Non-Bundy Related.
Watts Family Autopsies.
Here are the autopsy reports for Shanann, Bella, and CeCe Watts.
Ruth Marie Terry, AKA ‘the Lady of the Dunes.’
Ruth Marie Terry was born to John D. ‘Johnny Red’ and Eva Lois (nee Keener) on September 8, 1936 in a mountainside shack in Whitwell, Tennessee. The couple had three children together: Johnnie Lois (b. 1933), James Ray (b 1934) and Ruth. Eva was born on July 3, 1913 and died on September 20, 1937 at the age of 24 when Ruth was only one; her father eventually remarried a woman named Stel19la and they went on to have three children together.
On October 21, 1956 when she was twenty Ruth got married to Korean War vet Billy Ray Smith in Marion, Tennessee but the pair quickly divorced.* The daughter of a coal miner and housewife, Ruth wanted more than what Whitwell had to offer, so after leaving her husband she left home and got a job at a Fisher Body automotive plant in Livonia, Michigan.
Ruth gave birth to a son named Richard in 1958 (according to records, his father is unknown), but due to financial strain was unable to care for him and he was adopted by the superintendent of her workplace, Richard Hanchett Sr. (in exchange for him paying off her expenses). After the adoption was finalized, Ruth left Livonia and moved to California. She reached out to Richard in 1972, but at the time he was unavailable.
On February 16, 1974, Terry married an antiques dealer in Reno named Guy Rockwell Muldavin, who went by multiple pseudonyms, including Guy Muldavin Rockwell and Raoul Guy Rockwell; at the time of their marriage she was using an alias, and went by the name Teri Marie Vizina. Muldavin’s biological parents are unknown (but are confirmed to be from Russia), and his adoptive father Abram Albert Zadworanski Muldavin was born on July 2, 1894 in Wasilków, Poland, and his adoptive mother Sylvia ‘Lily’ Silverblatt was born on June 22, 1902 in Brooklyn. The couple had one biological son together named Michael and eventually divorced. Scandal seemed to follow the family everywhere, as his brother was disbarred and banned from practicing law in the state of New Mexico after being charged with misconduct for accepting $3,200 and ‘commingling the same with his own funds, contrary to the canons of professional ethics of the State of New Mexico.’
According to his obituary, Muldavin was born in Santa Fe, New Mexico on October 26th 1923, but there are records that show his birth date was later the same year in December, and in New York. During his early years he traveled extensively across the world with his family, and spent a significant amount of time living in various locations in and around Germany, Cuba, and California. He was married five times over the course of his life and was with his fifth wife Phyllis for almost fifty years before his death.
Cape & Islands District Attorney Robert Galibois said that after Terry and Muldavin got married in February 1974 they traveled around the US, and stopped in Whitwell to visit with her family. Ruth’s grand-niece Brittanie Novonglosky later told investigators that she thought Guy was ‘possessive and demanding,’ and that her aunt ‘wasn’t herself’ while in his presence. After leaving Whitwell they couple went to Chattanooga to visit her half-brother, Kenneth and his wife Carole, who later recalled them saying they were going to drive across the United States looking for antiques to buy (then sell), specifically mentioning they were going to stop in Massachusetts.
When Muldavin returned home to California from that trip, he was driving what is believed to be her vehicle and told acquaintances that his new bride had sadly passed away. The Terry family was immediately suspicious of the news, and Ruth’s brother James went to her home to confront his new brother-in-law. Upon arriving he was told that the two had gotten into a fight during their honeymoon and she got out of the car in a huff, and he had not heard from his wife since.
James Terry hired a PI to investigate his sister’s disappearance, who learned that Muldavin sold off all of her personal belongings and had left him ‘of her own will’ after getting involved with a religious cult. Prior to the identification of her remains, Ruth was listed as ‘deceased’ in family obituaries, and she was never officially reported as missing. Her SIL Carole wondered if maybe she was in a witness protection program and because of that couldn’t reach out to anyone.
I’ve come across varying details about how Ruth’s body was discovered, but it is agreed upon that she was found in Provincetown, Massachusetts on July 26, 1974 roughly 800 feet away from the Seascape Dune Shack in a clump of overgrowth by 12-year-old Sandra Metcalfe-Lee, just yards away from a busy road with a lot of insect activity. The first version is that Lee and her sister followed a barking dog (some sources say it was a stray, others say it was their family beagle) to the decomposing remains on July 24, 1974 but later told investigators that it took them two days to file the report because ‘the discovery had traumatized them.’ The second report (that is more commonly told) is that Lee and her parents were hiking back to the Province Lands Visitor Center after a day at the C-Scape Dune Shack when they came across Ruth, and they immediately went to park rangers. Getting to the area where the remains were found would have required a vehicle with four-wheel drive, as there was a great deal of sand to get through, and longtime DA on the Cape Michael O’Keefe felt it would have been incredibly difficult to carry a body out to the dunes. Sandra grew up and became a true crime writer and wrote a book about the case titled ‘The Shanty: Provincetown’s Lady in the Dunes.’
Investigators found two sets of size ten footprints in the sand leading to the body as well as tire tracks roughly fifty yards away, and forensic experts speculate that the remains had been there for about two weeks. The victim was found face-down on half of a green beach blanket, almost ‘as if she’d been sharing it with a companion,’ and investigators wondered if maybe she either knew her killer or had been asleep when she was attacked, as there were no signs of a struggle.
An official police report described the victim as a white female, roughly 140 pounds, and between 5’6” to 5’8,” with the discrepancy in height due to the neck, as it was almost severed. According to former Provincetown Police Chief James J. Meads, her age was estimated to be between ‘25 to 45′ but she was probably not older than 35. At the scene a blue bandanna and a pair of Wrangler jeans were found neatly folded under her head and her long, auburn/red hair was pulled back into a ponytail by a gold-flecked elastic band; her toenails were painted pink.
Both of the victims hands had been removed as well as one of her forearms, and several of her teeth had been pulled out. She had a large amount of expensive ‘New York style’ dental work done, including $3,000 to $5,000** worth of gold crowns, which is usually as conclusive as fingerprints when it comes to making an identification and is (usually) relatively easy to trace. Thousands of dentists were sent information regarding the crowns, but no one ever came forward with any information.
Mead suspected that Terry’s killer was a man she was familiar with and that he drove her to the scene of the murder in a four wheel drive vehicle under the pretense of sunbathing. In the beginning of the investigation, Chief Mead followed standard police procedures: bloodhounds were brought in to comb through the murder area. Missing persons bulletins were studied. Registers of all Provincetown hotels, motels, and rooming houses were checked. Anyone who had a permit to take a vehicle into the National Seashore was checked. In the years following the murder Mead received thousands of leads, phone calls, and tips regarding the Lady of the Dunes, and he investigated every single last one of them; sadly he died before the murder was solved.
The town’s police department had taken over the case immediately after the murder, however it was turned over to Massachusetts State Police Detectives Unit for the Cape and Islands District in 1982. In the early stages of the investigation, law enforcement entertained the possibility that the killer brought the remains to the Dunes from nearby Boston, but they eventually determined that the murder took place at the scene (despite a lack of blood). They also theorized that maybe the killer was a transient, especially when taking into consideration the inability to identify the victim.
According to her autopsy the victim had nearly been decapitated and the left side of her head had been crushed, an injury that had possibly been inflicted by a military-type entrenching tool. Despite being strangled, it was determined that she had died from the blow to the head, and she showed signs of sexual assault that most likely occurred postmortem. Some investigators believe that the missing teeth, hands and forearm pointed towards the killer either attempting to hide the identity of the victim or themselves.
Detectives sent a description of the victim out over teletype (which is a machine that sent and received messages via a typewriter-style keyboard where the reply was printed on paper) to the FBI and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Investigators were at a complete loss as to who she could be. Was she a girlfriend of Whitey Bulger? Or a showgirl from New York City? Barnstable County records show that in the late 1940’s to mid-50’s Muldavin’s parents bought land and properties in Provincetown, MA.
In October 1974 the remains of the Lady of the Dunes were finally laid to rest in a state issued metal casket and, the case went cold. In 2014, one of the investigators that worked the murder in 1974 helped raise the money to buy her a new coffin, as the one she was originally buried in was poorly made and had rusted through and deteriorated.
She was laid to rest in Provincetown’s St. Peter’s Cemetery, and her stone marker read ‘Unidentified Female Body.’ In 1979 the first facial reconstruction of the woman was created using clay as a medium, and the following year her remains were exhumed for the first time, but no new clues were found. In 2000 a woman came forward claiming to be the daughter of the Lady of the Dunes and the body was exhumed again that March for DNA testing; nothing ever came of it. The remains were dug up for a third time in May 2003 and it was then that experts performed a CT scan of her skull that resulted in images that were used by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children for another facial reconstruction. In 2006 law enforcement released age progression photos using to help with the search and a 3D composite image was created in 2010.
In 1987, a Canadian resident came forward claiming that she saw her dad strangle a woman in Massachusetts around 1974; investigators tried to look into the allegations but were unsuccessful. A second woman told detectives that the reconstruction strongly resembled her sister, who had disappeared in Boston in 1974. Provincetown police also chased a lead that involved Rory Gene Kesinger disappeared in 1973 after breaking out of a Plymouth, MA jail. Investigators saw a strong resemblance between Kesinger and the victim, but DNA from her mother did not match the victim. Two additional missing women were also ruled out: Francis Ewalt and Vicke Lamberton.
In August 2015, rumors started to swirl that the Lady of the Dunes may have been an extra in the 1975 cinematic classic Jaws, which had been shot in the village of Menemsha in Martha’s Vineyard between May and October 1974, which is located 100 miles south of Provincetown. Just weeks prior, Joe Hill (son of Stephen King) spotted a woman in the crowd during the Fourth of July beach scene that was wearing a blue bandanna and jeans that looked nearly identical to the ones found with the Lady of the Dunes. Hill brought this to the attention of police after reading a book called ‘The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths are Solving America’s Coldest Case’ but nothing ever came of this tip.
Unfortunately, evidence from the crime scene had been thrown away by MA state police (including the victim’s clothing and the blanket she was found with), and as time passed by and the chances that the case would be solved faded science and DNA analysis evolved, and investigators were finally given the break they needed. In 2022 the body was exhumed one final time, and a portion of the victims’ skull was sent to Othram Laboratories along with genetic samples of members of the Terry family. From this, a DNA profile was created that helped identify distant relatives and eventually lead to the identification of the victim and on October 31, 2022 the FBI field office in Boston announced that the ‘Lady of the Dunes’ had officially been identified as Ruth Marie Terry.
According to FBI Special Agent Joseph Bonavolonta, Terry’s identity was discovered using investigative genealogy, which is a blend of traditional DNA analysis and genealogical research that can generate new leads for unsolved homicides, as well as help identify unknown victims: ‘This is, without a doubt, a major break in the investigation that will hopefully bring us all closer to identifying the killer. Now that we have reached this pivotal point, investigators and analysts will turn their attention to conducting logical investigative steps that include learning more about her, as well as working to identify who is responsible for her murder.’
