Donna Ann Lass.

Donna Ann Lass was born on November 3, 1944 to James ‘Peter’ and Frances (nee Kukar) Lass in Beresford, South Dakota; when she was born her mother was 43 and her dad was 47. Mr. Lass was born on August 25, 1897 and was the second of three children. He served in WWI and spent most of his career farming in the areas of Beresford and Worthing in South Dakota. He married Frances Mary Kukar in Aurelia, Iowa and the couple had eight children together: two boys (Raymond and Eugene) and six girls (Donna, Marjorie, Mary, Karen, Joan, and Patricia). Mrs. Lass was born on November 24, 1900. They eventually divorced, and on October 18, 1951 James married his second wife, Petrine Horstad, in Worthington, MN.

In high school, Donna was a member of the Future Homemakers of America and sang in the mixed chorus. In an interview during her senior year, she shared that her future plans were ‘to go college or be a nurse,’ and after graduating from Beresford High School in 1962 (there were only 52 kids in her graduating class!) she went on and earned her RN. Described by friends as ‘quiet and shy,’ Donna had blue eyes, was 5’4” tall, and had light brown hair that she dyed blonde and wore short and parted on the side. At the time she disappeared in the fall of 1970 she weighed 139 pounds, wore contact lenses, and wasn’t in a committed relationship; she wore size eight shoes and a size 13 dress. Donna didn’t smoke or imbibe in any drug use, and drank infrequently and very little. She was Roman Catholic and attended church every Sunday at St. Mary’s of the Pines. According to her sister Mary, she had perfect teeth and took excellent care of them. She had pierced ears, a white gold wrist watch with a ‘small chain’ and wore a ring on her right ring finger. Lass was reportedly saving for a trip to Europe she planned on taking in 1971.

In May of 1970 Donna had moved from 4122 Balboa Street in San Francisco to Stateline, Nevada, settling down in the South Lake Tahoe area. She previously worked as a nurse at the Letterman General Hospital in the Presidio Army Base (it’s worth mentioning that the base was north of the site where Zodiac victim Paul Stine was murdered). After relocating she briefly resided with friends Ann and Larry Lowe before getting her own place at the Monte Verde apartments; when she disappeared on September 6 she had only spent one night there. Mrs. Lowe worked with Donna from 1967 to 1969 in Santa Barbara but relocated to South Lake Tahoe with her husband, and it was her that encouraged Donna to move there. After Lass disappeared the young couple set their plans of moving and returning to college aside so they could stick around and help LE with the investigation.

In early September 1970 Lass had recently moved into her new apartment located on 3893 Pioneer Trail Road, which was just a three minute drive from her new POE. On June 6 she started her job as a nurse at the Sahara Tahoe Casino in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada (now called the Golden Nugget Lake Hotel & Casino). On September 5, 1970 Donna was scheduled to work an overnight shift at the first aid station  from 6:00 PM to 2:00 AM, although her last notation in the nursing log was right it was scheduled to end at 1:50 AM (I’ve see a lot of back and forth about the exact time, I’ve seen it vary from 1:15 to 1:50). A pen mark dragged from the last letter of the final word she wrote (which was ‘patient complains of’) and went all the way down to the bottom of the page. I did read on a Reddit comment that Donna’s sister Mary said that the handwriting didn’t belong to her. That entry was for a San Francisco resident named Joan Bentley, who was also the last confirmed person to see Donna alive (at approximately 1:15 AM). A Websleuths user suggested that the ‘drag mark of her pen indicates being grabbed from behind, by perhaps the person who tore out two pages of her notebook, which may have held his name, and then adding the name Joan Bentley.’ I think they were on the right track, however Joan was a real patient that LE spoke with. Ms. Bentley shared with them that she enjoyed making small talk with her pretty young nurse, who appeared to be in a good mood and was ‘very congenial.’ Donna shared with her that she was looking forward to skiing that upcoming winter and that she enjoyed her new job and had plans on staying there for a while.

After Donna left Mrs. Bentley she was never seen alive again, and reportedly no one ever saw her leave the Casino grounds. Her red, 1968 Chevrolet Camaro convertible was found undisturbed in its assigned parking spot at her apartment building, although it’s speculated that she walked to work that day, as it was just a 8-10 minute walk away. ​If Lass walked to work the night that she disappeared it was less likely that her left behind car would attract attention from concerned coworkers. Donna’s vehicle was completely paid for and it appeared that she had an impressive wardrobe and little to no debt. Her uniform was found stuffed in a bag in the nursing office and had mud all over it, and it’s speculated that she may have changed into a blue pants suit with white stripes and a rust colored raincoat. Does Donna changing out of her work outfit and into her street clothes hint at a planned meet-up with someone after her shift was over, maybe a date? Was it with the same person that would ultimately take her life? Since Lass was abducted at the end of her scheduled shift when she wouldn’t be missed as much, was this evidence that her abductor knew her routine and schedule? On a semi-related note, in a press release from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department, in the weeks prior to Lass’ disappearance two female employees at the Sahara Tahoe were physically assaulted in the parking lot, although there were ultimately no connections established between the incidents.

Unfortunately police didn’t seem very interested in investigating Lass’ disappearance and her case wasn’t taken very seriously in its early stages. On September 25, 1970 Sargent Bezanson from the South Lake Tahoe PD reached out to her friend and former roommate/coworker from San Francisco Jo Ann Goettsch, who shared that she made plans with Lass to visit on September 7th but when she arrived was unable to get in contact with her. The friends made plans for Goettsch to meet up with Lass at her POE and from there she would follow her back to her new place. I should note, there does seem to be some uncertainty on the exact date Goettsch arrived: I’ve seen it reported as the 7th or 8th, but according to a PI report (more on that later) it’s the 7th so I’m going with that. After Donna vanished without a trace, multiple members of her family as well as her friends, acquaintances, and coworkers were interviewed and polygraphed, but unfortunately nothing of value was obtained. After she vanished Lass’ family flew in from Sioux Falls for a week to help look into her disappearance (her sister Mary stayed for two). According to her loved ones, Donna had a lot of friends and ‘would never just run off without telling someone.’

After searching a bit for Donna with another friend, Jo Ann eventually went spoke with one of her coworkers Victor Johnson, who was unable to provide much helpful information about her missing friend. The two stayed with him until around 4 AM, and he kept repeating over and over that he knew nothing about where Lass was or what happened to her. After no luck in finding her friend, Goettsch booked a motel room for that night and drove back to San Francisco the following day. After interviews with friends, family, and acquaintances of Johnson, investigators determined he had an ‘evasive manner,’ which left him as the individual they felt was most likely responsible for Lass’ disappearance as far as motive, opportunity, and reason were concerned. Despite multiple interviews and a polygraph examination, the suspect was never charged in relation to Donna’s disappearance.

Investigators spoke with Dorothy Cullison, who was employed at a local storefront called ‘Tahoe Paradise. She shared with them that she saw Lass the day after she was supposedly last seen on September 7th at roughly 3-4 in the afternoon. She was walking south on Pioneer Trail and was in the company of a young, clean shaven blonde man. Mrs. Cullison was unable to give LE any additional information regarding either individual, however she was insistent that the woman she saw was Donna Lass. She also claimed that they briefly spoke as well. If this is true, then Mrs. Cullison would be the last known person to see Lass alive. According to PI Miller’s report (again, more on that later), on October 21, 1970 the South Tahoe PD spoke with Joe Hershey from the Des Moines FBI office, who reported that he helped expedite a civilian stop order for Lass’ ‘file in Washington.’ Roughly a week later on October 27 a long distance call was made from LE to Jeremiah Murphy, a lawyer in Sioux Falls. Mr. Murphy shared that he was in contact with former FBI Director Herbert Hoover with the request that he help intervene on behalf of the Lass family in order to put the case more in the spotlight; no return call was ever received, however it does appear that Hoover did at one point attempt to help with her case (although I’m not exactly sure what he did).

On September 21, 1970 law enforcement contacted Tahoe National Bank, where Lass had an account and spoke with Clarise Chapman. Mrs. Chapman reported that they received no checks from Donna after September 1 and flagged her account for activity. She also had an account at the Bank of America in Tahoe, and there was no suspicious activity related to that one either (it was flagged as well). Additionally there was no suspicious activity before or after September 6, 1970 that had shown up on her credit card; her drivers license was flagged for activity as well.

George Victor Johnson, a security guard that worked with Donna during her final shift at the Casino, shared with investigators that he interacted with her on multiple occasions the evening she disappeared. Despite no criminal record, there is a notation in the private investigator’s report that he was ‘unstable and a heavy drinker, also not to be believed all the time.’ Another new acquaintance of Donna’s from the casino said that they were friendly and went out for drinks on occasion after work but she didn’t consider her a ‘close friend.’ The unidentified woman also shared that she saw Lass on September 9, 1970 when she went with Lass and another friend Dwight Stogsdale to take a third friend named Teke Holland to San Francisco to join the Army, but investigators determined that she had her dates incorrect and meant to say September 2nd. Additionally, two days before the friends went to San Francisco Lass was seen with two males that were employed at Barney’s Department store. Mrs. Tooker, who worked for the Lake Tahoe Ambulance company, looked into her log from September 6 to the 23rd and didn’t come across any reports of Jane Doe’s that matched Lass’ description.

The Lowe’s shared with law enforcement that the last time they saw Donna was on September 4, 1970 at around 11:30 PM. They also said that she was newly acquainted with a young man named ‘Dave’ that was employed at a local Chevron Station in Stateline. She reportedly went to see him a few times while on her way to work dressed in uniform, and that he went to her POE to visit with her on multiple occasions, but the pair never dated. The couple also volunteered that their friend dated a Maitre D named Ramon Vasuez that also worked at her POE. Apparently at one point during their time together the young man ‘went in for a kiss’ but was rejected; he did apologize to her the next day. Vascuas told investigators that he saw her ‘several times’ that Labor Day weekend but was ‘very busy at the time.’ He also said that he ‘never took her anywhere outside of their place of employment’ and his relationship with her didn’t go beyond a friendly occasional drink and conversation after their shift ended. Just as a side note, I was reading some comments from an interview posted on YouTube that an amateur true crime sleuth did with Larry Lowe, and some viewers pointed out that they felt his demeanor was suspicious and that he appeared to be visibly nervous. Although another commented that these were signs of Parkinson’s disease, so who knows? Lowe was looked into by LE but was eventually cleared.

Before she disappeared Lass briefly dated a writer from Keno, Oregon named Tony Chapman. When LE tracked him down Chapman shared with them that he never really ‘dated’ her but they did get together a few times to talk after she got out of work (on occasion they would end their night at around 5 AM). They went out on three different occasions but never even kissed. The last time he saw Donna was on September 2, when he and another friend named Vern Lauflin went out with her after work for about two hours.

There was a popular rumor floating around (and it was reported on by The Bee) that the day following Donna’s disappearance an unknown male made sinister telephone calls to her employer and landlord claiming that she had returned home to South Dakota due to a family illness (or emergency, I’ve seen it reported as both) and would ‘not be available.’ However, it was eventually determined that no such call was ever received by the landlord, and it cannot be confirmed nor denied whether or not a misleading call was ever received by her employer. Where this story originated from has yet to be identified, and there was no illness in the Lass family at that time. On page three of the Millers PI report there is a notation that a security guard named Gordon Petrovich at the Sahara received a call from a ‘Mr. Davis’ related to Lass. Petrovich claimed that he left a note on the security desk regarding the call; he did not recognize the voice and didn’t remember what time the call came in. When investigators searched Donna’s apartment it was tidy and undisturbed with no signs of a struggle, and there was a pile of neatly folded clothes on her bed, waiting to be put away.  The only unusual thing worth mentioning about the scene was there was a light left on in her bathroom. All of her personal belongings were left behind, including her purse, expensive clothing, and cosmetics bag. No fingerprint samples were taken from Donna’s apartment or vehicle.

A security guard that worked at the same casino as Lass filed a missing persons report for her three days after her disappearance. Less than a month after she disappeared on October 2, 1970 her sister Mary Pilker contacted a Private Investigator named John Miller to help look into her sister’s disappearance. According to the PI report, earlier in the day Lass disappeared she walked through her new apartment with both its old and new managers of the complex (a Nick Davis and Frank DeSimone, respectively) and completed a general move-in checklist. The two men reported her living space was neat and clean, with her bed made and her nurses hat on her dresser. On September 11 DeSimone went into her apartment and noticed it was in similar fashion to the first time he was there, and the only thing unusual was that the bathroom light was left on. After Donna disappeared Sargent Turker picked up her mail at the post office and gave it to Pilker, who drove her car back to California, taking with her Donna’s possessions from her apartment: ‘we drove her convertible home, packed all her things, and we were scared the whole way home.’ A few personal items that belonged to Donna were discovered in a shallow grave, but where that site was and what those items were I don’t know.

In September 1970 when Lass disappeared it looks like Bundy was employed as a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company, a family owned medical supply company; he worked there from June 5, 1970 to December 31, 1971. In mid-1970, he re-enrolled in the undergraduate psychology program at the University of Washington and was living at the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue. Additionally he was in the early stages of a long-term, committed relationship with Liz Kloepfer at this time, so he had a lot of established roots in the general Seattle area. Although attractive, Lass didn’t really fit Bundy’s typical victim profile: she had blonde hair that she wore short, which obviously doesn’t fit the whole ‘long brown hair parted down the middle’ narrative we are all familiar with (which I think it all just a coincidence and was simply a popular hairstyle in the 1970’s). She was also 25, which (although not entirely out of the question) is definitely on the older end of Bundy’s victims. Additionally, she was taken from her apartment that was in no way related to a college campus. But at the same time, we have to keep in mind that Donna was attractive and well educated, which we ALL know is absolutely Bundy’s type.

