In May 2022 I got in my little purple VW Beetle and made the 6 hour trek from Attica, NY to Philadelphia to explore where Ted Bundy spent his early years…















In May 2022 I got in my little purple VW Beetle and made the 6 hour trek from Attica, NY to Philadelphia to explore where Ted Bundy spent his early years…















Laura ‘Laurie’ Lynn Partridge was born on May 31, 1957 to Ken and Mary Partridge of Santa Monica, California. The family relocated to Spokane from Fountain Valley, CA when Mr. Partridge was transferred by the outdoor advertising firm that he worked for in August of 1974. At first Laurie was incredibly upset about the move to Washington state and had hopes of going back as soon as possible but she quickly settled into her new life. She even broke up with her old boyfriend in California and started dating a new guy in Spokane (which made her parents incredibly happy as they strongly disliked the old bf and adored the new one). Mrs. Partridge said of her daughters new fiance: “we liked him the moment he first came to the house. He is also religious and they really hit it off.” The senior at Ferris High School had blonde hair, blue eyes, and a brown mole on her right cheek; at the time of her disappearance she was 17 years old, stood at 5’0” tall and weighed 110 pounds. Laura (who only went by Laurie) was the oldest of five siblings: she had three younger sisters (Taryn, Cindy, and Kimberly) and a brother. A girl whose faith was incredibly important to her, she loved playing the guitar and even taught her sister Kim how to play. She also wrote for her new high schools newspaper and was on the drill team.
At roughly 12:30 PM on December 4, 1974 Laurie went to the administrative offices at her school after telling friends she was starting to experience menstrual cramps; she wanted to go home and lay down before her shift at work later. She didn’t have a car of her own so she called both of her parents for a ride, but they were working and told her to just hang out and wait for the bus (I read in a news article that it was rainy that day). Not willing to sit around and hoping the walk and some fresh air might help soothe her cramps, Laurie decided to trek the two miles home. Because she technically had enough credits to graduate early, per school policy she was allowed to end her day early and was able to just leave campus without notifying anyone at home. The only person who was aware that she left was her sister Cindy. When Mrs. Partridge picked the rest of the kids up later that day, Cindy told her Laurie left hours earlier. When they got home, she sent her husband and son out to talk to some of the neighbors who hadn’t seen her either.
Laurie never made it home and, and after failing to make it into work later that same day at the Lincoln Heights Theater her parents knew something was wrong, and after contacting her fiance and some friends with no success, reported her to the police as missing. Per her niece’s blog ‘creativehomelife‘ (link posted below under works cited), “after she was reported missing Laurie’s father and second oldest child walked the route she would have walked to get home. They knocked on every neighbor’s door and spoke to anyone along the route that answered their door, or who they came across. They were able to build a timeline where Laurie was and the approx time she disappeared based on accounts of people who saw her walking by.” In an article from The Spokesman Review published on January 19, 1975, “school officials at Ferris High School where she was a senior tend to doubt she would run away based on her records and their personal acquaintance with her. The same holds true for her friends.”
Laurie was last seen at the intersection of 37th Street and Havana Street by a man shoveling snow from his driveway. She was wearing a long hooded navy blue wool coat similar to a monk’s robe, a tan sweater, burgundy and tan plaid pants and faded blue denim oxford shoes with crepe soles and had with her a brown leather handbag with a braided shoulder strap and blue flower on it. The neighborhood that Laurie was walking through was surrounded by sprawling fields and the houses were set far apart from one another. Law enforcement speculate that she most likely was abducted while crossing one of these barren stretches of land… with nothing but empty fields around her, it would have been easy for someone to grab her quickly without witnesses. A detective with the sheriff’s department said it was as if she “fell off the face of the earth.”
The Partridge family was very open with law enforcement about Laurie’s initial troubles fitting in with her new peers, but they also made them aware of all the new extracurricular activities she had become involved in as well as the exciting new relationship she was in. They made it crystal clear that she would never run away or leave on her own accord. Laurie may have missed California at first but was really settling into her new life in Spokane; she was even given the opportunity to go back to Fountain Valley to finish out her senior year. That offer was extended roughly around the time she met her new beau, became the advertising editor with the school newspaper and started the drill team so she turned it down. Her mother said that “when Fall arrived and the autumn leaves started to fall, she said she really loved it here. She also had started going to the schools games and was making friends.”
At first Spokane police thought Laurie left willingly on her own, however the Partridge family made it clear from the beginning that they strongly disagreed with this theory. It didn’t take long for law enforcement to change their opinion and it was quickly determined that she was taken by force (it’s worth noting the family feels that valuable time was wasted before that happened). Laurie’s loved ones were insistent that she would never leave on her own, largely because she had just gotten engaged to her 20 year-old boyfriend and the two had plans to go pick out an engagement ring the day after she disappeared. The couple were planning on a summer wedding after she graduated from high school, and her dream was to move to his family farm, get married, have his babies, raise livestock and live happily ever after. Newspaper reports said the young woman was quickly adapting into her new life in Washington state and was excited about the future. In the days following Laurie’s disappearance, four Spokane sheriff units combed the area where she was last seen surrounding the city limits south going towards Tower Mountain while three other units patrolled the area around Ferris High School and the Lincoln Heights area. Immediately feeling foul play was involved, Mr. Partridge put out a $500 reward for information leading to his daughter’s safe return. A boy who lived in the Partridge’s Spokane neighborhood claims he somehow had firsthand knowledge that Laurie had run away, however his claim seems to hold no merit, as it is rarely mentioned and doesn’t really seem to factor into any of the pertinent information surrounding her case.
Before her disappearance, Mr. Partridge bought his daughter two general admission tickets to a Beach Boys concert later that month on December 9, 1974 at the Spokane Coliseum. Family members said Laurie was carrying them with her the afternoon she disappeared and they knew there was no way she would ever willingly miss that show. There’s conflicting reports that Laurie’s Mom either recalled by memory at least one of the ticket numbers or she had them both written down somewhere. The Partridge’s pleaded with law enforcement for permission to check the ticket numbers of people coming into the concert but denied their request, claiming it would hold people up that were trying to get into the show. After the concert was over, police went back and searched for her ticket numbers in the stubs and they realized that both of Laurie’s tickets had been redeemed. Unfortunately at this point it was too late and there was no way to figure out who had used them (they were general seating and obviously this was well before the days of cameras).
Around the time Laurie disappeared, her niece wrote that: “police and family also spoke to a witness who came forward in 1974. A teenage girl was riding her horse around 4:15 PM and spotted a man in his 40’s-50’s in a field holding a rifle standing with a girl who she thought looked like Laurie and she described the clothes as to what Laurie wore. They were standing in front of a vehicle described as a white truck with a van back end and a darker colored door. When the witness looked back the girl was no longer visible.This sighting was near the route Laurie last walked.” When she glanced back the young girl had disappeared but later that night saw the story of Laurie Partridge on the news and (after telling her mother) reported what she saw to law enforcement; nothing ever came of it (this was actually reported on in 2011, not 1974).
According to Laurie’s sister ‘Taryn‘ on the WebSlueths forum, “there was a sighting of Laurie in a field with a man with a truck and another sighting 2-3 days later in the back of a car with another man.The police did things a lot differently back then-and thought she ran away. Which we know she didn’t. There are a lot of things that haven’t been followed thru on and as more time passes it gets harder.Someone has to know something.” … “A few days later she was seen in in the back seat with a man- the car was green Vega or Pinto.” … “I think it was the parking lot of PAY N SAVE in SPOKANE.” …
Multiple reports said that a green Ford Pinto was in the area at the time of her abduction and may have been following her. Per Laurie’s niece, “police also received reports about a green Ford Pinto station wagon in the area possibly following Laurie and days later someone also contacted police and made a report that they believe they spotted the missing 17 year-old being held captive in the back of a pinto, these leads never went anywhere either. There were a couple other tips that Laurie’s Dad and Fiance followed up on, including them driving to Idaho. Again nothing viable was found.” Over the years law enforcement conducted hundreds of interviews and polygraphs with Laurie’s loved ones, friends, and acquaintances in California and Spokane … all of them passed.
It seems there are varying reports out there on whether or not Laurie’s purse and its contents have been found in the general area where she was last seen two days after her disappearance. Some sources say yes, others swear it’s never been recovered but I’m going to go by her nieces blog, who said it has not been recovered and that “her family has verified this with detectives.” In a deleted Reddit account, a user comments on a post about Laurie that: “Holy &%$ — my Dad went to school with her and he used to tell me about this case when I was smaller to illustrate why he and Mom worried about us. He said it really rattled him — one day he and his friends were discussing who was going to ask out the new cute girl first (though I guess she was already engaged?), and the next…. they were told she was missing. He said though, that her purse HAD been found. I do wonder if someone found it but didn’t turn it in, instead keeping it as some sort of weird trophy.”
Over the years three suspects were questioned in relation to Laurie’s disappearance but no one has ever been formally charged. Her new fiance was questioned in depth but was never considered a suspect. In regards to who abducted her sister, Taryn Chambers said: “I’m not sure-maybe someone she knew. We thought maybe Ted Bundy, but he was in Utah at the time.” At the time Ted was living roughly 750 miles away from Ferris High School in Salt Lake City (even though we all know he had no problem driving long distances when hunting for prey). In December 1974 he was in between jobs: from May 3, 1974 to August 28, 1974 Bundy worked for the Department of Emergency Services in Olympia and remained unemployed until June 1975 when he briefly worked as the night manager in charge of Bailiff Hall at the University of Utah (he was fired the next month for showing up drunk). Ted was a law student at the University of Utah at the time and was living at 565 First Avenue (he was there from September 1974 to September 1975). We know Ms. Partridge fit the physical description of one of his victims: she was slim, a student and was in the right setting… However, gas related credit card receipts place Bundy in Utah at the time of Laurie’s disappearance. His last known murder before she was abducted was Debra Kent on November 8, 1975 out of Bountiful, Utah and he killed Caryn Campbell in Aspen, Colorado on (or around) January 12, 1975. The Partridge family doesn’t believe Ted had any involvement with Laurie’s disappearance and frankly, neither do I.
Another suspect that was investigated for Laurie’s disappearance is Stanley Marvin Bernson. Born in 1936, law enforcement suspect Bernson may have killed a total of 30 women around the Northwest and he was sentenced to life in prison for two of them, one in Oregon (1978) and another in Washington (1979). He was arrested in connection with the vicious stabbing death of Diane Remington and was later found guilty of killing 15 year old Sharon Weber, of Hermiston, OR. He at one point bragged to his cellmates as well as law enforcement that he traveled the country killing women with Ted Bundy but police were unable to ever place the two men together. According to the website ‘tapatalk,’ “the internet is strangely scrubbed of any Bernson references, but this snippet turns up in an Oregon criminal trial lawyer publication: ‘Bernson’s lawyer, the late Dennis Hachler, said that his client used to run with Ted Bundy and, he added that Bernson made Bundy look like a choir boy.” At the time of Laurie’s disappearance in 1974, Bernson was employed as a traveling produce salesman and lived in Spokane, WA. Coincidentally, he had a route nearby where she was abducted from. One of Laurie’s sisters asked law enforcement several times over the years to interview the convicted killer, and in July 2018 detectives working the case went to Walla Walla where he was incarcerated and questioned him; he denied having any involvement in her disappearance. No additional victims have been tied to Bernson after he was arrested, and he continues to serve his life term at the Washington State Penitentiary.
