilly area near East Center Street in Pocatello. On September 12 ,1982 eighteen year old Brandy Miller and her stepsister twenty-one year old Kristina Nelson vanished after leaving Nelson’s apartment to walk to a nearby grocery store. On March 19, 1984, the remains of both women were found down a hillside off Highway 3, roughly forty miles outside of Lewiston. The last (female) murder was 14-year-old Cindy Bringhurst, who vanished in June 1983 and was discovered deceased the next month. While some sleuths strongly believe the abductions and murders to be related, the idea has failed to gain any steam.

In June 1982, the remains of a man were discovered in the Snake River near the mouth of the Grand Ronde River in Nez Perce County, Idaho. The Nez Perce County Coroner estimated that the indivudual was between eighteen and twenty-two years old, 5’11” tall, and weighed between 145 and 160 pounds. It was also noted that he had straight dark brown/black hair that was 3-4 inches long, a 2-inch scar on his right ankle, and calluses on both palms, pointing that he had had a job involving physical labor. The details of the case were entered into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) as UP3041 in December 2008, and the man became known as Snake River John Doe. In 2023, the Nez Perce County Sheriff’s Office and Idaho State Police Forensic Services submitted genetic evidence to Othram Laboratories in The Woodlands, Texas to determine if DNA testing could help identify the unidentified subject, which led to the positive identification of the man, who was determined to be Dewayne Surls.

I strongly suspect that Bundy was mistaken that the unknown young woman he abducted and killed from Idaho was from Boise, and wonder if maybe she was just passing through and was ready to move on when she ran into him. When Ted said he burned her identification, did he insinuate that he looked at it and at the very least remembered where she was from? I strongly suspect the young woman he abducted wasn’t from Idaho at all, and was from a surrounding state and just happened to be passing through when he killed her.

Deborah Lee Tomlinson was last seen on her sixteenth birthday on October 15, 1973 in Creswell or Eugene Oregon. The brunette had brown eyes, was 5’5” tall, weighed 140 pounds and had left home with an unnamed teenage girlfriend; she has never been seen or heard from again. Another good fit is Peggy Ann Reed, who was last seen possibly hitchhiking on March 28, 1974 in Santa Rosa, CA in the area of Guerneville Road and Coddling Town Mall. The fifteen year old was 5’2,” weighed 110 pounds, blue eyes and brown hair that was frosted at the time of her disappearance. A young woman that is possibly a good fit for the Idaho Hitchhiker is Charlotte Ann Erdman, who was 15 years old when she disappeared from Watertown, Wisconsin on July 18, 1974. She had light brown hair, blue eyes, was somewhere between 5′ 7″ and 5′ 9″ tall and weighed somewhere between 125 and 165 pounds.

Twenty-five year old Linda Lee Lovell and her male friend Stephen Locke Packard disappeared in June/July 1974 from Stinson Beach, California. Lovell was a resident of Missoula Montana, and eighteen year old Stephen was originally from New Jersey, and where it is unknown how the two knew each other or for how long it was determined that they were traveling along the California coast, hiking and possibly hitchhiking their way around and planned to make their way to Washington State for the world’s fair, before returning home. On June 10, 1974, Stephen called his family from Stinson Beach, and postcards were received by their respective families from the area in California as well, and on June 20 a travelers check in his name was cashed at a store in Westport, which is about a four hour drive away from Stinson Beach.

Deborah Rae Meyer lived in Red Lodge, Montana at the time of her disappearance on August 4, 1974 however she and her family were visiting relatives in Rawlins, Wyoming at the time she went missing. Meyer was last seen leaving a family member’s house near Seventh and Spruce Streets and was planning to walk to a nearby movie theater, but never arrived; she was never seen or heard from again. At the time she disappeared Deb was 14 years old, stood at 5’4” tall, weighed 115 pounds, and had brown hair; she also had a small circle shaped growth roughly the size of a pencil eraser on her left ear and wore a full set of dentures. Three other young women disappeared in July and August 1974 in the Rawlins area: nineteen year old Carlene Brown and her 19-year-old friend Christy Gross disappeared from the Rawlins fairgrounds on July 4, 1974; ten-year-old Jayleen Dawn Banker vanished from the area on August 23, 1974.

Seventeen year old Susan Rhonda Labbe was last seen hitchhiking in Lawrence, Massachusetts on August 7, 1974; she was 5’5” tall, weighed around 120 pounds and had green eyes. Belinda VanLith was last seen house-sitting for a neighbor around 8 AM on June 15, 1974 located on Little Eagle Lake, Minnesota. The seventeen year olds parents were expecting her home for her sister’s graduation party, but she never arrived, and they reported her missing the following day. She was 5’5” tall and weighed 110 pounds.

About the Snake River Jane Doe, ACSO Cold Case Investigator Tim Cooper said ‘I think this is one of those cases where we’re fifty years down the road, where the public is going to be a big part in solving this.’ If you remember someone who went missing around September 1974, or if anything in this description rings any bells, please contact ACSO at 208-577-3102 or lmontague@adacounty.id.gov.

Works Cited:
‘ACSO Seeks Public’s Help to Identify Teen Abducted by Ted Bundy in 1974.’ (November 1, 2024). Taken February 14, 2025 from adacounty.id.gov
Bertel, Steve & Darrow, Lacey. ‘Idaho investigator speaks of interviewing Ted Bundy.’ (2016). Taken February 15, 2025 from kivitv.com/
Blanchard, Nicole. ‘Serial Killer Ted Bundy said girl in Boise was a victim, Officials want to identify her.’ (2024). Taken February 16, 2025 from idahostatesman.com
Cavallier, Andrea. November 8, 2024). Serial killer Ted Bundy claimed he killed a girl while driving through Idaho in 1974. An investigator is determined to ID her.’ Taken February 13, 2025 from ‘theindependent.com’
Kendall, Elizabeth. ‘The Phantom Prince: My Life With Ted Bundy.’ (1981).
Mortenson, Chris. ‘Idaho AG Investigator On Ted Bundy’s Confession.’ (September 26, 2021). Taken February 14, 2025 from YouTube.com
Nelson, Polly. ‘Defending the Devil: My Story As Ted Bundy’s Last Lawyer.’ (1994).
Sullivan, Kevin M. ‘The Bundy Murders: A Comprehensive History.’ (2009).
Tuttle, Zoe. (November 1, 2024). ‘Sheriff seeking identity of Ted Bundy’s Idaho victim known as ‘Snake River Jane Doe.’’ Taken February 13, 2025 from ktvb.com

Bundy’s whereabouts on September 2 & 3, 1974 according to the ”1992 TB Multiagency Team Report.’
An aerial view of the area where Ted possibly abducted the Snake River Jane Doe.
The states surrounding Idaho.
Debbie Tomlinson.
Peggy Ann Reed.
Charlotte Ann Erdman.
Linda Lee Lovell.
Deborah Rae Meyer.
Rhonda Labbe.
Belinda VanLith.
Lynette Culver.
Lynette Culver.
Part one of an article about Bundy’s confession about the Idaho hitchhiker published by The Idaho Statesman on January 23, 1989.
Part two of an article about Bundy’s confession about the Idaho hitchhiker published by The Idaho Statesman on January 23, 1989.
An article about Bundy’s confession about the Idaho hitchhiker published by The Galveston Daily News on January 23, 1989.
Part one of an article about the Snake River John Doe published by The Spokesman-Review on October 8, 2024.
Part two of an article about the Snake River John Doe published by The Spokesman-Review on October 8, 2024.
A picture of Ted taken on September 2, 1974 as he was leaving for his second attempt at law school.
A picture of Idaho Investigator Randy Everitt courtesy of The Idaho Statesman.
A picture of Idaho Investigator Russ Reneau courtesy of The Idaho Statesman.

