Cheri Jo ‘Josephine’ Bates.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ted, Carole, and Rosa.

I came across quite a few pictures of Ted and his family these past few days and I wanted to share them here. Carole Ann Boone passed away in a retirement home in Seattle in 2018, and where I do know some details about Rose/Rosa’s adult life I will not disclose anything out of respect for her privacy. I was hesitant about including her face in some of these but I found them all quite easily on the public domain.

A rare picture of baby Rosa by herself, photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
Ted holding Rosa as a baby. I’ve seen her referred to as both Rose and Rosa.
A happy family: Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa. Sometimes her face is blurred out, and other times it isn’t.
Ted, Jaime Boone, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
Ted and Rosa. Imagine the only time you ever saw your father was under the watchful eye of a prison guard.
A rare picture of Rosa by herself, photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
Ted and Rosa.
Ted and his daughter.
Carole Ann and Ted.
Carole Ann and Ted.
Ted and Carole Ann.
Just Ted… he looks so ghastly in this picture.
A young Ted before his time in prison aged him, photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
Ted in prison. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Another picture of Ted in prison. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
Ted looks quite a bit heavier than he normally does in this picture.
Ted with some other FSU inmates. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
Ted in prison. Photo courtesy of the FB group ‘TB’s Crowbar Magazine.’
Another shot of Ted in prison. Photo courtesy of the FB group ‘TB’s Crowbar Magazine.’
A shot of a magazine article about Ted, Carole Ann, and Rosa.
A picture of Carole Ann Boone taken shortly before her death.

Analysis of ‘No Man of God.’

Directed by Amber Sealy and written by C. Robert Cargill (under the pseudonym of Kit Lesser), ‘No Man of God’ stars Elijah Wood (as Bill Hagmaier), Luke Kirby (as Ted Bundy), Aleksa Palladino (as Ted’s final attorney Carolyn Lieberman/Diana Weiner), and James Patrick of Terminator fame (Roger Depue). The film had its premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 11, 2021 and was officially released by RLJE Films on August 27, 2021. In my opinion, this movie is unlike any other Bundy production that’s out there because it takes place (almost) completely inside the walls of  Florida State Prison after his murders and trials took place. Set between 1985 and 1989, it’s based on conversations between the FBI Agent (Hagmaier) and serial killer during his time on death row in the sunshine state. In the opening scene some information about what you’re about to watch appears on the screen: ‘in the late 1970’s, a team of FBI researchers proposed that, by understanding the psychology of violent serial offenders, investigators could more effectively combat serial rapes and homicides. The process was called profiling. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan announced the establishment of the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime, creating the first five full-time positions for FBI profilers. Special Agent Bill Hagmaier was picked as one. The following is inspired by FBI transcripts, recordings, and the recollections of Bill Hagmaier.’

The movie begins in 1985, where an group of FBI agents from the elite Behavior Science Unit are sitting in on a meeting with Supervisory Special Agent Roger Depue, who shares with them that he needs them to gather case studies on violent offenders, including serial rapists and killers (by ‘begins’ I mean the plot of the movie, in literal terms it actually begins with a real-life broadcast announcing Bundy’s execution). Names like Charles Manson, Ed Kemper, and David Berkowitz are thrown around… and when the other agents laughed and passed on Ted, newcomer William Hagmaier accepted the challenge despite being aware of the killers deep distrust of the Bureau. Initially through snail mail, Bundy expressed interest in communicating with Hagmaier, who eventually traveled to the condemned man’s final home for an interview. Over the next couple of years, the two men developed an unusual ‘friendship’ of sorts while discussing pornography and detective magazines as a possible catalyst for violent serial offenders. Despite some hesitation at first from the agent, during these conversations Bundy was able to cajole personal details about his personal life out of him, under the guise of establishing trust between them.

The following year the two men met again. This time, Ted is shown some crime scene photos related to the recent Green River murders and gives Hagmaier his opinion on them, and through the agents sly questioning the killer accidentally volunteers some details about his own diabolical history. At one point during their chat Bundy asks Bill if he thinks he could kill someone, and when the agent responds that, due to his being an FBI agent it could in theory happen, it’s not exactly the answer he was seeking. Back at Quantico, FBI Unit Chief Depue cautioned his agent not to get too close to someone like Bundy, and that he ‘didn’t want someone like him getting inside his head.’ Despite this warning, while sharing stories about their children during their next visit in 1987, Ted senses that his new friend is getting too deep inside of his head and taunts him to wonder outloud what he might do if he ever escaped from prison. In response, Hagmaier describes it with (most likely) a good amount of accuracy, which makes him furious and he verbally attacks him. After calming down a bit Bundy begins to disclose more intimate details of his life and what may have led him to murder, but along the way he also dispelled many of the popular myths about him (such as going after women with long, dark hair). The killer also shared that in an alternate reality Bill could be the one sitting in prison and he could be an FBI agent, a statement that deeply affected the agent.

Thanks to IMDB, I learned quite a few interesting facts about the movie I was unaware about before writing this article: in the first conversation between Bundy and Agent Hagmaier the SK asks why the Bureau didn’t send Douglas, and by that he meant John Douglas, who was the criminal profiler that wrote ‘Mindhunter’ on which the TV series is based. Also, when Bill is talking to Bundy about confessing he mentions Henry Lee Lucas, another serial killer that (along with his partner/lover Otis Toole) frequently lied and fabricated stories about his criminal history, hinting at him to tell the truth. Lastly, in 1987 Ted mentions that they should co-author a book together and name it ‘The Bill and Ted Show,’ alluding to the 1989 movie ‘Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure’ which was released less than a month after he was executed. This is one of the few errors, as the movie wasn’t released for two years after this conversation took place.

The final half of the movie (roughly) takes place in the last few days of Bundy’s life in January 1989, after (then) Florida state Governor Bob Martinez signed his death warrant and he was trying to weasel his way out of getting executed. Ted (of course) said that the determination of only being granted seven days was done by the governor in a pathetic attempt to gain the favor of the people of Florida in the hopes of getting reelected (spoiler alert, he did not). Hearing of the killers quickly approaching doom, individuals from all over the US as well as members of the media began to gather outside the prison. At this time, we meet his civil attorney Carolyn Lieberman, who is deeply against Hagmaiers involvement in anything related to Ted due to his ties to ‘law enforcement,’ however the killer is insistent that he be there, saying Bill is his ‘best friend.’

Hagmaier was sent to Florida not to fight for Bundy’s life but to simply be there and act as his scheduling coordinator: Ted is finally ready to confess and spill all of his secrets, and because he is a complete narcissist it’s all being done on his terms. He tells Bill of his plan to only give detectives the bare minimum in order to bait them and make them want more, which he hoped would grant him more time to live. In response, the agent urges Bundy not to play games with the governor of Florida, advice that he mostly ignores. Members of law enforcement agencies from all over the US poured into Florida: Idaho, California, Oregon, Colorado, and Utah; where I didn’t hear representatives from NJ or Vermont mentioned I recall Bundy also being questioned about the 1969 New Jersey Parkway murders (Susan Davis and Elizabeth Perry) as well as the 1971 homicide of schoolteacher Rita Curran (in VT).

During interviews with investigators across multiple states, Bundy is purposefully vague and evasive with his answers, only sharing small tidbits of information with them. Additionally, he completely disregarded Bill’s concerns about media coverage and Carolyn scheduled an interview with Christian Psychologist, creator of ‘Focus on the Family,’ and straight up douchebag Dr. James Dobson the day before he was executed in hopes that he would petition the governor on behalf of Ted in hopes of getting a stay… But of course, the sleazebag waited until after the interview to reveal that he never planned on talking to Martinez, as he felt the killer would never be granted a pardon. It was really almost spooky watching Kirby’s performance as Bundy during his interview: not only was the dialogue nearly identical but so were the facial expressions made by the killer. It was as if he somehow channeled Bundy’s spirit during that scene.

Later that day after the interview the warden informed Hagmaier that Bundy was to undergo a last-minute sanity hearing, and where multiple conversations were to be conducted the decision to put the killer to death would ultimately fall completely on his testimony to a psychiatric board; as we know, they ultimately declare Bundy sane.

When the men speak for the last time on January 23, 1989 Bill brings up a conversation they had a few years prior, about being ‘brought under the water:’ through violent, horrifying details, Bundy finally opened up and shared how he lured and killed one of his victims, leaving the agent completely overwhelmed and in tears. After this interaction Ted asked his friend why this is happening to him, proving he was still completely remorseless. Infuriated, as Bill prepares to leave the condemned man asks if he had any idea why he did what he did, to which he simply said, ‘because you wanted to.’ Just moments before Bundy was scheduled to die, Hagmaier is told by a prison official that he had been taken off the list to sit in on the execution so that someone else could fill his spot. The movie wraps up with Agent Hagmaier alone in the warden’s office, answering the telephone and talking to his wife and son. As he is catching up with his son, the crowd outside erupts in spirited cheers as it was announced that Ted was officially declared dead.

Just some quick background on Diana: she was a civil attorney, which is a type of lawyer that mainly works on civil lawsuits (such as, a personal injury case or contract dispute) and represents their clients in non-criminal areas of the law. Weiner (whose maiden name was Acevedo) got her BA from Houghton College (which is a Christian school close to where I live) in NY in 1969 and went on to earn her Juris Doctorate from Georgetown in 1982. She has been married to her husband Nevin for over forty years, who also worked as an attorney before retiring.

Diana first met Ted Bundy in October 1986 through psychologist Art Norman, who was brought on earlier in the year to interview him for a clemency proceeding. Dr. Norman was in the same social circle as Weiner and her husband, and he felt that Bundy would be more open and honest if there was an ‘intelligent, attractive attorney, and a woman who could be very open and would have the personality to open up and would not be threatened by whatever he says.’ Well, he was definitely on the right track: almost immediately, Diana’s presence prompted Ted to talk more honestly and intensely about his feelings towards violence and women, which were ‘things he has difficulty talking about with a man.’ All of this was being done by Dr. Norman in an attempt to figure out whether the killer had been ‘mentally competent’ to stand trial when he was convicted in the early 1980’s. Shortly after their meeting, Weiner officially became Bundy’s civil attorney and represented him (along with other death row inmates) in a civil rights lawsuit surrounding the poor ‘exercise conditions’ at Raiford Prison.

There seemed to be quite a bit of whispering about the nature of hers and Bundy’s relationship before he was put to death, but there is no proof that anything inappropriate ever took place between the two. About Bundy, Weiner said they had ‘an attorney-client relationship,  but I also, as an attorney and client do, developed a congenial relationship with the client.’ The idea is strongly hinted at in ‘No Man of God’ as well: in the movie the warden asked Hagmaier why a civil attorney needed to visit a death row inmate 80 times in three years, and where I don’t know how accurate that estimation is, in reality she spent roughly seventy hours with him during his time on death row.

According to the website ‘yourtango’ (just for the record, I don’t know how accurate this information is), Bundy’s feelings for Weiner were so glaringly obvious that they became a bit of annoyance to the rest of his legal team, including his defense attorney Polly Nelson. At one point she even confronted Ted about his feelings, which she was beginning to suspect were making her own job more difficult. In her book ‘Defending the Devil,’ Nelson wrote about her experience, and at one point said: ‘Ted, quit giving me this ‘Ms. Weiner’ stuff. I know why you see her, and it has nothing to do with any lawsuit. She’s beautiful, she’s interested, she can come during lawyer’s visiting hours, and you can have unsupervised visits with her.’ In response to this, Ted paused briefly, smiled then said, ‘that about sums it up.’

In one of the few interviews she did after Ted’s execution, Weiner said she the man she knew wasn’t a killer, or a rapist: while she made it clear that she wasn’t in any way minimizing what he did, she remembers a man that became a born-again Christian that seemed genuinely remorseful for what he did and was sincere when he said he wanted to confess in hopes to ease the pain of his victims’ families: “I think the public is unwilling to accept that there could be a commonality between Ted Bundy and the rest of humanity or that Ted Bundy could have at the end of his life sought to tell the truth, confess or have had any moral compunction to do so.’

According to the legal paperwork that was left behind by the killer, Bundy left Weiner all of his worldly possessions, including his wedding ring, roughly $700, and his ashes. Regarding the latter of the three, she was instructed by her client to spread them across one of his dumpsites at Taylor Mountain, which never took place; a family member of Ted’s is currently in possession of them.

One thing I wonder about is the scene towards the end of the movie when Ted said he would rather slit his wrists then be killed by the state of Florida, an act he was easily talked out of by Hagmaier. I mean, it was no secret that Bundy was absolutely terrified of dying, and personally I think he would never have committed suicide because I honest to God think he fully expected a call from the governor granting him another stay of execution at the very last possible moment (like, as he was being strapped into the Ol’ Sparky). I mean… I just don’t think Bundy had it in him to take his own life. It’s ironic, in a really sad way: he had no problem killing potentially dozens upon dozens of girls and young women, but when it came to himself he was scared shitless.