When analyzing the logistics of Bundy killing the pretty young nurse, the scene of the abduction was about 12 hours and 55 minutes away (or 764 miles, one way) from where he lived in Seattle… but let’s think about it, he had a lot on his plate at the time Donna disappeared, did he really have time to drive all the way to Nevada to commit a murder? Well, in this instance, it turns out he may have: although not on the ‘the FBI TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ according to Redditor ‘triddy6,’ Ted got a speeding ticket in Lake Tahoe a week before Lass was abducted. At first I was hesitant on believing this, because I could’t find it anywhere else, then I found the following in Rob Dielenbergs ‘Ted Bundy: A Visual Timeline,’ for the date August 20, 1970 ‘Jerry Thompson logged a call from Detective Pat O’Neil from the Sheriff’s Office in Sacramento, California on October 21, 1975. He informed Thompson that Mr. Bundy had a traffic citation on August 20, 1970 in Marin County, the Bay area, and he was driving an old white pick up truck. Liz stated that ‘he purchased a white Ford pick up truck he has presently in the SLC area around one year ago before he left for SLC.’ (Ira Beal report post Liz Kloepfer interview, September 17, 1975).’ So he was at least in the same area in the general time frame that she disappeared. A few entries down in the same text, on September 4, 1970 it’s reported Bundy returned home to Seattle with Liz after returning from vacation: they traveled all over the place, first to the Watastch Mountains in Utah, then to Ogden, then to Yakima, WA then Baker, Oregon then back to Ogden again. His whereabouts for September 6, 1970 seem to be unaccounted for. September is the most popular time of the year to go to Lake Tahoe, and it is a popular area that skiers flock to as well, and we know at least one of Bundy’s victims was abducted from a ski resort (Caryn Campbell on January 12, 1975 from The Wildwood Inn in Snowmass Village near Aspen). Playing devil’s advocate, we know he was an avid night person and had no problem driving long distances when looking for prey. As we know he didn’t mind traveling far to help throw police off his trail, and it didn’t hurt that he was aware that police agencies were reluctant to share information with each other. Was Donna just another one of Ted’s ‘murders of opportunity?’ It’s worth noting that not only do we have confirmed kills from Washington, Colorado, Utah, Oregon, Florida, and Idaho, I’ve also written about numerous other states he could have been active in as well (New Jersey, Arizona, and Vermont). I will say that September 1970 is definitely on the early side of when Ted may have started killing: he told psychologist Arthur Norman that he killed two girls in New Jersey in 1969 (most likely the Garden State Parkway Murders, Susan Perry and Elizabeth Davis), but when he was doing his death row confessions he told Dr. Keppel that he committed his first murders in 1972. Before his execution Bundy was never questioned about Lass’ disappearance.

It’s often wondered if Lass is the final victim of the Zodiac Killer, and she is included in the list of his potential 37 victims. Although I’ve seen that number as high as 48, law enforcement have only confirmed four attacks took place: five victims were killed and two survived. I mean, the Zodiac wasn’t known to abduct his victims, but he was known to contact LE to taunt and anonymously take responsibility for his crimes, as he wanted recognition for what he did. There was a possible link though to Donna and the very first majorly suspected Zodiac suspect: William Joseph Grant, who (like Ted Bundy) got a speeding ticket in his white Chevrolet at roughly the time Lass disappeared. Grant (who is referred to as ‘Andrew Todd Walker’ in Robert Graysmith’s true crime classic, Zodiac) was fifty-seven in September 1970, had glasses, and wore his dark hair combed into a pompadour. He served in the military from January 1942 through November 1945 and allegedly taught cryptography and received code training. Walker lived in Suisun, California and was employed as a real estate salesman in Fairfield. According to a report by the Solano County Sheriff’s Office, he was seen ‘hanging around the rest stop area on Hunters Hill engaging in homosexual activities.’ Sergeant Les Lundblad, who investigated the Zodiacs first confirmed ‘Lake Herman Road murders’ that occurred in the outskirts of Benicia, spoke with the suspect and noted his ‘hostile manner towards a CHP officer.’ Sergeant Lundblad reported Walker to authorities after he played a game of ‘cat and mouse’ with his vehicle on a freeway one evening. One-time California Highway Patrol Officer Lyndon Lafferty was the first to suspect Grant, and he later published his own book titled ‘The Zodiac Killer Cover-Up (aka The Silenced Badge).’

Another serial killer suggested in the strange disappearance of Donna Lass is Joseph James DeAngelo, who is also known as the Golden State Killer. Looking into DeAngelo it appears that he began ransacking homes in 1968 but he didn’t begin his murder spree until April 1974, plus he operated mostly in California’s Sacramento County, so Donna disappeared quite a bit before he started.

A popular name I saw thrown around in relation to the disappearance of Donna Lass was Richard Joseph Gaikowski. A newspaper editor at the time of the Zodiac murders in the late 1960’s, Gaikowski was initially considered a person of interest largely because of his training as a medic in the Army. This is because victim Paul Stine’s shirt was ripped, which was a common bandaging technique taught to medics in the military. In addition to this, Stine’s sister also remembers seeing him at her brother’s funeral. He also had a tendency to shorten his surname to ‘Gike’ or ‘Gyke,’ the latter of which was used in several Zodiac cyphers. Police dispatcher Nancy Slover, who the Zodiac spoke with after his attacks on Darlene Ferrin and Mike Mageau (Ferrin was killed but Mageau survived), claimed that the voice of Gaikowski matched that of the caller. Strangely rough, in 1971 Gaik was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward, and the Zodiac communications ceased for roughly three years. Redditor ‘AllyNC’ commented that he ‘had a widows peak, knew about codes, and had been questioned by police.’ Nothing official has ever linked Richard Gaikowski to Donna Lass’ disappearance.

On March 22, 1971, Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ received a postcard (with no postmark) from a person claiming to be the Zodiac and insinuated that Donna Lass was one of his victims (Avery was a well known reporter that frequently wrote about the murders). The postcard was an altered advertisement for ‘Forest Pines at Incline: Lake Tahoe’s Forest New Condominiums located in Include Village, Nevada.’ The correspondence contained five phrases glued onto the advertisement: 1. ‘Sierra Club’ 2. ‘Sought Victim 12’ 3. ‘Peek through the pines’ 4. ‘pass Lake Tahoe areas’ 5. ‘Around in the snow (pasted upside down).’ The meaning behind the messages have yet to be determined. It’s thought that it was designed and sent by the Zodiac sometime in between March 19 and March 21, 1971, and was mailed out either on March 22/23.

The Pines postcard never made any direct reference to Lass, and only hinted at a possible connection through the ‘Lake Tahoe’ and ‘Sierra Club’ references. If she was murdered by the Zodiac and this was set by him then the correspondence may hold an important hidden message… or, it may simply be a hoax. Additionally, if the postcards creator was in fact the Zodiac, then there’s always the possibility that he was a resident of the South Lake Tahoe area at the time of Lass’ abduction and that he was connected to her somehow or knew her in some way. The authenticity of the correspondence has divided the true crime community ever since it was received, but according to the creator of the website ‘zodiackiller.com,’ ‘in 1999 a retired detective revealed to me that a former Zodiac investigator had admitted to forging the Lass postcard.’ I want to point out that I only found this information in a single source, and there was nothing of substance to back that up. I mean, there’s so much back and forth with this case, who knows what’s truth and what’s fiction.

Donna’s sister Mary got a strange Christmas card on December 27, 1974 with the signature ‘Best Wishes, St. Donna and Guardian of the Pines.’ The card’s picture was an array of snowy pine trees on a beautiful winter’s day, and its postmark was 940, meaning it was mailed from San Mateo County or an adjacent section of Santa Clara County. Pilker immediately turned it over to law enforcement, and it was eventually determined to be a fake. It was a hoax sent from a couple who read about the Lass case, and had no connection to the Zodiac.  

Before she moved to Nevada Lass lived in the same area where the Zodiac operated out of, and even worked at a hospital in Presidio Park close to where their final (confirmed) victim Paul Stine was killed on October 11, 1969. Did he stalk Lass while she lived in San Francisco but maybe she moved away unexpectedly and prematurely, and he followed her to Nevada to finish what he started? I did read somewhere that if Donna was killed while employed on a military base then her case may have become Federal and would have been under a microscope even more. But on the flip side, there is always a chance that the Pines postcard wasn’t sent by the Zodiac, and was designed by a different assailant in an attempt to deflect attention away from the South Lake Tahoe region and towards the San Francisco Bay area where the Zodiac operated out of?

The search for Donna Lass would be negatively affected by the poor weather conditions in the months following her disappearance: South Lake Tahoe experienced record breaking amounts of snow in November and December 1970. From the onset, former South Lake Tahoe PD Chief Ray Lauritzen said that: ‘we don’t know where we’re going to begin. There’s a four or five foot pack of snow out there and it’s still snowing heavily.’ The Pines postcard made a reference to snow, in an almost sinister way by putting the phrase ‘around in the snow’ at ground level and upside down. By doing this, the creator may have hinted that Lass was buried under snow. A newspaper article stated that ‘the site depicted on the ‘Pines Card’ was from an advertisement published last Sunday by several newspapers. It was an artist’s rendition of houses among the trees at a Boise Cascade Company project at Incline Village, where construction has just begun on the development. While much of the Sierra area is under several feet of snow, Incline Village has only two feet on the ground. Police went to the area to determine if a search is possible.’ ​Chief Lauritzen added that ‘there’s no point to a search at this time. It’s unlikely a victim would be uncovered before spring.’

In his book ‘Zodiac,’ Robert Graysmith interviewed Jo Anne Goettsche, a former roommate of Donna Lass when she was living at 225 Malorca Way in San Francisco. They worked together at Letterman General Hospital at the Presidio Army Base, and lived together until June 1970 when Donna moved to South Lake Tahoe. Just as a side note, the ‘Presidio’ is close to where taxi driver and Zodiac victim Paul Stine was killed on October 11, 1969, and it was where a man that was strongly suspected to have been the Zodiac, was seen walking away immediately afterwards. Goettsche said that she and Donna used to go flying with two men from Riverside when they lived in San Francisco (a bit more on that later). There’s also a comment on a podcast about the Zodiac made by user ‘Sandy Betts’ that Lass ‘feared the dark, and would stay up all night gambling. Before walking home. But then we have the PI who said she walked home when it was dark.’ I didn’t listen to the podcast itself but this is the only source I’ve come across that mentions Donna gambling, but maybe it was fairly new behavior, as she had only recently begun working at a casino. Maybe she was just experimenting.

In August 2000 ​former detective Harvey Hines began to investigate the abduction of Donna Lass. Retired from the Groveland, California police force since 1992, Hines had an avid interest in the Zodiac case and has studied it since 1973. He even became friends with the Lass family, and along with Mary and Don Pilker (Donna’s nephew) became convinced the Zodiac was responsible for Donna’s disappearance. In an interview with The Tahoe Daily Tribune, Hines stated that ‘there was a lot of evidence inside Sahara Tahoe Casino that she left directly from there. She was a very personal person and she left a lot of personal items behind; an opened letter, a dirty uniform and on her log, a pen was dragged from the last word she wrote to the bottom of the page.’

Hines firmly believes that Lass was abducted from her place of employment right at shift change: according to her friends and colleagues, she was a conscientious and reliable worker and would never just take off. This coupled with the strange pen mark (and unusual handwriting) on the nursing log suggests that she was either physically assaulted here, or was possibly distracted and lured away with the ruse of needing help in the casino’s car park (where she was most likely abducted from). Despite the overwhelming evidence that suggests Lass walked to work the evening she disappeared and never left the Hotel on her own, many true crime fans strongly feel that she may have made her way back to her apartment in her Camaro, where her abductor was waiting for her. Or, maybe he followed her from the hotel to the Monte Verde apartments and attacked her there, or even en route. Hines strongly speculated that Lass was buried on the Donner Ski Ranch, which was actually searched after an anonymous tip was mailed in about a suspected dump site. Bomb sniffing and cadaver dogs were taken to Mount Diablo near Donner Canyon to comb the area, but came up with nothing. The following is from an unreleased, 120-page investigative report completed by Hines: ’after studying the card, I drove to Nordin, located on old Highway 40, north of Lake Tahoe, and found the SIERRA CLUB. I learned the club was not called the Sierra Club. It was named the Clair Tappaan Lodge and it was a private club for Sierra Club members only. I believed if I followed the directions on the postcard I would find Donna Lass’ grave. I believe she was buried near the Sierra Club and most likely on the Donner Ski Ranch. I would later have the pictures of the Sierra Club developed. Then using a copy of Zodiac’s card, I cut out the phrases he had pasted on his card. Using these phrases, I overpasted them on the copy of the Sierra Club picture. It was strikingly similar to the original card.’

On April 20, 1970, a cipher was sent to the San Francisco Chronicle that contained only 13 letters, widely known as the ‘My Name Is…Letter.’ Hines felt that he successfully solved it, revealing the name ‘Lawrence Kane.’ Looking into him, Kane worked with Donna at the Letterman General Hospital at the Presidio Army Base, and lived next to her in San Francisco. He was a known peeping Tom and was in the Navy. According to Redditor ‘MozartofCool,’ he moved to Nevada around the same time as Lass and even got a job at the same hotel that she was employed at. Hines also claimed that Kane sold Arizona real estate from an office located across the street from the apartment building where Donna lived. I couldn’t find any proof of any form of relationship between the two, but there is a theory that he became obsessed with her after seeing her when they worked together in California, and ‘grabbed her when he knew she would be alone.’ The former detective drew additional parallels to Kane and the Zodiac, including similar penmanship styles and physical appearance. A former military man, Kane suffered a traumatic brain injury in 1962 and as a result was diagnosed as being able to control his urges and related to ‘self-gratification.’ Nothing of substance ever linked him to the disappearance of Donna Lass. Zodiac killer or not, Kane was a career criminal, even going so far as to rob a bank at one point in his life. Reading through the Zodiac Reddit pages, it seems that he is one of the more heavily discussed suspects. An interesting tidbit about him: in 1992 suspected Zodiac victim Kathleen Johns picked his photo out of a line-up and identified him as the man who attempted to abduct her and her baby in March 1970.

In a YouTube video made by the creator ‘BlackBoxOnlineRadio,’ user ‘captainj1339’ mentioned a possible suspect of James Richard Curry. Curry was a rapist and serial killer that murdered either four or five people in California and Nevada from 1982 to 1983. A few days after he was arrested he hung himself in his cell. He was most famous for posthumously being Id’ed as the killer of Mary Silvani, who was formerly referred to as the Sheep Flats Jane Doe. Looking into him it does appear Lass’ disappearance took place quite a bit before he was active, as his earliest suspected murder took place in 1978. Another YouTube video discussed another potential Zodiac suspect I never heard of before named Don Harden. A school teacher by trade, Harden broke the Zodiacs first (and longest) cipher, the 408 code (sent on July 31, 1969). The code was split into three pieces of equal length: two were mailed to newspapers in San Francisco and one to a paper in nearby Vallejo. He demanded they be printed or he would go on a ‘kill rampage.’ I mean, most of the information I found related to Harden was related to the fact that he solved the cipher, and there’s just a few small niche groups of amateur Zodiac researchers that suspect he created the cipher and is also the best suspect. It doesn’t hurt that his wife Bettye was a graphologist. Yet another new name I came across is Joseph Stephen Holt, a murderer and suspected serial killer who in 2019 was posthumously linked via DNA to two murders committed in South Lake Tahoe that occurred between 1977 and 1979. He was a real estate agent and died in 2014 without ever being considered a suspect. Since he was identified, authorities have been investigating whether he could be responsible for more violent crimes that were committed in the state, including the disappearance of Donna Lass.

