Margaret Elizabeth Bowman.

Margaret Elizabeth Bowman was born on January 6, 1957 to Jack and Runelle (nee Karnes) Bowman in Honokaa, Hawaii. Jackson Harrison Bowman III was born on October 26, 1930 in Chattanooga, TN and Mrs. Bowman was born on May 19, 1932 in Denton, TX. Margaret is also the great-great-granddaughter of Pinellas County pioneer Daniel McMullen and the great-niece of Donald C. Bowman (a prominent attorney). The couple were married on December 27, 1954 in Dallas TX and had two children together: Margaret and her younger brother, Jackson H. Bowman IV (b. May 12, 1961).

Mr. Bowman attended Southern Methodist University in Dallas, where he was a ROTC cadet. He joined the Air Force and became a pilot, and flew Trans-Pacific routes from bases in California, Hawaii, Utah and Japan; he also served his Country as an Operations Staff Officer in Saigon Vietnam where he flew combat missions, earning a Bronze Star. While ‘getting his wings,’ in 1953 he went on a blind date with Runelle, who was a Braniff Airways flight attendant at the time and the pair were together ever since. In December 1973 Jack retired from the US Air Force with the aeronautical rating of command pilot and the rank of lieutenant colonel. The following year he began his second career in the real estate business in St. Petersburg, where he served as president of the local Realtor Association and was an officer of the Florida Association of Realtors.

Always Margaret from the first grade on (never Peggy or Maggie), she always requested to be called by her full name. Tall and willowy, with chestnut hair and warm brown eyes, Bowman had her mother’s strong features as well as her delicate nose. As a little girl, she would sit in her father’s lap while he read her Peter Rabbit, and if he stopped for any reason she would pick up where he left off, reciting the book completely from memory, and when her grandparents gave her a copy of ‘The Secret Garden’ at the age of ten, she devoured it, and read it over and over again.

In Margaret’s early years the Bowman family moved around a lot, but in 1973 they settled down in St. Petersburg, FL during her time in high school and college. During her junior and senior years in high school Bowman was a member of the drama club, the Civinettes service club, the scuba diving club, and the tennis team, and in her senior year she served as the president of the French Club and the French National Honor Society, ‘Le Cercle Francais;’ she also enjoyed playing chess with her brother.

At the time of her murder, Bowman was 21 years old and a junior art history major (she had a deep love for classical civilizations) at Florida State University in Tallahassee and was a member of the Gamma Chapter of the Chi Omega sorority. She joined the Chi Omega’s because her grandmother (who was also named Margaret) had pledged there as well. She lived in room number nine in their house on West Jefferson Street, and was described by her sisters as ‘very religious’ but very sweet and easy to get along with. Margaret was rush chairman for the Chi Oh’s and was a member of the schools senate, and in January 1978, she was learning to sew and was working on making a green velveteen dress.

On the evening prior to their murders, both Bowman and her sorority sister Lisa Levy had been at Sherrod’s, a disco-like bar that was located right next door to their house, but whether Bundy saw them there is unknown. According to The Tallahassee Democrat on January 17, 1978, Margaret was invited to go out for a late night burger at an all-night diner  on the evening she was killed but she turned them down, deciding to go to bed instead.

In the early morning hours of January 15, 1978, Bowman was attacked as she was asleep in her second story bedroom as well as three other coeds: Lisa Levy, Karen Chandler, and Kathy Kleiner were found brutally attacked in their beds. Kleiner and Chandler survived, but Margaret and Levy did not. Using blood samples from the four women, forensic serologist (which is a scientist that studies bodily fluids) Richard L. Stephens proved that Lisa Levy and Margaret Bowman were bludgeoned before Kleiner and Chandler.

According to author Steve Winn, responding Tallahassee police officer Bill Newkirk went into Margaret’s room first and he assessed the damage: the young coed laid on her bed in a limp, awkward pose and she had a pair of panty hose cinched around her neck (knotted at the windpipe); her lifeless eyes stared blankly in front of her, and her mouth was gaped open. She had experienced a substantial blow to the head and had a large puncture on the left side of her cranium as well. There was blood everywhere, which had largely accumulated around her shoulders and head and there was also a bloody palm print on the wall that had already started to dry. Despite the massive head wound that Bowman had, the medical examiner concluded that both her and Levy died as a result of strangulation.