One thing I was incredibly impressed by was how accurate this movie was when it came to the smaller details about Bundy’s life as well as his timeline. In quite a few Ted related movies, the creators changed the names of victims and family members, but that didn’t happen with ‘No Man of God.’ They even called his daughter by the correct name, which surprised me a bit as I know she has tried her hardest to stay out of the limelight regarding her fathers case (I hope that was able to continue); it’s even mentioned that that he hadn’t seen Rosa for a long stretch of time after he told Carole Ann Boone his plans of confessing (she stopped visiting in 1986). Additionally, when Bill talks about how his son pulled his pants down while pretending to be an elephant while crab-walked around his preschool classroom… Well, he really does have a son named Bryan, who followed in his fathers footsteps and became an officer with the NYPD (and I’m sure he loved that story being involved in the movie).

Other popular names related to Bundy were also used, like Liz Kloepfer, true crime legend Ann Rule, and his first love Diane Edwards. Rule is briefly brought up in conversation, when Ted denied her theory that Edwards was the main catalyst for his drive to kill and declared that being dumped by her had nothing to do with why he committed such atrocities. One name did jump out at me as being wrong but it was the way it was done that surprised me: Hagmaier questioned Bundy about ‘Diane Leach,’ and where the details were mostly correct they called her by her middle name and completely left out her first (Kimberly). Another identity that was changed was Carolyn Leiberman, and it wasn’t until after I spent a solid half-hour trying to figure out who she was that I realized the name was changed from Diana Weiner. My educated guess as to why: Ms. Weiner is still alive and the creators of the movie didn’t want people looking her up and harassing her.

And now I’m just going to go through and point out various things that interested me about this movie (thrilling, I know):

  • When Bundy is talking to members of LE across various states about his potential victims, the detective from Oregon lists different cities across the state and asks whether or not he ever murdered there. Every place he brings up is one that Ted was suspected of killing in: Eugene (mainly Vicki Lynn Hollar but there are other suspected victims), West Linn (Rita Lorraine Jolly), and Corvallis (Kathy Parks, who was actually confirmed).
  • When a detective from Colorado questions Ted if he committed murder before 1975 (specifically 1968) he evades the question at first, and says he’s ready to break for lunch; when alone he tells Agent Hagmaier that he suspects the officer was in a relationship with one of the women he killed. I found no evidence that this ever happened, and I have never heard of this before seeing ‘No Man of God’ (I also couldn’t find a record of it anywhere else). After Ted tells Bill of his suspicions about the member of LE he shares that he not only killed the young woman but he also ‘made love to her dead body’ then cut her head ‘clean off.’ Looking into murdered women from the state in 1968, on March 26 Constance Marie Paris walked off a bus in Denver at the intersection of Girard Avenue and South Broadway and was never seen alive again. Just five days later on March 31, 1968 her remains were found in a ditch in the southwest part of Denver; she was found naked and was strangled and sexually assaulted. As of July 2024 her case remains unsolved.
  • Ted told Bill that when he was finally recaptured in Florida he tried to tell police who he was but they didn’t believe him. I recall (from listening to Liz Kloepfer’s ‘The Phantom Prince’ exactly one thousand times on Audible) that in reality he was reluctant to share his true identity and only gave them his name in exchange for a phone call (to Liz)…  so I’m not exactly sure how accurate that part is.
  • When Ted takes Bill ‘under the water,’ he mentioned using smelling salts to revive his victim, which I never heard of him using before. Also interesting, the victim he discussed killing was Kathy Parks. In this scene, he said: ‘I’m going to… take you somewhere… that I’ve never taken anyone before. And I will do the talking. She’s… beautiful. She’s…. Radiant. And very familiar. Her dad is sick. He’s, uh… He’s in and out of the hospital. I hear her talking about it over a pay phone. He has heart problems. I have a badge that I got in the usual way, a local police badge. And tonight… full moon. She looks amazing. She’s exactly like one of the girls from the magazines. Walk up to her. I’m Officer Ted, Officer Ted Bundy. Something’s happened. She goes pale. “What do you mean?” ‘Your father’s had a heart attack. I was sent to find you. My car is over this way.” She rushes with me. It all happened so fast. She doesn’t have time to clock the police officer is picking her up in a Volkswagen. I open the door for her. Before she realizes there’s no passenger seat, wham! I hit her in the back of the head with a tire iron. She’s out. Isn’t she beautiful? Her dark hair parted down the middle.’ Parks was abducted on May 6, 1974 at around 11 PM, most likely right outside the Memorial Union on Oregon State University’s campus; she was on her way to get a hot fudge sundae. We know that she was incredibly upset and distracted that night because her father had recently suffered from a heart attack and she was concerned about him.

I know that Ted once told a story that he was in the library at Michigan State University and was flipping through college catalogs while contemplating his next move… he knew he wanted to go somewhere warm that was near water and close to a college campus. The movie features a scene where Ted tells Bill that he didn’t want to get caught, and honestly I’m going to have to lean towards that. Did he go to Florida in hopes of living out the rest of his life in anonymity, or did he go there purposefully to get a death sentence? Or, did he simply not want to live the rest of his life behind bars? I mean… I’m sure he was aware that if he stayed in Colorado there would be a good chance that he would die of natural causes while living out his final days in prison. If you really think about it, the Chi Omega murders (and the attack of Cheryl Thomas on Dunwoody Street) were incredibly reckless almost to a point they would be considered careless. It was as if he was begging to get caught. Why was he so sloppy if he wanted to avoid detection?

Over the years there have been many movies made about Ted Bundy, and that isn’t taking into account the dozens upon dozens of documentary-type television shows and mini-series that have been produced as well. Personally, my favorite is the oldest one starring Mark Hammon titled, ‘The Deliberate Stranger.’ Made in 1986, it’s a (fairly) accurate retelling of a book by the same name that was written by Seattle Times reporter Richard W. Larsen in 1980. The book was adapted into a two-part made for TV movie that originally aired on NBC on May 4 and 5, 1986. What I think is interesting about this is that TB was still alive when it was made, even though he claimed he had no interest in seeing it. Surprisingly, there wasn‘t another film about the SK made until 2002 (things really seem to pick up after that), when Michael Reilly Burke played the serial killer in the movie simply named ‘Ted Bundy;’ it was universally panned (as it should have been because it’s a total of crap) and was deemed ‘exploitative’ by critics. The following year Ann Rule’s classic ‘The Stranger Beside Me’ was made into another made for TV movie starring Billy Campbell and Barbara Hershey. Next up: on July 21, 2008 Parker Lewis himself Corin Nemec starred in ‘Bundy: An American Icon’ (which is also called ‘Bundy: A Legacy of Evil’) and to be honest, I thought this and the MRB movie were one in the same. I only recently realized that they’re two separate films. Then of course in 2019 we have another favorite of mine, the Zac Efron/Lily Collins Netflix movie titled, ‘Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil And Vile,’ and where it wasn’t entirely accurate it was pretty well-made and entertaining. Lastly, in 2021 one-time teen heart throb Chad Michael Murray played the titular character in ‘Ted Bundy: American Boogeyman;’ it was a cinematic abortion and I don’t think I ever finished it.

There’s also been multiple films about Bundy’s involvement in the investigation of the Green River/Gary Ridgway killings that took place near Bundy’s hometown of Tacoma: in 2004 Cary Elwes portrayed Ted in ‘The Riverman,’ followed by ‘The Capture Of The Green River Killer’ in 2008 then ‘Bundy And The Green River Killer’ in 2019.

On the movie review website ‘Rotten Tomatoes,’ ‘No Man of God’ currently has an approval rating of 80% based of 81 reviews; the film has an IMDB rating of 6.4/10. According to ‘Metacritic,’ it has a weighted score of 67/100 and a user score of 7.1 (based off 21` reviews); this is considered by them to be ‘highly favorable.’ As of July 2024 ‘No Man of God’ earned $216,000 at the worldwide box office.

Works Cited:
bundyphile.com/2021/11/05/no-man-of-god-movie-review/
yourtango.com/2019321781/who-is-diana-weiner-ted-bundys-lawyer-and-final-love-interest

A picture of Bill Hagmaier sitting with Bundy during one of their interviews.
Elijah Wood (l) next to one of the only pictures of a young Bill Hagmaier (r) that I could find; I apologize for the poor quality.
Luke Kirby (l) next to Ted Bundy (r).
Aleksa Palladino (l) next to the ‘real’ Carolyn Lieberman (Diana Weiner, r). The photo of Weiner is courtesy of Maria Serban and is from the 1964 Northeast High School yearbook (located in St. Petersburg, FL). Weiner said that her client ‘wanted to die having left a more full understanding with the public of what the underlying factors were in his behavior so that we as a society would be able to take steps to prevent the kind of behavior he committed.’
Diana Weiner (then Acevedo) in a picture for the debate club from the 1968 Houghton College yearbook. Photo courtesy of Maria Serban.
Diana Weiner from her time at Georgetown. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A more recent photo of Diana Weiner taken from her Twitter account.
Diana’s husband, Nevin. He went to the University of Rochester which is close to the college where she earned her undergraduate degree.
An interoffice memorandum from one of the seventy (plus) visits Weiner made to Ted during her time has his attorney. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
An interoffice memorandum from Florida State prison regarding Bundy’s final interviews. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
An interoffice memo detailing Bundy’s final wishes, including a special contact visit with Diana Weiner (which was denied). Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
According to this interoffice memo, Weiners last (ahem, no-contact) visit with her client took place the day before he was put to death. Courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Bill Hagmaier in a group picture from an academic fraternity from his time at Slippery Rock University in 1969.
According to the Slippery Rock website, ​Bill Hagmaier was born in 1947 in Pittsburgh and earned his Bachelors in elementary education in 1969. After serving in the Army Military Police Corps, he went back and got his Masters Degree in counseling in 1974. Upon finishing his FBI training in May 1978, Hagmaier was assigned to the Minneapolis Division for four years; from there, he worked in the office at the FBI’s state headquarters for two years then finished his time with the bureau as the Assistant Senior Resident Agent in St. Paul.
Christian Clemenson (l) and Dr. James Dobson (r).
dob
Aleksa Palladino and Luke Kirby from ‘No Man of God.’
The weirdest review I’ve come across, found on commonsensemedia.org. I don’t want to sign up for more reviews, I want to be guaranteed no more of these ridiculous reviews come up in my search results again.
Amber Sealey.
About the movie, ‘No Man of God’ writer C. Robert Cargill (who wrote the screenplay under the name Kit Lesser) discussed with the horror-comedy podcast ‘Pod of Madness’ why he wanted to write the film, explaining: ‘There have been a lot of movies and a lot of media made about Ted Bundy, and one of the things that bugged me a lot was that it’s all kind of selling the myth of Ted Bundy and kind of glorifying him in a way. And the deeper you dig into the story you realize there’s nothing to mystify here, there’s nothing amazing about him.’
A newspaper clipping that mentions Weiner published by The News-Press on February 6, 1989.
A newspaper clipping mentioning Diana Weiner published in The Tampa Bay Times on February 7, 1989.
These are Bundy’s final, handwritten notes (between January 20 and 22, 1989). Thank you to Maria Serban for sharing these, she is amazing. Page one of Bundy’s notes from January 20, 1989.
Page two of Bundy’s notes from January 20, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Page three of Bundy’s notes from January 20, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Page four of Bundy’s notes from January 20, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Page one of Bundy’s notes from January 21, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Page one of Bundy’s notes from January 22, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Page two of Bundy’s notes from January 22, 1989. Document courtesy of Maria Serban.
Kathy Parks and her boyfriend, Christy McPhee.
I thought this contained a lot of interesting information about Kathy Parks written by Redditor ‘Quick-Employee1744.’
An article mentioning Kathy Parks father suffering a heart attack published by The Petaluma Argus-Courier on May 24, 1974.
Constance Marie Paris.

Katherine Merry Devine, Case Files: Part One.

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

Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin.

Geneva Joy Martin was born on November 16, 1952 to Robert Eugene and Florence (nee Boldt) Martin in Hastings, MI. Mr. Martin was born on August 7, 1930 and Florence was born on March 16, 1914 in Hutchinson, Minnesota; her occupation is listed as ‘secretary’ in her ‘geni’ profile, and the couple had two daughters but eventually divorced. In 1942 Florence moved her family to Anchorage, Alaska, where she would eventually get remarried to a man named Maurice Green, who worked for the state railroad. The couple would have two daughters together: Lynella Faith (Grant) and Madelon Grace (Mottet). Aside from a DOB and where she was born I couldn’t find any more details about Ms. Martins childhood.

At some point before her death Geneva married Harvey ‘Stormy’ Nelson Irvin … or, at least that’s what it says on her tombstone. I could find no record of their nuptials anywhere and he isn’t mentioned once in any articles about her aside from the fact that she used his last name on occasion ‘as an alias…’ I did, however, find four other marriage certificates for Mr. Irvin on Ancestry. The couple had a daughter named Daphnia Joy that was two months old when nineteen year old Geneva was found deceased, and in the year prior to her disappearance she briefly lived in Seattle and the Eugene/Springfield, OR area. Harvey was born on February 15, 1950, and after Geneva was killed he wasn’t single for very long: he married Patricia Connelly less than three years later on May 22, 1975 in Reno, Nevada.