Thurston County Sheriff’s Office, documents related to their investigation into William Earl Cosden Jr., Part Two.

This is the second installments of documents from the Thurston County Sheriff’s Department related to William Cosden Jr.

Elizabeth Kloepfer, Letter To Don Hull, March 16, 1976.

Below is a copy of a letter that Ted Bundys one time girlfriend Liz Kloepfer sent his probation officer Don Hull, voicing her annoyance that detectives were prying into his personal life. It is part of Judge Stewart Hanson’s private collection and was digitized and sent to Maria Serban by Sean Papanikolas, Stewart’s grandson.

Brenda Joy Baker, Case Files: Part Three.

The third installment of documents from the Thurston County Sheriff’s Department related to the murder of Brenda Joy Baker from Maple Valley, WA.

Altemio Sanchez, Some PDF’s.

Growing up near Amherst, NY the ‘bike path rapist’ was my families version of ‘the boogeyman.’ I remember when he reemerged in 2006 my mom came into my bedroom and told me ‘not to go running by myself’ after class (I was at Daemen University at the time, and if you knew me then you’d know how laughable the thought of that was), but I understand her fear. Coincidentally when Joan Diver was killed I was dating her husbands (who was a Chemistry PhD at the University of Buffalo) lab assistant, and it gave me a fairly unique perspective into it all.

Interview with Jean Secora, Deborah Lee Tomlinson’s Sister.

These past few months I’ve had an uptick in the amount of feedback I’ve received from victims family members and loved ones, and I’ve had the pleasure of chatting with Deborah Lee Tomlinson’s sister Jean, who was kind enough to answer some questions for me.

Tell me about your sister, what was she like? What do you remember most about her?
I remember she seemed happy to go live with our biological Mother, she thought she could do whatever she wanted with no limits. She found out that wasn’t true.

How many siblings did she/you have? Do you happen to know where she went to high school?
There were at the time 4 of us and two step brothers. My Aunt Helen recently told me she ran away from Eugene and not Creswell, then we were told she was spotted in Santa Rosa, CA. With a black guy ( our Dad didn’t like people of color) they think she was maybe pregnant. But who knows.

What did your parents say about Deborah, and how would they describe her? By that I mean, what was she like? What was her favorite book, or band?
They absolutely refused to talk about her at all, with either me or my twin Joyce. I know she loved Rock and Roll. She got caught several times sneaking out at night and didn’t get along with our step mother.

How was the relationship she had with your parents? Were they close?
Our father raised us with a step mother at the time and they didn’t get along.

It’s often reported that Deb ran away with an unidentified friend. Do you know who it was?
I have no idea if its true or who she was.

What do you know about the circumstances surrounding Deborah’s disappearance? Is there anything important that stands out to you that you feel is important?
Just that she was spotted in Santa Rosa with a guy.

I know she was young but did your sister date often, that you know of?
Not allowed to date until we were 16.

There were quite a few murders and disappearances in Oregon around the time Deb disappeared. Do you think any of the cases could be related?
I’m not sure but that’s how I found your blog.

What are your current feelings or emotions regarding your sisters disappearance? The new “big thing” in the world of forensics is genetic genealogy. Have the Eugene police been in touch with you at all recently about your sister?
Never a word, but the NCMEC (or the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children) said all records were destroyed in a fire.

What do you hope to see happen in regard to the investigation? How did your sisters disappearance affect your family dynamics?
Joyce and have always been close and Debbie running away was hard for many years. We always thought once we all grew up she would make contact.

I learned about Deborah’s disappearance only because her name was included in a list of young women that could possibly be linked to Ted Bundy. Do you think he had anything to do with her disappearance?
I wish I knew, but like I said she was spotted in Santa Rosa by a close family friend but I was never told by who. Our Grandmother lived there.

I think it’s a shame that Deborah’s disappearance isn’t discussed more publicly, and that she didn’t get any news time. Do you think if it was handled differently by police the case might be solved by now?
I always thought so.

What do you think happened to your sister?
I think she fell in love with the guy and ran off with him.

My wonderful new friend, Jean.

Missing/Murdered Oregon Women, 1969 to 1979.

I’ve been compiling a list of missing and murdered young women from the 1970’s in Oregon in a notebook, and I figured why not also include it here. As I learn of new victims I will update the list… over the years I’ve found dozens of names on various websites and newspaper articles about other missing and murdered women, but they’re scattered all over the internet in a million different sources… why not put them all here?

Janet Lynn Karin-Shanahan: (April 23, 1969, Eugene). Twenty-two years old. Strangled and found in the trunk of her own car.

Niki Diane Britten: (July 16, 1969, Albany). Fifteen years old. Frequent run away.

Barbara Katherine Cunningham: (May 25, 1971, Eugene). Thirty-four years old. Found deceased in her apartment by her mother.

Barbara Ann Bryson: (July 29, 1971, Stayton). Nineteen years old. Was last known to be attending a party.

Fay Ellen Robinson: (March 12, 1972, Eugene). Found deceased in apartment.

Alma Jean Barra: (March 23, 1972, Happy Valley). Twenty-eight years old. Found deceased in Willamette National Cemetery.

Beverly May Jenkins: (May 25, 1972, Cottage Grove). Sixteen years old. Her remains were found in June 1972 just off the I-5 roughly ten miles outside of Cottage Grove; she had been strangled to death. 

Jane Pellett: (June 7, 1972, Salem). Twenty-eight years old. Found deceased on a busy roadside on June 26, 1972.

Geneva Joy Martin: (June 16, 1972, Eugene). Nineteen years old. Found deceased on the side of the road by a farmer.

Rita Lorraine Jolly: (June 29, 1973, West Linn). Seventeen years old. Disappeared while out on a routine nightly walk.

Allison Lynn Caufman: (July 1973, Portland). Fifteen years old. Died as a result of head injuries after being shoved from a car moving at a high rate of speed.

Laurie Lee Canaday: (July 9, 1973, Milwaukee). Her remains were recovered on the pavement at the intersection of Southeast Scott Street and McLoughlin Blvd in Milwaukee, OR.

Susan Ann Wickersham: (July 11, 1973, Bend). Seventeen years old. Was found deceased from a gunshot wound on January 20, 1976.

Vicki Lynn Hollar: (August 20, 1973, Eugene). Disappeared along with her 1965 VW black VW Beetle with IL plates and the running boards removed.

Gayle LeClair: (August 23, 1973, Eugene). Found stabbed in her apartment.

Deborah Lee Tomlinson: (October 15, 1973, Creswell/Eugene). Disappeared along with a friend on her sixteenth birthday. According to her sister (and my friend) Jean she was seen in California after she disappeared).

Virginia Erickson: (October 21, 1973, Portland). Thirty-two years old, mother of six. Disappeared, most likely killed by her husband.

Suzanne Rae Seay-Justis: (November 5, 1973, Portland). From Eugene, despite having a car hitchhiked.

Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter: (October 1974, Tigard). According to McWhorter’s sister, she had been traveling before she disappeared around the Western part of the US. Her body was finally identified in September 2025, but the case remains unsolved.

Becky Rae Martin: (February 15, 1975, Junction City). Twenty-two. Throat cut.

Leslie Michelle (seven years old) and Geoffrey Lyman (five years old) Brown. Murders took place on February 22, 1975 and both victims were found on March 12, 1975 in McIver Park, Estacada.

Margo Nerline Ascencio-Castro: (March 1, 1975, Eugene). Twenty-two years old. Found stabbed in a motel room, possibly involved with a local motorcycle gang.

