Body Dump
Page 1
Body Dump
Kendall Francois, the Poughkeepsie Serial Killer
Fred Rosen
For my dear Aunt Irene and Uncle Nat
Prologue
September 1998
Eight women were missing. Only he knew how many more he had eliminated.
Eliminated. That was a good word to describe what he did. Once he was through with them, the women ceased to exist; he just … eliminated them.
To their grieving families who couldn’t find them, they vanished off the face of the earth. To Bill Siegrist, lieutenant of detectives dedicated to tracking him down, the harsh fact that his victims were prostitutes worked in the bad guy’s favor.
Prostitutes, Siegrist knew, followed a nomadic lifestyle. One day they were working Main Street, the next Oak Street, the next … who knew? They might find a sugar daddy who would take them off the street and support them. Or maybe they would escape from the city’s cold and damp into the warmth of Florida or California or Arizona.
Street people. They vanished without a trace. The majority of the time, it was not murder, just a by-product of their lifestyle. Nothing for anyone to worry about, in fact, maybe even a good thing. The more hookers that got off the streets, the less the cops had to run them in for prostitution. That meant less of a strain on the legal system and less for the reformers to kick up a storm about.
Eight prostitutes in a city of just over 28,000, a city where everyone knew everybody. The cops knew the prostitutes and the prostitutes knew the storekeepers whose stores they stood in front of, trying to attract the men in their cars to pull over to the side of the street and ask them to hop in. The storekeepers up and down Main Street knew the eight who had vanished off their street in the downtown area of the city. So, where were they? A few blocks away was the answer.
The house looked like something out of a Vincent Price movie. It was an old Victorian that children walking by could easily fantasize was haunted. But they had to walk fast.
“The place smelled something awful,” said Jim White, the postman who had the house on his regular route. “But I couldn’t figure out what it smelled from. It was just awful.”
People would gaze up at the gables of the old Victorian, wondering what in hell that smell was. At the Arlington Middle School where one of the residents worked as a hall monitor, the kids noticed the odor emanating from him and they wondered what it was.
It was a stink reeking off his massive, wrestler’s body, the kind of body capable of putting a man in a stranglehold that would quickly leave him unconscious. The kids had coined a name for the hall monitor that would dog him for the rest of his life.
Stinky. The kids had called him Stinky.
So he smelled; so do a lot of people. But Stinky smelled from body odor and something else. That “something else” was hard to define. Only a war veteran would have known what it was. It was a smell etched in memory, created in battle. The odor never faded from consciousness. It was a simple smell, actually, an elemental smell, as elemental as life itself.
It was death. That was what he smelled of.
Death.
PART ONE
The Serial Killer
One
October 24, 1996
Highland is a pleasant small town on the west bank of the Hudson River. Located just one mile from the Mid Hudson Bridge, the town lies in a narrow valley that provides picture-postcard, Norman Rockwell winter scenes of snow-covered hills and kids on sleds going down steep slopes during the winter months.
In the summer, the town transforms itself from its sleepy winter hibernation into a tourist spot of antiques stores and hole-in-the-wall restaurant finds. Still, unless one is a shopkeeper or restaurateur, making a living can be tough.
Route 9W, a long state highway that stretches from the New York City border north to Albany, meanders through Highland’s outskirts. In the summer, chili cook-offs, crafts fairs and country festivals can be found in back of the churches and schools that border the road. In the fall, pumpkin festivals are held in the large fields scattered along this 150-mile stretch of four-lane blacktop.
