Crime Scene: True Stories of Crime and Detection
By Gary C. King
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About this ebook
Bizarre, compelling, terrifying and authentic true crime stories of murder and mayhem. In these pages you will find a story about a tormented serial killer and how he resorted to cannibalism, a celebrity's fan with an obsession to murder her, torture murders, crimes of passion, among many others—chilling crimes that could only be perpetrated by the twisted minds and gruesome obsessions of coldblooded killers, the stuff that horror movies and novels are made of, brought to you from the vault of bestselling true crime author and serial killer expert Gary C. King.
There are 15 terrifying, heart-pounding true crime stories in all, guaranteed to keep you awake and your doors locked!
Gary C. King
For the last 35 years, author Gary C. King has been one of America's foremost true crime writers. Over 500 of his stories have appeared in crime magazines across the United States, Canada, and England, including True Detective, Official Detective, Inside Detective, Front Page Detective, and Master Detective. He has also written online content for truTV's Crime Library, Investigation Discovery, Discovery Channel, and other media outlets, and has published 19 books. After more than three decades of being traditionally-published, King is now an independent author.
Read more from Gary C. King
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Book preview
Crime Scene - Gary C. King
Bizarre, compelling and authentic true crime stories of murder and mayhem. In these pages you will find a story about serial murder and cannibalism, a celebrity murder, torture murders, crimes of passion, among many others—chilling crimes that could only be perpetrated by the twisted minds and gruesome obsessions of coldblooded killers, the stuff that horror movies and novels are made of, brought to you from the vault of bestselling true crime author and serial killer expert Gary C. King.
CRIME SCENE
True Stories of Crime and Detection
Gary C. King
Accolades for Gary C. King
Using the most intimate of facts, King draws readers as far inside the mind of murderers as rational, moral people can go—the rest of the journey, thank the gods, is beyond our knowing. King’s talent and faithful service does honor to the dogged truth-seekers who finally bring justice for those whose lives were stolen.
Noreen Ayres, author of the Smokey Brandon mystery series.
A page-turner for true crime fans.
Vincent Bugliosi, author of HELTER SKELTER and THE PROSECUTION OF GEORGE W. BUSH FOR MURDER, on BUTCHER.
Gary C. King is one of the best true crime writers on the scene today.
R. Barri Flowers, Author of THE SEX SLAVE MURDERS.
You will never want to walk alone again after reading this book.
Dr. Maurice Godwin, Criminal Psychologist and Author, on BUTCHER.
In a serial murder case almost too ghastly to comprehend, skilled true crime researcher (and writer) Gary C. King leads the reader deep into a world of unimaginable depravity, to meet a savage killer unlike any before him, who literally fed on dozens of helpless young women—whose defiled bodies then simply…disappeared. This book will jolt you…a page-turner.
Clark Howard, author of City Blood and Love’s Blood, on TO DIE FOR.
Writer Gary C. King knows the dark side of the Northwest as well as anybody…an unflinching account of one of the most vicious reigns of terror by one of the sickest psychopaths in the annals of crime.
--Official Detective, on BLOOD LUST: Portrait of a Serial Sex Killer
Effective account of the worst serial killer in Oregon’s history.
—Publishers Weekly, on BLOOD LUST: Portrait of a Serial Sex Killer.
Also by Gary C. King
Blood Lust: Portrait of a Serial Sex Killer
Driven to Kill
Murder in Room 305
To Die For
An Early Grave
The Texas 7
Murder in Hollywood
Angels of Death
Stolen in the Night
Love, Lies, and Murder
An Almost Perfect Murder
Butcher
Rage
The Murder of Meredith Kercher
Savage Vengeance
Murder Most Foul
Be sure to check out King’s true crime podcasts for a behind the scenes look at the writing of his books.
© Copyright Bleak House Publishing, Inc. and Gary C. King Enterprises, Inc. 2013
Cover image copyright Andrei Klochkov 2013. Used under license from Shutterstock.com.
This is the Smashwords edition.
This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com or your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
For Alex.
Thanks for everything!
Contents
Chapter 1: Tortured by the Sadist in the Press Box
Chapter 2: The Piece of Meat was Pamela’s Thigh
Chapter 3: The Riddle of the Missing Sea Dog
Chapter 4: Pretty Tourist’ Trek to Torture
Chapter 5: A Rage to Destroy the Pristine Screen Beauty?