On November 2, 2022, the Massachusetts State Police went to the public asking for information related to Terry’s one-time husband Guy Rockwell Muldavin, and on August 28, 2023 he was officially named as Terry’s killer. In a press release from the FBI, ‘for nearly five decades, investigators have worked tirelessly to identify this victim through various means, including neighborhood canvasses; reviews of thousands of missing-person cases; clay model facial reconstruction, and age-regression drawings.’ Friends of Muldavin were shocked when they learned who he really was, with one saying ‘he was great. I really loved him. I mean, he was terrific. And I was very close to him. I’m speechless, because none of it makes any sense.’
Known around Greenwich Village for his nightly parties with ‘beatniks, art lovers, celebrities and celebrity hunters,’ Muldavin charmed everyone he met with his magnetism and offbeat philosophy. He was disqualified from joining the military during World War II due to a mastoid infection, and in 1942 he was living in Manhattan and was going to school at The American Academy of Dramatic Arts. On May 11, 1946 while working as a professor in Bellevue, Pennsylvania he married former beauty pageant contestant and model Joellen Mae Loop. The newlyweds moved all over the US, and briefly lived in California where Muldavin got a job as a disk jockey at KIEM radio station Monday through Friday at 5 o’clock. They eventually settled down in Seattle, where he took a job in the furniture department at Bon Marche. The couple had one daughter together named Towers Joy and went on to purchase a large antique shop that ‘rarely opened before 6 PM.’ They were married for ten years before calling it quits, and divorced on July 16th, 1956.
But Muldavin wasn’t single for long, and only two years later married Manzanita Aileen Ryan in Kootenai, Idaho on September 30, 1958. According to an article published in The Evansville Press on January 7, 1962, his first marriage ended shortly after ‘Manzy’ and her then-husband, William Mearns, walked into his antique shop. His new bride had an eighteen-year-old daughter named Dolores Ann Mearns, who was attending college at the time and moved into a second floor bedroom in Muldavin’s antique shop on Seattle’s Lake Union waterfront. Maybe once a month, Manzy and Doloreswould travel to Vancouver to visit with her younger children and ex-husband, but on April 1, 1960 both mother and daughter disappeared without a trace. After Manzanita’s ex-husband reported the two as missing Muldavin immediately became the prime suspect. He had a motive to kill his wife, as he was cheating on her and was struggling with financial difficulties at the time. He was also the last person to see them alive and had access to the attic and septic tank, where bone fragments were later found.
Police quickly zeroed in on Muldavin, and got a warrant to search his combined antique store/ home. In the attic detectives discovered a large amount of blood, and they theorized that he had dragged their dead bodies up the stairs where he dismembered and disposed of them. After combing through the contents of the building’s newly sealed septic tank, investigators found human tissue as well as bone fragments, all of which matched Manzanita and Dolores’ shared blood type. Manzy’s legs eventually turned up in a body of water and were identified as belonging to her by her ex-husband, who recognized her ‘thick ankles.’ At some time in the early days of the investigation Muldavin up and left town, leaving behind his antiques business and no forwarding address.
In the early stages of the investigation, it was theorized that Manzy and Dolores fled to Canada, cutting their ties to Guy completely, and according to him the two had plenty of money as before they left they completely cleaned out his bank account. After his wife vanished he immediately filed for divorce, on the grounds of ‘cruelty and desertion’ in Seattle, and in WA state an uncontested divorce is finalized after three months, and he was officially single again by July 26, 1960.
Guy changed his story multiple times, on one occasion saying ‘she doesn’t love me anymore, and Manzy closed out our joint bank account. She took every penny I’ve saved for the shop and to buy more antiques. She even burned all my business records before she left! I’m having a terrible time trying to figure out my income tax return.’ But, he told others that she had run off with another man and took her daughter with her.
Just three days after his divorce was finalized on July 29, 1960, Muldavin got married for the third time to fellow antiques dealer Evelyn Marie Emerson in King County, WA. Emerson came from a prestigious Seattle family and was the step-daughter of wealthy socialite Caroline Winkler, who was impressed by her new SIL’s ‘cosmopolitan air and business sense.’ He told his new in-laws that he had won a Fulbright Scholarship to Portugal and Africa, and had recently tried to finance a yacht that would allow them to sail to their destination but his funds were ‘tied up’ after his ex-wife stole all of his ‘liquid assets.’ Evenyln sold her antiques business and planned on giving all of the money to her new husband, and just five days after the two said ‘I do’ Muldavin accepted a cashiers check from her stepmother for $10,000 (I’ve seen it listed as little as $6,000 and as much as $16,000); he told his wife’s family that he needed to buy antiques in Canada, but he took the money and ran away to NYC.
While looking into Muldavin, people that knew him told investigators that he was an ‘oddball and a pathological liar’ that left home in his late teens and falsely paraded around as a war hero. In December 1960 he was finally tracked down in an apartment in Greenwich Village by the FBI, however Seattle police determined that they didn’t have enough evidence to charge him with murder.
Muldavin did, however face larceny charges for swindling Emerson’s family and was convicted in 1961; despite being sentenced to fifteen years in prison in March 1962 a judge suspended the term provided that he pay his former in-laws back the money. He is also the main suspect in the homicide of 28-year-old bread truck driver Henry Lawrence ‘Red’ Baird and the disappearance of his girlfriend, seventeen-year-old waitress Barbara Joe Kelley. The two had worked together at a restaurant that was owned by the family of Muldavins first wife, Jo Ellen. Kelley was last seen in Humboldt County, California, on June 17, 1950 when she left to go on a date with her beau. Sans his socks and shoes, Baird’s nude remains were found face down on the beach near Table Bluff the following morning; he had been shot in the back of the head and his clothes were found nearby, neatly folded with Barbara’s tucked underneath (only her stockings and shoes were missing). No trace of Kelley was ever found.
Around 1976 Muldavin moved to Chualar, a small community near Salinas, CA, and according to an article published in The Californian on July 5, 1985, he retired from his position as an executive VP of a silver store on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. He then got a volunteer position at the KAZU radio station as a host of a 3-hour weekly call-in show on ‘aging, growing and making transitions.’ It was also reported that he did some work with at-risk youths through the Santa Monica Police Department and worked at a tobacco shop in Carmel.
Police questioned the local mob scene and motorcycle gangs, but nothing ever came of it. In 1981, investigators learned that a woman that strongly resembled Terry was seen with mobster Whitey Bulger around the time that she presumably died. An American organized crime boss , Bulger led the Irish mob group ‘the Winter Hill Gang’ in Somerville, MA, and he was known for removing his victims’ teeth. No evidence has ever been found that officially linked Bulger to Terry, and he was killed in prison in 2018.
A serial killer in Truro, MA named Tony Costa was briefly considered a suspect in the early stages of the investigation, but was quickly eliminated as he died before Terry’s murder on May 12, 1974.
Hadden Clark confessed to the murder of the Lady of the Dunes, stating ‘I could have told the police what her name was, but after they beat the shit out of me, I wasn’t going to tell them shit.’ … ‘This murder is still unsolved and what the police are looking for is in my grandfather’s garden.’ Clark was born on July 1, 1952 and is currently serving two 30-year sentences at Eastern Correctional Institution in Westover, MD. His first sentence is related to the 1986 murder of 6-year-old Michele Lee Dorr, and the second is for 23-year-old Laura Houghteling that took place in 1992. Clark was given an additional ten years for robbery after stealing from a former landlord. Authorities claim that he suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, which is a condition that may lead one to confess to crimes that they never committed.
When the news broke that the ‘Lady of the Dunes’ had been identified in June 2022 , I found a few people that suspected that she was a victim of Ted Bundy. I mean… the general time frame fits, as he was (very) active in mid-1974. But it was pretty easy to rule him out, as the ‘1992 FBI Bundy Multiagency Team Report’ placed him all over the general Seattle area in July. He was also getting ready to leave for his second attempt at law school and was still in a long-term, fairly committed relationship with Elizabeth Kloepfer.
After graduating from high school Ruth’s son Richard went on to attend Central Michigan University, and he retired from General Motors as a Service Engineer in 2015. Her first husband Billy Ray died at the age of 75 on February 22, 2007 in Chattanooga, Tennessee. In 1994 he was the recipient of a liver transplant, and he retired from CSX Railroad after 35 years of employment. Ruth’s dad Johnny died at the age of 71 on November 22, 1981, and her half-sister Vera passed away on February 3, 2017. Her brother James Ray died on Halloween in 2005 in Whitwell, and her sister Johnnie died on August 12, 2010.
Muldavin married for the fifth and final time on October 18, 1975, to Phyllis Georgina Smirle, a well-respected art professor at LA City College that he was with until his death on November 17, 2021. According to his obituary, he died at his home following a lengthy illness and was survived by his wife as well as a ‘sister,’ Joan Towers. A family friend shared with The Independent in November 2023 that Towers was not a blood relation to Muldavin, but the pair affectionately called each other siblings after a short lived romantic relationship turned platonic.
Guy Rockwell Muldavin died at the age of 78 on March 14, 2002 in Salinas, CA and was never held accountable for killing any of his five victims. His wife Phyllis Georgina died at the age of 86 on November 17, 2021 in LA, and his first wife Jo Ellen died just two months before he did in January 2002. Guy and Jo Ellen’s daughter Towers Joy died at the age of 71 in 2021.
* I’ve seen it reported that Ruth was only 13 when she got married but this is incorrect.
** Over the course of my research, this dollar amount was as high as $10,000.




































































































































Janice Louise Taylor.
Janice* Louise Taylor was born on September 27, 1952 to William ‘Bill’ and Lillian Taylor in Charlestown, MA, and at spoke point the family relocated to Warren, New Hampshire. She had eight siblings: five brothers (Paul, Alan, John, William, and Murdo Margeson Jr.) and three sisters (Lynn, Lauren, and Teresa). The Taylor family moved all over the state and spent some time in Manchester before eventually settling down in Concord, and at the time she vanished Janice was a sophomore at Concord High School; she previously attended Manchester Central High School.
At the time Taylor disappeared she was 5’3” tall, weighed 110 pounds, and wore her brunette hair on the short side. She had brown eyes and was last seen wearing a gold and white suit, black nylon stockings with black shoes, and a blue and white checkered coat; she was using a white purse. The young woman that was described as shy by her family also has a scar behind her left ear from an abscess that didn’t heal correctly.
Janice enjoyed horseback riding and was active in her local 4-H Club; she also had a PT job cleaning stables at a nearby farm. It’s also reported by the Concord PD that she was friendly with individuals that worked at ‘The Rumford Printing Press’ in Concord but they didn’t elaborate as to why this may or may not be significant. Taylor was last seen by friends at school on January 8, 1968* waiting for a ride home from her SIL’s new boyfriend, Barry Bickford, and according to an article published by The Concord Monitor on January 24, 1989, she was last seen standing in front of Buddy’s Grocery before she had given up and started to make her way home. The store clerk saw her walk down Warren Avenue carrying three books, and no one reported seeing her after that. * Just as a side note, I’ve also seen the date listed as January 9.
