Ted
Bundy is a striking contrast to the general image of a
"homicidal maniac": attractive, self-assured, politically
ambitious, and successful with a wide variety of women. But
his private demons drove him to extremes of violence that
make the gory worst of modern "slasher" films seem almost
petty by comparison. With his chameleon-like ability to
blend, his talent for belonging, Bundy posed an ever-present
danger to the pretty, dark-haired women he selected as his
victims.
Linda Healy was the first fatality. On January 31, 1974, she
vanished from her basement lodgings in Seattle, leaving
bloody sheets behind, a blood-stained nightgown hanging in
her closet. Several blocks away, young Susan Clarke had been
assaulted, bludgeoned in her bed a few weeks earlier, but
she survived her crushing injuries and would eventually
recover. As for Lynda Healy, she was gone without a trace.
Police had no persuasive evidence of any pattern yet, but it
would not be long in coming. On March 12, Donna Gail Manson
disappeared en route to a concert in Olympia, Washington. On
April 17, Susan Rancourt vanished on her way to see a German
language film in Ellensburg. On May 6, Roberta Parks failed
to return from a late-night stroll in her Corvallis
neighborhood. On June 1, Brenda Ball left Seattle's Flame
Tavern with an unknown man and vanished, as if into thin
air. Ten days later, Georgann Hawkins joined the list of
missing women, lost somewhere between her boyfriend's
apartment and her own sorority house in Seattle.
Now detectives had their pattern. All the missing women had
been young, attractive, with their dark hair worn at
shoulder length or longer, parted in the middle. In their
photos, laid out side-by-side, they might have passed for
sisters, some for twins. Homicide investigators had no
corpses yet, but they refused to cherish false illusions of
a happy ending to the case. There were so many victims, and
the worst was yet to come.
July 14. A crowd assembled on the shores of Lake Sammamish
to enjoy the sun and water sports of summer. When the day
was over, two more names would be appended to the growing
list of missing women: Janice Ott and Denise Naslund had
each disappeared within sight of their separate friends, but
this time police had a tenuous lead. Passers-by remembered
seeing Janice Ott in conversation with a man who carried one
arm in a sling; he had been overheard to introduce himself
as "Ted." With that report in hand, detectives turned up
other female witnesses who were themselves approached by
"Ted" at Lake Sammamish. In each case, he had asked for help
securing a sailboat to his car. The lucky women had
declined, but one had followed "Ted" to where his small
Volkswagen "bug" was parked; there was no sign of any
sailboat, and his explanation - that the boat would have to
be retrieved from a house "up the hill" - had aroused her
suspicions, prompting her to put the stranger off.
Police now had a fair description of their suspect and his
car. The published references to "Ted" inspired a rash of
calls reporting "suspects," one of them in reference to
college student Theodore Bundy. The authorities checked out
each lead as time allowed, but Bundy was considered "squeaky
clean;" a law student and Young Republican active in
law-and-order politics, he once had chased a mugger several
blocks to make a citizen's arrest. So many calls reporting
suspects had been made from spite or simple overzealousness,
and Bundy's name was filed away with countless others,
momentarily forgotten.
On September 7, hunters found a makeshift graveyard on a
wooded hillside several miles from Lake Sammamish. Dental
records were required to finally identify remains of Janice
Ott and Denise Naslund; the skeleton of a third woman, found
with the others, could not be identified. Five weeks later,
on October 12, another hunter found the bones of two more
women in Clark County. One victim was identified as Carol
Valenzuela, missing for two months from Vancouver,
Washington, on the Oregon border; again, the second victim
would remain unknown, recorded in the files as a "Jane Doe."
Police were optimistic, hopeful that discovery of victims
would eventually lead them to the killer, but they had no
way of knowing that their man had given them the slip
already, moving on in search of safer hunting grounds and
other prey.