Chapter 6: Humiliation, Torture and Murder!
Chapter 7: New Mexico’s Murder Most Foul!
Chapter 8: If You Don’t Kill Me, I’ll Do Anything You Want!
Chapter 9: Pervert Used His Torture Kit
on Krista!
Chapter 10: The Lethal Caress of a Devil Worshipper?
Chapter 11: Kinky Swingers Flung Their Sex Slave Off A Cliff!
Chapter 12: Torture Slaying of the Woman and the Demon Seed
Chapter 13: Tamara Sent Her Stud to Snuff Her Ex!
Chapter 14: Mass Murder on the Mississippi Coast
Chapter 15: Jeffrey Dahmer: The Butcher of Milwaukee’s Human Slaughterhouse
About the Author
Also by Gary C. King
True Crime Podcasts: A behind the scenes look at writing true crime.
Tortured by the Sadist in the Press Box
The evening of December 27, 1979 was a cold one. The sky was mostly clear, free from the clouds so common to many parts of the Beaver State, and the light of the moon and stars shone brightly off the snow that had made itself a temporary home in the hills surrounding Ashland. The effect made the night seem colder than it actually was, and it gave the small southern Oregon tourist community a peaceful quality with a brilliance all its own.
Then, suddenly, the tranquility of the evening was harshly broken by the loud, terrifying screams coming from the press box which overlooks Southern Oregon State College’s football field located on the town’s south side.
Rachel! Oh, Rachel, how could someone do something like this?
the terror-stricken man cried out. He had discovered the cold, mutilated body of 11-year-old Rachel Isser, one of two young girls who had disappeared earlier in the day. The girl who was still missing was Deanna Jackman –the distraught man’s daughter!
Rachel’s body was nude; it was evident that she had been dead for several hours. Numerous lacerations were visible on her body, inflicted by some sharp instrument which accounted for the massive amount of blood on the floor. The girl’s face was swollen and blue, and a white cord was wrapped tightly around her slender neck.
Although Rachel Isser and Deanna Jackman attended separate elementary schools, they became close friends after meeting each other at a Jewish Sabbath school. They regarded their friendship very highly and always looked forward to spending their free time together.
Early on the afternoon of December 27 they decided to play tennis at nearby Hunter Park, where they had played many times before. The two sixth graders left Rachel’s home shortly after 2 p.m., and Rachel told her mother that they would be back in a couple of hours.
About an hour after the girls had left, Mrs. Isser noticed that Rachel had not worn her coat to the park. Since it was a cold afternoon she decided to take the coat to her daughter. Upon arriving at the park, she discovered that Rachel and Deanna were not there. Somewhat worried, she started towards home, her concern growing. It was not like the girls to say they were going somewhere and then not do so, she thought to herself.
When Rachel and Deanna did not return home for dinner, the parents of both girls became worried. They decided to search the neighborhood, fanning out and taking the most direct route to the park. But there was no sign of the two children, and their efforts seemed to be in vain. Shortly after 5 p.m. they called the Ashland Police Department and asked for assistance.
Hours passed, and the parents became frantic in their efforts to find their daughters. Suddenly Deanna’s father stopped in front of the bleachers at the college stadium. There, lying on the ground in front of him, were two tennis rackets and a can of tennis balls. A sudden feeling of panic overwhelmed him. As he searched the area of the bleachers thoroughly, he noticed that the door of the press box was slightly ajar, and that is what had led him there in the first place. He opened the door and — much to his horror — saw Rachel’s naked body sprawled on the floor. That is when he began to scream.
Police were nearby, aiding in the search, when they heard the frenzied man’s shrieks. When they arrived at the press box, the distraught father was kneeling over Rachel’s body, sobbing. Police found several pieces of Deanna’s clothing there, identified by her father, but Rachel’s clothing was missing.
The search for Deanna continued into the long hours of Thursday night and Friday, but the outlook appeared bleak. Still, nobody had given up hope. Ashland and nearby Medford Police, Oregon State Police, Jackson County Sheriff’s Office, and the southern Oregon State College campus security police all played a major role in the search for Deanna. More than 50 people participated, and a trained police dog was brought in by Jackson County officers to aid the searchers.