At the time she disappeared, Janice moved to Concord to help take care of her nephew, and she resided at Alosa’s Trailer Park on Manchester Street with her sister-in-law, Judy Taylor, and her two-year-old nephew, Richard. Judy was estranged from Janice’s brother, and had recently started dating Bickford, who was a Concord local. After he failed to pick Taylor up from school, Barry returned to the trailer late in the evening and told his girlfriend he couldn’t find Janice. By midnight, she still hadn’t returned home, and Judy called the Concord PD to report her missing at 12:21 AM.
Right before Janice disappeared, she had seen bruises on her nephews body and told family members that she thought her SIL’s new beau was responsible. I’ve seen it incorrectly reported Bickford murdered Richard a month after she disappeared, but the event took place four days after she was last seen, and according to an Associated Press, Barry ‘was accused of kicking (the victim) in the abdomen in his home, and ‘the boy died four days later.’ Regarding the death of little Richard, he was convicted of second-degree manslaughter and served only ten months for the murder. At the time law enforcement made it clear to Taylor’s parents that they wanted to talk to her about what she knew about Bickford and the death of her nephew.
After getting out of prison Bickford seemed to go on to live a fairly normal life, and I was unable to find any additional criminal activity associated with his name. Janice’s brother William believes he could have also been involved in his sister’s disappearance as well. Bickford was 21 years old at the time of Taylor’s disappearance, and as of December 2024 would be around ninety years old. According to the Director of Investigations in Concord James Moran, LE had a suspect in mind during the early stages of the investigation but were unable to prove that he kidnapped Janice.
According to an article published in The Concord Monitor on August 9, 1968, a young woman that admitted she was Janice Taylor was found safe in Providence, RI about seven months after she disappeared. She was brought back to NH accompanied by two police officers who released her on her own recognizance into the custody of her mother, but not before she was charged with ‘accessory after the fact’ in relation to the death of her nephew. So… what does this mean? Did she disappear again after she was returned home? Was this all a mistake? Well, according to an article published by The Concord Monitor on the day of Bundy’s execution, the young woman that was brought back to NH from Rhode Island was not Janice, and according to her mother it was the wrong person and only looked like her daughter.
Almost eight years after Janice vanished her brother William learned about Ted Bundy, and the serial murders that were taking place in the western part of the US. He also discovered that the killer visited VT around the time his sister disappeared, and from there he, a private investigator, and an off-duty FBI agent investigated Bundy’s gas receipts along the highways from Vermont to NH, and their research proved that he stopped at a gas station in Loudon, NH two days before his sister disappeared in 1968. This correlates with Ted’s death row confessions, where he insisted that he had never left the interstate when he passed through Concord and that his only stop was to get gas in the Loudon area. In addition to NH, Bundy also clarified that: ‘I can say without any question that there is not, uh, nothing for instance that I was involved in Illinois or New Jersey; when asked about Burlington, VT (Rita Patricia Curran), he simply said ‘no.’
According to the ‘1992 TB MultiAgency Report,’ Ted did take up traveling in early 1968 but the document doesn’t list NH as one of the states that he visited. Also, according to Dr. Rob Dielenberg’s book, ‘Ted Bundy: A Visual History,’ in January 1968 Bundy didn’t begin his traveling until the 18th, when he dropped out of the University of Washington (and again, Concord isn’t listed in the list). In an article published in The Journal Tribune on January 28, 1989, it was reported that William Taylor wrote Bundy a letter that he read an hour before his execution begging him for information related to his sister’s disappearance: ‘in the letter I said, ‘Ted, cover all the bases because the mystery of redemption is not known by the human mind or heart. Only God knows.’ According to Taylor, he was told by two witnesses (one being Bundys own lawyer) that Ted was so ‘struck by that. He started to weep,’ but when asked if he killed Janice, Bundy said ‘absolutely no,’ which is an answer that satisfied the family.
In addition to Ms. Taylor, quite a few young women were either murdered or went missing in the same area in New Hampshire within a seven year period in the late 1960’s/early 1970’s that shared a fair amount of commonalities and a similar MO. Fifteen-year-old Joanne Dunham disappeared on June 11, 1968 in nearby Charlestown, NH, at approximately 7:10 AM. She was last seen on her way to school walking to her bus stop from her residence at the Raiche Mobile Homes, and her remains were found the next day at 4:15 PM on a roped off dirt road on Quaker City Road in Unity, NH approximately 5½ miles from where she was abducted. An autopsy determined that she died of asphyxiation.
Debra Horn disappeared from her Allenstown home on January 29, 1969, and on her walk to school earlier in the morning she fell on some ice and hurt the back of her head and returned home where she stayed for the day. When her parents came home for lunch and saw she wasn’t there her father immediately knew that she had been abducted. Some teenagers found Horn’s badly decomposed remains in the trunk of an abandoned car in Sandown, NH on August 10, 1969.
Twenty-nine-year-old schoolteacher Luella Blakeslee disappeared after leaving her home in Hooksett, NH on the evening of July 4, 1969 to go on a date with her boyfriend, Robert Breest. A local carpenter and general ‘Mr. fix-it,’ in an interview with police about Blakeslee’s disappearance, Breest told them that she never showed up for their night out that evening. Her skeletal remains were found in a shallow grave in Hopkinton on May 9, 1998, and the NH Medical Examiner ruled her death as ‘homicidal violence of an undetermined type.’ After Luella’s body was identified, the Attorney General’s Office issued a press release announcing that Breest had officially been named as a suspect in her murder. Now in his 70’s, in 1973 he was convicted of the 1971 first-degree murder of Susan Randall, and as of December 2024 he is still in prison in MA. In recent years has been fighting to have his homicide conviction overturned because of recent DNA testing.
Twenty-six-year-old Carmel Sue Whitacre failed to return to hospital grounds on August 9, 1970 after she was released from the New Hampshire State Hospital for a weekend visit with her husband in Portsmouth. Almost ten years later on October 27, 1979 hunters found her skeletal remains near Route 43 in Northwood, NH. Law enforcement consider the circumstances around her death suspicious.
Thirteen year old Kathy Lynn Gloddy failed to return home in Franklin, NH on the evening of Sunday, November 21, 1971, after telling her older sister Janet that she was walking to Bell’s Variety Store to get ice cream and potato sticks (which were some of her favorite snacks). On her way out the door, Gloddy told her sister that she would return shortly, and brought her loyal dog Tasha with her. As the hours ticked by and the day became night, the Gloddy family became frantic, and a sudden noise at their front door gave them a small amount of relief until they realized it was only the dog, who returned home ‘scratching and gnawing, whining and whimpering,’ and would not sit still. Kathy’s body was found around 1:00 PM the following afternoon in the woods off Webster Street, and an autopsy revealed that the young woman experienced severe blunt force injuries to the neck, abdomen, and head and she had been raped and strangled.
On October 6, 1971, the body of a woman estimated to be between 23 and 37 years old was found in the woods on an unused logging road at the end of Kilton Road in Bedford, NH. She was roughly 5’3” and is thought to have had brown hair, and where her exact cause of death remains undetermined her manner of death was deemed to be a homicide. Through forensic testing and genetic genealogy, in May 2020 the woman was identified as Katherine Ann ‘Kathy’ Alston, who was born in Chelsea, Massachusetts in 1945 and was about 26 years old when she disappeared (although she was never reported missing). In 2022 seventy-six-year-old Arthur Louis Massei was indicted on a charge of first-degree murder in Alston’s death, and was convicted of her murder in May 2024.
Forty-eight year old Arlene Clevesy was found dead in a wooded area near Hume Brook on June 4, 1972. She had been throttled and drowned, and the ME ruled her death as homicide by traumatic asphyxia including drowning. Unaware of this murder until 2015, The New Hampshire State Cold Case Unit pulled and reinvestigated this case, and it was determined that a man named Albert Francis Moore Jr. was her killer. While incarcerated Moore told multiple inmates that he was responsible for Clevesy’s death, but when investigators went to speak to him in 2015 he denied involvement not only for her murder but also for the one he was sitting in prison for. In 1977 Moore was indicted for second-degree murder in connection with Clevesy’s death, but in 1979 the NH Attorney General’s office decided not to prosecute as he was already serving a life sentence in connection with the murder of Donald Rimer in Salem, Massachusetts.
Kathleen Randall was an 18-year-old freshman from Boston University that was reported missing on September 19, 1972. She had vanished from her dormitory and hadn’t been seen since September 13, 1972, and her remains were found at Yudicki Farm on Route 111-A in Nashua on October 1, 1972. All indications suggest that she had been deceased for some time, and her manner of death was ruled undetermined because of the advanced rate of decomposition. The circumstances surrounding her death hint that foul play was involved, and her death has been treated as a homicide.
On July 12, 1973 two fifteen-year-old girls from Merrimack, NH, Diane Compagna and Anne Psaradelis went missing after telling their parents they were spending the night at each other’s houses. Compagna told her parents that before the sleepover the friends were going to swim at a nearby lake, and neither girl was expected home that night. The following afternoon when they failed to return home their parents began to worry, and Marcel Compagna went into the Merrimack PD and filed a missing persons report. It was first thought that they had run away, but two months went by without any word from either girl and their badly decomposed bodies were discovered on September 29, 1973 in the woods by New Boston Road in Candia, NH. Their cause of death was undetermined because of the late stage of decomp, but it is believed that they were strangled.
On April 16, 1974, the badly decomposed body of a female was found in a wooded area off Route 124 in Marlborough, NH. Medical experts estimate that she was approximately 19-30 years old, 5’4″ tall, and had a stocky build, and it is believed that the remains may have been there since the latter part of 1973. As of December 2024 her identity still remains unknown.
On May 20, 1975 at approximately 12:30 PM the body of twenty-two year old Judy Lord was found in her Royal Gardens apartment in Concord, NH; she had been suffocated and strangled. Judy was last seen the night before at about 10:30 PM when she left a volleyball game that was taking place in a common area of her apartment complex, where she lived with her seventeen-month-old son Gregory. Over the years numerous interviews have been conducted with friends, neighbors and acquaintances, and despite the efforts of investigators and the New Hampshire State Police Crime Lab, this case remains unsolved.
On June 30, 1975 twenty-seven year old Melodie Stankiewicz, of Cambridge, MA was found floating in Captain’s Pond in Salem, NH. She had been stabbed a total of 23 times in her chest and abdomen and it’s thought she is the victim of Leonard Paradiso, a convicted rapist and serial killer that operated in Boston that could be responsible for the deaths of up to seven young women. In September 2008 Boston area prosecutors announced that revelations brought to light by former homicide prosecutor Timothy Burke led them to reopen the unsolved murder cases of three young women: Melodie Stankiewicz, Holly Davidson, and Kathy Williams, and according to a prosecutor involved in the new investigation, ‘there were ‘too many similarities between the individual cases to ignore.’
On March 28, 2022 the New Hampshire Cold Case Unit and the Concord Police Department announced that they are taking another look into Taylor’s disappearance, and are looking for anyone that may have had contact with her between December 1967 and January 1968 (or anytime thereafter). John Taylor (who was only eleven at the time Janice vanished), feels that Barry Bickford could be responsible for his sisters disappearance, however police said they were never able to find any evidence officially linking him to the case. About Janice, John said that, ‘it was very turbulent. I could not focus on school. The teacher was talking, and my mind was only wondering where Janice was. I would come home from school, and my mom was crying all the time.’