At roughly 1 PM on June 16, 1972 the remains of a decomposed, ‘partially clad young woman’ were found face down in a ‘woody, roadside ditch’ by Frank Miller, a local farmer. She was only wearing a coat and shoes, and her hair was caked with dried mud and sediment; she remained unidentified for roughly ten days while detectives searched for clues. At the scene investigators made a plaster cast of where the victim was found in the ditch in hopes to further aid in the investigation… and this is where not having a background in policing/criminology/forensics hurts me because I didn’t know that was a thing. Looking into it, ‘casting’ is when experts preserve impressions from crime scenes (for example larger, 3D impressions such as tire marks or footprints). The process works almost the same way an orthodontist makes a mold of a patient’s teeth, and forensic experts and LE use an array of materials to help create the ‘casts.’

The young victim was taken to Eugene’s Sacred Heart Hospital, where specialists from the Oregon Crime Laboratory got to work on identifying her. According to (retired) Linn County DA Jackson Frost, they were able to tell that she was in the ditch for ‘about three days, but definitely not a week,’ and were immediately able to determine that she was no older than 25. Thanks in part to an advanced stage of facial decomp, it took thirteen days and $162 worth of long distance phone calls to Alaska (where Martin received care) before dental experts were able to make a near positive identification; a sister living in Colorado helped make an absolute positive ID. Despite an autopsy as well as ‘all kinds of lab tests,’ investigators were never able to pinpoint Martin’s exact cause of death due to her having ‘no violent wounds;’ I also found no mention of sexual assault. In the beginning of the investigation medical examiners thought they detected drugs in her system however it was later determined that the advanced state of decomp produced a chemical that masked the presence of narcotics. Despite there being 150 pages worth of notes in Martins case file, there is next to no information out there on her.

In the end of an article published in The Greater Oregon on June 30, 1972, DA Frost commented that ‘the young woman apparently was living under circumstances where she might not want to use her true name, thus the alias.’ In an article published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 28, 1973, Frost said that Martin was a known drug user and had recently been in treatment for ‘drug related mental problems’ in Eugene. At the time of her death detectives learned she had been living in Eugene for several months and a week before she was last seen had cashed her monthly welfare check then quietly slipped out of sight; it was the last time she was seen alive.

At the time Geneva was murdered Ted Bundy was living in Seattle at the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue, and was in the middle of a long term relationship with Elizabeth Kloepfer. He had just finished his undergraduate psychology degree from the University of Washington and was getting ready for his first (unsuccessful) attempt at law school at the University of Puget Sound (which he began the following year). At the time Ted was interning as a counselor at Harborview Mental Health Center in Seattle (he was only there from June to September 1972), and according to the ‘TB MultiAgency Report 1992,’ Bundy was mostly in Seattle the week before she was found dead but made a trip to San Francisco on June 13 and stayed until the 15th; his whereabouts are then unaccounted for until June 18 when he bought gas in Seattle. As I’ve said in multiple other articles, its Bundy cannon that the serial murderer began killing in early January 1974 with his brutal attack of fellow University of Washington student Karen Sparks in her basement apartment, but during his confessions before his execution he hinted to Dr. Robert Keppel that he may have started as early as 1972 with a young girl in Seattle (but of course didn’t elaborate further than that).

I didn’t know Bundy was ever actually suspected in any additional Oregon murders on top of Roberta Parks (for sure) and (possibly) Vicki Hollar/Rita Jolly/Sue Justis, but according to an article published by The Eugene Register-Guard on February 24, 1989, Martin was at one time considered a possible victim of his as well as Beverly May Jenkins, Allison Lynn Caufman, Laurie Lee Canaday, Tina Marie Mingus, and Floy Jean Bennet. Now, I am in no way saying these women are really possible victims of Ted Bundy, I’m just saying they were in the very least in the correct place at the right (or wrong) time (well sort of, as some if the dates are completely off). Sixteen year old Beverly May Jenkins was from Roseburg, OR and in June 1972 her remains were found just off the I-5 roughly ten miles outside of Cottage Grove; she had been strangled to death. Fifteen year old Portland native Allison Lynn Caufman died as a result of head injuries after being shoved from a car moving at a high rate of speed in July 1973. I think the last two girls can be quickly debunked, as Bundy was in prison when both victims were killed. Tina Marie Mingus was only 16 years old when her body was found in Salem, OR in October 1975, and Flow Joy Bennet was 37 (and obviously a bit out of Bundy’s preferred age range) when she vanished in February 1978. What’s strange is I couldn’t find any more information about any of these women out there. It’s almost as if they never existed.

But there’s more dead and missing women, on top of that article. Twenty year old Faye Ellen Robinson was found deceased from multiple stab wounds in the upper part of her body in March 23, 1972. Like most Bundy victims, she was educated and had a good job working in county government: she graduated from the University of Oregon in 1970 and was employed by the Lane County Welfare Department. Also on March 23 Alma Jean Barra was last seen after leaving the Copper Penny Tavern in the company of an unknown man driving southbound on 92nd Avenue between 11 and 11:30 PM. The 28-year-old’s body was found in an area of heavy brush of the Willamette National Cemetery, roughly forty feet off of Mount Scott Boulevard; she had been strangled and showed no signs of sexual assault. Next is 17 year old Susan Wickersham, who disappeared from Bend, OR on July 11, 1973 after dropping off the family car at her mom’s POE after joyriding around town with a gf (some conflicting reports say she was at a party). Wickershams remains were found on January 20, 1976 and her skull had a bullet hole behind the right ear with no exit wound. Gayle LeClair was murdered in her rental house on August 23, 1973; a clerk/typist at the Eugene Municipal Library, she had been found by her supervisor stabbed to death after she failed to come in for her scheduled shift. Lastly, Deborah Lee Tomlinson vanished without a trace after running away from Creswell, OR with an unnamed friend on her sixteenth birthday on October 15, 1973.

I tried my hardest to find some sort of link between Ms. Martin and any other victims from the area, but not having a cause of death makes it really hard to compare. What I (personally) think happened: she met up with some undesirable friends and together they used some illegal substances, then Geneva overdosed and they panicked then got rid of her body in the most convenient and easiest way they could think of. I mean, to me it sounds plausible that they dumped her on the side of the road (possibly in the middle of the night) because they got scared and didn’t want to be held responsible for her death. In 1972 ‘Good Samaritan’ laws didn’t exist, so if anyone was present when she died then most likely they would have been held responsible in some capacity.

After the death of her mother Daphnia was sent to live with relatives out of state. Per the Green family’s myheritage site, she got married and had a son. Harvey went on to marry (and divorce) numerous times and had four more children; he passed away on February 3, 2007 at the age of 56. Geneva’s father passed away at the age of 84 in 2014 in Garibaldi, OR, and Mrs. Green died January 13, 1994 at the age of 79 due to a smoking related illness. Both of her half-sisters have led incredibly remarkable lives: Dr. Lynella Faith Grant is a psychologist, statistician, lawyer, personnel director, inventor, marketer, publisher, and author; Dr. Madelon Green-Mottet got her PhD in Fisheries from the University of Washington in Seattle and taught classes on aquaculture at a small college in Sitka, Alaska.

Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
Some information related to the death of Geneva Joy Martin, courtesy of the King County Sheriff’s Department.
The grave stone of Geneva Joy Martin. She is buried in plot 21 at The Mulkey Cemetery
in Eugene, Oregon.
The family history of Ms. Martin according to myheritage.com.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Statesman Journal on June 17, 1972.
An article about Martin’s body being discovered (but unidentified), published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 17, 1972.
An article about the murder of Joseph N. Zaloom that mentions Geneva Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 19, 1972.
A picture from an article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 19, 1972.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Statesman Journal on June 20, 1972.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 20, 1972.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Corvallis Gazette-Times on June 20, 1972.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Corvallis Gazette-Times on June 21, 1972.
An article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 22, 1972.
Part one of an article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Times on June 22, 1972.
Part two of an article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Times on June 22, 1972.
An article mentioning Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 24, 1972.
An article mentioning Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 26, 1972.
An article about the identification of Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin’s remains published by The Corvallis Gazette-Times on June 29, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 29, 1972.
Part one of an article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published by The Times on June 29, 1972.
Part two of an article about the discovery of Martin’s remains published The Times on June 29, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin published by The Spokesman-Review on June 30, 1972.
An article about the positive identification of Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin’s remains published by The Capital Journal on June 30, 1972.
An article about the positive ID of Geneva Joy Martin’s remains published by The Statesman Journal on June 30, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Joy Martin published by The Greater Oregon on June 30, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on July 6, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Joy Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on July 26, 1972.
An article mentioning the death of Geneva Joy Martin-Irvin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on August 29, 1972.
An article mentioning the death of Geneva Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on September 14, 1972.
An article about the death of Geneva Joy Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on December 26, 1972.
An article mentioning the death of Geneva Joy Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on June 28, 1973.
An article mentioning the death of Geneva Martin published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on July 19, 1978.
Part one of an article about potential Bundy victims out of Oregon published after his execution from The Eugene Register-Guard on February 24, 1989.
Part two of an article about potential Bundy victims out of Oregon published after his execution from The Eugene Register-Guard on February 24, 1989.
Bundy’s whereabouts the week before Geneva was found murdered according to the ‘TB Multiagency Investigative Team Report 1992.’
An article about a burglary performed by Geneva’s ‘husband’ published in The Eugene Register-Guard on November 8, 1969.
A newspaper blurb about a burglary performed by Geneva’s ‘husband’ published in The Eugene Register-Guard on January 27, 1973.
A newspaper blurb about Geneva’s ‘husband’ published in The Eugene Register-Guard on March 6, 1973.
An article about Harvey Irvin having another baby with his new wife published by The Albany Democrat-Herald on July 10, 1975.
An article about Geneva’s ‘husband’ driving with a suspended license published in The Lebanon Express on April 12, 1976.
Harvey Irvin and Lorie Ann William’s marriage certificate from 2001.
Harvey Irvin’s obituary published in The Kansas City Star on February 3, 2007.
Mrs. Green’s obituary.
Madelon Green Mottet from the 1963 West Anchorage High School yearbook.
Dr. Madelon Green Mottet, PhD.
Dr. Madelon Mottet’s bio on her Amazon page.

Dr. Lynella Grant.

Ted Bundy Ritual House.

When I went to Utah in November 2022 there was one location I was completely unaware existed that I wish I (somehow) knew to include in my list: the supposed ‘Ted Bundy Ritual House’ just outside of SLC in Bountiful. The duplex-style residence is located at 1201 North 200 West, and is said to be ‘just across the street’ from Viewmont High School, which is where Deb Kent was abducted by Bundy on November 8, 1974 after his botched kidnapping attempt of Carol DaRonch just 45 minutes away in Murray. Kent was last seen at roughly 10:30 PM after leaving a showing of ‘The Redhead’ to go and pick up her brother from the nearby Rustic Roller Rink. According to eyewitnesses, there were loud screams heard from the parking lot at roughly the same time that she was last seen, and after the Kents realized that the family car had never left the parking lot they immediately contacted the police.

Before Bundy was executed in January 1989, he confessed to killing then 17 year-old Kent and pointed investigators to where he dumped her body. Upon searching Fairview Canyon later that May the only human remains that search crews located was a patella, which was found among the ten bags of animal bones that were collected. The kneecap was presumed to belong to Debra and was given to her family to hold onto, and it remained unidentified until 2015 when DNA testing confirmed that it belonged to her. After the positive ID the Bountiful PD returned the bone to Belva Kent along with her daughter’s official death certificate.

According to Redditor ‘je-m-en-fiche,’ Bountiful residents that lived in the area referred to it as the ‘Viewmont House’ because of its close proximity to the local high school. Looking into the residence, it’s in no way ‘close’ (in my opinion, anyways) to Viewmont HS, nor should it be considered just across the street (it’s actually 0.2 miles away, and is about a five minute walk). It was featured on the Travel Channel television show Ghost Adventures, ‘starring’ Zak Bagans and his group of cronies (including Aaron Goodwin and Nick Groff), specifically for the limited spin-off mini-series ‘Serial Killer Spirits.’ The episode, titled ’The Ted Bundy Ritual House,’ aired on October 26, 2019, and focused on the abandoned structure that has been uninhabited since a gas leak led to an explosion on July 4, 1997. The show’s creator and ‘lead investigator’ Zak Bagans claims that Bundy took Debra Kent there after abducting her after she left a showing of ‘The Red Head’ to go pick up her brothers from a nearby roller skating rink.

In addition to the TB ritual house, Ghost Adventures did episodes on HH Holmes (he killed a nine year old kid in a house in Irvington, Indiana and the current owner felt that dark and sinister forces had ‘overtaken the property’), Joliet Prison in Illinois (where John Wayne Gacy spent only a small amount of time), and an episode titled ‘Axe Killer Jail,’ where the team investigated a prison in Council Bluffs, IA, where SK Jake Bird was once housed.

Because the events of the episode are so ridiculously absurd, I’m not going to spend much time on a synopsis of it. In a nutshell, it began with some little ginger-haired boy that supposedly lived next door to the house (knowing Bagans it’s probably his own kid) peeing on a log on the front steps (Zak tells one of his cronies to smell it ‘for research,’ and he does), and of course the GA’s crew followed him home and gave him (and his mother) the third degree and told them exactly what they wanted to hear… and the guys ate it up like a piece of fucking cheesecake. When asked how he felt about the house the kid told Bagans that there were ten mean child-aged spirits that lived there and were trying to kill him and they ‘better not go in there because they might kill you.’