Shirley Anita Wallace: (July 21, 1975, Eugene). Thirty-one years old. Found, shot.

Tina Marie Mingus: (October 1975, Salem). Sixteen-years old. Murdered, body recovered.

Cherril Sue Miller: (October 12, 1975, Portland). Twenty-eight years old.

Camille Karen Covert-Foss: (October 17, 1975, Hillsboro). Found shot in her vehicle at her POE, in a Southwest Portland-area shopping center.

Kim Charleson: (January 7, 1976, Cannon Beach). The 22 year old had been in college and may have been carrying a small amount of Canadian currency when she disappeared.

Cindy Irene King: (July 19, 1977, Grants Pass). Fifteen years old. Disappeared.

Margie Ann Fernette: (January 24, 1978). Found in Fairfield Elementary School.

Benita Gay Chamberlin: (February 23, 1978, Eugene). Twenty-four years old.

Floy Joy/Jean Bennett: (February 23, 1978, Beaverton). Thirty-seven years old.

Karen Etta Whiteside: (March 22, 1978). Sixteen years old.

Diana Marie Kuhn*: (December 10, 1978, Portland). Twenty years old. Remains found in in West Linn, OR.

Christie Lynn Farni: (December 14, 1978, Medford). Six years old.

Irin Marie Meyer: (July 20, 1979, Brookings). Twenty-nine years old.

Sheryl Wright: (no additional information at this time).

* Thank you for Diana’s cousin Donna Mollema for informing me about her.

The Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders.

Introduction: ‘The Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders’ is a moniker for a group of unsolved homicides that took place in 1972 and 1973 in the general Santa Rosa area, located specifically in Sonoma County in the North Bay region of California. The perpetrator is responsible for at the murders least seven young female hitchhikers, who were all found completely naked in rural areas. Californian detectives strongly suspect that the killer spoke with and was familiar with some of his victims before he killed them. 

Confirmed Victims: At roughly 9 PM on February 4, 1972 twelve-year-old Maureen Louise Sterling and thirteen-year-old Yvonne Lisa Weber disappeared after being dropped off at the Redwood Empire Ice Arena at around 7:30 PM. Weber was born in Carson City, Nevada on January 29, 1959 and Sterling was native to Santa Rose and was born on February 18, 1959. Maureen’s father Larry tragically died in a skiing accident in August of 1958 just months before her birth at the age of 23, leaving Arleen to raise both her and her older sister, Theresa alone during a time where that was easier said than done).The girls, who were both studentsat Herbert Slater Middle School, had no intention of staying at the skating rink that evening, and had plans to go somewhere else, most likely a nearby park with four older boys (who later took lie detector tests, which ruled them out as suspects). They were last seen getting into a car on Guerneville Road, northwest of Santa Rosa. 

Sterling was last seen wearing blue jeans, a purple shirt, a red zip up hoodie and brown suede shoes, and Weber was also wearing jeans, a lavender and white tweed shirt, a black velvet coat, and brown suede shoes. Law enforcement only released that two pieces of evidence in relation to the case that were found with the victims: a single filigree type drop earring with orange beads and a basket weave mixed metal cross attached to a gold chain necklace. Neither item belonged to either one of the girls.

When one of the girls parents came to pick them up from the skating rink at 11pm, they were nowhere to be found, and in the early stages of the investigation LE had felt that they were runaways. Their heavily decomposed bodies were found on December 28, 1972 by 17-year-old Glen Frost and 18-year-old David Brooner, who were hiking through the area known as ‘The Devil’s Kitchen’ and down a steep embankment roughly 66 feet off the east side of the roadway. A single earring, orange beads and a 14-carat gold necklace with a cross were found at the scene, and the victims cause of death could not be determined, due to the advanced state of the remains. By that time Santa Rosa was in a panic, and a county wide program dubbed ‘The Secret Witness Program’ offered a $20,000 reward for any tip that would lead to the apprehension of the girls killer(s).

In 2019 an acquaintance of Weber and Sterling came forward and told detectives that she had spoken with them earlier on the evening they were last seen alive, and that the girls told her that a tall, slim man had asked them to smoke marijuana in the lobby of the ice arena (she declined to go with them), and that he strongly resembled Ted Bundy. However, that same friend was interviewed for the 2024 HBO Max documentary, ‘The Truth About Jim,’ and THAT time she said that Jim Mordecai (the subject of the documentary) was the man that was talking to her friends that evening.

There were also rumors that the girls had been looking for a ride to a nearby bowling alley so they could meet up with some friends, where other sources claim they were in contact with a gentleman who lived along the Russian River; detectives could confirm neither report. Schoolmates were questioned about the missing young women the week after they vanished, but nothing useful came of it.

Kim Wendy Allen was born on July 22, 1952 to Kimball and Roberta Allen, and had a sister named Annilee and a brother named Robert. Of her daughter, Mrs. Allen told The Press Democrat that: ‘she was never a speck of trouble to anyone from the day she came on this earth. She trusted everyone, believed that people were good.’ Kim graduated from the private, all-girls Ursuline High School in Santa Rosa, and despite being her senior class’s spirit leader she was an incredibly private person and usually kept her thoughts and opinions to herself, even with the people that knew her best. Allen lived in the 2200 block of Guerneville Road with two roommates and worked part-time at a natural health food store in Larkspur, located roughly forty miles south of Santa Rosa. 

Kim was last seen on Saturday, March 4th, 1972, and in the morning she had been visiting with friends in San Francisco and hitchhiked her way to work in Larkspur shortly before her shift at Larkspur Natural Foods was due to start at noon. She worked for approximately five hours then began making her way back to Santa Rosa, and the second-year art student at Santa Rosa Junior College was picked up by two men outside of her POE. They dropped her off on San Rafael’s Belle Avenue, leaving her with nearly forty miles left to her destination. The men told investigators that they last saw her at roughly 5:20 PM trying to hitchhike near the Bell Avenue entrance to Highway 101, and was carrying an orange, aluminum-frame backpack and a large wooden sauce barrel with red Chinese characters on it. Like Sterling and Webster, she also frequently used hitchhiking as a means to get around despite multiple warnings from her mother and a professor about how dangerous it was.

Allen’s remains were found the following day at the bottom of an embankment in a creek bed roughly twenty feet off Enterprise Road in Santa Rosa. She had been bound at her wrists and ankles and had been strangled with a cord. She had been brutally sexually assaulted, and semen was found on her remains; a single gold hoop earring was found near the body. Detectives found skid marks at the top of the embankment and wondered if her assailant may have slipped or lost their footing while throwing or transporting the body. The two men that gave Allen the first ride (one which had passed a polygraph test) were both ruled out as suspects. Her checkbook was found in a drive-up mailbox across from the Kentfield (CA) Post Office sometime in the morning on March 24, 1972. 

On November 11, 1972 thirteen year old Lori Lee Kursa was reported missing by her mother after disappearing while they shopped at a U-Save, and she was last seen on either November 20/21 in Santa Rosa while visiting friends. Someone reported possibly seeing her hitchhiking on November 30, however that was never positively confirmed by investigators. Kursa had a troubled home life, and she was a known hitchhiker and frequent runaway, and on December 14, 1972 her frozen remains were found in a ravine roughly fifty-feet off Calistoga Road, northeast of Rincon Valley in Santa Rosa. Lori’s murderer had thrown her body at least 30 feet over an embankment, and she was found wearing a single wire loop earring in each earlobe.