According to my research, a large chunk of the Taylor family relocated to the San Diego, California area in the years after Janice disappeared. I was unable to find out exactly when but according to Paul Taylor’s Legacy page Janice’s father passed away and Lillian Taylor-Margeson is still alive and resides in San Diego with her son John. Lynn Ellen Taylor died on January 12, 1995 in San Diego, and Janice’s brother Paul passed away on March 9, 2022 at the age of 77 after suffering a cardiac arrest. The father of two spent his career as a real estate investor, and was a self-taught electrician, plumber, painter, and carpenter. William Taylor Jr. passed away in 2016, and according to his (public) Facebook page, he graduated from the Idaho State University School of Pharmacy in 1972. About his sisters disappearance, he said that he was ‘bitter’ because the police told his family that she had probably run away, and it was ‘their job to investigate, that’s what they should have done 21 years ago.’
As of December 2024, Janice would be 72 years old. Regarding his sisters disappearance, John Taylor recalls no search parties at the time, nor any big headlines: ‘I don’t know what type of investigation they had back then, but it did not seem to be thorough. We want the truth and nothing to be sensationalized. We want you to know the basics of what happened. She did not leave home willingly; I can tell you that.’
* I’ve seen Janice’s name also spelled Janis, but I went with the version that was most frequently used and that was Janice.
Works Cited:
doj.nh.gov/bureaus/cold-case-unit/victim-list/janis-taylor
wmur.com/article/new-hampshire-janis-taylor-missing/46326405




















































Nancy Diane Wyckoff.*
Nancy Diane Wyckoff was born to Brian and Claire (nee Nimmy) in Los Angeles on January 5, 1954 (just as a side note, I’ve seen her referred to as both Nancy and Diane). Mr. Wyckoff was born on June 10, 1927 in LA, and Claire was born on August 11, 1922 in Oak Park, IL; at some point she relocated with her family to Georgia. The couple were wed on May 15, 1953 and settled down in Glendale, California; they had one child together but at some point divorced. Brian married again on July 4, 1958 and had two more children, including Nancy’s half-sister Sarah Wendeline, who was born on August 5, 1963 in San Diego.
An overall exceptional and bright young woman, Nancy’s parents described her as a diligent and loving child that only wanted the best for herself. She was a 1970 graduate of Herbert Hoover High School, where she was on the senior prom committee, the swim team, and the drill team. Wyckoff was also the Editor-in-Chief of the school newspaper and was secretary of the science club. She maintained a 3.88 GPA and ranked ten out of 490 out of her graduating class, and was considered an excellent, well-rounded young woman. She especially loved math and science, and was a Mu Alpha Theta Jr. Honor Scholar.
According to her parents, Nancy had an independent streak, and after graduating high school moved to Corvallis, OR where she enrolled at Oregon State University as a mathematics major. She lived in Poling Hall in room 333, and according to an article published in The Olympian, women lived on the first, third, and fourth floors and men lived on the second and fifth floors. Wyckoff was in the honors program, and had received a $1,000 National Merit Scholarship from the Signal Oil Company, where her mother had been employed for 15 years in Glendale. She was interested in politics, nature, and music, and especially loved horseback riding and camping.
Although she dated around, Nancy had no steady boyfriend at the time of her murder, and according to her mother she: ‘choose to live in a coed dorm because it was the ‘now’ thing to do. Nancy was very much a 1972 girl, in the finest sense.’ Taking an impressive 19 credit hours, Wyckoff was the dormitory coordinator of OCU’s recycling program and was active in the school’s Sierra Club, an organization that cherishes and protects natural beauty. A friend of hers from Herbert Hoover High School that also attended Oregon State said that Nancy was ‘always doing things. She always knew what was going on. But she was a considerate person. She never made you feel stupid just because she was smart.’
Before Diane’s murder two separate attacks took place on OSU’s campus: at around 8 PM on Thursday, February 3, 1972 a young woman named Elizabeth Ann Gleckler was walking by the Agronomy Building when she got hit in the back of the head with something hard. She fell to the ground and began to scream, which scared off her assailant; she needed stitches and it was eventually determined the weapon her attacker used was a chunk of concrete. Gleckler told campus security that although she didn’t see her assailant’s face she said he was short and young. Just a few days later on February 6, another coed named Connie Kennedy was attacked at around 2:30 AM. She had left her dorm room in Cauthorn Hall and went down to the basement to get a snack from the vending machines, and as she was making her selection felt a blow to the back of her head. A struggle ensued, but thankfully Kennedy was able to get away from her attacker and run away. Like Ms. Gleckler, she didn’t get a good look at her attacker but described him as ‘young, short, brown hair, I think.’
Around 3:45 AM on Tuesday, February 8, 1972 (although I’ve seen it listed as early as 3:00) residents of Poling Hall woke up to two separate screams that came from room 333 on the third floor, then the sound of someone running down the hall and the slam of the north facing fire door. Upon hearing the signs of distress, girls went running to Nancy’s room, and when they arrived they were met with a ghastly sight: Wyckoff’s bare feet, sticking out of the door frame, which prevented it from closing. The clothing on the upper part of her body was saturated in blood, and her head was resting against her bed frame. The young coed was dressed in pajamas, and a large amount of blood had already started to poole underneath her body. Her dorm room was decorated with driftwood and shells she collected from the Oregon coast, which was a popular weekend getaway for OSU students. At the foot of her bed was a poster of a gross green frog with a caption underneath that read: ‘kiss me.’ Her windows had faced the school’s quad, and glued on them were letters that formed the phrase: ‘cowgirl in the sand,’ which is a song by Neil Young that was released in 1969.
The young ladies quickly called the head resident, a young man named William Lex, who ran to Nancy’s room to assess the situation. He knelt beside her, and although she was gravely injured he could still make out faint, shallow breathing. He then made three separate calls: the first to 911 for emergency care, the second to the Corvallis PD, then finally to the OR State Trooper that was assigned to OSU to help augment the university’s police force.
Wyckoff had bled out quickly and it didn’t take long before she succumbed to her injuries; she died before the paramedics arrived. Investigators quickly determined that the young coed had been stabbed, and an 8-inch bone handled carving knife was found lying beside her; its tip was slightly bent. Two foreign hairs had been found in the pool of blood found underneath her. Investigators also found a small, red flashlight that was left behind in Nancy’s bedroom, a type that didn’t take batteries and had a removable portion that could be plugged into a wall and charged, which was missing. Its discovery was initially kept a secret from the public.
Dr. William Brady, who was the Oregon state medical examiner that performed a post mortem examination on Wyckoff, determined that she had suffered three different wounds, and their length and widths all aligned perfectly with the knife that was found left behind at the crime scene. The wound that proved to be fatal penetrated the upper part of her heart, and was six inches long; he said that she ‘she would have succumbed in two or three minutes as a result of this wound. And, it was dealt with considerable force, severing cartilage in its path.’ The second wound entered at the lower part of her neck immediately above the left clavicle and stopped at the top of her right lung. The third was the one that caused the assailant’s knife to bend: it was a shallow wound in her left shoulder, and the only reason it wasn’t deeper is because the shoulder bone is located right below the skin, and it resisted the thrust of the weapon. She was not sexually assaulted in any capacity.
According to those that knew her well, Nancy was a trusting girl, too trusting, and sadly this may have been her downfall: all rooms in her dormitory had locks on them, but she had not utilized hers on the night of her murder. According to Claire Wyckoff, ‘Nancy scoffed at locks. She pooh poohed at the idea of locking doors. She was inclined to be scornful of precautions that her mother wanted.’ After the murder the President of the University ordered a mandatory 10:30 PM curfew on campus: all dorms were to be locked by 7 PM, and all visiting between buildings ceased.
All three policing agencies working the case set up headquarters in the Gill Coliseum on OSU’s campus in order to be close to the investigation, and surprisingly they all seemed to work very well together. Typically LE in the 1970’s didn’t like to share information with each other, and I think of the 1971 murder of Joyce LePage, where the investigation was hindered because the different agencies working the case hoarded information and refused to share it with one another. So much data was collected over the course of Wyckoffs investigation that 1700 pages worth of reports were produced, and the Corvallis Police Sergeant Jim Montgomery (along with his partner, Mel Cofer) alone talked to 199 people during his time working the case.
On February 11, 1972 at roughly 8 PM a young student named Michael C. Stinson stumbled into Weatherford Hall, clutching his neck, barely able to speak. Finally, after much effort he was able to say that as he’d been looking at stars on the veranda of the men’s dorm someone had come up from behind him, slipped a cord around his neck and he subsequently blacked out. Stinson was taken to the Student Health Center where he was evaluated, and physicians said that the pressure from the wire or rope is what made the thin red line left behind on his neck. This only clouded the MO of the sneaky assailant even more.
As the days ticked by and the month of February came to an end, tensions on OSU’s campus lessened somewhat despite no movement being made on the case. On March 1 a decision was made and pictures of a knife that was identical to the one used to kill Wyckoff as well as the recovered flashlight were published in the OSU newspaper along with a plea that anyone that may know more about either to please come forward. When investigators released the picture of the flashlight they left out that it was found in Nancy’s room, and only stated it had been located ‘somewhere in Poling Hall.‘ LE was able to determine that the knife had been made in Japan and came in a kit along with a fork, and where several stores in Corvallis sold these sets unfortunately they didn’t keep records of their customers.
Shortly after the publication a student named Marlowe James Buchanan came forward and told police that he recognized the flashlight, and said: ‘you know, I think that might be my flashlight. I lost it the night before the murder, must have been around 11.’ The young man said that he couldn’t remember exactly where he lost it, but remembered seeing friends on February 7 and surmised that he probably misplaced it then. Buchanan then gave investigators the names of the buddies that he’d been with that night, however they quickly determined that his story had some inconsistencies to them: the boys said they didn’t recall that Marlowe was with them the evening before the murder and that when the article was published he’d asked them not to talk about the fact that he lost his flashlight, and when they asked why, he said ‘its not important, and the police would just bug me about it.’
Marlowe James Buchanan was 5’6″ tall and weighed 150 pounds. He maintained a 4.0 average and was known to be brilliant amongst those that knew him, and even graduated from high school a year early after skipping the fifth grade. During an initial interview with investigators, he told them ‘if I’d ever been in her room, it would have been way back at the start of the school year,’ so like all of the other students that admitted to being in Wyckoff’s room, he was fingerprinted. On the third occasion Buchanan spoke with LE he shared: ‘I’ve been thinking, you might find my prints on that fire door. I went up to the third floor to rat fink the girls up there. You know, set off a smoke bomb in the hall. But I changed my mind.’ Investigating officers said he seemed to like talking to them but had a flippant, uncaring facade to him, and that his story wasn’t ‘holding water.’
On March 15, 1972 Benton County Sergeant BJ Miller and his partner Corporal Harris of the Oregon State Police asked Buchanan to come in again to speak to them at their makeshift office in Gill Coliseum. They asked the young man over and over again where the replaceable charging unit had gone from his missing flashlight, and in response he told them that he flushed it down the toilet the morning after the murder because ‘the flashlight was lost, and when something’s gone, it’s gone, so there was no use in keeping the unit.’ He then changed his story, and said he recalled waking up the morning of February 8th feeling that something was ‘terribly wrong,’ and that made him get up, out of bed, and flush the battery down the toilet.