In the beginning of the episode, a one-time resident of the home named Peter Kingston claimed that when they first moved in his family found weird, mysterious satanic symbols drawn on the walls, including various ‘devils signs’ (including a ‘big pentagram’ on the wall) and ‘666’s all over the place.’ At some point during the episode some guy named Vincent (who does not appear to be with Bagans’ crew and I don’t care enough about him to do any additional research) said that when he was in the house prior to the episode he was pushed down the stairs and almost went through the side railings. As the show progresses, the ghost hunters break out all their fancy bullshit equipment meant to detect supernatural activity, and of course everything they do results in some sort of captured phenomenon (I mean, no one would watch it if nothing happened), and plenty of jump scares and ‘sledgehammers of evil’ (Zak’s words, not mine) ensues.

One of the first things the GA team does upon entering the residence is attempt to open a portal on the floor near a pentagram using what Bagans calls a ‘geophone device,’ which he said ‘measures temperature and electromagnetic energy.’ However, according to the website HiggyPop that’ ‘isn’t strictly true. A geophone doesn’t detect heat or electromagnetic energy, as the name suggests it’s to do with geological movement and it actually detects vibration. The gadget Zak is using is called an EDI meter which has several functions built in, including EMF and thermometer as well as a geophone. Ironically the geophone is the one function of the device that Zak is not using.

In addition to the ‘geophone’ (that really isn’t a geophone), Bagans used night vision cameras, digital recorders, and a spirit box, which is a device that rapidly scans AM/FM radio frequencies in an attempt to pull paranormal messages out of the static and white noise. Two additional pieces of equipment the team used (that I have also never heard of before) is the Ovilus V (which is a tool that supposedly allows spirits to communicate with the living by selecting words from a internal database using their ‘energy’) and a TriField meter, which measures EMF in the form of radio-frequency, magnetic, and electric fields.

Zak and Aaron used an SLS camera in the upstairs part of the house, which is a device which ‘looks for’ human-like shapes in the darkness and supposedly can capture images in the absence of light that the human eye can’t see. According to the investigators, while using the camera in a hallway they captured what they described as a ‘mind-blowing figure,’ which was shown in the form of a ‘glitching and dancing stickman on the camera’s screen for a brief moment’ (I cannot make this up, they pulled it out of thin air).

After doing some research into the history of the structure, Bagans was wrong: Bundy never could have brought Deb Kent to this house, because it was actually occupied by two different families at the time of her abduction in November 1974. In an interview with KSNV, the Peterson family had five daughters residing there at the time Kent was abducted in November 1974, and ‘people have said that Ted Bundy took women over here and killed them in this house at the time that Debbie Kent got taken. We were living here. Two families were living here and never saw anything like that happen.’ … ‘I think it’s ridiculous because Ted Bundy never came over here. Nothing like that ever happened here.’ Cindy’s mother Rolean did share that she felt the residence was haunted (just not by Ted Bundy), and that the family experienced several strange things during their time in the house: on one occasion they were sitting in a front room and a white ball flew out the wall, seemingly out of nowhere.

Despite Bundy never having any actual ties to their former residence, Mrs. Peterson said that as mother of five young girls she made sure to always keep the doors locked, and ‘it was a really terrifying time for everybody here.’ She also commented that linking Bundy to the old residence only further exploits his victims, and that ‘he was a monster. And I don’t think he should be glorified in any manner at all.  If they’re going to tell a story, they need to get their facts straight.’ KUTV out of Salt Lake reached out to Mrs. Belva Kent about the Travel Channel’s episode on the residence and she said that every time a movie or TV special is made about her daughter’s killer her family is forced to relive their pain and that the show only glorified the man that killed Debra.

According to a ‘deseret.com’ article published on July 5, 1997, the duplex went up in flames the day before after gas accumulated underneath the basement ceiling from a leak which caused the explosion (which was most likely ignited after the water heater kicked on). After an assessor was able to investigate the fire it was determined there was nearly $100K worth of damage done to the structure, with the first-floor apartment suffering the majority of it.

According to Redditor ‘OatyBisc,’ ‘I grew up in Bountiful (I even went to Viewmont HS where the abduction happened!) and this house has nothing to do with Ted Bundy other than proximity. I was excited to see an episode from my hometown but there were so many inaccuracies it drove me crazy! Debbie Kent’s body was never found, but they did find a patella at a site where they found bones from other murder victims and a few years ago they verified it was hers through DNA. This was maybe 20 miles or so from Bountiful, not 100 miles. Her headstone is in the city cemetery, but her body is not there. When she disappeared this house was occupied. It only looks bad now. I drive past it occasionally and it’s pretty worn and clearly burnt on the North end, but the fire was much later. It’s a spooky looking house and they have ghost tours there occasionally, but the Ted Bundy angle is a stretch.’ In addition to this, a Redditor going by the handle ‘pengony’ pointed out that when Bagans was told by locals that the house was completely unrelated to Bundy he told them that he didn’t care and was going to film there anyway.

Just as a side note, the episodes IMDB page gives a completely different narrative and outright fabrication of the truth: ‘Zak and the crew investigate an abandoned house in Bountiful, Utah, where locals claim notorious serial killer Ted Bundy murdered one of his victims. Overloaded with satanic rituals and violence, the home is drenched in a dark, sinister energy.’

Now… this isn’t just some old, dilapidated house with a possible (but, not really) link to Ted Bundy: referred to as the ‘Anson Call House,’ the residence was built by a pioneer of the Mormon faith (Anson Call, obviously) in the early days of Bountiful when it was known as Session’s Settlement (or North Canyon). The building, which began as a one-room cabin, was initially constructed in 1855 and the first additions to the home were made two years later when a dining room and kitchen area were built as well as a basement. Over the years a second floor was added, and it eventually turned into the structure you see today (or, before it blew up).

Interestingly enough though, Ted Bundy isn’t the house’s only murderous link: In Adam Call-Roberts blog post titled, ‘Mary & Anson Call: Hosts to a Killer,’ in October of 1857, Anson and Mary Call hosted then Utah Congressman John Doyle Lee overnight, blissfully unaware that just one month prior their guest participated in the ‘Mountain Meadows massacre.’ In September 1857 an emigrant group from Arkansas known as the Baker–Fancher party set up camp in Utah’s Mountain Meadows, which was a staging area in the southern part of the state that was used to get ready for the long crossing of the Mojave Desert by groups that were going west to California.

In the early morning hours of September 7, 1857 a group of Paiute Indian and Mormon militia men that were dressed as Native Americans attacked the circled wagons without warning. The party fought off their aggressors the best they could and the conflict went on for four days; in the process fifteen emigrant men were killed either in battle or while attempting to escape. Congressman Lee didn’t get involved in the dispute until the third day, when he approached the wagon party and convinced them to surrender their possessions and weapons in return for safe passage to nearby Cedar City. The emigrants (who were low on ammunition and supplies) accepted his offer and surrendered, and it was then that roughly 120 people from the Baker–Fancher party were then slaughtered, leaving only 17 small children behind. In 1874, Lee was arrested for leading the massacre: his first trial ended with a hung jury and two years later a second one took place in which the prosecuting attorneys put the blame solely on his shoulders. He was convicted and sentenced to death. On March 23, 1877, Lee was executed by firing squad at the very site of the massacre that took place twenty years before.

In conclusion, there’s a lot of different videos and podcasts on this residence, but one thing is for certain: Ted Bundy had absolutely nothing to do with this house.

Works Cited:
Deseret.com/1997/7/5/19321700/fiery-4th-home-goes-up-in-flames/
Roe, Ginna. (October 25, 2019). ‘Travel Channel links Bountiful house to Ted Bundy, former residents say ‘it’s ridiculous.’’ Taken May 22, 2024 from https://kutv.com/news/local/travel-chanel-links-bountiful-house-to-ted-bundy-former-residents-say-its-ridiculous
utah.com/things-to-do/attractions/mormon/mountain-meadows/

A picture of the Anson Call House taken around 1920 with attached ‘milk diet’ sanitarium on the south side of the residence. Photo courtesy of Lewis and Jean Call.
The Anson Call house around 1940 after the Sardoni remodel. Photo courtesy of Lewis and Jean Call.
Another shot of the Anson Call House, showing the southeast corner.
An older shot of the Anson Call House before the fire.
The front of Anson Call home showing picket fence and old enclosed brick entrance and balcony.
A side view of the house after the 1997 fire.
The Anson Call House as it looks today.
The entrance to those house, notice the ‘private property’ signs posted everywhere. Photo courtesy of news3lv.com.
The side of the Anson Call House in its more recent years. Photo courtesy of The Travel Channel.
An aerial view of the Anson Call House. Photo courtesy of The Travel Channel.
The houses front porch light. Photo courtesy of news3lv.com.
A drawing of the layout of the first floor of the Anson Call House. Photo courtesy of Lewis and Jean Call.
The back entrance to the house as it looks today.
The best screenshot I could get of the no trespassing sign on the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
Zak Bagans standing in the kitchen of the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
A recent view of the kitchen in the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
Another shot of the kitchen in the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
Another shot of the kitchen in the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
A pentagram drawn on the living room floor of the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
Some satanic drawings on the first floor walls in the Anson Call House. The GA team used UV flashlights to capture ‘hidden’ messages drawn on the walls of the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
Some satanic drawings on the first floor walls in the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
One of the living rooms in the duplex in the Anson Call House as it looks today. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
Another shot of one of the living rooms in the duplex in the Anson Call House as it looks today. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
Another shot of some ‘hidden’ messages drawn on the walls of the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
Some more ‘hidden’ messages drawn on the walls of the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of The Travel Channel.
Some spray painted artwork on the wall in the Anson Call House. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
A bedroom in the Anson Call House as it looks today. Screenshot courtesy of YouTube Channel ‘Lazarus Unknown.’
A comment on a Reddit post about the TB Ritual House from the user ‘penogy.’
A comment on a Reddit post about the TB Ritual House from the user ‘Coleyb23.’
A comment on a Reddit post about the TB Ritual House from the user ‘lordglo.’
Deb Kent.
Deb Kent’s patella, which remained unidentified until 2015. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Viewmont High School, located at 120 West 1000 North in Bountiful, UT. Photo taken in November 2022.
The parking lot at Viewmont High School where Deb Kent was abducted from.
A possible route from the Anson Call House to Viewmont High School in Bountiful, Utah.
Anson and Mary Call.
A picture of John D. Lee taken in December 1857. Photo courtesy of Adam Call Roberts.
A picture of Congressman Lee just prior to his execution sitting next to his own coffin; how dark but appropriate for what he did.

Deborah Lee Tomlinson.*

Deborah Lee Tomlinson was born on October 15, 1957 in Bitburg, Germany to Arthur and Sandra (nee Roup) Tomlinson. Arthur Vernon Tomlinson was born on September 22, 1937 in Modesto, California, and Sandra Lee Roup was born on December 31, 1939 in Livingston, Montana. According to the Tomlinson family tree, the couple had three daughters together: Deborah and her twin sisters, Jean and Joyce (b. 1958). At some point they divorced, and Mr. Tomlinson was briefly married again in 1968 (they quickly parted ways; he went on to have a relationship with Sally Morphis and in 1969 they had a son together named Daniel. He got married to Shelley Williams on August 30, 1975 in Orange, CA but their union also didn’t last long, and they split up in February of the following year. Mr. Tomlinson was married for a fourth time, and the couple had a son together. Sandra got remarried to Henry Nelson on May 10, 1963 in Billings, Montana.

After their parents parted ways Deborah, Jean, and Joyce went to live with their father and stepmother in California, and Sandra relocated to Oregon.  Because of their parents’ divorce the girls were separated from their mother at a very young age, which Joyce felt prevented them from forming a strong bond because she wasn’t given a chance to raise her own babies.

According to most reports online, Deborah Lee Tomlinson disappeared from Creswell, Oregon** on her sixteenth birthday on October 15, 1973. Creswell is an incredibly small town with only one high school, and according to the 1970 census the reported population was made up of a mere 1,199 people (it went up to 5,031 in 2010). Referred to as ‘Debbie’ by family and friends (per Joyce, she hated being called ‘Deb’), Tomlinson had brown eyes, stood at 5’5” tall, and weighed 140 pounds (Joyce felt she may have been slightly heavier); she wore her golden-brown hair at her shoulders and had a ring of moles around her neck. In the initial days following her disappearance investigators strongly believed that she was a runaway, which most likely explains why I couldn’t find any newspaper reports or media coverage on her. One of the only other real takeaways I could find regarding her case was that she disappeared with an ‘unidentified teenage friend.’

** After I initially wrote the article on Deborah in April 2024 I was contacted by her sister Jean, and more recently Joyce. Both sisters were kind enough to help fill in some of the gaps in their family background and were able to provide me with some of their thoughts regarding her disappearance. According to Jean, their Aunt Helen told them in more recent years that Deborah had ran away from Eugene, not Creswell, and at one point the family had been contacted by a friend that claimed they had seen her in Santa Rosa, CA with ‘a black guy,’ which was a big deal as their father didn’t approve of people of color (Joyce also said she was there visiting a friend named Lyn). The family member also volunteered that they thought she may have been pregnant at the time as well, but nothing ever came out of that. About this alleged sighting, Joyce doesn’t feel it’s true, as that’s where their grandmother lived and Deborah would never have left the area without paying her a visit, especially if she had been pregnant (the two were especially close). 