Per an article in The Spokesman Review published on January 19, 1975: “it isn’t that the family is just sitting back and waiting for something to happen. They have gone ‘deeply into debt,’ borrowing money to check out all of which have ended in “absolutely nothing.” The family even borrowed $5,000 to buy the help of famed psychic Peter Hurkos to help find Laurie. Hurkos gained international attention when he assisted Boston detectives in solving the Boston Strangler case and offered several possible leads that all lead to nothing (obviously). Not wanting to ruin her other kids’ childhood because of her own paranoia, Mary Partridge tried her hardest to not let the loss of Laurie affect her other children’s lives. However, none of them were ever really able to go back to “normal” and her disappearance caused such a deep seeded problem in the Partridge’s marriage that they ended up divorcing (although they reconciled and remarried over 10 years later). Of her big sisters disappearance, Kimberly Partridge-Carroll said, “Laurie was such a beautiful, beautiful person. Whoever took her changed the whole course of our lives.” Laurie’s mother passed away in 2004 but her father is still alive; her siblings are now dotted throughout the US. At this point, her family knows they are looking for a Jane Doe that would match Laurie’s physical description and they still are desperate for answers.
After Laurie disappeared the Partridge family moved out of Spokane, wanting to leave the trauma and bad memories behind. Kim said of her sisters disappearance: “it’s torture not knowing. It’s absolute torture.” Laurie’s niece wrote: “I never got to meet my Aunt Laurie, as my Mom was 10 years old when her sister went missing. Growing up, my mother would talk to my brothers and I about Laurie’s abduction, it was very difficult back then for Mom to talk about it, and it still is today. She still can’t talk about her without crying. It is difficult for all the surviving family members to talk about.”
DNA has been submitted by multiple family members in hopes to help build a genetic profile in case Laurie’s remains are ever found; her dental records are available for comparison as well. Ms. Partridge’s case remains unsolved as of March 2023; she would be 65 today and her social security number has never been used. Her case is featured in the ‘Ace of Diamonds playing cards’ used by prison inmates in Washington state; according to Laurie’s niece, “through research I found as of 2016, the cards have resulted in approx 600 tips, many have proved useless, but the program is indeed considered a success as the cards have resulted in 9 cold cases being solved.”
Works Cited:
youtube.com/watch?v=C41snwQJuEs&t=164s
creativehomelife.com/the-1974-disappearance-of-my-aunt-laurie-partridge/
reddit.com/r/UnresolvedMysteries/comments/2x5yxw/what_happened_to_laurie_partridge_missing_from/
Lauriepartridgemissing.weebly.com














































































Some pictures of Margaret Bowman I don’t frequently see:



























My friend Kyrie Allyson asked me to share the pictures of Ted’s apartment in SLC at 565 1st Ave. I didn’t get any sort of weird vibe from it, but I wasn’t in Utah for very long… I had limited time and needed to get through things FAST. Maybe if I had been able to walk around and linger a bit I would have been able to get a better feel for what may have happened here.
Ted Bundy lived at this house while attending law school in Salt Lake City between September 1974 and September 1975. Almost immediately after he moved in women started mysteriously disappearing from both Utah and Colorado. At the time, the residence was a boarding house meaning multiple tenants rented rooms and shared basic common areas. While living here Ted occupied room two, which (when looking at it from the street) is on the second floor right above the porch.
Located on the right side of the residence is a fire escape that was added some time in the 1960’s; Ted supposedly used it frequently to come and go as he pleased in the middle of the night. There is an entrance to a cellar in the back of the house on the left side, and according to one of his house mates (who didn’t find it suspicious at the time), Bundy would sometimes go down there late at night.
Before he was put to death, Bundy confessed to bringing two of his victims back to his room: Debra Kent and Nancy Wilcox. He claimed that he left Kent in his room ‘for a period of time’ before he killed her, and eventually dumped her body in a canyon around 100 miles away; he also claimed to have left Wilcox in his room as well before he took her life. Obviously there’s a lot of doubts with these claims: how could he keep girls there for days at a time against their will completely undetected? After leaving this residence in September 1975 he moved about a mile away to 364 Douglas Street.


















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





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

Robin Ann Graham.






































































































Joyce Margaret LePage was born to Walter and Florence (nee Ham) LePage on December 4, 1949 in Pullman, Washington. Mr. LePage was born on August 13, 1913 in Santa Ana, CA, and even though he dropped out of high school due to his family’s frequent moves, he enrolled in college in 1936 after seeing an ad that Brownsville Junior College accepted adult learners with no high school diploma as long as they were able to maintain a C average. About the experience, he said ‘That ad really excited me. I really worked to keep up that freshman year and was up until midnight studying a lot of nights … and, yes, did come through with the C average.’ In the summer months in between school, he hitchhiked and took odd jobs (like shoveling sand in Zapata, Mexico, for two weeks). Walter eventually went on to attend Central Missouri State Teachers College (where a full quarters tuition only cost $20) and graduated in 1940 with a dual BS in physics and chemistry (with minors in both education and math); his first teaching job was in a one-room schoolhouse in Missouri. Mrs. LePage (who preferred to go by her middle name of Ethelyn), grew up in Pullman where her father taught accounting at Washington State University.
In 1943 while working at Hanford Engineer Works as an instrument technician Walter met his future wife, who was a student and employed in their chemistry department; the couple were wed on October 5th, 1945. Before WWII, Mr. LePage learned how to fly airplanes and for most of the war training pilots near Cuero, TX; when the flight school closed in 1948 the couple purchased some undeveloped farmland just north of Pasco, WA and began the W.A. LePage Seed Company, which was family owned and operated for 46 years. Additionally, Mr. LePage helped found the Washington State Potato Commission.
Joyce was the second of five children, and had an older sister named Phyllis and three younger brothers: Bruce, Steven and David. She came from a highly driven, working class family that strongly valued education and spent a lot of time on the family farm on LaPorte Drive. Due to the long hours the LePage’s put in on the farm, the siblings didn’t partake in many after school activities, and because of this their bond was incredibly strong. When they were kids, Joyce loved bothering her younger brothers, and would often leave ‘scattered notes’ around the yard to keep them occupied and out of her hair when they were too loud or annoying. Of their childhood, Bruce said: ‘we never had to deal with financial stress. Just good family memories. My dad took a lot of photos and videos of us kids. We all have something to look back on.’
Joyce inherited her fathers love for flying and in the small amount of spare time she had earned her pilot’s license at only 18 years old. Some interesting facts about Ms. LePage: she was a phenomenal student throughout her entire academic career, and took grades very seriously. She got an 86/100 on her drivers test, and lost 6 points because ‘she slightly inched out of her lane six times.’ Joyce loved using vivid describing words when writing, and one time used the word ‘delicious’ to describe a tempting, beautifully wrapped gift she wanted to open. She enjoyed listening to rock bands like Steppenwolf, and particularly loved the Petula Clark classic ‘Downtown.’ Bruce said that his sister had a great passion for writing and ‘was going to go places in her life, and I think she could very well have ended up being an educator at some level, high school, junior high, middle school, or possible college level because she loved to write and was talented at it.’ … ‘Joyce had a great future ahead of her.’ Described by loved ones as vivacious, hardworking, and friendly, Joyce was the second of her siblings to attend WSU (her sister Phyllis earned a degree in business administration). As I said earlier, their maternal Grandfather was a professor of accounting at Wazzu so it seemed natural for the LePage children to continue their education at the institution (Bruce eventually enrolled there as well).
At the time of her murder in 1971, LePage was 21 years old and a junior at WSU. Despite it being summertime, the young coed was still living near campus on Maiden Lane, taking accelerated courses so she could graduate on time. Described by loved ones as athletic, ambitious, and attractive, she was 5’9”, weighed 136 pounds, had brown eyes and medium length light brown hair. Despite having her own apartment, Joyce enjoyed spending time in Stevens Hall, a vacant, all-girls dormitory on the university’s campus, which was under construction at the time of her murder. She enjoyed the quiet atmosphere and would frequently hang out on the first floor and study, write letters to her long distance boyfriend, and play the baby grand piano when the stress from the semester became too much; she would also (on occasion), spend the night there. About his sister, Bruce commented that: ‘she would slip up there. She had a window she could slide open and slip inside. She would go in there and do her writing.’ Retired WSU Sergeant Don Maupin said of Joyce: ‘clearly she was entering the hall, going in and out of there. And it wouldn’t be hard for someone else to do the same thing, particularly if they’re observing her’ … ‘Some of her friends knew she was going into Stevens Hall. In fact, the people who dropped her off said, ‘You’ve got to quit doing that. It’s dangerous, and besides that you’re going to get in trouble.’’ In the early stages of the investigation, law enforcement wasn’t aware that LePage liked to spend her down time in the unoccupied dormitory.
Joyce disappeared under mysterious circumstances on Thursday, July 22, 1971; she had been wearing cutoff jeans and a blue blouse late in the day when friends dropped her off at her apartment around 10 PM. Most likely because she lived away from home and took place before cell phones existed, it took ten days for Mr. LePage to report his daughter missing after she didn’t come home for a planned weekend visit. During their investigation, investigators found her car parked about 3-4 blocks away from her apartment on Oak Street; in it were her shoes and purse (sans her ID and keys). LePage had been taking skydiving lessons and her first parachute jump was scheduled for the following day (which she never showed up for). Regarding his sister as missing, Bruce said that ‘she had no reason to take off, and was planning to come down for the Water Follies (boat races) that coming weekend. She just never showed up.’ Joyce left behind all of her personal belongings and told none of her loved ones that she had any plans of taking off, and because of this, detectives immediately felt that some form of foul play was involved.
Oddly enough, a second crime took place on WSU’s campus on the evening LePage went missing: on July 23, 1971, a 5’x6’ chunk of green carpet was discovered to be missing from the lobby of Stevens Hall by school custodians. At first, campus police chalked it up to a random act of vandalism, but when they explored the residence hall further they stumbled upon blood splatter in the back corner of a room at the basement level of the hall.