When investigating officers realized that no battery had been found after being disposed of through OSU’s plumbing system, they rushed to the schools custodian, but despite their best efforts the charging unit was gone. Criminologist Bart Reid had done some DNA testing on the hair that was found underneath Wyckoff’s body, and it was determined to be a match to a sample pulled from Buchanan. And Reid’s lab report was shown to the young engineering student, they said to him: ‘we don’t believe you: this report shows you were in her room,’ and his smugness immediately vanished; he still didn’t ask for a lawyer. Harris placed a picture of the murder weapon in front of him and after a while asked, ‘will you go through life with her death on your conscience?” Buchanan began softly crying, and after a few moments he blurted out the entire story.
The young student had been ‘inspired’ by the recent attacks around campus (that he called ‘pranks’), and he wanted to throw the biggest one of all. Buchanan’s previous reference to smoke bombs only alluded to the truth of what really happened: he said he originally intended to scare the young women on the third floor, but the greatest thing he could dream up was to set off one of those bombs inside one of the girls’ rooms, and he only went into Nancy’s because she left it unlocked. He told investigators that he snuck in, knelt beside the sleeping girl, and placed the knife on the floor; he then reached into his pocket for the smoke bomb but as he was fumbling for it the flashlight fell onto the floor, which woke Wyckoff up. He said ‘ I reached for the flashlight but I got the knife instead,’ and when asked (repeatedly) why he needed the piece of cutlery, he never gave detectives a valid answer. When investigators searched Buchanans dormitory they found a set of knives that had one missing, which was a match to the one that was found next to Wyckoff.
Buchanan volunteered that he had been experiencing mental health issues at the time of the incident, and when he went in her room, she woke up, screamed, then quickly ran towards him, which caused him to panic. He said that because he had been raised with ‘conservative values’ he did not want to be caught alone in a female’s bedroom in the early hours of the morning, so he (logically) panicked and ‘unintentionally’ stabbed and killed Nancy in an effort to force her to be quiet.
Only four months shy of turning eighteen, Buchanan was quickly transferred out of juvenile court and was tried as an adult. On April 7, 1972 he was indicted on a charge of intentional murder, meaning there was no delegation between first and second degree murder. It is defined as the killing of another person intentionally and is punishable by a minimum of 25 years in prison without parole. The freshman electrical student plead not guilty, citing mental incompetence.
Skilled at chess and bridge, like Nancy Marlowe excelled at math and science, but his social skills and maturity level were not ‘in pace’ with his mind, and he had limited contact with the opposite sex and hadn’t started dating yet. The Buchanan family moved from Southern California to West Oswego, Oregon in 1967 because ‘there were things happening there that we could no longer live with, and we felt the schooling would be better in Oregon.’ He said he had danced with a girl once but that had been the extent of his experience with women, and also suffered from allergies. When asked by a reporter what Marlowe was like, one of his classmates replied with, ‘small thin, slightly built with a baby face and a baby voice.’
Marlowe waived his right to a jury trial and left his fate up to Circuit Court Judge Richard Mengler. Portland based attorneys Nick Chaivoe and Gary Petersen worked for the defense, and at the beginning of the trial Chaivoe said ‘whatever acts were committed were not done in such a way to enforce free will,’ and that Buchanan was ‘suffering from a mental disease or defect and acted without criminal intent.’ No effort was made by the defense to deny that he killed Wyckoff, but psychiatric testimony was introduced which purported that he was a sick person and would be a danger to society if not properly treated.
Doctors that later examined Buchanan dismissed his claims of mental incompetence and determined him to be mentally stable enough to be tried as an adult. The prosecution brought in multiple psychologists to testify on their behalf, all of which reported that he had not been battling any form of mental illness at the time of the homicide but did suggest that he may have been emotionally stressed and had possibly undergone a psychotic break. Experts deemed him to be immature and felt that he panicked beyond the point of rationality at the sound of his victims’ screams, which is why he stabbed her.
During the trial the defense called psychiatrist Dr. Guy Parvarvesh to the stand, who told the court that said ‘Buchanan thought of himself as a normal kid, when instead, he was very shy, introverted. He grew up with the idea that he was in full control, because he never failed at anything he tried.’ He also said that Marlowe developed a schizoid personality, most likely as a result of growing up with a ‘benevolent father and domineering mother. ‘As a result, this led to him ‘having doubts as to his masculinity, and naturally this developed much anger underneath, that he can never admit to anyone or himself.’ The Doctor also said that the defendant enjoyed playing pranks, which was very normal for a person who is ‘sweet on the outside but has anger underneath that can’t be expressed.’ Pranks were a socially acceptable way to express these feelings, while at the same time he was able to relieve these repressed emotions on an unconscious level.’ Dr. Parvarvesh went on to say that ‘Marlowe is a sick person, if he is not treated he will remain a very dangerous person, but if he undergoes extensive psychotherapy, I feel he can become a normal law abiding citizen.’ On Thursday, May 18, 1972 Buchanan received a 10-year prison sentence for the crime, as it was believed he had not entered the room with criminal intent. He was sent to The Oregon Correctional Institute to serve out his sentence.
In June 2024 the Lifetime Network released a made for TV movie (loosely) based on Wyckoff’s murder titled: ‘Danger in the Dorm’ (it’s technically based off of the Ann Rule short story of the same title, to be specific). It stars Bethany Frankel (who got top billing even though the movie is about her daughter, but whatever) and Clara Alexandrova as her daughter Kathleen, a college student that is supposed to be Nancy. While the movie somewhat (mostly) accurately tells Wyckoff’s story, the characters names were obviously changed and there were several occurrences of dramatization that took place. Also, just by watching the trailer, the biggest thing that jumped out at me was: the film takes place today, not in the 1970’s. According to the synopsis on the films IMDB page: ‘after the murder of her childhood best friend and fellow classmate, Kathleen must catch a killer who’s preying on young girls around campus.’ I may or may not watch it later. Stay tuned.
In late February 1972 Nancy’s alma mater of Herbert Hoover High School in Glendale, CA dedicated their journalism room to her memory. In July 1972 students at Oregon State University planted a sequoia tree in her honor in front of Kidder Hall, its plaque reading: ‘Nancy Diane Wyckoff / 1965-1972 / ‘In wilderness is the preservation of the World.’ / -Thoreau.’ Also in the fall of 1972, OSU dedicated their Volleyball Court to Wyckoff’s memory. Brian and Claire Wyckoff established a $1,000 scholarship in their daughter’s honor, and specified that it be divided between a male and female student that were residents of Poling Hall that showed academic excellence along with a financial need. Brian Wyckoff died at the age of 64 on January 10, 1992 and Claire passed at the age of 85 on July 7, 2007. Nancy’s sister Sarah died on April 11, 2023 in San Diego, California.
As of December 2024 Marlowe James Buchanan still lives in his hometown of West Oswego, Oregon with his wife, Elizabeth Ann (nee Houser). The couple were married on July 22, 1995 in Washington, OR and have no children. I wasn’t able to find much information about him, but I wasn’t able to find any additional criminal activity linked to him, so he seems to have flown under the radar since being released from prison. He may have gone on to finish his education after he got out of prison, as I found his name linked to some patents that were filed while he was employed at Eaton Intelligent Power Limited. As I found myself digging and digging but still coming up with nothing I suddenly realized that Mr. Buchanan most likely does not want to be found, and I’m going to let him be.
* Just as a side note, I have seen Nancy’s last name spelled Wyckoff and Wycoff; I’m going by the spelling used in almost EVERYTHING, including her high school yearbooks and newspaper articles… although it’s spelled Wycoff on her gravestone (which is actually VERY weird to me, of all the things that it should be correct on it should be that).
Works Cited:
Dawn, Randee. (June 16, 2024). ‘Who killed Nancy Wyckoff? The true story behind Lifetime’s ‘Danger in the Dorm.’’ Taken November 30, 2024 from today.com/popculture/tv/danger-in-the-dorm-true-story-rcna156410
Rule, Ann. (1994). ‘True Crime Archives: Volume One.’
SInha, Shivangi. (June 8, 2024). ‘Nancy Wyckoff Murder: How Did She Die? Who Killed Her?’ Taken November 30, 2024 from thecinemaholic.com/nancy-wyckoff/
Shrestha, Naman. (June 12, 2024). ‘Marlowe James Buchanan: Where is the Killer Now?’ Taken November 30, 204 from thecinemaholic.com/marlowe-james-buchanan/
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Arthur John Shawcross: Part One, Early Life and First Murder Spree.
Arthur John Shawcross was born at the US Naval Hospital at 4:14 AM on June 6, 1945 in Kittery, Maine to Arthur Roy and Elizabeth (nee Yerakes) Shawcross. According to his mother, he weighed five pounds at birth and was born one month premature, and as a result he spent twenty days in the hospital. Arthur Roy was born on October 7, 1923 in Jefferson, NY and after dropping out of school in the eighth grade he got a position with the Jefferson County Highway Department (which is a position that his father also worked before him), officially becoming their youngest employee on record. After the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in December 1941 he enlisted in the Marine Corps, and served honorably in World War II, earning four battle stars.
Elizabeth (who went by ‘Bessie/Betty’) was born on August 4, 1926 in Somersworth, New Hampshire and dropped out of high school in the tenth grade to work at a shoe factory to bring in money for her family. During WWII she got a position as a pipefitter’s helper at a Navy Yard in Portsmouth, which is where she met her future husband: after the war was over Arthur Roy was transferred to the Naval Hospital in Portsmouth near Kittery, Maine which is where he met Betty. The couple were married on November 23, 1944 and had four children together: Art, Donna (b. 1946), Jean (b. 1948), and James (b. 1954). Shortly after her first son was born on June 19th, 1945 Mrs. Shawcross took him to Watertown, NY to stay with her SIL until her husband finished his stint in the military. According to those that knew her, Betty was loud, abrasive, and apparently had a vocabulary that could make a sailor blush, where her husband was a calm man, and seemed to be very subdued. Upon returning home Mr. Shawcross returned to his job as a heavy equipment operator and road worker for Jefferson County.
According to one of Art’s cousin’s, he was a gorgeous baby, and had big, beautiful dark eyes and a sweet little face… but there seemed to be something off about him as well: he almost never cried, and frequently had a blank, vacant expression on his face. Shawcross was born with a genetic condition known as ‘Jacob’s Syndrome,’ where an individual’s genetic make-up contains an extra copy of their Y-chromosome; those that possess it have an increased risk of having learning disabilities and delayed motor and speech/language skills, as well as an increased risk of behavioral, social, and emotional difficulties. Where it was once thought to cause violent behavior, according to recent studies men with ‘XYY-syndrome’ are not more likely to be more aggressive than others, and this theory has been disproven.
The Shawcross family tree (mostly) goes back to the United Kingdom: one of Art’s ancestors was an attorney general in Great Britain, and a distant cousin was the chief prosecutor of the Nuremberg trials. But alas, scandal wasn’t new to the immediate family: when he was 21, Art’s (paternal) grandpa Fred married a 15 year old named Muriel Blake, completely against her family’s wishes. Her parents called the law and Shawcross was thrown in jail, and when he was released two days later the couple immediately got hitched. They had four children together and stayed married for forty-nine years until Muriel’s death; Fred followed three years later.
