Nancy Diane Wyckoff.*

Nancy Diane Wyckoff was born to Brian and Claire (nee Nimmy) in Los Angeles on January 5, 1954 (just as a side note, I’ve seen her referred to as both Nancy and Diane). Mr. Wyckoff was born on June 10, 1927 in LA, and Claire was born on August 11, 1922 in Oak Park, IL; at some point she relocated with her family to Georgia. The couple were wed on May 15, 1953 and settled down in Glendale, California; they had one child together but at some point divorced. Brian married again on July 4, 1958 and had two more children, including Nancy’s half-sister Sarah Wendeline, who was born on August 5, 1963 in San Diego.

An overall exceptional and bright young woman, Nancy’s parents described her as a diligent and loving child that only wanted the best for herself. She was a 1970 graduate of Herbert Hoover High School, where she was on the senior prom committee, the swim team, and the drill team. Wyckoff was also the Editor-in-Chief of the school newspaper and was secretary of the science club. She maintained a 3.88 GPA and ranked ten out of 490 out of her graduating class, and was considered an excellent, well-rounded young woman. She especially loved math and science, and was a Mu Alpha Theta Jr. Honor Scholar.

According to her parents, Nancy had an independent streak, and after graduating high school moved to Corvallis, OR where she enrolled at Oregon State University as a mathematics major. She lived in Poling Hall in room 333, and according to an article published in The Olympian, women lived on the first, third, and fourth floors and men lived on the second and fifth floors. Wyckoff was in the honors program, and had received a $1,000 National Merit Scholarship from the Signal Oil Company, where her mother had been employed for 15 years in Glendale. She was interested in politics, nature, and music, and especially loved horseback riding and camping.

Although she dated around, Nancy had no steady boyfriend at the time of her murder, and according to her mother she: ‘choose to live in a coed dorm because it was the ‘now’ thing to do. Nancy was very much a 1972 girl, in the finest sense.’ Taking an impressive 19 credit hours, Wyckoff was the dormitory coordinator of OCU’s recycling program and was active in the school’s Sierra Club, an organization that cherishes and protects natural beauty. A friend of hers from Herbert Hoover High School that also attended Oregon State said that Nancy was ‘always doing things. She always knew what was going on. But she was a considerate person. She never made you feel stupid just because she was smart.’

Before Diane’s murder two separate attacks took place on OSU’s campus: at around 8 PM on Thursday, February 3, 1972 a young woman named Elizabeth Ann Gleckler was walking by the Agronomy Building when she got hit in the back of the head with something hard. She fell to the ground and began to scream, which scared off her assailant; she needed stitches and it was eventually determined the weapon her attacker used was a chunk of concrete. Gleckler told campus security that although she didn’t see her assailant’s face she said he was short and young. Just a few days later on February 6, another coed named Connie Kennedy was attacked at around 2:30 AM. She had left her dorm room in Cauthorn Hall and went down to the basement to get a snack from the vending machines, and as she was making her selection felt a blow to the back of her head. A struggle ensued, but thankfully Kennedy was able to get away from her attacker and run away. Like Ms. Gleckler, she didn’t get a good look at her attacker but described him as ‘young, short, brown hair, I think.’

Around 3:45 AM on Tuesday, February 8, 1972 (although I’ve seen it listed as early as 3:00) residents of Poling Hall woke up to two separate screams that came from room 333 on the third floor, then the sound of someone running down the hall and the slam of the north facing fire door. Upon hearing the signs of distress, girls went running to Nancy’s room, and when they arrived they were met with a ghastly sight: Wyckoff’s bare feet, sticking out of the door frame, which prevented it from closing. The clothing on the upper part of her body was saturated in blood, and her head was resting against her bed frame. The young coed was dressed in pajamas, and a large amount of blood had already started to poole underneath her body. Her dorm room was decorated with driftwood and shells she collected from the Oregon coast, which was a popular weekend getaway for OSU students. At the foot of her bed was a poster of a gross green frog with a caption underneath that read: ‘kiss me.’ Her windows had faced the school’s quad, and glued on them were letters that formed the phrase: ‘cowgirl in the sand,’ which is a song by Neil Young that was released in 1969.

The young ladies quickly called the head resident, a young man named William Lex, who ran to Nancy’s room to assess the situation. He knelt beside her, and although she was gravely injured he could still make out faint, shallow breathing. He then made three separate calls: the first to 911 for emergency care, the second to the Corvallis PD, then finally to the OR State Trooper that was assigned to OSU to help augment the university’s police force.

Wyckoff had bled out quickly and it didn’t take long before she succumbed to her injuries; she died before the paramedics arrived. Investigators quickly determined that the young coed had been stabbed, and an 8-inch bone handled carving knife was found lying beside her; its tip was slightly bent. Two foreign hairs had been found in the pool of blood found underneath her. Investigators also found a small, red flashlight that was left behind in Nancy’s bedroom, a type that didn’t take batteries and had a removable portion that could be plugged into a wall and charged, which was missing. Its discovery was initially kept a secret from the public.

Dr. William Brady, who was the Oregon state medical examiner that performed a post mortem examination on Wyckoff, determined that she had suffered three different wounds, and their length and widths all aligned perfectly with the knife that was found left behind at the crime scene. The wound that proved to be fatal penetrated the upper part of her heart, and was six inches long; he said that she ‘she would have succumbed in two or three minutes as a result of this wound. And, it was dealt with considerable force, severing cartilage in its path.’ The second wound entered at the lower part of her neck immediately above the left clavicle and stopped at the top of her right lung. The third was the one that caused the assailant’s knife to bend: it was a shallow wound in her left shoulder, and the only reason it wasn’t deeper is because the shoulder bone is located right below the skin, and it resisted the thrust of the weapon. She was not sexually assaulted in any capacity.

According to those that knew her well, Nancy was a trusting girl, too trusting, and sadly this may have been her downfall: all rooms in her dormitory had locks on them, but she had not utilized hers on the night of her murder. According to Claire Wyckoff, ‘Nancy scoffed at locks. She pooh poohed at the idea of locking doors. She was inclined to be scornful of precautions that her mother wanted.’ After the murder the President of the University ordered a mandatory 10:30 PM curfew on campus: all dorms were to be locked by 7 PM, and all visiting between buildings ceased.

All three policing agencies working the case set up headquarters in the Gill Coliseum on OSU’s campus in order to be close to the investigation, and surprisingly they all seemed to work very well together. Typically LE in the 1970’s didn’t like to share information with each other, and I think of the 1971 murder of Joyce LePage, where the investigation was hindered because the different agencies working the case hoarded information and refused to share it with one another. So much data was collected over the course of Wyckoffs investigation that 1700 pages worth of reports were produced, and the Corvallis Police Sergeant Jim Montgomery (along with his partner, Mel Cofer) alone talked to 199 people during his time working the case.

