Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ Ruth Aardsma.

Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ Ruth Aardsma was born on July 11, 1947 in Holland, Michigan to Richard and Esther Aarsdma. Richard Cornelius Aardsma was born on January 15, 1916 in Chicago, IL and Esther Williene Van Alsburg was born on November 4, 1918 in Holland, MI.  Betsy’s father fought in WWII and the couple were married on September 28, 1940 in Holland, MI and went on to have four children together: Carol, Betsy, Kathleen, and David. They both attended Hope College in Holland, which is described as a ‘private four-year Christian liberal arts college known for its academic excellence, top-ranked undergraduate research and rich campus life.’

Betsy grew up in a devoutly religious family and was raised in a middle-class household on leafy West 37th Street in Holland, MI: her dad worked as a sales tax auditor for the state of Michigan Treasury Department (although strangely a single report said he was a psychologist for the Ottawa County Community Mental Health Department), and Mrs. Aardsma was a former teacher and stay-at-home mother. The Aardsma’s lived according to the Reformed Church tradition, a lifestyle that emphasized strong conservative values and religious observance.

In the late 1960’s, Betsy’s hometown of Holland was made up of around 25,000 residents and had strong Dutch-American roots that was reflective her family’s heritage and was founded by Calvinist religious dissidents from the Netherlands in 1847. It was known for being conservative and insular, and as the local saying went: ‘if you’re not Dutch, you’re not much,’ something that was part joke, half belief. At the time, Holland was made up of two main religious denominations: the moderate Reformed Church and the ultraconservative Christian Reformed Church, both of which believed that God’s will determines every event in life (good or bad) and that humans are ‘predestined’ at birth for heaven or hell.

As a child, Betsy displayed a flair for art and poetry, and by the time she was in her early teenage years had developed somewhat liberal ideals (at the time, anyways) and displayed a genuine concern for the underprivileged. An exceptionally strong student, she was known for her intelligence and the well-mannered way in which she presented herself: she graduated fifth in her class at Holland High School and was a member of the National Honor Society (she had a special interest in English, art, and biology); she was also the VP of her sophomore class, the East Unit Vice President of her junior class, and was in an exhibition dance group.

A friend and Holland High School classmate of Betsy’s named Judith Jahns Aycock recalled that she loved their colorful English literature teacher Olin Van Lare, who had been prone to burst into tears while reciting particularly moving passages of poetry. Verne C. Kupelian, a history teacher turned entrepreneur that later opened a teen dance club in Holland that was patronized by Aardsma and her friends, cherished a poem that his one-time student wrote for him long after her death. Dirk Bloemendaal Senior, who taught physiology (which had been an advanced senior-level biology course), remembered that Betsy was a hard worker that did well in a difficult class, one that required students to dissect cats: ‘I think I ended up giving her a straight ‘A’ in the class, and it was not an easy class. She was really the kind of person you love to have in your class.’ Aardsma largely hung out with a group of young ladies that took academics as seriously she did, and according to her best friend, Jan Sasamoto-Brandt (a Japanese-American girl whose parents had relocated to Holland from the West Coast during World War II): ‘Betsy was artistic, and I was bright also. But I was more the serious bright and she was more artistic, so I think we balanced each other pretty well.’

Upon graduating from Holland High School in 1965 Betsy was uncertain of what she wanted to do next with her life: her parents strongly encouraged her to go into medicine, but she felt more drawn to the arts and literature (she briefly entertained the idea of combining her two interests and becoming a medical illustrator), but in the end, she enrolled in the Honors Program at Hope College in the fall of 1965, majoring in pre-med (one of the schools’ stronger programs)… even though (according to Jan Sasamoto-Brandt, who spent all four years in Ann Arbor), Betsy would have preferred to start college at the University of Michigan and even discussed rooming together. But, the Aardsma’s were a Hope College family, and that’s the direction eventually Betsy went in: in addition to both of her parents, her older sister, Carole was also a graduate, and her brother would also one day go.

Aardsma’s freshman year roommate at Hope College was Linda DenBesten-Jones of South Holland, IL, who said she was friendly, accommodating to a fault, and was fascinating to talk to. And according to Tamara Lockwood-Quinn (an acquaintance of Betsy’s and fellow Voorhees Hall resident): ‘when we came to Hope College, it was really strict: lights out at 9 o’clock, chapel three times a week.’ Lockwood -Quinn even wondered if perhaps Aardsma was an early feminist, and she recalled that ‘she wanted to be a doctor. I think that’s pretty feminist. I thought it was kind of gutsy to say you were going to be a doctor. I didn’t know anybody else who was going to be a doctor. In the classes she was in, she was one of the few women in it.’ According to her friend Margo Hakken-Zeedyk, ‘she was always into really deep things and then was just so creative. She had a real good sense of humor, but at the same time, it was a little dry. Real clever.’

Betsy was a beautiful young woman: she stood five feet, eight inches tall, weighed 145 pounds, had hazel eyes, and long brown hair (that had a slight tint of red in it). Intrigued by the larger world, she wasn’t sure if a traditional life of one day becoming a wife and mother was for her, and during her years as an undergraduate student she began to explore some experiences beyond academics: she went on several dates with a few different promising young men, though none developed into serious relationships… however one encounter took a dark turn when the young suitor either threatened her with a knife or pulled one out during an argument; she immediately ended things, and no charges were filed against the young man. Friends recall that where Betsy had never been short of male admirers, she wasn’t boy-crazy and never went out with the same guy for very long.

At some time during her late high school or early college years, Aardsma spent a week on a mission trip in New Mexico teaching art to underprivileged children on a Navajo reservation in a program that had been run by the Reformed Church. Those close to Betsy also said that she also had a dark side, and at times seemed to foresee that her life would one day soon be cut short: a poem she wrote as a high school sophomore titled, ‘Why Do I Live?’ was briefly cited by her pastor at her funeral as evidence that she had ‘accepted God’s will and embraced death’: ‘I am living in preparation for death / What I live for will last. / And increase in the face of eternity.’

Betsy’s unhappiness with her choice of going to Hope College began to grow, and she began to yearn for a more dynamic environment, and in 1967 at the beginning of her junior year she made the decision to transfer to the University of Michigan. When she first moved to Ann Arbor Aardsma found herself somewhat lonely, and even though her high school best friend Jan Sasamoto-Brandt was there, by then she had joined a sorority and the two seemed to have grown apart during their two-years apart. Aardsma missed her Holland friends but kept in touch with them through the US Postal Service, and in a September 1967 letter to a high school friend named Phyllis ‘Peggy’ Wich-Vandenberg (who was a student at Marquette University in Wisconsin): ‘intellectually, this place is not as alive as it should be. I run into asses every day,’ but according to Wich-Vandenberg, she also encountered ‘a good number of acutely aware people’ and was happy that ‘no matter the type of person, U of M had a lot of them.’

During her senior year of undergrad, Betsy shared an off-campus apartment with three other girlfriends that was below a residence that was shared by four brothers of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity; one of them was David L. Wright, the son of a prominent psychiatrist from Elmhurst, IL. David was a senior pre-med major, and even though the two had met the year prior as juniors, it was their friends that started to push them to get together during their final year. According to Wright (who is now a kidney specialist in Rockford, IL): ‘she was just a very brilliant person, extremely smart. Good sense of humor. Just a wonderful person.’ Betsy and David talked about possibly getting engaged and married in the summer of 1970 but were not ‘officially engaged’ at the time of her murder (according to reports, Wright planned to propose over the upcoming Christmas break).

As content and happy as Aardsma had been during her last spring at the U of M, she was among many young women on campus that was worried about the murders of young females that had started two years earlier… Meanwhile, David became one of sixty-four individuals that had been accepted into the third class of the Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, which had opened in the fall of 1967. In the spring of 1969, Aardsma graduated from the University of Michigan with her bachelor’s degree (with ‘distinction and honors’) in English… but, as much as she loved and cared for her beau, she had plans of joining the Peace Corps and going to Africa for a year (she applied and had been accepted); the uncertainty of everything made for an unhappy summer in Holland.

In the beginning of the summer of 1969 Aardsma initially told Brandt that she wouldn’t be able to stand up in her wedding later that August because she was scheduled to be shipped off to Africa by then… but, this was before Wright told her that ‘he wasn’t crazy about the idea’ of his girlfriend going away for a year and ‘he wouldn’t wait for her’: ‘she asked if I would wait for her and so forth. And I sort of selfishly said, ‘I just don’t know what will happen.’’ After that, Betsy canceled her plans of going to Africa and she made the decision to follow Wright to Pennsylvania: she enrolled at Penn State in September 1969 with the intention of earning a Master of Arts in English, even though the campus that she would take up her studies the one in State College, PA, which was almost a hundred miles away from the medical school David was attending in Hershey.

Ultimately, Betsy set aside her dreams of volunteering at an international level and once again decided to focus on academics, this time with the goal of one day finding a career as a college English professor. Because of the murders of young coeds in the state of Michigan that had been taking place since 1967, the Aardsma family was relieved that she was getting out of Ann Arbor, and according to her former brother-in-law, David Wegner: ‘when she moved to Penn State, we thought, ‘oh, thank God, she’s at a place where she’s safe, not out at the University of Michigan.’’

The ‘Michigan co-ed murders’ were a series of highly publicized homicides that took place between 1967 and 1969 in the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area by an individual that had been given multiple nicknames, including ‘The Ypsilanti Ripper,’ ‘The Michigan Murderer, and ‘The Coed Killer.’ All of the victims were young women between the ages of thirteen and twenty-one and had been bludgeoned, abducted, and raped prior to their deaths; typically, they were murdered by stabbing or strangulation. Their remains were discovered within a fifteen-mile radius in Washtenaw County and on occasion they were mutilated post-mortem; each victim had been menstruating at the time of their death which made detectives strongly speculate had invoked an intense feeling of extreme rage into killer. The prime suspect, John Norman Chapman (who was then known as John Norman Collins) was arrested one week after the final murder; he was eventually sentenced to life imprisonment on August 19, 1970, and is currently incarcerated at Carson City Correctional Facility. Although never tried for the remaining five murders attributed to the Michigan Murderer (or the murder of a sixth girl killed in California whose death has been linked to the others), LEO’s believe Chapman was responsible for all seven murders.

When it comes to being a suspect for the murder of Betsy Aardsma, Collins was already in custody when she was killed in November 1969, as he was arrested earlier that July for unrelated murders; although some investigators feel that it is too much of a coincidence that he killed young women in the same Michigan area where Aardsma was in school, and wonder that it’s possible he may have stalked her then followed her to Penn State and murdered her there.

Going to a school so far away from home offered the twenty-two-year-old graduate student a fresh start, although her workload was incredibly demanding: one of her classes, English 501, which was co-taught by the tough but greatly respected Professor Harrison Meserole, was especially challenging (he handled the early American literature portion of the coursework). But, Betsy was diligent when it came to her studies and for the first eight weeks before her death had spent most of her time outside of class in Penn State’s Pattee Library. She maintained her relationship with David through daily letters and weekend bus trips to Hershey, but the intense academic pressures (on both of them) left little time for socializing. Long-distance telephone calls were expensive in 1969, so she wrote her long distance love a letter every day, with the last one arriving on the morning after her death.

Wright recalled that about halfway through the semester (roughly at the end of October), Betsy seemed troubled about something and told him she wanted to transfer schools and relocate to Harrisburg (which was a twenty-five minute drive versus an almost two hour one) and enroll in courses at the Penn State campus there: ‘in retrospect, when I thought about that, I wondered if she was worried about something up there. My wife’s theory is that she just wanted to move things along and be closer.’ But something seemed to be troubling Aardsma, and according to her former BIL, she had previously expressed a premonition of early death in some of her writings, and it was also around that time that she had told her mother, ‘I don’t know why I’m here. I have this weird feeling about being here.’

By Thanksgiving, Betsy Aardsma had been showing exhibited signs of stress due to the fact that she had fallen behind on an important English assignment, but instead of working on it she spent the day in Hershey in the company of her boyfriend, his roommates, and their girlfriends in the designated dormitory of the female medical students: the women cooked, and it according to David Wright it was ‘a real nice time.’ At some point during that day, Betsy called her family in Holland to wish them a Happy Thanksgiving: David and Carole were in visiting from Madison, WI, and everyone got a chance to chat briefly with her and say hello.

Wright said they briefly discussed the idea of her staying in Hershey for the weekend, but she declined, stating she simply had too much work to do and she needed to do research in the library for her English 501 paper that was due in less than two weeks. When dinner was over, he drove her to a nearby bus stop in the 400 block of Market Street in Harrisburg, and she arrived home later the same day. It was the last time he saw her alive, and according to him, ‘I always wonder if she had stayed down that weekend what would have happened,’ and that not insisting she did so was one of his ‘biggest regrets.’ Betsy and her roommate Sharon Brandt resided in room 5A in Atherton Hall (a dormitory that primarily housed graduate students), and before they went to bed the two chatted about their day and played cards. Brandt would later recall that her roommate seldom pursued ‘extracurricular activities’ outside of academics and spent much of her free time either studying or (on weekends) traveling to Penn State Hershey to be in the company of Wright.

During her short amount of time in graduate school, Aardsma managed to make some new friends at Penn State, among them Linda Marsa, another English graduate student, who said that Betsy: ‘always seemed like a young Katharine Hepburn. You know, with those kind of angular features and this curly, reddish hair that she pinned up. Lean and lanky with that same kind of sarcastic, funny, witty attitude.’ She also said that she knew Betsy loved her boyfriend and went to visit him often, ‘but she had a certain ambivalence that I think was very natural.’ Marsa, who called herself a political radical, said she and Aardsma were as one in the same when it came to their opposition to the Vietnam War, and in a 1972 news article David Wegner said that his one-time SIL had led a campus discussion group against the war on national Vietnam Moratorium Day (October 15, 1969). Additionally, a friend that has never been identified told The Associated Press that Aardsma loved black literature, especially the works of James Baldwin, and in the same news story an unidentified professor said she had ‘the deep sensitivity of an artist for others’ feelings.’`

Shortly before her death, Aardsma had started to express concerns about possibly (one day) becoming a ‘physician’s wife’ and a mother, however none of her journal entries, or the letters she regularly wrote to Wright showed any indication that she had felt any reluctance about her feelings for him. Based on these readings, Pennsylvania State Troopers also said that she did not appear to be interested in another man or had otherwise felt intimidated and/or uncomfortable during the eight weeks she had been enrolled at Penn State: according to the pages of her journal, Betsy seemed normal and devoted to David.

On the afternoon of Friday, November 28, 1969 the campus of Penn State University in State College PA was eerily quiet: most students were home for the long Thanksgiving weekend, leaving the sprawling campus in a state of almost total silence… but, deadlines loomed, and Betsy’s focus was on completing her assignments. Clad in a sleeveless red dress layered over a white turtleneck sweater with a gold watch pendant hanging around her neck, she left Atherton Hall at roughly 3:50 PM with Sharon with plans of a full day of classwork ahead of her (her primary goal that day was to gather materials for a paper in her English 501 course). According to (current) Penn State (and Betsy Aardsma case expert) English Professor Sascha Skucek, the girls made a brief stop in Burrowes Hall to talk to Professor Nicholas Joukovsky during his open office hours, who co-taught English 501 along with the lead Professor, Harrison Meserole. Their discussion revolved around a previous paper Betsy had written, as he had taken an interest in one of her sources, and she told him she would retrieve it during her visit to the library and would bring it to him.

When the girls arrived at the Pattee Library at 4 PM, they confirmed their plans to meet up again later that evening to watch either ‘Easy Rider’ or ‘Take the Money and Run’ at a movie theater near campus then parted ways (although one report says they made plans to meet at 7 PM for dinner): Brandt proceeded to the main reading room while Aardsma made her way to the central stacks (which has been referred to as ‘a labyrinthine,’ and a ‘dimly lit area housing millions of volumes in narrow, multi-tiered aisles designed for storage rather than prolonged occupancy’). Despite the Thanksgiving holiday drastically reducing the number of students on campus that Friday, the Pattee Library remained open and fully operational and recorded 3,343 exits that day (including staff); investigators would later learn that on an average Friday, upwards of 400 people would come and go from the Pattee Library between 4:30 and 5:00 PM, although on the date in question, only about ninety had done so.

A little after 4 PM, Betsy entered Penn State’s Pattee Library through its main entrance, passing the security checkpoint; she exchanged a brief greeting with two classmates from English 501 (Linda Marsa and Bob Steinberg), who were leaving the library together. Betsy then headed for Professor Harrison Meserole’s office in the basement, and according to Priscilla Letterman-Meserole (who at the time was the professor’s secretary but would later go on to be his wife): ‘we had a steady stream of students coming in the afternoon to talk about their research projects. She had on a red dress. I remember I complimented her on her dress.’ When she came up from the basement Betsy placed her purse, jacket, and a book about Africa inside a carrel assigned to her before she made her way towards one of the card catalogs, and it was around this time that she bumped into twenty-three-year-old Marilee Elaine Erdely, who dropped her pencil during the exchange. It didn’t take long for her to find the card for the book that she was looking for, with the system advising her it was in the level two core stacks.

The stacks at the Pattee Library were known for its claustrophobic layout: rows upon rows of shelves obscured everything around it, creating an environment where one’s presence was ‘acutely felt by others but rarely seen because of the height of the stacks of books;’ it’s aisles were barely wide enough for one person go get through let alone two, so visitors had to think ahead when attempting to navigate the aisles. Yet… Betsy seemed comfortable there. An undergraduate student named Carol Manning was in the same area of the stacks as Aardsma, and she had been searching for information related to a term paper. Manning later recalled that afternoon that her pen had died, and she asked Betsy if she could borrow one from her; in response, she smiled at her and handed her one and told her to keep it; by that point in the afternoon, she had already been surrounded by books and had been fully immersed in her work.

At around 4:30 PM assistant stacks supervisor Dean Brungart walked by the area and noticed Aardsma in the aisle, and that two men were lingering a few rows away on the west side of the library, talking to one another quietly. It’s around this time that eyewitness accounts started to become fragmented and inconsistent: Manning reported there had been two men near Aardsma in the level two core, and she described one of them as having ‘dark hair and darker skin,’ and said that he helped her retrieve a book from a high shelf, however Brungart told investigators that there had been ‘two white males in the vicinity.’ It’s also important to note that neither one reported seeing the other that afternoon, and as a result their accounts fueled years of speculation about a possible two-killer scenario. These sightings also pointed to possible outsiders or non-students as the mystery man, but alibis, lack of matching physical evidence, and failure to re-identify suspects led to their dismissal.

Sometime between 4:30 PM and 4:45 PM on the afternoon of November 28, 1969 a still unknown assailant stabbed Elizabeth Ruth Aardsma a single time through the left breastbone with a thin-bladed knife, between rows 50 and 51 of the second level stacks: the precision of the wound (which had gone right between her ribs and went directly into the heart) initially produced minimal external bleeding, as the blade’s narrow profile limited blood flow at the entry point. The entire incident occurred silently, as the young victim didn’t scream nor cry out for help.