On her death certificate, Allens cause of death is listed as a broken neck with compression and hemorrhage of the spinal cord, and she most likely died one to two weeks before her remains were found; she not been raped. Two people later called in tips to LE about possible sightings of Kursa: one shared that they saw two men with a girl fitting her description on Calistoga Road. A second said they saw a young woman with a white male with ‘bushy hair’ driving a pickup truck that had been parked near where her remains were later found. Nothing ever came of either report.

A possible witness to Kursa’s abduction eventually came forward and told investigators that on an evening sometime in between December 3 and 9, 1972 he saw two men with a young woman fitting her description run across Parkhurst Drive then push her into the back of a van that had been parked on the side of the road. They said that the woman seemed to be physically impaired in some way and that the men were holding her up in between them. The driver was a Caucasian man with an afro-type hairstyle and after the three got in the van it quickly drove north on Calistoga Road. 

At around 7 AM on February 6, 1973 fifteen year old Carolyn Nadine left her family residence in Shasta County and spent the next five months traveling. She was last seen wearing a brown leather jacket with a fur collar and faded jeans, and before leaving the Anderson Union High School student left a note for her mom and stepdad that read: ‘Dear Mom. Don’t worry too much about me, the only thing I’m gonna be doing is keeping myself alive. Love, Carolyn.’ In 2022 her older sister Judy Wilson told an interviewer that after she ran away Carolyn had stayed with her for a period in her apartment in Garberville, and that she had been an eyewitness to a double murder and was ‘afraid for her life.’

Wilson said that Carolyn was getting increasingly paranoid that she might be discovered by someone that that knew about the murders, and she left her duplex and hitchhiked to Illinois. Davis returned to Garberville in the summer of 1973 because her sister was going to have a baby, and she stayed with her grandmother for two weeks that July before returning to her boyfriend in Illinois. According to multiple reports, her grandma drove her to downtown Garberville on July 15,1973 and shared with her plans to hitchhike to Modesto, California, with plans of staying with friends. She parked in front of the post office located two city blocks away from Highway 101, and Carolyn was last seen hitchhiking in Garberville that afternoon near the Highway 101 ramp going southbound. Her remains were discovered in Santa Rosa on July 31, 1973, just three feet away from where the bodies of Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber had been found seven months before. 

Carolyn’s naked body had been discovered face-down roughly twenty feet down the embankment, and the fact that the vegetation growing around the body was not disturbed told investigators that her remains had been thrown from the road and she rolled for a few feet after landing. The way detectives discovered her body told them that ‘either a very large, strong man had heaved the dead girl’s body off the roadside, or he had help.’

Davis’s cause of death is listed as strychnine poisoning, administered ten to fourteen days before her remains were found, however the ME could not determine whether the drug had been administered by needle or by pill. Strychnine is sometimes mixed with other poisons, however an autopsy showed no trace of either heroin or amphetamines in her system. Having heard of the unidentified young woman, Carolyn’s sister sent detectives her dental records, and two weeks after her body was discovered, Jane Doe finally had a name: Carolyn Nadine Davis.

The ME determined that Carolyn’s probable date of death was July 20, 1973, five days after her grandmother had last seen her. It could not be determined if she had been raped, and her autopsy reported that she had an injury to her right earlobe that seemed to be an attempted ear piercing; her left earlobe had not been pierced. Detectives strongly felt that her killer had thrown her body from the road, as the brush on the hillside seemed to be undisturbed, and one investigator said that a witchcraft symbol that meant ‘carrier of spirits’ was found close to her body. In 1975 LE shared that it was ‘a rectangle connected to a square, with bars running alongside’ made up of twigs and sticks, and was identified as an occult symbol going back to medieval England, and possibly hinted at a connection to the Zodiac Killer.

In the winter of 1973 twenty-three-year-old Theresa Diane Smith Walsh left home and hitchhiked across California, making her way to Los Angeles and often traveled using Highway 101. Back home in Miranda, her two-year-old son was in the care of her mother, and she was separated from her husband. In late 1973 Walsh was in Malibu but made plans to go to Garberville for Christmas. She tried to arrange a ride home and even reached out to a group known as ‘Hitchhiker’s Anonymous’ for help but had no luck. At around 9 AM on December 22, 1973 Walsh said goodbye to her friends, who dropped her off near Zuma Beach; she was last seen wearing bell bottoms, a lavender blouse, a faux-fur brown coat, brown hiking boots, and an olive-green Boy Scout knapsack. Her remains were discovered partially submerged underwater six days later by kayakers in Mark West Creek; she had been hogtied with rope, raped, and strangled to death. It was later determined that she had been dead for roughly one week before she had been found, and a combination of high water and heavy rains suggest that she may have floated several miles down the river from where her attacker initially left her.

On July 2, 1979 the skeletal remains of a young woman were found in a ravine off Calistoga Road, roughly 100 yards away from where the remains of Lori Kursa were found seven years prior. Due to the advanced level of decomp, at first forensic experts believed that the victim may have been Jeannette Kamahele until dental records later proved this to be false. The young woman had been hogtied, and her arm had been fractured during the struggle at the time of her death; her body had been stuffed into a bag of some sort (maybe a duffel bag) before it was dumped in the ravine. Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputy Rick Oliver said that several pieces of evidence were found near the scene, but didn’t elaborate further.

It was determined that the young woman was between sixteen and twenty-one-years-old, wore hard contact lenses (that she kept in a metal container with cherries on it), had red/auburn/brown hair, was about 5’3”, and had broken a rib at one point in her life. Her weight and eye color could not be determined and no clothes were found at the crime scene. One medical expert hired by the sheriff’s department determined that at the time of her death the victim was roughly nineteen years old and was most likely killed sometime between 1972 and 1973. It’s also worth noting that hard contacts weren’t typically sold in the US and Canada after the mid-1970’s as soft contact lenses had become available.

* I have seen the next young woman listed as both a confirmed and unconfirmed Santa Rosa Hitchhiker victim: Twenty-year-old Santa Rosa Junior College student Jeannette Kamahele was last seen by her roommate on April 25, 1972 at around 9:30 PM, and had plans to hitchhike near the Cotati on-ramp of Highway 101. A friend may have (possibly) seen her abduction, and told investigators that she had seen Kamahele get into a faded brown Chevy pickup that had been fitted with a homemade wooden camper in the back and was being driven by a twenty to thirty-year-old white man with an afro-styles hairdo. Jeannette stood at 5’5” tall and weighed 120 pounds; she was of Pacific Island descent and had black hair, brown eyes, and had a large birthmark directly underneath her right breast. She was last seen wearing a dark brown short, Levi’s jeans, and gold-post style earrings.

Born on February 10th, 1952 Jeannette Kamahele spent her formative years in Japan thanks to her dads naval career, and attended Yokohama American High School, which was designated for American children of military service members stationed overseas. After she graduated from high school, Jeannette decided to move stateside, and decided to enroll at Santa Rosa Junior College and moved to Cotati, where she lived along the 900 block of Sierra Avenue with her roommate, Nora Morales. Because she didn’t have  a car of her own Jeannette often hitchhiked to get around, and would often catch a ride to class by walking along the nearby Highway 101 on-ramp. No trace of Kamahele has ever been recovered.

Unconfirmed Victims: Seventeen year old Lisa Michele Smith was last seen hitchhiking just a short distance away from her foster home, located along Hearn Avenue in Santa Rosa. Her foster parents reported her as missing from Petaluma, California on March 16, 1971 and shortly after a young woman with the name of ‘Lisa Smith’ went into Novato General Hospital after an incident she had while hitchhiking on March 26, 1971. Smith told investigators that she was picked up by a man that pulled a gun on her and threatened to rape her but she was able to escape by jumping out of the pickup, which was going 55 miles per hour at the time. The young victim was treated for a skull fracture as well as multiple cuts and bruises by physicians, and a nurse at the facility said that she looked to be about twenty-one-years-old. At the time, she was wearing a white blouse with ruffles, a dark pea coat, green bell-bottom jeans, and cowboy boots.