At various points along the way are independently run motels, the kind that have long since been passed by the major chains because 9W is no longer a main thoroughfare. That distinction belongs to the New York State Thruway, Interstate 87, to the west. Still, if a cheap, clean room with few amenities is wanted, a motel on 9W is a good bet. The Valley Rest Motel was one such place. Like most, it had been built in a u-shape. Wendy Meyers had taken up residence in one of the Valley Rest’s rooms. The place wasn’t expensive, so it was affordable to a street person like Meyers. A small, slight woman, Meyers was thirty years old. Her mug shot, taken after an earlier arrest for prostitution, shows a woman with dark eyes, high cheekbones that could have belonged to a model, a long aquiline nose and a jaw that jutted out almost defiantly. By the time she walked out of the Valley Rest Motel on Route 9W in Highland on October 24, she had more than her fair share of responsibilities.
Besides her relationship with her boyfriend, Meyers had a son who lived with his father in Ayden, South Carolina, the man Meyers had married and subsequently divorced.
Wendy Meyers had been born in the nearby town of Carmel, and given her mother’s name, while her brother George bore their dad’s name. A second brother had been named Albert. The men had moved to the warmer climes of Bell, Florida.
It probably came as a surprise to some people that Meyers was a member of St. James the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Carmel, given her profession. She was a prostitute. She had turned to prostitution to support her burgeoning drug habit.
Prostitution is a business requiring the right business climate, that is “johns.” Highland is small and doesn’t have enough trade. People also talk. Women like Wendy Meyers, who had had a life in front of them that had turned downward to drug hell, found that the only way to support their habit was prostitution. The only place in the vicinity that had a lot of men willing to pay for sex was the big metropolis across the Mid Hudson Bridge—the city of Poughkeepsie.
With all its economic travails, Poughkeepsie was a busy place and so was the Mid Hudson Bridge. More than twelve million vehicles a year use the bridge. Most come from the rural hamlets on the other side of the river. Highland is one such place, a bright, happy, sunny place with a stream flowing directly through the town. It is the last place a murder trail would be expected to begin from.
Wendy Meyers hitched the last ride of her life. As the car she was in crossed the river, Meyers was actually looking up at something really special. The Mid Hudson Bridge has often been recognized by bridge-building architects and bridge aficionados as one of the most beautiful suspension bridges in the world.
At the ribbon-cutting ceremony on August 25, 1930, New York State’s first lady Eleanor Roosevelt stood in for her husband, Franklin, the state’s governor and future President. When the ribbon was cut, traffic began pouring over the 3,000-foot span almost immediately.
On the other side of the bridge, the driver let Meyers off on Church Street. Thirty years before, when Lieutenant Bill Siegrist had been a raw twenty-two-year-old recruit assigned to foot patrol, Church Street was just a narrow block, with room for only one car to pass at a time. Set at the curbside were neat two- and four-family houses and occasional stores.
As the 1970’s progressed and urban decay set in, Church Street was literally thrown down and widened. It was transformed into the street with main access to the bridge to expedite traffic through the city. Siegrist could understand the need to do that, but he also felt that the city lost some of its charm with those changes, not to mention the human toll. Residents were forced to sell out and move someplace else.
To stimulate the city’s economy, a downtown civic center w
as built beside a Sheraton Hotel. The idea was to attract major conventions. It did, in a limited way, though not enough to revive the town. Conventions, plus the occasional “knife show,” touring circuses and music acts, did bring some additional revenue into the area. The Bardovan Theatre, which was built in 1869, was even restored to its former glory.
Despite such civic improvements, the town’s economy still floundered and the city and the surrounding township, which contained 42,000 residents, fell further into the economic doldrums. What kept the city afloat was IBM, which had a major plant in the town and supplied a good portion of the city’s tax base. But Wendy Meyers wasn’t in the least interested in IBM, or what the city would do if the techno giant gave the city the old heave-ho.
Wendy Meyers walked over to the mall, right off Main Street. Back in the 1980’s, the place was a big hangout for school kids and people who just wanted to go shopping at one of the outdoor mall’s many stores. There was a place where kids could buy jeans at good prices, a fish market, which always had fresh catches, and the tuxedo store where kids went to pick up their tuxedos for the high school prom. But as the 1980’s wound into the 1990’s, urban blight set in.