At the age of five it was reported by a family member that ‘little Artie’ had missed 33 days of kindergarten and still used ‘baby talk.’ Described as ‘odd’ by those around him (including his own relatives), he frequently had nightmares and wet the bed well into his adolescence. After Shawcross’ little sisters and brother were born his mother didn’t pay nearly as much attention to him, and Bessie’s oldest seemed to especially crave her attention. He began running away from home by the age of six, and in first grade earned A’s and B’s in school, despite his teachers saying he had ‘lazy work habits.’ The following year he began conversing with imaginary friends (most likely a result of having none in real life), and he was relentlessly mocked by his peers, who called him ‘weird’ and gave him the nickname ‘Oddie.’ By the age of eight he was a bully, and often went after younger, smaller children that weren’t as likely to put up much of a fight. It’s no surprise that he had trouble making friends, and in a later interview said that he felt as if his own parents didn’t like him as much as they did his brother and sisters. Arthur was a hypochondriac beginning at a very young age, and always seemed to be suffering from some form of imaginary illness in a desperate ploy for attention.
Artie (John) would later claim that his mother used to punish him with a belt and a broom handle, and that his father would beat him using his belt buckle, and would often hurt him so severely that he would often bleed. A relative of Art’s (that refused to give their identity) said of his early childhood: ‘Arty was a weird little bastard from the time he learned to walk.’
Beginning around the age of eight Arthur became a compulsive masturbater, a habit that his mother tried her hardest to discourage. On the repeated occasions that she caught him she would punish him severely, and claimed that she stuck a broom handle into his behind and even threatened him with a butcher knife on one occasion. Betty Shawcross denied these accusations, and psychologists aren’t 100% certain who is telling the truth.
Things really seemed to go south for Artie at around nine years old: his grades started slipping and his mother found out about his fathers other family in Australia from his time in the Marine Corps: while cleaning up the Guadalcanal island in the South Pacific in February 1943, Arthur Roy went to a dance thrown by the US Marine Corps, and there he met Miss Thelma June Chakros of Yea. According to a 1944 article published by the Watertown Daily Times, on June 14, 1943 the two were wed in Melny; they had one child, a son named Harley Roy. The dominating force in the Shawcross household, Bessie never let her husband forget about his other wife and child, and things never really returned to normal after his second family came to light. Also around this time Art was hit in the head with a rock and was hospitalized; he got stitches and suffered from numbness for years afterwards. He repeated the fourth grade and was always getting into fights with the other kids at school, and would often cry and use baby talk while being bullied by other children. Also at the age of nine Shawcross claimed that he had his first sexual encounter with his Aunt Tina, saying the two had intercourse.
Around the age of ten Arthur began stealing from local stores and homes around Watertown, but was never arrested. In 1958, the family built a small house near Brownsville, NY and because of this Artie no longer had to share a bedroom with his sisters anymore (just his little brother), and eventually three sets of relatives moved onto adjoining pieces of property, thus establishing an area dubbed ‘Shawcross Corners.’ In his later years Arthur would often speak about the difficult relationship he had with his parents and siblings, especially his mom, who he called domineering. Bessie, on the other hand, said that her oldest child was the source of most of her problems.
Despite only having an IQ of 86 (according to the first of many IQ tests, which is signifying less than the average of 100), Shawcross received A’s and B’s during his first two years of grade school. He claimed in later interviews that beginning at the age of thirteen he had sex with one of his male cousins (who denied the allegations) and began having relations with his sister Jeanne, (including ‘constant’ oral sex), which he said went on throughout his middle and junior high school years, prompting his mother to threaten to castrate him when she found out. He also claimed that around this time he had sex with a female neighbor, and when they were caught by her brother he forced Shawcross to have oral sex with him. Art also said that around this time he was raped by a male stranger and began having sex with a variety of animals (such as sheep, chickens, dogs… maybe a goat occasionally slipped in). At the age of fifteen he was only in the eighth grade, and was still wetting the bed and having nightmares. He was also becoming increasingly violent (especially when provoked), and began torturing small animals and setting brush fires. I just want to point out, Shawcross ticks off all three points of the MacDonald triad, which is a (controversial) hypothesis suggesting a link between violent offenders and three shared childhood behaviors: fire setting, animal cruelty, and bedwetting.
A very literal child, little Artie didn’t seem to understand sarcasm, or phrases like, ‘the cow jumped over the moon’ or ‘the dish ran away with the spoon.’ He would think that a literal dinner plate tried to run away with a tablespoon. His grade school teachers also noticed that he had a strangely complex relationship with his mother, and that he was constantly trying to get her to show love to him. One noticed that he always seemed to be showering her with gifts, even though she didn’t really seem to care. It seemed that the Shawcrosses blamed the school for his poor behavior, and the school seemed to blame Betty.
One of Art’s cousins shared that on one occasion they saw him walking home with a stick on his shoulders, and at the end of it was a snapping turtle: he had speared it with a stick, which went from its backside and out its mouth, and it was most likely alive when he did that. The same relative told another story about Art getting into an argument with his dad, and later that afternoon they saw him in a tree pointing a .22 rifle at Arthur Roy as he was mowing his lawn. Art never went through with it, but afterwards when he was confronted about it he said that he could have easily killed him, and it would have been like ‘shooting fish in a barrel.’
At sixteen Art was described by those acquainted with him as ‘moody,’ and a loner. He joined General Brown High School’s wrestling team, but got hit in the head with a discus and had to spend four days in the hospital. By seventeen he had only made it to the ninth grade and his grades fell to the lowest they had ever been; he eventually dropped out of school completely at the age of nineteen in 1960. It was also around this time that he began breaking into homes and peeping through windows, and in 1963 he was arrested for breaking into a Sears store; he received eighteen months of probation and was charged as a ‘youthful offender.’ Just two years later he was arrested again for second degree burglary, and was sentenced to six additional months of probation.
Around the time he was on probation he met his first wife, a woman named Sarah Louise Chatterton that he worked with at the local Family Bargain Center (a job he was let go from due to ‘poor customer service’ skills). The couple got married on September 13, 1964, and they did not consummate their marriage for several weeks after their wedding. Art and Sarah had a son together named Michael, who was born roughly a year after their wedding on October 2, 1956. During their marriage Shawcross had a hard time holding a job, and was fired from several employers (he said that his favorite job was at a butcher shop).
After less than two years of marriage Sarah and Art divorced; he relinquished all rights to his son (who he never saw again), and her new husband eventually adopted him. Around this time Shawcross was arrested after he chased a thirteen year old kid into his home after he threw a snowball at his car; he received another six months of probation. Around this time he also fell off of a 40-foot ladder and hit his head, earning him another concussion.
On April 7, 1966 Arthur Shawcross was drafted into the US Army. Surprisingly he scored above average on intelligence tests, but only scored an 88 on a military administered IQ test, which (when combined with his overall low motivation) made him unsuitable for many higher level jobs. Where he initially had some minor disciplinary problems, Art eventually settled into his role and served one tour of duty with the 4th Supply and Transport Company of the 4th Infantry Division in Vietnam.
In September 1967 while on a 30 day furlough before being deployed to Vietnam Shawcross met a woman named Linda Neary at a bar, and since they both figured he would die overseas the two decided to get married. Born Phyllis Lee Brown, Linda was given up at birth and was adopted by the Neary family and was later renamed. After graduating from high school in Clayton, NY she got engaged to a kind, soft-spoken young man that she only dated for a few months, but only three days before the wedding he came out to her as gay and called off the wedding. Linda begged him to go through with the wedding, but he said no, and told her that he couldn’t involve her in his ‘sexual confusion.’ Shortly after he relocated to Rochester, and eventually passed away due to complications from the AIDS virus.
According to Jack Owen’s book, ‘The Misbegotten Son,’ after Sarah saw their marriage announcement published in ‘The Watertown Daily Times’ she reached out to Linda, and told her: ‘I can tell you an awful lot about your husband if you want to know.’ The former Mrs. Shawcross told the new one that her new husband was violent, and that after their son was born she had always been afraid of what he might do to him. Neary said she didn’t believe a word she said, and figured it must simply be ‘sour grapes.’ She had seen Art with his young son on multiple occassions, and he seemed like a good father and was very gentle with him. Sarah also hinted that he beat her, however didn’t elaborate any further than that.
Just as she did with her previous fiance, Linda and Art abstained from sex until they were married and tied the knot in September 1967; only a month later, twenty-two year old Shawcross was sent to Vietna b vcm, where he worked as a supply parts specialist. In October of 1968 after the war was over he was sent to Fort Sill, Oklahoma where he worked as an armorer, repairing weapons. He was honorably discharged from the Army in Spring of 1969, and moved to Clayton, NY (which is where his new bride was from).
In the middle of 1968 Shawcross had an affair with a woman while on leave from the Army in Hawaii that led to the birth of his daughter, Margaret ‘Maggie’ Deming, who was born on Valentine’s Day in 1969. In 2001 Maggie learned the true identity of her father and decided to get in contact with him, and the two began a relationship of sorts, and he even met her seven children. Deming has called Arthur ‘very gentle,’ ‘soft-spoken,’ and ‘grandfatherly,’ and the two remained in contact until his death in November 2008.
Upon returning home from overseas, Art told anyone willing to listen that he was a member of an elite detachment and was personally sent to ‘take out’ entire villages (he said that his ‘kill count’ was 39 people). He also claimed to have PTSD, and bragged about some truly abhorrent (and made-up) combat exploits, including ‘beheading mama-sans and nailing their heads to trees as a warning to the Vietcong’ and acts of cannibalism. One of Shawcross’ favorite lies to tell about his time in Vietnam was that he once murdered and cannibalized two young girls after he found them hiding guns in a tree. He tied one to a tree, then shot the other and cut her head off, which he said he speared on a post ‘for the Vietcong to see’ (but not before he cut off a piece of her thigh and ate it). His second victim lost control of her bowels (most likely out he fear), but despite this Shawcross said that he sexually assaulted her then shot on the head.
After his arrest he said that the war was his introduction to murder, and that while in Vietnam he invented gruesome ways to torture and kill his victims (which included men, women, and children). But in reality, Shawcross never served in a combat position, and his military career was completely unremarkable. After his second arrest in Rochester, FBI Profiler Robert Ressler looked into his PTSD claim on behalf of the prosecution, and after an exhaustive look into Shawcross’ background he came to the conclusion that most of his claims from his time in Vietnam were ’untrue,’ and that he concocted his tales thanks to some descriptive books and movies (as well as an overactive imagination). A psychiatrist also stated that he had antisocial personality disorder.
When Artie was reunited with his new wife things quickly got violent (at one point he killed the family dog in a fit of rage), and after surviving a suicide attempt he decided to see an Army psychiatrist. The Doctor told Linda that her husband got intense sexual pleasure from setting fires and asked that she sign paperwork to have him committed to a psychiatric hospital, as he felt that Arthur was very possibly dangerous to herself and others. Neary, who hardly knew her husband, asked his mother what her thoughts on the matter were, and Mrs. Shawcross refused to answer, saying that it was her choice. According to Linda, the Mr. and Mrs. Shawcross were emotionally distant with all of their children, and almost never hugged them or showed them any sort of affection. In the end, she chose not to have Art committed (one of the reasons being she was a strict Christian Scientist), and the Army determined that they did not have enough of a reason to commit him themselves. Shortly after the evaluation in June 1969 he got drunk and beat her up so badly that she miscarried (she was four months along); she divorced him later that fall.