In an article published in The Santa Rosa Press Democrat on April 1, 1971, the ‘Lisa Smith’ that was treated at Novato General Hospital was the same person as the missing 17-year-old Lisa Smith. The young woman that is believed to have been Smith left the hospital before detectives could speak with her, and she reportedly hitchhiked her way back to San Francisco. Her biological parents eventually caught up with her and took her back to their residence in Livermore, California.

In 2011 The Press Democrat reported that the two Lisa Smiths were not the same, and she was not actually found. As of March 2025 it’s still not certain if the two Lisa Smiths were the same person or two separate individuals, and all of the police reports and medical records pertaining to the case were deemed to be missing by 2011.

Fifteen-year-old Kerry Ann Graham and fourteen-year-old Francine Marie Trimble of Forestville, California both disappeared on December 16, 1978 after leaving their respective homes to visit a shopping mall in Santa Rosa. Their remains were found wrapped in duct-taped garbage bags that were buried in an embankment of a heavily overgrown wooded area beside a remote part of Highway 20 the following July, roughly 80 miles north of their hometown. Because of the advanced level of decomp, their exact cause of death has never been determined. At first Graham’s remains were mistakenly ID’d as a male, until genetic testing proved otherwise. Both victims remained unknown until November 2015, when their identities were confirmed thanks to DNA profiling.

In 1975, the FBI issued a report stating that fourteen unsolved homicides that took place between 1972 and 1974 were committed by the same perpetrator, which consisted of six of the known SRHM victims as well as the following young women:

Twenty-year-old Rosa Vasquez was last seen May 26, 1973, and her body was found three days later on May 29 near the Arguello Boulevard entrance at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco; she had been strangled and her remains had been thrown seven feet off the road into some shrubbery. On June 10, 1973 fifteen-year-old Yvonne Quilantang was found strangled in a vacant Bayview district lot; she had been seven months pregnant and was out and about in the community buying groceries.

Angela Thomas was found July 2, 1973, smothered to death on the playground of Benjamin Franklin Junior High School in Daly City. The sixteen-year-old was a resident of Belton, Texas and was last seen at 9:00 PM the previous evening walking away from the Presidio in San Francisco; a locket was discovered near the crime scene. Nancy Patricia Gidley was last seen at a Rodeway Inn motel on July 12, 1973, and her remains were found three days later behind the George Washington High School gymnasium. The  24-year-old radiographer had been strangled and was completely nude, except for a single fish-shaped gold earring. It was eventually determined that she died within the previous 24 hours. Gidley had served in the US Air Force for four years prior to her murder, and told friends and family members that she had plans of becoming a freelance writer for the San Francisco Chronicle and was going to San Francisco to be the maid of honour at the wedding of a friend from Hamilton Air Force Base. After some investigating, this was all proved to be false.

Twenty-three-year-old* separated mother of five Nancy Feusi disappeared after going dancing at a club called The Plumbers Hall in the eastern part of Sacramento, and her nearly naked remains were recovered fifteen miles away by a fisherman at 6:30 AM on July 22, 1973, alongside Pleasant Grove Road and Steelhead Creek in Redding; her clothes were recovered nearby, and she had been stabbed twenty-nine times, mostly in the stomach, chest, and arm. She was last seen alive roughly two miles away from the night club, only three and a half hours before her remains were discovered. Detectives found shoe prints and tire tracks close to where Nancy’s remains were found, which opened up the possibility she was possibly killed in another location and was brought to the scene where she was found. 

In 2011, one of her daughters, Angela Darlene Feusi-McAnulty was accused of torturing, beating, and starving to death her 15-year-old daughter Jeanette Marie Maples. After she was convicted, McAnulty officially became the second woman in history to be sentenced to death in the state of Oregon, the first since the 1984 reinstatement of the death penalty. *Some sources say that Nancy was twenty-two.

Twenty-one-year old Laura Albright O’Dell was reported missing on November 4, 1973; her remains were discovered three days later in some shrubbery behind the Stow Lake boathouse in Golden Gate Park. Her hands had been tied behind her back, and her cause of death appeared to be from head injuries and/or strangulation. On February 1, 1974 nineteen year old Brenda Kaye Merchant was found dead at her apartment in Marysville; she had been stabbed over 30 times with a long bladed knife and had asphyxiated on her own blood. Her assailant left a bloody handprint behind on the screen door of the residence, and it is believed that she was attacked between 6 PM (when she was last seen) and midnight, when neighbors happened to overhear a loud argument. Donna Maria Braun was only fourteen when her strangled remains were discovered by a crop dusting pilot at 7 PM on September 29, 1974 in the Salinas River near Monterey.

Over the years, California investigators have strongly considered the possibility that the perpetrator of the Santa Rosa hitchhiker murders was also active in Oregon, Washington, Utah, and Colorado, and additionally have looked into the possibility that there was a link to the Flat Tire Murders, which took place in Miami-Dade County in the southern part of Florida between February 1975 and January 1976. Also, in 1986 author Robert Graysmith published a list of forty-nine confirmed and possible Zodiac Killer victims, which included the Santa Rosa victims as well as some additional murders with some striking similarities, including:

Seventeen-year-old Elaine Louise Davis disappeared from family’s home in Walnut Creek, California on December 1, 1969, when she was left to watch her younger sister while her mother went to nearby Concord to pick her husband up from work. When Mr. and Mrs. David arrived home shortly after 11 PM, they found their three year old daughter alone in the residence with no trace of Elaine. At the scene there was no sign of a struggle, however investigators were immediately suspicious of foul play due to the fact that her purse and glasses were left behind. After they arrived home, her little sister told her parents, ‘they took her away, she didn’t want to go,’ and ‘there was a Volkswagen,’ the latter part was corroborated by neighbors. The young woman’s coat was found two days later on the side of the road along Highway 17 near Santa Cruz.

On December 19, 1969 the remains of Elaine Davis were discovered floating near Lighthouse Point near Santa Cruz, however a positive ID was not made until 2001. An initial examination determined that the victim was in her early twenties, which led investigators to dismiss her as a potential match. Her cause of death is undetermined, however medical experts leaned towards strangulation because of some damaged cartilage found in her neck. In 2000, the investigation was reopened as part of a routine review of cold cases and the following year a new examination of the remains were conducted, and the victims dental records proved that the body did belong to Elaine Davis.

Sixteen-year-old Leona LaRell Roberts had been kidnapped from her boyfriend’s home on December 10, 1969; eighteen days later her nude body was found on the beach at Bolinas Lagoon in Marin County, and although the official cause of death was listed as ‘exposure,’ her case was treated as a homicide. Twenty-three-year-old Marie Antoinette Anste was kidnapped in Vallejo after experiencing a blow to the head, and her body was recovered in rural Lake County on March 21; an autopsy revealed that she had drowned and had traces of mescaline in her bloodstream.

Seventeen-year-old Eva Lucienne Blau was found dumped in a roadside gully near Santa Rosa during the equinox on March 20, 1970, and the medical examiner determined that she had been hit in the head and discovered drugs in her system. Blau was last seen leaving Jack London Hall on March 12 after telling friends that she was going to go home. On the evening of December 3, 1969, twenty-one-year-old Sonoma State College student Kathy Sosic accepted a ride from a stranger outside her school’s library, and at some point during the drive the man pulled out a handgun and tried to assault her. Sosic managed to escape by jumping out of the moving vehicle, and thankfully she was not seriously injured.