At roughly 4:45 PM, a badly injured Betsy stumbled out of the level 2 stacks and into the main circulation area of the Pattee Library and collapsed near the card catalog while in full view of the library. As she slumped to the floor, she finally made some noise, as she pulled books down on herself while she fell: students and library employees watched as she fell to the floor, however they initially mistook the incident for a ‘medical emergency’ (thinking she either fainted due to the stress of finals week, or perhaps suffered a seizure/epileptic episode) largely due to the fact that her red dress hid the extent of her injuries and her lack of reaction hinted towards there not been a violent altercation. A level above, Dean Brungart heard the sound of falling books through a floor vent, but he did not go to investigate, and according to Wayne Baumgardner (one of the librarian’s on staff that day): ‘there wasn’t any kind of real security in the building because it wasn’t considered to be necessary. Once the Aardsma slaying happened, the university put in major security regulations and things and really tightened up.’ There were thought to be nine people that had been within seventy feet of Betsy Aardsma when she was stabbed, but none of them (because of the intervening shelves of books) saw what happened to her.

Just before the attack, Marilee Erdely had settled herself at a desk just outside the eastern entrance of level two stacks, approximately twenty feet from where Betsy had been working, and she had a clear view of the eastern passage leading into the core. The loud crash associated with Aardsma falling startled both Erdely and Joao Uafinda (an international student from Mozambique that had been browsing books in a different section of the library), and neither recalled seeing anyone enter the stacks during this time. Less than a minute later, Erdely said that a man rushed out of the east passage that had been approximately six feet tall, 185 pounds, with trimmed brown hair; she clarified that he wore a lightweight jacket, slacks, and a plaid button-down shirt (possibly with a tie); Uafinda’s description matched Erdely’s, though he also noted that the man kept his right hand hidden behind him. Both Erdely and Uafinda reported that he said, ‘somebody better help that girl,’ before he quickly turned around and led them toward rows 50 and 51; once there, the man fled down a nearby staircase… But something about this ‘helpful stranger’ didn’t sit right with Uafinda, and he attempted to follow him, but the man quickly shook him.

Because both Erdely and Uafinda would later struggle to identify the suspect and their descriptions varied slightly police were uncertain if there had been one man or two. Analysis of the escape by law enforcement suggested that the individual had possessed a sense of familiarity regarding the layout of the library, as he was able to make a quick getaway without alerting anyone that had been nearby. While nobody on the main floor of the library was yet aware of the homicide that had been taken place only feet away from them, the sight of a black man chasing a white one out of the stacks caught the attention of one young student library employee, who managed to catch a glimpse of the suspect’s face as he made his way to the door; it was this last eyewitness report that helped to confirm that the man attempting to flee not only wore glasses but specifically horn rimmed ones.

Meanwhile, Erdely entered the core cautiously, and what she discovered was absolute chaos, with books lay scattered all over the floor, a heavy metal bookshelf had toppled over, and at the center of it all was Betsy. She had been moving only slightly and had been lying on her stomach. Dropping to her knees, Marliee leaned close to her, panic rising with each passing second: she interpreted the fallen books and the confusion as evidence that her new friend had suffered a medical episode, andwhereshe immediately noticed a small blood spot on Betsy’s sweater, she did not see the one inch wound that laid beneath it, hidden by her clothing. She softly whispered something, but her voice was too weak and quiet to understand. Never leaving Aardsma’s side, Marliee repeatedly called out for help, her voice echoing throughout the otherwise quiet library, and over the next few minutes, at least six people walked by, but none stopped to help. She didn’t move until Patricia Bland (the circulation librarian) came over to assist, and only moments later, Murray Martin appeared, who was the assistant head of the library: he unbuttoned the collar of Betsy’s blouse and attempted to administer a mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, but his efforts were in vain. Another library employee phoned Ritenour Student Health Center at 5:01 PM, which was a few hundred yards from Pattee Library.

Shortly after the call was made a team of student paramedics arrived at the level two stacks, believing they were only responding to a fainting and/or nosebleed incident. Initially, they believed they detected a faint pulse, which offered a fleeting glimmer of hope, but as they carefully turned Betsy over to place her on the cloth gurney, another librarian named Betsy Davis, noted drops of blood falling onto the floor. The EMT’s, with the guidance of the library staff, helped carry Betsy out through the east side of the core and into the larger elevator within the stacks. Erdely, (who remained with Betsy and had been clutching her purse tightly against her chest), followed them into the ambulance and sat in its passengers seat during the short drive to Ritenour Health Centre; in the back, one of the paramedic’s desperately tried CPR.

While the EMT was performing CPR, Dr. Elmer Reed, the on-duty doctor at the time, noticed something unusual: after each compression, a small amount of blood oozed out of her chest. The paramedics once again checked for a pulse, and when they found none (this time they were certain) they cut her clothes off, which finally revealed the wound that had since then gone unnoticed: on the upper left hand side of Aardsma’s chest was a single downward angled incision which sliced all the way through to her heart and severed her pulmonary artery. Upon discovering the fatal wound, Dr. Reed pronounced Betsy Aardsma dead at 5:19 PM; shortly after, a call over the Pennsylvania State Police was made, and her murder investigation officially began (one report incorrectly listed 5:50 PM as Betsy’s TOD).

Back at the Pattee Library, the staff (completely unaware that a homicide had just taken place) began cleaning the scene: books were reshelved, papers were picked up, and a janitor was even called to mop the floor (Betsy had urinated on herself during the incident, and there had been a small amount of blood left behind as well). As a result of this ‘accidental cleaning,’ multiple crucial pieces of trace evidence were lost, including footprints, fibers, and other microscopic traces of DNA; additionally, the students and untrained medical staff that had initially found Betsy and helped move her resulted in additional contamination. The absence of the murder weapon (which investigators felt was a small knife or similar shaped implement) meant no ballistic or tool-mark analysis could be performed, and searches of the stacks yielded no trace of one.

Later, detectives found blood smears on the wall of a nearby stairwell, which suggested that the killer had either wiped the knife off there before fleeing, or he had injured himself with it and in the process of fleeing, accidentally flicked some of his own blood onto the wall. At the scene, blood splatter evidence (which included samples on the floor and displaced bookshelves), indicated that Betsy had fallen in place after she sustained the single stab wound and suggested ‘minimal post-stabbing movement confined to her fall.’ Investigators also found a series of small, freshly spilt blood droplets that matched Aardsma’s blood type in the staircase that led to the level three core stacks, which hinted that her killer fled the scene using this route, however the lack of external spatter greatly limited serological analysis.

At the time of Betsy’s murder in 1969, forensic technicians didn’t properly preserve any biological samples, which as we know would have proven invaluable in more modern times when it comes to genetic testing. DNA profiling wasn’t’ a thing’ until 1984, and in 1969 crime scene experts were unable to match a victim’s genetic material against biological samples (such as blood, hair, or other bodily fluid); despite the fact that blood typing had been around since the turn of the century, there had been an insufficient amount of it found at the scene, and the large amount of contamination had drastically reduced its value (which also led to degraded trace evidence preservation). Forensic artists were later able to come up with a couple of composite sketches of the suspicious figures that had been seen around the library the afternoon of Betsy’s murder, but they eventually proved to be unreliable thanks in part to the poor lighting in the stacks and ‘the fallibility of human memory under a large amount of stress.’

The nearest Pennsylvania State Police barracks was roughly fifteen minutes away on the campus of Rockview State Prison… but the first officer to arrive on scene didn’t come from Rockview: instead, the responding LEO was part-time student and full-time undercover narcotics officer, Investigator Mike Simmers, who reached the Pattee Library at approximately 6 PM and thankfully had the sense to order that the scene finally be secured. Because of the holiday weekend there were a limited number of troopers that were available to assist with the case, as they had assumed jurisdiction as the lead investigative agency responsible for looking into Betsy’s murder. A full search of the stacks did not occur until November 29th, when Pennsylvania State Police began canvassing the campus of Penn State in an attempt to locate possible witnesses.

In an interview, Simmers said they had a few people they believed may have been suspects, but there was never enough evidence against any of them to make an arrest. He also pointed out that the general area of the stacks where Betsy was killed had been known for being a ‘clandestine spot,’ and was often used to stash porn and was had been a popular location for ‘secret homosexual rendezvous’. Trooper Simmers worked tirelessly on the case for multiple months, leveraging his knowledge of the university’s campus to track down and bring in students for questioning.

In the beginning of the investigation, efforts were largely focused on Betsy’s personal connections, which included looking into her boyfriend, David Wright, who said he had been studying with multiple friends in Hershey (which had been verified through multiple witnesses). Broader search efforts extended to door-to-door inquiries of dormitories and buildings that were close to the library in an attempt to identify any potential witnesses that may have observed any unusual activity around 4:45-5:00 PM on the afternoon of November 27th. These initial searches (that were conducted through the end of November and throughout December 1969), aimed to reconstruct foot traffic and secure any overlooked physical trace evidence that may have previously been overlooked.

The lack of video surveillance in the Pattee Library in November 1969 reflected the common technological constraints of that time era, as there had been no closed-circuit recording system that had been installed at the scene, and as a result investigators were forced to rely instead solely on faulty memories and eyewitness testimonies. When they started looking into Aardsma’s background and personal life detectives didn’t find many helpful clues that aided in the investigation, with one of the original investigators referring to her as ‘so damn squeaky clean;’ Retired Pennsylvania State Trooper Leigh Barrows (who worked Betsy’s case from 2008 to 2014), repeated (roughly) the exact same sentiment decades later, and told A&E Crime + Investigation that ‘everybody you talk to always had something good to say about her. They missed her. They couldn’t understand how somebody could do this to her.’

Witness descriptions of ‘transient figures’ in the Pattee Library at approximately 4:30-4:45 PM on November 28, 1969 generated brief leads that resulted in no identifications: a librarian reported seeing a man with wavy blond hair that had maybe been wearing glasses (but maybe not) walk briskly from the card catalog room towards the main exit of the library. Another student named Shirley Brooks came forward and told police that afternoon at around 4:45 PM in the Pattee Library she walked down the stairs into level BA to ask Betsy if she could borrow a pen, and when she made her way back upstairs she had bumped into ‘a tanned, mustached man’ that was wearing a brown overcoat as he had been exiting the level two core stacks. Additionally, a secondhand account from Patricia Bland at the circulation desk implied that a person in a winter coat emerged directly from the southern entrance of level three core into the lobby, telling her, ‘a girl needs help;’ she couldn’t remember whether the person was male or female. Nothing ever came of these reports.

An aerospace historian named Richard Allen had been at the Pattee Library on the afternoon of November 27, 1969, and as he was using a photocopier while waiting for his son, he overheard a seemingly normal conversation between a man and a woman in the general direction of where Aardsma was. Moments later, he heard a metallic crashing noise before a young man whom he described as ‘looking like a student’ ran ‘barreling’ past him; he also described another man in ‘student dress’ leaving the area, whilst casually saying , ‘there’s a girl down there needs help.’ However, in a second interview a week later, Allen claimed a blond man in student dress (‘preppy with khakis’) had exited the level three core west passageway and said, ‘a girl in there needs help.’ The distinction is important because it means Allen may have been on the same level of the core as Betsy, rather than a floor above.

Pennsylvania State Police assigned approximately thirty-five troopers to investigate the death of Betsy Aardsma; they were assigned use of room 109 in the Boucke Building on Penn States campus as a temporary ‘command center’ as they conducted inquiries, and hundreds of students were interviewed in the weeks that followed the murder. In the days that followed the entire campus was unsuccessfully searched in an effort to locate the murder weapon, and a $25,000 reward (the equivalent of approximately $220,800 in 2026) was offered for any information that led to the arrest of the killer of Betsy Aardsma. By December 11, 1969 investigators had conducted close to 1,500 interviews, and two men that had been sought by state police came forward on the sixth and provided their accounts of the event.

Betsy Aardsma’s autopsy was performed by Centre County Coroner Doctor Thomas Magnani at Bellefonte Hospital in Bellefonte, PA; it began at 11 PM on November 28th, 1969, and concluded at 4 AM the following morning. The Pathologist determined that Betsy had been killed as the result of a single stab to the heart (an act that would have required a good amount of strength and force), a wound that severed her pulmonary artery which led to extensive hemorrhaging into her chest cavity, which would have filled her lungs with blood, essentially drowning her (this also would have made her unable to call out for help). Exsanguination had occurred quickly, and Dr. Magnani estimated Aardsma was dead within five minutes. Further examination revealed no evidence of sexual assault.

The coroner noted signs of petechial hemorrhaging on Betsy’s chest (which are tiny, pinpoint-sized red/purple/brown spots on the skin or mucous membranes that are the result of broken capillaries) as well as some minor bruising and abrasions around one of her ears, wounds that were most likely were sustained when she fell to the floor of the library. Doctor Magnani concluded that Aardsma’s killer had intentionally aimed for her heart, suggesting that the act may have been premeditated. Additionally, the angle and depth of the stab wound led him to believe the killer was a right-handed individual who had attacked her face to face.

According to Dr. Thomas Magnani, his ‘findings also suggest that the wound was inflicted with considerable force at the time of a face-to-face confrontation of the victim and the assailant, and that this weapon was held in the right hand of the assailant.’ It is worth noting that most state troopers involved in the investigation believe that the killer grabbed her from behind before he stuck the knife into her chest.

According to Betsy’s autopsy report, her killer used a hunting knife with a one-edged blade that was approximately 0.5 inches wide and 3.5 to 4 inches long; the wound measured one inch wide and three inches deep. Toxicology results indicated no presence of alcohol or drugs in her system. In the Spring of 1970, a knife was discovered underneath some bushes outside the University’s Recreation Building that matched the size and shape of the blade that killed Betsy Aardsma, but due to the length of time that had passed any physical evidence that may have been left behind had eroded away. 

After his son called him to let him know what happened to Betsy, David Wright’s father reached out to the Aardsma family by telephone to offer his condolences… unfortunately, the news hasn’t quite made its way to them yet and it was at that moment that they learned that Betsy had been killed. In the early morning hours of Saturday morning, November 29. 1969Richard and Esther Aardsma’s nephew Ron Cotts (a pilot for Delta Airlines) flew his parents (his mother was Esther’s sister) to Holland to pick up his aunt and uncle; he then flew them all to Chicago, a flight of about two hundred miles, to catch a plane to State College to talk to police and bring Betsy’s body home. According to him: ‘Esther and Dick were absolutely silent from Holland, Michigan all the way to Chicago O’Hare. Almost didn’t say a word.’

Elizabeth Ruth Aardsma was laid to rest on December 3rd, 1969 at Trinity Reformed Church in Holland, Michigan. Her casket remained open throughout the ceremony and (as I did mention earlier), the family’s pastor Reverend Gordon Van Oostenburg recited a portion of the poem she wrote in 1965 titled, ‘Why Do I Live?’ during the service. David Wright said he briefly thought about not attending the funeral because it was ‘so close to finals,’ but his family convinced him that he had to go; he sent a dozen roses to the church, one of which was placed in Betsy’s hands as she lay in the coffin, and according to him: ‘that’s pretty much the only thing I remember. I was sort of in a daze.’ Reverend Van Oostenburg told mourners that her murder had been ’God’s will,’ which (according to one of her friends that had been there) was a statement that outraged most of those in attendance that day, as those who knew Betsy did not believe this to be true and felt that her death had been an unimaginable loss. She was buried in the Aardsma family plot within Pilgrim Home Cemetery.

Following the initial intensive police investigation, Pennsylvania State Police continued actively looking into the murder throughout the 1970’s, conducting supplementary interviews and pursuing leads, including one that involved an anonymous postcard sent from Atlanta (which ultimately led to nothing). Efforts included polygraph tests and hypnosis sessions, along with the creation of multiple composite sketches, but these efforts failed to produce anything useful to help with the investigation.

Into the 1980’s and 1990’s, the probe continued despite a lack of workable suspects, with troopers revisiting prior witness statements and coordinating internally within state police units (even though inter-agency collaboration remained minimal at the time and resulted in no prosecutions). Aardsma’s case file (which was approaching 1,700 pages at this time), documented thousands of interviews and highlighted persistent obstacles detectives ran into along the course of the investigation, which included deceased/relocated POI, conflicting recollections, and limited access to university-held records. By the late 1990’s, momentum had decreased despite the case still being classified as ‘open,’ and by the 2000’s the matter was deemed to be stalled and without any recent ‘fresh breakthroughs.’

There are six main theories as to what may have happened to Betsy:

Theory One, Betsy was Killed by Someone that she knew: this hinges on the deeply personal nature of the murder as well as the circumstances surrounding it: Aardsma had been known for her casual, almost Bohemian sense of style, and it was unusual for her to have worn the clothes she did that day (a red woolen dress and white turtleneck). Her friend Linda Marsa told investigators that her choice of clothing that day had been highly unusual for her, which raises questions about whether she had dressed up with the intent of meeting someone special. When she encountered her assailant, it is highly suspected that he had approached her from the front, and they both would have been in one of the incredibly narrow rows of the stacks, and it would have been next to impossible for two people to pass through at the same time unless one (or both) of them turned sideways. Additionally, she appeared to have made no attempt to flee or scream, and why had there been no defensive wounds found on her hands? This all points towards the idea that Betsy may had known and possibly even trusted her killer. Trooper Simmers shared his own spin on things: ‘personally, I think it was one of her fellow students who knew her. This was up close and personal. I just feel it.’

Theory Two, Betsy’s boyfriend was her Killer: David L. Wright was investigated but was ultimately cleared of any wrongdoing by Pennsylvania State Police: his alibi placed him 100 miles away in Hershey studying with multiple friends at the time of the murder.

Theory Three, A Professor with a Troubled Past Killed Betsy:  One suspect to come under the PA state Police looked into in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma was Robert G. Durgy, an English teaching assistant at Penn State that was originally from the University of Michigan that happened to arrive in the area at around the same time as she did. The TA, who suffered from crippling depression and had an extensive history of self-harm, left State College, PA abruptly the day before the murder, citing ‘medical leave’ from the University. Three weeks after Betsy’s murder, he died at the age of twenty-seven in a car crash near Lansing, Michigan; his widow, Martha described it as most ‘likely a deliberate act.’ Investigators ultimately cleared him of any wrongdoing in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma when they learned he had been out of state at the time.

Durgy was a teaching assistant in English at Michigan when Aardsma was there, and it isn’t too farfetched that she may have been a student in one of his classes (sadly, failed FOIA requests prevent me from verifying this). His widow defended her husband and his reputation, claiming he had been troubled by ‘demons,’ and hinted towards his long history of depression, suicide attempts, and inpatient hospitalizations. She also confirmed that her husband was from Michigan, that he and the victim were both English scholars, and that he and his family left Penn State a day prior to the murder: ‘obviously there was curiosity about all those coincidences, those parallel lines. I certainly never heard her name. She wasn’t an important person or even a familiar person in our lives.’ Mrs. Durgy said her husband was deeply stressed over trying to finish his dissertation along with his inability to carry out his teaching responsibilities at Penn State, and he was officially cleared of suspicion after investigators confirmed he was out of state at the time.

Professor Michael Begnal recalled a moment where Durgy had confided in him that he could no longer face students in his class (although he wouldn’t elaborate as to why), and as a result he needed him to take over some of his lectures. In the aftermath of his quick departure, a rumor began to spread around Penn State that he and Aardsma had been having a scandalous affair and that they had agreed to meet in the stacks that day so that she could give him some bad news (most likely that she was either planning on marrying David or that she was simply breaking up with him). The professor, unwilling to let anyone else have her, immediately took her life on the spot in a sudden fit of jealous rage. The problem was this theory was, there was no mention of Durgy in any of Betsy’s diaries or letters to her loved ones, and her friends couldn’t recall her ever mentioning him a single time. But perhaps most importantly, he’d left Pennsylvania before Betsy was killed and was confirmed to have spent Thanksgiving with his family in MI the night before (he was also said to have been with them the morning after as well).