It is strongly speculated that there was a party in Stevens Hall on the evening LePage disappeared: WSU custodian Rosy Lord said that on the morning of July 23, 1971 the cleaning crew came into a mess, and there were pizza boxes and ‘drug paraphernalia’ strewn all over the place. A friend of Joyce’s told law enforcement that she was planning on going to the residence hall the evening she disappeared, but no one could place her there. A neighbor told police that they saw her getting into a car with two unknown men early in the morning on the 23rd, but nothing ever came of this report. There were additional rumors being floated throughout the community: some suspected the attractive young woman ran off to join a commune, while others felt it was her that she stole the piece of carpet and took off with it (but why?). Additionally, a psychic came forward and told police he had a vision of the young girl getting on a plane for Argentina with a ‘Latin boyfriend.’
As time went by, the case created some jurisdictional complications: WSU investigated the missing patch of carpet, Pullman law enforcement was responsible for the missing persons case, and the Whitman County Sheriff’s Department was eventually put in charge of the murder investigation. This means that multiple police agencies were responsible for different parts of the case, and no one really knows how long it took them to connect Joyce’s remains to the missing carpet from Stevens Hall. The current (as of July 2024) Whitman County Sheriff Brett Myers commented: ‘that makes it difficult to piece together (today) what WSU did, what Whitman County did.’ As we know from other Bundy cases, this really throws a wrench in things as investigating agencies from that time period weren’t overly interested in sharing information with one another.
The letters that Joyce wrote to her boyfriend were handed over to police and became part of her case file, and thanks to them detectives were able to verify that she often liked to sneak into the vacant dormitory. Sergeant Maupin commented: ‘there’s little doubt that (Stevens Hall) is where the stabbing took place because she was stabbed multiple times and she was removed from the hall later on.’ … ‘Clearly she was entering the hall, going in and out of there, and it wouldn’t be hard for someone else to do the same thing, particularly if they’re observing her.’
Roughly nine months after her mysterious disappearance, on April 16, 1972, a teenager scouring the area for gemstones with his mom (some reports say they were looking for opals, another says garnets) discovered the skeletal remains of LePage along a dry creek bed in a gully roughly 10-15 miles south of Pullman, just off Wawawai Road in Wawawai Canyon. Her remains were well hidden by dense brush at the bottom of a deep ravine that was only accessible by a narrow gravel road, and she was enveloped in her school’s missing carpet as well as two military-style blankets then bound with rope (she was wrapped in the blankets first and then the carpet). Sheriff Myers said: ‘it starts as a missing person’s case. It starts out also as a missing piece of carpet from a WSU building.’ … ‘We have a theft case and a missing person case, but it was not until April of 1972 that we discovered that her body was deliberately put somewhere in the carpet.’ A positive identification was made thanks to Joyce’s dental records as well as genetic testing that was conducted by the FBI. Former Whitman County Sheriff Mike Humhprey said: ‘there definitely was foul play, but the official and specific cause of death has not been determined.’
The FBI performed some forensic tests on Joyce’s remains and determined that her cause of death was most likely the result of multiple stab wounds, as they found three puncture wounds close to her rib cage (I do want to mention that in one article it was reported she had seven wounds, but three is the number that is most frequently reported). Police determined that she had most likely been killed in the front foyer of Stevens Hall, and afterwards her assailant wrapped her body up in the missing hunk of carpet then quickly snuck her out to his waiting vehicle, then transported it to the ravine, where he disposed of it.
After Joyces body was found in 1972, the LePage family didn’t want much to do with the investigation: her father seemed to keep up with it the most, and after he passed away Bruce stepped up and seemingly became the family spokesperson, saying: ‘there wasn’t anything we or the public could do, so we had to wait until her body was found. If her body had been found immediately, at the site she was murdered, we could have looked into closure. My family has come to terms with the case pretty well, myself included. But with the nine month time frame, and the lack of evidence where her body was disposed of, there was nothing to go on.’ He further elaborated that he knew his sister had a lot of male attention: ‘I just know there were a lot of guys who would have loved to have dated her.’ … ‘This could very well be a person she turned down.’
At the time of her disappearance, Joyce was seeing a guy that was living in South Africa; he was investigated and was quickly cleared. Another possible scenario could be that LePage did attend the party at Stevens Hall on the evening she was killed and perhaps turned down the advances of a young man… When you combine that with the drug paraphernalia (I’m assuming the kids drank as well) that was found in the Hall on the morning after LePage’s murder it makes me wonder if maybe her killer wasn’t in the most rational frame of mind when he took her life.
There’s a few things that jump out at me when it comes to Bundy’s possible involvement with LePage’s murder, the biggest is the timing. As I’ve said in every single other piece I’ve ever written about a pre-Karen Sparks (suspected) victim: we know that his murder ‘career’ didn’t officially begin until early 1974 when he brutally attacked the young coed in her basement apartment then left her for dead… but when it comes to Ted I don’t think very much is set in stone, as there is no concrete, set-in-stone date that he began murdering young women. It’s pretty obvious that Joyce fit his typical victim profile, and I’m not even referring to her brown hair parted down the middle: she was a beautiful, slim, well-educated woman that disappeared off a college campus. If that doesn’t scream Ted Bundy then I don’t know what does. Sergeant Maupin said of his possible involvement: ‘profile-wise, she did fit the description (of Bundy’s victims)’ … ‘there’s no real evidence he was involved or in the area and Bundy was probably only suggested as other leads went cold.’
I’ve read in multiple sources that a ‘yellow VW Bug’ was seen cruising around WSU’s campus at roughly the time of Joyce’s murder, and that an ‘unknown person matching Bundy’s description was seen at the time of the disappearance.’ I do want to point out that per the FBI’s ‘TB MultiAgency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ he didn’t purchase his infamous tan 1968 Beetle until the spring of 1973 (he owned it until October 3, 1975), and where he did have another one prior to that he didn’t own it in the summer of 1971.
The way Joyce was murdered is also a big variation from Bundy’s typical method: much like the NJ Turnpike victims Elizabeth Perry and Susan Davis (who were killed in May of 1969), Joyce was stabbed to death. Aside from his final victim (little Kimberly Dianne Leach), Bundy was never known to use a knife while committing his atrocities, and even then he didn’t stab her. Just as an interesting side note regarding Leach: some pathologists theorized that he may have used a blade to slit her throat, while others strongly felt that he used a ligature but cinched it so tightly that her throat appeared cut. Additionally, it ‘appeared’ that none of Ted’s other victims had any sort of stab wounds, and he never said a word about using a knife in any capacity during his death row confessions… I use the word ‘appear’ because we didn’t often see his victims immediately after they were attacked, and experts really aren’t 100% certain how he murdered them (aside from Karen Sparks). It really wasn’t until Florida at the end of his rampage that he began unraveling and began leaving remains in places where they’d almost immediately be seen (like Chi Oh). It’s also worth mentioning that LePage was found wrapped up in a piece of carpet and some old blankets, and that was something Bundy wasn’t known to do.
Based on the remains that were uncovered in Washington state it looks like Ted preferred to bludgeon his victims and/or strangling them. He admitted that fact to Bill Hagmaier during one of their numerous conversations in the mid to late 1980’s, when he shared that he preferred strangling his victims so that he could watch them take their last breath. Bundy further elaborated that he choked his first victim to death with his bare hands at some point in May of 1973, but found this method to be too difficult and began using a ligature.
Because of Joyce’s advanced level of decomposition it was impossible to determine if she had been sexually assaulted or not, and it’s important to remember that the sexual component was a big part of Bundy’s drive to kill. Regarding the level of breakdown present, Sheriff Myers commented that: ‘her body was badly decomposed. We don’t know exactly how she was killed.’ Additionally, little forest creatures and other scavengers had disturbed her remains and spread parts of her all over Wawawai Canyon.
1971 was a busy year for Ted: in January he enrolled as a psychology student at the University of Washington. Pullman is only about a five hour drive from Ernst and Freda Roger’s boarding house on 12th Ave, and we know he drove a little less than four and a half hours to the University of Oregon when he killed Kathy Parks. At the time of LePage’s murder Bundy was working at Pedline Medical Supply Company and was taking summer classes; he was also in a (mostly) committed relationship with Liz Kloepfer at this time as well. According to her book ‘The Phantom Prince: My Life With Ted Bundy,’ things between the two were still pretty steamy in 1971, and in March she began pushing for marriage (again, according to her). When he resisted she told him that there was another guy that was interested in her and that she was going to go out on a double date with him and her friend Angie (most likely Mary Lynn Chino) and her bf . In response to this threat Ted seemed to be mostly apatheticc but would later follow Kloepfer and the date to The Walrus Tavern; lots of drama ensued and Bundy wound up leaving alone. In July, Liz and Molly moved into a two story apartment in the University District (located at 5208 18th Ave NE) that was closer to the Rogers rooming house, which would make you think they would have started spending a good chunk of their time together but according to Liz he became distant and ‘out of sync, and started spending most of his nights away from her.
Ted enjoyed toying with his audience, and frequently told different stories to different people, and usually refused to discuss his earlier crimes. He told one of his attorneys (during his latter years) Polly Nelson that he attempted his first kidnapping in Ocean City, NJ in 1969 but didn’t commit murder until sometime in 1971 in Seattle. However at a different time he told psychologist Dr. Arthur Norman that he killed two women in 1969 near the Jersey Shore while living with his aunt in Philadelphia. According to Robert A. Dielenberg’s ‘TB: A Visual Timeline,’ Bundy told both Dr. Nelson and Dr. Dorothy Lewis that sometime in June/July 1971 he ‘follows a woman, picks up two-by-four in a lot, lays in wait, but the woman enters her house before she reaches his hiding spot. A few nights later he saw a woman park her car, walk up to her door, and fumble for her keys. He walked up behind her and struck her with a piece of wood he was carrying. She fell down screaming. He panicked and ran.’ In September of 1971, Bundy began working at the Seattle Crisis Clinic on Capitol Hill.
Ted also hinted to former King County Detective Dr. Robert Keppel that he committed a murder in Seattle in 1972 and another the following year that involved a hitchhiker near Tumwater, but he refused to elaborate on either. By his own admission, he had by then mastered the necessary skills (keep in mind, this was in the days before DNA became a thing) to leave minimal incriminating forensic evidence behind at crime scenes. Before Bundy was executed in Florida, the Whitman County Sheriff’s Department gave Dr. Keppel information related to the LePage case, and the following is an exchange between the two men in January 1989:
Robert Keppel: ‘I guess what I need then, I want to eliminate any suggestions of rather than me throwing out stuff for you to say, you know, this is what we need to talk about or not, like the August 2nd, if there’s only eleven, then that’s fine. I don’t want to do any guess work. I mean, I’ve got girls like in 1971 at WSU that’s been murdered that I’m curious about.
Ted Bundy: ‘Yeah, I can tell you– I can tell you — yeah, we can do it that way if you’d like, too. And maybe in some ways that’s easier. I can tell you what, that’s, you know, what I’m not involved in. You know; if you have a list of that type in your head.’