Then, at 3:45 Friday afternoon, the search for Deanna Jackman ended. Her body - completely naked - had been spotted from a helicopter by state police. It was lying in a clearing across from gravel pits on Dead Indian Road, east of Ashland in a lonely, secluded area about six miles from the site where Rachel’s body had been found. From the marks on her body, it appeared to police that she may have been thrown out of a moving car.
This is the first time in Ashland that we’ve ever had a case like this,
said Police Chief Vic Lively. We’ve had murders here before, but never children. It’s got us very upset.
Leads began to trickle in, but so far none had proved helpful in finding a suspect.
At this point we need any information we can get,
Chief Lively said at a press conference.
In his concern for public safety, Lively expressed fear that the killer might strike again.
The possibility scares me to death,
he said.
Public concern, outrage, and fear continued to grow in the town of 15,000 as police followed up every lead. Never in the history of Ashland had such an unsavory offense been committed. Parents were afraid to let their children go anywhere alone, and most parents took their children to school and picked them up afterwards. Children were escorted to hamburger stands and ice cream shops by their parents; the Ashland Daily Tidings, the local newspaper, changed their circulation schedule so its carriers would not have to be outdoors after dark. Everyone in the community was affected in one way or another, whether it be by grief, sorrow, fear, or outrage.
Ashland was always regarded as a relaxed, peaceful town, where people would come to enjoy a play at the Oregon Shakespearean Festival, to ski the slopes of Mt. Ashland, or to simply enjoy the scenery. But now Ashland had become a place of sadness and terror, and so it would remain until the sadistic child slayer could be apprehended and brought to justice.
The next day the state medical examiner’s office, under the direction of Deputy Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Larry Lewman, reported that Rachel Isser had died of strangulation.
She died by a ligature - something tied tightly around the neck - and Deanna Jackman died from traumatic asphyxiation, due to pressure that was placed over her nose and mouth by a soft object, such as a pillow or a hand,
Lewman noted.
Numerous abrasions and deep cuts were visible on both girls’ bodies, and the cuts were obviously produced by a sharp instrument of some sort - most probably a knife or razor. Marks on Deanna’s body made it appear as if she had been raped and brutally beaten. It looked as if the marks could have been made with a whip or leather belt. Both girls had been viciously raped and it was evident they had been tortured prior to their deaths.
The details of what happened to these girls are certainly gruesome. I have seen individual cases like this in the past,
said Lewman. But this is the first time I have seen the sexual as-saults and murders of two little girls. That’s what makes it a unique and frightening case,
he said. Lewman also stated he felt the Ashland killings were the first of their kind in Oregon.
We’ve received nearly one hundred leads,
said Chief Lively. But so far we still do not have a suspect. We have several pieces of evidence, but no one to link it to. We found fingerprints on one of the tennis rackets that do not belong to the owner, and these are still under analysis at the state crime lab.
The police continued their search for evidence along Dead Indian Road where Deanna’s body was found. Lawmen went door to door in an attempt to find useful leads. Officers tore out sections of the press box where Rachel was murdered, and sent them to the state crime lab for analysis.
People who had been jogging on the track at the football field on the afternoon of the Isser girl’s death came forward and offered police a description of a man who had been observed sitting alone in the bleachers. One jogger told authorities of a dark-haired man in his mid-twenties who looked angry and confused, and appeared to be talking to himself.
A young boy and his sister told police about a stocky man who had asked them to play basketball with them, but they declined the offer. They said the man was wearing a green sweat shirt and looked like a Mexican.
Witnesses who had seen the man in question were asked to draw sketches of him to aid the cops in their composite drawings of the man. According to Sgt. Daymon Barnard of the Ashland Police Department, the descriptions and drawings of the man were all very similar, indicating that only one man was probably involved in the slayings.
None of the people interviewed by the police saw more than one man,
Barnard said. The descriptions differed on the length of his hair and whether he had a moustache, and on the color of pants he wore,
he continued. But the descriptions of the man in question were very consistent in that he is in his early or mid-twenties, of medium height and build, has dark hair, and was wearing a green or blue sweat shirt.
