Posted on 02/26/2005 5:16:30 PM PST by AntiGuv
WICHITA, Kan. - A 31-year manhunt for a serial killer who taunted police with letters about his crimes ended Saturday when authorities said they finally caught up with the man who called himself BTK and linked him to at least 10 murders.
The suspect was identified as Dennis L. Rader, a 59-year-old city worker in nearby Park City, who was arrested Friday. Police did not say how they identified Rader as a suspect or whether he has said anything since his arrest.
"The bottom line: BTK is arrested," Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams said Saturday, setting off applause from a crowd that included family members of some of the victims.
BTK a self-coined nickname that stands for "Bind, Torture, Kill" stoked fears throughout the 1970s in Wichita, a manufacturing center with 350,000 residents, about 180 miles southwest of Kansas City, Mo.
Then the killer resurfaced about a year ago after 25 years of silence. He had been linked to eight slayings between 1974 and 1986, but police said Saturday they had identified two more, from 1985 and 1991.
Rader, a Cub Scout leader who was active at his Lutheran church, lived with his wife, neighbors said. Public records indicate they have two grown children. Messages left for family members were not returned on Saturday, and no one answered the door at the home of his in-laws.
A few neighbors recalled receiving small favors from Rader, but most interviewed Saturday said the municipal codes enforcement supervisor was an unpleasant man who often went looking for reasons to cite his neighbors for violations of city codes.
"A part of me was scared when I heard, because I talked to him. It's a little creepy," said Chris Yoder, 23, who once lived nearby.
Rader has yet to be charged, but a jubilant collection of law enforcers and community leaders told the crowd in City Council chambers they were confident the long-running case could now be closed.
"Victims whose voices were brutally silenced by the evil of one man will now have their voices heard again," Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline said.
Rader was being held at an undisclosed location, and it was not immediately clear if he had a lawyer. In Kansas, suspects generally appear before a judge for a status hearing within 48 hours of their arrest.
Prosecutor Nola Foulston said the death penalty would not apply to any crime committed before 1994, when the death penalty was introduced in Kansas.
The BTK slayings began in 1974 with the strangulations of Joseph Otero, 38, his wife, Julie, 34, and their two children. The six victims that followed were all women, and most were strangled.
Along with his grisly crimes, the killer terrorized Wichita by sending rambling letters to the media, including one in which he named himself BTK for "Bind them, Torture them, Kill them." In another he complained, "How many do I have to kill before I get my name in the paper or some national attention?"
But he stopped communicating in 1979 and remained silent for more than two decades before re-establishing contact last March with a letter to The Wichita Eagle about an unsolved 1986 killing.
The letter included a copy of the victim's driver's license and photos of her slain body. The return address on the letter said it was from Bill Thomas Killman initials BTK.
Since then, the killer had sent at least eight letters to the media or police, including three packages containing jewelry that police believed may have been taken from BTK's victims. One letter contained the driver's license of victim Nancy Fox.
The new letters sent chills through Wichita but also rekindled hope that modern forensic science could find some clue that would finally lead police to the killer.
Thousands of tips poured in, and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation gathered thousands of DNA swabs in connection with the BTK investigation. In the end, DNA evidence was the key to cracking the case, said Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.
"The way they made the link was some DNA evidence, that they had some DNA connection to the guy who they arrested," Sebelius said in an interview with The Associated Press. She did not elaborate.
The two newly identified cases were similar to the early ones with one exception, Sedgwick County Sheriff Gary Stead said: The bodies had been removed from the crime scenes. One of the victims lived on the same street as Rader.
"We as investigators keep an open mind. But only now are we able to bring them together as BTK cases," he said.
On Friday, investigators searched Rader's house and seized computer equipment.
Authorities, who generally declined to answer questions in detail after announcing the arrest, had little to say about why BTK resurfaced after years without contact.
"It is possible something in his life has changed. I think he felt the need to get his story out," said Richard LaMunyon, Wichita's police chief from 1963 to 1989.
Very interesting. Has this be made well known or exclusive to here?
BTW, Kansas did have the death penalty at one point because the guys in Truman Capote's In Cold Blood were hung in Kansas.
LOL. Yes, sure I have an explaination:
We keep better records.
Well, I have exclusive sources, but it was all confirmen on Fox news tonight.....