RK: ‘There’s a gal in 1971, Thurston County.’
TB: ‘No.;
RK: ‘Not that far back. Nothing that far back?’
TB: ‘1972.’
(…)
TB: ‘I have no hesitation about talking about things that I have done… No hesitation about telling you about what I haven’t done. Ok. So if I tell you something, I may not tell you something. I might not tell you something right now or every single detail right now, but if I tell you something, you can rely on it. And when I say, yes, I did it or no, I didn’t do something, that’s the way it is.’
About LePage’s murder, ‘hi: I’m Ted’ researcher Tiffany Jean points out that ‘the location is also unusual for an early Bundy murder. Bundy’s earliest known attacks occurred quite close to his residence in Seattle’s University District, usually just blocks away. This way he was able to stalk his victims, probably peeping into their windows and learning their routines. This was easy for him to do, as he was essentially their neighbor, and felt comfortable roaming about the neighborhood.’ Redditor ‘janiceian1983’ also made a great point that: ‘this is a problem because the thing with Bundy is that he had a ‘generally unremarkable face’ which he CONSTANTLY changed the appearance of through different facial hair styles, that’s why it had been so hard to identify him for a while. People generally didn’t remember him because he was generic-looking.’
In 1989, former Whitman County Sheriff Steve Thomson said ‘there were certain similarities between this case and others that brought us to Bundy, and we later placed him in this area at about that time.’ Sergeant Maupin points out that: ‘profile-wise, she did fit the description (of Bundy’s victims). She had auburn hair. She was beautiful. She was tall, athletic and college-age.’ … ‘I don’t want to rule anybody completely out, but, my personal opinion is no. It wasn’t Ted Bundy. My gut feeling is this was someone she knew.’ Current Whitman County Sheriff Brett Myers said that ‘there were certain things that kind of leaned toward Ted Bundy, and there were things that leaned away. There were reports of a person matching Bundy’s description being in the area.’ Myers followed every reported lead and spent nearly his entire 26-year career trying to solve LePage’s murder, even going so far as to try to interview Ted while on death row. Regarding Bundy as a suspect in his sister’s murder, Bruce said: ‘we have to broaden it (the case) out and take all the possibilities. Ted Bundy is one of them. But sometimes you get too broad and get distracted and the probability goes out.’
Law enforcement administered polygraph tests to not only suspects but also friends and acquaintances of Joyce to no avail: Lieutenant Del Brannan of WSU campus police said that: ‘we have given tests to not only suspects but also associates of LePage’s who wanted to verify that they had nothing to do with it.’ … ‘we can have all the theories we want but we have to have proof.’ A (one time) major suspect was interviewed again in 2012 and passed a polygraph test, officially eliminating him from the suspect pool. About him, Sheriff Myers said: ‘he was interviewed immediately after Joyce disappeared and again after the body was found, but he’d never taken a polygraph. He hadn’t been contacted again since about 1972. We met with him and said here’s how he could help. He was very cooperative and passed a polygraph. I’m confident at this point that we can focus on other avenues. That’s a big change in the investigation in terms of our focus.’
Law enforcement administered polygraph tests to not only suspects but also friends and acquaintances of Joyce to no avail: Lieutenant Del Brannan of WSU campus police commented: ‘we have given tests to not only suspects but also associates of LePage’s who wanted to verify that they had nothing to do with it.’ … ‘we can have all the theories we want but we have to have proof.’ A (one time) major suspect was interviewed again in 2012 and passed a polygraph test, officially eliminating him from the suspect pool. Sheriff Myers commented that: ‘he was interviewed immediately after Joyce disappeared and again after the body was found, but he’d never taken a polygraph. He hadn’t been contacted again since about 1972. We met with him and said here’s how he could help. He was very cooperative and passed a polygraph. I’m confident at this point that we can focus on other avenues. That’s a big change in the investigation in terms of our focus.’
In 2014 evidence related to LePage’s case was re-submitted to the Washington State Crime Lab for forensic analysis but with no luck; additionally, LE also attempted to track down people from her circle of friends in recent years but didn’t come up with anything helpful. WSU Police Officer Jeff Olmstead (who took over the case after Sargent Maupin retired) said: ‘It would be nice to bring this to a logical conclusion and hold someone responsible. I think that’s the ultimate goal for the LePage family and for all the officers who investigated this over the years. My worst fear is what if we were never even close? What if it was someone who slipped through the cracks, who was never identified or interviewed by the early investigators?’
When researching this case I found a comment from Bruce LePage on Tiffany Jean’s article on Joyce: ‘DNA testing and fingerprint testing have been unsuccessful. Please remember that Joyce’s body was found nine months after her murder. Until then, her’s was just a missing person case. Once her body was found my father had her remains cremated. The Washington State crime lab was not able to identify definitive DNA samples. The prime person of interest in this case knows he is being watched.’
I did look into a few additional serial killers when researching this case, the first being Gary Gene Grant, who was only eighteen when he raped and murdered four young women (three of which were minors) in Renton, WA between 1969 and 1971 (which is less than a five hour drive to WSU in Pullman). But he was quickly ruled out, as he was apprehended on April 30, 1971 and Joyce wasn’t murdered until late July. On August 25, 1971, Grant was convicted of murder and was sentenced to life in prison, and as of July 2024 he is serving his sentence at the Monroe Correctional Complex.
Ottis Toole immediately came to mind as well, as his activity (sort of) fits into the right time frame of LePage’s murder. But after looking into him he didn’t really begin his criminal career until 1976 when he met his lover and co-killer Henry Lee Lucas at a Jacksonville soup kitchen. Warren Leslie Forrest was another active serial killer in the state at roughly the same time LePage was killed, and although he was only charged with two murders it is strongly suspected that he killed at least six women in Clark County between 1971 and 1974. In 1974, he was arrested for the kidnapping and attempted murder of a 15-year-old girl, who went to police after she escaped on July 17, 1974. She told them that she had been abducted by Forrest after he picked her up while she was attempting to hitchhike out of Ridgefield, and after they reached the slopes of Tukes Mountain he bound and gagged her then tied her to a tree; he then proceeded to rape and beat her. Thankfully she managed to escape by chewing through her gag and hiding in a nearby bush until the morning, when she emerged and looked for help.
On October 1, 1974 Forrest met a young woman in Portland and lured her into his van under the guise of a photo shoot for a modeling gig. But instead of take her picture, he drove the 20-year-old to a city park and repeatedly shot her with an air-powered dart gun and raped her. He then took her to Camas, where he stabbed her six times near Lacamas Lake then attempted to strangle her; she fell unconscious, and as her assailant most likely believed she was dead, he undressed her and left her remains in some nearby bushes. Thankfully, she woke up two hours later and was able to flag down some passers-by, who drove her to the hospital. She survived, and once she was in a stable condition, the young woman gave detectives a description of her attacker as well as the very particular features of his vehicle, which was a blue 1973 Ford van.
Forrest was identified the following day and was taken into custody; he was charged with the kidnapping and attempted murder of the 20-year-old woman. His legal team quickly filed a motion for a psychiatric evaluation, which determined he was legally insane, and because of this he was acquitted by reason of insanity and was ordered to undergo treatment at the Western State Hospital in Lakewood. He went on trial for the murder of another victim in 1979, then another in 2023 and was found guilty in both cases. I have found no evidence tying him to the murder of LePage, and it doesn’t sound like he would exactly fit in on a college campus. Just as a side note, police strongly feel that Forrest is responsible for several more unsolved homicides in Washington, including two that were initially thought to be Bundy. He is currently being held at Airway Heights Corrections Center in Washington.
Robert Lee Yates is another active serial killer that operated in Washington state at roughly the same time LePage was killed, however after a bit of investigating the date of her murder actually falls a bit outside of when he was active. Also referred to as ‘The Grocery Bag Killer,’ in 1975 Yates got a job as a corrections officer at the Washington State Penitentiary, and in October 1977 he enlisted in the US Army. Between 1975 and 1998 Yates killed at least eleven women in Spokane, two in Walla Walla in 1975, and one in Skagit County in 1988; his total victim count is unknown but he confessed to murdering at least eighteen women. He mostly went after sex workers, and after having intercourse with them he would then shoot them in the head. He managed to evade capture until 2000 but was arrested after evidence found in his car tied him to one of the murders. Although he took a plea to avoid the death penalty, after evidence of two additional murders came to light he was given the charge anyway. In 2018 his guilty verdict was changed to life in prison after the capital punishment was abolished in Washington; he is currently being held at the same prison where he was once employed in Walla Walla.
It does go without saying that any average Joe could have killed Joyce, and she wasn’t killed by a serial killer. Was it a fellow student at WSU? An employee, possibly? Someone just passing through that happened to be there because of the party that may have taken place the night of the murder? With so much advancement in genomics over the past few years hopefully the police are able to do a bit more work on her case soon.
Stevens Hall is the second oldest building at WSU, and as of July 2024 LePage’s murder is the only homicide that took place on school grounds. Over the years many spooky stories have come out of the residence hall: girls that lived there have reported disembodied screams, strange noises, and doors opening and closing on their own. In the early 90’s some of its residents were telling ghost stories late one night, and the next morning woke up to a scribbled note on a message board that said, ‘I’ll be back. – Ted.’ More messages appeared, along with other strange notes and mysterious phone calls, however it was eventually determined to be a prank after a student came forward and confessed it was them the whole time.
As of January 2023, Joyce LePage’s murder is the oldest unsolved case in Whitman County, and because it is still considered an ‘ongoing, open investigation’ the sheriff’s office will not release her case file to the public. To this day, Bruce LePage still holds onto hope that his sisters murder will be solved, and is offering a $100,000 reward to anyone with information that helps lead to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible ($60,000 for an arrest and an additional $40,000 for a conviction): ‘in a way it sounds foolish to do a reward at this time. If there was going to be one it might have helped if it was done earlier on. But I guess I don’t care.’ … ‘I will remain involved and keep the reward up for $100,000 for as long as I am alive.’
Sheriff Myers said that: A unique set of hurdles have been placed for this case: She wasn’t reported missing for 10 days and DNA testing didn’t really hit the scene for another 20 years.’ … ‘it’s sad that it’s been 50 years since Joyce’s murder and we still don’t have resolution or a positively identified suspect. Maybe once or twice a year, we get new leads.’ Sadly Joyce’s parents both passed away before their daughters killer was caught: Mr. LePage passed away on January 13, 2011 at the age of 97 and Mrs. LePage on October 7, 2017 at 93.
Bundy was only recently ruled out of another unconfirmed victim from 1971 that I wrote about: Rita Patricia Curran. It was speculated that Ted was in Vermont looking into his roots when Curran was murdered on July 19, 1971, and it was determined in February 2023 that she was actually killed by her upstairs neighbor, William DeRoos. Curran was a second grade school teacher at Milton Elementary School when she was found lying naked on her bedroom floor on Brooks Avenue in Burlington. It’s a popular Bundy rumor that Rita lived next door to the Elizabeth Lund Home for Unwed Mothers, but it was actually a few streets over. Thanks to advanced DNA technology and a discarded cigarette butt found at the scene of the crime, genetic genealogist CeCe Moore was able to tie DeRoos to Curran’s murder and it was eventually determined that his wife that alibied him was lying. DeRoos died of a drug overdose in San Francisco in 1986.