According to Officer Newkirk: ‘Ms. Bowman was lying on the bed in the south-west corner of the room with her head and feet pointing in the south-north direction, respectively. The bed spread was covering Ms. Bowman’s entire body with the exception of her head, which was tilted to the right lying on her pillow. Her face was facing the west wall. This writer pulled back the cover bedspread and observed Ms. Bowman had been strangled with a pair of nylon panty hose. Her legs were bent outwardly slightly and spread open. Ms. Bowman was lying on her stomach. Her right arm was extended down her side and her left arm was bent with her elbow facing east and her left hand resting on her back. Both palms of the hands were turned upward. This writer turned Ms. Bowman over onto her right side to check for a heartbeat or pulse and discovered neither. This writer looked at Ms. Bowman’s head and observed where Ms. Bowman had received a crushing blow to her right forehead coupled with what appeared to be puncture wounds in the same vicinity. Massive bleeding occurred from both the forehead and the right ear. Additionally Ms. Bowman’s neck appeared to be disjointed leading this writer to believe there was a possible neck fracture. Ms. Bowman’s body was relatively warm to the touch and her eyes were glassy with pupils dilated.’

As we all know, Margaret’s killer would later be identified as Ted Bundy, who was first arrested in Granger, Utah in August 1975. After being found guilty of attempted kidnapping on March 2, 1976, Bundy escaped (for the second time) from Glenwood Springs jail in Colorado on December 31, 1977, and over the course of a few days he slowly made his way to the sunshine state, arriving by bus on January 6, 1978. He secured housing at ‘The Oaks’ rooming house the following day, and was seen next to the Chi Omega house late in the day on January 14, 1978.

At 2:00 AM on January 15, 1978 Bundy left Sharrod’s Bar and approximately a half hour later entered the Chi Omega house and began his assault on the four sleeping coeds. It’s strongly believed that Margaret was attacked while in her bed at about 2:45 AM; she had been sexually assaulted and beaten with a piece of firewood, then strangled to death with a Hanes stocking. At 3:17 AM Nita Neary arrived home from a date when she heard unusual noises coming from the upstairs, and suddenly a man came running downstairs then out the door; police were immediately called and nine minutes later they arrived on the scene.

After fleeing the Chi Omega house Bundy made his way about eight blocks over to Dunwoody Street, where at 4:37 AM he broke into the basement apartment of Cheryl Thomas. He brutally attacked the 21-year-old dance major and left her for dead; her skull was broken in five places and she suffered from a dislocated shoulder and fractured jaw. Thomas survived, but due to the permanent loss of equilibrium that she suffered from the attack essentially ended her dance career.

Thankfully before the media broke the news the families of the victims were notified of what happened in the early morning hours of January 15, 1978. The attacks at Florida State shook the Tallahassee community, and the perpetrator remained unidentified for nearly a month. Bundy was arrested for the final time at 1:30 AM on February 15, 1978, but not before he killed 12 year old Kimberly Diane Leach in Lake City, Florida; he was identified two days later. On July 7, 1978 he was indicted for the Chi Omega attacks and after standing trial was given the death sentence for the murders; he was executed on January 24, 1989.

Margaret was one of the few victims whose murder Bundy was ever charged with, and in the days before his execution he confessed to thirty murders, including hers. After their daughter’s death the Bowman family found peace within their church, St. Thomas Episcopal on Snell Isle. Mrs. Bowman said: ‘We decided that the only acceptable way to continue on with our lives was to live life to the fullest and not become bitter old people that no one wanted to be around.’

If Margaret Bowman were alive in December 2024, she would be 67 years old. Her parents thought she would have found happiness working at a museum, possibly involving art or archaeology and would probably be married with children of her own. In 1987, Jack and Runelle Bowman donated a cross in their daughter’s name at St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church in St. Petersburg, where Margaret once belonged. Runelle said that God blessed her with ‘a non-feeling’ when it came to the man that killed her daughter, and she didn’t hate him or even think about him. Instead she turned to her faith, and went to church every Sunday, where she would look at the cross dedicated to Margaret and remember her memory. According to Mrs. Bowman, ‘we decided that the only acceptable way to continue on with our lives was to live life to the fullest and not become bitter old people that no one wanted to be around.’