Suspects: Over the years there have been quite a few men that have been investigated for the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders, and the first I’m going to talk about is Ted Bundy. When these murders took place in 1972 and 1973 Ted was in an active relationship with Elizabeth Kendall (and was seeing multiple other women as well) and he graduated from the University of Washington in the spring of 1972, and began law school at the University of Puget Sound in the fall of 1973. He had quite a few jobs during this time period, and from September 1971 to May 1972 he worked one night a week at the Seattle Crisis Clinic (with Ann Rule), and between June and September 1972 he had an internship as a counselor at Harborview Mental Health Center in Seattle. From September to November 1972 he worked for Governor Dan Evans’ re-election campaign, and between November of ‘72 and April 1973 he worked at the Seattle Crime Prevention Advisory Commission, and helped draft Washington’s new hitchhiking law, and even wrote a rape‐prevention pamphlet for women. From September 1972 to January 1973 he worked with the Law & Justice Planning in Seattle, and between February to the end of April 1973 he worked for the King County Program Planning, Additionally, in September 1973 he held the title of the Assistant to the Washington State Republican chairman.

s we all know, Ted didn’t ‘officially’ become active until January 1974, when he brutally attacked and left for dead University of Washington student Karen Sparks, but it’s widely speculated that he began killing much earlier than that. Some people even believe he may have begun killing as early as fourteen with the murder of Ann Marie Burr, who was stolen out of her Tacoma residence in  late August of 1961. Additionally, it’s thought Bundy killed two young stewardesses in the Queen Anne district of Seattle in 1966, as well as two young friends vacationing in the Jersey Shore in May of 1969. More realistically, he may have started killing in 1973, with the murder of a young hitchhiker in Tumwater, WA.

After Ted was captured for similar crimes in Washington/Colorado/Utah/Idaho he was suspected in the Santa Rosa hitchhiker murders as well, however according to Sonoma County law enforcement he was ruled out as a suspect in the late-1970s then again in 1989 (as his credit card receipts reveal that he was in Washington on the dates of some of the disappearances). I mean, let’s be real: he was known to drive hundreds of miles to commit a murder, and he confessed to having killed in the Golden State before (the ‘1992 TB FBI Multi agency Report’ credits him with one kill in the state). Another reason investigators feel that Ted isn’t responsible for the SRHM is that they believe that the perpetrator most likely lived in the Santa Rosa area, and may have even worked a local job, like as a mail carrier or a public utility worker that would have been familiar with the remote, rural areas where the young women were left. 

In an interview with The San Francisco Gate in 2011, retired Seattle Detective Dr. Robert Keppel said of Ted: ‘one of the last times I talked to Bundy, I mentioned California, and he looked at me like, ‘I can’t talk about that right now.’ I think he believed his execution would be stayed so he could talk for years about his crimes, but the governor had other ideas… Bundy is definitely a good suspect. The killings in Santa Rosa would fit his methods, he spent time in the area, and I’m sure he started killing well before 1974… it was an open market for Bundy.’

Some similarities between the cases and Ted’s victims sticks out to members of law enforcement, as the SRHM victim profile is nearly identical to his and were all young women between fifteen and twenty-five-years-old that wore their hair long and parted down the middle. Additionally, he also made sure to dispose of remains in out-of-the-way, rural locations completely nude, and the way the assailant subdued his victims was incredibly similar to Bundy’s, as they were strangled to death, either by hand or with a household item.

Bundy also matched the description of a young, ‘bushy haired’ man that was seen near the scene of at least two of the SRHM. The first is in relation to the disappearance of Jeannette Kamahele, who was last seen getting into the truck of a man with an afro which is a type of style that Bundy wore in 1972. Additionally, it’s worth noting that Ted did own a truck in the mid 70’s, as he bought an inexpensive one to help with his move from Seattle to SLC (I believe he gave it to his brother Glenn, or he at the very least drove it). Then there’s the abduction of Lori Kursa in November of 1972, where a similarly-described man with an ‘afro-styled hairstyle’ was seen waiting in the getaway van that Kursa was shoved into (although in this situation the driver would have been only one part of a three-man operation; whereas Bundy acted alone). 

After his first arrest while investigators were looking into his background, they learned that Ted had been in California on several occasions in the late 1960’s/early 1970s, proving that he did have some ties to the area: in 1968 he attended Stanford University and in 1973 he visited Sonoma County while working on a political campaign for the Republican party. He had also driven through the region on numerous occasions between 1968 and 1974 while visiting with his one-time love Diane Edwards, who had lived in Palo Alto and San Francisco.

However, despite his (weak) ties to California, Bundy was not linked to any of the victims from the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders, and investigators would later find evidence that placed him in Washington either right before or after several of the murders. In a January 1976 issue of ‘The Vallejo Times Herald,’ Sonoma County Sergeant Butch Carlstedt said: ‘I tried to tie Bundy to our cases but we found credit card receipts that put him in Seattle at the time of the murders here… He’s definitely cleared as far as we’re concerned.’ However, years later detectives in Sonoma County learned that this was anything but true, as on a few occasions there were two-day periods in between many of his gas receipts that supposedly placed him in Washington, which allowed Bundy upwards of two days to make the drive to California then back home to Seattle.

In 2011, authorities uploaded a sample of Bundy’s DNA into the FBI’s Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) in the hopes of matching to any victims that haven’t been tied to him yet. When speaking to ‘The San Francisco Gate’ in 2011, Sonoma County Lieutenant Steve Brown commented that: ‘the feeling was that one person committed the killings, and Bundy was looked at. But I always thought it must have been a utility worker or a postal worker, someone familiar with the area.’

Another suspect of the SRHM is The Zodiac, thanks to the timing of the murders as well as the general location of where they took place. Additionally, the killer was known to correspond in code using symbols and ciphers, and located on Kim Allen’s missing soy sauce barrel was some chinese characters. Also, there was a crudely constructed symbol made out of twigs close to Carolyn Davis’ remains that looked like it could have been constructed by the Zodiac. Investigators reportedly ruled out the killer as a suspect because the SRHM seem to have a sexual component to them, where the Zodiac murders did not and the killer progressing from homicides involving a knife/gun to brutal slayings involving rape would be a huge shift.

Zodiac suspect Arthur Leigh Allen of Vallejo owned a mobile home at Sunset Trailer Park in Santa Rosa at the time of the murders. In 1968 he had been let go from his job at The Valley Springs Elementary School for suspected child molestation, and in 1972-73 he was a full-time student at Sonoma State University. Allen was arrested by the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office on September 27, 1974, and was charged with child molestation in an unrelated case involving a young boy. He pleaded guilty on March 14, 1975 and was imprisoned at Atascadero State Hospital until late 1977. In his book ‘Zodiac Unmasked’ true crime writer Robert Graysmith said that a Sonoma County sheriff said that chipmunk hairs were found on all of the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker victims, and that Allen had been collecting and studying the same species of the animal.

Forty-one year old US Army veteran Fredric Manalli was a writing instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College and San Quentin Prison, and after he was killed in a head-on collision after his van veered into oncoming traffic on Highway 12 on August 24, 1976 he was a suspect in the SAHM; at the time of the accident he had no illicit drugs or alcohol in his system, but was taking medication for epileptic seizures. After his death police found sadomasochistic drawings in his van, and amongst his artwork were pieces showcasing Kim Allen, who was one of his former students as well as additional works involving two other young women and himself in a sexual manner. It’s also heavily speculated that he had one of Allen’s backpacks in his possession.