I came across another potential suspect one night scrolling through Facebook looking for anything additional I might have missed. A Facebooker named Randall Higgins claims that it was his father, Robert Melvin Higgins that was the Zodiac and the killer of Donna Lass. On his page he goes over a few reasons why he feels this is the case, it’s all mostly cipher related and how he feels they’re particular to his Dad and his life (I’ll include screenshots below), but in a different post he claims that his dad became a much kinder and more caring  person after he quit using amphetamines in 1980. Higgins also said that both of his parents were users of the prescription drug Thalidomide, which he felt might have contributed to his Dads altered mental state and what turned him into the Zodiac. He said his mother took the drug for 2-6 weeks when she was pregnant with him but his Dad took it anytime he could get his hands on it. Looking into it, Thalidomide is used to treat and prevent ‘erythema nodosum leprosum,’ a painful skin disease associated with leprosy and when paired with dexamethasone treats multiple myeloma. It works on the immune system and helps to reduce inflammation. So, I don’t really understand the need to take it with such urgency, it’s not a narcotic and won’t get you high. I was also able to find a TikTok video Mr. Higgins made where he broke down his rationale as to why he feels his dad was responsible for Lass’ death: apparently the weekend she disappeared in September 1970 he sat his entire family down and told them that he was going to Modesto to help take care of his adoptive parents, as his ‘father’ had recently been diagnosed with colon cancer. However Higgins suspected that his father never made it to Modesto and instead went to South Lake Tahoe and killed Donna Lass. He also said his father is DB Cooper so… I don’t know. At this time I’m taking this guy’s tale with a grain of salt.

On one of my final days of doing research, I came across a YouTube Channel of a PhD named ‘David Gold’ who claims to have found the body of Donna Lass in an unmarked grave on some uninhabited land in Lake Tahoe. Looking into this guy, he’s absolutely hellbent that the Zodiac killer is a Alcatraz escapee named Frank Morris as well as DB Cooper, the guy who hijacked a Boeing 727 aircraft on November 24, 1971 (but oddly enough, he isn’t the only person that feels this way). It appears policing agencies didn’t take his claims very seriously and never even looked into the site. The grave, decorated with an array of glued together rocks and pine cones, was obviously deemed not to be the final resting site of Lass, as it was recently announced that her remains were actually recovered in early 1986 (but more on that later). As of January 2024 there is nothing linking Morris or Cooper to the disappearance of Lass (or any other Zodiac murder).

One time Orange County Sheriff’s Inspector Stanley Parsons said that ‘if the Zodiac claims he killed the missing nurse at Lake Tahoe, and if in fact he did slay her, then there is a very good chance he also killed Miss. Hakari and Miss. Bennalack.’ About six months before Lass disappeared on March 7, 1970 23 year-old Judith Hakari had just finished her shift at the Sutter Memorial Hospital in Sacramento. It’s suspected she was abducted shortly after pulling into the parking lot of the Markston apartments where she lived at around 11:30 PM. The young RN had made plans to see her fiance, Raymond Willis, who was planning on meeting her at her home at around 11:45 PM. Willis waited for Hakari and became concerned when she didn’t show up. It was around 1:45 in the morning that he walked around the complex’s parking lot to check if her Mercury Cougar was there. It was, and after seeing it parked in its usual spot he immediately contacted the police. Upon investigating, Hakari’s vehicle showed signs of a struggle: the passenger’s side door was left open, her keys were found on the floorboard, and ripped up strips of a Cannon-brand towel were strewn all over the inside. Her remains were discovered roughly 40 miles from her apartment by hikers in a shallow grave near Ponderosa Way in Weimar on April 25, 1970. The pretty young nurse experienced an absolutely brutal death: her nose was smashed in repeatedly and her hyoid bone was fractured. Her jaw was broken in two places and she had several teeth knocked out. She had also been strangled and raped.

Twenty-seven year old Nancy Bennallack was found stabbed to death in her residence at the Tahitian Apartments on October 25, 1970. She lived just one block away from the Markston Apartments where Judith Hakari lived before she vanished. The attractive young court reporter lived alone in an upstairs apartment and was last seen alive by her fiance on October 25, 1970 at approximately 11:30 PM. When she didn’t come into work the next morning, her coworker called her son to check on her. The friend’s son explained the situation to Nancy’s apartment manager, who was sympathetic and gave him a spare key. After letting himself in, the young man came across a gruesome sight: Nancy had been brutally murdered and was stabbed so viciously that she was nearly decapitated. In 2021 advancements in genetic genealogy helped to identify Bennallack’s killer as Richard John Davis, who lived in the apartment building across from her. Sadly, Davis will never face justice because he died of an alcohol related illness on November 2, 1997.

On July 24, 1977, Brynn Rainey vanished after she was last seen at the Bittercreek Saloon in Stateline, Nevada. Originally from Ohio and employed at the Sahara Tahoe Casino, when the 27-year-old didn’t arrive at work for her usual shift the next day she was reported as missing. After walking through her apartment, investigators determined that there were no signs of a struggle and nothing had been stolen. Rainey was missing for slightly less than a month when a horseback rider found her remains in a shallow grave near a South Lake Tahoe horse riding area called Stateline Stables on August 20. From the small amount of forensic evidence investigators were able to gather from the scene, it was determined that she had been raped and then strangled to death. Less than two years later on June 30, 1979 Carol Andersen traveled from her parents house in Stateline to a party at Regan Beach, which was close to South Lake Tahoe. When her good time was over she declined a ride home from her friends, and it’s speculated that the 16-year-old most likely walked for a bit before eventually thumbing a ride from a passing motorist. The following morning, someone driving by the Pioneer Trail (which is where Donna Lass lived before she disappeared) came across her lifeless body; her killer made no effort to conceal her corpse. After her remains were sent for an autopsy in Sacramento, the coroner determined that she had been bound, gagged and strangled to death by her assailant. Although these murders happened near to where Lass had recently moved to there was nothing linking them to her disappearance.

A name that came up fairly frequently in my Lass research is Charles Hollingsworth, a doctor with a successful practice that lived in South Lake Tahoe. In fall 1970, Dr. Hollingsworth was recently divorced with two young daughters, and his marriage had recently fallen apart after years of infidelity. His ex-wife remarried, but he found himself alone and experiencing financial concerns; members of his family shared that they felt he may have had undiagnosed Manic Depression. On October 26, 1970, Charles left his practice after a disagreement and was never seen or heard from again. His vehicle was found abandoned in a desolate area 24 miles away from where he was last seen; inside it were several of his personal belongings, including a gun and his running shoes. It’s strongly speculated that his case is somehow related to the disappearance of Donna: at one time they may have worked together at Letterman Hospital when she was still living in San Francisco. Charles was also a known gambler, and it’s speculated that he spent a good amount of his spare time at the casino where Lass worked. As I mentioned earlier, the young RN enjoyed going flying with her friend Jo Ann, and Charles had his pilot’s license and owned his own plane (although there is no proof they were ever on an airplane together). Aside from this, they both worked in the medical field and Donna’s new apartment was less than a mile away from where Charles lived (she resided at 3893 Pioneer Trail and he lived at 3840 Pioneer Trail), there really isn’t anything substantial tying the two disappearances together.

In July 2007 the Sierra Sun reported that amateur Zodiac sleuth Clifton Calvez went to South Lake Tahoe PD and told them that he may have located the final resting place of Donna Lass using satellite imagery. After initially being dismissed because of the ‘Angora fires’ that were taking place at the time, Calvez said ‘screw it. I was fed up,’ and took off to check out the site on his own. He brought with him two disposal cameras he bought from a local pharmacy and a printout of the Google Earth map he used in his investigation. A retired colonel in the Air Force, Calvez admitted that he wouldn’t mind receiving the monetary reward for solving the Lass disappearance. According to the article, ‘as he ventured into the woods, Calvez said he saw a baboon and satyr etched into the bark of two trees. The baboon is the guardian referenced in the message to Lass’ sister in the Christmas card that read: ‘Best Wishes, St. Donna & Guardian of the Pine.’ After relentlessly contacting authorities and media representatives via phone calls and emails, investigators gave in, and went to check out the site with him. Retired Lieutenant Marty Hale with the South Lake Tahoe PD said investigators remained interested in what Calvez had to say and were ‘planning on seeing what leads we have there.’

After waiting around for about an hour waiting to get permission to dig from the California Tahoe Conservancy, they started digging. Investigators dug a good four feet into the ground looking for the remains of Lass but sadly found nothing (except for a pair of sunglasses). It was then that Calvez shared that he knew of a second possible site nearby where Lass could have been buried, but this also resulted in nothing. Investigators quickly called off search efforts. Using a house built in 1976 as a reference point, Calvez still believes the young RN is buried somewhere in the same general area, and: ‘I was disappointed, but even at this point I think that’s the place. Somewhere around that tree, no doubt about it.’

On December 31, 1985 a jawbone complete with all of its teeth was found by a fisherman in a drainage ditch as he was traveling towards Lake Valley Reservoir near the I-80 and Highway 20, near the Yuba Gap in Placer County. During a follow-up search of the area conducted by (retired) deputy Lowell Carleton in January 1986, the rest of the skull was discovered near where the mandible was found. No additional body parts or evidence were found at the time. After its discovery investigators kept the skull stored away, waiting for the day where forensic technology would be able to identify the remains. In recent years the sheriff’s office teamed up with the Placer County District Attorney’s office to form a cold case team, and they sent the skull to the California Department of Justice for genetic testing. In December 2023 it came back a match to Lass after a DNA profile was created in 2018 when Mary Pilker gave investigators a sample.

So what took so long for the skull to be identified as belonging to Donna? South Lake Tahoe Police Chief David Stevensen said that at that time it was found DNA evidence just wasn’t advanced enough to get a sample. Despite the positive ID, LE aren’t any closer to solving who it was that took the young nurse’s life, and didn’t share if they think foul play is suspected or how Lass died. South Lake Tahoe police are still actively investigating the case.

One interesting thing I came upon in my research is a comment in a YouTube video by the creator ‘BlackBoxOnlineRadio:’ user ‘colonelreb12014’ said that in an interview on the Peter Turner podcast with the Case Breakers, it was shared that Donna Lass reportedly dated and then dumped their Zodiac suspect Gary Poste’s brother. Some background: in October 2021, a team of cold case investigators calling themselves ‘The Case Breakers’ named US Air Force veteran Gary Francis Poste as the Zodiac killer. The video’s creator replied that he heard the same thing but had to wonder about the authenticity because the same group reported that victim Paul Stine owed Poste some money and that’s why he killed him. The creator said they were going to look into this further but I never saw anything additional from them about this. Despite their ‘discovery,’ the Zodiac investigation remains open to this day.

Interestingly enough, at one point Mary Pilker wondered if maybe Phillip Craig Garrido was responsible for her sister’s disappearance. Although Garrido infamously kidnapped Jaycee Lee Dugard in June 1991 (which is almost 21 years after Lass disappeared), he had an extensive criminal history that began well before then. A frequent drug user (primarily crystal meth and LSD), in 1972 he was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, but the case fell apart after she declined to testify. The following year, Garrido married his high school classmate Christine Murphy, but they later divorced after claims that he was abusive. Murphy also alleged that her husband kidnapped her when she attempted to leave him. While incarcerated at Leavenworth Prison in Kansas, Garrido met Nancy Bocanegra, who was there visiting her uncle, who was another prisoner. He and Bocanegra were married at Leavenworth on October 5, 1981. In 1976, Garrido kidnapped 25-year-old Katherine Callaway in South Lake Tahoe. He then drove her to a warehouse in Reno, Nevada where he brutally sexually assaulted her for five and a half hours. When a cop noticed an unusual vehicle parked outside the unit as well as a broken lock on the warehouse door, he knocked and was greeted by Garrido. The young woman then emerged and asked the officer for help. He was immediately taken into custody and was convicted of felonies in both federal and state courts.

In a 1976 court-ordered psychiatric evaluation, Garrido was diagnosed as a ‘sexual deviant and chronic drug abuser.’ A court appointed doctor recommended he undergo a neurological examination because of his chronic drug use, which may have been ‘responsible in part’ for his ‘mixed or multiple sexual deviations. During the examination, he shared that he enjoyed masturbateing in his vehicle on the side of elementary and high schools while watching young girls. The diagnostic tests came back that he had a: ‘normal neurological examination.’ On March 9, 1977 he was given a 50-year federal sentence on June 30, 1977, and was sent to Leavenworth Penitentiary; he was released only ten and a half years later on January 22, 1988. From there he was sent to Nevada State Prison, where he served only seven months of a five-years-to-life sentence and was granted federal parole on August 26, 1988. Upon his release, Garrido wore a GPS-enabled ankle bracelet and lived with his wife and elderly mother, who had dementia. In an interview with the ‘Reno Gazette Journal’ on April 5, 2014, Pilker said ‘as soon as I heard the Dugard case last week I thought that this could have something to do with my sisters disappearance.’ As of January 2024 nothing has ever officially linked Lass to Philip Garrido. He was apprehended along with his wife on August 26, 2009 and was sentenced to 431 years to life in prison. Nancy was sentenced to 36 years to life in prison.

Just as an interesting side note, according to true crime researcher Tom Voigt fingerprint comparisons were made in February 1989 after Bundy was executed which eliminated him as a person of interest in the Zodiac murders. I’ve seen whispers and rumors about Ted being a possible suspect in the slayings, which took place in 1968-1969… but I guess this confirms it.

Both of Lass’ parents have passed away, as well as the majority of her siblings. Mr. Lass died at the age of 75 on March 30, 1973 and Frances passed away on August 5, 1982; she lived in a nursing home for the last seven years of her life. Donna was listed as a survivor in her dads obituary but was listed as deceased in her mothers. Her brother Raymond died on July 18, 1988 at the age of 69. He was a Master sergeant in the US Marine Corps in World War II and is buried in Riverside, CA. Marjorie (Bellach) died at the age of 77 on July 31, 2006. She loved spending time with her daughters and enjoyed cooking, gardening, and babysitting her grandchildren. Eugene Lass died on March 5, 2014 at the age of 90. He worked in farming and trucking, and enjoyed being outdoors. Mary (Pilker) passed away at the age of 85 on November 17, 2019. Like Donna, she was a nurse and got married to her husband Zane on August 29, 1959. They had four children together before he passed away from cancer only five years later on December 29, 1964 (Mary’s life is especially tragic). Karen (Lounsbery) passed away on February 10, 2020 at the age of 77. After graduating from cosmetology school, she ran a salon out of their home for several years. She raised a family with her husband Gary, and everyone loved her snickerdoodles and pie.