On February 11, 1972 at roughly 8 PM a young student named Michael C. Stinson stumbled into Weatherford Hall, clutching his neck, barely able to speak. Finally, after much effort he was able to say that as he’d been looking at stars on the veranda of the men’s dorm someone had come up from behind him, slipped a cord around his neck and he subsequently blacked out. Stinson was taken to the Student Health Center where he was evaluated, and physicians said that the pressure from the wire or rope is what made the thin red line left behind on his neck. This only clouded the MO of the sneaky assailant even more.

As the days ticked by and the month of February came to an end, tensions on OSU’s campus lessened somewhat despite no movement being made on the case. On March 1 a decision was made and pictures of a knife that was identical to the one used to kill Wyckoff as well as the recovered flashlight were published in the OSU newspaper along with a plea that anyone that may know more about either to please come forward. When investigators released the picture of the flashlight they left out that it was found in Nancy’s room, and only stated it had been located ‘somewhere in Poling Hall.‘ LE was able to determine that the knife had been made in Japan and came in a kit along with a fork, and where several stores in Corvallis sold these sets unfortunately they didn’t keep records of their customers.

Shortly after the publication a student named Marlowe James Buchanan came forward and told police that he recognized the flashlight, and said: ‘you know, I think that might be my flashlight. I lost it the night before the murder, must have been around 11.’  The young man said that he couldn’t remember exactly where he lost it, but remembered seeing friends on February 7 and surmised that he probably misplaced it then. Buchanan then gave investigators the names of the buddies that he’d been with that night, however they quickly determined that his story had some inconsistencies to them: the boys said they didn’t recall that Marlowe was with them the evening before the murder and that when the article was published he’d asked them not to talk about the fact that he lost his flashlight, and when they asked why, he said ‘its not important, and the police would just bug me about it.’

Marlowe James Buchanan was 5’6″ tall and weighed 150 pounds. He maintained a 4.0 average and was known to be brilliant amongst those that knew him, and even graduated from high school a year early after skipping the fifth grade. During an initial interview with investigators, he told them ‘if I’d ever been in her room, it would have been way back at the start of the school year,’ so like all of the other students that admitted to being in Wyckoff’s room, he was fingerprinted. On the third occasion Buchanan spoke with LE he shared: ‘I’ve been thinking, you might find my prints on that fire door. I went up to the third floor to rat fink the girls up there. You know, set off a smoke bomb in the hall. But I changed my mind.’ Investigating officers said he seemed to like talking to them but had a flippant, uncaring facade to him, and that his story wasn’t ‘holding water.’

On March 15, 1972 Benton County Sergeant BJ Miller and his partner Corporal Harris of the Oregon State Police asked Buchanan to come in again to speak to them at their makeshift office in Gill Coliseum. They asked the young man over and over again where the replaceable charging unit had gone from his missing flashlight, and in response he told them that he flushed it down the toilet the morning after the murder because ‘the flashlight was lost, and when something’s gone, it’s gone, so there was no use in keeping the unit.’ He then changed his story, and said he recalled waking up the morning of February 8th feeling that something was ‘terribly wrong,’ and that made him get up, out of bed, and flush the battery down the toilet.

When investigating officers realized that no battery had been found after being disposed of through OSU’s plumbing system, they rushed to the schools custodian, but despite their best efforts the charging unit was gone. Criminologist Bart Reid had done some DNA testing on the hair that was found underneath Wyckoff’s body, and it was determined to be a match to a sample pulled from Buchanan. And Reid’s lab report was shown to the young engineering student, they said to him: ‘we don’t believe you: this report shows you were in her room,’ and his smugness immediately vanished; he still didn’t ask for a lawyer. Harris placed a picture of the murder weapon in front of him and after a while asked, ‘will you go through life with her death on your conscience?” Buchanan began softly crying, and after a few moments he blurted out the entire story.

The young student had been ‘inspired’ by the recent attacks around campus (that he called ‘pranks’), and he wanted to throw the biggest one of all. Buchanan’s previous reference to smoke bombs only alluded to the truth of what really happened: he said he originally intended to scare the young women on the third floor, but the greatest thing he could dream up was to set off one of those bombs inside one of the girls’ rooms, and he only went into Nancy’s because she left it unlocked. He told investigators that he snuck in, knelt beside the sleeping girl, and placed the knife on the floor; he then reached into his pocket for the smoke bomb but as he was fumbling for it the flashlight fell onto the floor, which woke Wyckoff up. He said ‘ I reached for the flashlight but I got the knife instead,’ and when asked (repeatedly) why he needed the piece of cutlery, he never gave detectives a valid answer. When investigators searched Buchanans dormitory they found a set of knives that had one missing, which was a match to the one that was found next to Wyckoff.

Buchanan volunteered that he had been experiencing mental health issues at the time of the incident, and when he went in her room, she woke up, screamed, then quickly ran towards him, which caused him to panic. He said that because he had been raised with ‘conservative values’ he did not want to be caught alone in a female’s bedroom in the early hours of the morning, so he (logically) panicked and ‘unintentionally’ stabbed and killed Nancy in an effort to force her to be quiet.

Only four months shy of turning eighteen, Buchanan was quickly transferred out of juvenile court and was tried as an adult. On April 7, 1972 he was indicted on a charge of intentional murder, meaning there was no delegation between first and second degree murder. It is defined as the killing of another person intentionally and is punishable by a minimum of 25 years in prison without parole. The freshman electrical student plead not guilty, citing mental incompetence.

Skilled at chess and bridge, like Nancy Marlowe excelled at math and science, but his social skills and maturity level were not ‘in pace’ with his mind, and he had limited contact with the opposite sex and hadn’t started dating yet. The Buchanan family moved from Southern California to West Oswego, Oregon in 1967 because ‘there were things happening there that we could no longer live with, and we felt the schooling would be better in Oregon.’ He said he had danced with a girl once but that had been the extent of his experience with women, and also suffered from allergies. When asked by a reporter what Marlowe was like, one of his classmates replied with, ‘small thin, slightly built with a baby face and a baby voice.’

Marlowe waived his right to a jury trial and left his fate up to Circuit Court Judge Richard Mengler. Portland based attorneys Nick Chaivoe and Gary Petersen worked for the defense, and at the beginning of the trial Chaivoe said ‘whatever acts were committed were not done in such a way to enforce free will,’ and that Buchanan was ‘suffering from a mental disease or defect and acted without criminal intent.’ No effort was made by the defense to deny that he killed Wyckoff, but psychiatric testimony was introduced which purported that he was a sick person and would be a danger to society if not properly treated.