According to Jean, after their parents split up the girls were raised by their father in California, but because Deborah’s didn’t get along very well with their stepmother she had moved to Oregon to live with their mother (who she also clashed with). She also said that at the time her sister disappeared she seemed mostly happy but had been in a bit of a transition period in her life and may have been under the impression that moving out of state may have resulted in more lenient rules, but that wasn’t the case.

According to Joyce, Debbie was simply acting like any other teenager, doing things like sneaking out at night and smoking: one evening in a quick moment of anger their dad announced that he was pulling a ‘Pontious Pilot’ and was ‘washing his hands of her.’ When she left home Joyce said somehow she knew it would be the last time that she ever saw her, and to this day she struggles with her feelings towards her father about that event. Additionally, she strongly suspects that a missing person’s report was never filed in the days after she was last seen, as she never came across one after contacting local Oregon law enforcement. Because of this, I strongly feel that Debbie didn’t disappear exactly on October 15, 1973, and most likely vanished sometime around it.

Jean shared with me that in the years following her sister’s disappearance neither one of their parents wanted to talk much about her, as it brough up too many painful memories. Because of this she told me that she doesn’t know as much about her as she would like to, but she does know that Debbie loved rock n ’roll music and had gotten caught sneaking out at night several times while she still lived with them in California.

Shortly after Deborah disappeared Joyce told me that their stepbrother had reached out to let her know about a formerly missing woman had been found murdered that happened to have some moles around her neck in a pattern similar to Debbie’s (which she said appeared to be ‘almost like a spaced apart, like a necklace’); it obviously turned out not to be her.

When I asked if perhaps Debbie had run off with a guy, Jean shared with me that was what most likely happened, despite the fact the sisters weren’t allowed to date until they were sixteen. Regarding her feelings on the recent ‘genetic genealogy’ craze and if she thought it could help solve the mystery of what happened to her sister, she said that she has never been contacted by LE about it, however at one point she was told by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children that any records possibly related to Deborah were destroyed in a fire.

In 1984 Joyce and her husband took a road trip with their grandkids to visit their great-grandmother and Hank, and while there her stepfather shared that he caught Debbie sneaking out one night and she had been smoking marijuana. He told them that this freaked him out and he tried to do a ‘scared straight’ type intervention and had reached out to the local county sheriff (who had happened to be a friend of his), who had come to the house and had a conversation with his teenage stepdaughter; Debbie disappeared shortly after that.

At the time Tomlinson disappeared in October 1973, Ted Bundy was living at the Rogers Rooming House on 12th Avenue Northeast in Seattle, and where it was a five-hour drive (one way) from his residence to Eugene/Creswell, we know he had no problem with traveling long distances to look for prey. Despite being in a long term, (supposedly) monogamous relationship with Liz Kendall, while on a business trip with the Republican Party to California in the summer of 1973 he rekindled his romance with one time girlfriend Diane Edwards. Ted’s former flame visited him in Seattle on multiple occasions in the latter part of the year, and the couple at one point were even briefly engaged… but the happy times didn’t last long, and in January 1974 he abruptly and without reason cut off all contact with her.

On top of juggling two women, in September 1973 Ted enrolled in law school at the University of Puget Sound, and according to the ‘TB MultiAgency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ on Monday, October 15, 1973 when Tomlinson disappeared, he was in class. Additionally, at the time he was in between employment: in September 1973 he was the Assistant to the Washington state Republican chairman and remained unemployed until May 3 of the following year when he got a position with the Department of Emergency Services in Olympia.

In addition to Ted Bundy multiple other serial killers roamed the Pacific Northwest in the early to middle 1970’s: the first one (aside from Ted) that popped in my head was Warren Leslie Forrest, a double murderer that has been sentenced to two life terms in prison for the murders of Krysta Blake and Martha Morrison in 1974; he is also considered the prime suspect in at least five additional murders and disappearances going back as far as 1971. He has been in police custody since 1974 and on February 4, 2023 he was convicted on another murder count after DNA linked him to the murder of Martha Morrison. 

On June 8, 1961, Portland police received a call from a housewife whose dog had returned home with a human foot in a paper bag, and when detectives went to her home the animal came back with a hand. Upon investigating, LE found several additional body parts around the woman’s neighborhood, and all of the appendages were deemed to be fresh and were completely drained of blood. Police went through local missing people’s reports and came across the file of twenty-three year old Joan Caudle, a housewife and mother of two that had recently been reported missing by her husband (who of course was an immediate suspect). 

Joan’s husband told detectives that where she wasn’t normally a big drinker she had been a bit depressed recently because her mother had been sick, therefore there was a chance she had been at a bar having a few. Police then tracked down a barfly that had a string of arrests for public drunkenness and she told them she had been in a bar on the night of June 7 and met a man going by the name Marquette. The pair had seemingly hit it off when a woman approached them and stole his attention away, and when detectives showed the eyewitness a photograph of Joan Caudle, she said that was definitely the same woman from the bar.

Upon his arrest Marquette admitted that he raped and murdered the Portland housewife then he drained her blood, dismembered her body, and left her head to rot in the woods. Despite being found guilty of first degree murder the jury recommended leniency, and Marquette was sentenced to life in prison.After serving only eleven years of his sentence (during which he was described as a model prisoner), he was released on parole in 1973.

Not even two and a half years after Marquette was released on parole in April 1975, a fisherman discovered a mutilated corpse floating in a Willamette River slough in Marion County, Oregon; it had been bled dry and had been dismembered. Detectives determined the remains were those of thirty-seven-year-old Betty Lucille Wilson (one report said she was thirty-five), a North Carolina native who led a life of extreme poverty and had seven children since marrying her abusive husband at the age of 16.  At the time she was killed she was living in an abandoned school bus.

While he was confessing to Wilson’s murder, Marquette also shared with detectives that he killed a second woman in a similar fashion sometime in 1974, and he led them to two shallow graves where he had disposed of the bulk of the remains. Unfortunately because the head was never found, there was no way the victim could be identified, and Marquette admitted that he didn’t know who she was. Her identity remains unknown.

Within a five-month period in the latter part of 1973 five young women went missing in Oregon, and three more were found murdered: first was Rita Lorraine Jolly, who disappeared on June 29 while taking a nightly walk in her West Linn neighborhood; her remains have never been found. On July 9, 1973 the body of Laurie Lee Canaday was recovered in the middle of the road at the intersection of Southeast Scott Street and McLoughlin Boulevard in Milwaukee, OR. Next was seventeen-year-old Susan Wickersham from Bend on July 11; her body was discovered in January 1976, only five miles south of her hometown; she had suffered a gunshot wound to the head. Additionally, sometime in July 1973 fifteen-year-old Allison Lynn Caufman of Portland died as a result of head injuries after she was shoved from a car moving at a high rate of speed.

On August 20, 1973 twenty-four-year-old Illinois transplant Vicki Lynn Hollar was last seen getting in her black 1965 Volkswagen Beetle (with the running boards removed) after she left her place of employment at the Bon Marché in Eugene, where she had been working as a seamstress for about two weeks. It’s thought that she was headed home to her apartment, as she had plans of meeting up with a friend to attend a party in her neighborhood later that evening (she never showed up). Friends shared with police that she had a habit of picking up hitchhikers; her VW and personal belongings have also never been recovered. Just three days later on August 23, 1973, Gayle LeClair was found stabbed in her apartment in Eugene, OR. The twenty-two year old had recently moved to the area after she got a job at the Eugene City Library.

Just six days after Deborah Tomlinson was reportedly last seen, thirty-two-year-old Virginia Erickson disappeared from Sweet Home on October 21, 1973; although it’s never been proven, evidence points towards her husband being her killer and that it most likely took place while the two were ‘out on a hunting trip.’ Lastly, we have twenty-three-year-old divorcee Suzanne Justis, who went missing on November 5, 1973. From Eugene, Justis had hitchhiked to Portland (despite owning her own car), and had called her mom from a payphone outside of the Veterans Memorial Coliseum to let her know that she would be home the next day to pick up her son from school; she never showed up. Not one case has been solved.

Strangely enough, there was another young woman with the same first and last name as Deborah that had been brutally killed a little over two years after she was last seen in Colorado: nineteen-year-old Deborah Kathleen Tomlinson was murdered in her apartment complex on Belford Ave in Grand Junction on December 27, 1975. In the days that followed her murder, detectives quickly exhausted all leads and the investigation quickly went cold. Forty-five long years went by. In an article published on December 3, 2020 by the website ‘WesternSlopeNow,’ the Grand Junction PD announced a break in the case: they had partnered with a DNA Technology Company called Parabon to analyze the unknown semen and blood that had been found with the victim at the original 1975 crime scene.

About the process, Parabon’s Chief Genetic Genealogist CeCe Moore said that they analyze ‘the DNA, so we can look at 850,000 genetic markers that will allow us to predict relationships that are distant.’ Also, just as a side note, Moore is the scientist that helped solve the 1971 murder of Roman Catholic schoolteacher Rita Curran out of Vermont (who up until recently was also an unconfirmed Bundy victim). After the samples that were collected from the original 1975 crime scene were processed, Parabon built a family tree using public records in an attempt to identify the unknown person-of-interest, and it was concluded that a man named Jimmy Dean Duncan killed Deborah K. Tomlinson. As of April 2024, law enforcement has found no connection between Duncan and Tomlinson, but found that he had a family member that lived close to the college she was attending at the time of her death. Detective Sean Crocker from the Grand Junction Police Department commented that ‘we believe Mr. Duncan visited this relative, and that’s how possibly he could’ve encountered Ms. Tomlinson.’ Jimmy Dean Duncan passed away in 1987.

Arthur Tomlinson died at the age of sixty-four on January 29, 2001 in Las Vegas, NV. Deborah’s mother Sandra Lee Nelson passed away from lung cancer at the age of sixty-three on February 2, 2003, and according to her death certificate, she had been the owner/operator of a café. Sandy’s husband Henry died on March 16, 1994 at the age of 54, most likely in a medical facility in Spokane, WA. Deborah’s brother Daniel Sean Tomlinson died in 2022 at the age of fifty-three in California.

Deborah’s sister Jean retired after almost twenty years in the RV Business in November 2023, and she currently lives in Henderson, Nevada with her husband of almost twenty years, Dave. In 2019 Joyce retired from the Bureau for Child Support Enforcement with the State of West Virginia, and was married to the love of her life until he passed away on May 26, 2003. She currently resides in St Thomas, Pennsylvania. If Deborah was anything like her sisters, she was a kind, compassionate person that would have done a lot of good in this world.

In the years following Deborah’s disappearance the twins remain close, although Jean admitted her disappearance has been incredibly hard on their family. She also confessed that a small part of her always thought her big sister would reach out to one of them when they were adults, after everyone had grown up. More than anything they want closure, and at the very least wish they had a body to properly lay to rest so their sister could be with the rest of their family. Debbie would have been an aunt and great aunt multiple times over, and it’s heartbreaking to think of her never getting to meet either of her brother-in-laws, or nieces and nephews. As of October 2025, Deborah Lee Tomlinson’s case remains open and she would be 68 years old. Joyce said that the family’s DNA is on file with the NCMEC website.

* In October 2025 I finally came across the Tomlinson family’s Ancestry page, which helped give me a lot of background into Deborah’s family life and background. I also updated the article with information from an interview that I did with her sister Jean in February 2025 as well.

