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Ted Bundy lived at this house while attending law school in Salt Lake City between September 1974 and September 1975. Almost immediately after he moved in women started mysteriously disappearing from both Utah and Colorado. At the time, the residence was a boarding house meaning multiple tenants rented rooms and shared basic common areas. While living here Ted occupied room two, which (when looking at it from the street) is on the second floor right above the porch.
Located on the right side of the residence is a fire escape that was added some time in the 1960’s; Ted supposedly used it frequently to come and go as he pleased in the middle of the night. There is an entrance to a cellar in the back of the house on the left side, and according to one of his house mates (who didn’t find it suspicious at the time), Bundy would sometimes go down there late at night.
Before he was put to death, Bundy confessed to bringing two of his victims back to his room: Debra Kent and Nancy Wilcox. He claimed that he left Kent in his room ‘for a period of time’ before he killed her, and eventually dumped her body in a canyon around 100 miles away; he also claimed to have left Wilcox in his room as well before he took her life. Obviously there’s a lot of doubts with these claims: how could he keep girls there for days at a time against their will completely undetected? After leaving this residence in September 1975 he moved about a mile away to 364 Douglas Street.


















On March 10, 1976, Louise Bundy penned an emotional plea to Judge Stewart Hanson on Ted’s behalf.





Robin Ann Graham was born on June 22, 1952 to Marvin and Beverly Graham. The family of eleven grew up at 2227 Lemoyne Street in the Silverlake-Los Feliz area of Los Angeles, California; Mr. Graham was employed with the Department of Water and Power. Described as having a big personality and an even bigger heart, at the time of her disappearance Robin stood 5’6” tall, weighed 125 pounds, and had dark brown eyes and long brown hair she wore parted down the middle. A naturally gifted student, Robin graduated from John Marshall High School in June 1970 and was attending Pierce College (a public community college in Woodland Hills, LA) as an art major; the ambitious young lady also worked PT at Pier 1 Imports in Hollywood. At the time of her disappearance Ms. Graham was in a healthy, long-term relationship and had a very busy social life.
The night before she disappeared on November 14th, 1970 (after dropping off a friend at home), Robin left her vehicle (a former black and white highway patrol car bought at auction) in the Pier 1 Imports parking lot (located at 5711 Hollywood Boulevard) and got a ride with her boyfriend for a night out partying and dancing with college friends. Robin was last seen carrying a leather handbag wearing a dark blue corduroy jacket (with gold buttons), a red jersey blouse, blue jeans and red clogs; she had a birthmark on her lower back and one of her front teeth was just a hair darker than the others. After dropping a friend off at home, I’m reading that Robin was either dropped off at her car by either her boyfriend or by a friend named Tom Palst (sp?), who very well may be her boyfriend, it’s unclear). I’m also coming across varying reports saying she was possibly driving her boyfriends car. Robin immediately set off down the Hollywood Freeway for home. Mere minutes into her journey (somewhere between 1:55-2 AM, accounts vary) the car stalled: she ran out of gas and was stranded on the Santa Monica Boulevard off ramp. Almost immediately after pulling over, California Highway Patrol pulled up beside her and asked if they could offer any assistance, or at the very least call her a tow-truck. At one point during the early morning, they helped push her car further onto the shoulder, as it was slightly sticking out in the Number four lane. Robin politely declined the tow but asked to be directed to the nearest ‘call box,’ which she used to let her parents know she was experiencing car problems; records say the call was placed to the Graham home at 2:04 AM. The officers pulled up a second time when she informed them she did indeed call home and help was on the way: her little sister accepted the call and passed the information along to her parents (who were out at a party). Satisfied with the answer but still wanting to make sure the young lady was OK, they drove away but decided to loop around once again just to check on her and make sure help really was on the way. After they passed her the last time no one knows exactly what happened to Robin: they saw her talking with a Caucasian man roughly around 25/26 years old with medium length brown hair standing at around 5’8.” I do want to point out there is a discrepancy in the hair color of the unidentified male: in one news report it’s said he had “blonde hair” instead of brown. He was wearing bell-bottom pants, a white turtleneck and was driving a 1957 – 1960 blue Corvette. The ‘Doe Network’ claims the car was a ‘hardtop’ which couldn’t be true, as apparently all Corvettes from that time period were convertibles. I found various reports stating that the man was either ‘leaning in her car window’ or was tinkering underneath the hood, inspecting something. CHP assumed it was the relative the young girl called for help so they just kept driving.
Unfortunately the CHP officers didn’t get close enough to the mystery man to get a good look at his face as they drove past him, and because of this there was never a composite sketch of the suspect done. They reported they saw the blue sports car initially pass Robin’s car, pull off the freeway at the next exit then circle around and come back, eventually parking behind her. The initial report stated that Robin left willingly with the young man, however when that officer was questioned for a second time he clarified he did not see the pair leave together. The last time Graham was seen by law enforcement officers was at roughly 2:00 AM. The call box operated called the Graham home but both parents were out: sixteen year old Bonnie Jean took the message that her sister was stranded and relayed it to her parents when they arrived home at 2:30. They both immediately went to their daughters aide, however when they arrived only her car was there and Robin was nowhere in sight. Additionally, there was no note left behind anywhere in or around her locked vehicle. Law enforcement even fingerprinted the car but were unable to get any viable prints off it and Sergeant Terry Pierce said they interviewed about 150 friends, family members, and acquaintances of Robins in an attempt to gain intel on the cause. Of her disappearance CHP Lieutenant Page said “we are seriously concerned for the girls safety. We fear she may have met with foul play.”
Handling of the incident by law enforcement prompted immediate criticism from LA County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, and because of the officers failing to stay with Robin and keep her safe the CHP faced immediate backlash: an investigation was launched looking into the conduct of the officers surrounding the night Robin disappeared. People were absolutely livid at the thought of trained police officers leaving a young, vulnerable teenage girl alone in the presence of a male stranger in the wee hours of the morning (which resulted in her abduction). Despite the public outcry, it was eventually determined that the patrolmen in question were acting in accordance with policy. Despite that ruling, California Highway Patrol policy was changed to ensure the safety of all stranded female motorists, stating that CHP officers were to remain with any female motorists that were left stranded on the side of the roads at night until their help arrived. Even though police took these extra precautions, women still continued to go missing under similar circumstances involving vehicles over the following years.
Ms. Grahams mysterious disappearance was first handled by the same detectives at the Rampart Division of the LAPD, who theorized it was linked to other eerily similar cases involving missing young women: in November 1967, law enforcement warned the public of an attacker who flagged down three women pretending to have car problems before he assaulted them; they felt the incidents seem to be linked. Eight months before Robin disappeared, Kathleen Johns was on her way to San Francisco with her infant when the car behind her started flashing its headlights at her. When she pulled over a man got out of the vehicle and said her back wheel was ‘wobbling furiously;’ he offered to fix it however instead of helping he loosened it so it completely fell off as she attempted to drive away. The man then backed up and offered to take her and the baby to a nearby service station, which she accepted. As he wordlessly passed the gas station Johns got nervous and asked where they were going. He kept quiet for a few minutes then said, “before I kill you, I’m going to throw your baby out the window.” They drove around like that for about 90 minutes; he taunted the young mother with similar comments like, “you know you’re going to die.” Johns eventually managed to escape the vehicle, hiding in a field with her baby as he frantically looked for her with a flashlight; he eventually left when a truck approached. She eventually was able to wave down another vehicle, which took her to a nearby police station. While she waited at the police station to make an official report, Johns saw a sketch on the wall of the same man that had spent the past hour terrorizing her: it was a wanted poster for the Zodiac Killer.
Ms. Graham was the fourth young woman to disappear under mysterious circumstances in the general Hollywood, CA area within a two year period, however, in most of those cases the victims’ remains were eventually found, unlike Graham (whose body has never been found). Most of Bundy’s victims were never discovered so we know he had a way of making bodies disappear (which also might explain why Grahams body was never found). On the evening of October 30,1966 Riverside College student Cheri Jo Bates went to her schools library to study for a few hours, and when she tried to leave for home her VW Bug wouldn’t start. Conveniently right at that very moment, an unidentified man offered her up his assistance, even going so far as to look under the hood of her VW Bug in an attempt to diagnose why it wouldn’t start. The man claimed he was unable to start it but offered her a ride, which she accepted. Her body was found the next day by a groundskeeper at the college: the young co-ed was brutally killed with a knife and was cut and slashed so aggressively that her head nearly came off. Elizabeth Habe was the daughter of author Hans Habe and b-actress Eloise Hardt. She was a student at the University of Hawaii and was home in LA on Christmas vacation when she was murdered on December 29, 1968 after returning home from a double date with John Hornburg (a family friend). She left Johns house at 3:15 AM in her sports car and was abducted when she got home to her Moms house on Cynthia Avenue in West Hollywood. Her body was discovered on New Years Day in 1969 in dense underbrush off Mulholland Drive; she was found fully clothed and her body was burned, with contusions in her eyes and slashes to her throat and heart; the medical examiner determined no sexual assault took place. There were a few rapes in the neighborhood in the weeks before Habe’s brutal death and it’s further speculated that the young student may have been killed by the Manson Family. A former Family associate said that “members of the Family knew her.” Robin’s case also shows some parallels with the May 1969 murder of Rose Tashman, a young woman who was found murdered just hours after her 1965 beige Mustang was discovered abandoned with a flat tire on the side of the Hollywood Freeway. At around 2 AM, the Valley Junior College student was driving home from a friend’s house in Van Nuys, CA after studying for an exam when she got a flat tire. She was stranded on the side of the Hollywood Freeway just a few miles away from where Graham’s car was found in late 1970. The next day, Tashmans Mustang was found abandoned near the Highway Avenue off-ramp on the Hollywood Freeway; road flares had been set up around the vehicle and her left tire was flat. There was also evidence that someone had stopped to “help” assist her with the flat tire. Only nine hours later, the young girls naked body was found in a brushy ravine off Mullholland Drive about a half mile away from where Habe’s body was found; she was strangled and raped. On January 20, 1970, Cindy Lee Mellin got a flat tire in the same general area as Tashman and Graham, and just like the others she vanished without a trace under mysterious conditions. Mellin was a student and employed at the Broadway Department Store in Ventura, California; she was 5’6″ tall, weighed 105 pounds and had brown hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing a navy blue dress with red buttons matched with blue shoes with gold buckles (she had her brown corduroy coat with her as well); The Press Courier described the 19 years old as a “pretty Ventura coed.” After work that evening in January, Cindy walked to her car only to discover she had a flat tire. Two of Cindy’s coworkers (who had been picked up by their spouses after work) reported they saw the young girl talking to an unidentified man at about 10:30 PM but assumed it was her Dad so they left. They described te male as tall and slim, between 35 and 40 years old; he drove a light-colored car. Leonard Mellin said that his daughter most likely would not have been able to change the tire herself so the theory that an unidentified man approached Cindy under the guise of helping makes sense. That following morning, after realizing his daughter never came home from work the night before, Mr. Mellin drove to the shopping center where Cindy worked and found her car in the same spot as she’d left it but the spare tire was on the ground nearby; her doors, trunk, and glove box were open, and it appeared that one of the car tires had been purposefully slashed with a knife. Her body has never been recovered. On April 20, 1972 Ernestine Terello got a flat tire near the Ventura freeway in Agoura, CA and surprise surprise… her car was later found abandoned; a month later her body was found on the ‘Circle X Boy Scout Ranch’ in the Santa Monica mountains. Police theorized that a good Samaritan had offered her help fix her tire then abducted her. Strangely her body was found fully clothed, so its possible that sexual assault may not have been a motive. Additionally, she still had on valuable jewelry robbery was most likely also not a motive. This case did not get much press attention and no suspects have ever been mentioned nor have any arrests been made. Similarly, on June 19, 1975 nineteen year old Mona Jean Gallegos was driving home from a friend’s house in Alhambra, CA and at roughly 1 AM ran out of gas near Santa Anita Avenue on the San Bernardino Freeway in El Monte. Her skeletal remains were discovered about six months later in a Riverside ravine.