Doctors that later examined Buchanan dismissed his claims of mental incompetence and determined him to be mentally stable enough to be tried as an adult. The prosecution brought in multiple psychologists to testify on their behalf, all of which reported that he had not been battling any form of mental illness at the time of the homicide but did suggest that he may have been emotionally stressed and had possibly undergone a psychotic break. Experts deemed him to be immature and felt that he panicked beyond the point of rationality at the sound of his victims’ screams, which is why he stabbed her.

During the trial the defense called psychiatrist Dr. Guy Parvarvesh to the stand, who told the court that said ‘Buchanan thought of himself as a normal kid, when instead, he was very shy, introverted. He grew up with the idea that he was in full control, because he never failed at anything he tried.’ He also said that Marlowe developed a schizoid personality, most likely as a result of growing up with a ‘benevolent father and domineering mother. ‘As a result, this led to him ‘having doubts as to his masculinity, and naturally this developed much anger underneath, that he can never admit to anyone or himself.’ The Doctor also said that the defendant enjoyed playing pranks, which was very normal for a person who is ‘sweet on the outside but has anger underneath that can’t be expressed.’ Pranks were a socially acceptable way to express these feelings, while at the same time he was able to relieve these repressed emotions on an unconscious level.’ Dr. Parvarvesh went on to say that ‘Marlowe is a sick person, if he is not treated he will remain a very dangerous person, but if he undergoes extensive psychotherapy, I feel he can become a normal law abiding citizen.’ On Thursday, May 18, 1972 Buchanan received a 10-year prison sentence for the crime, as it was believed he had not entered the room with criminal intent. He was sent to The Oregon Correctional Institute to serve out his sentence.

In June 2024 the Lifetime Network released a made for TV movie (loosely) based on Wyckoff’s murder titled: ‘Danger in the Dorm’ (it’s technically based off of the Ann Rule short story of the same title, to be specific). It stars Bethany Frankel (who got top billing even though the movie is about her daughter, but whatever) and Clara Alexandrova as her daughter Kathleen, a college student that is supposed to be Nancy. While the movie somewhat (mostly) accurately tells Wyckoff’s story, the characters names were obviously changed and there were several occurrences of dramatization that took place. Also, just by watching the trailer, the biggest thing that jumped out at me was: the film takes place today, not in the 1970’s. According to the synopsis on the films IMDB page: ‘after the murder of her childhood best friend and fellow classmate, Kathleen must catch a killer who’s preying on young girls around campus.’ I may or may not watch it later. Stay tuned.

In late February 1972 Nancy’s alma mater of Herbert Hoover High School in Glendale, CA dedicated their journalism room to her memory. In July 1972 students at Oregon State University planted a sequoia tree in her honor in front of Kidder Hall, its plaque reading: ‘Nancy Diane Wyckoff / 1965-1972 / ‘In wilderness is the preservation of the World.’ / -Thoreau.’ Also in the fall of 1972, OSU dedicated their Volleyball Court to Wyckoff’s memory. Brian and Claire Wyckoff established a $1,000 scholarship in their daughter’s honor, and specified that it be divided between a male and female student that were residents of Poling Hall that showed academic excellence along with a financial need. Brian Wyckoff died at the age of 64 on January 10, 1992 and Claire passed at the age of 85 on July 7, 2007. Nancy’s sister Sarah died on  April 11, 2023 in San Diego, California.

As of December 2024 Marlowe James Buchanan still lives in his hometown of West Oswego, Oregon with his wife, Elizabeth Ann (nee Houser). The couple were married on July 22, 1995 in Washington, OR and have no children. I wasn’t able to find much information about him, but I wasn’t able to find any additional criminal activity linked to him, so he seems to have flown under the radar since being released from prison. He may have gone on to finish his education after he got out of prison, as I found his name linked to some patents that were filed while he was employed at Eaton Intelligent Power Limited. As I found myself digging and digging but still coming up with nothing I suddenly realized that Mr. Buchanan most likely does not want to be found, and I’m going to let him be.

* Just as a side note, I have seen Nancy’s last name spelled Wyckoff and Wycoff; I’m going by the spelling used in almost EVERYTHING, including her high school yearbooks and newspaper articles… although it’s spelled Wycoff on her gravestone (which is actually VERY weird to me, of all the things that it should be correct on it should be that).

Works Cited:
Dawn, Randee. (June 16, 2024). ‘Who killed Nancy Wyckoff? The true story behind Lifetime’s ‘Danger in the Dorm.’’ Taken November 30, 2024 from today.com/popculture/tv/danger-in-the-dorm-true-story-rcna156410
Rule, Ann. (1994). ‘True Crime Archives: Volume One.’
SInha, Shivangi. (June 8, 2024). ‘Nancy Wyckoff Murder: How Did She Die? Who Killed Her?’ Taken November 30, 2024 from thecinemaholic.com/nancy-wyckoff/
Shrestha, Naman. (June 12, 2024). ‘Marlowe James Buchanan: Where is the Killer Now?’ Taken November 30, 204 from thecinemaholic.com/marlowe-james-buchanan/