Works Cited:
Namus. Retrieved April 3, 2024 from namus.nij.ojp.gov/case/MP11096
Websleuths. ‘OR – Deborah Tomlinson, 16, Creswell, 16 Oct 1973.’ Retrieved April 3, 2024 from https://www.websleuths.com/forums/threads/or-deborah-tomlinson-16-creswell-16-oct-1973.319290/
Westernslopenow. December 3, 2020. ‘Cold case murder of Deborah Tomlinson solved after 45 years.’ Retrieved April 3, 2024 from https://www.westernslopenow.com/news/local-news/cold-case-murder-of-deborah-tomlinson-solved-after-45-years/

A missing persons poster for Deborah.
The girls standing with their dad and Aunt Jean, who Joyce said they were all especially fond of; sadly right after this picture was taken she moved to Virginia. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
The three sisters in a picture during their time in the Bethlehem Lutheran Church Chancel Choir that was published in The Rohnert Park Cotati Clarion on June 26, 1968.
Deborah (on the far left), Joyce, and Jean. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Some members of the Tomlinson family; it looks like Deborah and her sisters are in the front. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Tomlinson before she disappeared in 1973.
What Debbie Tomlinson might have looked like at the age of 53 using age progressing technology, photo released on July 21, 2011.
What Debbie Tomlinson might have looked like at the age of 58 using age progressing technology, photo released on June 28, 2016.
According to the ‘Ted Bundy MultiAgency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ on October 15, 1973 when Tomlinson disappeared Bundy was supposed to be in class at The University of Puget Sound in Tacoma. 
Bundy’s fall 1973 law school schedule from the University of Puget Sound.
Bundy’s route from where he lived at the Rogers Rooming house to Creswell, OR.
Warren Leslie Forrest.
A more recent picture of Warren Leslie Forrest.
Warren Leslie Forrest’s van.
Richard Laurence Marquette.
A list of some other missing girls from Oregon from 1969-78. Tomlinson isn’t even listed.
A comment on a Websleuth’s page about Deborah’s disappearance made by Joyce Sparks on October 16, 2013.
A comment on a Websleuth’s post about Deborah Tomlinson made by user ‘Caring1.’
A Websleuth’s comment on a post about Deborah made by a user named ‘theshadow45’ on August 27, 2017.
A Websleuth’s comment on a post about Deborah made by a user named ‘Alleykins’ on August 27, 2017.
Deborah Kathleen Tomlinson.
An article about the murder of Deborah Kathleen Tomlinson published by The Daily Sentinel on January 14, 1976.
The Tomlinson family tree, courtesy of Joyce Tomlinson.
Deborah’s grandmother Nora and her father, Arthur. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Deborah’s father, Arthur Vernon Tomlinson. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Deborah’s mother listed in the 1940 census.
Arthur Tomlinson from the 1951 Westwego High School yearbook.
Deborah’s father listed in some Baptism’s that took place in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1951.
An article about Mr. Tomlinson’s time in the military in Great Falls, Montana published in The Malmstrom Minuteman on May 25, 1956.
A passport log for Deborah’s mother Sandra dated August 5, 1959.
A passport log for Deborah, dated August 5, 1959.
A passport log for Deborah’s sister Joyce dated August 5, 1959.
A passport log for Deborah’s sister Jean dated August 5, 1959,
Arthur Tomlinson in a list of people applying for a marriage license published in The Press Democrat on January 11, 1968.
Mr. Tomlinson’s address; according to this, he was employed at Sonoma State Hospital at the time.
Arthur Tomlinson and his second wife listed in the CA Divorce Index, 1966-1977.
Jean and Joyce Tomlinson. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Some of the Tomlinson family at Jean’s wedding. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Some members of Deborah’s family at Joyce’s wedding. Photo courtesy of the Tomlinson family archives.
Mr. Tomlinson’s second wife, Shelley.
Henry Nelson’s obituary published in The Montana Standard on March 17, 1994.
Deborah’s mothers death certificate.
Deborah’s half-brother, Daniel Sean Tomlinson.
Deborah’s half-brother, Daniel.
Deborah’s baby sisters, Joyce and Jean.
Deborah’s sister Jean and her husband, Dave.

Laura Ann Aime.

Laura Ann Aime was born on August 21, 1957 to James and Shirlene (nee Tolton) Aime in Lehi, Utah. Mr. Aime was born on August 10, 1928 in Fairview, Utah, and after completing high school he joined the US Navy; after getting out of the military he went on to attend the University of Utah. Shirlene was born on April 12, 1934 in Orem, and the couple were married on January 14, 1951. According to the Aime’s marriage certificate, Jim worked as a steelworker for Geneva Steel. Laura was Jim and Shirlene’s second child, and she had four younger sisters (Evelyn, Michelle, Denna, and Tommi lyn) and an older brother named John. Mrs. Aime filed domestic abuse charges against her husband in April 1966, but they must have worked out their issues because they never divorced.

According to her autopsy, Laura had blue eyes, medium length blonde hair, was 5’10” tall, and weighed around 140 pounds. Before Aime dropped out she was a student at North Sanpete High School, and was at one-time a member of the Laurel Class in the Fairview North Ward. She loved animals, and one time a wild deer wandered out of the canyon and she began feeding it, and eventually was able to convince the creature into becoming a family pet. When Laura was eleven she was thrown into a barbed wire fence by her horse, injuring her ring finger, forearm, and upper arm. Jim Aime liked to take his daughter hunting, and she even helped him bag the first prize deer in a Utah hunting contest at the age of ten. Before she was killed Aime somehow seemed to show awareness that she knew her life was going to end soon in a tragic way: Mrs. Aime said one day out of the blue just a few weeks before her daughter died she told her: ‘at my funeral, I don’t want to be buried in a dress.’ Additionally, Evelyn Aime said that her older sister mentioned that she wanted the 1974 Terry Jacks classic, ‘Seasons in the Sun’ to play during the service as well.

Immediately before she disappeared Laura had been staying with her girlfriend Marin Beveridge, who didn’t live far from her childhood home. Despite being raised in a Mormon family, after leaving home she quickly fell in with the latter-day counter-cultural life, and with her long blonde locks and ‘hippie look’ she already had the stereotypical appearance of a runaway. Although the Aimes didn’t care for their daughter’s  choice in friends they were just beginning to come to terms with her ‘nomadic’ lifestyle. Often teased about her height, Laura was given nicknames like ‘Wilt the Stilt,’ which greatly upset her, and her Aime’s suspected that the relentless mocking was what made her leave school. She was used to tough work as the family at one time lived in an old farm house in Mount Pleasant, where they kept a plethora of animals, including chickens, cows, peacocks, turkeys, hogs, goats, sheep, dogs and ‘dozens of cats.’ She was also a tomboy (especially during her early years), and she loved playing softball, and played on competitive teams as well as her families LDS ward, even going so far as to winning the 1972 state championship. Growing up, Laura loved horses and was an experienced rider; she even spent several of her teenage years in an all-girls horseback riding club called ‘The Silver Spurs,’ and participated in several competitions with them at different fairs and parades across Utah.

Before she disappeared Laura had been staying with her girlfriend Marin Beveridge, who didn’t live far from her childhood home. Despite being raised in a Mormon family, after leaving home she quickly fell in with the latter-day counter-cultural life, and with her long blonde hair and hippie look she already had the appearance of a runaway. Although the Aimes didn’t care for their daughter’s friends they were just beginning to come to terms with her ‘nomadic’ lifestyle. Often teased about her height, Laura was given nicknames like ‘Wilt the Stilt,’ which greatly upset her, and the Aime’s suspected that the relentless mocking was what made her leave school. Laura was used to tough work as the family at one time lived in an old farm house in Mount Pleasant, where they kept a plethora of animals, including chickens, cows, peacocks, turkeys, hogs, goats, sheep, dogs and ‘dozens of cats.’ She was also a tomboy (especially during her early years), and she loved playing softball, and played on competitive teams as well as her families LDS ward, even going so far as to winning the 1972 state championship. Growing up Laura loved horses and was an experienced rider. She spent several of her teenage years in an all-girls horseback riding club called ‘The Silver Spurs” in SanPete County, and participated in several competitions at different fairs and parades across Utah. Those that knew her remember her as a kind and loving person.

Laura Ann Aime was seventeen when she was abducted by Ted Bundy on Halloween night in 1974: the party she was at never really got going, and she left by herself around ten to get some cigarettes. About a half hour later she was picked up by an acquaintance named George Alley, who later told investigators that he dropped her off at The Knotty Pine in Lehi just after midnight (although according to Captain Borax, Browns as it was called by the locals closed at eleven, so perhaps it was closer to 11:00 versus 12:00). Quick Lehi factoid: ‘The Knotty Pine’ as it was once called was referred to as ‘Mo Browns’ because the gentleman that owned it was named Leon Brown and he reportedly had ‘a huge mole on his face’ (very clever). Alley also shared that Aime complained that before he picked her up a bunch of ‘cowboys’ ignored her outstretched thumb and drove right past her. From Browns, Aime again got bored and walked to Robinson Park. She was last seen wearing silver cross shaped earrings, a tan sleeveless turtleneck-style sweater with white horizontal stripes, a Navy Pea coat with a hood, light brown lace up shoes, and blue Levi’s with ‘patches on the rear;’ various sources report her wearing a halter top as well. Laura was wearing a ring with a yellow stone and had a rubber band around her wrist; her nails were adorned with black polish with silver flakes.

Although it’s (mostly) agreed on that Laura was last seen trying to hitchhike, there’s a few different possible narratives when it comes to where she was right before she disappeared. The most common theory I’ve seen is that she attended a house party at a mobile home in the suburbs of nearby Orem; a second says the party was in Lehi. The third possibility is that the party took place at the Knotty Pine Cafe in Lehi… (although there’s a FOURTH that says there was no party at all). BUT… every single one of these possibilities consistently placed her at the Knotty Pine Cafe for some period of time before she left to hitchhike to Robinson Park. One eyewitness came forward and shared with investigators that they saw Laura at the park in American Fork at around midnight, which is the last time that anyone reported seeing her alive. Robinson Park is about a 3.2 mile drive from the (former) Knotty Pine Cafe, and if she did walk it would have taken her roughly an hour (give or take) to do so. Due to the dropping temperatures (dipping as low as 45 °F) and the distance involved, it’s very likely that she tried to hitchhike back to Lehi after she was done hanging out at the park. Did Bundy see her there then pull up and offer her a ride? There’s also a possibility that he spotted Aime from a distance then crept up behind her and blitzed her, much like he did to Nancy Wilcox. As I mentioned earlier, Laura was in regular contact with her family after leaving home, and at first they weren’t too alarmed when they didn’t hear from her and figured it was only a matter of time before she got in contact with them. It wasn’t until Laura didn’t come home for a planned hunting trip with her father that the Aime’s knew that something was seriously wrong, as that wasn’t something she would miss without a good reason. After she disappeared her story didn’t make the news until her remains were discovered (like so many of the other case’s I’ve written about, for example Brenda Joy Baker out of Maple Valley, WA), which may have partially been due to her transient nature and nomadic lifestyle.

The remains of Aime were found less than a month after she vanished on Thanksgiving Day next to a stream in American Fork Canyon in the Wasatch Mountains by two BYU students that were looking for fossils for their Geology class (Raymond Ivins and Christine Shelly). Fearing that the murderer may still have been lurking in the area, the couple immediately went to the nearest ranger station and reported their discovery. Aime’s body was covered in leaves, twigs, and brush; she had been raped, sodomized, beaten then strangled to death with a pair of stockings. According to her autopsy report done by former Utah State Medical Examiner Dr. Serge Moore*, Laura had depressed skull fractures on the left side and back of her head and the necklace she was last seen wearing was tangled up in the pair of nylons that were cinched around her beck. She had numerous facial wounds (almost too many to count), and her body had deep wounds from where it had been dragged. LE deduced that the weapon used to inflict such brutal injuries was most likely either a pry bar or metal crowbar; her face was incredibly swollen and her tongue was hanging from her mouth. Aime had also suffered a vaginal puncture that may have been made by a weapon of some sort (perhaps an ice pick, and some have also wondered if it was a speculum which is what it’s thought Karen Sparks was assaulted with). Tire patterns that were found in the immediate area were said to be a match with Bundy’s Volkswagen Bug. *Just as a side note (per Kevin Sullivan), Dr. Moore never properly investigated either the temperature or the level of snow during the period that Smith and Aime were abducted. After complaints of sloppy work from Utah law enforcement Moore was investigated, and he officially lost his license in 1979 after he failed to produce any proof that he graduated from a University in Mexico City.

Laura’s cause of death was listed as multiple head injuries with a skull fracture and strangulation. Also, I do want to point out that I’ve seen the date incorrectly listed as both November 26 and 27th, but according to my research, Thanksgiving Day in 1974 was on the 28th. About the discovery, Ivins said: ‘I looked and I thought, you know, it was a deer or something and … it was a girl … It looked like she had been …she was dead. It was really grotesque. There was blood around her neck and breasts and she was naked and lying on that hill and it was a freak-out and I lost it. I thought maybe the guy was still somewhere around and I just panicked, worrying about my girlfriend . . . and we ran down the trail …Came down and ran right through the creek and got in the car and just drove like a maniac, I guess as fast as I could, down to the ranger station and I reported it.’ Swabs taken from Aime’s vagina and anus showed the presence of non-motile sperm, and blood tests showed no signs of substance use aside from alcohol. In the early stages of the investigation it was suspected that her remains belonged to Debra Kent, who had gone missing from Viewmont High School in Bountiful nineteen days earlier.

Several days before she was killed Laura spoke with her mother on the phone: Mrs. Aime begged her daughter not to hitchhike, and told her that she was afraid that she would meet a fate like that of Melissa Smith from nearby Midvale, who had recently been brutally murdered. She assured her she would be ok and told her mom not to worry; it was the last time they would ever speak. After Laura disappeared Mrs. Aime said that ‘she was missing and she had no purse coat, no nothing. I called the sheriff’s office and they said, ‘What do you want us to do about it?’’ On Sunday, November 3 Shirlene reached out to Judy Olsens’ mom, who was confused by her call, saying ‘isn’t she with you? We haven’t seen her since Thursday when she and Judy and Mark left for the Halloween party?’ Two days later on November 5, 1974 Mrs. Aime called the local police to notify them that her daughter was missing, and when she pleaded with them to look for her she told that there were too many ‘young runaways to pursue each one, and after a couple of weeks I just knew she was dead.’ After the remains of a young woman were discovered on a nearby river bank Shirlene reached out to the sheriff’s for a second time, and was again told ‘there’s no way it’s her, it couldn’t be her’ and that the victim was closer to twenty-five and wasn’t as tall as Laura. However the next morning a story in the newspaper mentioned the young woman was wearing a ‘ring with a green stone,’ which happened to be a peridot, which was Laura’s birthstone. Mrs. Aime immediately ran to look in her daughter’s jewelry box, to see if her peridot ring was still there. It was, however, the rest of the coincidences were just too much for her to bear.