Theory Four, Betsy was Killed by Drug Dealers: this (farfetched) theory suggests that Aardsma may have accidentally stumbled across a drug deal in progress while she was doing research in the Pattee Library level two stacks. Phyllis Wich-Vandenberg later recalled being questioned by detectives about whether her friend would have ‘reported’ such an encounter: ‘I said no, she would have kept on a merry way and acted like she didn’t see it.’ Live and let live, that’s how things ‘rolled’ back then and it was a common motto for many college students in the 1960’s when it came to casual drug use. Betsy was a modern-day woman, after all. LEO’s also followed a lead into a drug dealer from Philadelphia, but it was eventually determined that this person was elsewhere at the time Betsy was killed. It has been further speculated that she may have possibly been targeted because she was working as an undercover agent (although this theory has been largely debunked by those that knew her); a slightly different substance-related theory that investigators briefly considered was that she had been murdered due to an unsettled drug debt. It is important to bring up that although Betsy did smoke cigarettes and very occasionally drink, friends were adamant that she was not a user of drugs.

Theory Five, Betsy stumbled upon some sort of unusual sexual encounter and was killed to ensure her silence: this theory gained attention because of what state police investigators and Penn State Chemistry Professor Mary Willard found near where Aardsma was murdered. The late professor (who had been seventy-one at the time of the investigation) frequently helped state police analyze lab work from crime scenes, and according to Troopers Simmers and Jan Hoffmaster, she went with them to the stacks armed with a black light and luminol, which revealed the presence of human bodily fluids (largely semen). According to Trooper Kent Bernier: ‘it was everywhere. I mean, there was a lot of that going on in that area.’

In a section of the core that had been used to store desks and spare shelving located only a few aisles from where Aardsma had been murdered, investigators observed a desk with a seat pulled backwards: atop it was a half-empty can of POP (not soda) and a stack of about twenty to thirty heterosexual and homosexual pornographic magazines, some of which were dated as recently as October and November 1969 (I also read that they were found stuffed among the shelves in the area where she was stabbed). Although partial fingerprints were obtained from the beverage, they did not match any within police databases and any prints that were found upon and within the magazines had been smudged and were unusable.

However, State College Borough Police investigator Roger Smith deemed this scenario improbable, citing the absence of direct corroborating witness accounts or physical links to specific individuals, saying: ‘I just can’t buy into that theory too deep, but I know that was one thing that was discussed.’

Other sex related theories included the possibility Betsy may have accidentally stumbled upon an exhibitionist, or a man engaging in masturbatory fantasies, which was given particular credence by investigator Michael Mutch, who speculated Aardsma had observed two men engaged in sexual behavior, had recognized one or both of them, and had been killed in order to prevent her divulging to others what she had seen.

Theory Six, Betsy was killed by a serial killer, possibly Ted Bundy or the Zodiac Killer: every once in a while, I see Ted’s name brought up relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma, as it was heavily documented that he attended Temple University in Philadelphia in 1969. Theodore Robert Cowell (later Nelson, then eventually Bundy) spent the first five years of his life residing at his grandparents’ house in the Roxborough neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA; in 1950 he relocated (along with Louise) to Tacoma, and moved in with his Great Uncle Jack (I don’t think I need to go into yet another full history of TB so I’m going to skip ahead a bit). According to the ’1992 FBI TB Multiagency Team Report,‘ at the end of 1968 Ted quit his job at the Queen Anne Safeway and relocated to the East Coast, where he lived with his Aunt Julia in her apartment outside Lafayette Hill. He enrolled in classes at Temple University in January 1969 but never finished out the semester, and in May 1969 he returned to the East Coast and stayed with friends in San Francisco for ‘two or three weeks.‘ Later that month he moved back to Tacoma, where he found brief employment at a local sawmill, and in September he moved into the Rogers Rooming House in Seattle and began dating single mother Elizabeth Kloepfer.

Per Mike Simmers, people who have studied the Bundy case in depth claim he had been seen driving along Interstate-80 in PA at roughly around the same time that Aardsma was killed… but the reports didn’t exactly line up, as the dates had been several weeks before the murder. Where some investigators do feel it was possible that Ted was responsible for Betsy’s murder (especially since she perfectly matched the description of one of his victims), most point out that he typically bludgeoned his victims then strangled and raped them afterward; additionally, no records have ever placed him at Penn State.

In addition to Ted Bundy, some true crime buffs speculate that the Zodiac Killer could be responsible for the murder of Betsy Aardsma (though most experts do not agree). Although the timing of the murder coincides with his activity, they were separated by significant geographic distance, as the Zodiac murders took place in California and rarely (if ever) took place indoors; additionally, there was a total absence of his signature correspondence at or near the crime scene. Theories attempting to link Aardsma to the Zodiac largely revolve around circumstantial parallels to the 1966 Cheri Jo Bates murder in Riverside (which also took place near a university library), as well as a 1978 letter that cryptically hinted at some out-of-state murders. However, this connection has several major holes: firstly, the Zodiac Killer was infamous for craving attention, and would often demand publication of his ciphers, and was known to take credit for his atrocities. Aardsma was stabbed a single time in a public, crowded university library without her killer leaving behind any identifying letters, symbols, or taunts; there is also no verifiable evidence that the Zodiac Killer was ever in Pennsylvania at the time of the murder.

Suspects: William Spencer: one of the primary suspects that Pennsylvania State Police focused on in relation to the death of Betsy Aardsma was a forty-year-old teacher, artist, and sculptor named William Spencer, who had relocated to PA from Boston shortly before the murder. Upon looking into his background, Spencer had quite a scandalous background: in May 1960 he co-founded the Caffè Lena with his first wife in Saratoga Springs, NY, and some point after earning his degree a university had rescinded a teaching offer after he was arrested for growing marijuana. Only a few years prior to him moving to Pennsylvania he left his first marriage to chase after his (eventual) second wife Nancy, who had been an undergraduate student at Skidmore College at the time they met. In the fall of 1969, Spencer taught sculpture at a nearby local college while his wife studied for her PhD, and at some point earlier in the semester he told investigators that Aardsma had agreed to pose naked for one of his classes, a bold claim that her friends and family dismissed outright: those that knew her described her as a modest, reserved young woman, a fact that made Spencer’s claims that she offered to pose naked completely implausible. Detectives also noted that all (known) nude models who had participated in his classes traveled from The University from Philadelphia, which further discredited his claims.

Spencer was first reported to police as a potential suspect for Aardsma’s murder after allegedly confessing to having ‘killed that girl in the library’ at a Christmas 1969 faculty party; these claims culminated in his being formally questioned by investigators in early 1970, when he changed his tune slightly and said that he had only been ‘acquainted’ with Betsy and she had agreed to pose nude for his sculpting classes to earn ‘extra money.’ He also said in that same interview that he had been in the same part of the Pattee Library at the time she had been killed and had caught a glimpse of who did it (he claimed the man had been ‘wearing an overcoat’), and he even offered to construct a bust of the individual he had seen for investigators (which he later did provide to the task force). Although his confession and successive statements initially raised suspicions, investigators eventually were about to dismiss him as a suspect, as his claims lacked credibility and were unsupported by evidence or corroborating testimonies. Additionally, investigators did not feel that he would have had enough time to have gotten to know Aardsma before she was murdered (as he had moved there after her, only weeks prior).

Larry Maurer: a Penn State graduate student and classmate of Betsy in an English literature course, Larry Maurer had met Aardsma several weeks before she was killed, and he had even taken her out for coffee on at least one occasion (he followed up by asking her out for a movie, which was an offer she politely declined). No documented animosity existed between them, but investigators initially scrutinized him due to his recent acquaintance with the victim and his inconsistencies during multiple interviews that took place on the day of the murder: according to detectives, his behavior during questioning (which had been described as ‘taunting’ and ‘suggestive of guilt’) further raised suspicions, which prompted multiple repeat conversations. During his initial interview he very casually brought up that he carried a knife around with him, and when he was pressed about it, he clarified that he used it to ‘cut cheese, not stab young women.’ Speculation of a motive arose due to their limited interactions, with made some officers theorize he had unrequited affections for the pretty young victim, or she straight-up rejected him (though no concrete evidence supported such claims and police found no indication of conflict). Maurer’s involvement in Penn States’ ROTC program also drew attention to him, and shortly after Betsy’s homicide, he abruptly left Penn State and enlisted in the Army, a move that some saw as suspicious. Investigators further speculated that a military issued bayonet may have been the one that inflicted the fatal wound through Betsy’s heart.

Some reports claim that Maurer had been described as ‘an eccentric character’ by his peers, and he had been deeply fixated on Betsy even after she told him she was not interested in him romantically. He was ‘a country boy’ as well as an avid outdoorsman, and was also skilled in basic anatomy, which was a fact that made detectives wonder if he would have been able to execute the precise wound that took the life of Betsy Aardsma. So, thinking they had their man, the Pennsylvania State Troopers brought him in for a polygraph, but he passed with flying colors, which combined with the fact that he was a few inches too short and a few shades too blonde to match the description given by Joao Uafinda and Marliee Erdely, forced them to move on and seek a more appropriate suspect. Oddly enough, one presented itself in direct connection to Larry: his former roommate, Rick Haefner. Maurer went on to find employment with the National Security Agency.

Richard Charles Haefner: perhaps the most widely accepted killer of Betsy Aardsma is Dr. Richard Charles Haefner, a twenty-five-year-old geology graduate student that took her on a few dates and lived in the same dormitory as she did. Haefner first came to the attention of investigators only days after the murder, when Betsy’s roommate, Sharon Brant, suggested police interview him: per Brandt, Haefner had visited their room on more than one occasion in the weeks prior to the murder.

Richard Charles Haefner was born on December 13, 1943 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania to George and Ere Haefner. The younger of two sons (he had an older brother named George), Richard excelled at academics (he was especially strong at the natural sciences) and was described as a well-respected but socially awkward individual that was known for his eccentric behavior and bouts of explosive anger. According to his ‘FindAGrave’ page, Haefner was a ‘talented but deeply troubled Geologist who is remembered today as much if not more for his violent and unpredictable nature as he is for his work in the field of geology and petrology.’ He got his Bachelor of Science in Geology from Franklin and Marshall College in 1965, his Masters in Geology from Penn State University in 1969, and his PhD (also in Geology from Penn State) in 1972.

Haefner told police that he’d met Betsy not long after she’d moved into Atherton Hall in September 1969 and that he took an immediate liking to her; not long after that, he claimed they’d begin seeing each other as ‘more than just friends or neighbors.’ Throughout the month of October, he took Aardsma out on various dates around State College: they went out for ice cream at the Penn State creamery then drove her out to Bellefonte Lanes to go bowling, and one evening he treated her to dinner at the Nitny Lion Inn on the Northern Extreme of Campus. Towards the end of the month, he said they made plans to go on a drive together, but a ‘sudden illness’ dashed those plans, and shortly after, Betsy withdrew from their budding romance completely, citing the fact that she had a boyfriend in Hershey and was choosing to focus on him.

Haefner told investigators that because he was a geology student he would have had little reason to go to the Pattee Library (which primarily serviced the students in the schools College of the Liberal Arts), and his ‘library of choice’ was in the Deike Building, where the majority of the University’s earth science reference materials were kept. When questioned about how and when he’d learned about Betsy’s murder, he claimed to have found out later the same day: on the evening of November 28, 1969 he had been eating dinner in the hub building at the center of campus when he had first heard circulating rumors of a student having been murdered at the Pattee Library, when he found out who it had been he left the dining hall feeling sick because ‘his former girlfriend had been murdered.’ When the interview came to an end, investigators deemed he showed no sign of hostility towards Betsy.

In 1976 (after a falling out with his former student), Haefner’s mentor at Penn State Dr. Lauren Wright (no relation to David Wright) reported a suspicious encounter with his student on the evening of Betsy’s murder. An internationally renowned expert regarding the geology of Death Valley, Dr. Wright recalled Haefner arrived at his house on the evening of November 28. 1969 just as he and his wife had sat down to have dinner at roughly 6 PM in a state of panic: he exclaimed, ‘have you heard a girl I dated was murdered in the library?’, then proceeded to ask if there had been any news in the papers about Betsy Aardsma being killed in the Pattee Library. As we know, the murder had just happened less than two hours prior, making it nearly improbable that a news report had been published, and this account directly contradicted the statement that Haefner made to police about his whereabouts that night.

Had investigators bothered to look into Haefner’s past related to his hometown of Lancaster, PA they would have discovered a treasure trove of scandals, as he had quite a few skeletons buried deep in his closet: Rick first became known to police at the age of nineteen in the fall of 1962 when he was a sophomore at Franklin and Marshall College, and he committed an unsavory act with an underaged male elementary school student. At the time, he had been a counselor for the Lancaster YMCA, and where it’s unclear exactly how far things went, Haefner somehow managed to avoid arrest, and as result that single failure would have severe consequences for a number of young boys in the area, particularly the members of Boy Scout Troop 24, where he had recently taken a position as assistant scoutmaster.

Michael Whitmer would later recall to investigators that at first Haefner seemed like a really cool, smart guy who treated the boys (many of them up to a decade younger than him), as if they were his friends or younger brothers… but it was all just a ruse intended to gain their trust so that he could violate it for his own sick sense of satisfaction, something Whitmer realized for the first time when his best friend Dave broke down to him about something deeply inappropriate that Haefner had done to him while on a camping trip in the summer of 1965. Dave himself would later come forward and admit that it was not the first instance of abuse at the hands of Rick and that he had done it three or four additional times in 1963 and 1964; he said that when his parents found out, they complained to the scoutmaster, who also happened to be the parish priest of the church that hosted Boy Scout Troop 24.

Father Stephen E. Popovich brought Haefner in for a meeting which may or may not have been under the seal of confession, and where it’s unclear if he admitted to anything during that discussion, it led the priest to conclude that the accusations were legitimate and that he was ‘sick beyond help.’ After that, the troop removed Rick from his position and even took it a step further and informed the national headquarters of the Boy Scouts of America, which led to a lifetime ban from the organization… but of course, nobody had thought to contact the police.

Because the authorities were never made aware of the incident, Haefner managed to hold on to his job with the Lancaster Recreation Commission as a playground supervisor, which allowed him to gain the trust of a single mother, who in turn gave him permission to take her ten and eleven-year-old sons on five day vacation to Ocean City, Maryland in August of 1965; during the trip, he made victims of them both. Thankfully, the brothers had the sense to tell their mother upon returning home, and even though she confronted both Haefner and the chairman of the recreation commission, Philip Bomberger III, who ultimately choose to side with the abuser and against doing the right thing. In the end, Bomberger attempted to assess what had happened and tried his best to help Rick deal with his demons, which included a closed-door meeting with him on August 30, 1965 in which he had appeared very nervous and shaken after he was informed how the victim’s mother had reacted to the news; he also said that he only felt compassion for her and that if he had done anything wrong, he wasn’t aware of what it was.

During that meeting Haefner guilt tripped Bomberger by saying if he ever went to the cops and if people found out what he’d done, his only choices would be to either run away or kill himself… so, instead of turning him in, Bomberger asked the opinion of medical professionals, one of them being Dr. Charles H. Curtis (who was actually the victim’s physician), who understood why someone might be reluctant to report the crime, but did say he was leaning towards reporting it himself. It was eventually decided that if Rick was willing to start psychiatric care, then the police would not be notified of what he did in Ocean City; shortly after, Rick began seeing Dr. Curtis on September 13th, 1969, however, the therapy sessions were short lived and ceased after he moved across the state and began his graduate studies at Penn State. It never dawned on the doctor to check in with Haefner to make sure he was continuing to receive care while in State College.

Rick Haefner’s mom Ere seemed to be the type of parent that had no problem covering for her son and was also most likely the driving force behind his decision to start dating women, Mary Kelling being one of them. And while Dr. (Lauren) Wright may have been unsure of Rick’s involvement in Betsy’s death, he was certainly aware of his almost aggressive pursuit of Kelling, who had met on Thanksgiving Day in 1967 while doing field work in Death Valley, California. It was also around this time that Wright first began to wonder if there may have been something wrong with his student (at least as it pertained to his sexuality), and while it appeared that he didn’t surmise JUST how deviant he was, he eventually figured out that Haefner was not a typical heterosexual male and even commented to his other students that he wasn’t sure if he liked girls.

Rick met Mary Kelling while doing field work with Dr. Wright in Death Valley, California in 1967, (they went out to Shosonyi around the start of the fall term on October 1, 1967 along with another student named Joe Head); because they were there for the Thanksgiving holiday, Dr. Wright arranged for the three of them to have dinner with the family of his friend Bernice Sorrel, and it was that evening that Rick met Mary, who at the time had been a senior English major at Smith College in Northampton, MA. Mary was beautiful, with deep chocolate eyes and dark brown hair she wore short and styled in a bob, and where Head didn’t remember seeing the two engage in any noticeable interaction that evening, it was obvious that the young lady had made quite an impression on Rick. And it wasn’t hard to see why: she was beautiful, carried herself well, and was academically gifted… she even had dreams of one day entering the Peace Corps and going to Liberia, which is obviously something that Betsy (who looked remarkably similar to Mary) wanted to do as well. The biggest obstacle for Rick was that Kelling seemed to have absolutely no romantic interest in him whatsoever.

Rick, not knowing how to approach a woman like a normal young man, showed up at her dorm room in the spring of 1968: he had driven 400 miles from Penn State to Smith College, asked around campus as to where he could find her, then knocked on her door to tell her how he felt about her. There had been no calls, no letters… the two literally had never even spoken aside from a few polite exchanges on Thanksgiving. Mary asked him to leave then immediately phoned Bernice to tell her about the bizarre and somewhat threatening encounter; when they hung up, Ms. Sorrel then called Lauren Wright to complain about his protege’s behavior. Despite this, Dr. Wright continued to work with Haefner, and he even had him return to Shosonyi with him the following year to do more fieldwork, and didn’t even have the sense to tell him to stay away from Mary: he simply made sure to closely observe them together, and in the end, Wright seemed to have been satisfied by his young protégé’s behavior. But Dan Stevens, another Penn State graduate student that came along to help with the trip, felt perturbed by Haefner, who he found to be nerdy, annoying, and had always been ‘always looking down at him through horn rimmed glasses.’

In 1975 Rick was selected as the new head of the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History, which came with a prestigious teaching position at University of Southern California in LA… but in August of that year, two young boys that had worked in the Haefner family rock shop would separately come forward and accuse him of having touched them inappropriately, and as a result he was charged with involuntary deviant sexual intercourse and corruption of a twelve-year-old boy. Although his subsequent trial resulted in a hung jury, these accusations resulted in the recension of his job offer and did irreparable damage to his reputation.