Sadly both of Joyce’s parents passed away before their daughters killer was caught: Mrs. LePage died at the age of 93 on October 7, 2017; she was an active member of the Pasco Heights Community Club and taught Sunday school. Walter LePage died at the age of 97 on January 12, 2011. In the 1950’s, he helped establish the Franklin Fire District #3, and between 1957-67 he was a member of the county Parks and Recreation board, and helped develop Chiawana Park and the Sun Willows Golf Course. Joyce’s little brother David passed away at the age of 59 on Valentines Day in 2021. He enjoyed fireworks, garage sales, shopping at Costco, music, science, and conspiracy theories. He even created and published his own newspaper on conspiracy theories, and delivered it throughout the Northwest.
Sheriff Maupin commented that: ‘it’s sad that it’s been 50 years since Joyce’s murder and we still don’t have resolution or a positively identified suspect. Maybe once or twice a year, we get new leads. But we don’t get as much solid and credible information about the case. We will keep hoping for new information.’ Anyone with information on Joyce LePage’s disappearance and homicide should contact the Whitman County Sheriff’s Office at 509-397-6266.




























































































Rita Lorraine Jolly was born on December 6, 1955 to Donald Clover and Mary Elizabeth (nee Horner) Jolly of West Linn, Oregon. Mr. Jolly was an attorney and Rita was the youngest of four children: she had two brothers (Jeffrey and Bryan) and a sister (Jill). The couple met at the University of Minnesota Law School and were married on April 24, 1947 in Hennepin, Minnesota; they relocated to West Linn in 1949. After graduating, the couple opened a law office: Mr. Jolly worked as an attorney and Mary was his legal secretary. Because Don and Mary were both survivors of the Great Depression, they were often considered to be ‘frugal and liberal for their time.’ Above all else, the Jolly family valued education and pushed for their children to have strong critical thinking skills.
A tall girl, at the time of her disappearance, Rita stood between 5’5 and 5’6” tall, weighed around 130 pounds, had hazel eyes and medium length brown hair she wore parted down the middle. She had a small scar on her face just below her right eyebrow and her front teeth were slightly crooked and overlapped a little bit. She also had her wisdom teeth pulled and had small pit fillings in the buccal (cheek) side of her lower molars. In an interview with the website ‘Uncovered,’ Jill Jolly said that her sister enjoyed ‘nature, animals, and creativity’ and spent her time after school ‘immersed in books, writing poetry, and creating art.’ … ‘she had a real talent. I have folders filled with her writings. I am ashamed to admit that it’s very difficult for me to go through these writings. They are such intimate windows into her life, and often the anguish in them bleeds through. I feel a responsibility to preserve these writings. I have a good flatbed scanner now, and hope to be able to focus on making digital copies so that I may more easily share them.’
Per Uncovered: ‘growing up, Rita struggled with emotional regulation and sensitivity, which led her parents to seek help from a child psychologist.’ Jill said that she now believes her sister may have been on the autism spectrum, a concept not widely understood in the 1960’s and 70’s. Disillusioned by cliques and peer pressure, Rita faced bullying for being different, and in her junior year of high school was reprimanded for writing a derogatory statement on the school wall. Her parents defended her, challenging the school to ‘improve its culture.’
At around thirteen, the Jolly’s bought Rita a gelding quarter horse named Sugar that became her best friend. I read from multiple sources that she walked with an uneven stride due to an improperly knitted fracture of her lower left leg, however according to a comment Jill (username ‘JillElaine‘) left on the YouTube video ‘Mystery Murders: The 1973 Disappearance of Rita Jolly,’ (done by ‘Steve the Amateur Historian‘): ‘as for Rita’s ‘limp’, she was still in the process of healing from her broken leg (a horse she was riding fell over on a muddy trail and crushed it). But whatever limp she might have had was almost unnoticeable.’ … ‘she was healthy & strong, and a horse owner. She went for walks in the evening almost daily, often several miles in length.’ Rita’s front teeth were slightly crooked, and overlapped a little bit; she also had her wisdom teeth pulled and had small pit fillings in the buccal (cheek) side of her lower molars.
Mr. and Mrs. Jolly said their daughter was incredibly bright and mature for her age and took academics very seriously. A user going by the name of ‘Cheryl Klawitter’ commented on the ‘The Morbid Library’ article about Rita that she ‘was in a couple of classes with Rita at Clackamas Community College in Oregon City in 1973. I won’t claim we were friends, just casual acquaintances. But we talked some. She had told me she’d hitchhiked to a concert in Eugene, (sometime in the month prior to her disappearance). So the image of her being a naive high school girl, out for an evening walk is misleading. Of note: there was a full lunar eclipse Saturday the 30th, the night after she disappeared. From what I knew if her personality, that would have excited her. She could have been hitchhiking just about anywhere that Friday night (the 29th), looking to party. If she was on I-5 it is just not that unlikely she may have crossed paths with Bundy. Or for that matter some other predator. I knew the Chief of Police in West Linn at that time and he confided (later) they suspected Bundy. I assume that was after excluding people she knew.’* Per Jill Jolly, ‘As a senior, Rita attended full-time classes at Clackamas Community College through a special program for scholastically-advanced high school seniors. Excelling in Creative Writing and art programs, Rita thrived in this environment. Though she did not attend classes at West Linn High School during her senior year, she insisted on participating in the graduation ceremony in June 1973.’
At about 7:15-7:30 PM on June 29, 1973, Jolly left her family home to take a walk, something she did almost daily according to her sister. Jill said that she ‘left with a smile on her face’ and Mr. Jolly said ‘she smiled at us and went out the door. I went out to cut the grass. She never came back.’ Rita was last seen wearing a brown wool Pendleton shirt jacket, a red and blue cotton shirt, olive colored army fatigue pants (or blue jeans depending on the source), and low-cut blue tennis shoes with buckskin heels. She seemed okay and in decent spirits; her family said she didn’t have any known problems with anyone in her life and Jill commented that she ‘struggled with angst that affects so many young people, and it’s possible she initially ran away. But her social security number has never had any activity, as far as I know.’ Ms. Jolly was ‘in the Robinwood area and/or on Sunset Ave around 8:30 to 9:00 PM’ and was seen for the last time around 9:30 PM walking uphill on Sunset Avenue near the Oregon City Arch Bridge that crosses the Willamette River into West Linn. Shortly after she vanished two young men in Portland went to law enforcement claiming they saw her the night after she disappeared, but when approached she said her name was Mary. The men that reported the alleged sighting did not leave their contact information with police so no follow-up was made and their story was never confirmed. Regarding the incident, Jill said that: ‘the following night, two young men reported to the police that they tried to pick up a girl who looked like Rita, but this young lady was not her.’ Mr. Jolly told law enforcement that all of his daughters personal belongings were left behind and there was nothing missing from her bedroom. He said she that was an ‘independent thinker with few dates or close friends.’ Detective D. Calhoun (who worked the case and immediately had a gut feeling that Rita was murdered) commented that: ‘people don’t usually just disappear and have no contact.’
Almost from the beginning, information related to Jolly’s mysterious disappearance stopped trickling in and leads dried up almost immediately. By July 15, the idea of Rita having left home willingly had morphed into the possibility that she was most likely abducted under sinister circumstances. Mr. Jolly was crucial in keeping his daughters case in the news and relevant: not only did he hand deliver letters to local police precincts and news stations begging them to help find her, he also offered a $2,500 reward for any information leading to her whereabouts. Rita’s case was being investigated at the city, county, and state level, but despite all the help the investigation went nowhere. Apparently (per ‘The Morbid Library‘), her brother believed that the perpetrator was someone local who possibly knew her, and in an edit on their article about Ms. Jolly, author CJ Lynch said: ‘thanks to a comment on this post, we now know a bit more about Rita as a person. She is an adventurous person: at the time of her disappearance, she often hitchhiked to get where she was going, and she enjoyed concerts and parties. She is a free spirit, enjoying the freedom and independence that comes with being in college.’ (this edit was because of comments left by readers).
YouTuber ‘Whitney Dahlin‘ pointed out that a ‘hit and run is also possible. she was walking alone in the evening I feel like it’s entirely possible someone hit her and then hit her body or buried her body so they wouldn’t go to prison for it. I feel like a a lot of missing person cases where the missing person was last seen taking a walk in the evening are really hit by a car cases. Abductions are very rare compared with pedestrian car accidents.’
Within a six-month period in 1973 four young women went missing from the same general area in Oregon: first Rita in late June, then seventeen-year-old Susan Wickersham from Bend just two weeks later on July 11 (her body was discovered in January 1976 just five miles south of her hometown). Ms. Wickersham is sadly yet another unconfirmed Bundy victim I never heard of, although realistically he most likely didn’t kill her, as she was found with a gunshot wound in her head which wasn’t his MO… Next to disappear was twenty-four-year-old Vicki Lynn Hollar, a petite girl (only 5’1” and 115 pounds) with dark eyes and brown hair. Ms. Hollar was last seen getting in her black 1965 Volkswagen Beetle with the running boards removed (Illinois plates GR 7738) on August 20, 1973. She was leaving her place of employment at the Bon Marché (now Macy’s), where she had been employed as a seamstress for about two weeks. It’s been theorized that Vicki was headed home to her apartment at 600 West 27th Avenue in Eugene with the intention of meeting up with a friend to attend a party in her neighborhood later that evening (but she never showed up). Friends shared with police that Hollar had a habit of picking up hitchhikers; her VW and personal belongings have also never been recovered. Lastly is Suzanne Rae Justis, who disappeared on November 5, 1973. Recently divorced, Justis was from Eugene and hitchhiked to Portland, and in a phone call to her mother from outside the Memorial Coliseum that day said she would return home the next day to pick up her son from school. Sue’s mom booked a room for her for the night at a nearby hotel, but it was never used. She never came home and has never been heard from again. For unclear reasons, a missing persons report wasn’t filed until 1989.
I’ve been finding most of the ‘unconfirmed victims‘ have very weak commonalities without a lot of substance… Rita did look like one of Ted’s victims: she was attractive and slim, with long brown hair and dark features. Her abduction was most likely a crime of opportunity (like so many of the others), meaning the perpetrator took advantage of a particular situation most likely with no prior plans to go out and commit the atrocious act. Additionally, Jolly fit neatly into his preferred age range: she was seventeen, and he typically targeted younger females anywhere from twelve years old (possibly even as young as eight if you throw Ann Marie Burr into the mix) all the way up to twenty-six (Colorado ski instructor Julie Cunningham). But that’s about it. And it’s important to keep in mind how common the ‘long hair parted down the middle’ look was during that time period: even my own mother looked like she could have been one of Bundy’s victims.