Donna Lass’ freshman picture in the 1959 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass in a group photo for debate club in the 1960 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass in a group photo for ‘inexperienced debators’ from the 1960 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass’ junior picture in the 1961 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass in an officers picture for the Future Homemakers of America from the 1961 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass’ senior picture in the 1962 Beresford High School yearbook.
Donna Lass’ activities from her four years at Beresford High School from the 1962 yearbook.
Donna Ann Lass.
Donna Lass.
Donna Lass at the age of 25; photo taken in 1970.
Donna Lass.
Donna Lass.
A picture of Donna Lass using age progression technology.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on September 22, 1970.
An article about Donna Lass’ disappearance published by The Sacramento Bee on September 24, 1970.
An article about Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on September 26, 1970.
An article about the search for Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on September 28, 1970.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Lead Daily Cal on October 6, 1970.
An article about Mary Pilker beginning the search for her sister published by The Argus-Leader on October 9, 1970.
An article about Mary Pilker continuing the search for her sister published by The Argus-Leader on October 17, 1970.
An article about a reward for Donna published by The Sacramento Bee on February 6, 1971.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Oakland Tribune on March 26, 1971.
An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna published by The Times Standard on March 26, 1971.
An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna published by The Bryan Times on March 26, 1971.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Napa Valley Register on March 26, 1971.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Bulletin on March 26, 1971.
Part one of an article mentioning Lass published by The Times Standard on March 27, 1971.
Part two of an article mentioning Lass published by The Times Standard on March 27, 1971.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on March 28, 1971.
An article mentioning Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on July 18, 1971.
A blurb about a reward for information leading to the whereabouts of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on February 17, 1972.
An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Peninsula Times Tribune on March 27, 1972.
An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Times-Advocate on March 28, 1972.
An article mentioning Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on August 8, 1972.
An blurb pleading for information leading to the whereabouts of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on August 17, 1972.
An article about the Zodiac that mentions Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on April 26, 1975.
An blurb about a reward for the recovery of Donna Lass published by The San Francisco Examiner on August 31, 1975.
An article about the skeletal remains of Donna Lass being found published by The Press-Tribune on January 2, 1986.
An article about Donna Lass’ skull being recovered published by The Press-Tribune on January 23, 1986.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Modesto Bee on September 2, 2000.
An article mentioning Donna Lass published by The Los Angeles Times on September 2, 2000.
An article about Donna Lass published by The Sacramento Bee on November 16, 2000.
A missing persons poster for Donna Lass featuring information about the Zodiac. It was created by a friend of the Lass family in 1997 as an attempt to draw the killer out.
A press announcement regarding the identification of Donna Lass’ skull that was published by the city of South Lake Tahoe PD in late December 2023.
The Lass family’s ‘MyHeritage’ page.
A map of Lass’s POE compared to her new apartment.
The front of the ‘Pines’ Postcard sent to Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ on March 22, 1971.
The ‘Pines Postcard.’ The text on the card read: 1. ‘Sierra Club’ 2. ‘Sought Victim 12’ 3. ‘Peek through the pines’ 4. ‘pass Lake Tahoe areas’ 5. ‘Around in the snow (pasted upside down).’ The ‘Pines’ postcards that was sent to Paul Avery from the ‘San Francisco Chronicle.’ The postcard was produced by the Zodiac killer, according to the California Department of Criminal Identification. It was delivered to the San Francisco Chronicle, addressed to reporter Paul Avery. The cross and circle is the symbol used by the Zodiac and the assumption is tat he may have buried a 12th victim under the snow near Lake Tahoe.
The original, untouched advertisement.
The envelope for a letter to Donna’s sister Mary that was mailed in 1974.
A Christmas card sent to Mary Pilker that was mailed in 1974 that was a suspected correspondence from the Zodiac Killer.
A Zodiac cipher from June 26th 1970. where he claims 12 victims. It was sent to the San Francisco Chronicle and the cipher at the bottom was never decoded.
A breakdown of Lass related Zodiac information.
Donna Lass Code Solution.
The Monte Verde apartments.
The Monte Verde apartments.
The Monte Verdi apartments. Photo courtesy of ‘ZodiacKiller.’
The Monte Verdi apartments. Photo courtesy of ‘ZodiacKiller.’
The insides of a Monte Verde apartment.
South Lake Tahoe police officer Chuck Owens digs into earth where a Zodiac researcher believes Donna Lass was buried by the serial killer in 1970. The early July 2007 dig did not reveal any human remains. Photo taken on July 27, 2007 and is courtesy of Sierra Sun News Service.
Another picture from the 2007 dig site. Sierra Club stone cross.
A red,1968 Chevy Camaro much like the one Lass drove.
The Sahara Tahoe Hotel & Casino.
Bundy’s whereabouts in fall 1970 according to the ‘1992 FBI Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Richard Joseph Gaikowski.
Lawrence Kane.
Joseph Stephen Holt.
James Richard Curry.
Donald Gene Harden.
An older picture of Zodiac suspect, Don Harden.
A photo of Robert Melvin Higgins and his family (he’s the adult male). Photo courtesy of Randall Higgins.
The first part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.
The second part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.
The third part of Higgins explanation as to why he feels his father is the Zodiac. Screenshots courtesy of Facebook.
James P. Lass’ WWI registration card.
The Lass family in the 1950 census. It looks like Donna was child number 7 of 8.
An Obituary for James P. Lass published in The Argus-Leader on March 31, 1973.
An advertisement for an auction regarding the estate of James Lass published in The Argus-Leader on September 9, 1973.
An Obituary for Frances Lass published in The Argus-Leader on August 8, 1982.
A birth announcement for Raymond Lass published in The Argus-Leader on March 21, 1919.
Donna’s sister Mary Pilker.
An obituary for Donna’s sister Mary Pilker published by The Argus-Leader on November 20, 2019.
Marjorie Marie (Lass) Bellach.
The wedding announcement for Marjorie published in The Argus-Leader on December 2, 1948.
Marjorie Marie (Lass) Bellach. She passed away in 2006.
Eugene Lass, who passed away in 2014.
Karen Katherine (Lass) Lounsbery. She passed away in 2020.
The one time speculated gravesite of Donna Lass, thanks to amateur Zodiac researcher David Gold. Looking into him, most of his material is nonsense.
The crucifix on the site where David Gold at one time speculated where Donna Lass’ remains were buried.
Judith Ann Hakari.
Nancy Marie Bennallack.
Brynn Rainey.
Carol Anderson.

Cynthia ‘Cindy’ Lee Mellin.

Cynthia ‘Cindy’ Lee Mellin was born on December 3, 1950 to Leonard and Ardis (nee Mauseth) Mellin in Hennepin, Minnesota. Mr. Mellin was born on November 1, 1912 in Minneapolis, Minnesota and Ardis was born on December 15, 1912 in Brooklyn Center, MN. The couple were married in 1934 and had five daughters (Paula, Cindy, Janice Mae, Judith Mae, and Maryann) and eventually settled down in Ventura, California; Mr. Mellin worked as an engineer and draftsman for VETCO Offshore Industries, Inc. After Cindy graduated from Ventura Senior High School in 1968 she went on to attend Ventura College as a full time student majoring in education. She dreamt of becoming a teacher one day, just like her older sister Judith that lived in Pico Rivera; she was planning on transferring to the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1971. Cindy didn’t smoke, drink, or do drugs, and even though she was described as a shy and reserved girl by most people that knew her, she was well liked by her peers and seemed to get along with everyone. Her family members, friends, coworkers, supervisors, and teachers all said that she was an exceptionally kind person and not at all the kind of young woman that would just up and run off. At the time Cindy disappeared in early 1970 she lived at her parents house located at 258 North Linda Vista Avenue in Ventura and worked as a part time sales clerk at The Broadway Department Store at the Buenaventura Shopping Center. She had blue eyes and light brown, shoulder-length hair that she typically wore tied back in a ponytail; she was approximately 5’6” tall, weighed 105 pounds and wore contact lenses.

On Tuesday, January 20, 1970, Cynthia Lee Mellin went to class like she did every day, and when she got home in the afternoon received a call from her employer asking if she’d be able to come into work at 5:30 PM. She agreed, and the 19-year-old arrived at her employer without incident; like always, she parked her vehicle in the back part of the parking lot along Main Street. Cindy left work shortly after closing at 9:42 PM and it was then she discovered her left rear tire was flat. She was last seen a few minutes later by two coworkers standing next to her cream blue, 1960 Rambler sedan; the vehicle’s rear bumper was up on a jack and there was an unidentified man there helping her. He drove a small, light-colored car and appeared to be about six feet tall; he was thin in stature, had light-colored hair and appeared to be between 30 and 40 years old. She was last seen wearing a red ribbon in her hair, a navy-blue dress with red buttons going down the front, a brown corduroy three-quarter length coat, medium-heeled blue and red shoes adorned with gold buckles, and a gold ring with a single pearl. The night she disappeared Cindy only had five or six dollars cash on her and didn’t have her purse with her (in an attempt to curb employee theft, The Broadway Department Store didn’t allow their employees to bring in purses or book bags so she had her personal belongings in a clear, plastic bag).

A security guard that was assisting Mellin in changing her tire had to leave and take care of an alarm that was going off thanks to the foggy weather conditions. At around 9:45 PM, two of her coworkers drove past her vehicle and saw her open her trunk, and it was then that a man ‘stepped out of the shadows’ and offered her help. The women had been picked up by their husbands, who also offered to help her with the tire but she waved them away, indicating that everything was fine. After getting a cup of coffee at a nearby restaurant they drove by the parking lot again at around 10:10 PM; this time, it was deserted except for Mellin’s car, which was still up on the jack. They would later tell investigators that they ‘didn’t think anything about it because we thought the man was Cindy’s father and that she was just taken home.’

When she worked the closing shift Cindy usually got home around 9:50 PM, and when she didn’t arrive by eleven her father simply thought she went out for coffee with friends and went to bed. He left the front light on like he always did when one of his girls was still out, and although she was out the night Cindy disappeared Mrs. Mellin said that she ‘never could rest until they were all home.’ The next morning at 4:45, Mr. Mellin woke up and immediately noticed that the porch light was still on and his daughter’s vehicle was not parked in the driveway. It was completely out of character for her to stay out all night, especially since she had a final in her biological sciences class later that morning at 8 AM (which was the first of her scheduled final exams).

Mr. Mellin then went to her bedroom and saw that Cindy’s bed was still made and had not been slept in, meaning she never came home from work the night before. Within minutes he was dressed and out the door. He immediately drove to the Buenaventura Shopping Center to look for her and came across an ominous site: the parking lot was completely empty except for her car, still up on the jack with the flat tire still on; the spare was lying nearby on the ground. He said that his daughter wouldn’t have been able to operate a jack and had no idea how to change a tire. He was always the person that she called when experiencing car problems, and just a week before he had to come to her aid in the same parking lot when her battery died. The vehicle’s glove compartment box, doors, and trunk were all left wide open, and when he examined the flat it seemed to have been deliberately punctured with a knife, and ‘there was a large slit in one side.’ There was no sign of his daughter at the scene, and he immediately notified law enforcement of the situation. Mr. Mellin immediately suspected foul play, and according to him, ‘Cindy would not go away willingly with anyone.’ He also said that she was ‘practically without problems,’ and ‘would never willingly hurt anyone.’ In the early part of the case, Lieutenant Howard Peek of the Ventura PD said that they ‘were drawing no conclusions at this time. They have a few clues, but we are appealing to anyone who might have seen the girl or who might have information concerning her to get in touch with us.’

From the early stages of the investigation law enforcement immediately suspected that Cindy was abducted and not a runaway. She wasn’t in a relationship or have any problems with anyone in her life. She had stable employment and was a full-time student. Additionally, when she disappeared Mellin was wearing her contacts, which were the ‘old-school,’ hard contacts that weren’t designed to be worn for extended periods of time. Furthermore, she left all of her cleaning and maintenance materials for them at home. Lieutenant Ken Cozzins of the Ventura Police Department said that the department had ‘no evidence or witnesses that Cindy was kidnapped, but because of her background we must suspect she was met with foul play.’ In the beginning, the Mellin’s held onto a glimmer of hope that she was safe, but as the days ticked by their hopes quickly faded. Mrs. Mellin said that they were ‘just in a state of distress, near the breaking point. We just don’t know what to think. It’s just a blank, similar to a nightmare.’ Leonard Mellin said his daughter has ‘never done anything like this before’ and there ‘has never been any family conflicts.’

According to LE, Mellin had no mental health concerns, financial issues, or problems at home, and had never ran away before. Both of her parents said that she was a better than average student that dated only occasionally, and she never really had a serious boyfriend. Cindy had a busy schedule throughout the month of January and letters from friends further proved that there was nothing out of the ordinary in her life. Her savings account was untouched and no money had been withdrawn from it recently. In the beginning of the investigation, Lieutenant Cozzins said that it was ‘still too early to speculate what happened to the teenager, but evidence indicates the girl was apparently kidnapped. But, we are thoroughly investigating every angle possible.’ Regarding her daughter’s disappearance, Mrs. Mellin said ‘we think that she didn’t go willingly. She has a habit of always locking the car even when she leaves it at home. It’s not like Cindy to go off and leave it unlocked.‘ Her father strongly felt that the man that appeared to be helping her change the tire was the same one that abducted her, and that he most likely caught her off guard, grabbed her, then pulled her into his waiting car and sped off. After Cindy was reported as missing investigators spent the next two days canvassing the area around the shopping mall, talking to hundreds of people that worked and lived in the area; they came up empty. Mr. Mellin said that he ‘knew if she were physically able to she would have contacted us. I guess I’ll just have to go back to work and get my mind off of it.’… ‘If she was kidnapped I have no doubts that she will attempt to escape. If she is physically able. The man may have been lurking nearby after puncturing Cindy’s tire with a knife and when she arrived portrayed himself as a Good Samaritan by starting to change the tire to allude suspicion.’ About the nature of the young woman’s disappearance, Lieutenant Cozzins said that ‘we have no physical evidence or witnesses that Cindy was kidnapped, but because of her background, we must suspect she met with foul play.’