After Margaret was murdered Runelle Bowman went back to school and earned her Bachelor’s degree in business from the University of South Florida in 1982. After graduating and getting a job in her field she never missed an opportunity to cook a good meal for someone she loved, and her ‘food offerings’ helped serve as a great reminder of how much she loved her family and friends.

On the morning of Bundy’s execution Jack Bowman couldn’t sleep, and as dawn crept near he and Runelle turned on their television set. As seven o’clock came and went, somewhere inside of Florida State Prison the last person to see Margaret alive was being strapped into the electric chair. According to an article published by The Tampa Bay Times, at 7:18 AM they were notified by Paul Freeman from the attorney general’s office that their daughter’s killer had finally been put to death. Freeman’s position had only recently been created mostly due to the efforts of Diane Cossin, a Chi Omega sorority sister who held Lisa Levy as she died.

Following the call, the couple heard horns and fireworks going off in the distance, and on the news saw crudely made signs supporting Bundy’s death and felt a little sickened. About the execution, Mrs. Bowman said: ‘I don’t understand. You don’t see any of the victims’ families acting that way.’ As they watched their TV they saw an eyewitness to the execution describe Ted as looking scared, but that he had managed to retain a sense of dignity. Jack Bowman was glad to hear that, saying: ‘I didn’t have a motivation of vengeance. I had a motivation of justice.’ In the days following Bundy’s death, someone asked about his feelings regarding the execution, to which he replied, ‘I wanted him punished, This was not hard for me,’ and when asked to talk more about Margaret, he began to cry then shut his eyes, saying ‘I don’t think I can.’

After retiring Jack and Runelle decided to stay in Florida because of the kindness they had received from the community when they were on deployment. According to his son, Mr. Bowman was someone that never forgot a face or said an unkind word about anyone, and enjoyed a good meal at a fine restaurant with loved ones. About her husband, Runelle said ‘I was so blessed to have Jack as my husband. He made me a better person. He could connect with people and people loved him.’ The couple were married for over sixty years when Jack died of esophageal cancer at the age of 84 on May 31, 2015. Runelle Bowman passed away peacefully at the age of 88 on March 13, 2021.