The media was incredibly inconsistent when reporting on Robins case, and law enforcement felt that the “free-spirited nature of the 70’s” made these young girls fairly easy, very trusting targets. Regarding her daughters disappearance, Beverly Graham said: “it’s strange, it happened right in the middle of the city, but there never really were any clues. Maybe it will turn something up. We still live with that hope.” For years after his daughter disappeared, Mr. Graham called LA homicide Sargent Donald Ham every few weeks to get a status update on the case; the two men eventually became friends and would on occasion grab lunch and catch up. In 1975 Sargent Ham thought that Robin “had been found in Pennsylvania [over a year ago], they came across a skeleton there. A bunch of pathologists put in together and even had a drawing made of what the woman would look like. It kind of looked like Robin.” However after a forensics expert investigated dental records it was obvious that the skeleton did not belong to Robin. Ham took over the case in 1976, and in his time investigating it checked out “millions of blue Corvettes.” … ” I was checking Corvettes until I was going nuts.” … “one traffic control officer used to come in every morning with a list of Corvettes he had spotted. It didn’t matter what color they were. He said it could have been painted.” As for Robins parents, he said “they won’t ever five up. They still feel she’s alive somewhere. They always want to have that feeling that she’s going to walk through that door someday… she was a beautiful girl.” After the LA Times ran a story on Robins disappearance a woman wrote to Mr. and Mrs. Graham claiming that she too, had stalled out on the Freeway earlier that same night and that a man driving a similar Corvette claiming to be an off-duty officer offered her a ride. She refused his offer; and it’s unknown if it was the same man who was last seen with Robin. There’s been no proof this is the same man last seen with Robin, but police felt this was a “solid theory. One thing that further confused law enforcement was why Robin left no note on her car for her family; was it for the simple reason she had no pen and/or paper with her? Sadly I never have pens in my car. They were also confused as to why she refused help from uniformed police officers in marked police cruisers just minutes earlier but accepted help from a non-uniformed man in a Corvette? Was she trying to avoid a tow fee from the police? Unfortunately this lead to nothing. The next month the woman identified this unknown man as Bruce Davis, who is one of the numerous people suspected of being the Zodiac Killer. Davis was a serial killer who operated in the California area in the late 1970’s. He is still suspected in many unsolved disappearances and murders in the area, including a couple found in an alley close to the Silver Lake area close to Los Angeles. They had each been stabbed over 40 times. Davis had been a high-profile member of the Charles Mansons ‘Family’ and, although he didn’t participate in the August 1969 murder of actress Sharon Tate he had turned himself into police just weeks after Graham disappeared. He was eventually convicted of two separate murder counts, including that of ranch hand Donald “Shorty” Shea, which is the only murder Manson technically had a direct hand in. After he was taken into custody on December 2, 1970, no further murders took place that were definitively linked to the Zodiac Killer. Davis was sentenced to life in prison, and despite keeping a clean record since 1980 and it being previously recommended he be granted parole seven times (those decisions were rejected by three different CA governors), in 2022 a California panel denied his parole, telling him to try again in three years saying he “lacks empathy.” Bruce Davis has denied being the Zodiac Killer.
It is worth noting that Robin disappeared on the night of a full moon, which is when the Zodiac was known to operate. It was very challenging finding a lot of relevant information regarding the case, but one thing that surprised me was that it was speculated that she was possibly a victim of the Zodiac. I won’t lie, I don’t know a ton about that particular SK: I read Robert Graysmith’s famous book many years ago… But, when looking into it further I guess Graham did live in the right region of California during the right time frame to be a possible victim. He claimed to have killed 37 victims in northern California between 1968 and 1970 and sent letters with hand-drawn ciphers taunting San Francisco Bay Area press taking credit for these murders. It’s worth noting that of these 37 victims the Zodiac takes credit for, law enforcement can only agree on seven confirmed victims (two survived). The case remains unsolved despite a lot of recent activity in the past few years: Earl Van Best Jr. (he was the central figure on the FX show “The Most Dangerous Animal of All”), Arthur Leigh Allen (a former elementary school teacher as well as the only suspect authorities ever publicly named and convicted sex offender who died in 1992), and (this is almost brand new information) Garry F. Poste, a suspect named by a group called ‘The Case Breakers’ that said forensic experts now feel is “a very strong suspect” after a statewide examination recovered new Zodiac evidence. It’s pretty well known that any case from that time period with the weak ‘modus operandi’ involving victims in broken down vehicles was linked to the Zodiac, and unfortunately in recent years a slew of amateur sleuths invested in the case have helped spread much misinformation.
As I stated earlier, the man last seen with Robin that night in 1970 was described as being brunette, 5’8″ tall, and in his mid-20’s (specifically 25-26); at that time in November 1970 Bundy would have been 23, which is pretty consistent with that description. What’s really jumping out at me is the turtleneck part, as that piece of clothing seemed like a staple in Ted’s wardrobe (there’s numerous pictures with him wearing one). Now, Bundy was 5’10” where the man talking to Robin was described as being roughly 5’8” but keep in mind that’s just an estimation. Also at the time it’s thought that Bundy still owned his first VW Beetle, a light blue one he purchased in April 1966; he didn’t buy the infamous yellow one until spring of 1973… so if Bundy did abduct Robin, where did the blue Corvette come from… I probably don’t need to say that we know it didn’t belong to him. Did he borrow it? One thing we do know is that he is a competent car thief (but a bad driver) so is it really that off base for him to have stolen this car then ditched it when he was done with it? We know he was caught in Aspen and Florida after getting pulled over in stolen vehicles and he did it numerous times when he was an adolescent (his mother helped pay for him to have his record expunged when he became legal age so it wouldn’t affect his future career). Bundy did at one point tell law enforcement that he killed a victim somewhere unspecified in California during his reign of terror, and he’s further suspected of committing the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker murders that also took place in the 1970’s. Of the victims in the SRH case, three were raped and three others were too badly decomposed to tell. Detective Bob Keppel shared with ‘SeattlePI’ that “the killings in Santa Rosa would fit his methods, he spent time in the area, and I”m sure he started killing well before 1974. It was an open market for Bundy.” … “one of the last times I talked to Bundy I mentioned California, and he looked at me like, ‘I can’t talk about that right now.’” … “I think he believed his execution would be stayed so he could talk for years about his crimes, but the governor had other ideas.”
In mid-November 1970 when Robin disappeared it looks like Bundy was employed as a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company (a family owned medical supply company); he worked there from June 5, 1970 to December 31, 1971. In mid-1970, he also re-enrolled at the University of Washington and was living in the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue in Seattle. Additionally he was in a committed relationship with Liz Kloepfer at this time as well, so he had a lot of established roots in the general area. It’s obvious in Robin Grahams description that she fit the profile of one of Teds typical victims: she was tall and slender, with long dark hair parted down the middle. She was even in the right age range and a college student (who we know Ted LOVED to target). When analyzing the logistics of Bundy killing Robin, the scene of the crime was almost 17 and a half hours away from where he lived in Seattle… but I mean, Bundy had a lot on his plate at the time Robin disappeared. Did he really have time to drive all the way to California to commit a murder? Playing devils advocate, we know he was an avid night person and had no problem prowling long distances when looking for prey. It was in early 1970 that Bundy rekindled his relationship with Stephanie Brooks, which helps place him in California; it also appears that he was in the Santa Rosa area of California at some point in that general time frame as well, which is just a hair over a 6 hour drive (with light traffic) to LA. This also helps put him much closer to the scene of the crime (as we know Bundy enjoyed traveling far distances to throw police off his trail). Was Robin Graham just another one of Teds ‘murders of opportunity?’ It’s worth noting that not only do we have confirmed kills from Washington, Colorado, Utah, Oregon, Florida, and Idaho, I’ve also written about numerous other states he could have been active in (Pennsylvania, Vermont, and New Jersey).
Websleuths user ‘Howard’ commented that they “have researched the Graham case. I know her parents. They are still waiting for a break in the case and have kept their same address and phone number since 1970!” On June 28, 2005, Websleuths user ‘Graham‘ commented back saying: “when you say that you have researched the case I was wondering if you have found anything that is not in the police reports? I just recently spoke with the police regarding the case. I’m Robin’s sister. I would like to hear what info you have found. Thanks.” Seventeen years after Robins strange disappearance in 1986, a mysterious ad caught the attention of a member of the Graham family when it appeared in the LA Times classifieds. Beverly Graham said of the event: “one of our daughters saw it. The funny thing is, she never looks at the personal ads. But this one day…” The ad read: “DEAREST ROBIN You ran out of gas on the Hollywood Frwy. A man in a Corvette pulled over to help. You’ve not been since of since. It’s been 17 years, but it’s always just yesterday. Still looking for you (signed) THE ECHO PARK DUCKS.” The message sounded innocent enough and almost romantic in a way, which made some people speculate it was a clue about the young girls disappearance. The ad was really put under a microscope after KFI disc jockey Geoff Edwards read it on the air, and the phone calls and letters quickly started coming in, which helped establish the link to the missing persons case from 17 years before. Edwards said, “it sounded so romantic. I wondered if anyone knew what it was all about, and I got all kinds of calls and mail. Someone even wondered if the message was a clue to the killing.” It turned out the mystery sender was an old friend of Robins named Al Medrano (who was still living in the neighborhood) just wanted to let the world know that his friend was still missing and that she had not been forgotten about. The Graham family, who also still live in Echo Park, remember Al as a neighborhood friend of their Robins. Why he chose then to put something in the paper, he said: “well, it occurred to me that Nov. 15 (the day of her disappearance) fell on the same day (Sunday) this year as it did in 1970, and I just wanted to show she wasn’t forgotten.” He said the last part about the “Echo Park Ducks” was what they used to call their friend group and he wanted the message to be off all of them.
On October 5, 2012, the blog missingrobinanngraham.blogspot.com, creator Michael Haddan commented: “Please note that there is NO TRUTH to the ‘Find A Grave’ post by someone anonymous claiming that Robin Ann Graham ‘died’ in 1970. This was posted by someone who apparently wants Robin to be dead, to settle the mystery of her disappearance with a completely unfounded and irresponsible statement that hurts both Robin and all who love her. This person wants everyone who has hope for Robin’s safe return to GIVE UP, and for all continuing investigations into her disappearance to end. LAPD Detectives John St. John and Detective Hamm both told me never to assume that she is dead just because I ‘want resolution’ to her case, and that to do so would be not only to give up on Robin, but to show a lack of love and respect for her. I’ve notified this person and asked how Robin ‘died’ and how this person knows this. Of course there is no answer. I thought that he/she would have taken the post down by now, but it still shows up in Google’s priority postings. This is an utter travesty. We’ve had many hoaxes regarding Robin’s disappearance over the decades, and unless this ‘mystery person’ actually knows something–and should therefore contact the LAPD–this is unquestionably just another HOAX.”
Regarding Robins disappearance, Sargent Ham said: “all we’ve got is a missing persons report. We’ve never found remains. She could be alive somewhere.” At this time, the surviving Graham family is trying to enter pieces of her hair into DNA databases that didn’t exist when she went missing in the early 1970’s; Both Mr. and Mrs. Graham have passed away and Robin would be 70 years old as of February 2023. One thing that is nearly certain about Robins mysterious disappearance is that she fell victim to the good Samaritan ruse.

Robin Ann Graham.






































































































Ann Marie Burr was born on December 14, 1952, in Del Morte County, California, to Donald and Beverly Ann (nee Leach) Burr. Beverly Leach was born January 4, 1928 to Roy and Marie (nee Wadsworth) Leach; her father owned a group of small grocery stores in Tacoma, WA. Bev’s relationship with her mother was never very good, and they clashed her entire life. After high school she went on to attend the University of Washington where she met Don Burr, and they were married in the summer of 1951 (Don never graduated from college). Beverly went on to graduate from Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma and after graduating got a job teaching school, a position she enjoyed but found incredibly challenging. Her true passion was in journalism or (as she stated proudly), she wanted to be a ‘famous writer.’ Mrs. Leach dreamed of being out in the field and ‘in the trenches’ like a real journalist… in fact, she wanted it so badly in fact she almost didn’t marry Don. In addition to having big career aspirations there was a fellow teacher at her school she debated on running away with; he even told her that he would leave his wife and children for her. Both of those ideas absolutely horrified Beverly’s parents… so she played it safe and got married.
The newlyweds spent the first year of their marriage in Oregon, where Don worked for the logging company he partially owned with his father. At some point, his dad would go behind his back and claim he owned 51% of the company, which made him the majority owner. The older Mr. Burr then sold the entire business without telling his son, and because of this there was bad blood between father and son for the rest of their lives. Later, after Don was given money for the sale of his part of the business, the couple moved to Tacoma, where he became a civilian employee at the local National Guard base in Camp Murray, where he worked his entire career. The Burr family were parishioners of St. Patrick’s Church located in North Tacoma despite the fact that Don wasn’t a practicing Catholic. In later years Bev did admit that her faith would waver and disappear at roughly around the same time Ann died.
At the time she disappeared in summer 1961, Ann Marie had short, dirty blonde hair, hazel eyes, weighed roughly 35 pounds, and stood at 4’2” tall. She had red marks on her left hand as well as malformed fingernails from a fungal infection. She was the oldest of four and had a mix of three younger brothers and sisters: Mary, Greg, and Julie, In July 1963 after Ann disappeared the Burrs adopted a seven month old girl named Laura Gayle. They kept her adoption public in hopes to keep their oldest daughter’s case discussed and relevant and for Bev, it was just another opportunity to try to find Ann. Laura was said to be by her mother ‘the perfect baby.’
At the time of her disappearance, Ann Marie was eight years old and getting ready to start the third grade at Grant Elementary School in Tacoma. Mr. and Mrs. Burr said she was a shy, well behaved, ‘intelligent, artistically talented and an obedient daughter who didn’t cause any problems at home.’ Her mother raised her to be unafraid of people and independent, traits Mrs. Burr said she eventually regretted teaching her. She said, ‘Ann was so trusting.’ … ‘it was a big mistake. We taught her everyone was good. We didn’t teach them that people could be bad. I still think it was probably someone she knew.’ She even walked the several blocks to school alone starting in kindergarten. Ann’s father admitted that he didn’t trust some of their neighbors, including a lady that lived across the street that spent time in a psychological asylum after giving birth to a mixed-race baby. There was also a man that would occasionally sunbathe nude in his backyard, and the neighborhood children loved to come visit him because he gave them candy. The Burrs lived in a two story bungalow in a middle class neighborhood located at 3009 North 14th Street in the North End section of Tacoma, Washington. Next door to their home was a small but dense orchard filled with apple trees and raspberry bushes owned by their neighbor, Mrs. Gustafson (the neighborhood kids called her ‘Gusty’). Just before that Labor Day weekend in 1961 before Ann disappeared, neighbors of the Burrs reported a man walking the streets selling cookware (which they found odd because he had no pots or pans to show them).