Wyckoff’s sophomore picture from the 1969 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff in a group photo for the Modern Dance Club from the 1970 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff’s junior picture from the 1970 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Another picture of Wyckoff from the 1970 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff in a group photo for the Purple Press Staff, from the 1970 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook
Wyckoff’s senior year picture from the 1971 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff’s in a group picture from the 1971 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff’s in a group picture for the school newspaper from the 1971 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Wyckoff in a picture for homecoming court from the 1971 Herbert Hoover High School yearbook.
Nancy Diane Wyckoff.
The Agronomy Building on OSU’s campus. A few days before Wyckoff was killed another female student was attacked outside the building after she was hit in the head with a chunk of concrete.
Poling Hall, where Diane lived at the time of her murder.
A picture of the outside of Nancy’s building taken from The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
Detectives looking at the killers escape route, looking for evidence. Photo courtesy of Ann Rule.
Investigators examining locks at the scene of Wyckoff’s murder.
An investigator at the scene of Wyckoff’s murder, photo courtesy of The Barometer.
Pictures related to the scene of Wyckoff’s murder, courtesy of The Barometer published on February 11, 1972.
The knives that were found at the scene of the crime. Photo courtesy of the OSU school newspaper ‘The Barometer,’ published on March 2, 1972.
The flashlight found at the scene of the crime. Photo courtesy of the OSU school newspaper ‘The Barometer,’ published on March 2, 1972.
Wyckoff’s parents and maternal grandmother at a press conference related to her murder. Photo courtesy of The Statesman Journal, published on February 10, 1972.
A clipping of a police sketch of the wanted killer published in The Oregonian in February 1972.
An article about the attack of a coed on OSU’s campus before the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Statesman Journal on February 5, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Olympian on February 8, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on February 8, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Columbus Telegram on February 8, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on February 8, 1972.
An article about the an attack on campus published in The Oregon Daily Journal on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Spokane Chronicle on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 8, 1972 .
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Daily News on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Kellogg Evening News on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Arizona Republic on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregonian on February 9, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Sacramento Bee on February 10, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Sacramento Bee on February 10, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Statesman Journal on February 10, 1972.
The first article about the murder of Wyckoff published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 10, 1972.
The second article about the murder of Wyckoff published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 10, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Sacramento Bee on February 10, 1972.
An article about the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Oregon Daily on February 10, 1972.
An article about an assault on OSU campus that mentions the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The World on February 10, 1972.
An article about the level of security on OSU’s campus after Wyckoff’s murder published in The Oregon Daily Journal on February 11, 1972.
An article about the level of security on OSU’s campus after Wyckoff’s murder published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 11, 1972.
An article about an assault on OSU campus that mentions the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Greater Oregon on February 11, 1972.
An article about a composite sketch from an attack on OSU’s campus that mentions Nancy Wyckoff published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 11, 1972.
An article about the atmosphere on OSU’s campus published in The Oregon Daily Journal on February 12, 1972.
An article about a curfew on OSU’s campus after the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Gazette on February 12, 1972.
An article about the attacks on OSU’s campus in February 1972 published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 15, 1972.
An article about a reward for information about the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Oregon Daily Journal on February 16, 1972.
An article about another attack on OSU’s campus published in The Los Angeles Times on February 17, 1972.
An article about another attack on OSU’s campus published in The Barometer on February 17, 1972.
An article about OSU moving forward with ‘Dad Day’s’ after the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Capital Journal on February 18, 1972.
An article about activities on OSU’s campus that mentions Nancy Wyckoff published in The Oregon Daily Journal on February 18, 1972.
An article about an incident on OSU’s campus that mentions Nancy Wyckoff published in The Star News on February 19, 1972.
An article about the curfew on OSU’s campus being lifted that mentions Wyckoff published in The Capital Journal on February 21, 1972.
An article about the coed dorms on OSU’s campus possibly being responsible for Wyckoff’s murder published in The Greater Oregon on February 25, 1972.
An article about the journalism room at Herbert Hoover High School being dedicated to Wyckoff’s honor published in The LA Times on February 26, 1972.
An article about the reward for information related to Wyckoff’s murder published in The Capital Journal on March 2, 1972 
An article about Buchanan being charged for the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on March 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on March 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Vancouver Sun on March 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on March 17, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Redlands Daily Facts on March 17, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Sacramento Bee on March 17, 1972.
An article about Marlowe Buchanan retaining legal council published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on March 21, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on March 22, 1972.
An article about security in OSU dorms being amped up after the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The World on March 22, 1972.
An article about no decision being made regarding remanding Marlowe Buchanan published in The Oregonian on March 24, 1972.
An article about OSU being vigilant after a bout of attacks published in The Anchorage Times on March 28, 1972.
An article about Marlowe Buchanan being remanded to adult court published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on April 7, 1972.
An article about Marlowe Buchanan being indicted for intentional murder published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on April 8, 1972.
An article about Marlowe Buchanan entering a plea published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on April 8, 1972.
An article about a trial date being set for Marlowe Buchanan published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on April 26, 1972.
An article about the trial date for Marlowe Buchanan published in The Capital Journal on May 13, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Desert Sun on May 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The World on May 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Statesman Journal on May 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Eugene Register-Guard on May 16, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Statesman Journal on May 17, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on May 17, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on May 18, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Statesman Journal on May 18, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The World on May 18, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Statesman Journal on May 19, 1972.
An article about Buchanan receiving ten years in prison published in The Statesman Journal on May 23, 1972.
An article about the trial of Marlowe Buchanan published in The Daily News on July 23, 1972.
An article about the death of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 8, 1973.
An article about Buchanan published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on February 10, 1973.
An article about finances related to psychiatric care in the state of Oregon that mentions Marlowe Buchanan published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on March 1, 1973.
An article about public safety on OSU’s campus after what turned out to be the Ted Bundy murders in Florida that mentioned Nancy Wyckoff, published to The World on January 28, 1978. 
An article about the murder of Nancy Wyckoff published in The Daily News on September 8, 1991.
A newspaper clipping about the 25th anniversary of the murder of Nancy Diane Wyckoff published in The Statesman Journal on May 17, 1997.
Kenneth R. White, who was the VP of Whites’ Electronics in Sweet Home, OR using one of his metal detectors on OSU’s campus outside of Weatherford Hall, near where Nancy was killed. Photo published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on March 17, 1972.
A picture of Buchanan walking into the county court building with detectives after his arrest published in The Corvallis Gazette-Times on March 16, 1972.
Marlowe James Buchanan walking out of Benton County Jail on his way to a preliminary hearing in Benton Co. Juvenile Court. Photo published in The Albany Democrat-Herald on March 17, 1972.
Marlowe James Buchanan walking into court. Photo published in The Barometer on April 10, 1972.
Buchanan walking into the county court building with detectives after his arrest.
Benton County District Attorney James Brown and and former DA Frank Knight worked together to prosecute Buchanan.
The sequoia tree dedicated to Nancy Wyckoff at Oregon State. Picture taken in July 1972, courtesy of the Oregon Digital Archives.
Wyckoff’s tree on OSU’s campus.
The plaque on Nancy’s memorial tree.
The Volleyball court dedicated to Nancy Diane Wyckoff at Oregon State University. Picture taken in 1972.
The plaque dedicating volleyball court to Nancy Diane Wyckoff at OSU. Picture taken in 1972.
Brian Barr Wyckoff from the 1944 Glendale High School yearbook.
A picture of Claire Wyckoff published in The Atlanta Constitution on July 30, 1939.
A picture of Claire Wyckoff published in The Atlanta Journal on March 24, 1940.
An article mentioning Claire Nimmy published in The Atlanta Constitution on January 11, 1942.
Brian and Claire Wyckoff’s marriage certificate.
Sarah Wendeline Wyckoff.
Marlowe James Buchanan’s eighth grade picture from the 1967 Lake Oswego Junior High School yearbook. He was born on July 13, 1954 in Washington, OR.
Marlowe James Buchanan’s sophomore picture from the 1969 Lake Oswego High School yearbook.
Marlowe James Buchanan’s junior picture from the 1970 Lake Oswego High School yearbook.
Marlowe James Buchanan’s senior picture from the 1971 Lake Oswego High School yearbook.
Buchanan in a candid shot taken at an event related to chess club taken from the 1971 Lake Oswego High School yearbook.
An announcement that Buchanan was granted a marriage license published in The Oregonian on July 20, 1995.
Buchanan in the 1995 Oregon state marriage index.
Where Marlowe Buchanan is said to live (according to public record) in Lake Oswego, OR.
I know TB has nothing to do with this case, but it wouldn’t feel like an article if I didn’t account for his whereabouts in February 1972, according to the Ted Bundy Multiagency Investigative Team Report.
Nancy’s spot in The Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, in Glendale, CA. She is located in the Fucshia Terrace in The Great Mausoleum, Columbarium of the Dawn, Niche 30161.
A Reddit post about a possible experience with Wyckoff’s spirit.
Ann Rule’s book: True Crime Archives, Volume One, which features the short story about Wyckoff, ‘Danger in the Dorm.’
A promotional sign for the Lifetime movie, ‘Danger in the Dorm.’
A still from the Lifetime movie, ‘Danger in the Dorm.’