The terror came to Utah on October 2, 1974, when Nancy
Wilcox disappeared in Salt Lake City. On October 18, Melissa
Smith vanished in Midvale; her body, raped and beaten, would
be unearthed in the Wasatch Mountains nine days later. Laura
Aime joined the missing list in Orem, on October 31, while
walking home in costume from a Halloween party; a month
would pass before her battered, violated body was discovered
in a wooded area outside of town. A man attempted to abduct
attractive Carol Da Ronch from a Salt Lake City shopping
mall November 8, but she was able to escape before he could
attach a pair of handcuffs to her wrists. That evening,
Debbie Kent was kidnapped from the auditorium at Salt Lake
City's Viewmont High School.
Authorities in Utah kept communications open with police in
other states, including Washington. They might have noticed
that a suspect from Seattle, one Ted Bundy, was attending
school in Utah when the local disappearances occurred, but
they were looking for a madman, rather than a sober,
well-groomed student of the law who seemed to have political
connections in Seattle. Bundy stayed on file, and was again
forgotten.
With the new year, Colorado joined the list of hunting
grounds for an elusive killer who apparently selected
victims by their hairstyles. Caryn Campbell was the first to
vanish, from a ski lodge at Snowmass on January 12; her
raped and battered body would be found on February 17. On
March 15, Julie Cunningham disappeared en route to a tavern
in Vail. One month later to the day, Melanie Cooley went
missing while riding her bicycle in Nederland; she was
discovered eight days later, dead, her skull crushed, with
her jeans pulled down around her ankles. On July 1, Shelly
Robertson was added to the missing list in Golden; her
remains were found on August 23, discarded in a mine shaft
near the Berthoud Pass.
A week before the final, grim discovery, Ted Bundy was
arrested in Salt Lake City for suspicion of burglary.
Erratic driving had attracted the attention of police, and
an examination of his car - a small VW - revealed peculiar
items such as handcuffs and a pair of panty hose with
eyeholes cut to form a stocking mask. The glove compartment
yielded gasoline receipts and maps that linked the suspect
with a list of Colorado ski resorts, including Vail and
Snowmass. Carol Da Ronch identified Ted Bundy as the man who
had attacked her in November, and her testimony was
sufficient to convict him on a charge of attempted
kidnapping. Other states were waiting for a shot at Bundy
now, and in January 1977 he was extradited to Colorado for
trial in the murder of Caryn Campbell, at Snowmass.
Faced with prison time already, Bundy had no time to spare
for further trials. He fled from custody in June, and was
recaptured after eight days on the road. On December 30 he
tried again, with more success, escaping all the way to
Tallahassee, Florida, where he found lodgings on the
outskirts of Florida State University. Suspected in a score
of deaths already, Bundy had secured himself another happy
hunting ground.
In the small hours of January 15, 1978, he invaded the Chi
Omega sorority house, dressed all in black and armed with a
heavy wooden club. Before he left, two women had been raped
and killed, a third severely injured by the beating he
inflicted with his bludgeon. Within the hour, he had slipped
inside another house, just blocks away, to club another
victim in her bed. She, too, survived. Detectives at the Chi
Omega house discovered bite marks on the corpses there,
appalling evidence of Bundy's fervor at the moment of the
kill.
On February 6, Ted stole a van and drove to Jacksonville,
where he was spotted in the act of trying to abduct a
schoolgirl. Three days later, twelve-year-old Kimberly Leach
disappeared from a schoolyard nearby; she was found in the
first week of April, her body discarded near Suwanee State
Park.
Police in Pensacola spotted Bundy's stolen license plates on
February 15, and were forced to run him down as he attempted
to escape on foot. Once Bundy was identified, impressions of
his teeth were taken to compare with bite marks on the Chi
Omega victims, and his fate was sealed. Convicted on two
counts of murder in July 1979, he was sentenced to die in
Florida's electric chair. A third conviction and death
sentence were subsequently obtained in the case of Kimberly
Leach.
After ten years of appeals, Bundy was finally executed in
February 1989, he confessed to a total of 28 murders.
This bio was taken from "Hunting
Humans," by Michael Newton.
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