Earlier on that hot, muggy Wednesday, all four of the Burr children spent the day playing with other kids in their neighborhood. Ann Marie ate dinner at a nearby friend’s house, and that same girl asked her to spend the night, however Mrs. Burr said with school starting up again soon maybe it wasn’t the best idea, so she kept her home. Aside from her family, Ann’s neighborhood friends Susie and Christine were the last people to see her alive. Around 8:00 PM on August 30, 1961, all four Burr children were sent to bed: Ann Marie went to sleep in the upstairs bedroom she normally shared with Julie (7), however three year old Mary slept with her that night, while Gregory (5) and Julie were allowed to spend one more night in a recently constructed fort in the basement. Mr. and Mrs. Burr locked the front door at around 11 PM (complete with a chain) and went to bed after. And just like any other night, Mr. Burr put the family’s black cocker spaniel Barney out on the landing, in between their kitchen and back door. Bev said she was exhausted from the hot weather but hadn’t been sleeping well, and in addition to the heat keeping her awake both her and Don thought they heard noises in their yard late at night. It was rainy and stormy that night in late August when Ann disappeared: trees blew over, lights went out, and large areas were thrown into complete blackness. At some point in the middle of the night (Beverly was uncertain of the exact time), Mary started crying so Ann brought her into their parents room; the youngest Burr child broke her arm earlier in the summer and still experienced bouts of pain because of it (she was still in a cast and it was bothering her). Beverly was able to calm Mary down and put both girls back to bed.
Around 5:30 AM on August 31, 1961 Mrs. Burr woke up feeling uneasy: first she went to the basement to check on Julie and Greg then went up to the second story; it was then discovered that Ann Marie was no longer in her bedroom after she discovered a (once again) crying Mary, this time alone. Upon going downstairs, in the living room Bev found the small window normally left open only a crack “for TV antenna wires” was now wide open; in addition, the front door was left slightly open. Outside there was an upside down bench from the backyard that was found resting against the side of the house; there was also grass from the perpetrator tracked inside the house. There was no sign of a struggle.
After realizing her daughter was missing, Bev (wearing only her bathrobe) walked around the neighborhood and asked a few of her neighbors if they’d seen Ann Marie. After arriving home and seeing a stool from the garden in the backyard propped underneath the open living room window, she woke up Don and had him call the police. When law enforcement arrived, they immediately interviewed the entire family. Right after he was questioned, Don and his brother, Raleigh, went to search the neighborhood. The men walked two blocks to the nearby University of Puget Sound and even combed through the construction sites. At the time of Ann’s abduction there were seven buildings on campus being worked on, and Don reported there were some very deep ditches and excavation sites present. Near one of those buildings, the two men saw a teenage boy kicking dirt into a ditch, while looking at them with a smirk on his face. They immediately went home and told police they should search the campus. Four entire days passed, and on September 3 police finally did what the brothers suggested mere hours after Ann Marie disappeared: they sent officers to search the University of Puget Sound. Unfortunately, by the time they arrived there were no open construction sites and everything was filled in: ‘at this time, all ditches are covered and the roads are open’ (Burr Missing Person Report). When Don went back to look shortly after, cars were driving over the spot where he felt the body of his daughter might have been buried.
All of Ann Marie’s clothes were accounted for by her mother and none of her personal items were missing. It was determined that she left the home wearing a homemade, ankle-length light blue nightgown with blue and white flowers, a small chain necklace with two religious medals (with engraved images of Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary), and a silver ID bracelet with her name, address and phone number on it along with the phrase ‘Saint Christopher Protect Us.’
At the beginning of the investigation, law enforcement felt that Ann Marie was possibly taken by someone she knew. They surmised that the kidnapper’s silent, almost invisible movements showed a familiarity with the layout of the house. They also spoke with all of the convicted sex offenders living in close proximity to the Burrs but none could be linked to Ann’s disappearance. Police set up camp in the Burr’s basement while they waited for a ransom call or letter that never came. In an interview with Seattle based TV station KOMO-TV hours after her daughter went missing, Beverly said, ‘probably the worst has happened to our little girl. I just hope they find her.’ What she didn’t admit out loud to anyone was that she had little hope about her daughter coming home to her. Years after Ann’s disappearance she said: ‘when I first saw that window open, I knew I would never see her again. I knew I would never know what happened.’ … ‘it came to me, just like that. It was a strong feeling. When they were searching, I thought, ‘What’s the point?’ I knew she was gone, and we would never see her again.’ The police attempted to interview little Mary however the child was too young to be able to properly put into words whether or not she had seen anything helpful. Mrs. Burr told police that several members of the family heard the dog bark at some point in the middle of the night, but at the time they assumed it was because of the unusually rainy weather. They also told law enforcement they heard someone prowling around their yard a few nights before; in addition to the Burrs, three neighbors reported they had seen a peeping tom looking in their windows as well (however no one could come up with a physical description of the perpetrator).
Ann Marie’s disappearance occurred early enough in the morning that it made the first morning edition of the Tacoma News-Tribune. Strangely, it said that the young girl was believed to be a possible victim of amnesia (which I’ve never heard ANYTHING about before I really started looking into this case). The disappearance of Burr brought on the largest missing persons search in Tacoma history (at the time) and lasted for months: on the morning she disappeared, fifty National Guardsman from Camp Murray and 100 soldiers from nearby Fort Lewis (which was only about 11 miles away from the Burrs home) helped local law enforcement in their search. By 11 AM, over 75 square blocks surrounding the Burr home had been thoroughly searched (including several densely wooded areas) but there had been no sign of the little girl; she vanished without a trace. At the time of Ann Marie’s abduction there were open ditches at the end of the street about 30 feet deep for an upcoming city sewer project. Detectives crawled under houses with flashlights searching for her and the Tacoma Public Works Department walked through sewer lines close to the Burr house. Additionally, a three-man crew went underground using portable lights to probe the pitch-black flumes of the city’s sewer network through the North End and scuba divers went to the main outfall pipe on Commencement Bay in low tide, where the rushing flow of storm drainage and sewage was rapid enough to push a body out of the pipe and into the bay (upon inspection it had not). Investigators came up with nothing.
There wasn’t a lot of helpful evidence found at the crime scene, however law enforcement did discover a single red thread that was found snagged on a brick near the living room window. While searching the home, they did notice a table of completely undisturbed figurines right next to the open living-room window, despite someone possibly entering the home through it. The small bench the intruder placed outside the Burr’s window was taken in to be further examined by forensic experts: it had a footprint on it about the size of a teenager’s or a small man’s foot (although it was slightly misshapen from the previous nights rainstorm), and there was a similar print found by the back of the house close to the basement window. Experts determined that the intruder was most likely wearing a size seven or eight Ked’s, and because the tennis shoe apparently had a very particular tread on it law enforcement went to stores in the general Tacoma area in an attempt to track down its owner. They were given the names of nearly 10 individuals that had bought them recently but it appears they only really looked into two of them: a younger boy that was ruled out and a college student who was away at school at the time of Ann’s abduction.
Based on the crime scene, there seemed to be no sign of a struggle, and nothing aside from the single red thread was left behind by the intruder. He came and left completely undetected, almost like a ghost. Does that mean Ann possibly knew the man that abducted her and went with him willingly? In addition to next to no physical evidence there were no witnesses, no vehicle description/license plate for a potential getaway car, no fingerprints, no credible ransom demand, no motive, no weapon, and no body. Because of the lack of concrete evidence indicating that an abduction did indeed take place, the FBI would only assist with this case on a stand-by-basis. A few days after Ann Marie disappeared, a neighbor came forward and reported that she heard a scream coming from a car with California plates the morning the girl went missing. However, when the driver of the vehicle was eventually tracked down they claimed the noise was simply from the radio and everyone in the car was alright. Police even camped out in the Burrs basement during the beginning of the investigation, hoping to record a ransom call from a potential kidnapper that never came.
When the second edition of the paper was released later that day, there was more information about the developing story as well as a photo of Ann Marie. In it, she was wearing a paper lei won at a summer carnival, a headband, a blouse with short, puffy sleeves, and pedal pushers. The front-page headline from the Tacoma News-Tribune read: ‘Girl, 8, Vanishes From Home: Chief Hager Calls for Wide Hunt.’ Unfortunately, Tacoma is well known for its kidnappings, even being nicknamed the ‘Kidnap Capital of the West.’ In 1935, the 9 year old son of Washington timber baron John Philip Weyerhaeuser was grabbed off a Tacoma street in the middle of the day. His parents paid a $200,000 ransom and the boy was released unharmed; there was an arrest made within days. On December 27, 1936 a man broke into the mansion of Tacoma Physician Dr. William Mattson and scared his four children with a loaded gun. He took Mattson’s 10 year old son Charles and fled. The kidnapper left a ransom note asking for $28,000, but two weeks later the boy’s naked body was found on a snow-covered field 60 miles north near Everett, WA. The case remains unsolved to this day.
A complete search of Tacoma turned up no clues as to little Ann Marie Burr’s whereabouts. Within the first twelve days after her disappearance, over 1,500 persons were interviewed, and over the course of the entire investigation thousands of people were talked to and hundreds were polygraphed. In the beginning, the leading suspects included a teenage neighbor boy who flirted with the young girl as well as one of her cousins that grew up to be a convicted child molester (both were eventually cleared). On September 8, 1961, Donald and Beverly voluntarily went into the police station and took polygraph examinations in response to whispers that they had withheld information to the police in regards to their daughter’s disappearance. Both Mr. and Mrs. Burr were found to be truthful in their responses. The following day, Burr’s maternal grandmother (Marie Leach) posted a $1,000 reward for information leading to the discovery of Ann Marie, which was eventually increased to $5,000 after allocation of additional funds. As I said earlier, Beverly never got along very well with her mother and the two seemed to butt heads a lot, especially in her youth. Mother and daughter were never seen hugging or being affectionate, and never said ‘I love you’ to each other. It almost seems like as a whole Beverly too wasn’t very warm or physically affectionate with the people she loved: her brother in law Raleigh commented that Don and him always hugged, but Bev would stiffly shake his hand (even after knowing her for 60 years).
Sadly after the disappearance of their daughter, Beverly and Donald’s marriage began to struggle, with Don becoming verbally abusive and controlling with his wife. He was incredibly cruel and demeaning to Bev, even in front of friends and family, and was so jealous and possessive that she wasn’t even allowed to talk to the mailman or wear shorts outside while doing yard work. One time when they were stranded in Russia on a trip Don berated her for hours after she spoke with a male baggage handler and tried to help resolve the situation. After a single driving lesson in the family’s new car Bev was not allowed to learn how to drive after she accidentally stepped on the gas and floored the car over an embankment and into a busy highway. She called the marriage a big mistake. In her later years Beverly said that she would have left her husband but stuck around for the sake of the children, and she got along with him because she frequently just gave into him. Her relationship with Julie started to get strained in her adolescent years because she often looked at her and wanted to see Ann Marie. In addition to problems with her now oldest child, Mary developed mental health issues starting at an early age as a result of being the last person to see her sister alive. Mrs. Burr tried her hardest to help her daughter with her issues, even going so far as to put her own happiness and the well being of the other children on the line for her. She said, ‘I already lost one daughter, I can’t lose another.’ Julie has said that despite her dad being controlling and damn near abusive he was a loving person and loved his wife dearly. Raleigh Burr said in all the years they were married he didn’t remember ever seeing the couple hold hands or kiss or be openly affectionate towards one another. Of the couple he said that ‘maybe they weren’t outwardly loving but their children all knew they would do anything for them.’ One thing was for sure: Don and Bev were united when it came to their fierce love they felt for their children.
In August of 1961 Robert Bruzas was a teenage boy that lived close to the Burrs and reportedly liked to ‘flirt with Ann Marie.’ He failed an initial polygraph test about the young girls disappearance and it was determined he was lying (he blamed his failure on heightened nerves); however, he did pass a second one. Beverly said she was always nervous about Bruzas as he frequently sat outside their house in his car, but when the police questioned him about this he said he was just listening to the radio. Bev said that Robert had always been very friendly with Ann Marie and it was reciprocated somewhat but they questioned why a 15 year old boy would want to spend so much time with an 8 year old girl. No evidence has ever linked Bruzas to the crime scene, however police never ruled him out as a suspect. There are no arrest records for Robert and there is nothing on record of him ever being inappropriate with children. Bruzas got married in 1966 and worked for Boeing; he died in February 2022.
In the winter of 1964 a man named Ralph Everett Larkee, an auto parts salesman from Portland, Oregon, kidnapped a ten year old girl named Gay Lynn Stewart from Tacoma and took her on a 3 day joyride throughout the Pacific Northwest in his Buick Electra convertible. Police called the case the ‘next Ann Marie Burr’ and Larkee was considered a possible suspect in her disappearance as well. Stewart’s parents said that their daughter was very intelligent and was capable of taking care of herself (she had apparently run away before), and because of this they felt her case wasn’t given the same amount of attention as Burr’s because she was considered too ‘worldly’ for her age. Gay was last seen wearing a light blue blouse and cut off jeans and blue tennis shoes. Larkee called himself ‘Bob Brown’ and throughout the excursion kept a small caliber handgun in his glove compartment box; the two ate meals together in restaurants and he eventually dropped her off safely in Tacoma just three days later, with$15 in her pocket, a new haircut, and wearing a brand new outfit complete. When Stewart was finally recognized by a salesclerk the young girl denied who she was and even gave officers the fake name of Mickey Anderson. She was taken to the local police station and after being questioned was briefly allowed to speak with her parents, who left without their daughter in tears. Gay Lynn was taken to Raymond Detention Center where incarcerated children were housed, largely to keep her in a safe place because this ‘Bob Brown’ hadn’t been caught yet. Because he took his victim across multiple state lines the FBI became involved. She helped law enforcement come up with a composite sketch of her abductor and about two months after their excursion they were finally able to track down Ralph Everett Larkee. Larkee was discovered to be living in a Portland apartment building under the name of Paul Lindley when he was caught. On September 9, 1964 Larkee shot himself as the FBI were closing in on his apartment. He survived the suicide attempt and remained in critical condition in a coma for six months before eventually dying on March 31, 1965.