According to Robert Graysmith, ‘when the teacher’s widow was cataloging his property, she came across drawings of people being whipped. The sketches suggested the husband had been involved in S&M. The instructor had drawn himself as a woman and labeled it with the female version of his own name. Chief Wayne Dunham felt the deceased man might have something to do with Kim Wendy Allen’s death.’ In Graysmith’s book ‘Zodiac UnMasked,’ Sergeant Steve Brown said ‘I’ve actually got a photocopy of two of the drawings that they found. He drew Kim and he drew himself as ‘Freda.’ He drew the other girl and those two girls had classes with him. They tested it, but it wasn’t Kim. He probably taught Kim, and when she shows up dead, he became really obsessed with her. A weird dude.’

In 2024 HBO Max created a documentary titled, ‘The Truth About Jim,’ which explored the idea that a high school vocational agriculture teacher and part-time landscape designer named Jim Mordecai might have been responsible for the SRHM. Mordecai was born August 27, 1941 in Santa Rosa, and as early as 1953 his name started appearing in local papers thanks to his skill in basketball and football. He died of cancer in 2008 and his family had an isolated ranch in Sonoma County near Santa Rosa, where he spent a lot of time in the early-1970’s. He had no known criminal record and after his death family members found a box of mismatched jewelry among his belongings, which belonged to no one in the family. One item, a hoop earring with orange beads attached, matched the description of a piece of jewelry that was worn by one of the SRHM victims…but his family threw out the evidence and didn’t hold onto anything. A DNA profile of Mordecai was turned over to the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Department in August 2022. 

Philip Joseph Hughes Jr. resided in Pleasanton, CA and was convicted of three murders in Contra Costa County in the early-to-mid 1970’s: in November 1972 he stabbed nineteen-year-old Maureen Field to death after she disappeared after her shift at KMart was over. Two days after she was last seen, her family got a phone call from an unidentified male caller, who said: ‘I’m calling about your daughter. She is dead. I killed her,’ then hung up. Her badly decomposed remains were discovered on February 15, 1973 on Morgan Territory Road. Just over a year after her death on January 26, 1974 fifteen-year old Skyline High School sophomore Lisa Berry disappeared while hitchhiking. It was later determined that Hughes (along with his wife and accomplice Suzanne Perrin) kidnapped Berry at knife point after picking her up near her home then took her to a basement in Oakland, where they sexually assaulted her then stabbed her to death. They then wrapped her remains in a bed sheet then dumped her in a shallow grave in a desolate area in Contra Costa County; she was found five years later in Moraga.

On March 19, 1975, Hughes and Perrin abducted then strangled, raped, and beat (with a hammer) twenty-five-year-old Letitia Fagot. Her nude remains were discovered in her Walnut Creek home after coworkers called on a welfare check when she never showed up for her shift; she had experienced blunt force trauma to the head. Hughes managed to fly under the radar until July 1979 when a friend of his then wife went to police and confessed on her behalf (this supposedly was due to Perrin’s intense fear of her husband). The day after the call to law enforcement was made, Suzanne met up with a Contra County Sergeant at a local restaurant and gave him information about her husband and the murder of Lisa Beery, and on July 13, 1979, detectives got a search warrant for their home. Because Hughes victims were stabbed it’s a deterrent to him being responsible for the SRHM and he is currently serving life imprisonment at California Correctional Institution.

Another serial killer Joseph Naso was investigated for the SRHM: known as ‘The Double Initial Killer,’ Naso was born on January 7, 1934 in Rochester, NY and after serving in the US Air Force in the 1950’s he met his first wife, who he lived with in San Francisco. Together for eighteen years when they separated, Naso continued visiting her and the two had a child together that eventually developed schizophrenia, and he spent a good part of his life caring for him. Nicknamed ‘Crazy Joe’ for his unusual behavior, Naso took classes in a few different colleges in the general San Francisco area in the 1970’s, and in the 80’s resided in the Mission District of San Francisco, then in Piedmont and Sacramento; in 2004 he relocated to Reno, Nevada and worked as a freelance photographer. He also had a long history of lower-level crimes, like shoplifting, which he committed up to his arrest in his mid-seventies.

Nevada law enforcement arrested Naso in April 2010, and while searching his residence discovered a diary where he listed ten unnamed women along with some correlating geographical locations. The journal proved that he stalked and sexually assaulted his victims then photographed them in suggestive poses next to mannequin parts. He was charged with the murders of four sex workers on April 11, 2011 and was later charged with the murders of two additional victims. On August 20, 2013, Naso was given a guilty verdict by a Marin County jury and on November 22, 2013, a judge sentenced him to death.

Another name that came up in my research a few times in relation to the SRHM was Robert Kibbe, or the I-5 Strangler, who was known to target young, vulnerable hitchhikers in the later part of the 1970’s. Kibbe was first arrested for assault and battery in 1987, after he tried to handcuff a sex worker named Debra Ann Guffie, who managed to fight him off and flag down a nearby police officer for help. With her testimony, Kibbe was arrested and sentenced to eight months in country lock-up, and it was at this time that LE began to piece together their case against him. He was arrested in 1988 for the murder of Darcie Frackenpohl that took place the year prior, and was convicted of first degree murder and was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. The SRHM’s fall a bit outside of when Kibbe was active, as he didn’t begin killing until September 10, 1977 when he met twenty-one-year-old Lou Ellen Burleigh for an interview; the two met again the following morning and she was never seen again. He was also known to cut off the hair of most of his victims in order to remove the duct tape before he would abandon them, and this was never seen in the SRHM murders.

Kenneth Bianchi and his cousin Angelo Anthony Buono Jr. were also briefly investigated for the SRHM but they were both ruled out as suspects, as they weren’t active until October 1977. Known as the Hillside Stranglers, they were convicted of killing ten young women in Los Angeles between October 1977 and February 1978 (Bianchi killed two women in Washington by himself). Buono died on September 21, 2002 and Kenneth Bianchi is currently serving a life sentence in Washington State Penitentiary.

Joaquin Cordova is another possible perpetrator in the SRHM: at the time of the murders in 1972/73, Cordova was a twenty-two-year old bartender that was arrested for the rape and assault of a twenty-nine year old woman in his home. During the assault he told his victim that she was ‘different from the other girls,’ hinting at him doing this multiple times prior. He was ruled out by investigators (as he was in jail during the murders).

I would like to give credit to the ‘unresolved’ true crime website, who said the following about a man named ‘Campo de Santos: ‘outside of these big name, serial offenders, there are a couple of other small-time criminals that I discovered during my research into this case. One is a man named Campo de Santos, who operated under the alias, ‘Deyo.’ By 1975 ‘Deyo’ was spending time on New Mexico’s death row, having been convicted for a crime that was almost identical to the hitchhiking crimes. He was believed to have been in Sonoma County when at least some of the crimes were carried out, but it’s unknown what kind of connection there may be if any. Speaking to The Press Democrat, Sonoma County Sheriff’s captain Jim Caufield would state the following about the suspect: ‘he could be out man in some of these, but he won’t talk to us. It’s essentially possible they’ll send him to the gas chamber and we’ll never know if he’s the man, in fact, it’s possible out killer is dead or locked up somewhere else on other charges.’

True crime writer Gray George strongly suspected that serial killer Jackie Ray Hovarter was responsible for the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders. Hovarter was a long-haul trucker that routinely drove throughout the northern part of California, and he was convicted of kidnapping, raping, and killing 16-year-old Diana Walsh from Willits, CA in August of 1984. He raped a second girl from Fortuna a few months later in December and tried to kill her by shooting her in the head, but she survived; she testified at his trial and helped put him behind bars. George feels that he could be a strong suspect in the murders of Francine Trimble and Kerry Graham.