It was no secret that Leonard Mellin was unhappy with the way law enforcement handled his daughter’s disappearance: from the very beginning he labeled the investigation a ‘costly misdirected amateurish farce.’ … ‘We have accepted the fact that Cindy is gone, and perhaps spared the trials and troubles of this world. We also know that nothing we can say or do will bring her back to us.’ He further attacked the Ventura PD, saying that their attempts to find his daughter the morning after she vanished under the supervision of (former) Chief David Gerty was ‘just plain appalling stupidity.’ However, Lieutenant Cozzins disagreed with his harsh statements, and said that his department tirelessly searched for Cindy and had ‘spent thousands of hours working on the case and have talked to at least 400 people during the year.’ He also said that the investigation took them as far as Florida and they searched throughout all of California as well as Washington and Oregon. Despite the fact that her body was never recovered, both of her parents strongly felt that she was abducted and ‘undoubtedly murdered.’ They also said that anyone that knew her personally or that made an ‘intelligent investigation of the circumstances regarding her disappearance’ would agree with them.

All of Mellin’s girlfriends that were interviewed by LE were in absolute disbelief and shock over her disappearance, and all said the same thing: that she was not the type of person that would just up and run away or just disappear. Although she was described as a quiet girl that mostly kept to herself, it is still possible that the man who abducted her may have been friendly with her. Maybe he was a customer from her POE that thought she was pretty? Or, perhaps it was an (older) male classmate from her college that stalked her and learned her pattern, routine, and vehicle. I wonder if maybe that’s why she so casually waved her two coworkers along when they offered her assistance? But, there’s also a pretty good chance that she was simply a victim of opportunity, and the perp noticed her park her car in the beginning of her work day, stabbed her tire, then waited around until her shift was over to offer her help and get her alone. One article published by the Fresno Bee in February 1970 mentions that Cindy’s uncle Stanley Mellin strongly suspected that his niece was being held captive in the general Fresno area and was kept subdued and under the influence of drugs. I’m not sure what exactly would make him think that, as there was nothing that would hint that it was a possibility (I also couldn’t find the article).

Police waived the typical 24 hour mandatory waiting period and began investigating the young students’ disappearance immediately. But by March 1970, the case was pretty much at a stand still. It was then that a janitor from Ventura College came forward and shared with LE that before she vanished he overheard the young coed say that she was planning a trip to Oregon. At roughly the same time the Klamath, OR police notified the Ventura PD that several residents of their city came forward claiming they saw a girl around town that matched Cindy’s description. A police bulletin with her photo was subsequently aired on Klamath Falls television stations, and the Star Free Press out of Ventura felt so strongly felt that Mellin was in Oregon that they sent her dad and a reporter on a one day trip to visit the area. While there, they talked to a general store clerk, a sales girl at a department store (both in Klamath Falls) and the owner of a small grocery store about 60 miles away that all said that they saw a girl that resembled Cindy. Unfortunately, the young mystery woman was not a recognizable local and didn’t appear to live in the area.

After this incident, the leads on Mellins disappearance were few and far between, but are as follows: (1) an Ojai priest claimed that he had learned that a woman had been attacked in an Oxnard, CA parking lot. The incident occurred on a Tuesday evening around 9:30 PM. The attacker had approached the woman from behind and attempted to drag her away. (2) Three youths in Fillmore, CA reported they saw Cindy driving a purple sports car in the general area. They thankfully thought to get its license plates, and the vehicle was registered to a sailor stationed near San Francisco. However, he had a daughter that matched Mellins description and she happened to be in the area at the time. (3) The August 1970 edition of The LA Free Press contained a cartoon of a young girl dancing, and the caption simply read, ‘Cindy Lee.’ Looking into it, investigators determined there was no connection between the drawing and the disappearance of Cindy Lee Mellin. (4) A woman had psychic visions of Mellin being held captive against her will in a desert house. She described an area in San Bernardino County; a check came up with nothing. (5) Investigators made a trip to the LA Morgue to look into an unidentified female, whose body was never successfully identified. (6) Police made a call to authorities in Florida after they recovered the body of yet another unidentified girl. It was determined not to be Mellin. (7) In mid-January 1971 it was reported that Cindy’s dental records were finally sent to the Contra Costa Sheriff’s Department in Northern California, who had found the body of yet another unidentified female. It was not Cindy Mellin (The Ventura County Star, January 21, 1971). After this, Cindy’s case quickly went cold, and she quickly became just one more name in a long line of young women that disappeared in California during the late 1960’s/early 70’s. We’ll most likely never know what happened to her. Paula Mellin-Stoddard said that the investigation ‘took us nowhere. Nothing ever seemed to pan out.’ The family was so desperate for answers that they contacted psychic medium Peter Hurkos, but sadly nothing came from that either. 

An article published by the Ventura County Star on February 2, 1970 mentioned that Mr. Mellin was offering a $15,700 reward for any information leading to the return of his daughter. To me, what’s interesting is the breakdown of the distribution; there was a $5,000 cash reward for information leading to the safe return of Cindy, $500 cash for information that would lead to the recovery of her body, and $200 cash for the positive ID or information leading to the identification of the man seen at the scene. That same reward was retracted on September 3, 1970 after the Mellins said they realized it was useless because the people with information often would not discuss it with police. Leonard Mellin retained a private investigator but they too were unable to produce any trace of Cindy. The family released a statement saying they wanted ‘to publicly thank the private citizens, both friends and strangers, who generously gave their assistance and sympathy. We believe that time will reveal the whereabouts of Cindy’s remains and that the perpetrator of this cruel slayings will eventually be uncovered when he repeats his crime elsewhere.’

At one time in the investigation investigators thought they had a prime suspect in a convicted rapist that lived near the shopping center where Cindy worked and was employed at two different places that Cindy was known to frequent. But, he denied any knowledge of her disappearance. There was another incident where LE thought Cindy was alive after a janitor at Ventura College said that several days before she disappeared he overheard her talking about taking a trip to Oregon. At roughly the same time police in Klamath Falls, OR got reports of people seeing a girl that resembled Cindy, but nothing ever came from it. Paula Mellin-Stoddard said that it ‘took us nowhere. nothing ever seemed to pan out.’ The family was so desperate for answers that they contacted psychic medium Peter Hurkos, but sadly nothing came from that either. 

Early in the investigation detectives talked to a man named Edward Nelson Cole, who matched the description given by Mellins two coworkers. Cole, who went by the alias ‘Sam Roper,’ was suspected by many members of Ventura LE to have been the man that helped Mellin change her tire the evening she disappeared, and that he most likely abducted then killed her. I’ve seen two different reports as to where he worked at the time Cindy disappeared in January 1970: the first said that he was employed at a nearby gas station. The second (and to me, more legitimate and well thought out option) reported that he had a job digging trenches and laying pipes along the southern CA highway; Ventura PD strongly suspect that Cole discarded Cindy’s body somewhere along the developing highway. In later years of the investigation, detectives had trouble locating his whereabouts, but according to a true crime researcher (and public domain websites), he died at the age of 69 on February 5, 2005 in Florida. That researcher was also able to locate the real ‘Sam Roper’ who lived in South Carolina, whose ID Cole had somehow managed to swipe. Strangely enough, Edward and the real Sam Roper shared the same birthday. Just as a weird side note, a young female neighbor of Cole was killed at a lake, and it looks like her murder was never solved. I also want to add, the Cole this other researcher talks about didn’t seem to have any connection to California, and mostly lived his entire life in Florida (I looked into him as well). I’m wondering if they found a different man named Edward Nelson Cole? Just a thought.

Also suspected in Mellins disappearance is a man named Mack Ray Edwards, a serial killer and child sex abuser. He molested and killed three children between 1953 and 1956, and three more in 1968 and 1969. Edwards later confessed that all of his crimes were motivated by a deep desire for sex. In 1970, Edwards and an 15-year-old unnamed male accomplice entered the home of Edgar Cohen of Sylmar, CA, where they kidnapped three sisters: Valerie (12), Cindy (13), and Jan (14) Cohen, who were one time neighbors of his. After forcing the girls to write a note for their parents saying that they were running away from home, Edwards and his accomplice drove the sisters to remote Bouquet Canyon in LA National Forest, north of Newhall,CA. Thankfully, two of the girls escaped, and knowing they could identify him he released the third. Shortly after, on March 6, 1970 he walked into a San Fernando Valley police station and turned himself into the LAPD Foothill Division. He gave detectives his loaded handgun and confessed that he had planned to molest and then kill all three girls. He also confessed to having killed six other children. Although he was sentenced to death, Edwards hung himself in his prison cell. It’s speculated he was responsible for Mellins disappearance but so far there is nothing concrete tying him to her.

At one point in the investigation detectives thought they had a good suspect in an unnamed convicted rapist that lived near the store where Mellin worked that was employed at two different places that she was known to frequent. But during a police interview he denied any knowledge of her disappearance and he was eventually cleared.

At the time Mellin disappeared in January 1970, Ted Bundy was living in Seattle at the Rogers Rooming house on 12th Avenue and was in the early stages of his long-term relationship with Elizabeth Kloepfer. At this time he wasn’t a student, as he re-enrolled at the University of Washington in June 1970. At the time, he was a file clerk and courier for an Attorney Messenger and Process Service’ in Seattle (he was there from September 1969 until May 1970, when he was fired for unjustified absences, as he claimed that he was baby-sitting Liz’s daughter, Molly).

According to Robert A. Dielenberg’s book, ‘Ted Bundy: A Visual Timeline,’ in 1970 Ted spent time at 1252 15th Avenue located just north of San Francisco in Marin County. At this time, the closest physical address this can be associated with is 1252 15th Avenue in San Francisco, across from the SF Botanical Gardens. There is also a dubious claim floating around the interwebs that says Bundy worked at Electro Vector in Forestville (which is just northeast of Santa Rosa in California) for a short period in 1970… although no dates or proof of this could be found anywhere and it’s not listed anywhere on the ‘TB Multiagency Report 1992.’ It’s also reported that Bundy helped Liz find a new apartment on Green Lake in 1970 and in the early part of the year, Kloepfer said that they spent a lot of their nights together (which makes sense as they were in the beginning stages of their relationship). I know some people may have immediately jumped to Ted’s signature tan VW Bug when they saw that Cindy’s possible abductor drove a ‘small, light colored car,’ but he didn’t purchase it until the spring of 1973.

Strangely enough, one of the other unconfirmed victims I wrote about from the same year was also abducted from California: Robin Ann Graham was an eighteen year old student at Pierce College when she vanished from a LA freeway in the early morning hours of November 15, 1970 after her car had broken down. At the time of her disappearance, Robin weighed 125 pounds, had long brown hair, brown eyes, and was 5’6″ tall. California Highway Patrol officers had noted Graham stranded beside her vehicle earlier in the evening before she disappeared and even stopped to check on her several times. When they drove by her the final time they didn’t stop, as they observed her talking to a young man driving a blue Corvette (that is now believed to have been responsible for her abduction). Although they were technically in compliance with 1970 protocol, after Graham’s disappearance CHP policy was officially changed to help ensure the safety of all stranded female motorists.

So, would Ted really have driven the 1,143 miles/8+ hour trip ONE WAY (which is the exact distance from the Rogers Rooming house to the Broadway Department Store in Ventura) to abduct Cindy Mellin on the evening of January 20, 1970? During Bundy’s death row confessions he told Dr. Robert Keppell that he committed his first murder in 1972. But I mean, I’ve written about unconfirmed victims that were murdered as early as 1961 (eight-year-old Ann Marie Burr in 1961 from Tacoma), and it’s no secret he was a compulsive liar, so obviously nothing he says can really be taken as 100% truth. In a separate event, when asked when he committed his first murder the serial killer refused to answer. He did admit to killing one woman in California, but they have not been identified.

In addition to Bundy, another name frequently thrown out there in relation to Mellin’s disappearance is the Zodiac Killer. It seems like any woman that disappeared out of a certain 50-75 mile radius in Northern California in the late 60’s/early 70’s is automatically classified as a possible victim of the Zodiac. A glaring difference between Mellin’s disappearance and those of Zodiac murders is that she remains missing, whereas Zodiac’s known victims were all found where he killed them. Also the serial killers only verified murder spree took place from 1968 to 1969, so the murder of Cindy Mellin occurred slightly outside of his activity date.

Aside from Robin Graham there’s quite a few other young women that disappeared from California during that same general time frame. Like Mellin, none of their cases have been solved, however the remains of some of the victims were eventually recovered throughout the Hollywood Hills. In the fall of 1968, two young women were walking down Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley when a man pulled up alongside them and asked if they needed a ride; they declined his offer. Early in the morning on May 29, 1969, 19-year-old Rose Tashman vanished just a few miles away from where Graham’s car was found abandoned. She was a student at San Fernando Valley State College and her car was later found abandoned with a flat left tire at around 2:00 AM; she was on her way home to Hollywood after leaving a friend’s house in Van Nuys. Her vehicle was found on the Hollywood Freeway off ramp and had flares set up around it. Her naked body was found dumped in a ravine near Mulholland Drive later that same day at around 6 PM; she was strangled and her throat was bound with wire.

On October 30, 1966 Cheri Jo Bates disappeared from the campus of Riverside City College in Riverside, CA where she was a student. The next morning at around 6:30 AM a groundskeeper discovered her remains on a gravel driveway close to the school’s library. The eighteen year old had been stabbed to death, and had wounds in her back, abdomen and chest; she had also been brutally beaten and stomped in the face, head, and feet. Bates throat had been cut so severely that she was nearly decapitated. About 100 yards away from where her body was found LE discovered her VW Bug, with its keys still in the ignition and three library books on the passenger’s seat; the cars ignition coil wire and distributor had been disabled. In the beginning of the investigation, Riverside LE wondered if maybe she was a victim of the Zodiac Killer after they noticed a number of similarities between the cases, but he was eventually cleared. Bates murder remains unsolved.