On October 31, 1961, police interviewed Hugh Bion Morse, a 31 year old former Marine at one time suspected in the 1959 murder of a young girl named Candice ‘Candy’ Elaine Rogers from Spokane. Candy was in the fourth grade at Holmes Elementary on West Spark Avenue, and at the time of her disappearance on March 6, 1959 she was out in her neighborhood selling Camp Fire Girls mints. Investigators had very little to go on aside from finding boxes of the candy discarded all along nearby Pettet Drive and after a 16 day search, Candy’s body was discovered in a wooded area in Northwest Spokane County. The young girl had been raped and strangled to death with a piece of her own clothing and sadly three Fairchild airmen died in a helicopter crash during the search efforts. Her murder went unsolved for 62 years until 2021, when Spokane police announced they had finally solved her case using DNA evidence and old-fashioned detective work. The killer of little Candy Rogers was determined to be a man named John Reigh Hoff, who died by suicide in 1970 at the age of 31. His daughter gave police a DNA sample that helped link her father to semen found on the young girls clothing. Oddly enough, Hoff was buried in the same cemetery as Candy. His body was exhumed and a DNA sample taken confirmed it was his semen found on the young child.
In June 1962, an employee at a full service gas station in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Canada (a small city in the Central Plains Region of Manitoba, Canada also located right across the US border from Grand Forks, North Dakota) told law enforcement he saw a young girl fitting the physical description of Ann Marie accompanied by a man and woman who ‘spoke a little too sharply’ to her to be her parents; the employee claimed the girl said she was from Tacoma. There was another man that made a ransom demand however he wound up being an opportunist that had nothing to do with Ann Marie’s disappearance; for that the man was charged with disorderly conduct.
In 1965, an Oklahoma based inmate named Richard Raymond McLish initiated correspondence with the Burrs claiming that he and his friend David Withnell kidnapped Ann Marie while passing through Tacoma in the summer of 1961 looking for work; they further admitted to burying her on a bean farm in Oregon. While incarcerated in McAlester Prison in Oklahoma in 1965, McLish (friends called him ‘Mountain Red’ for his good looks, Native American blood, and curly red hair) read an update in a Tacoma based newspaper on the search for the missing girl on the fourth anniversary of her disappearance. The Associated Press picked up the story and published the article in various newspapers around the US and wouldn’t you know it, Richard McLish received one of the papers: in it, Bev had written an open letter to The Tacoma News Tribune about how her little girl had been missing for four years now and that the $5,000 reward was still being offered. McLish wrote Don Burr and told him it was him who took his daughter and that he knew where her body was located, and in turn, Mr. Burr gave the letter to Tacoma law enforcement. In the correspondence, he claimed that he knew where Ann Marie was, and in exchange for the information all he wanted was for the reward money to go to his family. He said he was driving with a couple who had abducted Ann Marie and that she was living with them in Oklahoma for quite some time and they had told him in passing that they had ‘gotten the wrong child.’ Oddly enough, in the original police report it is noted that a car with two men with a crying child driving a car with either California or Oregon plates inside driving at a high rate of speed sped off from the scene of the crime the night Ann Marie was taken. Detective Tony Zatkovich who, (along with his partner Ted Strand) had been on the case since the beginning immediately called the penitentiary where McLish was being housed. David Withnell killed himself on December 27, 1963 by carbon monoxide poisoning so unfortunately authorities were unable to question him, however they did speak to his widow, who said she could see her ex-husband performing an atrocity like that. She didn’t think, however, that McLish ‘had it in him.’ She reported she took her seven children and left her ex after she discovered he molested one of their daughters. Sometime over the course of that weekend in August 1961 while her husband was in Washington state looking for work, Withnell’s ex-wife noticed that a quilt had disappeared. By the time McLish was questioned by Tacoma law enforcement his story completely changed: he claimed that he and Withnell were the ones who abducted Ann Marie then drove back from Tacoma to Oregon to disposed of her body: McLish said that Withnell paid him to get rid of her so he wrapped the little girls remains in the missing quilt and buried her next to a tree about three feet deep out of the way. This way it was in an area where it wouldn’t be disturbed by a plow. After two years of back and forth between Tacoma police and the prison, on October 11, 1967 officers flew with the prisoner to check out the location where he allegedly dumped Ann Marie’s body. By the time they arrived in Oregon McLish had changed his story yet again: this time claiming they put the tiny body in the pond (still wrapped up in the quilt), even going so far as to point out where he remembered disposing of it on a hand drawn map. Unfortunately a semi-recent flood had drastically altered the landscape of the farm in 1964 and no remains were ever recovered. It’s unsure whether or not the inmate was telling the truth or not (although they were probably lying). The then-current owner of the property (Vern Chamberlain) said that if McLish did indeed dispose of Burr’s body in the pond then it most likely would have been washed away by the flood water. That didn’t stop divers from searching the pond but they came up with nothing. In Tacoma, police showed McLish’s photo to both Don Burrs and neither one of them recognized him, which seemed to confuse the inmate as he swore up and down that he knew Ann Marie’s father. While still in Oregon McLish agreed to an interview while under the influence of sodium pentathol (after turning down a polygraph he initially agreed to), however there is no proof or record anywhere of it ever being performed. Law enforcement in Tacoma told a local newspaper they couldn’t say either way, if he did it or didn’t.
Ar0und the time Burr disappeared there was an unknown girl suffering from amnesia found in Omaha, Nebraska, however it was eventually determined not to be Ann Marie. Another incident involved two boys that discovered a bottle with a note inside claiming that she was being held prisoner by bank robbers (nothing came from that either). Another odd occurrence: her name was found carved on a sandstone cliff near a roadside picnic area just southwest of Tacoma close to the Washington coast. But maybe one of the strangest things happened many years after Ann disappeared: Bev received an empty envelope addressed to the family at their new house; in a panic, she took the envelope to the police along with one of Ann’s old school books to hopefully compare the handwriting. However, the handwriting was deemed by police to be inconclusive and there was absolutely no way to determine whether or not it was from the same person, or even if it were from a child, teenager, or an adult. Was this Ann Marie trying to get in contact with her mother, or just another prank?
In the mid-90’s, Mrs. Burr received a strange phone call from a Tacoma based psychiatrist who felt that Ann Marie was one of his patients. So, Bev baked an apple pie and invited the woman over to her house: ‘I took one look at her and knew it wasn’t her,’ she said years later. The woman said she remembered having a canary (just like Ann) and a few other small details that were true. Mr. and Mrs. Burr met with her five or six times until they were finally talked into a DNA test by Julie: ‘I said, ‘Mom, you’ve got to find out if it’s her.’ After two years of being in communication with the mystery woman, the Burrs had their DNA tested and sadly she was not Ann; strangely Bev kept some pictures of her in family albums.
The cozy bungalow Bev once thought of as her dream home quickly became her biggest nightmare, but she felt she had to stay there in case Ann ever came home. When the family moved into a large colonial on North 28th Street in Tacoma six years to the month after Ann’s disappearance, they published the new address and phone number in the local newspapers in hopes Ann Marie would one day find her way back to them. Some of Ann’s clothes and toys made their way to the new residence. However, this led to many prank calls and a lot of harassment. Beverly received a phone call on February 20, 1964 from a man who sounded young but well-spoken and polite with no distinguishable accent. He claimed that Ann Marie was now living in the Phoenix, Arizona area but he would only give her more information if she ‘undressed for him.’ Despite being incredibly embarrassed, Mrs. Burr did inform police of the call which resulted in them re-installing recording equipment in their home to monitor any additional calls. They eventually found and arrested the culprit: a 17 year old Woodrow Wilson high school student (where Ted Bundy was ironically a junior). The teen had no new information about Ann Marie. In addition to harassing the Burr family, he admitted to making nearly 150 prank calls in the previous 2-3 years around the general Tacoma area.
We all know that Ted Bundy didn’t ‘officially’ start killing women and young girls until early 1974… but at the same time it’s widely accepted he started his rampage years before that. Bundy first came up on police radar when he was a kid for being a peeping tom and shoplifter. Ann Marie’s case made national news when she disappeared in 1961, and there was a renewed buzz surrounding it in 1978 after it was realized the infamous serial killer grew up fairly close to her neighborhood. After Ted was arrested in Florida in 1978 he was considered a suspect in Ann Marie’s case when it was revealed that at the time of her disappearance he was 14 and living near the Burrs home in the West End of Tacoma at 658 North Skyline Drive (which is about 3.3 mile away). Additionally, there is no concrete alibi for Ted during the time in which Ann Marie went missing. His parents said he was in bed, but I mean… are they undeniably, 100% certain where he was on a random night in the summer of 1961? It’s impossible. I did read somewhere that at the time of Ann’s disappearance Mrs. Bundy made periodic, frequent walks through the house (she had younger kids at the time), and said she doesn’t remember anything out of the ordinary that particular night. It’s also worth mentioning it’s a pretty popular myth that Ted’s (favorite) Uncle Jack taught Ann Marie piano at one point in time (he didn’t), and he lived at 1514 South Adler Street in Tacoma (which is only 1.4 miles away from the Burrs). Jack Cowell was a professor of music at the nearby University of Puget Sound. Another common myth about Bundy and the Ann Marie Burr case is that he was the family’s paperboy at the time of her disappearance, but it turns out he wasn’t and his route was roughly 3 miles away. At the time Burr disappeared in 1961, 14 year old Ted had no drivers licenses or access to a vehicle, so if he did abduct her he most likely made the trek over to her house on foot. I mean, I was an out of shape 38 year old when I made the walk around Tacoma and it was definitely doable. Although it was stormy the night Ann Marie disappeared, that probably wasn’t enough to stop Bundy from making the walk. Or maybe he rode his bike over to her house and stashed it somewhere until he could come back and retrieve it?
I’ve read a lot of back and forth over the years about whether or not a 14 year old teenager would have been physically capable of committing an atrocity like this. At the end of the day, all I know is I’m 5’2” and when I was back in school for my teaching degree the seventh and eighth grade boys (and some girls) absolutely towered over me, and they were even younger than Bundy at the time. Now, we know Ted wasn’t a huge teenager (as he wasn’t an overly large adult), but I’m sure he was fairly tall, especially compared to Ann Marie’s slight 4’2″ frame. I personally think it’s less ‘could Bundy have physically killed her’ and more ‘what resources does a 14 year old boy with no drivers license (or access to a car, even illegally) or land/property have to properly dispose of a body?’ A part of me is thinking back to that laughing teenage boy Mr. Burr saw kicking dirt into the hole at The University of Puget Sound and is wondering, maybe the killer did dump her body in a hole that was eventually filled in with concrete. But, what about the byproducts of decomposition? I have a background in general chemistry and biology and I wondered about a rotting body’s effect on concrete and how it would hold up over the years. When the human body breaks down and decomposes, carbon dioxide, water, simple sugars and mineral salts are released (gasses and liquids). Well, leave it to my good friend Erin Banks to almost read my mind, because she had the same thought I did (but enough sense to do the research). About this, Ms. Banks said: ‘Many Washingtonians believe that Ann was embedded in cement at the construction site. In the 2010’s, there was a study conducted in the course of which pigs were buried in cement, so as to study the delay and changes in decomposition. Because decomposition involves gasses and fluids, it creates air pockets, impacting the structural integrity of the concrete, causing it to collapse over time. So there is a relatively slim chance for Ann to be buried underneath the former construction site, although we can, of course, never rule it out completely.’
In 1980-81, Ted Bundy conducted his death row interviews with journalists Stephen Michaud and Hugh Aynesworth. In them, he spoke in the third person and often hinted at the crimes he committed. On one occasion Bundy spoke of ‘killing a young girl in an orchard,’ where he talked about attempting to sneak up behind a victim but she heard him and turned around, which forced him to pull out a knife, grab her by the arm and tried to force her to submit. But instead of complying, the victim became loud and vocal, and since there were houses in the area he was worried that someone might hear them: so, in an attempt to force her to be quiet he placed his hands around her throat and she eventually stopped struggling completely. It appeared she was unconscious, but after the assailant removed her clothes and raped her he noticed she wasn’t breathing. Was that Ann Marie Burr? Ted even went into graphic detail, going so far as to give the precise layout of the Burrs neighborhood and set-up of their house.