Another name I came across in my research was an individual named Byron Avion, who was described as ‘an odd, portly man that was admittedly obsessed with the Zodiac Killer.’ He had other eccentricities as well, not the least of which was his ‘large collection of cardboard boxes, carefully stacked and tied shut with white nylon rope.’ However, the only place I came across a possible link was one source: a book titled ‘Suspect Zero,’ published on May 15, 2003 and written by Michael D Kelleher. I didn’t read the book so I didn’t learn much about this individual.

Works Cited:
Best, Joseph. ‘Jim Mordecai and the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders.’ (Fenruary 29, 2024). Taken on March 8, 2025 from Medium.com
Fagan, Kevin. ‘Ted Bundy a suspect in Sonoma County cold cases.’ (July 7, 2011). Taken March 8, 2025 from sfgate.com
Hamilton, Francis. ‘Sonoma County Missing and Murdered.’ (September 11, 2019). Taken March 8, 2025 from sonomacountymissingandmurdered.wordpress.com
March, Lisa. ‘Adventurous Shasta County Teen Last Seen in Garberville: An Unsolved Cold Case.’ (May 16, 2022). Taken March 8, 2025 from kymkemp.com
Romano, Tricia. ‘The Case of the Double Initial Murders: An Odd History.’ Taken March 13, 2025 from crimelibrary.com
‘Serial Killer Database: HUGHES, Philip Joseph Jr.’ Taken March 13, 2025 from skdb.fandom.com
The Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders. (March 21, 2020). Taken March 8, 2025 from killerqueenspodcast.com/the-santa-rosa-hitchhiker-murders/
Unresolved. ‘The Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders.’ Taken March 8, 2025 from https://unresolved.me

Yvonne Weber, who went missing on February 4th, 1972 with her friend Maureen Sterling and was last seen getting into a car in front of the Redwood Empire Ice Arena. Her body was found on December 26th, 1973 at the bottom of an embankment on the west side of Franz Valley Road roughly 2.7 miles from the intersection with Porter Creek Road.
Yvonne’s obituary published in The Press Democrat on January 4, 1973.
Maureen Sterling, who went missing with Yvonne Weber on February 4, 1972.
Sterling’s obituary published in The Press Democrat on January 5, 1973.
The only two pieces of evidence that LE released in relation to the murders of Sterling and Weber: a single filigree type drop earring w beads and a basket weave mixed metal cross attached to a gold chain necklace. Photo courtesy of ‘Sonoma County: Missing and Murdered WordPress’ page.
Part one of an article about the murder of Sterling and Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part two of an article about the murder of Sterling and Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part one of an article about the funerals of Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part two of an article about the funerals of Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Kim Allen, who went missing on March 4th, 1972 hitchhiking from her job in Larkspur in Marin County to her home in Santa Rosa. Her remains were found on March 5th, 1972 at the bottom of an embankment on the north side of Enterprise Road. She had been strangled.
An obituary for Lori Lee Kursa published in The Press Democrat on December 19, 1972.
An article about the murder of Kori Kursa published in The Press Democrat on December 27, 1972.
An article about Lori Kursa clipped from The Press Democrat on February 6, 1973. Kursa was last seen on November 20th, 1972 with her mother at U-Save Market ; her remains were found on December 14th, 1972 roughly 20′-30′ down an embankment on the western side of Calistoga Road. She died due to extreme trauma, and her first and second cervical vertebra were dislocated and her spinal cord had been compressed.
Carolyn Davis, who went missing on July 15th, 1973 and was last seen hitchhiking on the on ramp of Highway 101 in Garberville, California. Her remains were recovered on July 31st, 1973 less than ten feet away from where Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber were found; she died from strychnine poisoning.
An article about the murder of Carolyn Davis published by The Press Democrat on August 16, 1973.
The Sonoma West Times and News on August 23, 1973.
The following symbol was left in sticks next to Santa Rosa Serial Killer victim, Carolyn Davis. Some think it was left by the Zodiac Killer.
Theresa Walsh, who has been missing since December 22nd, 1973 when she was last seen hitchhiking north on Highway 101 to Maranda, California. Her body was recovered a few days later on December 28 found submerged under a log in Mark West Creek .I have seen her name also spelled ‘Terese,’ however ‘Theresa’ is what is on her death certificate.
An article about the murder of Theresa Walsh published in The Times Standard on January 9, 1974.
An article about the Santa Rosa Jane Doe, who as of March 2025 still remains unidentified.
An article about the thwarted abduction of Lisa Smith published in The Novato Advance on March 31, 1971.
Jeannette Kamahele, who was last seen on April 25th, 1972 hitchhiking north on Highway 101 and was going from her residence to Santa Rosa Junior College. Her remains have never been recovered.
Jeannette Kamahele.
Jeannette Kamahele.
An article about the disappearance of Jeanette Kamahele published in The Rohnert Park Cotati Clarion on May 2, 1972.
An article about the disappearance of Jeanette published in The Press Democrat on April 28, 1972.
Kerry Ann Graham.
Francine Trimble.
An article about Francine Trimble and Kerry Ann Graham published in The Sacramento Bee on February 4, 2016.
An article about Francine Trimble and Kerry Ann Graham published in The Fresno Bee on February 4, 2016.
Rosa Vasquez.
An article about the murder of Rosa Vasquez published by The Oakland Tribune on June 1, 1973.
An article about the murder of Yvonne Quilantang published by The Oakland Tribune on June 15, 1973.
An article about the murder of Yvonne Quilantang published by The San Francisco Examiner on June 24, 1973.
An article about the murder of Angela Thomas published by The Oakland Tribune on July 5, 1973.
An article about the murder of Angela Thomas published by The San Francisco Examiner on July 6, 1973.
Angela Thomas’s obituary published in The Austin American on July 7, 1973.
A picture of Nancy Gidley taken from The Idaho Statesman published on July 18, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Patricia Gidley published by The Idaho Statesman on July 18, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Gidley published by The Martinez News-Gazette on July 19, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Feusi published by The Sacramento Bee on August 9, 1973.
An article about Nancy Feusi’s daughter being charged with the torture of her daughter published by The Corvallis Gazette-Times on February 11, 2011.
An article about the murder of Laura O’Dell published by The San Francisco Examiner on November 7, 1973.
An article about the murder of Brenda Merchant published by The Sacramento Bee on February 2, 1974.
An article about the murder of Brenda Kaye Merchant published by The Colusa Sun-Herald on February 4, 1974.
An article about the murder of Donna Marie Braun published by The Californian on October 1, 1974.
An article about the murder of Kathy Sosic The Press Democrat on December 4, 1969.
An article about the murder of Elaine Davis published by The Martinez News-Gazette on December 5, 1969.
An article about the murder of Leona LaRell Roberts published by The Sacramento Bee on December 12, 1969.
An article about the murder of Marie Antoinette Anstey published by The Berkeley Gazette on April 1, 1970.
An article about the murder of Cosette Ellison published by The Concord Transcript on March 25, 1970.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on January 10, 1973.
An article mentioning a man from Camarillo being arrested for the rape of a seventeen year old that is possibly related to the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on May 11, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The Ventura County Star on July 17, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The Morning Union on July 17, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on September 13, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The San Francisco Examiner on April 25, 1975.
Bundy’s whereabouts in the early part of 1972 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1972 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in the early part of 1973 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1973 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Arthur Leigh Allen.
Fred Manalli.
Jim Mordecai.
Philip Joseph Hughes Jr.
Naso
Robert Kibbe.
Kenneth Bianchi.
Angelo Buono.
Joaquin Cordova.
Jackie Rae Hovarter.
A book about Byron Avion titled ‘Suspect Zero,’ written by Michael D. Kelleher