Brenda Carol Ball.

Before I started this piece all I really knew about Brenda Ball was that she had recently dropped out of college and disappeared from a dive bar just outside of Seattle (which I went to during my visit in April 2022); she (obviously) also fit his typical victim profile: she was young, thin, and beautiful, with dark chocolate eyes and brown hair that she wore long and parted down the middle.

Brenda Carol Ball is Theodore Robert Bundy’s fifth (confirmed) murder victim. She was born on November 4, 1952, to Duane Kaye and Rosemary (nee Rupp) Ball; Mr. Ball was born on April 12, 1930 in Seattle, and Rosemary was born in September 1930; the couple were wed on March 31, 1953 and Brenda was their only child. They parted ways in November 1971 and the reason listed on their divorce certificate is ‘cruelty.’ 

Brenda was twenty-two years old, 5’3” tall, and weighed a mere 112 pounds at the time of her disappearance… just a short side note, most of Bundy’s victims were incredibly ‘dainty’ and petite women: both Georgann Hawkins (5’2”) and Lynda Ann Healy (5’6”) only weighed 115 pounds, Donna Gail Manson was 5’ even and 100 pounds, and Janice Ott was 5’1” and 105 pounds. I wonder if this was due to his sexual preference or because smaller women (in theory) would be easier to subdue.

In 1970 Ball graduated from Mount Rainier High School in Des Moines, WA and at the time she disappeared in 1974 was taking classes at Highline Community College but mysteriously dropped out roughly two weeks before she vanished. She lived with two roommates in a five-bedroom house in Normandy Park, and according to them, she was content and happy regarding her decision to leave school, but was beginning to ‘party a lot.’

In the early morning hours of June 1, 1974, Brenda Ball seemingly vanished into thin air after seeing a band play at The Flame Tavern in Burien, WA. The topless dive bar had a seedy reputation for being a bit rough back in the 1970’s (it definitely isn’t in the greatest of neighborhoods), and has changed hands/names a few times since that fateful night in 1974: at one point it was called ‘El Baron’ before most recently being named ‘Fiesta del Mar.’ As of April 2022 the building sits abandoned (complete with multiple mattresses conveniently located in the back parking lot, for relaxation purposes). The night Brenda disappeared she was wearing blue jeans, a turtleneck with long sleeves, a ‘shirt-style’ jacket, and brown clog-like wedge-heeled shoes; she arrived at the establishment alone to see the band play and stayed until last call.

Immediately following Ball’s disappearance no one seemed overly concerned: her roommates said that she was an adventurous person and would often disappear on trips for days at a time without telling anyone (this reminds me so much of Donna Manson). I further feel that the two young women were similar in the sense that their almost nomadic lifestyles, casual drug use, and frequent habit of hitchhiking put them both in a higher risk pool. However, as time passed by it was glaringly obvious that something very serious was wrong, as Brenda wouldn’t leave for weeks on end without reaching out to somebody. Only adding to the mystery: all of her clothes and personal belongings were left behind, and eventually her roommates decided to reach out to her bank to inquire if there had been any recent activity related to her account. When they learned that there was none, alarm bells started to go off, and it was at this point they called her parents in nearby Kent. They told them that they hadn’t heard from their daughter either, and upon hearing that no one had heard or seen from her daughter, Mrs. Ball immediately called the police. This is why she was not reported missing until June 17, 1974: two and a half weeks later.

According to police reports, the day before she disappeared at roughly 2 PM on Friday, May 31, 1974 Brenda did tell friends that she was thinking about catching a ride to go camp with some friends at Sun Lakes-Dry Falls State Park in the eastern part of the state the Memorial Day weekend after her night at The Flame. The park is located a little over two hundred miles away, and is roughly a four hour drive from Normandy Park.

At first, police didn’t link Balls disappearance to the other missing Seattle girls: by this time in mid-1974, Lynda Ann Healy, Donna Gail Manson, Susan Rancourt and Roberta Kathleen Parks were all abducted from places directly related to a college campus (except Healy who technically lived in an off-campus apartment, but I’m being nitpicky and I think you understand what I’m getting at). Brenda, on the other hand, was a bit older than the other victims (at a whopping 22 years old) and had disappeared from a seedy dive bar. She also had a well-established history of disappearing then reappearing, usually for days at a time. Former King County Detective Bob Keppel claimed that her disappearance didn’t have anything in common with the other missing women, and because of this law enforcement didn’t release any information about her case to the media until August 7, 1974. The police weren’t the only ones that were hesitant to publicly connect the dots between Brenda and the other missing girls: it was incredibly challenging to find newspaper articles related to her, and maybe if her disappearance was treated the same as Lynda Ann Healy’s or Georgann Hawkins they would have caught Bundy sooner.

Although not calling Brenda by name, Seattle based paper ‘The Sunday News’ published an article about her disappearance roughly one month after her case became public. She wasn’t brought up again until the gruesome discovery of her skull at Taylor Mountain in March of 1975 (I’ll talk more about that shortly).

Towards the end of the night after the band wrapped up their set, Ball asked one of its members that she knew for a ride home back to her shared house, but he told her that he was heading in the opposite direction and couldn’t. Now, there are two conflicting possibilities regarding how Ms. Ball possibly left the tavern on the night she disappeared: the first being that she left alone with plans of hitching a ride home, and the second one is that she left with an unidentified man wearing an arm sling.