No photo description available.
The Bowman family.
Margaret and her little brother.
Margaret and a friend working on Red Cross friendship boxes published on The Tampa Bay Times on August 3, 1969.
Margaret Bowman’s junior picture from the 1974 St. Petersburg High School yearbook.
Margaret Bowman’s senior picture from the 1975 St. Petersburg High School yearbook.
Margaret Bowman in a group picture for the Civigrams from the 1975 St. Petersburg High School yearbook.
Margaret in a picture from her time on the tennis team at St. Petersburg High School.
Margaret in high school.
Bowman.
Margaret Bowman.
Margaret
Bowman and some friends.
Bowman and some friends at FSU.
Bowman at a dance, with a date.
Bowman
The crime scene of Chi Omega victim, Margaret Bowman. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West. It’s speculated that the entire crime spree took Bundy less than fifteen minutes.
Margaret Bowman, who was murdered while defenseless in her bed. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
Chi Omega victim, Margaret Bowman. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
Chi Omega victim, Margaret Bowman. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
Chi Omega victim, Margaret Bowman. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
Chi Omega victim, Margaret Bowman. Photo courtesy of Vanessa West.
Lisa Levy.
Bundy being read his indictment by Sheriff Ken Katsaris.
The grave of Margaret Bowman.
The Chi Omega House right after the murders took place in 1978. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another shot of the Chi Omega House right after the murders. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another shot of the Chi Omega House right after the murders. I love the old LE vehicle parked out front. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
The unlocked door of the Chi Omega House that Bundy snuck into. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
An area outside of the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
A shot of the logs outside of the Chi Omega house Bundy used to attack the four sleeping co-eds. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another shot of the logs outside the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
One of the beds in the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another one of the beds in the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another bed from the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another bed from the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
Another bed at Chi Oh.
Another bed at Chi Oh.
A picture of one of the bedrooms in the Chi Omega house after Bundy’s murders.
A picture of a hallway at the Chi Omega house after Bundy’s murders.
The layout of the rooms at the Chi Omega house in January 1978.
An advertisement for Sherrod’s Disco published in the Florida Flambeau on January 28, 1978. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at FSU published in The Boca Raton News on January 16, 1978.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at FSU published in The Miami Herald on January 16, 1978.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at FSU published in The Fort Pierce Tribune on January 17, 1978.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at Florida State University that mentions Bowman published in The Tallahassee Democrat on January 17, 1978.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at FSU that mentions Margaret Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on January 20, 1978.
An article about Bundy’s attacks at FSU published in The Pensacola News Journal on January 22, 1978.
An article about stolen credit cards and student ID’s published in Florida Today on February 21, 1978.
According
A newspaper article about Margaret Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on November 28, 1999.
Ted’s whereabouts in January 1978 according to the TB 1992 FBI Multiagency Investigative Team Report.
A comment on a YouTube video about Margaret Bowman.
A newspaper blurb about Runelle Bowman being crowned the Bronco’s Basketball Sweetheart published in The Denton Record-Chronicle on February 15, 1948.
Runelle’s Bowman’s junior year picture from the 1948 Denton High School yearbook.
Runelle’s Bowman’s senior year picture from the 1949 Denton High School yearbook
A picture of Margaret’s mom from the 1948 Denton High School yearbook.
Jack and Runelle Bowman’s wedding announcement published in The Tampa Tribune on December 31, 1954.
Mr. and Mrs. Bowman’s marriage license.
Jackson Bowman IV in a picture from the 1976 St. Petersburg High School yearbook.
Jackson Bowman IV in a picture published in the Tampa Bay Times on January 16, 1978
Jackson Bowen IV’s wedding announcement published in The Miami Herald on March 4, 1990.
A newspaper clipping about the Bowman’s joining the Dragon Club published in The Tampa Bay Times on April 15, 1983.
A picture of Jack Bowman published in The Miami Herald on November 8, 1994.
Jack Bowman.
The Tampa Bay Times on June 3, 2015.
Runelle Bowman.
Mrs. Bowman’s obituary published in Tampa Bay Times on April 2, 2021.
Jack Bowman’s grave stone.
The first part of an article mentioning Jack Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on January 25, 1989.
The second part of an article mentioning Jack Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on January 25, 1989
A quote by Jack Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on January 25, 1989.
An article about former Governor Martinez’s re-election campaign that mentions Jack Bowman published in The South Florida Sun Sentinel on April 21, 1990.
A snippet of a newspaper that mentions Jack Bowman published in The Tampa Bay Times on June 5, 1997.
An article about Bundy’s conduct in court that mentions Jack Bowman.
A letter from Jack Bowman to Larry D. Simpson dated June 7, 1979. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A second letter from Jack Bowman to Larry D. Simpson dated June 7, 1979. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A letter from Jack Bowman to Judge Stewart Hanson dated July 2, 1979. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Jack Bowman (on the far right) at a 1986 conference on victim advocacy. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.

Valerie Ann Duke.

Valerie Ann Duke was born on July 27, 1956 to Thomas and Elizabeth Ann (nee Porter) Duke in Mathis, Texas. Mr. Duke was born on September 15, 1931 Archer City, Archer, TX and Elizabeth was born on August 9, 1933 in Mathis, TX. The couple were wed on November 6, 1954 and had two children together: Valerie and her younger brother Thomas Wade Duke II (b. 1957). An Eagle Scout, Tom went on to earn his PhD in Oceanography at Texas A&M after serving as a Lieutenant in the US Air Force. At some time the family relocated to Tucson, AZ and in 1968 they moved to Gulf Breeze, Florida. The Duke family was Methodist, and before her death Valerie was a member of the Gulf Breeze United Methodist Church.

Information about her background was hard to come by, but I do know she graduated from Woodham High School in Pensacola in 1974 then went on to attend Florida State University in Tallahassee. After enrolling she pledged the Gamma Chapter of the Chi Omega society, and eventually moved into their house on West Jefferson Street; in early 1978 she lived across the hall from Lisa Levy, and next to Kathy Kleiner and Karen Chandler. On January 14, 1978 (which was the night before Bundy’s Chi Omega attacks) Duke decided to go home to her parents house for the weekend in Gulf Breeze, and was not present for the murders that took place the following evening.