In November 1967, multiple Van Nuys,CA women were approached by a man following them and flashing their lights in an attempt to get them to pull over in a way similar to the potential abduction of Kathleen Johns. On March 22, 1970 at around 11:15 PM, Johns was driving west on Highway 132 when she observed a late-model, light colored car following her, blowing its horn and flashing its lights at her in an attempt to get her to pull over. The 22 year old was traveling with her 10-month-old daughter, and when she complied the man pulled over as well. He got out of his vehicle with a tire iron in his hand, and when he approached Johns’ said, ‘your rear wheel is wobbling. I’ll tighten the lugs.’ The young mother stayed in her car as the man fixed the tire, but when he told her she was good to go it came off as she attempted to back it up. When Johns got out to inspect the damage, she saw that there was only one bolt holding the tire in place  and it wasn’t long before the mystery man returned, this time with an offer to take her to a nearby service station. Johns hesitantly accepted, and got into the man’s car with her daughter, but instead of taking her for help he drove around on side roads for about an hour and a half. On several occasions when Johns asked if he was going to stop and get help he would ‘merely elude the question and start talking about something else.’ According to a police report at first the man was not threatening and friendly, but it wasn’t long before he grew menacing and threatened her life. When he finally slowed down for a stop sign she was finally able to open the car door and jump out with her daughter, and after he managed to close the door the suspect quickly sped off. Johns ran from her abductor and hid in a neighboring field. After enough time passed and she felt like he wasn’t going to return she was able to flag down a passing car, and from there she went to the police to file an incident report. At one point, she noticed a wanted poster on the station wall with a composite sketch of the Zodiac Killer on it, and said ‘that’s the man!’ Investigators later found her car incinerated near Byrd Road and Highway 132. In a letter dated July 24, 1970, the Zodiac claimed responsibility for this incident.

Another possible victim out of California that I wrote about disappeared almost a year to the day after Mellin vanished is Christine Marie Eastin, who went missing from Hayward on January 18, 1971. She left her home at 10 PM to get her loaner car washed and from there was supposed to pick up her ex-boyfriend at a local Jack in the Box, but never showed up. The 1969 Ford Maverick was found abandoned at a Charlie’s Car Wash with her purse locked inside. She hasn’t been seen or heard from since. In 2019 an unidentified eyewitness came forward and told investigators she saw two men in a white van abduct Christine from the car wash on the evening of January 18, 1971. The witness told LE that she was only able to get a good look at the driver because his accomplice was out of her line of vision as he was busy loading Eastin into the back of the van.

On February 4, 1972 12-year-old friends Maureen Louise Sterling and Yvonne Lisa Weber disappeared around 9 PM after visiting the Redwood Empire Ice Arena. The middle school students were last seen hitchhiking on Guerneville Road, northwest of Santa Rosa. Their bodies were recovered on December 28, 1972 thrown down a steep embankment approximately 66 feet off the east side of Franz Valley Road.  A single earring, some orange beads, and a 14-carat gold necklace with a cross were found at the scene. The girls cause of death could not be determined from the skeletal remains. A little over a month later on March 4, 1972 nineteen year old Kim Wendy Allen was given a ride by two men from her POE at Larkspur Natural Foods to San Rafael. They last saw her at approximately 5:20 PM hitchhiking to school near the northbound Bell Avenue entrance to Highway 10 carrying a large wooden soy barrel with red Chinese characters on it. Allens remains were found the next day down an embankment in Santa Rosa, about 20 feet off a creek bed near Enterprise Road. She was found bound at the ankles and wrists and was strangled to death with a cord. She had also been raped. All three of these young women are considered to be victims of the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Killer.

On April 25, 1972 20-year-old Jeannette Kamahele was last seen leaving her residence by her roommate at 9:30 AM with plans to hitchhike to Santa Rosa Junior College, where she was a student. A friend was just about to pull over and pick her up, but someone else beat him to it. According to that eyewitness, she was picked up near the Cotati on-ramp of Highway 101 by a white male with an afro hairstyle that was between 20 and 30 years old driving a faded brown Chevrolet truck. Her body has never been recovered. Bundy was at one time a suspect in her disappearance but he has since been cleared. It’s also speculated that she could be a victim of the Zodiac, although it’s a bit outside of his time frame.

Just two days later on April 28, 1972 forty-three year old Ernestine Francis Terello was on her way to do some shopping at the Topanga Plaza Centre when her yellow 1969 Plymouth got a flat tire in Agoura; it was later found locked and abandoned near Agoura Road and Chesboro Road on the Ventura freeway. Terello’s husband reported her as missing later that same day. Her remains were found about a month later on May 27 by Boy Scouts hiking off the Pacific Coast Highway, roughly six miles from where her car was found. Because of the advanced stage of decomposition, medical examiners were unable to determine her exact cause of death, but it is strongly speculated that she was sexually assaulted before she was murdered.

Thirteen year old Lori Lee Kursa ran away from her family on November 11, 1972 after a shopping trip with her mother at a U-Save Market. She reportedly went to stay with friends, and was last seen on November 30, 1972. Kursa was a frequent runaway thanks to a poor home life, and her frozen remains were found on December 14, 1972 in a ravine approximately 50 feet off Calistoga Road in Santa Rosa. On February 6, 1973 fifteen year old Carolyn Nadine Davis ran away from her home outside Anderson, CA. She hitchhiked to her sister Judy’s house in Garberville, and didn’t officially disappear until July 15, 1973 after she was dropped off near the post office by her Grandma, who lived nearby. Davis was last seen hitchhiking later that same afternoon near the Highway 101 southbound ramp and was never seen alive again. In the winter of 1973, 23 year old Theresa Diane Smith Walsh decided to take a road trip, and hitchhiked her way through Santa Rosa and Malibu, visiting friends along the way. But Christmas was quickly approaching, and Walsh grew homesick for her family and decided to start making her way home to her husband and young son for the holidays. She was last seen on December 22, 1973 trying to thumb a ride near Zuma Beach. On December 28, 1973, some kayakers were taking advantage of some high water near the Mark West Creek north of Santa Rosa and came across her body floating in the water in between a boulder and a log. She had expired within the past day or two and she was found completely nude. Her thumbs had been bound together as well as her wrists, which had then been tied to her thighs; her ankles were bound together as well. In a final gesture of cruelty, Walsh’s murderer tied a piece of rope to her ankle bindings then ran it up her back and looped it about her neck, which pulled snug at her heels and against her buttocks. The pain of being tied up in such a severe manner must have been unbearable: stretching her legs out to help relieve the strain would have only tightened the noose around her neck, causing her to slowly and painfully choke herself to death. Theresa’s remains were found within about 100 yards of the fire trail where Lori Lee Kursa had been dumped a year prior.

Mona Jean Gallegos was a twenty-two year old part-time waitress when she was murdered in the early morning hours of June 19, 1975. She had gone over to a friend’s house that sold cars in Alhambra, CA to ask him a few questions about purchasing a ‘new’ (to her, anyways) vehicle; she left his house for home at around 1 AM. Sometime shortly after leaving, Gallegos ran out of gas near Santa Anita Avenue on the eastbound San Bernardino Freeway. Her vehicle was later found locked and abandoned by Highway Patrol at about 4:45 AM, who theorized that a passing motorist may have stopped and offered the young woman a ride to a nearby 24 hour service station, then abducted her. Her skeletal remains were found almost six months later by two teenage boys that were hiking in a remote Riverside ravine. Investigators were unable to pinpoint her exact cause of death due to advanced levels of decomposition but were able to determine that there was no trauma to the bones.

Additionally, the skeletal remains of a young white female was discovered on July 2, 1979 in a ravine off Calistoga Road, roughly 100 yards from where the body of Lori Lee Kursa was discovered seven years prior. One forensics expert that was consulted by authorities determined the victim was most likely killed between 1972 and 1974 and was about 19 years old. Their remains have yet to be identified.

One thing I’ve never come across before is a column from a newspaper dated February 1970, that asked people from a variety of different age ranges, genders, races, and backgrounds how they would approach finding Cindy Mellin, and the results were interesting. Candy Teffe, a fourteen year old ninth grader from Anacape Junior High School, said: ‘two things. Go where she was seen last, and then talk to her friends.’ Ventura College freshman Craig Gottlieb said that ‘there are certain things I would attempt to do but my belief is that she has helped herself disappear. I would find out who she has been associated with and why she’d have reasons for leaving home.’ Restaurant executive Bruce Derns suggested that LE should, ‘offer a sizable reward.’

One interesting article I found while conducting my research is a ghost story that took place at the former Broadway Department Store at the Buenaventura Shopping Center (that is now a Macy’s): a one time sales girl said the building was haunted by none other than Cindy Lee Mellin, and that she heard footsteps and humming on multiple occasions when the space was supposed to be empty. She also noticed that pieces of clothing would frequently move around on their own. I also came across a comment about the haunting by Facebook user Ed Mata, who was employed there as well in the 1980’s and ‘heard the story but didn’t think much of it till I experienced cold and noisy stock rooms and someone humming in the elevator.’

Judith Mellin-Williams said that her sister was ‘quiet, obedient, hard-working, spiritual, a downright goody-two shoes.’ In an article published by The Oxnard Star on January 20, 1995, Paula Mellin-Stoddard (who was only 15 when her older sister was abducted) said that her and Cindy were ‘the little girls in the family that dreamed of growing up, getting married, and having children together. I still feel her presence today, but she’s not there. She’s nothing more than a ghost.’ Judith also said she was a ‘late bloomer, extremely introverted, conservative and definitely not a boat rocker.’ Mellin-Stoddard also said that she considers her sister’s disappearance a painful mystery for her surviving family members, and that they were all haunted by their anger and anguish. Janice Mellin said in the same Oxnard Star article that ‘the only way we’ve been able to deal with it is to assume that she was murdered. But I’ll never be at peace without a body, funeral, or grave site to mourn.’

In an article published by The Oxnard Star on January 20, 1995, former Lieutenant Brad Talbot said that they ‘ran out of leads, people to talk to, and places to investigate.’ Regarding the perp, Talbot feels that ‘he might still be around. People sometimes get a guilty conscience and turn themselves in. We’d be willing to clear it all up.’ Oddly enough, later the same year Bundy was executed investigators received a tip that California inmate Gerald Stanely claimed he knew where Mellin’s body was buried. LE went to the San Quentin’s prison where Stanley was on death row to talk to him about the disappearance, but unfortunately the twice convicted killer had a habit of claiming to know about homicides he had no involvement in and was unable to provide anything useful to detectives. Cindy’s sister Janice said ‘it was just another lost hope.’ After her daughter disappeared Mrs. Mellin began volunteering three days a week at a ‘Head Start’ education program for her local school district, and sadly died on June 9, 1975 at the age of 62 from a stroke. Mr. Mellin remarried a woman named Marian E. Guild on February 19, 1977 but died just a few years later at the age of 68 on July 24, 1981. Cindy’s sister Judith died at the age of 42 on July 4, 1979, in Brea, CA, and Janice Mellin passed away at the age of 63 on July 8, 2001. If Cindy was still alive in December 2023 she would be 74 years old. Her dental charts are available and were entered into the national database; her DNA is also on file.

A picture of Mellin from a newspaper article.
A picture of Cindy Mellin taken from The Napa Valley Register published on June 30, 1970.
A picture of Cindy Mellin taken from the Ventura County Star published on March 14, 1970.
Cindy Lee Mellin.
Cindy Lee Mellin’s sophomore year picture from the 1966 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Cindy Lee Mellin’s junior year picture from the 1967 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Cindy Lee Mellin in a group picture for the ‘Cougar Howlers’ from the 1967 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Cindy Lee Mellin in a group picture for the ‘ushers’ from the 1967 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Cindy Lee Mellin’s senior year picture from the 1968 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Mellin in a group picture for Modern Dance club from the 1968 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
Cindy Lee Mellin in a group picture for the ‘ushers’ from the 1968 Ventura Senior High School yearbook.
A picture of Cindy published by The Ventura County Star on January 23, 1970,
Cindy listed in a directory from the Ojai, California City Directory in 1970.
A missing persons flier for Mellin that contains a lot of interesting and helpful details about the case.
Despire no remains ever being recoverd, the Mellins strnogly felt tat Cindu was abducted and 'undoubablted murdered. Everyone who knew her personally or has
The Mellin family’s home located at 258 North Linda Vista Avenue in Ventura, CA.
A missing persons flyer for Cindy, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department in Seattle.
A letter from Cindy’s father to the law enforcement dated November 6,. 1972, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
A letter from Cindy’s father to the Seattle Chief of Police dated September 3, 1974, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
An envelope from a letter that Cindy’s father wrote to the Seattle Chief of Police, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
The Broadway Department Store from an article published by The Ventura County Star-Free Press on April 5, 1963.
The Broadway Department store (located at 477 South Mills Road) where Cindy Lee Mellin worked as a sales clerk in Ventura, CA.
How ‘The Broadway’ looks today.
An article I found on Mellin on WebSleuths; I couldn’t find any information related to it’s publication.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 22, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 22, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Valley Times on January 23, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 23, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 23, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Los Angeles Times on January 23, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 24, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 24, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 25, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Thousand Oaks Star on January 25, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 27, 1970.
She wanted to be a teacher like her older sister, that lived in Pico Rivera. The MEllisn called aroud the Cindy's frieds and none of them knew where she could be.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 27, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 28, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 28, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 29, 1970.
An article about a reward for any information leading to the return of Cindy Lee Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 2, 1970.
An short blurb about Mellin’s disappearance published by The Ventura County Star on February 4, 1970.
The picture from an article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 18, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 18, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 19, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 20, 1970.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 21, 1970.
A blurb mentioning Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 22, 1970.
Part one of an article published by The Ventura County Star on March 14, 1970.
Part two of an article published by The Ventura County Star on March 14, 1970.
Part one of an article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on March 15, 1970.
Part two of an article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on March 15, 1970.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on March 19, 1970.
A portion of an article about Cindy Mellin written by Rick Nielsen published on June 21, 1970.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on June 25, 1970.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Napa Valley Register on June 30, 1970.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Santa Cruz Sentinel on July 1, 1970.
An newspaper clipping about Cindy Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on July 25, 1970.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on September 3, 1970.
Mellin mentioned from ‘a year in review’ published by The Press-Courier on January 1, 1971.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Press-Courier on January 20, 1971.
Part one of an article about Mellin being gone for a year published by The Ventura County Star on January 21, 1971.
Part two of an article about Mellin being gone for a year published by The Ventura County Star on January 21, 1971.
Part three of an article about Mellin being gone for a year published by The Ventura County Star on January 21, 1971.
An opinion piece about how Mr. Mellin handles his daughters disappearance published by The Press-Courier on January 28, 1971.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on November 21, 1971.
An ‘in-memorium’ piece for Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 16, 1972.
An article about Mellin being gone for three years published by The Ventura County Star on January 21, 1973.
An article mentioning Cindy Lee published by The Thousand Oaks Star on February 23, 1973.
An article about Cindy Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 20, 1974.
An ‘in-memorium’ piece for Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on January 20, 1974.
Part one of an article about Cindy Mellin published by The Thousand Oaks Star on February 26, 1976.
Part two of an article about Cindy Mellin published by The Thousand Oaks Star on February 26, 1976.
An article about Leonard Mellin petitioning for his daughters appointed administrator of estate published by The Ventura County Star on May 12, 1977.
An article about Cindy Lee Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on February 21, 1986.
An article about Mellin published by The Record Searchlight on February 11, 1989.
An article about Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on March 9, 1989.
Part one of an article about Mellin published by The Oxnard Star on January 20, 1995.
Part two of an article about Mellin published by The Camarillo St on February 20, 1995.
A 1960 cream blue, four door Rambler similar to the one Mellin drove.
The Mellin’s in the 1950 census.
An article about the Mellin family house being robbed published by Press-Courier on August .17, 1966
Leonard Mellin’s WW2 draft card.
Judith Williams- Mellin was born on July, 18 1936 in Hennepin, Minnesota; she married Robert Williams on June 22, 1963. She died on July 4, 1979.
An obituary for Mrs. Mellin published by The Ventura County Star on June 15, 1975.
One possible route Bundy could have take from the Rogers Rooming house in Seattle to The Broadway in Ventura, CA.
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1970 according to the’TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1970 according to the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Robin Ann Graham.
Rose Tashman.
Cheri Jo Bates.
Kathleen Johns.
Christine Marie Eastin.
Maureen Louise Sterling.
Yvonne Lisa Weber.
Kim Wendy Allen.
Jeannette Kamahele.
An article about Ernestine Francis Terello.
Lori Lee Kursa.
Carolyn Nadine Davis.
Theresa Diane Smith Walsh.
Mona Jean Gallegos.