In addition to treating his wife poorly, after Art’s return from Vietnam his general behavior became increasingly problematic. In 1969 he was convicted of helping rob $407 from a local gas station, and was brought up on three separate arson charges: a barn in Delafarge Corners, The Knowlton Brothers Paper Mill in April (there was over $250,000 in repairs needed), and extensive damage to Crowley’s Food Mart in September. In December of 1969 he was sentenced to five years in Attica prison. During his stint he claimed to be raped by three black inmates (although he said that he eventually got his revenge), and in June 1970 he was transferred to Auburn Prison, where he served out the rest of his sentence. Ultimately he only served twenty-two months and was paroled early to his parents after he saved the life of a prison official during a riot on October 18, 1971.
Upon his release from prison Shawcross returned to Watertown and got a job with the local public works department. He reconnected with a single mother of two that he knew from high school named Penny Nichol Sherbino in January 1972 after they ran into one another in front of the Watertown JC Penney’s. The couple got pregnant after only five dates and got married on April 22, 1972; they moved into the Cloverdale Apartments (which was income based, subsidized housing) but she later miscarried. Strangely enough, despite working at the city dump, Art required his wife to have a freshly ironed, white button up shirt for him to wear everyday, and he refused to get his driver’s license. Interestingly enough, she said that he had the unique hobby of painting on panes of window glass, and he ‘would lay a pane of glass atop a picture and trace a copy in a bright-colored paint.’ To Penny, some of his paintings seemed sellable, but he didn’t have any interest in turning a profit. When she asked where he learned the technique, he immediately changed the subject (my guess: jail) (Olsen, 44).’ Neither one of them drank or did drugs, however Art did like to drink coffee and hang out with the local cops, something Penny never understood (as she didn’t trust the police). On one occasion Shawcross left a bouquet of wildflowers on a female neighbor’s door step, along with a note that said ‘these are for your grave.’ When questioned about it he refused to elaborate why he did it.
But, despite multiple ‘second chances’ Arthur couldn’t seem to keep his nose clean, and at one point during his marriage to Penny had been required to pay a $10 fine after he got caught spanking a small boy then stuffing grass into his pants. It wasn’t until this event that Sherbino became aware that her husband was even on parole, and only learned about it after seeing a notation on his court paperwork that said ‘paroled to Lyle Sylver’. He also got caught putting a small child in a burning barrel of garbage and grabbing another ‘by the neck,’ incidents that eventually blew over.
According to Art’s third wife, it never seemed as if Betty had any interest in seeing her son, and according to her he never seemed to do anything right (and she had no problem telling him so). Penny also said that her MIL once shared that Art was the ‘bane of her life’ and that ‘it just seems that no matter what he does he can’t seem to get along with people.’ She also shared that she thought there was something wrong with her son’s brain, most likely a result of suffering multiple head injuries during his developmental years. The two also exchanged stories about Art’s letters: Betty reported that he told her he had been ‘wounded by shrapnel’ (something that he never shared with his wife) and about a ‘big battle’ that he played a large part of (which was most likely a lie in an attempt to get some sort of positive reaction from her). She also said that her husband seemed almost afraid of the tiny matriarch, and wondered if his need for ‘comforting’ had anything to do with her lack of affection towards him (she said he frequently would choose sitting with his head in her lap while she ‘tickled his back’ over love making). Art swore to Penny that he loved his mother deeply and ‘sang her praises,’ but at the same time appeared nervous and almost uncomfortable while in her presence.
A hobby that Art seemed to deeply enjoy was fishing: according to Penny, he went every day, however she said he ‘couldn’t catch a cold,’ as he never came home with any fish she could make for dinner. Art seemed to lack general direction in his life, and it was around the summer of 1972 that he began walking long distances around Jefferson County. He would frequently stop to fish along the Black River, and it was during one of these excursions that he met a local 10 year old boy, Jack Owen Blake. Jack’s mother Mary (nee Lawton) was born on November 29, 1934 in Watertown NY (which also happened to be Thanksgiving Day) and was one of fourteen children. She had a dysfunctional upbringing: her father was an alcoholic and wife beater, and her mother cheated on her dad and had multiple children by another man (she said that no one really seemed sure of which kid was fathered by what man).
A Korean War veteran, Alan Blake (who went by the nickname ‘Big Pete’), was born on December 7, 1931 in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The couple met at a bar when Big Pete was stationed at Pine Camp (now Fort Drum) with the Army in 1953, and he got Mary pregnant with their oldest son Richie and her parents made them get married. A petty thief, Big Pete lost an arm in a motor vehicle accident that took place while he was fleeing a robbery while drunk. In name only, the couple went on to have nine children together, as Mary would later admit to having an extramarital affair with a man named Bob, and she is largely sure that he is Jack’s real father (although no DNA test was ever performed). About her husband, Mrs. Blake said ‘when he wanted sex, he took down his pants. He gave me kids but he din’t want no part of ’em. Dr. Rossen told him, ‘I oughta take a shotgun and blow that thing right offa ya and tie it up on the wall with a ribbon. Your family’d be better off’ (Olsen, 11).
With no high school diploma or skills, Big Pete had a hard time finding employment, and eventually got a position picking potatoes for a local farmer named Bob Gardner. After forging a check from his parents in Michigan, they agreed to drop all charges against him as long as he promised to never return to the state again.
Jack Owen Bake was born at Mercy Hospital in Watertown NY on October 18, 1961 to Mary and Allen Blake. The seventh of nine brothers and sisters, he had straw blond hair, freckles, big ears and a pug nose, and according to the Blakes, at the time of his murder was a typical, fun-loving 5th grader that once saved his older sister from drowning in the Black River.
On May 7, 1972 during one of their afternoons fishing together Shawcross’ violent fantasies came to a head, and Blake disappeared after telling his mom he was going outside to play near the Cloverdale apartments. I do want to add (just for the sake of being complete) that I’ve also seen it reported in multiple places as April 7, 1972, however May seems to be most frequently used and is on his tombstone as well. The two had gone fishing together a few days prior to when he was last seen, and when Mary found out she told her son not to go near him again.
Shawcross was questioned about the disappearance and denied having any involvement, and in the initial stages of the investigation he was not high on the Watertown PD’s suspect list (despite receiving concerns by Mary Blake). Law enforcement did not make Jack’s disappearance easy on the Blakes, and as a result the family had a deep hatred for LE (Mary called them ‘piggie-wiggies’). After Mrs. Blake first reached out to police to tell them that her son was missing they didn’t take her seriously, and refused to investigate. At one point they even searched the family home after they claimed to ‘received a tip that Jack’s body was somewhere in the basement.’ The family had frequent run-ins with LE, and one of them always seemed to be in some sort of legal trouble (whether it was shoplifting, truancy, or fighting).
It was also in the summer of 1972 that Shawcross confessed to his parole officer that he was beginning to have troubles in his (third) marriage, but was willing to accept blame and was ‘beginning to have doubts about the true meaning of love.’ He also used the interview as an excuse to get in a few good jabs in about his mother, and told his PO that she ‘was a domineering person’ that ‘downgraded her husband and son (Olsen, 79).’ Sylver immediately sent him for a mental health evaluation, where he was found to be functioning at a ‘borderline level of intelligence’ and was ‘exhibiting defective moral and social development.’ The psychotherapist/social worker (he was referred to as both) also said that ‘when he becomes upset he acts impulsively… he describes himself as always having felt that rules are to be broken and did everything in his power to break rules at home as a child and in school… his mother had a very bad temper’ (Olsen, 80).
Later that same year on September 2, 1972 Arthur Shawcross killed Karen Ann Hill, who was born on Fathers Day in 1964 to Joseph and Helene (nee Korneliusen) Hill in Rochester, NY. Mr. Hill was born on March 2, 1933 and worked for Eastman Kodak as a machinist and (according to his ex-wife) had a bit of a drinking problem; Helene was born on May 20, 1937. The couple were wed on August 25, 1955 and had four children together (two boys and two girls), but divorced in 1971. After Karen was born her mother said to the nurse, ’that’s not my baby, look at that pitch-black hair,’ but within four weeks it turned light blond. A native of Rochester, Helene was in Watertown with Karen and her two year old sister Christmas to visit with her new bf’s family for the Labor Day holiday (12 y/o Bob and 10 y/o Tom were left at home with her sister). Hesitant to get into a new relationship so soon after her divorce (especially with four young children to take care of), she liked Stan Fisher’s warm and likable personality, and it helped that her kids seemed to adore him (she said that where it definitely ‘wasn’t love but it beat loneliness’). When Fisher suggested a weekend trip away to Watertown to see his half sister and her family, at first Helene was just going to bring Chrissy, but then her older daughter begged to go too at the very last minute as well, and she relented. Mrs. Hill said Karen had an independent streak and her dream was to grow up and become a movie star.
Little Karen Ann had large, chocolate brown eyes and honey-blonde hair that her mother styled long and girlish. At a bit before 2 in the afternoon on September 2, 1972, Karen told her mother that she wanted to go and play outside, which Helene said was ok but told her to ‘stay close,’ as she wanted to wash her hair to help make a good impression on Stan’s family. She told police that the last time she checked on her daughter she was playing with a little white bunny that belonged to one of her bf’s sisters kids, and the last thing she said to her was, ‘honey, mommy’s gonna wash her hair. You stay in the yard, okay?’ To this request, Karen replied, ‘I will, Mom.’ When she failed to turn up after a few hours, Helene went for a walk around the neighborhood and asked if anyone had seen her daughter. After being met with multiple ‘no’s’ she began to worry, and called Watertown Police at 5:45 PM; the responding officer only took five minutes to show up (if only Jack Blake was given the same level of care).
Shortly after Karen disappeared Mary Blake’s SIL went to her house and asked if she had seen her. She hadn’t, and where she wanted to go and help in the search for the little girl she had her children of her own to take care of; she immediately knew that Shawcross was responsible.
At roughly 2 PM a local college student named David McGrath was driving over the Pearl Street Bridge and saw a small blonde girl climbing the yellow fence near the Black River. He noticed that she appeared to be looking for something on the ground and that there was a newer brown and white 10-speed bicycle propped up against the ‘latticed laced iron fence.’ McGrath’s first thought was that a child that young shouldn’t be alone in such a dangerous spot, but at the same time he firmly believed in minding his own business and kept driving. On his return trip about ten minutes later he noticed the bike was still there but the child was gone. After hearing about the missing child he reached out to LE, and it was his call that led to the discovery of Karen Hill.
A few minutes later four teenage girls on their way to visit a relative just happened to be walking by the same bridge as McGrath and witnessed a man climbing up the river bank then climbing up and over the fence. As they passed by him they noticed that his clothes were stained and his legs were wet, and he was carrying with him two fishing poles.
At 2:45 PM Terrey Roy Tenney was walking past Gateway Electronics near the railroad tracks on Factory Street when he noticed Art riding his bike nearby. The sixteen year old was on his way home to the Cloverdale Apartments and had his arms full of clothes, something Shawcross noticed because a few minutes later he circled around and came up behind him. His neighbor asked if he wanted an ice cream cone, which he accepted (although hesitantly) and later observed that Shawcross was ‘out of uniform’ and wasn’t dressed in his ‘normal’ neat clothes (he was wearing ‘soiled dark blue shorts and a dirty t-shirt’). Art volunteered that he had ’been fishing’ and offered to carry his bags of clothes home for him; he accepted, but stressed not to lose anything. When Tenney arrived at Cloverdale ten minutes later Shawcross was already there, along with his clothes. The boy said that it was his first real interaction with him, and they’ve never really spoken before; it was later suspected that he was Art’s way of establishing an alibi.