The kids stopped hanging out at the mall because it was too dangerous. Drug addicts and prostitutes began to clog up the place. Sometimes there would be fights, shootings—it definitely wasn’t a good place for good people to hang out at or shop, anymore.
Meyers passed the mall and stood on the corner of Jewitt Avenue where it crosses Main Street. It was a good place to pick up johns, with lots of traffic. After a few minutes of waiting, she got her first bite when Kendall Francois, driving his 1984 red Subaru, pulled over to the curb.
Francois remembered her from a previous occasion. He recalled that she had ripped him off. She had, according to his memory, taken his money, but had not given him enough sex in return.
Francois opened the window. They began haggling about price and when they finally settled on one, Meyers got in on the passenger side and Francois drove off. He tooled his car smoothly through Poughkeepsie’s streets, observing every traffic law, neither going too fast nor too slow, nothing to attract attention.
When he got to his house a few blocks off Main Street, he parked in his driveway and escorted Meyers upstairs to his second-floor bedroom. Like most prostitutes, Meyers was smart enough to demand payment up front. With johns you never knew. They could always try to stiff you.
Francois took out a wad of bills and paid her. It was time to go at it.
She pulled her pants and panties off and Francois took out his penis. There were no pleasantries, no romantic idyll and no foreplay. Just straightforward intercourse. He got on top of her and began pounding inside her. It must have hurt to have him doing that, not just from the force of his member but from the sheer weight of him on top of her. Meyers was a slight girl. It probably felt like she couldn’t breathe.
It’s unclear exactly what she next said, but Francois would later recall it as something like “I’ve had enough!” or “Look, I, uh, have another appointment I have to run to.” It is also unclear what, if any, change took over Francois’s face and/or body when the big man went from being just an abusive john to a serial killer.
Did his expression turn from a snarl into rage? Did it look like another personality had taken over? No one knows. He did, however, say in his later statement to police that he was thinking something like How dare this whore try to stop me? How dare she not give me what I paid for?
Wendy Meyers would be his first “kill.”
Hands that had once, with ease, pushed back three-hundred-pound opposing wrestlers in high school, closed around the throat of Wendy Meyers. Hard. Harder. Harder still. You have to have strong hands and squeeze awfully hard to strangle a person to death. For Meyers, the pain would have been the least of her problems.
Francois was literally choking the life out of her. She would have been conscious and known what was going on for at least the first minute and a half. Then mercifully, her brain reeling from oxygen deprivation, she would have blacked out. Until then, it would be sheer, unrelenting agony.
Even when she went limp in Francois’s hands, he would know she was unconscious but not dead. If he stopped strangling her, it was possible she could be revived. But Francois kept strangling her until he heard her hyoid, or throat bone crack, and added still more pressure until she was clearly, definitely, absolutely dead. Releasing his grip, she would have fallen to the floor.
It was a beautiful late autumn day, the temperature in the mid-seventies. Francois could hear the traffic sounds from Main Street, sounds drifting genially in on the wind. He could hear the songs of the birds that congregated in the trees in back of his house.
Silently, Francois picked up the body. He carried it into the second-floor bathroom. He placed Meyers in the bathtub and turned on the faucet. Slowly, almost reverently, he placed her in the water. It was almost as though he wanted to make her clean for her passage into the next life.
When he was satisfied that she was clean enough, he took her out, dried her off and then placed her on his shoulder. On the second-floor landing, he opened a door set into the wall. A stairway led upward to the attic.
Francois carried the body up the stairs and into the attic. He placed it in a black, plastic garbage bag that he’d brought with him, the super-duper size normally used to haul leaves. Then he closed the bag over her head and placed the sack deep into the large, stuffy room. If his parents or sister or anyone came up to look, all they would see was a big bag filled with … whatever.
His work finished, Kendall Francois walked down the stairs. It was still the middle of the day and he had plenty of things to do.