A composite sketch of the Zodiac Killer.
In an article oublished by
Mack Ray Edwards, who hung himself in his prison cell after receiving a life sentence on October 30, 1971.
Gerald Frank Stanley, who was born in 1945 and is an American murderer and suspected serial killer. Stanley killed his fourth wife, Cindy in August 1980, after completing a four-year prison term for murdering his second wife, Kathleen in 1975. He is also suspected in the disappearance of his third wife, Diana Lynn.
A comment on an article written about Mellin by a blogger by the handle ‘True Crime Guy.’ Taken from truecrimeguy.com/vulnerable-ventura-case-cindy-lee-mellin.
Another comment on an article written about Mellin by a blogger by the handle ‘True Crime Guy.’
Another comment on an article written about Mellin by a blogger by the handle ‘True Crime Guy.’
Another comment on an article written about Mellin by a blogger by the handle ‘True Crime Guy.’

Robin Ann Graham.

Robin Ann Graham was born on June 22, 1952 to Marvin and Beverly Graham. The family of eleven grew up at 2227 Lemoyne Street in the Silverlake-Los Feliz area of Los Angeles, California; Mr. Graham was employed with the Department of Water and Power. Described as having a big personality and an even bigger heart, at the time of her disappearance Robin stood 5’6” tall, weighed 125 pounds, and had dark brown eyes and long brown hair she wore parted down the middle. A naturally gifted student, Robin graduated from John Marshall High School in June 1970 and was attending Pierce College (a public community college in Woodland Hills, LA) as an art major; the ambitious young lady also worked PT at Pier 1 Imports in Hollywood. At the time of her disappearance Ms. Graham was in a healthy, long-term relationship and had a very busy social life.

The night before she disappeared on November 14th, 1970 (after dropping off a friend at home), Robin left her vehicle (a former black and white highway patrol car bought at auctionin the Pier 1 Imports parking lot (located at 5711 Hollywood Boulevard) and got a ride with her boyfriend for a night out partying and dancing with college friends. Robin was last seen carrying a leather handbag wearing a dark blue corduroy jacket (with gold buttons), a red jersey blouse, blue jeans and red clogs; she had a birthmark on her lower back and one of her front teeth was just a hair darker than the others. After dropping a friend off at home, I’m reading that Robin was either dropped off at her car by either her boyfriend or by a friend named Tom Palst (sp?), who very well may be her boyfriend, it’s unclear). I’m also coming across varying reports saying she was possibly driving her boyfriends car. Robin immediately set off down the Hollywood Freeway for home. Mere minutes into her journey (somewhere between 1:55-2 AM, accounts vary) the car stalled: she ran out of gas and was stranded on the Santa Monica Boulevard off ramp. Almost immediately after pulling over, California Highway Patrol pulled up beside her and asked if they could offer any assistance, or at the very least call her a tow-truck. At one point during the early morning, they helped push her car further onto the shoulder, as it was slightly sticking out in the Number four lane. Robin politely declined the tow but asked to be directed to the nearest ‘call box,’ which she used to let her parents know she was experiencing car problems; records say the call was placed to the Graham home at 2:04 AM. The officers pulled up a second time when she informed them she did indeed call home and help was on the way: her little sister accepted the call and passed the information along to her parents (who were out at a party). Satisfied with the answer but still wanting to make sure the young lady was OK, they drove away but decided to loop around once again just to check on her and make sure help really was on the way. After they passed her the last time no one knows exactly what happened to Robin: they saw her talking with a Caucasian man roughly around 25/26 years old with medium length brown hair standing at around 5’8.” I do want to point out there is a discrepancy in the hair color of the unidentified male: in one news report it’s said he had “blonde hair” instead of brown. He was wearing bell-bottom pants, a white turtleneck and was driving a 1957 – 1960 blue Corvette. The ‘Doe Network’ claims the car was a ‘hardtop’ which couldn’t be true, as apparently all Corvettes from that time period were convertibles. I found various reports stating that the man was either ‘leaning in her car window’ or was tinkering underneath the hood, inspecting something. CHP assumed it was the relative the young girl called for help so they just kept driving.

Unfortunately the CHP officers didn’t get close enough to the mystery man to get a good look at his face as they drove past him, and because of this there was never a composite sketch of the suspect done. They reported they saw the blue sports car initially pass Robin’s car, pull off the freeway at the next exit then circle around and come back, eventually parking behind her. The initial report stated that Robin left willingly with the young man, however when that officer was questioned for a second time he clarified he did not see the pair leave together. The last time Graham was seen by law enforcement officers was at roughly 2:00 AM. The call box operated called the Graham home but both parents were out: sixteen year old Bonnie Jean took the message that her sister was stranded and relayed it to her parents when they arrived home at 2:30. They both immediately went to their daughters aide, however when they arrived only her car was there and Robin was nowhere in sight. Additionally, there was no note left behind anywhere in or around her locked vehicle. Law enforcement even fingerprinted the car but were unable to get any viable prints off it and Sergeant Terry Pierce said they interviewed about 150 friends, family members, and acquaintances of Robins in an attempt to gain intel on the cause. Of her disappearance CHP Lieutenant Page said “we are seriously concerned for the girls safety. We fear she may have met with foul play.”

Handling of the incident by law enforcement prompted immediate criticism from LA County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, and because of the officers failing to stay with Robin and keep her safe the CHP faced immediate backlash: an investigation was launched looking into the conduct of the officers surrounding the night Robin disappeared. People were absolutely livid at the thought of trained police officers leaving a young, vulnerable teenage girl alone in the presence of a male stranger in the wee hours of the morning (which resulted in her abduction). Despite the public outcry, it was eventually determined that the patrolmen in question were acting in accordance with policy. Despite that ruling, California Highway Patrol policy was changed to ensure the safety of all stranded female motorists, stating that CHP officers were to remain with any female motorists that were left stranded on the side of the roads at night until their help arrived. Even though police took these extra precautions, women still continued to go missing under similar circumstances involving vehicles over the following years. 

Ms. Grahams mysterious disappearance was first handled by the same detectives at the Rampart Division of the LAPD, who theorized it was linked to other eerily similar cases involving missing young women: in November 1967, law enforcement warned the public of an attacker who flagged down three women pretending to have car problems before he assaulted them; they felt the incidents seem to be linked. Eight months before Robin disappeared, Kathleen Johns was on her way to San Francisco with her infant when the car behind her started flashing its headlights at her. When she pulled over a man got out of the vehicle and said her back wheel was ‘wobbling furiously;’ he offered to fix it however instead of helping he loosened it so it completely fell off as she attempted to drive away. The man then backed up and offered to take her and the baby to a nearby service station, which she accepted. As he wordlessly passed the gas station Johns got nervous and asked where they were going. He kept quiet for a few minutes then said, “before I kill you, I’m going to throw your baby out the window.” They drove around like that for about 90 minutes; he taunted the young mother with similar comments like, “you know you’re going to die.” Johns eventually managed to escape the vehicle, hiding in a field with her baby as he frantically looked for her with a flashlight; he eventually left when a truck approached. She eventually was able to wave down another vehicle, which took her to a nearby police station. While she waited at the police station to make an official report, Johns saw a sketch on the wall of the same man that had spent the past hour terrorizing her: it was a wanted poster for the Zodiac Killer.

Ms. Graham was the fourth young woman to disappear under mysterious circumstances in the general Hollywood, CA area within a two year period, however, in most of those cases the victims’ remains were eventually found, unlike Graham (whose body has never been found). Most of Bundy’s victims were never discovered so we know he had a way of making bodies disappear (which also might explain why Grahams body was never found). On the evening of October 30,1966 Riverside College student Cheri Jo Bates went to her schools library to study for a few hours, and when she tried to leave for home her VW Bug wouldn’t start. Conveniently right at that very moment, an unidentified man offered her up his assistance, even going so far as to look under the hood of her VW Bug in an attempt to diagnose why it wouldn’t start. The man claimed he was unable to start it but offered her a ride, which she accepted. Her body was found the next day by a groundskeeper at the college: the young co-ed was brutally killed with a knife and was cut and slashed so aggressively that her head nearly came off. Elizabeth Habe was the daughter of author Hans Habe and b-actress Eloise Hardt. She was a student at the University of Hawaii and was home in LA on Christmas vacation when she was murdered on December 29, 1968 after returning home from a double date with John Hornburg (a family friend). She left Johns house at 3:15 AM in her sports car and was abducted when she got home to her Moms house on Cynthia Avenue in West Hollywood. Her body was discovered on New Years Day in 1969 in dense underbrush off Mulholland Drive; she was found fully clothed and her body was burned, with contusions in her eyes and slashes to her throat and heart; the medical examiner determined no sexual assault took place. There were a few rapes in the neighborhood in the weeks before Habe’s brutal death and it’s further speculated that the young student may have been killed by the Manson Family. A former Family associate said that “members of the Family knew her.” Robin’s case also shows some parallels with the May 1969 murder of Rose Tashman, a young woman who was found murdered just hours after her 1965 beige Mustang was discovered abandoned with a flat tire on the side of the Hollywood Freeway. At around 2 AM, the Valley Junior College student was driving home from a friend’s house in Van Nuys, CA after studying for an exam when she got a flat tire. She was stranded on the side of the Hollywood Freeway just a few miles away from where Graham’s car was found in late 1970. The next day, Tashmans Mustang was found abandoned near the Highway Avenue off-ramp on the Hollywood Freeway; road flares had been set up around the vehicle and her left tire was flat. There was also evidence that someone had stopped to “help” assist her with the flat tire. Only nine hours later, the young girls naked body was found in a brushy ravine off Mullholland Drive about a half mile away from where Habe’s body was found; she was strangled and raped. On January 20, 1970, Cindy Lee Mellin got a flat tire in the same general area as Tashman and Graham, and just like the others she vanished without a trace under mysterious conditions. Mellin was a student and employed at the Broadway Department Store in Ventura, California; she was 5’6″ tall, weighed 105 pounds and had brown hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing a navy blue dress with red buttons matched with blue shoes with gold buckles (she had her brown corduroy coat with her as well); The Press Courier described the 19 years old as a “pretty Ventura coed.” After work that evening in January, Cindy walked to her car only to discover she had a flat tire. Two of Cindy’s coworkers (who had been picked up by their spouses after work) reported they saw the young girl talking to an unidentified man at about 10:30 PM but assumed it was her Dad so they left. They described te male as tall and slim, between 35 and 40 years old; he drove a light-colored car. Leonard Mellin said that his daughter most likely would not have been able to change the tire herself so the theory that an unidentified man approached Cindy under the guise of helping makes sense. That following morning, after realizing his daughter never came home from work the night before, Mr. Mellin drove to the shopping center where Cindy worked and found her car in the same spot as she’d left it but the spare tire was on the ground nearby; her doors, trunk, and glove box were open, and it appeared that one of the car tires had been purposefully slashed with a knife. Her body has never been recovered. On April 20, 1972 Ernestine Terello got a flat tire near the Ventura freeway in Agoura, CA and surprise surprise… her car was later found abandoned; a month later her body was found on the ‘Circle X Boy Scout Ranch’ in the Santa Monica mountains. Police theorized that a good Samaritan had offered her help fix her tire then abducted her. Strangely her body was found fully clothed, so its possible that sexual assault may not have been a motive. Additionally, she still had on valuable jewelry robbery was most likely also not a motive. This case did not get much press attention and no suspects have ever been mentioned nor have any arrests been made. Similarly, on June 19, 1975 nineteen year old Mona Jean Gallegos was driving home from a friend’s house in Alhambra, CA and at roughly 1 AM ran out of gas near Santa Anita Avenue on the San Bernardino Freeway in El Monte. Her skeletal remains were discovered about six months later in a Riverside ravine.