When the book ‘Conversations with a Killer’ was published in 1983, Mr. and Mrs. Burr both read it, and it was shortly after that Beverly first wrote to Bundy. She pleaded with him in a letter dated May 30, 1986: ‘On August 31, 1961, just before school was to start for you and our children, there came a black rainy night with lots of heavy winds. You were 15 and had been wandering the streets late at night and peeping in windows and taking cars. I feel your FIRST MURDER WAS OUR ANN MARIE BURR. The bench from the back yard was used to climb in the living room; the orchard next door was a dark setting for a murder. What did you do with the tiny body? God can forgive you.’ Strangely enough, he responded shortly after on June 8, 1986, saying that he had nothing to do with her disappearance: ‘Dear Beverly, Thank you for your letter of May 30. I can certainly understand you doing everything you can to find your daughter. Unfortunately, you have been misled by what can only be called rumors about me. The best thing I can do for you is to correct these rumors, these falsehoods. First and foremost, I do not know what happened to your daughter Ann Marie. I had nothing to do with her disappearance. You said she disappeared August 31, 1961. At the time I was a normal 14-year-old boy. I did not wander the streets late at night. I did not steal cars. I had absolutely no desire to harm anyone. I was just an average kid. For your sake you really must understand this. Again and finally, I did not abduct your daughter. I had nothing to do with her disappearance. If there is still something you wish to ask me about this please don’t hesitate to write again. God bless you and be with you, peace, ted.’ After two letters back and forth with the convicted serial killer, Beverly felt that ‘he avoided the real questions, talking instead about the Green River murders and world events.’
Later in 1986 Ted told the same story to Dr. Ronald Holmes about the murder of a young girl in an orchard. Dr. Holmes was an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of Louisville’s School of Justice Administration; he had a two-year grant to study serial killers in the United States. Bundy told the Doctor that he had “stalked, strangled and sexually mauled his first victim, an eight-year-old girl who mysteriously vanished from her Tacoma home, 26 years ago” (Holmes interview). This confession didn’t make the news until 1987, when Holmes presented his findings to a conference in Colorado. His admission didn’t make news until the next year, when Holmes presented a paper to a conference in Colorado. Bundy told Dr. Holmes that he had “stashed the body of Ann Marie Burr in a muddy pit, possibly near the University of Puget Sound” (Holmes interview). Many Bundy enthusiasts and law enforcement have disputed the story, however Dr. Holmes never wavered about what Bundy admitted to him. Years after Ann Marie’s disappearance Bundy told law enforcement that he “wouldn’t have hurt a little girl” and denied any involvement with her disappearance. In a 1987 interview with King County detective Bob Keppel Bundy said that there were “some murders” he would “never talk about”, because they were done “too close to home”, “too close to family” or involved “victims who were very young”. Technically, Ann Marie Burr’s strange disappearance checked all three of these boxes.
I do want to point out that Bundy has spoken to a few people about how he raped Nancy Wilcox in an orchard when he was in law school in SLC. During his earlier interviews with Stephen Michaud, Ted implied he strangled a young woman to death in an orchard across the street from her home because she raised her voice and refused to be quiet (I guess technically this could have been either girl as they both lived by orchards). Before he was executed in early 1989, Bundy confessed to Wilcox’s murder: before she vanished on October 2nd Nancy got in an argument with her father about her bf’s truck leaking oil in the driveway and left in a huff. Shortly after, Bundy saw her walking near her home and abducted her: he got out of his Bug and after creeping up on her from behind forced her to walk with him to a closeby apple orchard, where he was able to restrain then put her in his waiting VW. He then told law enforcement that he brought the young girl back to his SLC apartment but didn’t kill her until the next day. Many Bundy scholars don’t believe this confession, as he lived in a boarding house at the time with other tenants and bringing an incapacitated woman back to his room against her will would most likely have been pretty loud (especially when she regained consciousness). He attempted to tell law enforcement where he left her body, however they were never able to find any part of her. To this day, Nancy Wilcox’s remains have never been found, and as a result she is still listed as a missing person.
In 1989, Ted Bundy requested that Dr. Dorothy Lewis come see him while on death row. Lewis was a Yale psychiatrist and scientific researcher working with a pro-bono attorney in an attempt to get the serial killer a new prison sentence. Dr. Lewis had spent her entire career as a clinical psychiatrist talking to serial murderers and rapists in maximum security prisons. She was attempting to figure out what exactly it was that made them do what they did and alleges that when Bundy was ‘twelve, fourteen, fifteen … in the summer … something happened, something, I’m not sure what it was. … I would fantasize about coming up to some girl sunbathing in the woods, or something innocuous like that … I was beginning to get involved in what they would call, developed a preference for what they call, autoerotic sexual activity,’ he told her. ‘A portion of my personality was not fully … it began to emerge … by the time I realized how powerful it was, I was in big trouble (Lewis interview).’
Shortly after Bundy was executed in 1989 Don and Beverly Burr made a public statement, saying they felt their daughter’s body may have been disposed of in one of the seven ongoing construction sites that were taking place on the University of Puget Sound campus.
Author Rebecca Morris wrote a book about the Ann Marie Burr case around Bundy’s confession to Dr. Holmes in 1986 titled ‘Ted and Ann: The Mystery of a Missing Child and Her Neighbor Ted Bundy.’ I waited until the very end to bring up Sandy Holt because I wasn’t sure exactly how to feel about her at first but… now that my research is complete I can confidently say I think she is 100% full of shit. Holt grew up with Bundy in Tacoma and claims to be privy to information that he did unspeakable things to the young girls in the neighborhood, including dragging them to the woods and urinating on them. She also claims he liked to build tiger traps, which obviously resulted in children hurting themselves. Sandy’s older brother Doug was friends with Bundy, and she claims that her father molested Ted while on a boy scouts camping trip (they were seen coming out of a tent together). Now, this Sandy Holt also claims to know more than Beverly Burr (who told law enforcement that her daughter did not know the serial killer in any capacity) and alleges that Ann would follow Ted around like a little lost puppy dog with a schoolgirl crush… she also claimed the eight year old child would sit and watch him fold newspapers, which doesn’t make much sense as Bundy was never the Burrs paperboy and he lived 3.1 miles away from them. Considering there is NOTHING anywhere else on Ted peeing on neighborhood children or making tiger traps as a kid except from this one source just screams ATTENTION SEEKING to me.
In July 2011 authorities developed a DNA profile utilizing a vial of Bundy’s blood preserved from blood samples taken on March 17, 1978 and shortly after Ann Marie’s DNA was submitted to the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab for DNA comparison. Several weeks later, it was determined that the evidence gathered at the scene of the abduction did not contain enough measurable DNA to produce a complete profile of the assailant. At this time in November 2022, Burr’s disappearance is still a mystery and her body has never been recovered.
One thing I did learn that doesn’t really fit in anywhere is that Beverly Burr and Louise Bundy were casual acquaintances and ‘knew each other in passing,’ however both women said their children didn’t know each other. The two couples strangely enough ran into each other while on a 20 day bus tour of the Ozarks and because of where their last names fell in the alphabet they were placed close to each other for the entirety of the trip. Mr. and Mrs. Burr always tried to get away from Tacoma during the month of August (for what should be logical reasons); they tried to stay out of each others way for those 20 days and made extra careful to not be in any of each other’s pictures. This case reminds me a little of the Lynda Ann Healy abduction in 1974 that took place close to the University of Washington campus. She was Bundy’s first confirmed murder victim and he abducted her from her home in similar fashion to the way Ann Marie was kidnapped. There was no blood left behind with Ann like there was with Healy but the abduction method does show some parallels. We also know that the two youngest Bundy victims were 12 years old (Kim Leach and Lynette Culver), and where Ann Marie was quite a bit younger than them it was brought up by Molly Kloepfer (Ted’s girlfriend Liz’s daughter) that he did touch her inappropriately when she was only seven. So, he obviously has no problem with going after extremely young victims. Beverly never let the people of Tacoma forget her Ann Marie: there were frequent updates regarding the case in the local papers and she made sure her daughter got news coverage. When Bundy was put to death in 1989 the Burr family listened to the broadcast on the radio: they were hoping for some last minute news about Ann’s death but sadly there was none.
At the time of the service many Tacoma and Seattle newspapers published articles about Ann, and there was a resurgence of interest in the case. Mrs. Burr said she was glad that she didn’t know what had happened to her daughter, but that she ‘still thinks it was someone she knew,’ and regarding Bundy commented: ‘you know, he tortured women.’ At her sisters memorial service Julie Burr said of her mother: ‘you probably wanted to crawl into bed and bury your head as each day and year passed with no answer. But instead you gathered strength and provided us with a wonderful childhood.’ After a brief hospitalization where Bev may have had some self-inflicted injuries as a form of ‘attention seeking,’ she briefly considered becoming a nun, a thought her parish strongly discouraged. In the years after the children flew the coup, Don finally allowed his wife to take writing classes and get a job: she worked as a secretary at Bates Technical College in Tacoma and at St. Josephs Hospital. She also volunteered at a local school teaching children how to read. Beverly said that she was always looking into the faces of strangers around her for the little girl that disappeared so many years before. Many years after Ann’s disappearance, Bev was asked by a journalist why there were no pictures of her up in the living room with the other children. She held back tears as she went to the spare bedroom and gathered pictures of her precious Ann Marie: she explained that seeing her up on the wall everyday was just too painful. Beverly did comment that she thought it was odd that the last name of Bundy’s final victim was Leach, which was her maiden name.
Sadly, Donald Burr passed away on September 4, 2003 at the age of 77 and Beverly passed away of congestive heart failure on September 13, 2008 at home in Tacoma. At the time of Dons death the couple had been married over 50 years. They were the parents of five, grandparents of seven, and great-grandparents of three. All four of the remaining Burr children are alive as of November 2022. Ann’s disappearance remains an open case with the Tacoma Police Department.


























































































































I’ve really been enjoying writing about the unconfirmed Bundy victims lately: so far I’ve done Lisa Wick/Lonnie Trumbull (the Seattle flight attendants who were attacked in their Queen Anne Hill basement apartment), Brenda Joy Baker, Katherine Kolodziej and Sotria Kritsonis (I wrote a short article briefly discussing the disappearance of Ann Marie Burr but she deserves her own full piece*). Last spring when I was in Seattle I debated on whether or not I was going to actually follow through with my lifelong dream of starting a blog or once again take the easy way out and just post my pictures as I took them. I was genuinely nervous about putting out unimaginative, run of the mill content that’s been written about a thousand times before. So, I started digging even further into the Bundy verse, beyond the confirmed victims (such as Georgeann Hawkins) and commonly discussed places (like the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Ave in Seattle).’ So, I started looking into Ted’s unconfirmed victims. His places of employment. The former dorm building he kept a key for after moving out so he could go back and sleep there (he at one time had a room on the 4th floor in the South Tower of McMahon Hall at the University of Washington). The brick with Mr. and Mrs. Bundy’s names on it at the University of Puget Sound (where she was employed for many years as a secretary). I’m going to Utah in November and Colorado in December (I have the time off work) but I’m putting Florida off until last because it’s the state that scares me the most… Margaret Bowman‘s crime scene photos will forever haunt me.
I ran into a lot of snags in my research of May-Hardy, and unfortunately it’s becoming a consistent issue with the unconfirmed victims: I’m finding that if the woman is not directly related to Bundy there’s little or next to no information out there on them. Even simply figuring out Kerry’s exact date of birth took quite a bit of effort, and I’d like to thank my husband for allowing me to use one of his credit cards so I could sign up for another free trial of Ancestry. I was able to find some neat things on Kerry May-Hardy that I hadn’t seen anywhere else: before my discoveries I found exactly ONE picture of her on the internet (along with her composite sketch after her skeletal remains were found). I ran into this lack of information issue with Brenda Baker, the Seattle flight attendants (Lonnie Trumbull and Lisa Wick), and to an extent Kathy Kolodziej (I say this because I was in contact with the detective working the case as well as her cousin which helped make it a little more personal for me… plus there was a fair amount of information about her on Reddit message boards). I do want to add that after I really got digging on Kerry I found a bit more information that I was expecting… BUT at the same time there wasn’t a single YouTube video or Reddit thread on her and the small amount of information I found didn’t compare to the information you can find about (for example) Georgann Hawkins or Lynda Ann Healy. None of the unconfirmed victims got the attention that they deserved… for example, there’s next to NO information out there about the murder of 14 year-old Brenda Joy Baker and I think that’s a real shame. AND to be truthful I was struggling to find interesting facts about Brenda Ball and she was one of Ted’s more widely known Seattle victims (hers was the first skull found on Taylor Mountain). I think I read somewhere that there were 18,000 murders that occurred in 1972 across the US. It’s too bad you had to have been murdered by a serial killer to deserve any recognition for the case.
Kerry M. May-Hardy was born on April 3, 1950 in Seattle, Washington to Donald and Sheila (most recently Olson) Hardy; she had an older brother named Kenneth, two younger half-sisters (Carlee and Barbra), and a half-brother (Ed). According to a June 2011 article from the Vancouver Sun, Kerry’s parents were only married for a few years before they divorced in 1960. Sheila remarried Carol Olson the following year and Donald married Yvonne Lathrop on December 7, 1956. Mrs. Olsen described her daughter as a ‘free spirit,’ and the first person that popped in my head after I read that was Donna Gail Manson, who’s been called the same thing (and I could see it for myself looking at her pictures). Hardy grew up in the Capitol Hill district of Seattle and attended Lincoln High School in Seattle before dropping out her senior year. In a 2021 interview with ‘hi: I’m Ted’ blogger Tiffany Jean, Ken Hardy said that his sister ‘had hair like a brand new copper penny, and one of those personalities that you instantly liked her. Very friendly and outgoing, but engaging too, and when she started to talk, it didn’t matter where you came from, you wanted to listen to what she had to say.’ After graduating from high school in 1967 Ken went to serve in the Vietnam War; he came home to Seattle two years later in 1969. At that time his younger sister had left school a year early and adopted a ‘free and easy flower child way of living in the Seattle music scene.’ Hardy commented that, ‘I was the older one, so she took a back seat the whole time we were growing up, and all our friends would say, ‘oh yeah, that’s Ken’s little sister.’ But when I got back home, all of a sudden it was, ‘oh you’re Kerry’s brother!’ She really jumped out because her personality was so attractive.’