Killing a wife and a husband plus two children must have been pretty complicated and long. I wonder if he had an accomplish at some point. Why didn't the husband fight him off while the wife fled with the kids?
Gacy was also a volunteer clown. Bundy did political volunteer work and had been a law school student.
< highly civilized and orderly society providing few, if any, 'legitimate' outlets for such murderous impulses >
What the he!!? Pray tell, just what "legitimate" outlets are we supposed to provide to people who have murderous impulses so they can practice?
Ex-Military ? Albeit I believe ya .....I'm missing that in the article here ...do ya have a source for that for me.
Traditionally, they could go off on the next venture to rape and pillage the neighboring tribe....
PS. Slaves and conquered subjects were always a 'popular' outlet as well. So were underclasses of other kinds.
Actually Wikipedia is not only in English.
The 20 largest Wikipedias (February 10, 2005):
English (471035)
German (Deutsch) (197941)
Japanese (99658)
French (Français) (81095)
Swedish (Svenska) (60460)
Polish (Polska) (55451)
Dutch (Nederlands) (51616)
Spanish (Español) (41468)
Italian (Italiano) (34337)
Portuguese (Português) (30946)
Danish (Dansk) (22305)
Esperanto (20594)
Chinese (20197)
Norwegian (17479)
Finnish (Suomi) (14983)
Hebrew
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They dont count dictators as serial killers.
Their victims are counted as mass killings.
That's true. I don't know how they share information, but maybe if you searched on the other wikis you would find more. But I have heard there are many more serial killers in the US.
Presumably, he used a gun to control the husbands into allowing him to restrain them. After that, he's in control.
He probably assured the adults that he was only interested in simple robbery---which would make it easier to bind them without incident.
People tend to become compliant at gunpoint, especially when children are in the house.
Pretty smart, actually.
Freedom of the press?
Like he was prowling the major boulevards. Urban hunting.
................... A more specific profile of a serial killer has been presented by Apsche stating that most are white males in their twenties or thirties, who target strangers near their homes or places of work. "According to criminologist Eric Hickey, who has assembled the most extensive database on demography of serial murder states that, 88% of serial killers are male, 85% are Caucasian, and the average age when they claim their first victim is usually around 28.5. In terms of victim selection, 62% of the killers target strangers exclusively, and another 22% kill at least one stranger. Finally, 71% of the killers operate in a specific location or area, rather than traveling wide distances to commit their crimes"(Apsche, 1993, p.16).
Also, the F.B.I claims that to be classified as a serial killer, the person must first complete 3 separate murders, that are spaced by a duration they call "the cooling off period" which can vary from a few days to years.
But one thing that very few definitions include is that for a killer to be known as a "serial Killer", they must have a particular method to their killings.
For instance, Wayne Gacy, had the trade mark of gagging victims with their own underwear so that they would die in their own vomit.
David Berkowitz, known as "The son of Sam", is a typical example of an average serial killer, and quiet normal in comparison to his other counterparts who have been known to eat their victims. From the years of 1976 through to 1977, he set out his reign of terror in New York City, by shooting over ten lovers who were parked in secluded areas. Upon being interviewed by John Douglas (a member of the F.B.I) at Attica State Prison, it was discovered that Berkowitz came from an adopted home, and upon discovering his real mother, was told by her that he wasnt wanted. Originally being shy, insecure, and angry, he blossomed into a potential killer. He procured a large and powerful weapon, which in turn made him feel bigger and more powerful, and set about unknowingly to obtain revenge for what his mother had done to him.
In most cases, there is an event known as the "Pre-crime stresser", as discussed by Ressler, Burgess, and Douglas (1990). The pre-crime stresser can be looked at as the reason for why the person turns to killing as a form of release, even if the criminal does not realise the full extent of his motivations or fails to see the reasons behind the stress he feels. A clear example of this can be seen upon the questioning of Berkowitz who denied he had anything against women, nor did he have reason as to why he killed so many. In actually fact, his mothers rejection was the stresser that ultimately turned him violent. He did not attack his mother directly (few serial killers ever attack the source of their resentment), but the majority of his killings where based on women who had a likeness to his mother. http://www.uplink.com.au/lawlibrary/Documents/Docs/Doc5.html
And your evidenece of this statement is er, where?
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