It was reported by an employee at the Flame Tavern that Brenda was seen talking to a good-looking man that had his arm in a sling towards the end of the evening on May 31, 1974. It is worth mentioning that this statement was probably made at some point later in time (most likely after the initial police report was made in mid-June), because if the witness told law enforcement about the assailant using an arm sling at the beginning of the investigation, then it is highly likely that they would have immediately made the connection between Brenda’s disappearance and the other missing Seattle girls. By August of 1974, King County law enforcement knew that the man they were looking for was using a fake injury ruse, and because of this, it would make one think that any report of Brenda talking to a good-looking man with his arm in a sling would have been more important or prioritized.

On May 31, 1974 Ted was spending the evening with his girlfriend Liz Kloepfer, her daughter Molly, and her parents that were visiting Seattle from Utah. Kloepfer said that Bundy took everyone out for a pizza dinner but was reportedly in a hurry to leave and get out of there at the end of the night. The following is a transcript from one of her interviews: ‘it was a Saturday night, and my parents came out from Utah. The tradition in the Mormon faith is that when you’re eight years old, you get baptized. And so I was going to have my daughter Molly baptized, and my father was going to do the baptism. We went out to dinner the night before, and Ted treated us all to pizza. He was in a big hurry to go after we were done with pizza. The next day, he didn’t show up. He completely missed the baptism. He was probably two hours late. And after it was all done, he showed up at the church. I forget what he said was the excuse. Car trouble or something like that. I was mad because he was making me look bad in front of my parents. But, you know, never in our wildest dreams did we think he was out abducting people.’

Personally, I think Ted was practically giddy at the thought of committing another murder and wanted to get out of there as soon as possible. The last time that he killed was on May 6, when he drove almost four and a half hours to Oregon State College in Corvallis to abduct Kathy Parks. Furthermore, the fact that he was late for Molly’s baptism the following morning citing ‘car troubles’ almost makes one think he was held up trying to get rid of Ball’s body and clean up any lingering mess and simply lost track of time… or, maybe he went back to the body that morning for sexual reasons and his girlfriend was the absolute furthest thing from his mind. We’ll never know.

I think I own every single piece of literature ever written about Ted Bundy (I’m joking, but I do have quite a few and between two jobs, school, and my husband I may one day get through them all). In Michaud and Aynesworth book ‘Conversations with a Killer,’ Ted would frequently speculate about what ‘may have’ happened to the victims while talking in the third-person, and according to him ‘the killer’ may have intentionally changed his modus operandi slightly in Balls case by picking up a hitchhiker. Also, going after a victim that was in a slightly different population helped him fly under the radar a bit as missing young women on college campuses were getting a lot of attention at the time. He furthered that in his journey that night, the killer stumbled upon Brenda, who was looking for a ride home from a bar and after picking her up the two got friendly, and her assailant attempted small talk in an attempt to help keep her distracted and unafraid. When he learned that she didn’t have any plans for the rest of the night/early morning he asked if she wanted to go to a party back at his place, an invitation that she accepted. The drive back to his rooming house may have seemed casual on the outside but it was coldly calculated on the inside: her killer wanted to appear friendly and jovial so as not to alarm and frighten her, as he wanted to keep her relaxed and at ease. But of course, when they arrived there was no gathering, and he then concocted a story about why it was just the two of them. Bundy said that at first Ball seemed slightly hesitant on coming in, however the boredom and drunkenness eventually took over and she went inside. He went on to say that they continued drinking until she was ‘exceptionally intoxicated’ and apparently the two had a ‘consensual’ sexual encounter.

Unfortunately for Ms. Ball, a night of drinking and sex that was ‘more or less’ consensual was not enough to completely squash her killer’s dark desires, and because of this, he waited until she was asleep then strangled her to death. Many members of law enforcement and true crime scholars doubt this pseudo-confession (for obvious reasons): if we pretend Ted is telling the truth then it means that he brought Brenda back to his room at the Rogers Rooming House, and considering that he had lived there for quite a few years by then and was in a well-established relationship with Liz Kloepfer, this would have been an incredibly risky move on his part. What if he ran into another resident, or Ernst and Frieda? I mean… It was 2:00 AM, and Ted lived there for quite a few years by then so I’m sure he knew the nocturnal patterns of his fellow tenants (especially since he was such a night owl himself). But… When you think about the fact that Bundy was often drunk and/or high during his murders, it makes me lean towards him being an impulsive person that didn’t seem to think through his attacks very well. I’m sure for the most part Bundy scholars are overthinking things a bit: drunk Ted didn’t think, he acted… therefore, I think he most likely had a tough time keeping his shit together during the 15-minute drive back to his room from The Flame, and it would have made more sense that he drove Ball to a remote location then killed her.

The following is a quick but super interesting snippet from Michaud and Aynesworth’s book ‘Conversations with a Killer’ regarding Balls disappearance:
Michaud: ‘He’d take her home?’
Bundy: ‘Sure.’
Michaud: ‘It would seem terribly risky.’
Bundy: ‘If you live with someone. But he had his own house.’

Obviously, we know part of this ‘confession’ isn’t true if Bundy is talking about himself: he obviously lived with the Rogers as well as MULTIPLE other people at the time of Brenda’s murder, not in a house, alone. Now what would have happened if he wasn’t perfect in his attempt to kill Ball and she put up a struggle, and let’s say (just a theoretical) she started kicking and screaming while trying to put up a fight? That would have drawn a LOT of attention to him and probably would have gotten him caught, and I think that was the very last thing that he wanted. During interviews while on death row, Bundy told investigators that he cut off the heads of twelve of his victims, and according to Dr. Robert Keppel, he told FBI Agent Bill Hagmaier once that he kept ‘as many as four heads’ in his room on 12th Avenue in Seattle. Was Brenda’s one of them?

I’m not exactly sure why but I absolutely adore Phyllis Armstrong from Netflix’s ‘Falling for a Killer.’ I found her very sweet and easy to like, and I could tell she genuinely loves Georgann, and misses her. In one of her segments during the documentary, Armstrong said that at around 11 PM on May 31, 1974 (roughly three hours before Ms. Ball disappeared) a man using crutches asked her for help carrying a can of gas to his VW Bug on the campus at the University of Washington. She said yes, and when they reached his vehicle he asked her to get inside and push a button located underneath the steering wheel, starting it. At this point Phyllis was starting to get the willies, and after making up an excuse and apologizing she quickly dropped the can got the heck out of there. That gut instinct probably saved her life.