And then, on Sunday, the police felt confident they had their man. A 27-year-old man confessed to murdering the two girls, after he first attempted suicide by jumping from an Interstate 5 overpass onto a passing semi-truck and its trailer. However, after investigating the details of his confession thoroughly, their confidence was quickly shattered. His confession conflicted with the evidence that had been collected and, after administering a lie detector test to him, he was cleared of any involvement in the homicides. It turned out he had psychological problems and was of the type to confess to heinous, high-profile crimes—not because he committed them, but because of the attention he could get from doing so.
On Monday, December 31, the Ashland Police Department released three composite drawings to the news media of a man they believed was a witness to the first murder and possibly a suspect in the case.
Meanwhile, Ashland Police Sgt. Mel Clements was assigned by Chief’ Vic Lively to head a four-man detective force to investigate the homicide case, along with assistance from the Oregon State Police and the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department.
The next day, after the composite drawings had been released to the public, the Ashland Police Department was swamped with telephone calls, each one offering information and names that could lead to the identity of the man being sought for questioning.
Police felt optimistic that they would solve the case soon. Nonetheless, they took precautionary measures by issuing warnings to parents and teachers to be suspicious of any strangers hanging around the schools. Parents were warned not to let their children go out alone, especially in the evening, until the case was solved.
The door to the press box at Southern Oregon State College’s stadium was always left unlocked and the area of Dead Indian Road was very secluded, located on the outskirts of town. This led police to theorize that the killer was an area resident because a transient would likely not be aware of such details.
Meanwhile, the Jackson County District Attorney’s Office made it known to the public that a hand-made quilt, soiled with dirt and blood, had been found inside a paper sack at a car wash. Tests showed that the blood on the quilt matched that of Deanna Jackman. A photograph of the quilt appeared in the local newspaper and on television, and authorities urged that anyone who recognized it to call the police immediately.
The photo of the quilt brought quick results. It was identified by Peter White as belonging to him. He said he left it on his bed at his home on Idaho Street, along with many other personal belongings, when he began staying at another residence. White also told police he had met a man by the name of Manuel Cortez in late November, and he had allowed Cortez to use his Idaho Street residence on a temporary basis. He also informed the police that Cortez worked at a Mexican restaurant, the El Toro Blanco, in Ashland.
After questioning the owners of the restaurant where Cortez worked, detectives felt they had enough evidence to arrest him on suspicion of murder. However, when police arrived with their warrants at the Idaho Street residence on January 4, 1980, it was clear that Cortez had fled, leaving the police with no one to take into custody for the double murder.
Police learned from a girlfriend of Cortez’s that he had lived in the Ashland area for only six or seven weeks and was originally from City of Industry, California, located near Los Angeles. She told police she did not know much about him, for she had only gone out with Cortez a few times.
After checking with California authorities, Detective Clements learned that Cortez was wanted in California on kidnapping and attempted rape charges. He allegedly kidnapped a 16 year-old Pomona girl in 1977 and held her for ransom in a garage, where he tried to rape her. He had planned to ask a ransom from her parents, but the girl refused to give Cortez her parents’ phone number, and she escaped unharmed and telephoned police.
Through painstaking detective work by those investigating the case, authorities learned that Cortez had a brother living in Salinas and a mother in City of Industry, both very likely spots for the hunted man to appear.
California police were alerted by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department that Cortez might be going to visit his brother in Salinas, but their efforts were once again thwarted. Cortez had just left his brother’s home prior to the arrival of police.
Not wasting any time, detectives set up a stakeout of Cortez’s mother’s house in City of Industry, where they waited for his arrival hoping that he would, indeed, show up.
And then, around noon on Saturday, January 5, 1980, Manuel Cortez was observed by detectives approaching his mother’s home. He was arrested immediately without resistance, only eight days after he allegedly raped, tortured, and killed Rachel Isser and Deanna Jackman.
Cortez, waiving his Miranda rights, agreed to a taped-recorded interview with Los Angeles Police. During the course of the hour-long interview, he confessed to killing the two Ashland girls and made comments concerning his mental state of mind. The police were certain they had the right man, for his confession did not conflict with the evidence in any way. The tape would subsequently be used as evidence and played at his trial.
Extradition procedures were instituted against Cortez immediately. California authorities agreed to support his extradition to Oregon rather than retain him for trial on the California charges.
Meanwhile, at the urging of Jackson County District Attorney Justin Smith, a grand jury returned two murder indictments against Manuel Trinidad Cortez, charging him with the strangling death of Rachel Isser and with suffocating Deanna Jackman.
