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I am constantly updating my articles when I stumble across new information and boy did I find a great new source. Needless to say, I’m reading through this now and will be updating Sandra’s article shortly.
FBI correspondence and investigation documents surrounding the Caryn Campbell case, in which Bundy was a suspect. Courtesy of Pitkin County DA.
The interviews of Ted Bundy with Don Patchen and Steve Bodiford after David Lee arrested him, February 1978.
A scanned copy of the letter sent by Ted’s brother Glenn to Judge Stewart Hanson dated March 16, 1976. In it he said that he had always known his older brother to be a rational, nonviolent person. Courtesy of Sean Papanikolas/Internet Archives.
This document contains correspondence that took place in 1986 that Ted Bundy established with John Hinckley Jr.. Hinckley wrote to Bundy while he was on death row, and the pair wrote letters back and forth for about about four months. Two of Ted’s letters were found when Hinckley’s room at St. Elizabeth’s Psychiatric Hospital (where he was confined to after he was found not guilty by reason of insanity after trying to kill Ronald Reagan over a 19 year old Jodie Foster) was tossed. The letters created a media sensation in April 1987 when prosecutors used them to protest Hinckley’s request for a “holiday furlough from the hospital,” saying that they helped prove his obsession with serial killer Ted Bundy. During the aftermath there was an investigation, where Bundy claimed he destroyed his letters from his new friend. Typical Ted, he lied and passed the correspondence on to a friend to hold onto, fearing that the Secret Service would want to get their hands on them (turns out he was right about that); he later gave the letters to his attorneys. Courtesy of by Maria Serban/Internet Archives.
Courtesy of Maria Serban/Internet Archives.
Correspondence between the King County Sheriff’s Office and Bundy throughout the 1980’s. This PDF contains Bundy’s letters with Dave Reichert and Robert Keppel, including information on the Green River Killer consultation.This file contains photocopies of their original forms (either typed or hand written depending on the specific document)’ Bundy’s letters to Keppel and Reichert are handwritten, where Keppel’s letters to Bundy are typed. The documents are largely related to the Green River case with some additional bits of interesting Bundy-related information peppered in as well. in 1987, Bundy and Keppel also have an interesting exchange regarding Ronald Holmes (after Holmes, who had talked to Bundy while in prison, claimed that Ted had confessed to him that he committed 365 murders). Courtesy of the King County Archives/Internet Archives.
An article related to Bundy’s first escape from the Pitkin County Courthouse published in The Aspen Times on June 9, 1977. Courtesy of the Aspen Historical Society/Internet Archives.