October 26, 1996
After two days, Wendy Meyers’s boyfriend reported her missing to the Town of Lloyd police. Highland was in the town of Lloyd and since that was where she was last seen, they had venue.
Immediately, the town and city of Poughkeepsie police departments were notified that a Missing Person’s report on a Highland resident, Wendy Meyers had been filed.
“Her boyfriend was a suspect,” Bill Siegrist recalled. “[They were] hot on him.”
But after Meyers’s boyfriend submitted to a polygraph and passed, he was crossed off the list. As for the involvement of City of Poughkeepsie detectives, it wasn’t their investigation. When a person is reported missing to the police department of Highland, there is not much Poughkeepsie, despite its close proximity, can do. If Poughkeepsie got a lead that the missing person was somewhere within its borders, they could move in. Until then, the investigation lay with the town across the river.
Police entered Wendy Meyers’s name in the computer. It was actually not a bad place to be for a missing person. The New York State Police maintains a central database that every police department in the state has access to. The New York State Police Management Information Network (MIN) Missing Persons File lists every missing person for whom a report has been filed.
Every year, 35,000 people are reported missing. And every year about 31,000 show up, a phenomenal recovery rate of 85 percent. The other 4,000, or 15 percent, are still listed as “missing.”
Among other fields that data entry clerks fill in are the circumstances surrounding the person’s disappearance and the location where he was last seen. Those two factors are all important in solving a single homicide, let alone a string of them. But prostitutes are different from “normal” civilians. The assumption the police made was that Wendy Meyers was a street person and subject to a street person’s vagaries of life.
Prostitutes lead dangerous, unstable, dysfunctional lives. Meyers was not some middle-class housewife with regular habits. Her disappearance was most probably due to someone who was keeping her. Maybe she’d gone to Florida without telling her boyfriend. Who knew?
Or maybe she had gone down to New York City to go shopping. She’d probably turn up like most of the other 35,000. There was no reason to suspect she had been abducte
d or, worse, murdered. Maybe it would have helped if the cops could have seen Meyers differently, as a girl who started out with real dreams that were thwarted by a drug habit she had to feed and a life of prostitution to pay for it.
Maybe, maybe, maybe.
While the cops hoped Wendy Meyers would soon turn up, she lay in her makeshift, last resting place. She was inside a middle-class house on a tree-lined street, just waiting for somebody to figure out where she was.
Albany, New York
For twenty-seven years, Senior Investigator James “Jimmy” Ayling had been a New York state trooper. He began his career in central New York, where he eventually rose to the rank of sergeant. Modeled along military lines, with ranks from trooper through colonel, the state police was a great place for an enterprising young guy like Ayling. After a few years on the force, he became station commander in the Oneonta barracks. While he was climbing the ladder, Jimmy Ayling had time to get his Bachelor of Science in criminal justice.
Ayling doesn’t look like a cop. With a shocking head of carefully combed, thick, gray hair, he seems more like a corporate executive. In a sense, that is one of the roles of his job, making sense out of and leading a corporate hierarchy. But the one he leads is not charged with ruthless business dealings, but with saving lives.
Tall and well built, though thickening a little with middle age, Jimmy Ayling is the senior investigator in the New York State Violent Crime Analysis Unit (ViCAP). Previously known as Homicide Assessment and Lead Tracking (HALT), ViCAP was created to help police officers around the state identify and apprehend serial killers, rapists and other violent offenders.
Under the State of New York Executive Law, 221-B, “Every law enforcement agency which received a report of an actual or attempted abduction or molestation shall notify the New York State Violent Crime Analysis Program (ViCAP) via the requirements of the New York Statewide police information network of such report. Such program shall make comparisons of data in its files and report to the law enforcement agency making an initial report any similarities to other reports received by such program. The Violent Crime Analysis Program shall also notify the unit of law enforcement agency which investigates homicides when a report reveals similarities, patterns or modus operandi which appear in reports of homicides.”