After this, Haefner began filing a number of vindictive lawsuits against anyone that accused him of any and all wrongdoing, and where he was successful in his attempt to expunge the records pertaining to his arrest and trial in 1981, he was later convicted of assaulting a woman in 1998 after he dragged her from her car and beat her until he dislocated her jaw; he has also stood accused of harassed his neighbors and was arrested more than once for shoplifting. In 2009, one of Haefner’s nephews contacted Derek Sherwood to divulge that after his initial arrest in approximately 1975, he had overheard a heated conversation between him and his mother, who had been aware of several accusations of pederasty that had been made over the years against her son. The overall context of the conversation indicated that he had confessed to Ere (at some point in time) of killing Betsy, and she ended the exchange with the phrase: ‘you killed that girl, and now you’re killing me!;’ also during that same encounter, she had also gave Rick a hard time for coming to the attention of the police after ‘all her effort’ to protect him’ on the previous occasion.

In recent years some of the young men that Rick had ‘befriended’ came forward and said that he had taken them on ‘field trips’ to Penn State, and on one occasion he took one of them to the same library stacks where Betsy has been killed and directed him to stand in one spot. He then took a step back, and where the kid initially thought that he was going to show him something interesting, he then said (with a weird, almost satisfied expression on his face) that a girl he had known (or dated) had been murdered in the exact same spot he was standing in.

Richard Charles Haefner died at the age of fifty-eight in the bathroom of a Las Vegas hospital on March 19, 2002 after a tear in his aorta (a congenital heart defect) caused him to bleed out into his lungs (which ironically is a similar manner of death endured by Aardsma.) His grave marker is placed with his family in Lancaster, but he was in fact cremated and it is not known for certain if his ashes are buried there or not. According to Haefner’s ‘FindAGrave’ page, he was a ‘talented but deeply troubled Geologist who is remembered today as much if not more for his violent and unpredictable nature as he is for his work in the field of geology and petrology.’ Ultimately, no physical evidence has ever linked Richard Haefner to the murder of Betsy Aardsma, and as a result he was never charged, however according to Sascha Skucek; ‘he is the best suspect, but I don’t like that people act like it’s been solved. There is not a smoking gun that says he did this.’

A Stalker?: although investigators found no proof that Aardsma had been stalked during her short amount of time at Penn State, many years after her death a campus security guard would recollect to author Derek Sherwood that one evening as he performed his security rounds in the days prior to her murder, he had observed Betsy typing alone in the Pattee Library. The former officer recalled that at the end of the night he asked her if she wanted him to walk her to her dormitory, to which she said: ‘No. The guy who lives upstairs isn’t around, so I’ll be fine.’ As I said earlier, Richard Haefner lived in the same residence hall as Betsy, however there was never any clarification as to who she was referring to.

Despite the best efforts of the Pennsylvania State Police and the President of the University, Eric Walker (who had conducted his own private investigation into Aardsma’s murder), the case gradually went completely cold, and over the years things took on almost a supernatural aspect: on the twenty-fifth anniversary of Betsy’s death someone left a candle burning in exact spot in the library where she had been fatally wounded, along with an original newspaper clipping about the crime and a message that read, ‘RIP Betsy Aardsma, born July 11, 1947, died November 28, 1969. I’m back.’ A similar spectacle was discovered in a different part of the library in 1999, however investigators believe both incidents were pranks.

Conclusion: The Aardsma family endured decades of unresolved grief following Betsy’s murder, with her parents channeling their loss into supporting other families who had experienced the murder of a child. After the murder, Penn State made no attempt to keep in contact with the Aardsma’s, and it almost appeared that they tried to brush the entire thing under the rug; according to Mrs. Aardsma in an interview with Ted Anthony of The Daily Collegian in 1989: ‘when it happened the school was quite nice, but we really never met with the administration. I think they were very worried the University would get a bad name. So the victim is sort of pushed aside, I guess.’ Betsy’s brother and two sisters have maintained privacy regarding the incident and decline most interview requests, with her sister Carole saying, ‘I’ve said all I’m going to say.’ Betsy’s police file (which spans sixty-five years and consists of over 3,000 pages) remains sealed to the public as of June 2026.

Richard Cornelius Aardsma died at the age of eighty on January 4, 1997 in Holland, Michigan, and Betsy’s mother Esther died at the age of ninety-three on September 4, 2012 in the Brookcrest Nursing Home in Grandville. According to her obituary, she was a longtime volunteer at Holland Community Hospital, who had at one time recognized her service to them with a ‘4,000 hour award.’ Carole Aardsma was once a teacher before she changed career paths and became a Reformed Church minister; she currently lives in Holland, MI. Richard and his wife Marilyn reside in Holland and he is a retired graphic artist for the Kent County School system in Michigan, until he retired and now he creates (beautiful) paintings, which are featured on his website. Betsy’s younger sister Kathy found success as an art instructor in Amesbury, MA before she retired, and currently lives with her husband Art in Holland, MI.

Works Cited:
Daly, Kim (November 28, 2025). ‘The Fatal Stabbing of Penn State Student Betsy Aardsma Remains Unsolved More Than 55 Years Later.’ Taken June 12, 2026 from aetv.com
DeKok, David (2014). ‘Murder in the Stacks: Penn State, Betsy Aardsma, and the Killer Who Got Away.’
Sherwood , Derek (May 30, 2018). ‘Justice Perverted: The Molestation Mistrial of Richard Charles Haefner.’
Sherwood , Derek (December 7, 2011). ‘Who Killed Betsy? Uncovering Penn State University’s Most Notorious Unsolved Crime.’
Skucek, Sascha. (January 1, 2025). ‘Blood & Burden: The Enduring Mystery of Betsy Aardsma. Taken June 12, 2026 from statecollegemagazine.com
Smart, Gil. (October 10, 2010).’Who killed Betsy Aardsma?’ Taken June 12, 2026 from lancasteronline.com

The Aardsma family in the 1950 census.
Betsy from the 1963 Holland High School yearbook.
During her sophomore year in high school Betsy was the vice president of her class, picture from the 1963 Holland High School yearbook.
Betsy Aardsma’s junior year picture from the 1964 Holland High School yearbook.
Betsy in a group picture from the junior exhibition dance group taken from the 1964 Holland High School yearbook.
Betsy and some of the other junior class officers from the 1964 Holland High School yearbook.
Betsy’s senior year picture from the 1965 Holland High School yearbook.
Betsy Ruth Aardsma.
Betsy and her friends from their 1965 graduation from Holland High School. Photo courtesy of David DeKok.
Betsy Aardsma from the 1967 Hope College yearbook.
Betsy Aardsma from the 1969 Michigan State University yearbook.
The Aardsma Family’s home located at 117 East 37th Street in Holland, MI.
A handwritten letter from Betsy to a friend.
The route from Penn State in State College where Betsy attended school to the medical school in Hershey that her boyfriend David L. Wright attended.
A map of The Pattee Library in relation to the Aardsma murder scene, at the Penn State library. Courtesy of WebSleuths user ‘AKWilks.’
The layout of the Pattee Library Central Core, Level 2, photo courtesy of ‘The Lore Lodge.’
The layout of the Pattee Library Central Core in 1969 versus in 2026, courtesy of ‘The Lore Lodge.’
Dean Brungart, an employee of the Pattee Library at Penn State, pointing to a spot on the floor at Level 3 (which is identical to Level 2 where Betsy was found) on the afternoon of Friday November 28, 1969.
A Penn State University security officer standing near the site where Betsy Aarmsda was killed.
The aisle where Betsy Aardsma was murdered taken on the morning of November 29, 1969. In 1969, it went level one, level two, level three, in 2026 it goes level B, level B, AA, level one. So, when Betsy went down to the level two core stacks, that means she went to the level between the basement and the first floor of the library, which today would be level BA (it’s also important that this level is only accessible via the central staircases). Photo courtesy of the Pennsylvania State Police.
Betsy’s certificate of death.
Some details about Betsy’s death taken from a page of her sutopsy report.
An offer of award for information regarding the death of Betsy Aardsma, courtesy of The Collegian Archives. Published in The Centre Daily Times on March 10, 1970.
Betsy’s funeral card.
A spooky little ghost on level two of ‘the stacks’ close to where Betsy was killed, photo courtesy of Sarah Desiderio.
The sketch of the man who said, ‘someone better help that girl,’ as provided by Marliee Erdely.
A sketch of the man seen leaving the library as he was being pursued by Joao Umberto Uafinda.
The final resting place of Betsy Aardsma.
A picture from Dateline asking for more information about the murder of Betsy Aardsma.
One of the books written about the murder of Betsy Aardsma, written by Derek Sherwood.
Another book written about the murder of Betsy Aardsma, written by David DeKok.
A comment made on Betsy’s Websleuth’s page made by Derek Sherwood that mentions the website that he used to run in relation to Betsy’s murder.
A comment made on Betsy’s Websleuth’s page made by the user ‘MaryLiz.’
A comment made on Betsy’s Websleuth’s page made by Derek Sherwood.
A newspaper clipping from before Betsy’s murder that mentions her hosting a party at her house published in The Holland Sentinel on June 3, 1963.

Betsy’s name is listed amongst the name of local college graduates that was posted in The Holland Sentinel on June 17, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Holland Sentinel on November 29, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Grand Rapids Press on November 29, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Pittsburgh Press on November 30, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Daily News on November 30, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Scrantonian Tribune on November 30, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Kalamazoo Gazette on November 30, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Detroit Free Press on November 30, 1969.
An short blurb about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Bay City Times on November 30, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Cleveland Press on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Quad-City Times on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in Philadelphia Daily News on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Niles Daily Star on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Muskegon Chronicle on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Daily News on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Ann Arbor News on December 1, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Ann Arbor News on December 2, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Jackson Citizen Patriot on December 3, 1969.
An article about Betsy I found on Ancestry, dated December 3, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Kalamazoo Gazette on December 4, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Kalamazoo Gazette on December 5, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that also mentions an earlier Penn State murder, that of Rachel Hutchinson Taylor in 1940 that was published in The Express on December 5, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Kalamazoo Gazette on December 6, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Patriot-News on December 9, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Jackson Citizen Patriot on December 9, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Patriot-News on December 12, 1969.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Flint Journal on December 14, 1969.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Grand Rapids Press on January 8, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 16, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 19, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 20, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 21, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 22, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 29, 1970.
Part one of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 5, 1970.
Part two of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on January 5, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Traverse City Record-Eagle on January 8, 1970.
Part one of an article mentioning the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Centre Daily Times on January 9, 1970.
Part two of an article mentioning the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Centre Daily Times on January 9, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on February 2, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on February 9, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on February 12, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on February 18, 1970.
An article about the investigation into the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on March 5, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on March 9, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Grand Rapids Press on March 10, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Centre Daily Times on March 12, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Tyrone Daily Herald on March 13, 1970.
An article about a kidnapping case that mentions Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Progress on March 20, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Centre Daily Times on April 14, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Pittsburgh Press on April 19, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Centre Daily Times on May 1, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Centre Daily Times on May 28, 1970.
An article about a reward in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma resulting in no good leads that was published in The Muskegon Chronicle on June 2, 1970.
An article about no new news in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on July 3, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on August 7, 1970.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Time on November 11, 1970.
An article about Carole Aardsma seeking information in relation to the murder of her sister that was published in The Valley Independent on January 20, 1972.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Centre Daily Times on November 28, 1979.
An article abut the murder of Betsy Aarmsda published in The Philadelphia Inquirer on July 31, 2008.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Kalamazoo Gazette on August 3, 2008.
Part one of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Patriot-News on December 8, 2008.
Part two of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Patriot-News on December 8, 2008.
Part three of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Patriot-News on December 8, 2008.
Part one of an article about recent advancements in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on October 25, 2009.
Part two of an article about recent advancements in relation to the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on October 25, 2009.
Part one of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Grand Rapids Press on October 10, 2010.
Part two of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Grand Rapids Press on October 10, 2010.
The third part of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Sunday News on October 10, 2010.
Part one of an article bout the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Intelligencer Journal/Lancaster New Era on November 22, 2013.
Part two of an article bout the murder of Betsy Aardsma that was published in The Intelligencer Journal/Lancaster New Era on November 22, 2013.
The first part of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Daily Item on October 13, 2014.
The second part of an article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Daily Item on October 13, 2014.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Centre Daily Times on November 30, 2014.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Centre Philadelphia Inquirer on February 22, 2015.
An article about the murder of Betsy Aardsma published in The Morning Call on April 14, 2015.
A picture of Atherton Hall, where Betsy lived at the time of her murder. Picture taken in June 2026.
Burrowes Hall, where Betsy stopped with Sharon to speak to Professor Nicholas Joukovsky before she went to the library.
The entrance to Burrowes Hall.
The outside of the Pattee Library in June 2026.
The Dr. Keiko Miwa Ross Garden Terrace located on the west side of Pattee Library (outside the Collaboration Commons), picture taken in June 2026.
A close-up shot of The Dr. Keiko Miwa Ross Garden Terrace, picture taken in June 2026.
One of the entrances to the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
One of the entrances to the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
One of the entrances to the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
One of the entrances to the Pattee Library.
The outside of the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
The outside of the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
The main lobby of the Pattee Library at Penn State, picture taken in June 2026.
The entrance of the Pattee Stacks. picture taken in June 2026.
The spot in the current level BA stacks (in 1969 it was the level two stacks) where Betsy Aardsma was stabbed, picture taken in June 2026.
The Mineral Sciences Building, where Rick Haefner would have done a large amount of his graduate course work, picture taken in June 2026.
A close-up shot of The Mineral Sciences Building, where Rick Haefner would have done a large amount of his graduate course work, picture taken in June 2026.
The Dieke Building on Penn State’s campus in State College where the library Rick Haefner would have spent a large amount of his time studying, picture taken in June 2026.
Marilee Elaine Erdely from the 1964 Hopewell High School yearbook.
Joao Umberto Uafinda, who died in 1996 in Mozambique, Africa.
Lauren Wright. Photo courtesy of ‘The Lore Lodge.’
Professor Harrison Meserole. Photo courtesy of ‘The Lore Lodge.’
Professor Nicholas Joukovsky; he earned his AB from Princeton University in 1961 (AB is short for Artium Baccalaureus, which is Latin for Bachelor of Arts), his MA from the University of California, Berkeley in 1963, and his Doctor of Philosophy from Oxford University in 1971.
William Spencer in 1965, photo courtesy of Derek Shurwood.
A clipping that mentions sculptor William Spencer that was published in The Boston Globe on October 1, 1967.
A picture of a young Richard Haefner with his parents at Lake Strause in Bethel Township, PA.
A picture of a teenage Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on July 30, 1960.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1958 Franklin and Marshall College yearbook.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1960 McCaskey High School yearbook.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1960 McCaskey High School yearbook.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1958 Franklin and Marshall College yearbook (bottom row, middle).
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1960 McCaskey High School yearbook.
Richard C. Haefner’s senior year picture from the 1961 John Piersol McCaskey High School yearbook.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1961 John Piersol McCaskey High School yearbook.
Another shot of Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1961 John Piersol McCaskey High School yearbook.
Another shot of Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1961 John Piersol McCaskey High School yearbook.
Richard Haefner in a group picture from the 1964 Franklin and Marshall College yearbook.
Richard Haefner wearing a pair of horn rimmed glasses.
Richard Haefner.
Richard Haefner.
A newspaper clipping mentioning Richard Haefner that was published in The Gazette and Bulletin on January 30, 1945.
Rich Haefner’s name is listed amongst those who won a science contest in an article that was published in The Lancaster New Era on February 24, 1956.
Rich Haefner’s name is listed amongst those who won a science contest.
An article about Rick Haefner taking an eight-week Astronomy course that was published in The LNP Lancaster Online on December 28, 1958.
The article related to Haefner being picked as ‘Teen of the Week’ published in The Lancaster New Era on July 30, 1960.
A picture of Rick Haefner in a pool with some young boys, from an article that was published in The Lancaster New Era on July 25, 1963.
An article about Rick Haefner working with young boys in the summer of 1963 that was published in The Lancaster New Era on July 25, 1963.
Rick’s name in an article about filing an application to become a teacher that was published in The Standard-Speaker on March 25, 1964.
Rick Haefner’s name in a list of local graduates that was published in The Lancaster New Era on June 3, 1965.
A newspaper clipping about Rick Haefner being featured in an Earth Science Show that was published in The Lancaster New Era on February 25, 1966.
A newspaper clipping about Rick Haefner teaching ‘rural youths’ that was published in The Lancaster New Era on August 10, 1967.
An article written but the Curator of Paleontology of the North Museum of Franklin and Marshall College that mentions Richard Haefner that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on October 21, 1971.
A short write-up about Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on September 28, 1972.
A newspaper article about Richard Haefner facing morals charges that was published in The Lancaster New Era on August 16, 1975.
A newspaper article about Richard Haefner being in ‘who’s who’ that was published in The Lancaster New Era on September 10, 1975.
A newspaper article about the morals trial of Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on January 28, 1976.
A newspaper blurb about the morals trial of Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on January 29, 1976.
Part one of an article the morals trial of Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on January 30, 1976.
Part two of an article the morals trial of Richard Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on January 30, 1976.
An article about Richard Haefner being convicted of contempt that was published in The Lancaster New Era on February 2, 1976.
Part one of an article about Richard Haefner being convicted of contempt that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on February 6, 1976.
Part two of an article about Richard Haefner being convicted of contempt that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on February 6, 1976.
An article about a series of pretrial motions in relation to the trial of Richard Haefner being heard that was published in The Lancaster New Era on May 19, 1976.
Part one of an article about Rich Haefner’s sodomy trial that was published in Ther Boca Raton News on May 26, 1976. ·
Part two of an article about Rich Haefner’s sodomy trial that was published in Ther Boca Raton News on May 26, 1976. ·
A newspaper article about Rich Haefner losing his second bid to block his second trial that was published in The Lancaster New Era on June 25, 1976.
One of the very few newspaper articles that I was able to find where Richard Haefner was not being some sort of aggressor that was published in The Lancaster New Era on March 19, 1976.
An article about Terry Hess being re-arrested on perjury charges in relation to the court hearing of Rich Haefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on June 24, 1976.
An article about Rich Haefner morals trial being ordered delayed that was published in The Lancaster New Era on August 31, 1976.
An article about Rich Haefner seeking some official court tapes that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on September 9, 1977.
Part one of an article about some lawsuits filed by Rick Haefner that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on October 7, 1977.
Part two of an article about some lawsuits filed by Rick Haefner that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on October 7, 1977.
An article about how Rick Haegfner angered city council members by asking them if police were allowed to accept ‘rewar:ds’ that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on October 26, 1977.
The Lancaster New Era on December 1, 1977.
d
Part one of an article about no new trial being allowed for Richard Hefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on March 13, 1979,
Part two of an article about no new trial being allowed for Richard Hefner that was published in The Lancaster New Era on March 13, 1979.
The Lancaster New Era on April 6, 1979.
The Lancaster New Era on December 26, 1979.
The Lancaster New Era on January 26, 1980.
The Lancaster New Era on March 8, 1980.
Lancaster New Era on March 29, 1980.
The Sunday News on October 5, 1980.
Intelligencer Journal on January 20, 1981.
LNP Lancaster Online on February 8, 1981.
Lancaster New Era on February 12, 1981.
The Lancaster New Era on January 27, 1983
The Intelligencer Journal on July 22, 1983.
The Intelligencer Journal on January 11, 1985.
The Intelligencer Journal on January 11, 1985.
Lancaster New Era on January 15, 1985.
The Intelligencer Journal on October 22, 1988.
The Intelligencer Journal on October 22, 1988.
Lancaster New Era on December 19, 1991.
Lancaster New Era on December 19, 1991.
Intelligencer Journal on December 20, 1991.
Intelligencer Journal on December 20, 1991.
An article about Richard Haefner being charged in relation to a of custody case that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on May 30, 1992.
An article about Richard Heafner being cleared of custody charges that was published inThe Intelligencer Journal on July 28, 1992.
An article about Richard Heafner being cleared of custody charges that was published in The Lancaster New Era on July 30, 1992.
Part one of an article about the Haefner brothers getting into an altercation with police that was published in The Lancaster New Era on October 6, 1994.
Part two of an article about the Haefner brothers getting into an altercation with police that was published in The Lancaster New Era on October 6, 1994.
Part one of an article involving stolen money and Richard Hefner that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on June 10, 1993.
Part two of an article involving stolen money and Richard Hefner that was published in The Intelligencer Journal on June 10, 1993.
An article about Richard Haefner hosting a ‘Gemboree’ that was published in The Daily News on August 16, 1995.
Part one of an article about Richard Haefner pulling out of a geology show that was published in The Daily News on August 13, 1997.
Part two of an article about Richard Haefner pulling out of a geology show that was published in The Daily News on August 13, 1997.
The home Richard Haefner lived in his entire life located at 217 Nevin Street in Lancaster, PA.
The gravestone of Richard C. Haefner.
The cover of the book Derek Sherwood wrote about Richard Haefner titled. ‘Justice Perverted: The Molestation Mistrial of Richard Charles Haefner.’
Haefner
Ted Bundy’s whereabouts in 1969 according to the 1992 TB Multiagency FBI Team Report.
A map of the I-80 across the US.
Cheri Jo Bates, who was killed in Riverside, California on October 30, 1966.
The poem that was found at the Riverside Community College Library i relationship to the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.
 Rachel Hutchinson Taylor, who was seventeen when she was stabbed on Penn State’s campus in 1940.
A newspaper article about the Michigan Coeds Murders that was published in The Saginaw News on June 22, 1969.
A police diagram that was released to the media on June 10, 1969 that showed the locations of the first five victims that were linked to the Michigan Coed Murderer.
An old b&w picture of John Norman Chapman next to a more recent one.
David L. Wright.
Dr. David L. Wright.
Dr. David Wright.
Dr. David Wright’s information taken from the website of the medical practice that he is employed at.
Richard Aardsma’s WWII draft card.
Some information related to Richard Aardsma’s time in the military.
A picture of Ethel Aardsma from the 1938 Alma College yearbook.
Richard Aardsma’s senior picture from the 1940 Hope College yearbook.
A picture of Ethel Aardsma from the 1940 Hope College yearbook.
Ethel Van Alsburg-Aardsma.
Betsy’s parents’ marriage certificate dated September 28, 1940.
A newspaper clipping about the Reformed Church that mentions Richard Aardsma that was published in The Holland Sentinel on October 21, 1954.
A picture of Carole Jean Aardsma from the 1960 Holland High School yearbook.
Richard Aardsma’s picture from the 1965 Holland High School yearbook.
A newspaper clipping announcing the engagement of Betsy’s sister Carole published in The Holland Sentinel on May 29, 1965.
A newspaper clipping announcing the engagement of Betsy’s older sister Carole that was published in The Muskegon Chronicle on June 3, 1965.
A picture of Carole Aardsma on her wedding day that was published in The Muskegon Chronicle on August 30, 1965.
A newspaper clipping about the wedding of Carole Aardsma and David Werner that was published The Muskegon Chronicle on August 30, 1965.
Richard Aardsma from the 1967 Holland High School yearbook.
A picture of Kathy Aardsma from her time on the gymnastics team taken from the 1972 Holland High School yearbook.
A newspaper clipping about the engagement of Richard Aardsma and Marilyn Rigby that was published in The Grand Rapids Press on November 30, 1974.
A newspaper clipping about the wedding of Richard Aardsma getting married to Marilyn Rigby that was published in The Grand Rapids Press on January 11, 1975.
A newspaper clipping about Kathy Aardsma participating in a teachers program at the University of Michigan that was published in The Holland Sentinel on May 8, 1975.
A newspaper clipping about Carole Aardsma speaking at the Second Reform Church sthat was published in The Grand Rapids Press on August 7, 1987.
A newspaper clipping mentioning Carole Aardsma that was published in The Grand Rapids Press on April 27, 1991.
The final resting place of Richard C. Aardsma.
The final resting place of Esther W. Aardsma.
Mrs. Aardsma’s obituary published in The Grand Rapids Press on September 6, 2012.
Betsy’s sister, Carole.
Reverend Carole Aardsma’s picture from the website of Christ Memorial Church.
Betsy’s sister, Kathy Tessimond.
Richard Aardsma.
A painting created by Betsy’s brother, Richard Aardsma.
A write-up about Richard Aardsma’s artwork taken from the Hope College website.
The Haefner family’s information from the 1950 US Census.
Richard Haefner’s parents on their wedding day on November 6, 1934 at St. James Catholic Church in Lititz, PA.
Richard Haefner’s parents, George and Ere.
Ere Josephine Seaber-Haefner.
A wedding announcement for Era Seaber and George Haefner’s wedding that was published on November 7, 1934.
Richard’s brother, George P. Haefner Jr. taken from the 1959 Elizabethtown College yearbook.
The Obituary for George P. Haefner that was published on December 30, 1983 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
An article about George P. Haefner Senior’s autopsy results that was published in The Lancaster New Era on December 30, 1983.
An article about the death of George P. Haefner Senior that was published on December 30, 1983.
The obituary of Ere Haefner.

The Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

A police bulletin published by the San Francisco Police Department on August 8, 1973 regarding the recent murders of Rosa Vasquez, Yvonne Quilantang, Angela Thomas, and Nancy Gidley.
Yvonne Weber, who went missing on February 4th, 1972 with her friend Maureen Sterling and was last seen getting into a car in front of the Redwood Empire Ice Arena. Her body was found on December 26th, 1973 at the bottom of an embankment on the west side of Franz Valley Road roughly 2.7 miles from the intersection with Porter Creek Road.
Yvonne’s obituary published in The Press Democrat on January 4, 1973.
Maureen Sterling, who went missing with Yvonne Weber on February 4, 1972.
Sterling’s obituary published in The Press Democrat on January 5, 1973.
The only two pieces of evidence that LE released in relation to the murders of Sterling and Weber: a single filigree type drop earring w beads and a basket weave mixed metal cross attached to a gold chain necklace. Photo courtesy of ‘Sonoma County: Missing and Murdered WordPress’ page.
Part one of an article about the murder of Sterling and Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part two of an article about the murder of Sterling and Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part one of an article about the funerals of Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Part two of an article about the funerals of Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber published in The Press Democrat on January 3, 1973.
Kim Allen, who went missing on March 4th, 1972 hitchhiking from her job in Larkspur in Marin County to her home in Santa Rosa. Her remains were found on March 5th, 1972 at the bottom of an embankment on the north side of Enterprise Road. She had been strangled.
An obituary for Lori Lee Kursa published in The Press Democrat on December 19, 1972.
An article about the murder of Kori Kursa published in The Press Democrat on December 27, 1972.
An article about Lori Kursa clipped from The Press Democrat on February 6, 1973. Kursa was last seen on November 20th, 1972 with her mother at U-Save Market ; her remains were found on December 14th, 1972 roughly 20′-30′ down an embankment on the western side of Calistoga Road. She died due to extreme trauma, and her first and second cervical vertebra were dislocated and her spinal cord had been compressed.
Carolyn Davis, who went missing on July 15th, 1973 and was last seen hitchhiking on the on ramp of Highway 101 in Garberville, California. Her remains were recovered on July 31st, 1973 less than ten feet away from where Maureen Sterling and Yvonne Weber were found; she died from strychnine poisoning.
An article about the murder of Carolyn Davis published by The Press Democrat on August 16, 1973.
The Sonoma West Times and News on August 23, 1973.
The following symbol was left in sticks next to Santa Rosa Serial Killer victim, Carolyn Davis. Some think it was left by the Zodiac Killer.
Theresa Walsh, who has been missing since December 22nd, 1973 when she was last seen hitchhiking north on Highway 101 to Maranda, California. Her body was recovered a few days later on December 28 found submerged under a log in Mark West Creek .I have seen her name also spelled ‘Terese,’ however ‘Theresa’ is what is on her death certificate.
An article about the murder of Theresa Walsh published in The Times Standard on January 9, 1974.
An article about the Santa Rosa Jane Doe, who as of March 2025 still remains unidentified.
An article about the thwarted abduction of Lisa Smith published in The Novato Advance on March 31, 1971.
Jeannette Kamahele, who was last seen on April 25th, 1972 hitchhiking north on Highway 101 and was going from her residence to Santa Rosa Junior College. Her remains have never been recovered.
Jeannette Kamahele.
Jeannette Kamahele.
An article about the disappearance of Jeanette Kamahele published in The Rohnert Park Cotati Clarion on May 2, 1972.
An article about the disappearance of Jeanette published in The Press Democrat on April 28, 1972.
Kerry Ann Graham.
Francine Trimble.
An article about Francine Trimble and Kerry Ann Graham published in The Sacramento Bee on February 4, 2016.
An article about Francine Trimble and Kerry Ann Graham published in The Fresno Bee on February 4, 2016.
Rosa Vasquez.
An article about the murder of Rosa Vasquez published by The Oakland Tribune on June 1, 1973.
An article about the murder of Yvonne Quilantang published by The Oakland Tribune on June 15, 1973.
An article about the murder of Yvonne Quilantang published by The San Francisco Examiner on June 24, 1973.
An article about the murder of Angela Thomas published by The Oakland Tribune on July 5, 1973.
An article about the murder of Angela Thomas published by The San Francisco Examiner on July 6, 1973.
Angela Thomas’s obituary published in The Austin American on July 7, 1973.
A picture of Nancy Gidley taken from The Idaho Statesman published on July 18, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Patricia Gidley published by The Idaho Statesman on July 18, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Gidley published by The Martinez News-Gazette on July 19, 1973.
An article about the murder of Nancy Feusi published by The Sacramento Bee on August 9, 1973.
An article about Nancy Feusi’s daughter being charged with the torture of her daughter published by The Corvallis Gazette-Times on February 11, 2011.
An article about the murder of Laura O’Dell published by The San Francisco Examiner on November 7, 1973.
An article about the murder of Brenda Merchant published by The Sacramento Bee on February 2, 1974.
An article about the murder of Brenda Kaye Merchant published by The Colusa Sun-Herald on February 4, 1974.
An article about the murder of Donna Marie Braun published by The Californian on October 1, 1974.
An article about the murder of Kathy Sosic The Press Democrat on December 4, 1969.
An article about the murder of Elaine Davis published by The Martinez News-Gazette on December 5, 1969.
An article about the murder of Leona LaRell Roberts published by The Sacramento Bee on December 12, 1969.
An article about the murder of Marie Antoinette Anstey published by The Berkeley Gazette on April 1, 1970.
An article about the murder of Cosette Ellison published by The Concord Transcript on March 25, 1970.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on January 10, 1973.
An article mentioning a man from Camarillo being arrested for the rape of a seventeen year old that is possibly related to the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on May 11, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The Ventura County Star on July 17, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The Morning Union on July 17, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published in The Press Democrat on September 13, 1973.
A general article about the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murders published by The San Francisco Examiner on April 25, 1975.
Bundy’s whereabouts in the early part of 1972 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1972 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in the early part of 1973 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1973 according to the ‘Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Arthur Leigh Allen.
Fred Manalli.
Jim Mordecai.
Philip Joseph Hughes Jr.
Naso
Robert Kibbe.
Kenneth Bianchi.
Angelo Buono.
Joaquin Cordova.
Jackie Rae Hovarter.
A book about Byron Avion titled ‘Suspect Zero,’ written by Michael D. Kelleher

Cheri Jo ‘Josephine’ Bates.

I don’t normally put titles before the sections in my articles, but I’m trying something new since this piece is so overwhelmingly long and I was really struggling to organize it so it flowed easily. I hope you guys don’t mind.

Background: Cheri Josephine Bates was born on February 4, 1948 to Joseph and Irene (nee Karolevitz) Bates in Omaha, Nebraska. Joseph Charles Bates was born on December 3, 1919 in Seneca Falls, NY and after graduating from high school he joined The Republic Aircraft in 1939, working as a machinist. Irene Margaret Karolevitz was born on June 27, 1919 in Lesterville, ND. The couple had two living children together: Cheri Jo and her older brother, Michael. They also had a daughter named Bonita Jo that only lived for ten days at the end of December 1945. In 1957 the family relocated to Riverside, a small suburb in the eastern part of LA where Mr. Bates initially worked on the X-15 recovery program at Edwards Air Force Base before getting a machinist position at the Corona Naval Ordnance Laboratory. The couple divorced in 1965, and at the time she was murdered Cheri Jo lived with her dad at 4195 Via San Jose in Riverside. Mrs. Bates lived nearby but it’s said that at the time of her daughter’s murder she was experiencing mental health troubles and was committed to Patton State Hospital; in an article published by The Daily Oklahoman on November 1, 1966, she was incorrectly listed as deceased. Cheri Jo’s brother Michael was away from home serving in the US Navy.

Described by those that knew her as a sweet but shy young lady (her brother said she had a lot of friends but ‘wasn’t cliquish’), Cheri Jo graduated from Ramona High School in 1966, where she was an honor student, varsity cheerleader (although she dropped out her senior year), and was active in student government. She had dreams of one day becoming a flight attendant and traveling the world, a job she applied for right out of secondary school but was turned down for (apparently she applied to all of the major airlines but you had to be twenty to work in the position at the time). Cheri Jo liked creating things for the people that she cared about, could play the piano, and enjoyed sewing her own clothes. In a 2013 interview with the RCC school newspaper ‘Viewpoints,’ a girlfriend of Bates from junior high named Cherie Curzon recalled a time where the two competed in a talent show together, and (dressed up like sailors) sang ‘I’m Gonna Wash that Man Right Out of My Hair’ from the musical ‘South Pacific:’ ‘for me, the best part of our story was, I was an underclass person who she wanted to help out. The people who were going to do the talent contest with me backed out and she volunteered to be my partner.I will never forget her kindness… We had so much fun rehearsing and then performing, I loved her generosity and kindness toward me…She did it because of who she was; just a wonderful person.’

In high school Bates frequently babysat for the families in her neighborhood, and Jeannie Casil-Miller (who was 12 at the time Cheri Jo watched her little brother) said of her: ‘what a sweetheart, she was such a sweet gal, she never talked to me like a kid. Everybody liked her. She always had a smile for everybody. She needs to be remembered.’ After graduating from high school Bates thought that continuing with her education would help her chances of getting hired at an airline, and went on to attend Riverside City College (she planned on going for two years then reapplying to be a flight attendant). She also got a PT job at Riverside National Bank, which allowed her to earn enough money to purchase a 1960 lime green VW Bug that was her pride and joy (and I get that, I loved my Beetle). The week before she was killed Cheri took her little Bug to a local service station to make sure everything with the vehicle was up to par, and according to her family she loved her little car and was very particular about its condition and cleanliness. She had recently gotten engaged to her high school sweetheart of two years, Dennis Highland on October 22, who had previously attended RCC but after two years transferred to San Francisco State College to play the tight end position on their football team. He was two years older than Cheri Jo and graduated from Ramona High School in 1964. The weekend before she was killed Highlands’ parents visited with the couple in San Francisco (which is about a six hour drive from Riverside), and friends recalled that they were crazy about each other and were head over heels in love.

The Murder: In October 1966 Cheri Jo was in her first semester at Riverside City College and had the rest of her life in front of her. The eighteen-year-old had blue eyes, blonde hair that she wore short in a pageboy style, and according to her father wore eyeglasses when studying; she was petite, and only weighed 110 pounds and stood at 5’3” tall. On the morning of the 30th she attended Sunday mass at St. Catherine of Alexandria Catholic Church with her dad, then the two had breakfast together at Sandy’s, a local diner. After they ate, Mr. Bates asked his daughter if she wanted to go to the beach with him, which was a common family activity they enjoyed doing together; she declined and told him she had to go home and work on a research paper on the electoral college that was due soon. Later that afternoon, Cheri Jo went to her college library to focus on schoolwork and study.

Before departing her house, Bates called a friend named Stephanie Guttman (twice, at 3:00 and between 3:30/3:45 PM) and asked if she wanted to go to the library with her; she declined. Bates then called an unnamed coworker and asked her if she had seen a bibliography for a term paper that she had misplaced. When she replied no, Bates said: ‘now I’ll have to start all over on my note cards.’ I’ve also seen it in a few sources that she was supposed to go to the library with a neighbor and fellow RCC student Kathryn Hunter, who eventually wound up declining her offer (more on that later). At 5:00 and 5:15 PM Mr. Bates called home and got a busy signal.

Based on the contents of her stomach, Cheri’s last meal was a roast beef sandwich (I’ve also seen it reported as ‘some type of dinner-like food’), which she consumed roughly 2-4 hours before her death. It is strongly speculated that she left her residence sometime between 4:30 and 5:00 PM (but most likely more towards 5:00), and when Mr. Bates returned late in the afternoon from the beach at 5 PM there was a note taped to the refrigerator that read: ‘Dad, went to RCC Library.’ Oddly enough, he left the house again that night and left his daughter a note of his own, which he found undisturbed when he arrived back around midnight. A neighbor told police that they recalled seeing her car parked in her driveway at 4:45 PM, and an eyewitness told the Riverside PD that they had seen Bates driving towards RCC at roughly 6:00 PM; a second person said they noticed that she was being closely followed by a bronze 1965/1966 Oldsmobile.

It shouldn’t have taken Cheri long to get to the library from her house, as it was only three miles away. Upon arriving she parked her VW on Terracina Drive, a narrow road between the library and the old Mediterranean style quadrangle. According to the website ‘ZodiacCiphers,’ at exactly 6:13 PM four men in work attire were sitting on a fence outside across from Cheri’s car and noticed her park and walk towards the library. The workmen were there until around 7:15 PM and told investigators they didn’t recall seeing anyone suspicious around her vehicle. At 6:15 PM Bates was seen by an acquaintance, a Mexican-American student who said he later remembered seeing her inside the library ‘writing inside of a blue spiral bound notebook with a ballpoint pen’ immediately after it opened. Just as a side note, there seems to be a bit of black and forth across the internet about the time he saw her: I’ve seen it listed as early as 5:30 PM but the library didn’t even open until 6 PM so that doesn’t make any sense. Additionally, a librarian reported that she saw Bates at some point that evening but didn’t recall exactly when.

Between 6:30-6:45 some RCC students that were acquainted with Bates said they did not recall seeing her at the library, and due to the small size of the building it would have been hard to miss her. Police also said that an eyewitness came forward and reported that at approximately 7:00 PM a tan 1947-52 Studebaker with oxidized paint was seen driving south on Terracina Drive; initially, it was incorrectly reported that the vehicle was a ‘tucker torpedo’ as the two look incredibly similar, but after police looked into them only fifty-one had been made at the time, so that tip was quickly disregarded. A friend of Bates named Walter Siebert was at the library working on homework between 7:15 – 9 PM, and he didn’t remember seeing her. No one saw Cheri Jo leave the library.