After a short courtship, Kerry Hardy married James May in a ceremony at the Central Lutheran Church in the Capitol Hill area of Seattle on May 15, 1971; at the time he was studying to be a court transcriber. Although the Hardy-Olsen clan didn’t know him very well, they immediately disliked Kerry’s new husband. Mrs. Olsen commented that ‘He wasn’t a very outgoing person. I just know she was very much in love.’ Ken on the other hand didn’t mind being more truthful, saying that his new brother-in-law ‘was a jerk, and they were always arguing.’ He also said that only six months into his little sisters brand new marriage ‘a friend of ours found out that James was beating up on her and so he got him up against a wall one night when James was alone. Warned him that if he ever did that again, he’d kill him.’ The newlyweds separated shortly after that incident, and Kerry left him and stayed with friends. It is speculated but unconfirmed that Mr. May eventually remarried and relocated to Hawaii.
Ken said that the first time he remembered that his sister was missing his ‘parents and m younger siblings were going on a family trip out of town, and Kerry was supposed to go over and help pack some clothes for my youngest sister, who has Down’s Syndrome, but she never showed up.’ Sheila said the phone calls and visits from her daughter stopped abruptly about a week before the family was supposed to leave on vacation to Minnesota. She also said that while away she ‘made frequent phone calls home during the trip to see if anyone had heard from her (Vancouver Sun, 2011).’ When the family got home in late June 1972 there still was no word from Kerry. In the time they were gone James May never thought to report his wife as missing to the police (although he did claim he didn’t see her since they separated). After calling every one of her daughters friends she could think of, Mrs. Olson went to the Seattle Police Department to report her as missing a week after returning home from vacation, however she was turned away because ‘her husband would have to report.’ She went right home and had James May do that. After he was done she immediately made a second call back to the police to file her own report, I’m assuming because there was now another (MALE) one on file? Unfortunately nothing ever came of either report and no one ever came forward to volunteer anything helpful regarding Kerry’s disappearance.
Ken Hardy commented that ‘because of the separation of her marriage, they didn’t pay that much attention to it at first, because they figured she just went off somewhere.’ The news media never reported on her disappearance, and not a single time was her name ever mentioned in the news. Weeks then months passed by, and Sheila kept contacting law enforcement over and over again, begging them to do more work on her daughter’s case. Eventually one of the officers got irritated and barked, ‘Mrs. Olson, your daughter is not dead!’ then hung up. As the years passed by with no news or resolution, Kerry mom said of her daughter: ‘I knew she was dead. … she would have called.’ Sheila described herself as ‘a mess’ the year after her daughter vanished but thankfully she was able to get herself together for the sake of her other children. She said at the time surrounding her daughter’s disappearance the thought never crossed her mind that Ted Bundy could have been Kerry’s killer.
Mrs. Olson said that her daughter, ‘knew all these people and they knew her: she was amazed, one time when, walking down the street, her daughter stopped to talk at length to a woman in a mink coat and then to a hippie down the block.’ The evening before Kerry disappeared she spent the night at a girlfriends house in the Woodland Park area of Seattle and from there (per a note she left behind) was going to a second girlfriends house roughly ten miles away on Beacon Hill. Years into the investigation Seattle cold case detective Mike Clestnski said that at some point it was reported she was last seen alive hitchhiking around the Woodland Park area on June 13, 1972 (a day after what was initially reported).
At some point in October 1974 Seattle law enforcement compared Kerry’s dental records against the teeth of two skulls that were discovered in Dole Valley near Vancouver, Washington. One of the bodies was immediately identified as Carol Valenzuela and after quite a few years the second was determined to be Martha Morrison; it is strongly speculated that both girls were victims of Warren Leslie Forrest. It is unknown if there was any additional investigative work done related to Hardy’s case at the time and unfortunately the original documents related to her case file have been destroyed (why?). According to Ken, the Seattle Police Department didn’t seem overly concerned in conducting a thorough investigation into his sisters case, and they did not keep in contact with the Hardy/Olson family at all after she disappeared. With no sightings of the young flower child and no one coming forward with information Kerry’s case quickly went cold. This absolutely broke her parents’ hearts. Ken shared with Tiffany Jean a terribly sad story: ‘one day my stepdad calls up and has me come over to the house. I was a single parent then, with two young kids. My stepdad said that he was really worried about my mom and that they would get my truck fixed up and take care of my kids if I went out looking for my sister. At first I thought it was a good idea, but reality sunk in immediately. I looked at him and said, that sounds great, but where do you want me to start? New York, Florida, southern California, you know? I kept having talks with my mom about it, but there just wasn’t anything to do.’
A drug bust in Seattle’s Fremont District in 1974 helped give the family hope: according to Ken, Kerry’s estranged husband was involved in dealing drugs, however ‘he just kind of walked through the middle of this huge mess and nobody touched him… so our feeling at that point was that Kerry had probably turned state’s evidence on the drug situation and made a deal for her husband, because she still loved him. Like maybe my sister had made a deal which led to this huge bust under the condition that he didn’t get touched, you know? That’s what it seemed like.’ But as more and more time passed by this ideal scenario seemed less and less probable. ‘She wouldn’t have stayed away that long, even in witness protection, because we were close.
It didn’t take long before the Hardy/Olson clan began to suspect that somehow James May was involved in Kerry’s disappearance. Ken said that ‘James said that he’d tried to contact several mutual friends that she would have been in contact with, looking for her. We found out that that was a lie. He never contacted anybody. One time he came over to my parents’ house when I was there, and my stepdad was so pissed at him that he wouldn’t even allow him inside. When we confronted him about her disappearance, he just acted totally ignorant.‘I haven’t talked to her since she left.’ That’s all he would say. That and ‘I don’t know.’’ After a few years passed by Ken ran into his former brother-in-law at a coffee house in Seattle’s University District. ‘James was sitting at the bar, and he jumped off his stool when he saw me. He came up to me and said, ‘Hey, Ken, how ya doin?’ and boom, he hit me in the arm. I just kind of turned sideways and elbowed him in the side of the head. Laid him out on the floor and walked out.’
Ken thinks that at some point in the week before the family was supposed to leave for Minnesota James and Kerry met up and the visit turned violent: ‘I kind of assumed, knowing her as I did, that eventually she was going to think about either getting a divorce or reconciling with her husband. And I don’t know if the attempt to do one or the other of those two things got them together. I just don’t know.’ At the time Kerry vanished she wasn’t sure how she wanted to move forward with her life. Ken commented that she was still wearing her wedding ring and that ‘she wore it all the time. Getting married, even at her young age… it was an important thing for her.’ Eventually James May moved away from Seattle, and his former in-laws lost contact with him completely. Ken said that ‘all we had was speculation, no evidence.’
Over time the Hardy/Olson clan came to realize that their sweet Kerry was never coming back to them. Mrs. Olson said that ‘at some point I knew Kerry was dead. She would have called.’ Years then eventually decades passed by without any word from investigators. It wasn’t until 2004 when the King County Medical Examiner gathered DNA samples from Sheila Olson with hopes to maybe help link Kerry to one of the unidentified bodies found during the Green River Killer investigation. Sadly none were a match to her Kerry. She remained missing for six more years.
Now I know what you’re thinking? Jessica, who is this young lady and why have we never heard of her before (I know the ‘hi: I’m Ted’ page did a Patreon piece for a $3 monthly fee but I’m not sure how many people subscribe… at the completion of my article I’ve stumbled upon a few other noteworthy sources as well)?** So where’s the Bundy related evidence related to Kerry May-Hardy and is it believable? First off, Kerry’s murder took place in mid-1972… even a fledgling Bundyphile knows that his first ‘official victim’ was Karen Sparks in early January 1974 (as my own personal side, note I think Bundy killed Ann Marie Burr when he was 14 and I think he’s been killing ever since then but that’s my opinion and I understand not everyone agrees with me). Aside from Hardy fitting his typical victim profile, what I think jumped out at me the most is the fact that her mother told law enforcement she thinks roughly two years before Kerry vanished she lived above a crisis clinic in Seattle’s University District (however she isn’t completely certain). Again, most Bundy aficionado’s know that he met Ann Rule when she volunteered and he was a PT work study at the Seattle Crisis Clinic in 1971. However, Sheila Olson’s timeline alleges that her daughter lived there in 1970 and Bundy worked there in 1971, so this information doesn’t quite add up. When Kerry supposedly lived above the crisis center Bundy was employed for an Attorney Messenger and Process Service in Seattle as a file clerk and courier; he was employed there from September 1969 to May 1970 when he was fired for ‘unjustifiable absences’ (he claimed to have been babysitting Molly, Liz’s daughter). Job #2 in 1970 for Mr. Bundy lasted from June 5 to December 31, 1971 where he was a delivery driver for Pedline Supply Company, a family owned medical supply company. He quit the job at the end of 1971 when the office moved to another part of Seattle. However it is worth noting that while Hardy was alive and in Capitol Hill Bundy was just 2-4 miles away the entire time, living at the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue in Seattle’s University District. Kerry was also close friends with Cathy Swindler, daughter of Herb Swindler who was employed at one time as the Head of Homicide for the Seattle Police Department and he happened to work the Georgeann Hawkins and Lynda Ann Healy investigations. Strangely enough, Cathy briefly went out with Bundy (she wasn’t aware he was still dating Elizabeth Kloepfer while seeing her). It’s speculated she introduced Kerry (who was a high school friend) to Ted while they were student interns together at Harborview Medical Center (where he coincidentally interned from June 1972 until September 1972, which is consistent with the date of Kathy’s disappearance on June 12, 1972). Physically, I think Kerry’s appearance would have been striking and memorable to Bundy: she was slender and beautiful, with long copper hair parted down the middle. … What if he stalked then approached her as she was attempting to thumb a ride and lured her into his car? Despite all this, at this time there is no actual evidence linking Ted to Hardy’s murder. Tiffany Jean points out that ‘the potential for a previous social connection is enticing. Perhaps Cathy introduced her to Ted while they were a couple, or ran into her around town while out on a date. Physically, Kerry’s appearance would have been striking and memorable. What if Ted had approached a hitchhiking Kerry a few years after dating Cathy, and lured her into his girlfriend’s car with that famous veneer of charm? ‘Hi Kerry, I’m Ted! Remember me? We met through Cathy, do you need a ride somewhere?’ Of course, without Cathy’s confirmation, this entire scenario is pure speculation, and could merely be an eerie coincidence.’
The Crisis Clinic was first located in an office close to Seattle University (which was located on 12th Street) before relocating to an old Victorian style house in Capitol Hill. Ann Rule and the night supervisor at the time Bundy worked there claimed that there were no other tenants in either building due to the confidential nature of the work done and the records present on site. So if Kerry did live above a Crisis Center it must have been at a different one than the one Ted worked at. Whether or not Hardy lived somewhere close to the Crisis Clinic is under investigation at this time (per an article written in mid-2011). At the end of the day, Sheila Olson strongly feels that Bundy isn’t responsible for the murder of her daughter: ‘I just don’t… a mothers feeling.’ Ken thinks that James May seems like a far likelier suspect instead of the serial killer. At the end of their 2021 interview Ken shared with Tiffany Jean that he was ‘pretty sure, I’m pretty confident in my assumption… I think you can rule the Bundy thing out.’ Unfortunately there is no direct evidence of May’s involvement, only suspicious context. According to Ken, Kerry’s remains were close to property that the May family owned and was even dug up with machines owned by the family. A records search pretty much confirms that story: James May’s father did in fact own a large amount of land in the Kittitas County area. Perhaps what is most incriminatory is Mr. Hardy’s allegation that he was physically abusive to his sister, and as most true crime fans are aware, when a wife disappears under mysterious circumstances her husband is usually the first suspect. In her article, Tiffany Jean comments that ‘circumstantial and character evidence are always difficult to prosecute. In the case of James May, the sum value of these circumstances, while compelling to laymen, probably would not hold up in court. Without any telltale trauma to her bones, her body itself offers no clues. A third possibility, that Kerry’s murder was a random attack by an unidentified perpetrator, also remains. Sadly, without DNA evidence to analyze, and short of a confession, it seems unlikely that Kerry Hardy-May’s murder will ever officially be solved.’
Former Kittitas County Sheriff Andrea Blume said as of 2011 that detectives are still looking into the case and are ‘looking at all possibilities;’ the Seattle Police are also working with the Sheriffs on the case. I want to mention that the original missing persons file from 1972 was somehow ‘destroyed’ (that’s all the Vancouver Sun article said with no further explanation… that sounds oddly sinister). What’s interesting to me is there’s not one but TWO Seattle based serial killers that have been investigated for Hardy’s murder: the second was none other than ‘The Riverman’ himself, Gary Ridgway. In 2004, King County Sheriffs requested (and were granted) Kerry’s mothers DNA to compare it to that of the Green River Killer case and Ridgway was eventually ruled out as a killer. After Kerry’s family came forward to law enforcement that they felt the composite sketch was similar to hers, the familial DNA sample from 2004 was sent off to the University of North Texas. Kittitas County Undersheriff Clayton Myers said the DNA sample was sent to the Center for Human Remains at UNT where it was entered into a national DNA database: ‘the database would search all the human remain samples there for a match.’