On the first anniversary of the murders Valerie Duke dropped out of school, which according to her mother was ‘completely out of character for Valerie. She had broken up with her boyfriend and couldn’t seem to decide whether to stay in Tallahassee or come here.’ Her sorority sisters also said that she was having an incredibly difficult time processing the murders, and to make matters worse, according to her parents Bundy’s fingerprints were found in her room (even though I came across a shred of evidence that confirmed that).

But, Valerie believed it and on May 1, 1979 while driving in between her home in Gulf Breeze and Tallahassee the twenty-two year old* pulled her car off to the side of the road near the East River in Holley and shot herself; she died as a result of her injuries. Her remains were discovered at 6 PM later the day, roughly ten hours after she killed herself . Former Lieutenant Ron Boswell of the Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Department said Duke parked her car near the river, locked the doors, then shot herself with a .38 caliber pistol that was found inside of the car. Also according to Boswell, ‘a suicide note was found inside of the car, at this point we have no reason to suspect foul play.’ It’s strongly speculated by those that knew her well that survivors’ guilt drove Duke to take her own life, and after a communion service she was laid to rest at the Cenizo Hill Cemetery in Mathis, TX. * For the record, I have seen her age listed at both 20 and 22, but simple math puts her at 22 years old.

Thomas Wade Duke I retired from the US Environmental Protection Agency as their Laboratory Director of Marine Biological Research in Gulf Breeze, FL, and went on to work as an environmental consultant for five years. In 2006 Tom and Elizabeth moved from Florida to Woodstock, Georgia to be close to their son and his family. Dr. Thomas Duke died at the age of 79 on March 10, 2011 in Woodstock, Georgia, and Mrs. Duke passed away at the age of 84 after a lengthy illness on December 1, 2017 in Pensacola.

Valerie Duke’s senior year picture from the 1974 Woodham High School yearbook.
Duke in a picture from the Jayettes from the 1974 Woodham High School yearbook.
An article about the suicide of Valerie Ann Duke published in The Pensacola News on May 2, 1979.
Valerie Ann Duke’s obituary, published in The Pensacola News Journal on May 3, 1979.
A newspaper clipping about Duke’s graveside service published in The Corpus Christi Times on May 4, 1979.
An article about the suicide of Valerie Ann Duke published in The Mathis News on May 10, 1979.
Part one of an article about the Chi Omega murders published in The Miami Herald on January 24, 1989.
Part two of an article about the Chi Omega murders published in The Miami Herald on January 24, 1989.
An article about Valerie Duke published in The Tallahassee Democrat on January 25, 1989.
Duke’s grave stone.
The layout of the rooms at the Chi Omega sorority house.
A picture of the front of the Chi Omega house. Photo courtesy of the Oxygen Network.
Outside the Chi Omega house the morning after the murders. Photo courtesy of the Oxygen Network.
Valerie’s mother on her wedding day, from an article published in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times on November 7, 1954.
An article about Thomas Duke visiting his sisters published in The Baytown Sun on August 5, 1954. ·
A picture of Elizabeth Duke published in The Corpus Christi Times on September 26, 1954.
An article about Mrs. Elizabeth Duke published in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times on November 3, 1954.
A write-up about Valerie’s parents getting married published in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times on November 7, 1954.
The birth announcement of Valerie’s younger brother published in The Mathis News on August 9, 1957.
Valerie is mentioned in a local newspaper, published in The Mathis News on December 27, 1957.
An article that mentions Valerie published in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times on June 17, 1974.
Wade Duke’s junior year picture from 1974 Woodham High School yearbook.
An article about the marriage of Valerie’s brother published in The Pensacola News Journal
on August 12, 1979.
Mr. Duke’s obituary published in The Atlanta Constitution on March 15, 2011.
Elizabeth Duke’s obituary published in The Pensacola News Journal on December 5, 2017.
Elizabeth Duke’s obituary published in The Mathis News on December 14, 2017.