Within an hour both Mr. and Mrs. Aime were on their way to the University of Utah morgue, accompanied by Sheriff Mack Hollet and a copy of Laura’s dental charts. Jim said that she had been beaten so severely that he ‘didn’t even recognize her,’ was only able to positively ID her by the scars on her forearm from the horse injury that I mentioned earlier. When he realized that he was looking at his precious little girl, he let out a loud, gut wrenching wail. Shirlene said that she ‘couldn’t believe it had come from a human being.’ Additionally, the dental records that the Aime’s brought with them further verified that it was Laura. Her autopsy revealed a broken jaw, a fractured skull, bruises and lacerations to her head and shoulders, a deep cut to the back of the head, and injuries to the vagina and anus. The ME determined that she had died on November 20, which was roughly twenty days after she disappeared. Many years after his daughter’s murder, Mr. Aime was driving near the spot where her remains were discovered with a friend, and he shared: ‘my little baby was up there all by herself and there was nothing I could do to help her.’

Captain Borax was able to locate a copy of the Lehi Free Press from the night Laura was abducted, and it was apparently an election period in local county government: Mack Holley was running for Utah County Sheriff, and Noall Wootton was running for County Attorney. Wootton was busy promoting his stance on crime prevention while Sheriff Mack Holley was preoccupied with communicating his belief in strong family values, but both men openly discussed the need for increased protection against the dangers that lurked in the night. Together, Wootton and Holley wrestled with a real, live boogeyman that slithered through the shadows of Lehi and American Fork, but at the same time they had no problems with hiding information away from one another. Mack Holley was known to keep information to himself and refuse to share it, and about him Jerry Thompson said ‘all I kept getting was a runaround, so I basically said, ‘to hell with them.’ As early as December 3, 1974 (which is only six days after Aime was found), retired Utah County Sheriff’s Sergeant Owen Quarnery wrote to the FBI crime lab in DC about the case, saying: ‘The MO is similar in many respects to the Smith case. The victims in both cases were beaten, sexually assaulted and strangled. Also many of the wounds were similar in appearance.’

Despite Laura disappearing on the last day in October it was determined she had only been dead for roughy a week when her body was discovered. According to Kevin Sullivans book ‘The Enigma of Ted Bundy,’ her remains showed a very small decomposition, which strongly hints that her killer may have kept her alive after abducting her. Looking into SLC temperatures during November 1974, it was a relatively warm fall and wasn’t very cold meaning the body wouldn’t have preserved because of low temps. Less than two weeks before Aime disappeared on October 18, 1974 Melissa Anne Smith disappeared from nearby Midvale after leaving a pizza parlor at around 9:30 PM. Nine days later her naked remains were found in a nearby mountainous area, and just like with Aime the only thing found on her body was a cross on a delicate chain necklace. One strange commonality I wanted to point out is that unconfirmed Bundy victim Sandra Weaver was also found the same way.

According to David McGowans book ‘Programmed to Kill,’ Melissa Smith’s body was found almost entirely drained of blood, and revealed a somewhat strange abnormality: like Laura, she had not been murdered immediately and had been kept alive for possibly a week after she was abducted. Additionally, her make-up was applied neatly and none of her nails were broken. Strangely there were no signs of restraints or ligatures, so if she was held against her will before her life was taken, there was next to no signs of it (perhaps he kept her in a locked room of sorts?). Retired Colorado investigator Mike Fisher strongly felt that Bundy brought both Smith and Aime back to his first SLC apartment (located at 565 1st Ave), and further elaborated that on occasion other tenants would hear him going down to the cellar in the middle of the night and making noise.

Sullivan feels that Bundy could have kept Aime alive in two possible scenarios: the first one being he kept her in the basement of his rooming house, which was in the rear of the building and that he could keep locked, and because he was the apartment manager he had a key for the area. The second involves him pulling what he calls a ‘reverse Lynda Ann Healy,’ and he carried her into his room in the middle of the night when no one was awake to see (then down and out again when he disposed of her remains). Thinking about it, carrying the body of a young woman out of your room in the middle of the night sounds awfully bold (even if she was alive), but by that time he had lived there for a few months and had most likely gotten familiar with the behaviors of his fellow tenants. We know he didn’t admit to anything related to Laura Aime during his confessions however he did admit to keeping Deb Kent alive in his residence for a period of time before he took her life, so it’s fairly likely that he did the same with Aime (and Smith). Laura’s autopsy report states that in the middle of November 1974 two or three of her friends told LE they think they got phone calls from her but weren’t 100% certain if it was actually her or not.

In the summer of 1974 Sheriff Mack Holley created Utah County’s first Detective Division, and Laura Aime’s murder was their first investigation. Strangely enough, in an interview between (retired) Chief Investigator for Utah County Brent Bollock and True Crime blogger and creator Captain Borax, Bollock said that (former) Utah County Sheriff Mack Holley never believed that Bundy was responsible for Aimes murder, and even wrote about it in one of his books (which I was unable to locate online). In fact, Holley strongly felt that another man was responsible for her murder, one that was later convicted of killing his girlfriend, even going so far as telling a member of the team of investigating detectives: ‘Bundy had nothing to do with our case, so forget him. That man didn’t do our case. I wish you’d get that through your head.’

A little over a week after Aime disappeared on November 8, 1974, Bundy tried (but failed) to kidnap Carol DaRonch from the Fashion Place Mall on South State Street in Murray. After the 18-year-old telephone operator escaped, Ted quickly realized that he needed a new victim, so he drove roughly 25 miles away to Bountiful and abducted 17 year-old Debra Kent (this will also be important later). The family was attending a showing of ‘The Redhead’ at Viewmont High School that went later than expected and Deb volunteered to take the family car and pick up her two younger brothers at a nearby roller skating rink. On her walk out to the parking lot, Bundy abducted her, then killed her and dumped her body roughly 50 miles away in American Fork Canyon.

In 1977 investigators took a second look into Aime’s murder, and they spoke with her girlfriend Marin Beverige, who positively identified Bundy as an individual that was at Brown’s on the night she disappeared. In fact, Marin’s sister worked at the establishment and even claimed to see Ted pull up and pick up Laura the night she disappeared. Beverige told detectives that she first noticed him one day in September 1974, and remembered that he drove a Volkswagen and told her he was a student at the local university. She also recalled one occasion where she was sitting in the sunshine with Laura and a group of friends near a local high school and the man joined them. When a young guy teased Aime by putting some grass down her halter top, he objected, and ‘this guy came unglued and told him Laura was his. He was really weird.’ Marin said that the attractive young man kept randomly showing up all around Lehi, and always seemed to be looking for Laura. She recalled an event that took place one night at The Knotty Pine, where: ‘he came in and was sitting there talking and I got up…..When Laura said, ‘I’m ready to go,’ this guy said, ‘You can’t. I’m going to rape you.’ Laura just laughed and pushed him away.’’

Beverige informed detectives that she had seen the man on multiple occasions, and one evening he even knocked on her front door and asked to speak to Aime privately. She agreed and after the two went outside to speak alone: ‘Laura was really shook up. But she wouldn’t say what happened.’ About the events surrounding her friend’s disappearance, Marin had a completely different account of what happened that night, one that differed greatly from the one gathered by the Utah County Sheriff’s Department: according to Beverige, her, Laura, and a bunch of their friends had gathered at her house for a Halloween party, and some guys had brought a large amount of vodka and Laura had gotten pretty drunk: ‘It was about midnight or so, and she was pretty well drunk. And she wanted me to walk downtown with her to get some cigarettes.’ She said no, and as Aime walked away into the darkness it was the last time Marin ever saw her friend. ‘Around three or four o’clock some of us went to town to look for her, but we couldn’t find her.’ When Beverige was shown a lineup she immediately picked out Bundy; a female clerk employed at Brown’s picked him out as well. She was also asked to take a polygraph test which she agreed to, and passed. 

Mrs. Aime called the early stages of her daughter’s murder investigation ‘damned frustrating,’ and said it was filled with ‘blunders, omissions and political jealousies,’ elaborating that two of the detectives working the case were incredibly uncoordinated: ‘one would come and ask me a question, and a couple hours later the other would come and ask me the same thing. Neither of them would tell the other anything.’ On one occasion a political rival of the (then current) sheriff came to speak with the family to ask them questions for his own personal investigation, and because the Utah County Sheriff’s Department was so unwilling to share information the Aimes would frequently receive phone calls from other police agencies, asking for information about their daughters murder. Not satisfied with how local LE were handling Laura’s murder, the Aime’s desperately wanted the experienced homicide detectives in Salt Lake City to help with the investigation, but they were turned down and told by (local) officers, ‘if we can’t solve it, no one else can.’ Mr. and Mrs. Aime felt that Laura’s murder had become somewhat coveted politically, and that whoever was able to solve it ‘could have written their own ticket politically.’ But unfortunately it went unsolved, and months went by without investigators learning anything new, and it wasn’t until August 1975, when a handsome young law student was arrested that everything started to come together, and Ted became the first decent suspect in her murder. It was at that point that a highly skilled investigator became involved in the case, Brent Bullock of the Utah County attorney’s office, who the family was incredibly pleased with, and was impressed and encouraged by his ‘professionalism, his relentless search for evidence, and his questioning of witnesses.’

When Bundy escaped prison for the first time in Aspen on June 7, 1977, Jim Aime ‘exploded in anger,’ and he ‘would have gone down there and searched for him myself, if I could have afforded to lay off work.’ Thankfully the father of five remained home with his family (he still had four daughters at home), but because Shirlene was so afraid for the safety of their other girls he bought her a .38-caliber pistol. As we all know Bundy was recaptured just a few days later on June 13, 1977, but he escaped for a second time later that same year on December 30 from the Garfield County jail in Glenwood Springs. By this time in the year they had ‘hocked’ the weapon as they were reportedly ‘hard-pressed financially,’ and by his second escape Jim had become even more angry and bitter, and said that his wife was ‘just scared to death. She quit her job so she can stay home and watch the kids. She won’t let those girls out of her sight.’

Laura’s murder wasn’t the only time that the Aime family had to deal with the ‘keystone cops:’ After graduating from high school John joined the military and became a radar specialist in the Army, but after his sister was killed it was as if the entire family’s lives fell apart. After leaving the service he began working in construction in Tacoma, and on April 28, 1975 at around 10 PM he reportedly approached a young woman on a street, briefly spoke with her, then physically accosted her. She testified that she was ‘grabbed by Aime and dragged toward a brushy area and that the defendant ran when she fell to the ground and screamed,’ (she also said that he tried to ‘drag her’), and after letting out an ear piercing scream he fled, but a passerby caught him and held him at gunpoint until police arrived. Aime later said that he had no intention of harming or molesting the young woman, and his wife Lynn was completely puzzled by that incident and couldn’t provide any explanation for her husband’s actions. John was taken to jail and investigators began digging into his past; a probation officer wrote: ‘he and his family have suffered as a result of his sister being raped and killed in Utah.’ While in jail in Tacoma Aime got married to a medical technician and an Air Force vet; it was an unusual ceremony that took place without the guards’ knowledge. After a two-day trial in June 1977, he was convicted of a misdemeanor assault and was sentenced to a five-year term at Washington’s Western State Hospital at Steilacoom for the rehabilitation of sex-offenders. For obvious reasons, this devastated both of his parents, and about the incident Mr. Aime said that he ‘was just a scared kid from the country.’

Before Bundy was put to death in Florida, he confessed to killing Laura Ann Aime on January 22, 1989 in a 90-minute confession with (retired) SLC Detective Dennis Couch. The following is an excerpt from Dick Larsen’s ‘The Deliberate Stranger:’ ‘Y’know, there’s always been something about that Laura Aime case, that one in particular, that’s really bothered Theodore. When several case files were given to Bundy in his jail cell, under the discovery procedure …. the first one he went for … and really tore into … was the Aime case…. ‘ When asked about his involvement in Aime’s murder, Ted lowered his head and refused to talk about it. Strangely enough, I’ve heard that he washed some of his victims’ hair and manicured some of their nails as well, but this is the first time I’ve written about a woman that he actually did it to. After Aime’s remains were found, law enforcement determined that her hair had been recently shampooed, making them believe her killer had returned to her corpse on multiple occasions to engage in acts of necrophilia. About this act is a passage from Michaud and Aynesworths book, ‘The Only Living Witness:’ ‘Bundy also indirectly touched on some old mysteries, such as Laura Aime’s freshly-washed hair, and Melissa Smith’s make-up: ‘If you’ve got time,’ he told Hagmaier, ‘they can be anything you want them to be.’’