During his death row confessions Ted admitted to abducting Roberta Kathleen Parks from Oregon State University on May 6, 1974; he claimed to have raped and killed her at Taylor Mountain, over 250 miles away from her school and about 25 miles southeast of Seattle. Because Parks was found in Washington state she is typically not included in his Oregon victim count. In interviews, Bundy confessed to killing two additional women in Oregon but refused to elaborate on the details; according to most detectives, Rita Jolly and Vicki Hollar are the best candidates. Law enforcement tried but were unable to question Ted about Rita’s disappearance before his execution in 1989, eliminating the chance of possibly closing her case. Jill Jolly said of Bundy’s execution: ‘as I recall, my mother told me that the local detectives managed to get a direct question about Rita through to him before his execution, and his reply was ‘No. No more in Oregon.’’ Dubbed Ted’s ‘bones-for-time scheme,’ he withheld many secrets right up until the very end of his life in hopes to parlay the untold stories into yet another stay of execution. ‘There are other buried remains in Colorado…’ Bundy said, refusing to elaborate any further. He then took his secrets with him to the grave. Colorado Detective Matt Lindvall felt this was a direct conflict between his desire to postpone his execution by giving up information and his need to remain in ‘total possession: the only person who knew his victims’ true resting places.’
Regarding suspects, Ted is one of only two seriously considered individuals I could find that was investigated for the abduction of Rita Jolly; the other one is Warren Leslie Forest. Two additional names that are almost casually thrown around when ANY unclaimed victim is brought up from that time are Henry Lee Lucas and Ottis Toole. The pair were lovers, united in their shared childhood traumas and together they terrorized the United States throughout the 1970’s and 80’s. Lucas falsely claimed he killed upwards of 600 people (Toole said he participated in 108 of them), however it was eventually determined he was responsible for two of them and was strongly suspected of only eight more. But, investigating both men a little further, at the time Rita disappeared in mid-1973 Lucas was serving a 5-year prison stint for attempting to kidnap three schoolgirls in 1971, and Toole’s history is a little fuzzy between 1966 and 1973, but his first strongly suspected kill was the 1974 murder of Patricia Webb. Oddly enough, Toole died at the same Florida State facility that executed Ted in 1989: he entered the Raiford prison in 1983 and died in 1996 from cirrhosis of the liver. Additionally, Ed Kemper and Gary Ridgway both popped in my head as possible suspects, but Kemper was apprehended on April 24, 1973 and operated more in the California area (Rita disappeared June 29 which is obviously after he was arrested) and Ridgway didn’t start his atrocities until 1982. In her interview with Uncovered, Jill said that: ‘there are five possible suspects that have been identified.’ I’m unsure who else it could have been (I’m sure police are playing close to the vest with what information they have). If I think of any additional potential suspects I will update my article.
Warren Leslie Forrest was convicted of abducting and stabbing to death nineteen-year-old Krista Kay Blake in 1974 then burying her remains near Battle Ground on Tukes Mountain. He’s been in prison since October 2, 1974 and for decades Clark County law enforcement tried (with no success) to link him to other murders in the area. On October 12, 1974, the human remains of two women were found in Dole Valley near Vancouver, Washington. One was immediately identified as Carol Platt-Valenzuela but the other individual remained unidentified for over 40 years. But, thanks to DNA profiling and some blood left behind on the dart gun Forrest used to subdue his victims, in 2015 those remains were finally determined to be those of Martha Morrison, who disappeared from the Portland area under mysterious circumstances in September 1974. Two of his suspected victims have never been found: Diane Gilcrest (14) and Jamie Grissim (16). Before Warren was identified as the killer, Bundy was considered a person of interest in Morrison’s death (he’s still a suspect in Valenzuela’s murder). In 2020, Forrest was charged with the murder of Martha Morrison.
‘Historywmystery.blogspot.com‘ said about the Jolly disappearance: ‘It’s also important to remember that this was the 1970’s and there were numerous women, especially young ones, hitchhiking along I-5 back in the 1970’s and some of them met with death at the hands of someone who couldn’t have been Ted Bundy. There was an extensive article I found in a 1975 paper discussing the perils of young women who were hitchhiking in Oregon, many of whom knew the danger and yet continued to hitchhike. There was Martha Morrison, who was a frequent runaway who vanished from Portland on September 1, 1974. Her remains were discovered a little over a month later and were not identified until 2017 using DNA testing. She, for a long time, was considered a possible Ted Bundy victim until her remains were identified and it was found she had been killed by William* Forrest, a serial killer working out of the Vancouver, Washington area. Interestingly enough, Forrest was someone that I considered as a possible culprit in the Rita Jolly case, something that’s still possible but definitely something I am calling more into question now.’
*they meant Warren Forrest.

Jill Jolly gave the following quote in her interview with ‘Uncovered:’ ‘…the truth is that we really don’t know what happened to her. We all have theories. Our dad thought she had called several times, mostly just silence on the phone but once he said that he heard her voice, ‘Mom? Mom?’, then ”Dad?’, then a click on the phone hanging up. Could she have gotten involved in a cult or some other situation where it was hard to leave? I find myself wondering how folks can help with solving the mystery of what happened to Rita. After 50 years, I don’t think it’s likely that we will have answers before all of us who knew her are gone from this earth. The advent of DNA gave us so much hope! But the number of unidentified bodies and the expense & difficulty of the tests has been discouraging. It’s not a quick fix. Nonetheless, perhaps someday she will be one of the humans who are ‘given their name back’.’
2022 marks the 49th anniversary of Rita Lorraine Jolly’s mysterious disappearance. Sadly, Mr. and Mrs. Jolly both passed away before learning what happened to their daughter: Mary died in 2005 and Donald on July 2, 2010. Mr. Jolly always held onto hope that Rita was still alive. As of December 2022, all three of her siblings are alive and are still desperate for answers. Rita’s dental records are available and her DNA was entered into CODIS in 2000.
Jill Jolly also pointed out that: ‘there are literally thousands of unidentified bodies in NamUs database at https://www.namus.gov/ Thanks to DNA, some of them are finally being given their names back. Unfortunately, running DNA is expensive and can be difficult to extract from older remains. Please support efforts to fund attempts to give these poor souls back to their families.’
* Jill Jolly researched the lunar calendar extensively and couldn’t find any record of there ever being an eclipse on the evening her sister disappeared.
I’mWorks Cited:
doenetwork.org/cases/2503dfor.html
namus.gov/MissingPersons/Case#/7780
newspapers.com/clip/38129030/rita-jolly-missing-oregon/
clackamas.us/sheriff/case/73-9833
missingin.org/reg4206/rita_lorraine_jolly.htm
salem-news.com/articles/march022008/cold_cases_3-1-08.php
newspapers.com/newspage/565976821/
historylink.org/File/2637
obits.oregonlive.com/obituaries/oregon/obituary.aspx?n=donald-clover-jolly
uncovered.com/cases/rita-jolly





















































Katherine ‘Kathy’ Merry Devine was born on Christmas day in 1959 to William and Sallyann (nee Dayton) Devine of Seattle, Washington. Bill was born on September 14, 1935 in Yakima, WA and Mrs. Devine was born on May 15, 1935. They were wed on September 20, 1954 in Seattle and had three daughters together: Sherrie, Katherine, and Charlene. Kathy was the middle child and there is a twelve year age gap between her and Char; Sherrie is just a year older than Katherine. The couple at some point divorced, and Bill remarried a woman named Beverly (nee Clark) on Valentine’s Day in 1989. He was employed in the fire equipment sales and service business for over 35 years before retiring.
Just as a side note, this was one of the very first articles I wrote, and recently when I went back to edit it I was shocked at how incomplete it was. I’ve been writing for about two years now and I’ve gained a lot of skills and resources since then, so I’ve really been able to dig into Kathy’s case and find out more about not only her but also the man that killed her. In April 2024 I began the (long and tedious) process of editing her piece after not only finding more articles (and pictures) about her but also meeting her younger sister and mother. Earlier in the month I went to Portland and Seattle, and had the privilege of meeting both ladies, and Char was kind enough to show me her childhood home as well as the corner at the end of their street where investigators strongly suspect her sister initially hitchhiked from. From there we went to the mausoleum where the remains of her sister were kept in the north part of Seattle, and as beautiful as it looks in the pictures it’s even more stunning in person. When we were done she took me to the retirement community where Mrs. Devine lived, and we spent about an hour together, sitting and reminiscing about not only Kathy but also the hitchhiking ban the family attempted to get off the ground. Sitting there on that beautiful spring day, it was as if I’ve known both women my entire life. In fact, I found myself telling Char things that my husband doesn’t even know (sorry Charlie). I’m really finding it incredibly hard as an adult to meet new people, especially ones that I have such a strong connection with (working two jobs makes things especially difficult). Back when I was in Florida I was able to track down Sue Justis’ sister on FB and I sent her my newly finished article, and she was NOT HAPPY. I feel very fortunate that both Charlene and Mrs. Devine were both so kind and welcoming to me. Both women are very easy to love.
In the fall of 1973 fourteen year old Kathy Devine was struggling: she had recently ended things with her boyfriend and was beginning to dabble in substance abuse. Talking to Char about it, her drug use wasn’t anything extreme, and sounded like normal teenage fun (especially in the early 1970’s). Described by those that loved her as sweet and kind, Katherine loved poetry and lined the walls of her bedroom with poems. She doted on her little sister, and I saw this with my own eyes when watching home videos of the Devine’s: Kathy was always playing with Charlene, and showing her all the love and affection a big sister should give to their little sister. The Sunday after Thanksgiving on November 25, 1973 Kathy disappeared while hitchhiking near her Seattle residence after getting into an argument with her mom about dating. Before leaving the Devine family home, she wrote her mom a note explaining that she needed to escape and was going to Rockaway Beach, Oregon to visit with her cousins. She ended it with: ‘PS. Don’t worry mom I’ll be back.’
Kathy was last seen by two girlfriends getting into a beat up old pickup truck driven by an unknown male near North 91st Street and Aurora Avenue North; investigators strongly theorized that she walked roughly a quarter mile down the corner of her street and took off from there. Devine told them she was ‘thumbing a ride’ to her cousin’s house about 200 miles away and intended to hitchhike the entire way there. After meeting Charlene she shared with me that investigators suspect she was picked up at the end of their street and was dropped off at the Restover Truck Stop near Tumwater, and it was there that she met the man that killed her. Kathy’s parents said that she had some depression and mental health issues and reported her as missing to police after they found her note and she failed to return home. Mrs. Devine said of her daughter: ‘she was beautiful inside and out, but she was a normal troubled teenager.’… ‘I don’t think she had more troubles than anyone else her age during that time.’ At the time of her murder Devine was a sophomore at Ingraham High School, and like so many Bundy victims she was beautiful, tall, and willowy, weighing 120 pounds and standing 5’8″ tall; she had startling blue-gray eyes and light brown hair that fell mid-way down her back. I’m pulling this quote from her ‘FindAGrave’ site from an interview someone did with one of her sisters: ‘there’s a million things I could tell you about Kathy but I wouldn’t even know where to start. Since she was born on Christmas Day, she felt it was her calling to become a minister. I don’t know if she would’ve ever done it but she always talked about it. She constantly brought home both stray animals and unfortunate children. She had such a big heart and was always looking to help someone.’