Now think about it: this encounter took place just a few hours before Brenda Ball went missing, which means if the man Bundy was talking about was indeed himself, then his confession about ‘the killer’ changing up his MO to hunt an ‘older woman’ in order to avoid getting caught was just another lie. Meaning, he didn’t switch it up as part of a well thought out plan: he just bombed out with Phyllis and needed to find another girl to kill. I mean, look at what happened when he crapped-out with Carol DaRonach in SLC? He drove to a high school roughly twenty miles away and abducted Deb Kent. After Balls abduction Ted went back to taking his victims from a school setting: Georgann Hawkins was next, and her abduction took place not even two weeks later on June 11th, 1974. She was taken early in the morning on her way home from a party outside of her sorority house at the University of Washington.

It’s also worth bringing up that Ball’s skull had a large fracture in the back of it when it was found on Taylor Mountain, and the King County Medical Examiner determined that she was missing one of her temporal bones, suggesting that her assailant may have struck her in the head with a blunt object (like a crowbar, as TB was known to have used). Bundy never mentioned this during his ‘confession,’ so if he really strangled her to death, then why was a large part of the right side of her skull missing? This injury completely contradicts the statement he made that he strangled her until she expired.

However, thinking in an ‘outside the box’ sort of way, what about foraging animals? Could they have been responsible for the giant hole that was found in Brenda’s skull? The wildlife population in Washington state is pretty diverse… It’s home to bobcats, lynxes, multiple types of bears, wolverines, deer and many other large animals. Could a large outdoor creature have stepped on her skull after Bundy dumped her in the forest, causing the fracture, maybe a bear? The area is home to both grizzly and black bears: an average sized adult male grizzly weighs anywhere from 300-650 pounds, and a male black bear can exceed 600 pounds. Well, apparently I wasn’t the only person that thought of this: according to the King County ME, there is a zero chance that Ball’s skull fracture occurred because of local wildlife. This means that if Bundy was telling the truth about strangling the young woman to death, then it is difficult to see why he would have also needed to inflict such a traumatic injury upon her as well.

The following is a short excerpt regarding Brenda Ball from ‘The Riverman: Ted Bundy and I Hunt for the Green River Killer,’ written by Dr Robert Keppel:
‘The dentition of the skull contained a pattern of silver fillings that were familiar to me. I had memorized the dental work detailed on [victim’s dental] charts and easily recognized the jawless expression of Brenda Carol Ball. My crude on-site identification was to be confirmed by a forensic odontologist three days later. We photographed the cranium from all angles and measured its position to two temporary triangulation stakes. We carefully picked up the skull and preserved it in the position in which it was resting. Since dusk was setting in, we decided to wait until the next day to resume our search for the remainder of the skeleton.’

Despite the fact that LE was hesitant to link Ball to the other missing Washington state girls, ironically it was because of her that they were discovered in the first place: on Sunday, March 1st, 1975, two forestry students from a nearby community college were doing a project at Taylor Mountain when they spotted her skull lying among the damp, moss-covered trees. Shortly after, investigators unearthed the craniums of Lynda Ann Healy, Susan Elaine Rancourt, and Kathy Parks; in addition to skulls, search parties also found clumps of hair as well as an array of human bones, including a mandible and a femur that is strongly believed to have belonged to Georgann Hawkins (however they had nothing else to compare it to and it was eventually misplaced).

The following is an excerpt from the ‘SurivingSara’ GoodReads blogspot; I will include the direct link below if anyone is interested in reading all of it. Just as a side note, I wrote an article about ‘Sara A. Survivor,’ which is a pseudonym for her real name of Susan Roller. She reportedly is a surviving Bundy victim and claims that she suffered from long term abuse by him, and by this I mean she said they had a relationship (of sorts) and she sustained repeated physical and psychological abuse as a result, trauma that she alleges that she still suffers from today. I won’t go too far into her as there’s an entire separate article written about her, but she’s a real piece of work and REALLY has it out for the King County Sheriff’s, specifically Bob Keppel:
‘Skeletal remains at the scene, marked with evidence numbers, were sent to Superior Court, then returned back to the King County Sheriff Office and then sent to the ME: all the evidence numbers of the skeletal remains line up and those numbers verify they were found on site in March of 1975 at the time of the discovery of Taylor Mountain. Further, those remains were sent to Texas in 2005 and identified via DNA three of the four girls found on Taylor Mountain and another who could not be identified. In addition, records show that at least 1-2 individuals besides Ott and Naslund were found at Issaquah and at least 1 individual not matching the four girls found at Taylor Mountain was found at Taylor Mountain. Both crime scenes had girls’ clothing, jewelry, and other evidence. None of this appears to have been preserved.’

On Memorial Day weekend of 2022 I went on an overnight trip to explore Bundy’s former hood in Philadelphia, PA, and I made the drive from Attica, NY which was about a 6.5 hour drive, one way. Making that drive two days in a row was a bit nuts, but I absolutely LOVED it because I renewed my Audible subscription, put on ‘The Phantom Prince,’ and just drove… and I’m really glad I did that because it provided me with a lot of smaller details regarding Balls murder that I wasn’t aware of previously… Because Liz’s Mom kept a detailed journal, there is a detailed account as to exactly what happened on the evening of May 31, 1974:(as I said earlier), Ted treated everyone to dinner at Pizza & Pipes, however she mentioned that the meal seemed rushed and it only lasted for roughly an hour and a half. She went on to say that after everyone was finished eating, Bundy dropped them all off at Liz’s house and said that he was going home.

I am absolutely flabbergasted by how fearless Bundy was: for a good amount of his atrocities he operated VERY close to home, and when I was in Seattle I saw first hand just how close in proximity everything was to one another. When I went to the site of where Karen Sparks once lived (the residence was torn down to make room for apartment buildings) I literally looked up and there was The (former) Sandpiper! Also, The Flame Tavern is only 4.2 miles away from the Rogers Rooming House, which is less than a 15-minute drive. Plus he lived in the general Seattle area since he was a young boy: HOW DID HE NOT RUN INTO ANYONE HE KNEW??! I know if I was going to feign injury while committing multiple felonies I would at least do it in an area where I was positive that I wouldn’t be recognized. Piggybacking off that, the fact that he killed women from the same university that he attended further amazes me. He must have had gigantic stones.