The media was incredibly inconsistent when reporting on Robins case, and law enforcement felt that the “free-spirited nature of the 70’s” made these young girls fairly easy, very trusting targets. Regarding her daughters disappearance, Beverly Graham said: “it’s strange, it happened right in the middle of the city, but there never really were any clues. Maybe it will turn something up. We still live with that hope.” For years after his daughter disappeared, Mr. Graham called LA homicide Sargent Donald Ham every few weeks to get a status update on the case; the two men eventually became friends and would on occasion grab lunch and catch up. In 1975 Sargent Ham thought that Robin “had been found in Pennsylvania [over a year ago], they came across a skeleton there. A bunch of pathologists put in together and even had a drawing made of what the woman would look like. It kind of looked like Robin.” However after a forensics expert investigated dental records it was obvious that the skeleton did not belong to Robin. Ham took over the case in 1976, and in his time investigating it checked out “millions of blue Corvettes.” … ” I was checking Corvettes until I was going nuts.” … “one traffic control officer used to come in every morning with a list of Corvettes he had spotted. It didn’t matter what color they were. He said it could have been painted.” As for Robins parents, he said “they won’t ever five up. They still feel she’s alive somewhere. They always want to have that feeling that she’s going to walk through that door someday… she was a beautiful girl.” After the LA Times ran a story on Robins disappearance a woman wrote to Mr. and Mrs. Graham claiming that she too, had stalled out on the Freeway earlier that same night and that a man driving a similar Corvette claiming to be an off-duty officer offered her a ride. She refused his offer; and it’s unknown if it was the same man who was last seen with Robin. There’s been no proof this is the same man last seen with Robin, but police felt this was a “solid theory. One thing that further confused law enforcement was why Robin left no note on her car for her family; was it for the simple reason she had no pen and/or paper with her? Sadly I never have pens in my car. They were also confused as to why she refused help from uniformed police officers in marked police cruisers just minutes earlier but accepted help from a non-uniformed man in a Corvette? Was she trying to avoid a tow fee from the police? Unfortunately this lead to nothing. The next month the woman identified this unknown man as Bruce Davis, who is one of the numerous people suspected of being the Zodiac Killer. Davis was a serial killer who operated in the California area in the late 1970’s. He is still suspected in many unsolved disappearances and murders in the area, including a couple found in an alley close to the Silver Lake area close to Los Angeles. They had each been stabbed over 40 times. Davis had been a high-profile member of the Charles Mansons ‘Family’ and, although he didn’t participate in the August 1969 murder of actress Sharon Tate he had turned himself into police just weeks after Graham disappeared. He was eventually convicted of two separate murder counts, including that of ranch hand Donald “Shorty” Shea, which is the only murder Manson technically had a direct hand in. After he was taken into custody on December 2, 1970, no further murders took place that were definitively linked to the Zodiac Killer. Davis was sentenced to life in prison, and despite keeping a clean record since 1980 and it being previously recommended he be granted parole seven times (those decisions were rejected by three different CA governors), in 2022 a California panel denied his parole, telling him to try again in three years saying he “lacks empathy.” Bruce Davis has denied being the Zodiac Killer.

It is worth noting that Robin disappeared on the night of a full moon, which is when the Zodiac was known to operate. It was very challenging finding a lot of relevant information regarding the case, but one thing that surprised me was that it was speculated that she was possibly a victim of the Zodiac. I won’t lie, I don’t know a ton about that particular SK: I read Robert Graysmith’s famous book many years ago… But, when looking into it further I guess Graham did live in the right region of California during the right time frame to be a possible victim. He claimed to have killed 37 victims in northern California between 1968 and 1970 and sent letters with hand-drawn ciphers taunting San Francisco Bay Area press taking credit for these murders. It’s worth noting that of these 37 victims the Zodiac takes credit for, law enforcement can only agree on seven confirmed victims (two survived). The case remains unsolved despite a lot of recent activity in the past few years: Earl Van Best Jr. (he was the central figure on the FX show “The Most Dangerous Animal of All”), Arthur Leigh Allen (a former elementary school teacher as well as the only suspect authorities ever publicly named and convicted sex offender who died in 1992), and (this is almost brand new information) Garry F. Poste, a suspect named by a group called ‘The Case Breakers’ that said forensic experts now feel is “a very strong suspect” after a statewide examination recovered new Zodiac evidence. It’s pretty well known that any case from that time period with the weak ‘modus operandi’ involving victims in broken down vehicles was linked to the Zodiac, and unfortunately in recent years a slew of amateur sleuths invested in the case have helped spread much misinformation.

As I stated earlier, the man last seen with Robin that night in 1970 was described as being brunette, 5’8″ tall, and in his mid-20’s (specifically 25-26); at that time in November 1970 Bundy would have been 23, which is pretty consistent with that description. What’s really jumping out at me is the turtleneck part, as that piece of clothing seemed like a staple in Ted’s wardrobe (there’s numerous pictures with him wearing one). Now, Bundy was 5’10” where the man talking to Robin was described as being roughly 5’8” but keep in mind that’s just an estimation. Also at the time it’s thought that Bundy still owned his first VW Beetle, a light blue one he purchased in April 1966; he didn’t buy the infamous yellow one until spring of 1973… so if Bundy did abduct Robin, where did the blue Corvette come from… I probably don’t need to say that we know it didn’t belong to him. Did he borrow it? One thing we do know is that he is a competent car thief (but a bad driver) so is it really that off base for him to have stolen this car then ditched it when he was done with it? We know he was caught in Aspen and Florida after getting pulled over in stolen vehicles and he did it numerous times when he was an adolescent (his mother helped pay for him to have his record expunged when he became legal age so it wouldn’t affect his future career). Bundy did at one point tell law enforcement that he killed a victim somewhere unspecified in California during his reign of terror, and he’s further suspected of committing the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker murders that also took place in the 1970’s. Of the victims in the SRH case, three were raped and three others were too badly decomposed to tell. Detective Bob Keppel shared with ‘SeattlePI’ that “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.” … “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.”

In mid-November 1970 when Robin disappeared it looks like Bundy was employed as a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company (a family owned medical supply company); he worked there from June 5, 1970 to December 31, 1971. In mid-1970, he also re-enrolled at the University of Washington and was living in the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue in Seattle. Additionally he was in a committed relationship with Liz Kloepfer at this time as well, so he had a lot of established roots in the general area. It’s obvious in Robin Grahams description that she fit the profile of one of Teds typical victims: she was tall and slender, with long dark hair parted down the middle. She was even in the right age range and a college student (who we know Ted LOVED to target). When analyzing the logistics of Bundy killing Robin, the scene of the crime was almost 17 and a half hours away from where he lived in Seattle… but I mean, Bundy had a lot on his plate at the time Robin disappeared. Did he really have time to drive all the way to California to commit a murder? Playing devils advocate, we know he was an avid night person and had no problem prowling long distances when looking for prey. It was in early 1970 that Bundy rekindled his relationship with Stephanie Brooks, which helps place him in California; it also appears that he was in the Santa Rosa area of California at some point in that general time frame as well, which is just a hair over a 6 hour drive (with light traffic) to LA. This also helps put him much closer to the scene of the crime (as we know Bundy enjoyed traveling far distances to throw police off his trail). Was Robin Graham just another one of Teds ‘murders of opportunity?’ It’s worth noting that not only do we have confirmed kills from Washington, Colorado, Utah, Oregon, Florida, and Idaho, I’ve also written about numerous other states he could have been active in (Pennsylvania, Vermont, and New Jersey).

Websleuths user ‘Howard’ commented that they “have researched the Graham case. I know her parents. They are still waiting for a break in the case and have kept their same address and phone number since 1970!” On June 28, 2005, Websleuths user ‘Graham‘ commented back saying: “when you say that you have researched the case I was wondering if you have found anything that is not in the police reports? I just recently spoke with the police regarding the case. I’m Robin’s sister. I would like to hear what info you have found. Thanks.” Seventeen years after Robins strange disappearance in 1986, a mysterious ad caught the attention of a member of the Graham family when it appeared in the LA Times classifieds. Beverly Graham said of the event: “one of our daughters saw it. The funny thing is, she never looks at the personal ads. But this one day…” The ad read: “DEAREST ROBIN You ran out of gas on the Hollywood Frwy. A man in a Corvette pulled over to help. You’ve not been since of since. It’s been 17 years, but it’s always just yesterday. Still looking for you (signed) THE ECHO PARK DUCKS.”  The message sounded innocent enough and almost romantic in a way, which made some people speculate it was a clue about the young girls disappearance. The ad was really put under a microscope after KFI disc jockey Geoff Edwards read it on the air, and the phone calls and letters quickly started coming in, which helped establish the link to the missing persons case from 17 years before. Edwards said, “it sounded so romantic. I wondered if anyone knew what it was all about, and I got all kinds of calls and mail. Someone even wondered if the message was a clue to the killing.” It turned out the mystery sender was an old friend of Robins named Al Medrano (who was still living in the neighborhood) just wanted to let the world know that his friend was still missing and that she had not been forgotten about. The Graham family, who also still live in Echo Park, remember Al as a neighborhood friend of their Robins. Why he chose then to put something in the paper, he said:  “well, it occurred to me that Nov. 15 (the day of her disappearance) fell on the same day (Sunday) this year as it did in 1970, and I just wanted to show she wasn’t forgotten.” He said the last part about the “Echo Park Ducks” was what they used to call their friend group and he wanted the message to be off all of them.

On October 5, 2012, the blog missingrobinanngraham.blogspot.com, creator Michael Haddan commented: “Please note that there is NO TRUTH to the ‘Find A Grave’ post by someone anonymous claiming that Robin Ann Graham ‘died’ in 1970. This was posted by someone who apparently wants Robin to be dead, to settle the mystery of her disappearance with a completely unfounded and irresponsible statement that hurts both Robin and all who love her. This person wants everyone who has hope for Robin’s safe return to GIVE UP, and for all continuing investigations into her disappearance to end. LAPD Detectives John St. John and Detective Hamm both told me never to assume that she is dead just because I ‘want resolution’ to her case, and that to do so would be not only to give up on Robin, but to show a lack of love and respect for her. I’ve notified this person and asked how Robin ‘died’ and how this person knows this. Of course there is no answer. I thought that he/she would have taken the post down by now, but it still shows up in Google’s priority postings. This is an utter travesty. We’ve had many hoaxes regarding Robin’s disappearance over the decades, and unless this ‘mystery person’ actually knows something–and should therefore contact the LAPD–this is unquestionably just another HOAX.”

Regarding Robins disappearance, Sargent Ham said: “all we’ve got is a missing persons report. We’ve never found remains. She could be alive somewhere.” At this time, the surviving Graham family is trying to enter pieces of her hair into DNA databases that didn’t exist when she went missing in the early 1970’s; Both Mr. and Mrs. Graham have passed away and Robin would be 70 years old as of February 2023. One thing that is nearly certain about Robins mysterious disappearance is that she fell victim to the good Samaritan ruse.

Robin Ann Graham.

Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
A still image of a scrapbook for Robin Ann Graham..
Some of the Graham kids posing with their fish; Robin is on the left.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin Ann Graham.
Robin and a friend.
A screen grab of some pictures of Robin.
A screen grab of some pictures of Robin.
A screen grab of some pictures of Robin.
A screen grab of some pictures of Robin.
The Graham family.
The Graham family.
What Robin might look like today using age progression technology.
A sketch of Robin done by Michael Haddan.
Beverly Graham, Robin’s Mother.
Heather Graham, Robin’s Sister.
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Los Angeles Pierce College, (or simply Pierce College or simply Pierce), is a public community college in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California. It is part of the Los Angeles Community College District and is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
An advertisement for a news special about Robin Graham.
An article about Robin Graham written by Bonnie Glassman.
An article about the disappearance of Robin Graham.
An article about the disappearance of Robin Graham.
An article about Robin Graham published in The Oxnard Press Courier on November 17, 1970.
Part one of an article about the disappearance of Robin Graham published in The Van Nuys Valley News on November 19, 1970.
Part two of an article about the disappearance of Robin Graham published in The Van Nuys Valley News on November 19, 1970.
An article about Robin Graham published in The Independent on November 20, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from The Star News on November 26, 1970.
An article about Robin Graham published in The Pomona Progress Bulletin on November 17, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Press Telegram on September 17, 1971.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Argus on November 18, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Independent on November 18, 1970.
An article about Robin Graham published in The Van Nuys Valley News on November 27, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Marysville Appeal Democrat on September 17, 1971.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Press Telegram on November 18, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Modesto Bee and News Herald on November 19, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from The Daily Review published on November 19, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Van Nuys Valley News on November 19, 1970.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by The Oxnard Press Courier on November 19, 1970.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by The Independent on November 19, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Van Nuys Valley News on November 24, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from The Press Telegram published on November 26, 1970.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by the Van Nuys Valley News on December 3, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from The Ontario Daily Report on December 12, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Van Nuys Valley News on December 17, 1970.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance called “Police Seek Leads about Missing Girl” published in The Van Nuys Valley News on September 17, 1971.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Star News on September 17, 1971.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by the Van Nuys Valley New on November 16, 1971.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by the Sarasota Herald Tribune on December 4, 1971.
An article about Robin Graham published a year after she disappeared.-
An article mentioning Robin Graham called “Ill Girl Vanished without a Trace” published by The Ontario Daily Report on July 3, 1972.
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A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from in The Oxnard Press Courier on July 16, 1972.
A newspaper clipping about Robins disappearance from The Press Telegram on January 8, 1974.
An article mentioning Robin Graham published by the Independent on January 8, 1974.
An article about Robin Graham published six years after she disappeared.
An article about Robin Graham published six years after she disappeared.
An article about Robin Graham published six years after she disappeared.
A blue Corvette much like the one referenced above.
The general area where Robin was last seen alive.
Local law enforcement on the roadway where Robin was last seen alive.
The call box on the side of the California Highway Robin used before she was abducted.
The route Robin would have took when she drove home the night she disappeared.
A shot of the roadway where Robin was last seen alive.
The roadway where Robin was last seen alive.
A highway sign from around where Robin was last seen alive.
A more current shot of the side of the road where Robin was abducted in California.
A more current shot of the side of the road where Robin was abducted in California.
A sample of Robin’s hair.
Robin and some of the other missing girls.
An article about Helen Maria Thomas who ran away that mentions Graham published in The Woodland Daily Democrat on September 18, 1971.
An article about Helen Maria Thomas who ran away that mentions Graham at the bottom published in The Van Nuys Valley News on September 19, 1971.
An article about Helen Maria Thomas who ran away that mentions Graham at the bottom.
Kathleen Johns.
An article about Kathleen Johns possible experience with ‘The Zodiac,’ published in The San Francisco Examiner on March 23, 1970.
An article about Kathleen Johns possible experience with ‘The Zodiac.’
Rose Tashman.
An article about the murder of Ernestine Terello.
An article about the murder of Ernestine Terello.
An article about the murder of Ernestine Terello.
 Cindy Lee Mellin.
 A missing persons poster for Cindy Lee Mellin.
Cheri Jo Bates.
 Cheri Jo Bates’s VW.
Mona Jean Gallegos.
An article about the disappearance of Mona Jean Gallegos that mentions Robin Graham.
An article about the disappearance of Mona Jean Gallegos that mentions Robin Graham published in The Independent on June 23, 1975.
An article about the disappearance of Mona Jean Gallegos that mentions Robin Graham.
An article about the disappearance of Mona Jean Gallegos that mentions Robin Graham.
An article about the disappearance of Mona Jean Gallegos that mentions Robin Graham.
An article about the discovery of Mona Jean Gallegos remains that mentions Robin Graham.
An article about the discovery of Mona Jean Gallegos remains that mentions Robin Graham.
A young Bruce Davis.
Bruce Davis.
A wanted poster for the Bruce Davis/the Zodiac Killer.
TB’s whereabouts in November 1970 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
The Pier 1 Imports store where Robin was employed.