Sadly, two of Devine’s girlfriends were with her when she got in the strangers truck, and were forced to watch their friend drive away with a man she didn’t know, completely unaware that they’d never see her again. Kathy was last seen wearing a white peasant blouse, navy-colored bell bottom jeans with a dragon patch on the back pocket, a mock-suede brown coat with fur trim and her black ‘waffle-stomper’ boots. She was also wearing some inexpensive ‘costume jewelry,’ including a florentine-style friendship ring, an imitation blue-green zirconia ring, and a pair of cross earrings.
Eleven days after she was last seen on December 6, 1973 the remains of Katherine Merry Devine were discovered roughly 80 miles away in Margaret McKenny Campground in the Capitol State Forest. Park Caretaker Barbara Saling was out with her husband picking up trash when she stumbled upon the remains at the edge of a clearing. About the incident, Saling said ‘we knew it was a murder. We knew it was not an accident.’ The couple found Devine laying face down in an overgrowth of ferns, salal, moss, and kinnickinnic in a depression in the forest floor next to Campground Space #1. Retired Thurston County Undersheriff Neil McClanhan commented that ‘it was a horrific crime, she was just dumped, left for the animals and the environment. What a shock it was to the community.’
Thurston County forensic experts were able to tell that Kathy was killed shortly after she disappeared (most likely on December 1), but unfortunately the winter of 1973 was unseasonably warm so decomposition had set in quickly making it hard for forensic experts to determine her exact cause of death. Additionally, small animals had ravaged her body, coming in at the neck; her heart, lungs, and liver were missing. Despite being found fully clothed, the young woman’s bell bottoms were cut in the back, exposing her backside from the waist to the underwear area; evidence suggested she had been sexually assaulted and sodomized. Devine had a deep wound on her neck and it was the ME’s determination that she had been strangled to death. She had deep knife wounds on both of her breasts and investigators found a piece of rope underneath her body. Kathy also had noticeable cuts on her coat, jeans, and underwear, and neither her wallet, purse, or left boot were found with her.
When Kathy’s remains were discovered they weren’t immediately identified: Sherrie Devine was watching television several weeks after her sister disappeared and saw a news report that mentioned the discovery of a body at a local park and recognized the embroidered dragon patch on the victims bell bottoms as belonging to Kathy. She never arrived in Oregon.
After Kathy’s remains were discovered her uncle Delmar Bennett positively identified her body (it was actually his house in Oregon that she was hitchhiking to). Devine was a frequent hitchhiker, and according to reports it was not the first time she traveled that way to Rockaway Beach. She reportedly stayed at a friend’s house the night before she disappeared along with a third girl, and on the day of the three agreed to travel to Oregon together. When someone pulled over and Kathy got in, the other two girls thought she was joking and stayed behind, fully expecting the vehicle to pull over after a few blocks and for their friend to jump out. Before she was killed Sherrie tried to educate her younger sister on multiple occasions about the dangers of hitchhiking, and Mrs. Devine had no idea she was participating in the activity until she got a ticket in the summer of 1972 for doing it ‘too close to a freeway.’ It’s worth mentioning that in 1973 you needed to be 18 to do it.
The eleven days between her disappearance and the discovery of Kathy’s body made it almost impossible to pinpoint exactly who abducted her. Former Thurston County Sheriff Don Redmond commented that: ‘it’s that damned new hitchhiking law. Kids can stick their thumbs out and get in a car with anybody.’ Devine’s murder case was one of the longest unsolved homicides in Washington state history, and for most of the 28 years after she was killed her family said they learned next to nothing about the identity of her killer.
A few weeks after Kathy’s remains were found the Thurston County Sheriff’s Department received a four page letter sent sent by an anonymous individual that purportedly named Kathy’s killer. The correspondence included a sketch of the mustachioed perp as well as a second drawing of his ‘scarred hand.’ (Retired) Thurston County Lieutenant Don Snook told the public that ‘we would like to hear more from this writer,’ and (retired) Sheriff Don Redmond commented that the letter said the slayer was ‘sick and would kill again.’ The details from the letter were investigated and two homes were looked into as the potential hideouts of Devine’s killer, one in Nisqually Valley and another on Waldrick Road. In addition to the letter, the ‘Crime Checkers’ (which is a hotline of sorts to report crime-related activity) received an anonymous phone call from a man who simply said, ‘I know who killed Katherine Devine,’ then immediately hung-up without elaborating. Nothing ever came of either incident and were eventually deemed to be hoaxes. When I asked Char why anyone would do such a thing, she simply shrugged her shoulders and said, ‘people are nuts.’
Before Kathy was killed on May 17, 1973 nineteen year-old Theresa A. Granulas out of Spokane was murdered after being stabbed in the stomach, and roughly twenty days after her remains were discovered another body was found in a nearby wooded area outside of Seattle. The ME was able to determine that the remains belonged to thirty-eight year old Jimmy Frank Hildebrand, a GI from Fort Lewis; he died from two small caliber bullet wounds to the neck. Almost immediately Sheriff’s determined that the three murders were unrelated, mostly due to the fact that they were committed in different ways and their methods of disposal greatly varied. After putting in some good detective work, it was eventually determined that two men from Tacoma murdered Hildebrand, and in July 1973 a jury of his peers found a man named Frank Chase (who also went by the alias ‘Frank White Eagle’) guilty of Granulas’ murder; he was sentenced to forty years in prison. Additionally, on Mothers Day in 1973 a Richester, WA mother named Elaine Bills killed her four year old daughter after shooting her in the temple with a .22 caliber revolver. The twenty nine year old was sentenced to twenty years in prison, and was later transferred to the Purdy Treatment Center for Women.
On January 2, 1974 the skeletal remains of a waitress named Debbie Poller was found in a shallow grave in Tacoma. The nineteen year old was identified through dental records and her autopsy showed that she was strangled and suffered a blow to the head; she was found wrapped in a red bedspread. Strangely enough, while researching I learned about two more young women that disappeared from the greater Seattle area in 1974: eighteen year old Melody Logan and seventeen year old Linda Hamilton. All I could find about Linda was that she was last seen at a restaurant called ‘The Frontier Cafe’ (this is most likely due to her fairly common name), and looking into Logan it turns out she eloped in Carson City, Nevada with her bf.
Just two days after Kathy’s remains were discovered, sixteen year old Sherrie came up with the idea to organize a petition to ban hitchhiking across the state of Washington, titled ‘Initiative-283.’ In an interview with The Longview Daily News published on December 18, 1973, she said that ‘we don’t want anything to happen to anyone else. We’re not against hitchhikers. We just want to prevent hitchhiking.’ In addition to collecting thousands of signatures, the Devine family also testified before the WA state legislature in hopes to help make the act illegal. Just some general background on hitchhiking in Washington state: in 1972 it had been legalized amid the ongoing gas crisis and the carefree days of the early 70’s when it was considered ‘cool’ (I know I said it in past articles, but my own mother spoke of doing it very casually with her friends). Unfortunately, the 86,000 signatures that the family obtained just wasn’t enough and the bill stalled in Olympia. In an interview with a reporter in July 1974, Mr. Devine commented that: ‘because it was legal, she thought it was safe.’ … ‘My oldest daughter thought she had failed. I told her, ‘look how many people became aware of the problem. You didn’t fail.’’
At the time of Kathy Devine’s disappearance in November 1973 Ted Bundy was living at the Rogers Rooming house on 12th Ave in Seattle’s University District. He was in an established, long term relationship with Liz Kloepfer (and was dating multiple other women as well) and was taking his first crack at law school at the nearby University of Puget Sound in Tacoma. He had been unemployed since September (when he was the assistant to the WA State Republican chairman) and remained so until May 3 of 1974, when he started work at the Department of Emergency Services in Olympia. He did have his infamous tan VW in November 1973 as he purchased it earlier that spring, and according to the ‘TB MultiAgency Investigative Team Report 1992,’ on the day Kathy disappeared Bundy ‘had a beard’ and ‘bought gas on the Washington IBH-521 in Seattle.’
For the first 28 years after Kathy’s murder the Devine’s strongly felt it was Ted Bundy that brutally took her life, as she fit the physical description of (most of) his victims and the way she was murdered was similar to the technique he was known to use. When Ms. Devine disappeared in 1973 Ted was living only two miles from where she was last seen, and where everyone knows he drove a light cream colored Beetle for a couple years before his Utah arrest few are aware that he also owned a pick-up briefly to help with his move from WA to SLC (although this was in 1975); his brother Glenn owned a (white) pick-up truck at some point as well. During his death row confessions Bundy told LE that he picked up a hitchhiker in 1973, killed her, then left her body close to where Kathy’s remains were found in Olympia (although he couldn’t remember the exact location), but he specifically denied having any involvement with her murder. Even crime author and Bundy bff Ann Rule (kidding) brought up the possibility that Ted killed her in her crime classic ‘The Stranger Beside Me.’ Oddly enough, as I sit writing this I have the movie adaptation playing in the background and right away I recognized the Devine case as it was being discussed (even though they used a fake name I still recognized the details). Just my own personal observation: both Brenda Baker and Kathy Devine are both frequently included as TB victims in early articles about him (before he was caught).
On March 7, 2002 the Thurston County Sheriff’s office announced that they finally solved the murder of Kathy Devine: using DNA that was collected at the original crime scene in 1973, forensic experts were able to determine that a Vietnam vet named William E. Cosden Jr. killed Devine, who was already in prison serving a sentence for rape. In 1967 he was found ‘not guilty by reason of insanity’ for the sexual assault and murder of a young woman in Maryland (law enforcement commented that there were a lot of parallels between the two cases) and he was sentenced to reside in a psychiatric facility until he was ‘deemed to no longer be a threat to society.’ Unfortunately the former Marine wasn’t locked away for very long, and in 1973 he was released from the mental institution and moved across the country to live with his parents in Washington state.
At the time of Devine’s murder, William Cosden Jr. was 26 years old and resided with his family on Scott Lake in Thurston County. Just a few years after he was released from prison in late 1975 ‘Billy’ raped a young woman in Thurston County named Beverly Pearson. According to the Washington State Department of Corrections, he was sentenced to just over 32 years in prison in 1976 for that crime and was sent to McNeil Island in Pierce County, WA to serve out his sentence. Cosden was sent to two different ‘pre-release’ facilities in late 1989, however eventually returned to prison because of ‘disciplinary problems’ of some sort, according to Corrections Department spokeswoman Mary Christensen. He came up for parole multiple occasions (the last time in May 1999) but thankfully his requests were denied largely due to the fact that he wrote ‘some kind of rambling, pornographic discourse’ while he was in custody proving that he may not be completely rehabilitated, according to one time parole board Chairman John Austin.