According to an article published by The Salt Lake Tribune right before Bundy was executed, investigators had to exhume Aime’s remains in order to get another hair sample because the first one they obtained after her remains were initially discovered were misplaced. Jim Aime wept at the mere thought of it, but relented, saying ‘why not? They can’t hurt her any more. It seems like these things just couldn’t happen.’ About her daughter’s disappearance, Mrs. Aime commented that ‘there’s no way of putting it out of your mind…’

According to Ann Rule’s true crime classic, ‘The Stranger Beside Me,’ Laura’ toxicology report came back just over 0.1, which is obviously an indicator of impairment (at least from a legal standpoint), but at the same time wasn’t so extreme or outrageous that she wouldn’t have been able to defend herself (or at the very least scream or try to run away). Now, if she really was kept alive up until a week before her death, and she wasn’t murdered immediately after the Halloween party… Was Bundy plying her with alcohol up until her final moments? Another thing that is jumping out at me as being weird is… if Laura Aime was kept alive until roughly a week before her body was discovered, that would put her murder date sometime in between November 17-20 (roughly, give or take)… Did he somehow keep multiple victims alive at the same time (somewhere)? Were Aime and Deb Kent somehow kept alive together in an unknown location for a period of time? Did he kill the one in front of the other, like with the Lake Sammamish murders of Denise Naslund and Jan Ott?

Despite the way she was killed was very similar to Bundy’s MO and she fit the physical description of  one of his victims, he initially denied any responsibility for Aime’s murder and refused to talk about her when he was questioned. However, (most likely) in an attempt to delay his execution in the days leading up to his death Ted finally confessed to the murder of Laura Ann Aime.

Mr. Aime died at the age of 59 on November 26, 1987. It appears that in 1980 Shirlene Aime adopted her granddaughter Danika, who was given the middle name of Laura after the aunt that she never had the chance to meet. Mrs. Aime died on November 1, 2011 in Reno, Nevada at the age of 77. Laura’s only brother John died at the age of 56 on November 29, 2010 in Gunnison, Utah but it appears that all of her sisters are still alive. Because it’s’ strongly suspected that Bundy kept her alive for a period of time after abducting her, the Aime family chose to list ‘November 1974’ as her official date of death on her gravestone.

Update: On April 1, 2026 the Utah County Sheriff’s Office officially confirmed that Ted Bundy was the individual responsible for the murder of Laura Ann Aime: while he had previously confessed to the murder just prior to his 1989 execution, investigators simply didn’t have the physical evidence to definitively close the case until recently. Using new forensic technology acquired in 2023, the Utah state crime lab was able to extract a single male DNA profile from evidence from the original 1974 crime scene; this profile provided an irrefutable match to Ted Bundy.

The Aime children: Laura (right ), John (left), and Evelyn (middle).
A picture of Laura from Elementary School, courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
A picture of Laura from the 1971 North Sanpete Junior High School yearbook, courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
Laura in a picture from her time in the ‘Silver Spurs Riding Club,’ courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think Like an Elk.’
Laura Ann Aime. Her mother said she had ‘hell inside her’ after watching her ride her shining blue Arabian horse at top speed.
Laura Ann Aime.
Laura Aime.
Laura Ann Aime.
Laura Aime, blowing a bubble.
A group picture from Laura’s time at North Sanpete High School; Laura is in the back row on the far right.
Laura in a group photo.
Photo courtesy of OddStops.
The Aime’s residence. Photo courtesy of ‘Crimes Forgotten by Time.’
Investigators at the site where two students found the remains of Laura Ann Aime. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
Investigators at the site where two students found the remains of Laura Ann Aime. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
Investigators at the site where two students found the remains of Laura Ann Aime. Photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was trying to Think like an Elk.’
Investigators at American Fork Canyon carrying out the remains of Laura Aime.
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A picture from Laura Aime’s autopsy, courtesy of the series: ‘Hunting Ted Bundy.’
A labeled aerial map of the dump site of Laura Aime in American Fork Canyon. The yellow line shows the trail the students took when they found her remains. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
A labeled map of where Robinson Park is located compared to the dump site of Laura Aime in American Fork Canyon.
A chart of the average temperatures in SLC in November 1974 when Laura was missing and possibly being kept alive somewhere.
Aime’s gravesite at the Fairview Cemetery in Utah.
Where ‘The Knotty Pine’ once stood in Lehi, UT, in the left hand side of the building. Picture taken in November 2022.
Where ‘The Knotty Pine’ once stood in Lehi, UT. Picture taken in November 2022.
Laura walked down this street the night she disappeared to go to the Knotty Pine. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.
An old advertisement for the Knotty Pine Cafe. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.
William S. Robinson Park in American Fork, Utah. Picture taken in November 2022.
William S. Robinson Park in American Fork, Utah. Picture taken in November 2022.
William S. Robinson Park in American Fork, Utah. Picture taken in November 2022.
A statue at William S. Robinson Park in American Fork, Utah. Picture taken in November 2022.
The entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
The entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
The entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
A building at the entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
A gate at the entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
A sign for the Timpanogos Cave at the entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
A sign for the Uinta National Forest at the entrance the American Fork Canyon. Picture taken in November 2022.
This white SUV is where the PD coordinates took me from the OddStops website.
This white SUV is where the PD coordinates took me from the OddStops website.
Former Utah County Attorney, Noall T. Wootton. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.
An article about an antler contest that Mr. Aime won, published by The Pyramid on November 8, 1968.
A picture of Mr. Aime with his award winning buck. Photo courtesy of Captain Borax.
An newspaper blurb mentioning some of the Aime sisters, published by The Pyramid on September 9, 1971.
A newspaper blurb mentioning some of the Aime girls, published by The Pyramid on June 8, 1972.
An article about the murder of Laura Aime.
An article about the murder of Laura Aime.
An undated article about the murder of Laura Aime.
An undated article about the murder of Laura Aime.
An undated article about the disappearance of Laura Aime.
Part one of an article on Aime published by The Deseret News on November 28, 1974.
Part two of an article on Aime published by The Deseret News on November 28, 1974.
An article on Aime published by The Idaho Statesman on November 29, 1974.
An article about the disappearance of Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on November 29, 1974.
Part one of an article about the disappearance of Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on November 29, 1974.
Part two of an article about the disappearance of Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on November 29, 1974.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Daily Sitka Sentinel on November 29, 1974.
An article about the disappearance of Laura Aime published by The Deseret News on November 30, 1974.
An article about Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on December 1, 1974.
An article about Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on December 3, 1974.
An article about Laura Aime published by The Spanish Pyramid on December 5, 1974.
An article about the disappearance of Laura Aime published by The Deseret News on December 7, 1974.
An article about Aime published by The Deseret News on December 9, 1974.
An article about Aime published by The Deseret News on February 7, 1975.
An article about Aime published by The Del Rio News Herald on March 14, 1975.
An article about Aime published by The Salt Lake Tribune on March 15, 1975.
An article about Aime published by The Daily Herald on March 21, 1975.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Eugene Register-Guard on April 24, 1975.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Bulletin on October 3, 1975.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Spokesman-Review on October 3, 1975.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner on October 4, 1975.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Spokane Chronicle on October 22, 1975.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Kitsap Sun on October 31, 1975.
An article about Bundy being freed on bail that mentions Laura Aime published by The Ogden Standard-Examiner on November 21, 1975.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Daily Herald on November 21, 1975.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Spokesman-Review on March 4, 1976.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Deseret News on September 9, 1977.
An article about Bundy mentioning Laura Aime published by The Deseret News on December 16, 1977.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Deseret News on April 3, 1978.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Evening Independent on July 25, 1979.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Deseret News on February 14, 1983.
Part one of an article mentioning Aime published before Bundy was executed by The Daily Herald on January 5, 1989.
Part two of an article mentioning Aime published before Bundy was executed by The Daily Herald on January 5, 1989.
An article mentioning Laura Aime published just before Bundy was executed on January 22, 1989.
An article mentioning Laura Aime after Bundy was executed published by The Deseret News Tribune on February 28, 1989.
A funeral card for Aime. Courtesy of Captain Borax.
Laura Aime’s obituary published by The Daily Tribune on December 1, 1974.
Laura Aime’s obituary published by The Spanish Fork Press on December 4, 1974.
Another obituary for Aime.
A thank you to the local community from the Aime family regarding their kindness surrounding Laura being killed published by The Pyramid on December 26, 1974.
Page one of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page two of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page three of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page four of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page five of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page six of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page seven of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page eight of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
Page nine of Laura Aime’s autopsy report. Document courtesy of Erin Banks/CrimePiper.
James and his sister, Evelyn Aime.
James and Shirlene Aime’s application for a marriage license.
James and Shirlene’s marriage certificate.
James and Shirlene Aime’s marriage certificate.
A newspaper blurb about a domestic incident featuring the Aime’s published by The Daily Herald on April 29, 1966.
James Aime’s WWII registration card.
The second part of James Aime’s WWII registration card.
John Aime.
John Aime.
Mrs. Aime and her family when she was a kid.
Mrs. Aime. Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
Shirlene Aime (left). Photo courtesy of Ancestry.
Evelyn Aime from the 1977 American Fork High School yearbook.
Michelle Aime from the 1977 American Fork High School yearbook.
Michelle Aime from the 1978 American Fork High School yearbook.
An article about Laura’s brother published by The News Tribune on May 1, 1977.
An article about Laura’s brother published by The News Tribune on June 17, 1977.
An article mentioning Aime published by The Orem-Geneva Times on August 7, 1980.
A notice about Mrs. Aime adopting her granddaughter published in The Orem-Geneva Times on August 21, 1980.
Mrs. Aime with the granddaughter she adopted, Danika.
James Aime’s obituary published in The Daily Herald on November 29, 1987.
A note about James Aime’s memorial service published in The Daily Herald on November 29, 1987.
A screenshot of Evelyn Aime from an interview she did with Captain Borax, whose real name is Chris Mortenson. I keep calling him Captain Borax as if its the name his parents gave him that’s listed on his birth certificate.
Marin Beverige.
A screenshot of Sheriff Mack Holley’s published memoirs, ‘From the Journal of Sheriff Mack Holley, Utah County Sheriff’s Department Events, 1960 to 1985, BYU Basketball, Football, Personal Observations,’ published on January 1, 1986.

Bundy’s Execution: January 24, 1989.

Theodore Robert Bundy was executed in Florida’s Prison’s electric chair on January 24, 1989 after brutally raping and killing dozens of young women between 1974 and 1978 (most likely earlier than that). The infamous serial killer was sentenced to capital punishment after brutally killing three young women in Florida (and countless others across the Pacific Northwest) and had been given the death penalty three times before he was finally killed. Bundy sat on death row for almost a decade when he was finally executed at 7:16 AM EST, and the event became a celebration of sorts for Floridians. On January 23, as the condemned man was spilling his guts in a last ditch effort to push off his execution, a crowd of almost 500 gathered outside the Florida Prison chanting phrases such as ‘die, Bundy, die’ and ‘burn Bundy, burn,’ drinking drank beer and holding signs that read ‘watch Ted fry, see Ted die!’ But not everyone was excited, there was also a small group of anti-death penalty protesters that didn’t want to see the event take place.

Bundy in prison with some of his fellow inmates. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
Ol’ Sparky, the electric chair at Florida State Prison.
Bundy peering out from behind the bars at Florida State before he was executed. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.
A drawing of Bundy walking to the execution chair.
A drawing of Bundy on his way to the execution chair.
A drawing of Bundy in the execution chair. Photo courtesy of ‘Ted Bundy: I was Trying to Think like an Elk.’
A drawing of Ted sitting in the electric chair.
A picture from a Florida newspaper after Bundy was executed.
The crowd outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.
The crowd outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.
News crews gathering outside of Florida State Prison before Bundy’s execution in the early morning hours of January 24, 1989. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.
A gentleman wearing a ‘Burn Bundy, Burn’ t-shirt outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Hezakya News.
A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.
A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.
A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.
A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution.
A picture taken the morning of Bundy’s execution outside Florida State Prison.
A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.
A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed. Photo courtesy of Fox 13 News.
A sign someone was holding outside Florida State Prison before Bundy was executed.
A picture taken before Bundy’s execution.
Some pro-death penalty demonstrators standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.
Some anti-death penalty protesters standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.
Some anti-death penalty protesters standing outside of Florida State Prison the morning of Ted’s execution.
A sign hung in the window of a Florida musical instrument store the morning of Bundy’s execution.
A sign hung in the window of The Phyrst, a bar in Florida on the morning of Bundy’s execution.
Mrs. Bundy talking on the phone the morning of Ted’s execution.
The hearse pulling out of Florida State Prison carrying Bundy’s remains after he was executed.
The hearse driving Ted’s remains to the ME’s office after he was executed.
A photo of Ted arriving at the Medical Examiners office after his execution.
A B&W of Bundy after his execution.
A close-up B&W of Bundy after his execution.
A picture of Bundy, post-mortem. Photo courtesy of the Florida state Department of Corrections.
Bundy after his execution.
The top of Bundy’s head after his execution.
Bundy’s legs after his execution.
An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Greenwood Commonwealth on January 24, 1989.
An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Enterprise-Journal on January 24, 1989.
An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Elizabethton Star on January 24, 1989.
An article written the day Bundy was executed published by The Sun Times on January 24, 1989.
Bundys death certificate.
A mock obituary for Ted Bundy created by ‘theodorerobertcowellnelsonbundy.wordpress.com.’ The description reads: ‘I thought he deserved a proper obituary, not some sensationalized news article about the monstrous serial killer celebrating his death.’
An interesting opinion piece Bryan Kohberger’s mother sent to a newspaper about Ted Bundy’s execution, published by The Daily News on February 16, 1989.