As far as the truth goes… I really think Bundy liked screwing with his audience, whoever it was. Journalists. Members of law enforcement. Carole Ann Boone. He’d tell one person one thing then turn around and tell another something completely different. He would literally change his story for his audience, and lied so frequently about so much… Obviously, like so many other Ted related things, we’re going to have to take his pseudo-confession with a grain of salt, and unless someone discovers his long-lost diary, we’ll probably never know what happened to Brenda Ball. However, one thing is for certain: her life was cut short because of Ted Bundy.

Thanks to the website OddStops (which is amazing, and if you haven’t checked it out yet you totally should), I found some interesting facts about the former Flame Tavern, most recently called ‘El Baron Rojo:’ the building was built in 1928 and in 2007 it sold for $990,000. During the 1970’s, the tavern was known for its live music, and drunken brawls would frequently break out in their parking lot. Denise Naslund (another confirmed victim of Ted’s that he would go on to abduct then kill exactly one month and two weeks later from Lake Sammamish) was a frequent patron of the bar. In addition to Brenda Ball’s abduction, in 1977 twenty-one year-old Rhonda Louise Burse was last seen getting into a car in the tavern’s parking lot and was never seen or heard from again. At one point the watering hole went by the name ‘MVP Sports Bar,’ and in 2008 a man was shot and killed somewhere on the premises with an AK-47 assault rifle, and in 2020, former owner Sonia Olvera Jimenez was arrested for the murder of a gentleman that was renting a room in her house.

Mr. Ball passed away on August 13, 1988 somewhere in Pierce County, WA. Brenda’s mother remarried a man named Donald Arnaud on March 9, 1974 and despite looking EVERYWHERE (Google, Ancestry, MyHeritage, etc…) I was unable to find any record of her passing away (even though she would currently be in her 100’s, but it’s not completely unheard of). According to an Associated News article regarding Bundy’s execution: ‘Rosemary Arnaud, mother of 22-year-old Brenda Ball, who disappeared outside a Burien, Wash., tavern in 1974, said Bundy’s death will be a relief only in the knowledge that he will never be able to kill again.’

Works Cited:
https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_posts/15965444-skeletal-remains-were-found-at-taylor-mountain
https://apnews.com/article/e83729933cf61be312252a25cf879025

Brenda Ball’s sophomore picture from the 1968 Mount Rainier High School yearbook.
Brenda Ball’s junior picture from the 1969 Mount Rainier High School yearbook.
Brenda Ball’s senior picture from the 1970 Mount Rainier High School yearbook.
A grab from Ball’s 1970 Mount Rainier High School yearbook of her senior activities.
A barefoot Brenda.
Brenda Ball’s ID card.
Brenda Ball.
Brenda Carol Ball.
A missing persons bulletin about the disappearance of Brenda Carol Ball.
An article about the disappearance of Brenda Ball published by The Olympian on August 7, 1974.
An article mentioning Brenda Ball published in The Daily Herald-Tribune on March 5, 1975.
An article about the murder of Brenda Ball published in The Spokane Chronicle on March 5, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Sun Post News on March 5, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Corpus Christi Times on March 5, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Lewiston Tribute on March 5, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Spokesman-Review on March 6, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Daily Herald on March 6, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Middlesboro Daily News on March 7, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times on March 7, 1975.
An article mentioning Brenda Ball published in The Minneapolis Star on March 8, 1975.
An article mentioning Brenda Ball published in The Herald on March 8, 1975.
An article mentioning Brenda Ball published in The Statesman Journal News on March 9, 1975.
An article mentioning Brenda Ball published in The San Francisco Examiner on March 9, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Longview Daily News on March 11, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Statesman Journal on March 11, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Gazette on March 12, 1975.
An article about Brenda Ball published in The Idaho State Journal on October 3, 1975.
An article about Bundy that mentions Brenda Ball published in Florida Today on July 9, 1979.
An article about Ann Rule’s true crime classic ‘The Stranger Beside Me’ that mentions Brenda Ball, published in The Miami News on October 22, 1980.
In his statement to the media, Lt. Richard Kraske said that there seemed to be no link between Brenda’s case and the other women. Photo courtesy of ThisInterestsMe.
In the days leading up to Bundy’s execution, Brenda’s mother Rosemary Arnaud said that his death will be a relief because it means that he will never be able to kill again. Photo courtesy of ThisInterestsMe.
The Sunday News published this article one month after Brenda’s case became public; it did not mention her nor feature her picture among the missing. Photo courtesy of ThisInterestsMe.
Brenda Ball’s death certificate.
Brenda Balls grave. I apologize it’s not a better quality picture, it was the only l one could find. When I go back to Seattle next year I’ll get a better one.
An older image of a sign for the tavern from the 1970’s. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
The band ‘Child Jam’ performing at The Flame Tavern in the 1970’s.
The former Flame Tavern as it looked in the 1970’s’; it’s located at 12803 Ambaum Boulevard in Burien, WA.
An older image of the tavern from the 1970’s. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
This Google Street View image of the bar was taken in 2011. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
The former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022; it’s located at 12803 Ambaum Boulevard in Burien, WA. I stopped by as I was on my way to Gary Ridgway’s house (which is shockingly close to where Bundy operated).
The front sign from former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022.
The back parking lot of the former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022.
The former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022.
The former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022.
The former Flame Tavern as it looked in April 2022.
Pizza and Pipes Restaurant, where Bundy took Liz and her family before he killed Brenda Ball.
A Google map route from The Flame Tavern to Taylor Mountain.
Google Maps directions route from The Flame Tavern to Taylor Mountain.
The old Rogers Rooming House on 12th Ave in Seattle in April 2022.
Highline Community College.
Ted Bundy’s Taylor Mountain dump site.
Ted Bundy’s Taylor Mountain dump site.
Taylor Mountain, April 2022.
Brenda Balls skull. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Brenda Balls skull. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Brenda Balls skull. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Brenda Balls skull. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
Brenda Balls skull. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A grid of skulls testifies to the changing nature of the case police faced. Theirs was no longer a missing persons investigation. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A grid of skulls testifies to the changing nature of the case police faced. Theirs was no longer a missing persons investigation. Photo courtesy of Tiffany Jean.
A Google Earth image of the layout of the Taylor Mountain site. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
A map of the skulls found on Taylor Mountain. Photo courtesy of OddStops.
Duane Ball’s senior year picture from the 1948 West Seattle High School yearbook.
A newspaper blurb mentioning Brenda’s mother Rosemary joining the Spokane naval reserve published in The Spokesman-Review on October 21, 1949.
Mr. and Mrs. Ball’s marriage certificate.
Mr. and Mrs. Ball’s divorce certificate.
Brenda’s mothers second marriage certificate.
Rhonda Louise Burse, who was last seen at The Flame Tavern in Burien, Washington on August 8, 1977.