In 1986, Thurston County detectives interviewed Cosden in prison about his possible involvement in the murder of Kathy Devine, and he denied having anything to do with her death. At that time they took blood, hair, and saliva from him (thanks to a warrant), and in 2001 those samples were sent to a Washington state crime lab where they were compared to a vaginal swab taken from Devine during her autopsy in December 1973. William Cosden Jr.’s DNA was a match to the semen found inside of Devine. Later that year Detectives David Haller and Tim Rudolf went to McNeil Island to share their findings with the incarcerated man, who still insisted that he had nothing to do with Kathy’s murder. It wasn’t until a few days later when they returned for a second time that he admitted to having sex with the teen, but he still denied killing her. Strangely enough, despite the hard DNA evidence against him Cosden still seemed genuinely shocked when he was arrested for Devine’s murder: Thurston County Sheriff Gary Edward said that he was not happy about being blamed for the crime and was actually angry at the news.
Cosden was 55 years old in March of 2002 when he was booked for the murder of Katherine Merry Devine at the Thurston County Jail in Olympia. He pleaded not guilty when he was arraigned on first-degree murder charges in front of Superior Court Judge Richard Hicks and didn’t say a single word during the arraignment. Because Cosden faced the murder charge under the law as it was written in 1973, the case was not eligible to be tried with death-penalty laws (they were eventually deemed constitutional in the late 1970’s). To the arraignment he wore the standard white jailhouse uniform and his hands and feet were shackled. At the time, Sheriff Gary Edward said of Cosden: ‘my main purpose today is to let those criminals out there, who think they got away with something, know that we’re coming.’ … ‘I hope they all get ulcers.’ Bail was set at $500,000 with a trial scheduled to begin May 6, 2002.
After finally seeing the man who killed her little sister after so many years, Sherrie Devine said: ‘it was very creepy.’ Sally commented that she felt anxious about seeing Cosden for the first time but was happy he wasn’t facing them: ‘It would have been worse if we would have had to look directly at him.’ Immediately following his arrest, William’s attorney John Sinclair said he didn’t know how critical the alleged DNA evidence would be to the case, and that: ‘with a case this old, I don’t know to what extent the prosecution can put together a case.’… ‘It’s surprising they even still had evidence going back 30 years.’ Philip Harju was Thurston County’s Chief Criminal Prosecutor at the time of the arrest and admitted that where the case did present some challenges he was confident it was solid, and: ‘we’re trying to find witnesses from 28 years ago.’ … ‘but I believe we have enough evidence. There is other evidence, circumstantial evidence.’
William Cosden Jr.’s father owned the Restover Truck Stop and in the 1970’s, and it was a popular hangout for hitchhikers. A gas station attendant that was present the night Devine disappeared named Carl Clark testified that he saw drops of blood on Cosden’s shirt as he was fueling up his pick-up truck in the early morning hours of November 26, 1973. Another individual named David Perschon also testified that he saw blood in the back of his truck with Williams’ brother Tim when looking for ‘tire rims’ late in the evening on November 25. Cosden told them that the blood was from a deer he had recently killed and shooed both of them away from the vehicle, and Tim later testified that he didn’t remember looking in his older brother’s truck that night.
During the trial the prosecution called to the stand Gail Amster of Florida, who was Kathy’s childhood best friend and one of the two girls that was with her the night she disappeared. She said that her friend was upset because she had just gotten into a fight with her bf and really wanted to see her cousin in Rockaway Beach. Amster (who knew Kathy since the two were four!) testified that Devine had gotten into a green pick up and that ‘we just waved goodbye. She looked back at us, and we went home.’ When questioned again about the type of vehicle that Kathy had gotten into, Amster repeated her answer about the pick-up truck, and the prosecutor showed her the original statement she made in 1973, that said she saw Devine get into a ‘faded blue hippie-type van.’ This might make sense when you go back to the theory that Kathy may have initially caught a ride to the truck stop from someone else, so she wouldn’t have gotten into a vehicle that was different from William Cosden Jr.’s pick-up truck.
A little after midnight on November 26, 1973 William Cosden Jr.’s pick-up truck caught fire about three miles from the Restover Truck Stop, which is just a few miles away from the campground where Devine’s remains were found. According to police reports: ‘witnesses saw Cosden come in the night of the murder with stains on his clothing. / The witnesses called police. / After leaving the truck stop, Cosden’s truck caught fire and was destroyed three miles from the truck stop. / During initial interviews with police, Cosden denied ever seeing Kathy Devine.’
At the time Devine’s case was solved in 2001 it was the oldest open murder case in the history of Washington state to have been solved using ‘DNA fingerprinting.’ Thisis a lab technique used to determine the probable identity of a person based on the nucleotide sequences of certain parts of DNA that are unique to an individual. About Cosden being caught after so many years, (retired) Thurston County Sheriff Edward said that, ‘this case came about through a lot of hard work by a lot of individuals for a long period of time.’ … ‘it has been continually investigated. Let those criminals know who thinks they’ve ‘gotten away with it’ that we’re coming.’
Investigators played close to the vest with Cosden’s possible involvement with Kathy’s murder, and despite the fact he was a chief suspect from the beginning they didn’t even share their suspicions of him with her family. It wasn’t until the DNA fingerprinting came back a match that law enforcement finally told the Devine’s they had a suspect, as they wanted to be certain and didn’t have enough evidence to charge and take him to trial until then.
The Olympian reported that Thurston County Sheriff’s Captain Dan Kimball never closed the case files on Kathy’s murder even after Bundy was executed. When detectives came to her family after so many years and told them they had a suspect, they were never told who it was, so logically Mr. Devine’s mind always went to Ted Bundy: ‘Everyone deals with this in their own way.’ … ‘I have to admit I clinged to that belief.’ When detectives came back to the family about a month later to tell them the DNA pointed to William Cosden Jr., Bill admitted that he felt oddly disappointed, mostly because his gut instinct told him it was the infamous mass serial killer who killed his daughter: ‘Then all of a sudden, it came to me that maybe we’re right this time, and if we’re right this time, that’s all that matters.’ … ‘what can I say to (Cosden) that’s going to make him feel any worse? He’s already got his little cell to live in. Let him rot where he’s at.’ Regarding Bundy being ruled out as a suspect, Mr. Devine said: ‘He was my, if you will, my quasi-closure.’… ‘He seemed to be the most logical person. All of these years, I had wanted to believe it.’ Both Bill and Sallyann were shocked and relieved at the announcement that their daughters case was finally solved after so many years. Of the development, Mr. Devine said ‘we’re feeling a great sense of relief’ … ‘it’s truly amazing’ and Mrs. Devine commented that she was ‘just so flabbergasted.’
After Cosden was convicted of Kathy’s murder, Mr. Devine said: ‘it’s finished. There’s a justice system, and it works.″ … ‘It doesn’t bring Kathy back, but it sure does help.’ … ‘They said time heals all wounds, but I’m here to say they just scab over a little. It’s been a long time. But at this point what we’re seeing is a light at the end of the tunnel.’ Sallyann shared that she frequently thinks of her daughter, even after all these years: ‘She was just a sweetheart.’…. ‘It is nice to know that this has finally been solved. We’ve been wondering for 28 years. I still feel like it’s a dream and I’m going to wake up and it’ll all be over.’ … ‘I thought she was beautiful.’ … ‘But she was beautiful inside and out. She was softhearted, and she loved poetry. She wanted to be a preacher.’ Regarding the conviction of William Cosden Jr. for the murder of Katherine Devine, former Sheriff Gary Edward said that: ‘DNA made the case.’ … ‘This came about as a result of technology and a lot of hard work.’
It’s strongly speculated among Thurston County LE that William Cosden was responsible for the murder of Brenda Joy Baker as well as Kathy Devine. The 14 year old from Maple Valley had a bit of a rebellious streak and was known to frequently hitchhike, and on May 27, 1974 she ran away from home for a second time. Brenda was last seen near Puyallup, Washington getting into a blue pickup truck, and her remains were found on June 17, 1974 in a corner of Millersylvania State Park stuffed underneath two logs. Her cause of death is usually listed as a slit throat, but initial reports also suggest that she was strangled. According to Charlene, most of the detectives that worked her sister’s case also felt that Cosden was responsible for Bakers murder, not Bundy. When I asked if there was any hope of one day linking her death to Cosden she sadly shook her head no while looking at her feet: apparently investigators never took any DNA samples from the crime scene so they have nothing to compare it to. I mean… in 2024 it sounds like such a normal, almost routine concept, but in the early 1970’s that was something most investigators didn’t do, and Char even said the fact that they took samples from her sister’s murder scene is a small miracle in itself. Although Bundy is still considered a suspect, as of April 2024 William Cosden Jr. is the prime suspect in Bakers murder.
Katherine Merry Devine was cremated, and her final resting place is at the Evergreen-Washelli Memorial Park in Northern Seattle. William Earl Cosden Jr. maintained his innocence until he took his final breath in June of 2015, when he passed away after having a heart attack in prison. He died without serving a single day for the murder of Kathy due to the fact he never was paroled for his prior rape charge. At least he died away from the general public in prison and no other women were attacked.
William Devine passed away at the age of 77 on June 7, 2013 in Seattle. His obituary says that he ‘loved and lived life to the fullest, never met a stranger and always had a kind word and corny joke to share with his innumerable friends and customers, to keep everyone around him smiling.’ Sallyann Devine is a real firecracker, and currently (as of April 2024) resides in a wonderful retirement community in Everett, WA. Kathy’s older sister Sherrie lives in Everett as well, but currently prefers to stay out of the public eye regarding her sister’s brutal murder. Charlene Devine-Gonzales resides in Marysille just outside of Seattle and has two beautiful daughters, Amanda and Christina (who now have children of their own). Sadly her husband Greg passed away in 2022 after battling a plethora of health issues, something that most likely could have been prevented had he been under the care of competent medical providers.
Works Cited:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7643386/katherine-merry-devine
https://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/DNA-match-leads-to-arrest-in-girl-s-1973-slaying-1082515.php
https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=20020309&slug=oldmurder09m
http://www.murders.ru/Ann_Ru_stran_vnytre.pd






















































































































































































