One female student reported that at around 9:30 PM she noticed a young man smoking a cigarette that she estimated to be around 19/20 years old and roughly 5’11” lurking in the shadows in the alleyway Bates was later found dead in, located across the street from where her Beetle was parked. The individual had been intently looking in the vehicles direction at roughly the same time the library closed, and when she walked by him they exchanged hellos despite not being acquainted with one another. It was later determined that from where he was standing he could have easily kept an eye on Cheri’s Bug while she was at the RCC library. The eyewitness was able to give LE a description of the clothing on the unknown man, and several years later the Riverside PD showed that eyewitness a lineup containing a suspect’s picture (who I will refer to as ‘Bob Barnett,’ but more on him later), and where she was unable to identify anyone in the lineup the clothes she described previously matched what the suspect was said to be wearing on the night of Cheri Jo’s murder. Police were able to go back and obtain a discarded cigarette butt that was most likely from the same man that was in the alley the night of Bates murder.

At around 7 PM on October 30 Joseph reached out to Cheri’s friend Stephanie to see if she was over at her house or at the very least knew where she was; she told him about their earlier conversations and that the last she had known had gone to the library. After waking up in the early morning hours of Halloween, Mr. Bates discovered that his daughter never came home the night before. He immediately filed a missing person’s report with the Riverside Police Department (which was officially made at 5:43 AM) then called Guttman back at 5:50 AM to see if she had heard from his daughter; she hadn’t.

The Discovery: At 6:28 AM on the morning of October 31, 1966 the remains of Cheri Josephine Bates were found by a groundskeeper named Cleophus Martin. As he passed by the gravel pathway on his street-sweeper he noticed the young girl lying face down in between two vacant fascia board homes on Terracina Drive, close to the library parking lot and roughly 75 yards away from where she had parked her car the evening before. She was still dressed in the clothes that was last seen wearing: a long-sleeve, light yellow blouse and faded pinkish-red capri pants. Her clothes were unaffected but were completely saturated in blood, and there was a bloody handprint found on her pants; strangely, the only thing missing was her shoes. Her large, red and tan woven straw bag still containing both her ID and 56 cents was found partially underneath her leg. Detectives would later find droplets of blood that went from the scene of the crime to Terracina Drive, which made them deduce that the killer took that route after the murder. Despite it being the mid-1960’s, DNA was collected, and the coroner was quickly able to determine that she had not been the victim of sexual assault. Detectives felt that Bates most likely expired while lying on her back and was rolled over post-mortem, due to the way blood had pooled on the back of her pants and how her feet were crossed.

The Investigation: By the end of the day on November 1, 1966 members of Riverside LE had spoken with 75 people and had a combined amount of 133 man hours spent on the investigation; by the 3rd, 125 people had been interviewed. Detectives spoke with anyone that may have had any contact with the coed: friends/coworkers/classmates/acquaintances of the young college student, including numerous RCC students, and had even begun interviewing military personnel stationed at the nearby March Air Force Base (which was only a fifteen minutes drive from campus). By November 6 all but two individuals that were confirmed to have been on the RCC campus when Cheri Jo was murdered had been checked out and eliminated from the investigation. Detectives also looked into testimony from a resident of the nearby Shelly Lane Apartments, who heard short, female screams coming from Terracina Drive on the night of the homicide between 10:15 and 10:45 PM, then a more muffled one just moments later. Only two minutes later she heard what sounded like an old car starting up. A second witness came forward and reported they also recalled hearing a woman’s scream at roughly 10:30.

Let’s think about this: if this story from the eyewitness is accurate and those screams came from Bates then it raises some unusual concerns: if she stayed at the RCC library until 9 PM, where had she been for over an hour/hour and a half? Now, there is actually a completely rational explanation as to why there was such a large gap between 9 PM and when the screams were heard: that particular weekend the Uniform Time Act of 1966 had taken effect, which is the system of uniform daylight saving time throughout the US meaning everyone would ‘fall backwards’ and clocks would have been adjusted Saturday night/Sunday morning. Since it was the first one EVER there was quite a bit of backlash (some people even refused to implement it and ignored it), so it’s very possible that the eyewitness that heard screaming forgot to set back her clocks and may have actually heard Bates between 9:15 and 9:45 PM. I mean, let’s also keep in mind this was many, many years ago and nothing automatically switched over. Any changes made to a clock had to be done manually.

Based on evidence found at the scene, Bates most likely was crawling away from her attacker at one point and he pulled her back. When conducting her autopsy it was determined that Cheri Jo had most likely been killed sometime between 9:23 PM and 12:23 AM on October 30/31 based on the contents of her stomach as well as additional details found at the crime scene. After a very extensive investigation into her background, detectives could find no apparent motive for her murder, and found nothing that would make them think she was classified as a target of any sort of revenge or random non-sexual act of violence. Her autopsy revealed that the young woman had suffered from twenty-six wounds in total, and had been kicked in the head repeatedly. Her hair was disheveled, and had leaves, sticks, and other debris stuck in it. Her left cheek, upper lip, the back of her left hand, and arms had been slashed as well, and she had three cuts to her throat, one that severed her jugular vein. She had also been stabbed twice in the chest, once under the left shoulder blade, and had several puncture wounds on her left breast. The pathologists were able to determine that the wounds to Cheri Jo were inflicted by a knife that was only 1.5” wide and 3.5” long.

At roughly 10:30 AM on the morning of October 31 Bates body was taken to Acheson & Graham Mortuary, where Dr. Rene Modglin immediately began her autopsy. Over the years it has become lore that her head was nearly cut ‘clean off,’ but that is simply not true: her left carotid and jugulars were not in any way affected nor was her windpipe, so her head was in no capacity ‘nearly severed.’ This would have been a nearly impossible feat thanks to the limited amount of time that the killer had in combination with their small knife. It was determined that she had been laying on the ground when she had received the knife wounds to her left shoulder blade and neck. Her killer made contact with her thyroid cartilage twice, making a V-shaped cut to her neck; the knife went through the right carotid and jugular effortlessly with no hesitation, which was deemed by the ME to be the fatal blow.

Pathologist Rene Modglin found fragments of skin underneath the fingernails of Cheri’s right hand as well as several brown hairs at the base of her right thumb that didn’t belong to her; unfortunately the sample was too decomposed to get a full DNA sample from by the time the technology became available in the early 1990’s (more on this later). Bates was found with petechiae on her forehead and scalp, which are small blood spots that form underneath the skin as a result of broken capillaries that form during extreme emotional trauma and duress. The ground surrounding her body was described in her official autopsy report as ‘looking like a freshly plowed field.’ According to a YouTube video made by creator ‘’2S: The Horror Quarters,’ it was initially reported that groundsmen found a knife in the ivy shrubbery close to where Bates remains were found, however no murder weapon has ever been recovered.

There is also a bit of uncertainty out there regarding a footprint that was said to be found at the crime scene: according to an article published by The Press-Enterprise on November 8, 1966, the scene of the crime was completely devoid of footprints. It was said the area was so churned up after the scuffle between Bates and her attacker that it ‘appeared as if a tractor had been through the area.’ Now, a more recent piece published in the Inland Empire Magazine in May 2016 said that ‘footprints indicated that Cheri had walked at a normal pace side by side with someone before the attack.’ The heel print in question was that of a BF Goodrich brand shoe (size 8-10) that were only sold to the federal prison system in Leavenworth, Kansas that was said to be found at the murder scene. Perhaps it’s  because of this uncertainty or the location of the print that detectives are somewhat hesitant to say for absolute certainty that it is related to the murder of Bates.

Detectives discovered a cheap Timex wrist watch with white paint flecks on it roughly ten feet away from Cheri Jo’s body that was eventually determined to be a ‘Marlin’ style that was made in either 1963/64. Even though it was noted that the timepiece was stopped at 12:24 it’s unknown when exactly the murder took place (just as a side note, in an attempt to be complete I have seen the time also listed as 9:07, however 12:24 seems to be the most frequently reported one). It was eventually determined that the watch was most likely sold at a military type facility (possibly as far away as England), but where exactly from remains a mystery. Fingerprints found on the timepiece remain unidentified as of July 2024. Small specks of paint were also found that were eventually determined by forensic technicians to be ordinary house paint. After law enforcement received information on the watch in early November 1966 they turned their focus to the March Air Force Base, where they interviewed 154 airmen and had the full cooperation of military authorities. In an interview with Inland Empire magazine in 2010, retired Riverside PD Captain Irv Cross shared his deep regret at not having done more to investigate the military angle of Bates murder. 

Despite her small stature, Bates was scrappy and appeared to put up quite a fight: an examination of the crime scene as well as her autopsy showed evidence that an intense struggle took place between the two, and Cheri Jo scratched her assailants arms, face, and head; it’s also speculated that she ripped the watch right off his wrist. 

Upon further inspection of the inside of the car, investigators found three books on the US government that she had checked out of the RCC library on her passenger’s side front seat along with the blue spiral notebook I discussed earlier (they were signed out but not time stamped). Law enforcement also found eleven greasy fingerprints and palm prints on both the outside and inside of Bates Bug, and as of July 2024 four finger and three palm prints remain unidentified; they are on file with the FBI. Also, according to a 1974 FBI report there were two unidentified latent prints from the Bates related letters: one from the November 1966 ‘confession’ letter and another from the Riverside PD’s copy of the ‘She had to die’ correspondence. They were compared to the unidentified ones found on the VW and no match was made.

It was  determined that Cheri Jo’s killer had torn off the middle wire going from the distributor cap to the ignition coil in her Beetle, most likely in an attempt to leave her stranded and in need of assistance. Doing this essentially cuts the power from the battery and prevents it from reaching the spark plugs, thus incapacitating the ignition. Forensic experts quickly determined that the prints did not belong to Cheri or anyone in her circle of friends/family/acquaintances, and strongly believe they belonged to her killer. Detectives also strongly feel that Bates’ killer most likely surprised her after she made multiple attempts to start her vehicle before he stepped out of the shadows and offered his assistance in the guise of a ‘good Samaritan’ ruse to get her away from the VW before he pounced. When Cheri Jo’s Beetle was investigated immediately after her murder it was discovered that her driver’s side door was left ajar and both of her windows were rolled down; additionally, its keys were left in the ignition.

Did Bates killer offer assistance in the guise of a phone call for help? Perhaps to her dad? Maybe he lied and told her he was a groundskeeper or a school administrator and had a phone in an office or home nearby. If you really think about it, if the killer offered her a ride home she most likely would have grabbed the three library books that were found left behind on her seat, especially if she had homework that was due… The two residences that she was found between were vacant and had recently been purchased by RCC. Maybe she didn’t realize they were empty and followed her killer to the area in hopes of using a phone to call her dad or a friend for help? I read a post on Reddit by user going by the handle ‘Happy_Vincent,’ (which was mostly a good piece but I immediately noticed some errors and I am no Zodiac scholar) that mentions it’s been theorized that maybe Bates was planning on meeting up with a boyfriend, and was only planned on briefly stopping at the library that night. Perhaps there was a guy that she had plans of meeting up with, and while this might sound a tad far-fetched when you think about how she was recently engaged, it’s not; I will return to this idea later.

Another interesting theory comes from YouTuber ‘Planet X Filmworks,’ who suggests that Bates was taken at knife-point and abducted, which may explain why no one saw her leave the library on the night she was killed. Then, after he took her to a secondary location and killed her he then came back to campus and dumped her body at the scene where it was found. But… that doesn’t quite match up with the evidence found at the crime scene. Another interesting fact is there was a chance she was killed after midnight, meaning her murder would have taken place on Halloween on an evening that coincidentally fell on a full harvest moon. Was her murder related to some sort of ritual? Or was it all just a coincidence?

Reenactment: At 8 PM on November 3, 1966 St. Catherine’s Catholic Church had a rosary recital in honor of Bates, and her funeral service was held there as well the following morning. St. Catherines is the same church she attended with her father the morning of her murder. 350 of her loved ones were in attendance and from there she was buried at the Crestlawn Memorial Park in Riverside. Just nine days after Bates’ funeral was held a staged re-enactment of her final hours at the RCC library was organized by Riverside PD in hopes of producing some vital eyewitnesses. Police closed off the library annex between 5 and 9 PM, and at the event were two librarians, 62 students, and one janitor that had been there on the evening of her murder. All parties were dressed in the same clothes they wore on the evening in question and any participants that drove a car to the library on October 30 were asked to park in exactly the same location they did on the evening of the murder. Where this reenactment did bring forward many eyewitnesses no helpful information was obtained.

Every individual that police needed to speak with showed up to the reenactment, except for a heavy-set, bearded man that was seen talking to a young blonde girl; neither individual was seen again after the night of the murder. All male students present submitted hair and fingerprint samples, and they were all cleared. Several additional individuals reported seeing the tan Studebaker that I previously mentioned, and it’s theorized that the heavy set man was the owner of the car; despite exhaustive attempts by members of LE and the local press, unfortunately its owner was never found.

Prior Attempted Murder on RCC’s campus: The year before the homicide of Cheri Jo there was an attempted murder of another young coed that shared many similarities with the her case: on April 13, 1965 a young student named Rosalyn Attwood was viciously attacked as she was leaving night classes. The 19-year-old lived near campus and frequently walked to school, and as she was making her way home through a parking lot near Cutter pool she was approached by a man driving a car that was very  insistent on taking her home. After declining his offer multiple times he then got out of the vehicle and followed her a short ways before attacking her. The two began to struggle and after pulling out a weapon of some sort he stabbed her in the stomach. Attwood’s attacker quickly fled the scene but thankfully some good Samaritans found her and helped save her life; she suffered from multiple stab wounds and quite a bit of trauma but luckily she was able to give the detectives a description of her assailant.

After the murder of Cheri Jo the following year Riverside media reported that Attwood hadn’t been far from where her remains were discovered. An arrest was made just a little over two weeks later on April 28, 1965 after fingerprints found on the knife were matched to 19-year-old Rolland Lin Taft. Strangely enough, he also graduated from Ramona High School and lived near Bates as well. Taft was (very briefly) considered a suspect in her murder in the early stages of the investigation but was quickly ruled out, as he was in prison at the time. The infamous ‘desk poem’ (that I will talk about more later) is thought to possibly be about Miss Attwood, not Cheri Jo.

Statutory rape on RCC’s campus: Just four days before the discovery of Bates remains on October 27, 1966, twenty-one men from a RCC fraternity were arrested for statutory rape after they picked up a 16-year-old student from Ramona High School on October 22. During the five days before the assault the young girl tagged along with them to several events on campus, where they plied her with booze. Of the twenty-one suspects, twenty of them were accused of partaking in the activities and two were immediately booked into custody; two additional men were remanded to juvenile authorities and the remaining seventeen were released on $550 bond. I haven’t come across any follow-up stories regarding the incident and I haven’t found any link to this case and the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.

Post-Bates Attempted Murder on RCC’s campus: According to the subreddit ‘ZodiacKiller,’ in a post titled ‘Who do you think murdered Cheri Jo Bates?,’ a user going by the handle ‘MrRedbelly’ said that just three weeks after the murder of Cheri Jo Bates on November 22, 1966 there was an attack on another Riverside CC coed that began with an offer of a ride in his car. Luckily she survived the experience and described her assailant as a heavier-set male that was roughly 35 years old, 5’9″ tall, and had a protruding belly. During the incident the man had repeatedly mentioned Cheri Jo and told her, ‘shall I kill you now or will you take off your clothes?’ Thankfully she was able to get away.

December 1966 Attack in Nearby San Diego: According to an article published in The San Bernardino County Sun in early December 1966, an attack similar in nature to that of Bates took place less than two hours away from Riverside in San Diego: nineteen year old Linda K. Gilllinger was released unhurt after her abductor forced her at gunpoint to drive after waiting in the backseat of her vehicle. The attacker, a young man with short brown hair and a medium build, tried to kiss her and when she slapped him he hit her back then ordered her to get out of the car. After locking all of its doors he then tossed the keys far away from both of them, yelling ‘now you have as good a chance as I do’ before they ran away from one another in opposite directions. It was eventually determined the two incidents were unrelated. Strangely enough, Ms. Gilllinger was also a student at Riverside CC.

Correspondence: Just one day shy of the one-month anniversary of Bates murder, on November 29, 1966 two identical, type-written letters with no return address were sent to the RPD headquarters as well as the editorial offices of The Riverside Press-Enterprise; the correspondence described a possible scenario as to how the young victim had been lured away from her car and subsequently murdered. The author recalled (in vivid detail) how he had disabled her car then stood in the shadows and watched her make repeated attempts to turn it on until the battery was completely drained of power. It was only then that he offered her some help, telling her that his own car was parked down the street, successfully drawing her away from her VW. After they had walked only a short distance he said to her: ‘it’s about time,’ and in response to this she said, ‘about time for what?’ To this, he simply said ‘about time for you to die.’ RPD contacted the FBI the following day regarding the correspondence and asked them to check their records; they came back with nothing. In 1974 the bureau determined that a latent fingerprint was found on the envelope of the letter sent to the Riverside PD that as of July 2024 remains unidentified.

The author then claimed that he put his hand over her mouth and, while pressing a knife to her neck, forced her to walk to a nearby dimly lit alley then proceeded to hit and kick her in an attempt to subdue her before stabbing her to death. The creator of this communication claimed that he knew the victim, and: ‘only one thing was on my mind: Making her pay for the brush-offs that she had given me during the years prior.” Because this letter included details of the homicide that had not yet been released to the public, members of LE initially felt that its author may have been the killer, but it was eventually determined to be a hoax.

A local newspaper printed a further update on Cheri Jo’s murder the following spring on April 29, 1967, and coincidentally the very next day, the Riverside Police, The Press-Enterprise, and Joseph Bates all received handwritten letters from an unknown individual with the chilling message: ‘Bates had to die. There will be more’ (well, to be fair, Mr. Bates’ letter replaced ‘Bates’ with ‘she’). At the bottom of each correspondence was an indecipherable symbol that was either a ‘2’ or a ‘Z.’

In August 2021, the Riverside PD’s cold case unit released an update to the public regarding the three handwritten letters that were supposedly from the Zodiac Killer: in April 2016 detectives received a letter from a San Bernardino resident that claimed responsibility for the letters that were sent in April 1967, and that they had been a distasteful hoax. The unidentified individual expressed remorse for their actions and apologized, saying they had been a troubled teen at the time and that he had written and mailed the letters as a means of seeking attention. These claims were later backed up by a positive DNA match.

In a letter postmarked March 13, 1971, the Zodiac Killer sent a letter to the LA Times taking responsibility for the murder of Cheri Jo Bates, saying: ‘I do have to give the police credit for stumbling across my Riverside activity, but they are only finding the easy ones. There are a hell of a lot more down there.’ The authors use of the word ‘easy’ hints that the killer felt his ties to the Bates homicide as well as his related writings should be glaringly obvious and should have been realized effortlessly. When experts analyzed the handwriting, they found similarities that led them to deduce that it was penned by the same writer that was behind the Riverside communications, and local investigators apparently confirmed this when they called the material a ‘possible forged letter by Zodiac.’

In March 1999, the Riverside police sent all of their physical evidence related to the murder of Cheri Jo Bates to the FBI lab in Quantico to be tested against their prime suspect. They were able to extract a mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence from one of the hairs that were found in the blood clot at the base of Bates right thumb (Q1.1), and on June 21, 1999 the Bureau announced that they were microscopically different to the hair found on Bates head. The following March it was reported that the mtDNA from the Q1.1 hair sample was not a match to the DNA of RPD’s main suspect. Additionally, the Bureau attempted to extract DNA from the cigarette butt recovered from near the crime scene (its thought to have belonged to the mysterious man standing in the alleyway that appeared to be looking in the direction of Bates VW), however it was determined to be too small to be of use. 