Kerry May-Hardy’s disappearance remained a mystery until September 6, 2010: while digging at a construction site machinery disturbed her remains about five miles from Interstate-90 near the Suncadia Resort (a golf club) in Roslyn, Washington. Her body was uncovered when a backhoe operator digging a waterline ditch came across her remains; at first, the operator noticed her clothing mixed in with the dirt. This site is in fairly close proximity to where Ted Bundy hunted AND lived (in fact, it’s only about 5 miles away from one of his dump sites that was discovered three years after Kerry vanished). She was found in a shallow grave less than two feet below the earth’s surface (to be exact, the depth ranged from 18 to 24 inches) and her skeleton was clad in a blue-colored, long-sleeved shirt with pink buttoned cuffs and a 14-carat gold ring on her left finger, roughly a size 5-6. According to the autopsy, the woman had been dead for at least twenty years, but possibly as long as fifty. No cause of death could be determined from the remains.In a KIRO-TV article published March 22, 2011, Kittitas Sheriff’s department said of the discovery: ‘she had fairly straight teeth with extensive dental work.’ Bundy often left his victims bodies sans clothes so if this was indeed one of his victims perhaps he was in the midst of either perfecting his technique or was too inebriated and sloppy to have remembered to do it? Ted certainly was familiar with the rural portion of I-90 east of Seattle where Kerry was discovered. In early 1974 he drove down that highway many times to get to his ‘dumping grounds’ at Taylor Mountain and Issaquah. He traveled two hours further east that April to abduct Susan Rancourt, a confirmed victim that attended Central Washington College in Ellensburg, WA. The Suncadia Resort is located about halfway between the Taylor Mountain gravesite (where Rancourt’s skull was found) and the college. Much like Bundy’s Taylor other two gravesites, Kerry’s burial place was wooded and remote, yards away from a gravel side road off the interstate. In 1989, Bundy described burying Colorado victim Julie Cunningham in a similar location, saying he would get on the highway and just drive until he found an isolated place to turn off: “I found a side road, a dirt road, turned off onto it and drove maybe a quarter mile off the road.” He made similar declarations about Utah victims Debra Kent and Nancy Wilcox.
Kerry gravesite was roughly 100 yards away from a minor gravel road off the highway that had been around before the conversion. Law enforcement began careful excavation of the body the very afternoon it was found. Two tents were set up: one related to the excavation site, the other for processing. In addition to the Sheriff’s Department combing the area, two archaeologists from Central Washington University were also on site to help recover and preserve remains, bits of clothing, and any other evidence that was found. It took two full days to remove the entire skeleton. Law enforcement said Kittitas County didn’t have any unsolved cases involving missing women around that time, therefore they felt the victim was an outsider not from the area. One time Kittitas County Undersheriff Clayton Myers said, ‘we have a team of investigators who are working locally and with neighboring counties for missing adult females. It’s a little too early to tell which ones are in the ballpark because we are still struggling with our time frame.’ At the time of Kerry’s disappearance in 1972 the area was isolated, heavily wooded, and used for logging, and it’s worth noting that Bundy often left his victims in remote, wooded locations (such as Taylor Mountain and the Issaquah dump site).
A report regarding the excavation of the body states that it didn’t take investigators long to realize the remains were probably moved there at one point and it wasn’t the original dumpsite (meaning it couldn’t have been Bundy since he was put to death in early 1989). It took law enforcement until the following March to determine that the young victim’s estimated date of death was determined to be sometime in between 1960 and 1990. It was further determined the young girl was between 5’4” and 5’10,” tall and was between 19 and 40 years old (I feel like date of death, height and weight range are all surprisingly broad), and had a large amount of expensive dental work done. At first it was speculated that she was possibly of Hispanic ethnicity however it was eventually determined she was not. Forensic experts entered the victims dental records into a national database and surprisingly there were no hits.
Local Kittitas County law enforcement from where the body was discovered found no female missing persons cases that took place in the county that were consistent with the found remains; because of this police felt that the victim wasn’t from the area. A facial reconstruction image was generated from the remains by forensic artist Natalie Murry in conjunction with the King County Medical Examiner’s Office in hopes that the victim would be identified. Oddly enough, Kerry’s family members did contact law enforcement after they saw the composite drawing and told them that they felt it looked like her. Jeff Norwood (Kerry’s younger sister Carlees husband) said that ‘my wife and my mother-in-law both looked at it and said, ‘Yes, that’s Kerry’’ … ‘when you put her picture up to it. It was Kerry.’ They immediately went to law enforcement to tell them their thoughts. The King County Medical Examiner’s Office used DNA from the 2004 sample they took from Kerry’s mother and compared it to DNA extracted from a bone sample that was sent to the University of North Texas’ Center for Human Remains for genetic testing.
On June 1, 2011 the remains were officially determined to be a match for Kerry May-Hardy. It was announced to the public two days later in a statement by The Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office in conjunction with Dr. Kathy Taylor of the King County Medical Examiner’s Office. On June 6, 2011 Seattle’s KOMO-TV News spoke with Kittitas Undersheriff Clayton Meyers who said investigators were still looking into the possibility that Hardy’s murder could have been related to Ted Bundy: ‘We’ll look into everything’ … ‘we’ll be working with the Seattle and King County investigators who are responsible for those Bundy cases. We don’t have anything at this point, it’s very early.’ Olson said she was almost ecstatic when it was determined that her daughter’s remains were finally identified, saying ‘I don’t care if they find who did it or not. My daughter is going to be home by the end of the week and that’s all I care for.’ Hardy’s sister Carlee Norwood was only 9 years old when her sister disappeared in 1972, however she said that none of the family ever forgot her. She told Seattle based news station KIRO-TV Channel 7 that: ‘she was fun… she was my sister…. she was very close with our whole family, with everybody.’ She went on to say the family never gave up hope that Kerry would come home to them, but that discovery in 2006 did nothing but confirm her worst fears: ‘you always hope, you never give up hope.’ … ‘realistically, I think we knew. My mom did. We all knew. But you just want that closure.’
A dailyrecordnews.com article written by Mary Swift mentions that Rick Norwood was the designated ‘Hardy-Olsen family spokesperson’ for the case, and regarding his sister-in-laws murder commented that: ‘we kind of knew then… we were shocked. We were shocked and also relieved … We’re relieved that Kerry’s been found and we are able to finish the grieving process. She had been gone almost 40 years.’ … ‘We are just now going through the process of dealing with this. At some point, we’ll probably have some kind of service but that has not been totally decided. Kerry’s remains have not been released yet. It’s now a criminal investigation. We don’t know what’s going to happen.’ Norwood never met his sister in law, however he said loved ones described her as ‘a loving family person who cared about the family very much. She was quite a bit older than my wife. She cared for and doted on my wife.’ Lastly Norwood praised the police department, saying ‘we’re grateful to the Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office and Detective Blume for all that they’ve done.’ … ‘They’ve been very wonderful with this family and helping us through this process.’
Ms. Olson was 80 years old in 2011 when her daughter’s remains were discovered, and after they were found the Hardy-Olsen family held a celebration of life in her honor. Since Kerry’s disappearance she has fallen out of touch with James May (who remarried in 1992). Sheila said she held onto one thought after being told her daughter was finally found after so many years: ‘welcome home.’ Per Legacy.com she passed away on December 9, 2015.
Bundy’s attorney Polly Nelson claimed her client confessed to her that he attacked and killed a young lady in her apartment building then took her body back into the woods. Was this Kerry May-Hardy? Or one of his many other victims? Obviously her body was moved to where it was found at some point after the golf club was constructed in 2002 but… maybe it wasn’t the original killer who moved it. Maybe a big wig at the golf club who didn’t want to deal with an expensive construction project screeching to a halt stumbled upon the corpse, panicked and moved it (for whatever reason, maybe they didn’t want to deal with the police)… well, that doesn’t make sense, why would they allow a construction team to dig there in 2006? Law enforcement questioned Bundy before he was put to death in January 1989 and he claimed to know nothing about her disappearance.
As of July 2023 Kerry’s case remains unsolved. Ken Hardy still remembers and misses his sister. He grew emotional as he spoke of her, saying that ‘she was musically and artistically talented. Whatever she had decided to do in her life, it would have been cool and she would’ve been recognized for it. I often wonder, how would my life have been different, if Kerry was still here?’ Both of Kerry’s parents passed away before her case was solved: Mr. Hardy died on January 11, 1989 at the age of 59 in Federal Way, Washington; Mrs. Olsen passed on December 9, 2015. The case is being actively investigated by the Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office. If anyone has any information regarding Kerry May-Hardy in 1972, they are asked to contact Detective Andrea Blume at 509-962-7069.
**Edit one: I did eventually write a full piece on Ann Marie (and it took FOREVER).
**Edit two: The piece recently became available at no cost, which allowed me to update this article with new information.





















A Washington state institution for well over a century, the Seattle Yacht Club is located at 1807 East Hamlin Street in the Montlake neighborhood of Seattle, WA. Where it was technically established in 1879, the club remained slow-growing and mostly uneventful until 1909, when it joined forces with the Elliott Bay Yacht Club. Like most businesses, it has experienced both high and low points over the years, including the Great Depression, both world wars, and societal/economical changes.
The yacht club really came into its own after WW I when the Lake Washington Ship Canal was completed and it was relocated to a beautiful new location on the eastern shore of Portage Bay, where it remains to this day (as of August 2024). Founded by the city’s social and financial elite, it now has over 2,500 members and is constantly evolving and striving to get better as time goes by. I will say that its absolutely beautiful, and luckily when I visited in April 2022 it was on a lovely day and I was able to walk around a bit while I took my pictures.
Ted Bundy was (briefly) employed at the yacht club beginning in the fall of 1967, however nobody seems to be exactly sure of when he was there: per the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ he started there as a busboy sometime in September (that part appears to be universally agreed on) but was fired after a brief period for stealing food. Now, the discrepancy mostly lies in when he was let go: his friend (and the clubs ‘elderly’ pastry chef) Sibyl Ferris said that he was fired after only six weeks, however true crime author Ann Rule said that the position lasted for six months. Additionally, in Robert A. Dielenberg’s ‘TB: A Visual Timeline,’ the author states that Bundy parked cars at the establishment until January 1968, and police files report that he left on January 13, 1968, which means he worked there for anywhere from four to five months.
Ted’s one-time coworker Mrs. Ferris described him as a ‘peculiar boy’ that always seemed to be ‘sneaking around.’ After he was let go the two maintained their ‘friendship,’ although she suspected that he only did this so that he could ‘borrow’ things from her: on multiple occasions she let him borrow her car, and despite him promising to return it by midnight, he often wouldn’t get back until 3 or 4 AM.
The following are excerpts from the Seattle Police Department archives (courtesy of archives.org) with information related to Bundys ‘relationship’ with the Seattle Yacht Club. For whatever reason there are a TON of spelling errors, and I tried to clean it up the best I could but despite my best efforts there are still parts that are unclear. Remember that’s not my fault, and please be gentle. I’m a sensitive snowflake.
‘Mrs. Ferris is 69 years old but has a good memory of her dealings with Ted Bundy. She advised that she met him about 5 years ago when he was working as a bus boy at the Seattle Yacht Club. Another person that knew him well there is Kenny Gilman, who is now the chef at the Moose Club by the Seattle Center. Mrs. Ferris recalled Bundy taking men home who were drunk and other employees suspected him of trying to ‘roll’ the customers after hours. She also remembered a young secretary whom Bundy took up into the ‘Crow’s nest’ for sexual purposes, Bundy is a schemer and a sneak according to Mrs. Ferris, and would befriend older people like herself and live with or off of them. He had little or no money and would borrow money and fail to repay it. He would often borrow Mrs. Ferris’ car and be gone into the night, Mrs. Ferris later thought Bundy might be robbing but was afraid of him at the time and still is and requests her name not be used. She got Bundy a job at the Olympic Hotel as a busboy and he worked there for a few months as he did at the Yacht Club. Persons at the Olympic suspected Bundy of brewing into the employees lockers and on one occasion Bundy showed Mrs. Ferris a waiter’s uniform (new) that he said he had taken from the Olympic, It was around this time Bundy borrowed some of Mrs. Ferris’s China and silver to put on some special sort of dinner for his girlfriend who was a high class girl from San Francisco, Bundy had showed Mrs. Ferris how he planned to prepare and serve an excellent dinner to the girl and put on a British accent for Mrs. Perris, During this time Bundy had borrowed a car from someone but later got a VW in Tacoma which needed a good deal of work, Bundy also had a job at a Safeway store on Queen Anne Hill, stocking.’
‘Ted had a friend who lived on Sunnyside Ave. Pi. who owned an antique.. whose in his home and also worked in a prison. Bundy lived with this man for a while, Bundy had a black wig that he showed Mrs. Ferris and Mrs. Ferris also saw a picture of him during the Rosellini-Evans campaign wearing a wig. On it one occasion Mrs. Ferris drove Ted to Diane’s (the girlfriend’s) house of Greenlake, and another time she. went to the ocean on business and Ted went with her. They also made a trip to Mossyrock, and at other times Bundy would take the car to “visit his parents”. He borrowed’ Mrs. Ferris’s, phone to make a lot of calls… ‘The last time Mrs. Ferris saw Bundy was in the Post Office on the Ave. before he left for Salt Lake. They had small talk at that time.’