The trial of Manuel Cortez was to be heard in Lane County Circuit Court in Eugene, Oregon, due to a change of venue granted earlier in Jackson County Circuit Court. The district attorney’s office intended to prosecute Cortez in two separate trials, first for the murder of Rachel Isser and following with a trial for the murder of Deanna Jackman.
The first trial, which began in July, 1980, lasted for three weeks. In spite of the 95 pieces of evidence and the testimony of 35 witnesses, not to mention the taped confession Cortez made while in Los Angeles, Lane County Circuit Judge George Woodrich declared a mistrial after 14 hours of deliberation because the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict.
It was then decided by District Attorney Smith to consolidate the two cases into one trial. The new trial was expected to be less prolonged than the first one, lasting from four to six days. The court would hear testimony from 40 witnesses.
Robert Webber and Lee Werdell, the defense attorneys who represented Cortez in the first trial, withdrew from the case. They disagreed with Cortez, who wished to use a defense of mental disease or defect. In the first trial the two attorneys tried to convince the jury of a lack of intent on the part of Cortez to kill the two girls.
Attorney Harry Carp was selected to represent Cortez after Webber and Werdell withdrew from the case, and Carp decided to use the defense of mental disease or defect. The second trial was scheduled to begin in October but was postponed at Carp’s request.
A jury of seven men and five women was chosen on November 14, and the trial was set to begin on November 18, 1980. Harry Carp told jurors that they would hear gruesome testimony.
You will hear testimony that you will not want to tell your children about,
he said. By the end of this case, you will have heard about carnage, and you will have heard about torture.
He also stated he hoped the jurors could keep an open mind regarding the charges against Cortez, despite the manner in which the girls were killed.
On the other hand, District Attorney Justin Smith said he hoped the jurors would not consider the possible penalty Cortez could receive when deciding if he was guilty or innocent. If he was found guilty of murder, he could be put to death in the state’s gas chamber.
When the trial began on November 18, it was held before the same Lane County Circuit Judge George Woodrich. Cortez remained calm and relaxed, listening intently, as he did during the first trial. Harry Carp, the defense counsel, waived his opening statement, allowing the prosecution to proceed.
Jackson County Deputy District Attorney Frank Desimone told the jury in his opening statement about the 26 events which led up to the discovery that the girls were missing. He told of how they found the disfigured bodies of the two girls, and gave some of the details of the investigation which eventually led to Cortez’s arrest at his mother’s home.
After the prosecutor completed his opening statement, he called Ron Carson to the witness stand. Carson, of Ashland, testified that he was jogging on the track of the college football field on the afternoon of December 27, 1979, the day the Isser girl was murdered. He said that he saw a man who looked similar to Cortez in the stadium.
He looked weird, agitated, and hostile,
recalled Carson. He looked as if he was in a bad mood and appeared to be under intense pressure, as if he might explode,
he said.
Bill Mead and his wife Gail, the owners of the El Toro Blanco restaurant — Cortez’s former employers — testified Cortez had worked for them for about three weeks in December 1979. Mrs. Mead told the court that when Cortez showed up for work on December 30 his hair was mussed and his shirt was wrinkled.
He usually was neatly dressed and personable,
said Mrs. Mead. He could normally wait on about eight tables, but that day he could only handle about three.
She also testified that he had to be sent home from work that day.
Mrs. Mead also said that Cortez came in the day before and asked for his check early, so he could put down a deposit on a house he wanted to rent. She said his hair was in clumps on that day, and it looked as if someone had been pulling on it, indicating a struggle might have occurred. It may have appeared to the jury that his hair was pulled by one of the girls while being raped, in an attempt to thwart the attack.
Marie Langley, the Mead’s bookkeeper who issued the check to Cortez, said he wasn’t looking like himself. She testified that he usually dressed neatly and his appearance was always immaculate.
He had on wrinkled clothes and his hair was a mess,
she said. It looked like it had been pulled very hard, and as if he was having trouble combing it down.
An acquaintance of Cortez’s told the court that she loaned her car to him early in the day on December 28. She said Cortez told her he needed to haul some wood for a woodworking project he was working on. She said that he was gone for about 45 minutes. When he returned he asked her for a paper bag, which she gave him. She said Cortez put a