In 2017 the History Channel made a TV mini-series titled ‘The Hunt for the Zodiac Killer’, and during filming cold case Detective Ken Mains noticed a droplet of blood on Bate’s pink capri’s that appeared different from the others. He would later share with Zodiac researcher Misty Johansen that two blood drops were tested: one from the front and one from the back. Forensic Serologist Suzanna Ryan used microbial vacuum suction technology (also referred to as a ‘M-Vac’) to collect DNA from the pants and was able to confirm that it came from a Caucasian male and that there was enough of it to compare with another sample. Experts were also able to collect DNA from the Timex watch and confirmed that it did not belong to Cheri or anyone in her family.

Ted Bundy?: At the time of Cheri Jo Bates murder in the fall of 1966, Ted Bundy was nineteen years old and living in McMahon Hall at the University of Washington. He enrolled for the semester on September 26, 1966 and studied Chinese, attending the school until the end of the year. Someone on a message board about Bates said that he attended Stanford in 1966 but according to his timeline he didn’t start at the prestigious university until June 1967. Despite coming across Ted’s name multiple times during my research on Miss Bates, I could find next to no evidence that he played any role in her murder. In fact, there seems to be far better and more realistic suspects that I can think of just off the top of my head: Joseph D’Angelo (AKA The Golden State Killer, but it took about thirty seconds of research to figure out he didn’t start his spree until the mid-1970’s), and in some true crime circles its strongly hypothesized that she may be the first victim of the Zodiac (who I did bring up multiple times earlier), who identity still remains unidentified as of July 2024.

The Zodiac Killer: The Zodiac was active in the northern part of California from the late 1960’s to the early 1970’s, and it’s strongly felt by some that they may have begun in Riverside then relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area. The serial killer was active in the northern part of California from the late 1960’s to the early 1970’s (this timeframe is typically accepted as being ‘for certain’), and it’s felt by some that they may have begun in Riverside then moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. According to the website ‘zodiackiller.com,’ the serial killer was first considered a suspect by LE in the murder of Bates three years after it took place in October 1969. The RPD noted some striking similarities between her case and a confirmed Zodiac attack that took place on September 27, 1969: when 22-year-old Cecelia Shepard her boyfriend, 20 year old Bryan Hartnell were stabbed by a hooded man in Lake Berryessa; Shepard died as a result of her injuries, but Hartnell survived.

By November 1970, the media had started to piece the similarities together, and both the San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles Times published stories about the possibility that Bates was a possible victim of the serial killer. Detectives from the San Francisco Bay Area that were assigned to the Zodiac case met with members of the RPD that were in charge of the Bates case, and according to the website ‘zodiackiller.com’ the conclusion was made that the killer was responsible for Cheri’s murder. Now, (mostly) everything else on that website seems legit and factual, but that is the only place I’ve seen it confirmed like that where LE officially said that he was the one responsible for the murder of Cheri Jo Bates. In every other article/TV show/podcast I’ve come across it was clear that the RPD did not want to make any official, ‘on the record’ statement that the Zodiac Killer was responsible for the murder of Bates. Detective Jim Simons, who is the current investigator in charge of the murder, said of the case: ‘I have personally spoken to the previous detectives assigned to the case, and they genuinely believe that the Cheri Jo Bates case is not related to the Zodiac murders; they believe it was an acquaintance of hers, or a scorned love interest.’

One of the most talked about ‘clues’ that support the idea that Bates was a victim of the Zodiac Killer was the discovery of a morbid poem along with a set of lower-case initials (r.h.) carved underneath a desk with a ballpoint pen at RCC. It was found by a custodian six months after the coed was killed, and despite being found tucked away in storage the desk had been in the library in October 1966 at the time of the murder. The carving contained graphic references to repeated assaults on young women using a bladed weapon.

Paul Avery/Sherwood Morrill: In November 1970, a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle named Paul Avery got an anonymous letter from a ‘tipster’ pointing out some similarities between the murders committed by the Zodiac and the homicide of Bates and urged him to investigate the two cases in greater detail. Avery took these letters to a handwriting expert in California named Sherwood Morrill, who confirmed that the writing in letters related to the Bates murder matched the writing in the Zodiac case. On November 16, 1970, Morrill stated that the poem that was found scrawled underneath a desk at RCC and the 1967 letters that were sent to the RPD, The Press-Enterprise, and Bates’ father were ‘unquestionably’ written by the same person that would later write the Zodiac letters. Avery took his discovery to the Riverside Police, who remained unconvinced of his recent findings.

Zodiac Suspects: One very frequently mentioned name I’ve seen in relation to the murder of Cheri Jo Bates (as well as the Zodiac case as a whole) is Ross Sullivan, and I’ll admit there is quite a bit of compelling evidence that ties him to her murder. Sullivan was born in 1941 across the country from California in Syracuse, NY and in his adolescent years moved to Glendale in the Golden State. After graduating from Glendale High School, Sullivan began attending Riverside City College on September 11, 1961, and got a PT job at the school as a library assistant. A coworker of his from his time at the RCC named Jo Ann Bailey reported that he bragged about being a patient at Patton State Mental Hospital in San Bernardino at some point before entering the school (he actually suffered from schizophrenia). For a class at the college, he wrote an essay on how to purposefully disguise your handwriting, and his thesis was on cryptography methodology; he also played the part of a killer in a short student film. It’s also worth mentioning that Ross’s brother Tim married Cheri Jo’s best friend, Bonnie, and he often wrote poetry but was a poor speller. Sullivan was employed at the school at the time that Bates was murdered, and it’s been said that he made those around him feel uncomfortable. He didn’t come into work for six days after Cheri Jo was murdered, and it’s reported that he acted rather suspiciously afterwards.

I’ve also seen it reported that before the murder of Cheri Jo Bates, Sullivan always wore the same set of clothes, but afterwards dressed in something completely different. Also, when you compare a picture of him next to a composite sketch of the Zodiac they look exactly alike, as he also wore his hair in a crew cut and had a similar style of glasses. Another damning piece of evidence against Sullivan was that he was known to live in the same general area of all five confirmed Zodiac homicides, and after the death of Cheri Jo he moved to Santa Cruz just before the officially recognized murders began the following year in Benicia (on December 20, 1968); this is about a six-and-a-half-hour drive from Riverside. He also supposedly lived at the YMCA in Presidio Heights when Paul Stine was killed. True crime experts also point out that one of the Zodiacs’ letters mentions ‘The Mikado’ by Gilbert and Sullivan, which could possibly be a reference to his name.

In November 2017 the website ‘Bustle’ did an interview with an (at the time) member of the library staff at the Riverside CC that also worked with Sullivan back in the 1960’s. Jo Ann Bailey described him as a quiet, unsocial individual that made her feel uncomfortable and that other employees had openly wondered if he was somehow related to Bates murder. She went on to say that before Cheri Jo was killed he wore the same army jacket and military-style boots to work every day (ones that she felt were very similar to the ones responsible for the shoe prints found at Bates’ murder scene as well as the Zodiac’s Lake Berryessa stabbings), however when he returned from his six day sabbatical he had completely switched things up, and began wearing a completely new set of clothing.

Before his untimely death of a heart attack at the age of 36 on September 29, 1977 (I’ve also read that it was the result of Pickwickian syndrome, also known as obesity hypoventilation syndrome), Ross Sullivan moved back to his home state of New York. Strangely enough, in 1974 there was a confirmed Zodiac correspondence sent from Albany to the LA Times, and all correspondence from the killer ceased after he died. Sullivan did, however, have one thing going for him when it came to the murder of Cheri Jo Bates: he was huge. 6’3” tall and 300 pounds. A size 7 watch and an 8-10 pair of shoes most likely wouldn’t have fit the mountain of a man.

At the time of the murder in October 1966, Allen had been employed as an elementary-school teacher at Valley Springs Elementary School, and by the time that position ended in late March 1968 he had used only one of nineteen available personal days, and oddly enough the day he was sick was November 1, 1966, which was right after Bates murder. But what strikes me as odd about that date is it was a Tuesday (Halloween when Bates was discovered was on a Monday), so did his school district maybe have off that last Monday in October? Why would he go into work on the 31st but call off the next day? Looking into his possible route, it was almost a seven-hour drive from the elementary school where he worked to Riverside City College.

At the time of Bates murder in late October 1966, Allen had been employed as a teacher at Valley Springs Elementary School, and by the time that position ended in late March 1968 he had used only one of nineteen available personal days; oddly enough, the day he used was November 1, 1966, which was right after the murder. But what strikes me as especially strange about that date is it was a Tuesday, and Bates was discovered in the early morning hours on a Monday… did his school district maybe have off that Halloween? Why would he go into work on the 31st but call off the next day? Looking into his possible route, it was almost a seven-hour drive from the elementary school where he worked to Riverside City College.

Earl Van Best Jr. is another name I see pretty frequently in relation to the Zodiac case, especially after the FX show ‘The Most Dangerous Animal of All’ premiered in 2020. In his 2014 book with the same name, Van Best’s son Gary Stewart made a case that his father was the Zodiac. Van Best made the news in San Francisco in the early ‘60s when the 28 year old began a predatory relationship with Stewarts 14-year-old mother Judy Chandler shortly after meeting her at an ice cream parlor. He married her shortly after and the following year she became pregnant with their son (Gary), although Van Best was in prison for statutory rape by the time he was born.

Despite the vast publicity Stewart’s book received, experts quickly dismissed the majority of its claims, as the evidence was weak and mostly fabricated: Van Best (who didn’t raise him) resided in CA at the time of the killings, resembled the composite sketch of the Zodiac, was interested in codes and ciphers, was acquaintances with a Satanist and member of the Manson-family, and liked Gilbert and Sullivan (a Victorian-era theatrical partnership). In an odd coincidence, Stewart’s mother ended up marrying a detective in the San Francisco PD, and in his book he theorized that his bio father’s ties to Zodiac were covered up by the department in order to protect his stepfather. Earl Van Best Jr. died on May 20th, 1984.

Oddly enough, Van Best wasn’t the only Zodiac suspect made infamous by their offspring ratting them out: in 2007 a man named Jack Tarrance was accused of being the serial killer by his stepson Dennis Kaufman, who attempted to back up his accusations by producing items that he thought was proof of his stepfather’s involvement. This includes a broken, bloody knife that he felt matched the description of the one that killed Cheri Jo Bates, rolls of film with disturbing images on them, handwriting samples that he felt were similar to the Zodiac letters, and a black executioner’s style hood that he suspected was worn by the killer during the Lake Berryessa incident in September 1969 that was found rolled up and stuffed inside of an amplifier (which is an electronic device that helps boost power, current, or voltage of a signal). Torrance served in both the US Navy and Air Force and was trained as a radio operator, which may have allowed him to learn coding which may have helped him develop the cryptograms found in at least eight of Zodiac’s letters (possibly more). Jack Torrance was never taken seriously as a suspect and died in 2006.

The name Richard Marshall has come up in a few articles that I’ve written so far, and he does have a link to Riverside in the fall of 1966. A movie projectionist and ham radio operator, Marshall resided in the area at the time Bates was killed and was living close to where Paul Stine was murdered in San Francisco in 1969. Acquaintances of his told police that they found him odd, and on one evening he had talked about finding ‘something much more exciting than sex.’ Additionally, he enjoyed older movies including ‘The Red Phantom,’ which was mentioned in a 1974 Zodiac letter. He also lived in a basement apartment (a detail that the killer brought up) and owned a typewriter and a teletype similar to the one that the Zodiac used; also, both Marshall and the Zodiac were known to use felt-tipped pens as well as unusual sized pieces of paper. Napa County Sheriff’s Detective Ken Narlow (who has been on the case for decades), said that the suspect made for ‘good reading but was not a very good suspect in my estimation.’ Marshall denied being the Zodiac and died in a nursing home in 2008.

Another name that is frequently brought up when discussing the murder of Cheri Bates is Richard Gaikowski, a one-time editor of a ‘counter-culture’ newspaper based in San Francisco. According to ‘history.com,’ a former coworker of Gaikowski sent multiple LE agencies long letters that accused him of being the Zodiac Killer and that he asked him to ‘engage in violent acts together.’ In 2009, the individual (who only goes by the nickname ‘Goldcatcher’) appeared in disguise on an episode of the History Channel show ‘Mystery Quest,’ and was even able to come up with recordings of the suspects voice. The episode featured a retired police dispatcher that spoke to the killer during his heyday, and that person said that she strongly felt that it was the same voice as Gaikowski. Zodiac researcher Tom Voigt also pointed out that ‘Gyke’ appeared in a cipher that the killer said contained his name. Experts concluded that Goldcatcher’s claims have little to no merit, and he is actually a popular (and very vocal) conspiracy theorist that lacks credibility, and was even called ‘one of the three top Zodiac kooks’ by a San Francisco police inspector. Gaikowski died in 2004.

Another possible suspect in the murder of Cheri Jo is Bruce Davis, who was also a member of the infamous ‘Manson family.’ Supposedly, Davis worked at Riverside City College in 1966 while it was being renovated and was also known to go to Newport Beach, a local spot that the Bates family was known to frequent. In 1972, he was convicted of two counts of first degree murder (of Donald ‘Shorty’ Shea and Gary Hinman), conspiracy to commit murder, and robbery. From what I’ve gathered, Davis was known to pal around with a guy named Robert E. Hunter, who also appeared to be briefly investigated for the homicide as well after the San Francisco PD said that he was eliminated when a fingerprint comparison ruled him out. To be honest, Hunter is a really great example as to why I strongly dislike writing about the Zodiac case: despite about a half dozen websites I found that mentioned him, they were all incredibly confusing and I still couldn’t really figure out exactly who he was.

According to the WordPress blog ‘darcsfalcon,’ Bates was supposed to go to the library with a friend that lived nearby and fellow RCC student named Kathryn Hunter, who ultimately said that she couldn’t go because her Uncle Robert happened to be in town that weekend. The day after her friend was killed, nineteen year old Kathryn unenrolled at RCC. Mr. Bates told investigators that he was under the impression that his daughter had visited a friend the night she was murdered, one that ‘only lived one-and-one-half blocks away,’ like Hunter did; Kathryn denied any relation to Robert E. Hunter. It’s been reported that both he and Davis left Riverside the day after Bates was killed and it’s worth mentioning that he shared the same initials as the ones that were carved underneath the infamous ‘desktop poem.’

According to a letter (or possibly an email) between Zodiac enthusiast Eduard Versluijs and a man known only as Howard, an unnamed ‘source’ that went to school at RCC in the fall of 1966 claims that a mustachioed member of the RCC construction crew was ‘highly interested’ in Cheri Jo and was possibly named Bruce (as in, Davis?). Although interesting,  I could find no confirmation of this interaction.

A Redditor going by the handle ‘sandy_80’ brought up yet another suspect: Bud Kelley, a member of the RPD that worked as a patrolman in 1966 when Bates was murdered. He was one of the first officers that arrived on the scene and worked her case as a detective beginning in 1972; before joining the Riverside PD in 1960 Kelley served in the US Marine Corp for five years. A 30 year veteran of the force (22 of those spent as a detective), Kelley retired in 1990 and was known to write poetry; he also frequently wrote to The Press-Enterprise, a California based newspaper. Coincidentally, at one point he lived across the street from Bates in Riverside, and it’s strongly speculated that he had her diary in his possession at his home. Just for the record, I saw in a different source that he resided across the street from Ramona High School, and only lived near Bates. It was also noted that whenever the Zodiac was brought up in conversation he would get irrationally angry, and seemed really hung-up on Bob Barnett (much more on him later). Kelley would eventually turn out to be a pedophile, and between January 2003 and December 2004 he molested two seven year old girls. In November 2011 he pled guilty to more than nine felonies for his atrocities and was sentenced to 24 years in prison.  Just an interesting tidbit (and I know it’s a bit late in the article for this, I just wanted to make sure I give them the proper credit), the same Redditor mentioned that Cheri Jo was afraid of the dark, and the route she took with her killer the night of her death happened to be considered ‘a very scary dark alley.’

I’m only bringing this person up in an attempt to be complete (because there is absolutely no evidence of any wrongdoing against him), but another name I came across in relation to the murder of Cheri Jo Bates is Gerald Peterson, a teacher from her alma mater, Ramona High School. A Redditor going by the handle ‘ahlimatter’ in the group ‘ZodiacKiller’ pointed out that Peterson happened to teach various mathematics courses at the school, which is alarming since the Zodiac Killer was fond of using higher level math in his codes. Aside from this pure speculation and Mr. Peterson’s deep love for math, nothing officially links him to the murder of Bates.

In his 2009 book titled ‘Most Evil,’ former LAPD investigator Steve Hodel alleges that his father, Dr. George Hill Hodel, was responsible for the murder of Cheri Jo Bates. This ‘confession’ has been taken with a grain of salt, as there is little evidence to back up his claim, and on top of his father being the Zodiac Killer, Hodel claims that he is also responsible for the death of Elizabeth Short and ‘The Lipstick Murders.’ Short, who is often referred to as ‘The Black Dahlia,’ was found naked and cut in half in a vacant lot in the Leimert Park area of LA on January 15, 1947. Her remains were completely drained of blood, which left her skin a pallid white; as of July 2024 her murder remains unsolved. William Heirens was a possible serial killer who confessed to killing three women while under extreme duress and was given the nickname after a message in lipstick was found at the scenes of one of his murders. Despite being incarcerated from 1946 until his death in 2012, Heirens recanted his confession almost immediately and claimed he was the victim of ‘coercive interrogation and police brutality.’ Steve Hodel met Heirens in 2003 and tried to get him out of prison but his efforts were in vain. The only charges Dr. Hodel were ever brought up on were for raping his daughter, of which he was acquitted; he died on May 17, 1999. There is no actual evidence that proves he is the Zodiac Killer.

In October 2021 a group of retired police officers, intelligence officers, and journalists calling themselves ‘The Case Breakers’ claimed to have solved Bates’ murder, and that she was killed by an individual named Gary Francis Poste. They said that among the evidence was the fact that Poste was a painter by trade, which may have explained why the discarded Timex watch had paint flecks on it; he also had brown hair, which might be a match to what was found under Bates’ fingernails. Additionally, at the time of the murder he was receiving care at the nearby March Air Force Base for an ‘accidental’ gunshot wound. All of this was met with extreme skepticism from the RPD, and according to the gossip rag TMZ The Code Breakers claimed that the department had refused their request to submit the hair samples that were found beneath her fingernails for DNA testing. In response to this accusation, the Riverside PD denied that they received any such plea from the group, and maintained that no evidence exists that links Bates homicide to the later Zodiac Killer and that they ‘strongly believe her murderer was native to Riverside County.’

One individual that didn’t come across my radar until right before I was about to release this piece was William Lester Suff, who (according to the website ‘ZodiacCiphers.com’) was a 16 year old high school student that lived close to Riverside at the time Bates was killed. I’m not going to spend much time on this person because I don’t think he has any real ties to the case, but in 1995 Suff was convicted of the murders of 12 women in Riverside County CA (keep in mind this was after being released from a 10-year bid for killing his two-month-old daughter, Dijanet). It’s actually suspected that Suff may have committed up to 22 murders between 1986 and 1992, and according to a LA Times article, he mostly went after prostitutes and drug users. Every victim was either strangled or stabbed (or both), and three of them had been mutilated (he cut a breast off each one). I came across nothing that would make me think Suff had anything to do with the murder of Bates.