The body of Karen Ann Hill was found under an old iron bridge that went over the Black River by Watertown Police Officer Augustine Capone, who saw her feet sticking out above the water and ‘her whole upper torso buried in rocks;’ she had grass and leaves stuffed down her throat and was naked from the waist down. The Pathologist that performed her autopsy said that she had been dead anywhere from eight to twelve hours and there was a chance that she’d been killed before she’d been sexually assaulted. Immediately Shawcross was a suspect, most likely because of the debris that was found in her mouth and throat; locals told LE they remembered seeing him with a young girl matching her description earlier in the day that she disappeared, with one even reporting they saw him sitting with her on the same bridge where her body was later discovered; the two were eating ice cream.
I’m just curious: what did Shawcross say that made the girl go with him? Her mother said she walked eight blocks to school everyday alone in the city of Rochester, and that it was uncharacteristic that she would just wander off with a stranger. What I personally think happened is the little white rabbit Karen was playing with ran away and she simply ran after it without thinking. Shawcross was probably fishing when the child approached him and he somehow convinced her to come over to him (maybe he told her he knew where the creature had gone?). Sadly we’ll never know.
After police connected the dots between Karen’s murder, Jack Blake, and Art’s new bike that was seen near the scene of the crime, police quickly brought him in for questioning. Shawcross arrived at the police station shortly after midnight, and he told LE that he left his apartment at 7 AM earlier that day and after a few hours of fishing he went home for a break. He then volunteered that he rode his bike to the local bargain center and visited with a friend before he eventually ran into Tenney from Cloverdale. He bought his teenage neighbor an ice cream cone then carried a bag home for him, arriving there at 3:15 in the afternoon. Shawcross also mentioned that he returned to the shopping plaza two additional times that day, where he purchased a few things for himself as well as some sneakers for his stepson; he then claimed he spent the rest of the day at home with his wife.
During their interview, Watertown Detective Charles Kubinsky observed that Shawcross went out of his way to give an explanation as to why he was near the bridge when he was, and that he also seemed desperate to make it clear that he was nowhere near it at the time that Hill disappeared. Shawcross remained at the police station talking to detectives until around 2 AM, and he was released. Early the next day Kubinsky read the report from the teenage girls, who said they saw him on the bridge at roughly the time Hill was murdered, which destroyed Art’s alibi. The detectives immediately brought Shawcross in for a second interview.
During this interview Shawcross was inconsistent when it came to the time that he was near the bridge, and he eventually stopped answering their questions and he was released again. At around 8 AM on September 3rd a sniffer dog was brought in to track the scent of Karen Hill, and it led investigators from the bridge where she was found right to the Cloverdale Apartments. Shawcross was arrested on the third time he was brought into the Watertown Police station for questioning.
As Detective Kabinsky wrote his report on Karen Hill he recalled a report from a man named William Corky Murkock, who reported a suspicious looking man that came out of the woods behind his motel and gas station around the time that Jack Blake disappeared. After some additional questions later that same day at roughly 10 PM Shawcross hinted that he knew where the Blake kid was buried, saying ‘okay Charlie, I’ll help you. And maybe you can help me. But let me sleep on it.’ The detective thought to himself that Art seemed to enjoy having the upper hand, and that he probably wanted to make a deal.
He confessed to burying the child somewhere in some swampland off of Route 81, just north of Watertown. Police quickly formed yet another search party on September 6, 1972, and when they stumbled upon human remains they immediately knew they found Jack: the name ‘Blake’ was written on the back of the child’s t-shirt, one that had written on the front, ‘I act different because I am different.’ Big Pete and Mary weren’t even contacted by the authorities after their son’s remains were discovered, and they had to find out just like everyone else: on the news. It was determined that the initial search for Jack took place within yards of where his body was eventually found.
The pathologist determined that Blake had been suffocated to death, and that his remains showed signs of sexual abuse. Shawcross would later admit to luring the boy into the woods, then forced him to strip naked then run from him before taking his life. He also said that he returned to his remains on several occasions and had sex with the corpse, and that he cut out the child’s genitals and heart then ate them. Because the level of decomp was so advanced nobody really could say that it did or did not happen.
The day after Art confessed he sent a friend to his ex-wife Linda with a message for her: that he didn’t mean to do it and was having a ‘Vietnam War flashback’ when he killed Karen Hill. Exactly two weeks later on September 17, 1972 a plea bargain was struck, and in return for a guilty plea for a first-degree manslaughter charge for the murder of Karen Hill no charges would be filed against him related to the homicide of Jack Blake (thanks to a statute that acknowledges the killer’s ‘extreme emotional disturbance’). The former Jefferson County DA William McClusky rationalized the plea bargain by stating that aside from his confession to detectives, there was no direct evidence linking him to the murder of Jack Blake. McClusky also suggested that had the case gone to trial Shawcross may have argued that he was under ‘extreme emotional disturbance,’ and a jury would have most likely agreed upon a verdict of manslaughter anyway. He confessed that he encountered Karen while she was playing by the Black River, then proceded to lure her away before he raped then strangle her to death.
Arthur John Shawcross was sentenced to an indeterminate term, with a maximum of 25 years at Attica Correctional Facility. In November of 1972 he was transferred to Green Haven Correctional Facility, and two years later he became violent after receiving constant threats from other inmates. In 1975 he filed for divorce from Penny after she wouldn’t visit him, and the same year he also claimed to have sex with a nurse’s aide (something that has never been confirmed). After Shawcross was in prison for fourteen years, inexperienced prison staff and social workers concluded that he was ‘no longer dangerous’ (completely disregarding the warnings of psychiatrists who had assessed him as a dangerous ‘schizoid psychopath’), and he was released on parole in April 1987. This is where I’ll end this portion of my article, and the second part will be about his crimes in Rochester.
Initially after the discovery of Jack Blake’s body in September 1972 he was laid to rest in North Watertown cemetery in an unmarked grave in Section W between the stones of William Howard and Leland Parker. However in November 2013 an unnamed childhood friend of Jack’s reached out to the Blake family and donated a marker for Jack, which was installed at a dedication ceremony later that same month.
Mrs. Blake struggled with Jack’s death until the end of her life, and even thought that police lied about finding his remains and that Shawcross was innocent of both murders in 1972 (she even thought they buried an empty coffin). Years after the murders she met with Helene Hill, who she told her crackpot theories to, and after a few phone calls and a sit-down with some Rochester detectives Mrs. Hill was told to ‘get rid of that woman,’ because her whole family was bad news and was always in trouble. I mean, it’s rude but fair: all of the Blakes (Mary included) were constantly in and out of the Watertown Police Department on a various (small) misdemeanor charges (mostly fighting and shoplifting). Strangely enough, Richie Blake was sentenced to Green Haven for burglary, and happened to be assigned the same counselor as Shawcross.
Sadly Big Pete and Mary’s marriage couldn’t withstand the murder of their precious son and they eventually separated. After she took the kids and left he turned to hard drugs and booze, and got so sick that (according to her) his ‘liver exploded.’ Despite being divorced, she had to sign him into rehab towards the end of his life for alcoholism, and he died at Mercy Hospital in Watertown on February 10, 1984 at the age of 52. Mrs. Blake died of congestive heart failure at the age of 69 on January 1, 2004. According to her obituary, she was a homemaker and enjoyed playing bingo. Jack’s sister Dawn passed away at the age of fifty on February 18, 2007. A waitress at various restaurants around Watertown, Ms. Blake enjoyed playing cards and going for walks. Rose Marie Blake died at the age of 43 on April 9, 2003 of acute respiratory failure due to pneumonia. She loved cats and like her sister also worked as a waitress; she briefly lived in New Jersey, where she cared for race horses.
Karen Hill’s father Robert died at the age of sixty on April 17, 1993. Helene Hill remarried a man named Larry E. Southwick on September 13, 1992 in Collin, TX and passed away on April 21, 2024 in Walworth, NY. Karen’s sister Christmas Madama died on May 17, 2021; Chrissy worked at Eastman Kodak and as a bus driver for Brockport Central Schools, and loved riding her motorcycle, gardening, and going to concerts. She was happily married and enjoyed spending time with her husband and daughter. Karen’s brother Bob Hill is currently residing in Florida, and Thomas lives in Albion, NY.
In the years he spent in prison after his second round of murders Doctors ran Shawcross’ blood work, and discovered that he suffered from ‘pyroluria,’ which is a fairly unusual physiological abnormality. Also referred to as Malvaria, Kryptopyrroluria, and Hemepyrrole, pyroluria is a condition that causes ones body to make too many ‘pyrroles,’ which is a byproduct of the formation of hemoglobin that is believed to be caused by an abnormality during its synthesis. A normal level of pyrroles in the blood is between 0 – 10 μg/dL, where samples between 10 – 20 μg/dL are considered borderline, and those above 20 μg/dL are deemed elevated; Shawcross had a level of around 200. People that have the disorder typically have behavioral problems and are poor at controlling their anger, especially when provoked.
Works Cited:
Aamodt, Mike. Retrieved August 27, 2014 from maamodt.asp.radford.edu/Psyc%20405/Shawcross%20Presentation.pdf
Cummins, Dan. (January 31, 2022). ‘Timesuck with Dan Cummins: 281, Arthur Shawcross: The Genesee River Killer.’ Taken September 9, 2024 from podscripts.co/podcasts/timesuck-with-dan-cummins/281-arthur-shawcross-the-genesee-river-killer
Cowiki, Jeff. Taken August 28, 2024 from jeffcowiki.miraheze.org/wiki/Arthur_Shawcross
Olsen, Jack. (1993). ‘The Misbegotten Son.’
’47,XYY syndrome.’ Taken August 26, 2024 from medlineplus.gov/genetics/condition/47xyy-syndrome/#synonyms












































































































Jeffrey Dahmer: FBI Documents.
These are the documents that werereleased by the FBI related to the Jeffrey Dahmer murders.
BTK: FBI Documents.
Here is the .PDF file I found from the fbi.vault.gov website. You can find them in there, but I wanted to include them here as well in a continued effort to be a one shop stop.
Cheri Jo Bates, Autopsy Report.









Katherine Merry Devine, Case Files: Part One.
In late April 2024 I requested the files related to the murder of Kathy Devine from the Thurston County Sherrif’s department in Washington state, and they finally got around to getting them to me at the end of June. I shouldn’t be so salty, I’m very thankful they were willing to send them to me. Included in the information was a bunch of newspaper articles about Kathy, and I almost didn’t include them because most of them I found on newspapers.com (and are in my article), but it was important that I release Kathy’s case file in it’s entirety. They did tell me that sometime in August additional information will be ‘made available’ so… that’s also exciting.