‘Earing the time she knew him best he never talked about going, to law school. She also vaguely remembers seeing Ted at the Albertson’s store in Greenlake with a cast on his arm. Mrs. Ferris remembers Ted going to Ellensburg frequently and to meet friends from there to go skiing. He would ski at Snoqualmie Pass or Crystal Mountain, When he went to Aspen Ted had new, imported ski equipment – something he could not well afford. She has no idea where he got his money and recalls him mentioning he had a strict home life. Mrs. Ferris took r/0 to locates the places she knew Ted lived in. She was unable to locate, the address on 17th but will look again and call this office. She also showed K/O Bundy’s residence by the Seattle Yacht Club.’
Kathy McChesney from the King County Sheriff’s Department also commented that: ‘Mrs. Ferris recalls about four years ago Bundy coming to her house on a rainy day in a grey VW, He had a 6-10 year old boy with him and said they were going horseback riding in Issaquah and borrowed an umbrella. Bundy told Mrs. Ferris his father was a chef.’
The following are excerpts from Ann Rule’s controversial true crime classic, ‘The Stranger Beside Me’ regarding his time at the Seattle Yacht Club (Beatrice Sloan is a pseudonym for Sibyl Ferris, in an attempt to protect her identity):
‘Ted worked a series of menial, low-paying jobs to pay his way through college: in a posh Seattle yacht club as a busboy, at Seattle’s venerable Olympic Hotel as a busboy, at a Safeway store stocking shelves, in a surgical supply house as a stockboy, as a legal messenger, as a shoe clerk. He left most of these jobs of his own accord — usually after only a few months. Safeway personnel files evaluated him as “only fair,” and noted that he had simply failed to come to work one day. Both the surgical supply house and the messenger service hired him twice, however, and termed him a pleasant, dependable employee (Rule, 13).’
‘Ted became friends in August of 1967 with sixty-year- old Beatrice Sloan, who worked at the yacht club. Mrs. Sloan, a widow, found the young college student a lovable rascal, and Ted could talk her into almost anything when they worked at the yacht club together for the next six months and then for many years after. She arranged for his job at the Olympic Hotel, a job that lasted only a month; other employees reported they suspected he was rifling lockers. Mrs. Sloan was somewhat shocked when Ted showed her a uniform that he had stolen from the hotel, but she put it down as a boyish prank, as she would rationalize so many of his actions (Rule,13-14).’
‘Several years ago when Ted was out of the University of Washington he took a trip to Philadelphia to visit an uncle in politics. Mrs. Ferris took him to the plane and gave him $100 which she later tried to get back and called Mrs. Bundy looking for Ted, Mrs. Bundy said that Mrs. Ferris was a fool to give Ted that money, and she’d never get it back and Ted was a stranger around there.’
‘When Ted returned from Philadelphia Mrs. Ferris took him to the airport again: he was going to Aspen, Colorado to be a ski instructor. Mrs. Ferris was going to knit Ted a ski hat but he already had one, possibly white, that fit over the face. She also recalled mention of his seeing his girlfriend from San Francisco at Aspen, Bundy had a key to McMahon Kali and sometimes would go inside and sleep when he had no other place to sleep. He went for some time with this girl who attended Stanford and had a desire to go to Taiwan to get out of the army.’
‘Ted also called Beatrice Sloan, his old friend from the Seattle yacht club. She found him the same as he’d always been, full of plans and adventures. He told her he’d been to Philadelphia, where he’d seen his rich uncle, and that he was on his way to Aspen, Colorado, to become a ski instructor (Rule, 18).’
While editing this article in August 2024 I did some digging (just a little bit) into Ted’s friend, Mrs. Ferris, and the first thing that jumped out to me is that her first name is frequently spelled wrong: it’s spelled Sibyl and not Sybil. Born Sibyl Templeton on February 6, 1906 (which means when Bundy befriended her in September of 1967 she would have been sixty-one years old), she was a widow at the time that she met Ted at the Yacht Club (her husband Steve died on November 8, 1961). She passed away on August 2,1980 from cardiac arrest, and interestingly enough, on her death certificate physical therapist is listed as her occupation, which is a far cry from being a pastry chef (this isn’t meant to be judgmental, I admire people who are talented at multiple things).
























Oh Mindhunter: the Netflix show based off a book (written by genius profiler John Douglas) that I logically should adore because I love all things true crime but I just CANNOT get into. The main character (Bill Tench) is based on FBI profiler Robert Ressler. In 1955, Mr. Ressler graduated from Schurz High School in Chicago, Illinois then attended two years at a community college before joining the US Army. After two years in the Army he enrolled at Michigan State University, focusing on Criminology and Police Administration. He earned a Bachelors of Science and attempted graduate school before eventually dropping out after a single semester. He then rejoined the Army, this time as an officer (thanks to the ROTC program at MSU). In 1970, Ressler joined the FBI and was quickly recruited into the newly formed Behavioral Science Unit, whose purpose was to come up with the psychological profiles of violent offenders that usually select their victims at random.
After Ted Bundy escaped through the light fixture of his Colorado prison cell on December 30, 1977 while awaiting trial for the murder of Caryn Campbell, Ressler helped to develop a profile of the serial killer in February 1978. In addition to putting the killer on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted List they also released the profile to law enforcement. This was to help educate all policing agencies where the killer was most likely to gravitate to and who he was most likely to target. Only five days later on February 15, 1978 he was apprehended in Florida.
I live 1.2 miles away from Attica Prison where Ressler interviewed infamous Son of Sam serial killer David Berkowitz in 1979. Yes, THE Attica prison you hear about all the time in Law and Order and other procedural cop shows. In addition to Berkowitz, Attica Prison has been home to many other infamous murders over the years, including Mark David Chapman (he killed John Lennon) and Willie Sutton (famous bank robber).
Ressler and Douglas interviewed Berkowitz at the Attica Correctional Facility in 1979. When meeting the killer for the first time, Douglas was struck by how “his very blue eyes kept dodging between Bob and me.” … “He was trying to read our faces and gauge whether we were being sincere.” After he told the killer they were there for an interview to “help law enforcement solve future cases, and possibly help intervene with children who displayed violent tendencies,” he then pulled out a newspaper with a Son of Sam related headline. Ressler said, “David, in Wichita, Kansas, there is a killer who calls himself the BTK Strangler and he mentions you in his letters to the media and police.” … “He wants to be powerful like you.”
This flattery worked like a charm, and Berkowitz immediately was at ease with the profilers. He leaned back in his chair, allowed himself to get into a more comfortable position, and inquired: ‘what do you want to know?’” One of the more interesting insights Douglas gained from Berkowitz is that “he was always thinking about these murders, to the point that on a night when no victims of opportunity were available, he would return to the sites where he had successfully killed to masturbate and relive the sensation of power and sexual energy he derived from the crime itself.”
Berkowitz confessed to killing six people and wounding several others in New York City during the late 1970’s and has since become a born again Christian. He said because of this he should pay for the sins he has committed and will not seek parole. The killer is currently housed at Shawangunk Correctional Facility in Ulster County, NY.
Ressler became the first serial killer profiler in history and went on to interview some of histories most infamous and depraved murderers. Between 1976 and 1979, he interviewed thirty-six killers to help find commonalities between a criminals’ backgrounds and their motives, including Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Ed Kemper, and John Jobert. He was also crucial in the formation of Vi-CAP, also known as the ‘Violent Criminal Apprehension Program’. In 1990 Ressler retired from the FBI and published four books about serial murder. In addition to writing, he worked as a guest lecturer and often would speak on college campuses and to police agencies. On May 5, 2013, Robert Ressler passed away at his home in Spotsylvania County, Virginia from Parkinson’s disease. He was 76 years old.
In 2015 when I first moved to Attica I was curious as to what the prison looked like… so I hopped in my powder blue Dodge Dart, drove to the massive compound and just sat in front of it, staring… then all of the sudden out of nowhere I have very 4 official looking vehicles on top of me and I got the heck out of there. It’s a maximum security prison, the CO’s do NOT fuck around. They wanted to know who I was and what I was doing, and I completely get that. Now.













“In a will signed the night before his execution, Ted Bundy asked that his body be cremated and the ashes spread over Washington state’s Cascade Mountains, where at least four of his victims’ bodies were found, a newspaper reported.
The will prepared by Bundy’s civil attorney, Diana Weiner, was released by Florida State Prison officials Wednesday at the request of The Florida Times- Union in Jacksonville, which reported the story in Thursday’s editions.
‘Diana A. Weiner will contact family and friends as to any services. The ashes are to be spread over the Washington Cascade Mountains,’ Bundy stated in the will.
The will did not give a specific location for the ashes, and attempts by The Associated Press to reach Ms. Weiner by telephone were unsuccessful.
Sandy Williams, co-owner of the Williams-Thomas Funeral Home in Gainesville where Bundy’s body was sent, would not give details about the final disposition of the body because of an agreement with Ms. Weiner.
‘There will be no public funeral as of right now,’ Williams said. ‘We do not believe there will be a public funeral in the future.’
Bundy was executed Tuesday at Florida State Prison near Starke for the February 1978 murder of Kimberly Leach, 12, of Lake City. He also was convicted of two other Florida deaths and is suspected in at least 50 deaths nationwide.
He was suspected in as many as 15 rapes and murders of young women in Washington while he lived in the Seattle area in the mid-1970s. Four of his victims’ bodies were found on Taylor Mountain in the foothills of the Cascades.
In the typewritten will, Bundy gave Ms. Weiner control over his remains, personal property and assets, including mail sent to him at the prison.
Prison records show Bundy’s personal property included a radio with a headphone, a gold-tone chain with a cross, a religious book, stationery, a gold wedding band and a bottle of suntan lotion.
He also had $709.66 in cash, money donated by family and friends for snacks and other items from the prison canteen.
The items were inventoried Tuesday and picked up at the prison by Ms. Weiner, said Department of Corrections spokesman Bob Macmaster.
Volusia County State Attorney John Tanner, a friend of Bundy’s who visited him often in recent years, was designated to handle the arrangements if Ms. Weiner was unable to do so.”
‘Bundy Wanted Cremation, Ashes Spread Over Cascades.’ Published January 25, 1989. Taken July 27, 2022 from AP News.com.”
“After Bundy’s death, celebrants cheered at the departure of the van carrying his remains to Gainesville, where he would be cremated. But the party ended there. Bundy was dead, and the evil he had carried was apparently gone from the world. Vendors packed up their souvenirs and counted their earnings. Spectators rolled up their signs, piled into their cars, and drove back home. Camera crews dismantled the equipment and left in search of the next story. And Ted Bundy’s ashes, along with all his other earthly possessions, were given to his attorney, with the instructions that they be scattered at an undisclosed location in Washington’s Cascade Range, in lieu of a public funeral. In many ways, he’d already had one.
Bundy had disposed of two of his victims in Lake Sammamish State Park, and of another two on Taylor Mountain, both locations west of Seattle and not far from the Washington Cascades. It was in these secluded, wooded areas that he revisited his victims for hours at a time, possessing them as fully as one human being can ever possess another. (In his interviews with Aynesworth and Michaud, Bundy described his fondness for theft, and how the joy of ownership was, for him, far superior to the thrill of the crime.) It is not so far-fetched to guess that there may be other, undiscovered bodies somewhere in the Washington Cascades—perhaps one, perhaps a dozen, perhaps all of them clustered in the undisclosed location where Bundy’s ashes were laid to rest.
The truly remarkable thing about the disposal of Bundy’s remains, however, is how little anyone seemed to care what happened to them. Anyone who followed the Bundy case with even the vaguest interest can piece together the likelihood of his remains mingling with those of his victims. Yet the fate of his body became a nonissue once it became just that—the fate of a body, and not of a man.
If we are to believe in evil—evil as a substance, as nonhuman dark matter that sometimes comes to rest in human bodies, as something as intangible yet identifiable as a soul—then what happens when the person who possesses it dies? The people who clustered outside Florida State Prison on the morning of Bundy’s execution seemed to believe that it would simply dissipate, and would perhaps descend to hell just as a soul ascends to heaven. Yet this is a fiction that perpetuates the same blind spot that allowed Bundy to seem above suspicion for so long. If “evil” is an unknown quantity, a supernatural presence in an otherwise normal human body, then we will fail to suspect the seemingly normal humans surrounding us—let alone a handsome, successful, intelligent young man—of harboring “evil” impulses. Bundy, unable to acknowledge the enormity of his crimes until it was clear that doing so was his only hope at survival, comforted himself with the same fiction by describing “the entity” and “the personality”—two separate beings coexisting within the same body. But there was no entity. There was no pure evil or “special kind of malevolence.” Bundy wasn’t possessed, nor was he a larger-than-life monster. Though psychologically atypical, he was in all other ways a normal, flesh-and-blood member of the human race, and his death was the same as anyone else’s. No great evil departed the world at the moment he died. No one was safer. No one’s life was measurably improved. The human capacity for evil actions remained unaltered: greater in some, but present in every man, woman, and child on earth.
Ultimately, the scattering of Bundy’s ashes in the Cascades is a testament to his humanity, and a crucial reminder to us that he was human after all. He may have committed brutal crimes in Washington’s parks and woods, but they were also areas that he loved the same way the rest of us do: the way we love the beauty of an area that will live long after us; the way we love a place that affords us peace; the way we love our home. And Bundy himself, though no longer able to cause us harm, is still present in our world, his earthly remains at rest in one of the most beautiful parts of the country. They have no magic qualities. They pose no threat to the area they inhabit. They are, in the end, the remains of a human being—no more, no less.”
Marshall, Sarah. “The Earthly Remains: Revisiting Ted Bundy.” January 4, 2013. Taken July 27, 2022 from https://www.orderofthegooddeath.com/article/the-earthly-remains-revisiting-ted-bundy/.