A second name I came across at the very end of my research is Robert R. Houser, who was mentioned in a letter from a crime reporter for The Vallejo Times-Herald named Dave Peterson to an individual simply named ‘Jerry’ (who quite possibly could be Jerry Carroll, Riverside’s former Police Chief) that was sent sometime in the 1970’s. The correspondence discusses Houser in relation to the murder of Bates, and according to ‘TapaTalk’ website user ‘bobloblawslawblog,’ its ‘tone and wording seems to indicate (at least to me) that Peterson came to be interested in Houser separate from that murder and is now trying to connect him to it.’ Houser was employed at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, which is roughly a seven hour drive from Riverside, although it isn’t clear if he worked there at the time the letter was written or the time of Bates’ murder. Like Suff, I could find nothing linking Houser to Bates.

I saved the most interesting suspect for last: Another individual that I consistently came across during my research is that of a man going by the name ‘Bob Barnett.’ Most likely due to the fact that he is still alive, Barnetts true identity has never been made public by LE but in online discussions of the case he was given that pseudonym. Barnett was also a student at RCC in the fall of 1966 and according to the website ‘ZodiacKiller.com,’ he dated Bates in the weeks prior to her murder. Now, I know what you’re thinking: didn’t she just get engaged to a guy named Dennis Highland? How was she also with this Bob guy? Well, what I think happened was she may have dated around a little bit here and there while Highland was in San Francisco, but after they got engaged she cut off all romantic entanglements with any lingering men. I mean, my Grandma encouraged all of her granddaughters to date around and strongly discouraged us to ‘go steady with just one fella’ (she was even against my parents getting engaged and my mother was twenty and they were together until her death for forty-four years). I think it was just a different time back then. I did, however, come across a comment in a website somewhere that said Cheri Jo was faithful to Dennis and wouldn’t have cheated on him, so I guess I’m really not sure what to think. Oddly enough, in the days following Bates’ untimely death a TV station in LA filmed an interview with two young women that claimed they were friends of hers, and that she told them she was ‘going to meet her boyfriend’ on the night of her death. LE eventually dismissed that story as false, as there was no real reason to believe that she planned to do anything else that evening other than go to the RCC library.

After the supposed break-up, the pair got into a public argument somewhere on the RCC campus just days before she was killed, one that was apparently so fiery that he slapped her. Another student that was walking by heard Barnett say to her, ‘have you changed your mind yet?’

On the evening of Cheri’s murder Barnett was playing basketball with friends and she (somehow, as cell phones didn’t exist) reached out to him (for reasons that still remain unknown), and he left the game right away, saying to his buddies ‘that bitch is going to the library.’ He was initially cleared of suspicion immediately after the murder, but became a main suspect around 1968 after the RPD spoke with an informant claiming he bragged to him about being responsible. The informant was incarcerated at the time he came forward but passed a polygraph test, and over the years his story hasn’t changed once.

At roughly 1:30 AM on October 31 neighbors that lived close to the RCC campus noticed two men near the scene of the murder walking around with flashlights that appeared to be searching for something; after roughly 15 minutes, they left. This report made detectives strongly suspect that Barnett had an accomplice, and it’s worth mentioning that his best friend failed a polygraph test. At the advice of his attorney, Bob would later take a lie detector test as well, and where he cooperated at first after being asked some ‘tough questions’ he simply refused to say a word. After a bit of back and forth with the administrator, he finally said, ‘get him the fuck out of here.’

In the early 1990’s nearly thirty years after Cheri Jo’s murder, Barnett’s former best friend finally came clean that he had seen him at roughly 2:30 AM on October 31, 1966 after ‘accidentally’ running into him at ‘The Green Turtle,’ a local eatery; Bob then asked the friend for a ride to campus in help him look for something that he had lost. The unnamed man refused to admit that he had any knowledge that a crime had taken place and eventually was talked into taking a polygraph test, which showed he was being mostly truthful except when it came to questions that may have implicated himself in Bates murder.

A second friend of the suspect came forward and told investigators that a hysterical Barnett came to him early in the morning of October 31, 1966 saying that he had ‘snuffed Cheri;’ this individual was also administered a polygraph test and passed. It’s worth mentioning that where Barnett had no military training or ties, his sister worked at the Norton Air Force Base at the time of the Bates murder, which may explain the discarded watch and military shoe prints that were found near the scene. It’s worth mentioning, Riverside PD do not consider his sister as being a possible accomplice, and the assumption is that she may have given him the watch and shoes as a present of some sort. Family members of Barnett did tell LE that he had a watch similar to the one that was found at the crime scene, but they never saw it again after Cheri Jo was killed.

As I mentioned earlier, when investigators were examining Cheri’s remains they found two to three strands of hair in ‘a clot of blood and tissue’ in the palm of her hand. At the time of Bates murder in the mid-1960’s the technology that was available only showed that they belonged to a white male with ‘sandy-brown hair,’ and coincidentally Barnett is a Caucasian male that had the same color hair… but now that I think about it, other Zodiac suspect Ross Sullivan had blonde hair, so this evidence could technically rule him out.

For years, police were interested in Barnett but didn’t have enough evidence to build a case against him, and it wasn’t until December 1998 that information was received that he was returning to the Riverside area for Christmas from the Philippines (he seems to have lived most of his life outside of the US). According to Redditor ‘efficient-invite,’ when he was approached by the detectives they claimed ‘he had an attitude like, how did it take you so long to catch me?’ RPD managed to get a warrant and met Barnett upon his arrival at Ontario Airport, and took skin, saliva, hair and other samples from him, which were then sent to the FBI Laboratory in Quantico, VA for testing. His DNA was compared to the sample that was found on Bates the night of her murder, and he was cleared of any wrongdoing. Despite this, there are some members of the true crime community that feel he is still somehow involved, and that he had some sort of accomplice that did all of his dirty work.

Riverside Detective Jim Simons has admitted that there is one lingering suspect that is remains of interest to the Riverside PD. In 2016, an article published by The Press-Enterprise said that the department strongly felt that they knew the identity of Bates’ murderer, but due to lack of evidence they were unable to arrest and charge this man.

Memorial Scholarship: After the loss of his sister, Michael Bates established a memorial scholarship at Riverside City College in her honor. The award, titled ‘The Cheri Jo Bates Memorial Endowed Scholarship,’ is given to an individual majoring in music, specifically one focusing on the piano or organ. The recipient should also be active in extracurricular activities, demonstrate financial need, participate in some form of volunteering, and be able to maintain a ‘B’ average.

Aftermath: For reasons that were never made known to the public, the remains of Cheri Jo Bates were exhumed in 1982 by her family and were cremated; her ashes were then spread out to sea. Sadly, Irene Bates died of suicide from strychnine poisoning in early July 1969; at the time of her death, she lived at the Swiss Inn Care Home on Main Street in Riverside. Her body was discovered in her room on July 4, however it’s strongly speculated that she ingested the poison (that was in the form of gopher pesticide) on July 2. Mr. Bates died at the age of eighty on December 29, 1999, in Cayuga, NY. Michael Bates is still alive (as of July 2024). Cheri’s one time fiancé Dennis married a woman named Katherine Jan Rochek on June 7, 1969; the couple had three children together and he found employment in sales at Xerox. Highland is still alive and living in California. The murder of Cheri Jo Bates remains one of Riverside’s most infamous cold cases.

Works Cited:
Dowd, Katie. (March 4, 2020). ‘There’s almost no evidence Earl Van Best Jr. was the Zodiac Killer.’ Taken July 11, 2024 from sfgate.com/crime/article/Zodiac-Killer-Earl-Van-Best-Gary-Stewart-fx-show-15105150.php
Getz, Dana. (November 17, 2017). ‘This New Show Thinks It Can Finally Figure Out Who The Zodiac Killer Is.’ Taken on July 5, 2024 from bustle.com/p/who-is-ross-sullivan-the-hunt-for-the-zodiac-killer-explores-a-popular-theory-5465516
Walker, Dion. (2021). ‘Tragedy in Riverside: The Murder of Cheri Jo Bates.’ Taken July 16.2024 from sites.google.com/view/tragedy-in-riverside/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Cheri_Jo_Bates

A picture of Cheri Jo sitting at her piano with her brother Michael and their dog, ‘Jiggs’ from 1965.
Some members of the Bates family. From left: Teresa Horacek-Mazourek, Frank Merkwan, Irene Bates, Cecelia Mazourek-Karolevitz-Merkvan; the two children in the front are Michael and Cheri Jo Bates. Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
A picture of Cheri Jo and her dog ‘Jiggs’ from 1964.
Cheri Jo Bates from 1957.
Cheri Jo Bates with her dad, Joseph (middle) and brother, Michael (far left). Photo courtesy of ZodiacKillerFacts.
Cheri Jo Bates posing with her fellow homecoming princess candidates at Ramona High School. Photo courtesy of ZodiacKillerFacts.
Some pictures of Cheri Jo Bates from the 1964 Ramona High School yearbook.
Bates in a group shot fro the 1964 Ramona High School yearbook.
Bates in a group shot from the 1964 Ramona High School yearbook.
Bates in a group shot for ‘Keeping up in Classwork’ from the 1964 Ramona High School yearbook.
Cheri Jo Bates junior picture from the 1965 Ramona High School yearbook.
Cheri Jo Bates posing with some fellow varsity cheerleaders from the 1965 Ramona High School yearbook.
Bates in a group shot from the 1965 Ramona High School yearbook.
Cheri Jo Bates senior picture from the 1966 Ramona High School yearbook.
Cheri Jo Bates and her fiance, Dennis Highland.
A picture of Cheri dated December 28, 1963. Photo courtesy of Kenneth L. Mains.
Cheri Jo Bates in her college library; she is on the right side looking down at a book.
The Bates family information from the 1950 US Federal Census.
The house Bates lived in at the time of her murder with her dad located at 4195 Via San Jose in Riverside, CA.
The Confession Letter, also known as ‘The z408 Cipher.’ Sent 30 days after Cheri’s death on November 29, 1966, two nearly identical typewritten letters were sent to the Riverside PD and the Riverside Press Enterprise. In these letters, the author claimed responsibility for the murder and gave gruesome, unreleased details of the murder that (at the time) only LE and the killer would have known.
The note Cheri Jo left her dad before she left for the RCC Library.
The injuries Bates sustained. Photo courtesy of ‘ZodiacCiphers.com’
Ramona High School, where Bates attended and graduated from. Photo courtesy of ZodiacKiller.
A picture of the crime scene the morning of Cheri Jo Bates murder; her body is on the right side of the pathway. After her murder the houses were torn down and the area was turned into a parking lot and was eventually paved and replaced with new buildings.
The body of Cheri Jo Bates, with a police car behind it. She was found on a dirt pathway between two old fascia board homes that had recently been purchased by RCC. Walking through it in the dark one could have easily mistaken the area for being deserted, and it didn’t help that the shrubbery in the front was overgrown, making it hard to see.
Investigators standing over the remains of Bates. Photo courtesy of ZodiacKiller.
Investigators looking at the crime scene from the murder of Cheri Jo Bates. Picture courtesy of The Press-Enterprise.
Riverside detectives Bob Walters (l) and Earl Brown using a metal detector to search through the shrubbery near the site of where Cheri Jo Bates as killed.
An officer at the crime scene of the murder of Bates. About the killer, the Chief Psychologist at Patton State Hospital said in July 1967: ‘He is obsessed and pathologically preoccupied with intense hatred against female figures, all the more so if he sees the young woman as attractive. Because of his own unconscious feelings of inadequacy, he is not likely to act out his feelings sexually, but in fantasy, as a rule. The fantasy can take on aggressive aspects … I would like to emphasize that there is a real possibility that he can become homicidal again.’
An officer at the crime scene of the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.
If you notice the car on the left, Bates body was found roughly five feet from its bumper.
A picture of the pathway where Bates was found killed taken in 1967.
New lights at the scene where Cheri Bates was killed.
A Photo of a Studebaker similar to the one seen on the evening of Bates murder. Photo courtesy of Dion Walker.
The Timex watch found at the scene of Bates murder.
Another shot of the time piece found at the scene of Bates murder (the picture was taken in the police station).
Cheri Jo Bates lime green, 1960 VW VEetle.
The inside of Bates lime green 1960 VW Bug, with the three library books on its front seat. This means she most likely made it to her car after she left the library.
The library books insides of Bates car.
The poem found underneath the desk at RCC in December 1966.
This OLD photo gives a perspective of where Cheri’s car was reported to have been parked on the RCC campus. Courtesy of Craig Rhodes.
The approximate area of where Bates car was found the morning after her murder. Photo courtesy of YouTuber ‘The Horror Quarters Podcast.’
The approximate area of where Bates car was found compared to where the four workmen were. Photo courtesy of YouTuber ‘The Horror Quarters Podcast.’
Another shot of the approximate area of where Bates car was found and where the four workmen were. Photo courtesy of YouTuber ‘The Horror Quarters Podcast.’
A drawing of the layout of Terracina Drive, which shows where the parking lot was in relation to the Library. Courtesy of Craig Rhodes.
Some picture of the RCC Library and how it looked in the mid 1960’s.
The pants Cheri Jo was wearing the night she was murdered.
The droplet of blood that caught cold case detective Ken Mains attention. Photo courtesy of Dion Walker.
Bates death certificate. Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
A possible Zodiac letter sent after the murder of Cheri Jo Bates on November 29, 1966. The paper (possibly teletype paper) had its top and bottom ripped off, possibly in a way that made it harder to trade.
All three of the ‘Bate’s had to Die’ Letters, aka the Riverside Letters, sent on April 30, 1967.
A picture from Cheri Jo’s funeral. Taken from The Riverside Press on November 5, 1966.
Sherwood Morrill.
An article about the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.
An article about the murder of Cheri Jo Bates published by The San Francisco Examiner on October 31, 1966.
An article about Cheri Jo Bates published by The Sacramento Bee on October 31, 1966.
An article about Bates murder published by The Napa Valley Register on November 1, 1966.
An article about Bates murder published by The Daily Oklahoman on November 1, 1966.
An article about Cheri Jo Bates published by The Salt Lake Tribune on November 1, 1966. 
An article about Bates published by The Press-Courier on November 2, 1966.
An article about Cheri Jo Bates published in The Press on November 5, 1966.
An article about the murder of Cheri Jo Bates published in The Press on November 8, 1966.
Part one of an article about the reenactment of Cheri Jo’s murder published by The Press on November 16, 1966.
Part two of an article about the reenactment of Cheri Jo’s murder published by The Press on November 16, 1966.
An article about the murder of Bates published by The Press-Telegram on November 16, 1966.
An article about a later attack that mentions Bates published by The San Bernadino Sun on December 9, 1966.
An article about Bates being a potential Zodiac published by The Times on November 16, 1970.
An article about the murder of Bates in relation to the Zodiac published by The LA Times on November 16, 1970.
An article about the connection of Cheri Jo Bates and the Zodiac published by The Times on November 16, 1970.
An article about the connection of Cheri Jo Bates and the Zodiac published by The San Bernardino County Sun on November 17, 1970.
An article about the connection of Cheri Jo Bates and the Zodiac published by The Daily Report on November 17, 1970.
An article about the connection of Cheri Jo Bates and the Zodiac published by The Star-News on November 17, 1970.
An article about the connection of Cheri Jo Bates and the Zodiac Killer published in The News Journal on November 19, 1970.
An article about a possible connection between Bates and the Zodiac published in The News Journal on November 19, 1970.
An article about a possible connection between Bates and the Zodiac published by The Desert Sun on November 19, 1970.
Part one of an article from Argosy magazine that was published in March 1971, courtesy of ‘forum.zodiackillerciphers.’
Part two of an article from Argosy magazine that was published in March 1971, courtesy of ‘forum.zodiackillerciphers.’
An article about Bates possibly being a victim of the Zodiac, published by The San Francisco Examiner
on March 16, 1971.
Part one of an article about Bates published by The San Bernardino County Sun on May 16, 1982.
Part two of an article about Bates published by The San Bernardino County Sun on May 16, 1982.
An article about a possible connection between Bates and the Zodiac published by The Press Democrat on May 21, 1982. 
Part one of an article about The Zodiac Killer that mentions Cheri Jo Bates published in The World on May 8, 1996.
Page two of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The San Francisco Examiner
on May 8, 1994.
Page three of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The San Francisco Examiner
on May 8, 1994.
Page four of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The San Francisco Examiner
on May 8, 1994.
Page five of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The San Francisco Examiner
on May 8, 1994.
Part one of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The Napa Valley Register
on September 27, 1999.
Part two of an article about the Zodiac mentioning Bates published by The Napa Valley Register
on September 27, 1999.
An article about the Zodiac mentioning Cheri Jo Bates published by The Union Democrat on March 2, 2007.
Page one of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. ‘ZodiacRevisited’ website user ‘Morf13’ provided them with the following eleven page document. The documents pertain to mitochondrial DNA and hair analysis done on evidence from the Cheri Jo Bates murder. In particular, it was done at the request of the Riverside Police Department in an attempt to incriminate their prime suspect. Unfortunately, for them, it ended up clearing him. The analysis itself was performed between 1999 and 2000. The documents are interesting for numerous reasons, not the least of which are the significant details they provide regarding the physical evidence that was used to generate the mitochondrial DNA profile. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page two of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page three of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page four of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page five of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page six of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page seven of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page eight of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page nine of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page ten of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Page eleven of the Cheri Jo Bates Evidence Analysis. Courtesy of ‘ZodiacRevisited.’
Bundy’s whereabouts in 1966 according to the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
Zodiac suspect, Ross Sullivan.
Another picture of Ross Sullivan.
An article about Sullivan’s indecent exposure arrest published in The Santa Cruz Sentinel on February 6, 1968.
Oddly enough, this is a letter about one Zodiac suspect written to another.
Zodiac suspect, Arthur Leigh Allen.
Earl Van Best Jr.
Jack Tarrance.
Richard Marshall.
Richard Gaikowski.
Bruce Davis (left).
A picture of Gerald Peterson from the 1964 Ramona High School yearbook.
A picture of Gerald Peterson from the 1965 Ramona High School yearbook.
George Hodel.
Gary Francis Poste.
William Lester Suff.
A screen shot of the details for the Cheri Jo Bates scholarship.
A notice about the $50,000 private reward that was offered for information leading to the the arrest and conviction of the persons responsible for the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.
An advertisement from August 2021 for a $50,000 reward for information leading to the the arrest and conviction of the persons responsible for the murder of Cheri Jo Bates.
Irene Karolevitz in the 1920’s.
Mr. Bates WWII draft card.
The grave site for Cheri Jo’s sister, Bonnie Jo Bates. She is buried in Saint Mary’s Catholic Cemetery
in Dante, SD.
Michael Bates senior year photo from the 1965 Ramona High School yearbook. In an interview with Inland Empire Magazine, he said ‘I’ve always felt that Cheri was killed by someone she knew. She would not have walked into a dark alley with a stranger.’
Mrs. Bates death certificate.
Mrs. Bates obituary published in The Daily Republic on July 8, 1969.
Mrs. Bates grave site.
The RCC librarians in 1966.
The RCC librarians.
A ss from the FB group, ‘ The Cheri Jo Bates Discussion Group.’