Journey into Darkness

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Journey into Darkness Page 45

by John Douglas


  thinking like, 1-9, 294, 368

  serial rapists, 14, 71-72

  “Sexual Homicide: A Motivational Model” (Douglas, et al.), 43

  Sexual Homicide: Patterns and Motives (Douglas, et al.), 20

  sexual sadists, 45, 51, 53, 66, 77, 117, 124, 136, 318

  child molesters, 134-37, 146

  profile of, 73-74

  Shapiro, Robert, 352

  Shawcross, Arthur, 89, 126, 166

  profile of, 64

  Shawn, Leonard, 61

  Sheela, Barton, 42

  Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, 223-24, 232

  Shelton, Chuck, 297-300, 304

  Shephard, John, 78, 82

  Shepherd, Bill, 231

  Shotwell, Mark, 224-25

  Showalter, Bill, 311-13

  signature, 15, 318

  MO vs, 26-27, 36-43, 318

  of nonwhite offenders, 310-11

  Silence of the Lambs, The (Harris), 16, 25

  “Simple Art of Murder, The” (Chandler), xiii

  Simpson, Nicole Brown, murder of, 333-56

  profile in, 335-56

  Simpson, O.J., 333, 344-46, 348, 349-52, 354-56

  Simpson, Sydney, 346

  Slaydon, Sharon Leigh, 154-55

  Smelser, Valerie, abuse and murder of, 148

  Smelser, Wanda, 148

  Smerick, Pete, 335

  Smith, Shari Faye, murder of, 13, 99, 350

  Smith, Susan, 27

  SNAP (Selected Neighborhood Apprehension Program), 309

  Son of Sam, see Berkowitz, David

  souvenirs, 91, 132

  Spalding, Dick, 314

  Speck, Richard, prison interview with, 21

  Spencer, Timothy Wilson, 323-29

  Spencer, Travis, 327

  Spofford, Barry, 225-26

  Stalking Justice (Mones), 323, 331

  Stewart, Raymond Lee, 35-36

  Stock, Harley, 116-18

  Stoner, Mary Frances, murder of, 45, 291

  stress of profilers, 11-16

  Su, Tien Poh, 43-46, 125, 291

  suicide, 142, 146, 351

  Suzanne Marie Collins Perpetual Scholarship, 275

  Tafoya, Bill, 360

  Takemire, Ralph Blaine, 157-58

  Tarr, Holly, murder of, 36-37, 41

  Tate, Sharon, murder of, 24, 343, 361-62

  Taylor, Virginia, 243-44

  Theisman, Jerry, 131, 132

  Thompson, Ed, 234-35, 259

  Thornburgh, Richard, 262, 265

  “three strikes” law, 144

  Thurmond, Strom, 263

  Time, 181, 182

  Timmendesquas, Jesse, 164

  Tirrell, Richard, 216

  Tombo, José, 114, 116-17

  Toobin, Jeffrey, 350

  Toronto Metropolitan Police, 49,55

  Toronto Sun, 72

  Tousignant, Michelle, 58

  Trailside Killer case, 89

  Tripp, David, 271-72

  Tripp, Doug, 271

  Trooien, Donald, 88, 93

  Trumble, Henry, 325

  Tucker, Reggie, 302-03

  Tucker, Susan M., rape and murder of, 301-04,305, 314, 317-19, 326, 328-29, 331

  Unabomber: On the Trail of America’s Most-Wanted Serial Killer (Douglas and Olshaker), 319

  Unabom case, 319

  UNSUB, definition of, 6

  Van Houten, Leslie, 361

  Vannatter, Philip, 349, 355

  Van Zandt, Clint, 335

  Vasquez, David, 299-304, 320-21, 329-31, 366-67

  alleged crime partner of, 300-01, 303-04, 314, 320-21, 330

  vengeance, 357, 362

  Venverloth, Geralynd, 38

  Vetter, Donna Lynn, rape and murder of, 69

  VICAP (Violent Criminal Apprehension Program), 40

  victimology, 32,43,80,105, 128, 156, 279, 294, 297, 303, 307, 308, 336-37, 343, 368

  victims:

  age of, 134

  gender of, 89, 103, 125, 134

  relative risk and, 41, 63, 105, 129, 134, 137, 143-44, 152, 303, 307, 313, 320

  victims and families, advocacy for, 252-56, 261-66, 270, 362-64, 368

  Victims of Crime Act (1984), 265-66

  Vilaume, Philip, 101-02

  violence against children, 47-85, 86-120, 152-53, 158

  see also child abductors; child molesters; infant abductors

  Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (VICAP), 40

  Virginia, University of, 16

  Wagner, Chuck, 62-63, 67

  Wallen, John Henry, 271

  Walsh, John, 122

  Walsh, Reve, 122

  Wallon, Ken, 104

  Watson, Charles “Tex.” 24

  Weaver family, 25

  Weinhold, Janene, murder of, 36, 38, 39

  Whalen, Donald, Jr., 101

  White, Penny, 266-68, 270-73

  White, Ron, 190

  Wicks, Ed. 221

  Williams, Ginny, 233

  Williams, Glenn D., 305-06, 307, 309, 324

  Williams, Henry “Hank,” 8-9, 29, 228, 233-34, 238-40, 243-48, 259-60, 266, 267-69, 368

  Williams, Ray, 306, 307, 309, 324

  Williams, Wayne, 23, 238-40, 291, 321

  Witt, Heather, abduction of, 152-53

  Witt, Joan, murder of, 152-53

  Witt, Sandra, 254

  Womack, Carl, 328

  Wright, Jim, 13-14, 69-70, 278, 335, 342

  Yochelson, Samuel, 265

  Young, Kimberly, 225

  Zabel, Wendy Leigh, 152-54

  Zink, Oliver, 78

  John Douglas (left) and Mark Olshaker (right)

  JOHN DOUGLAS was the founder and head of the FBI’s investigative Support Unit, which was formed in 1980. He retired from the Bureau after twenty-five years of service. In addition to his many nonfiction books, he is the author of two novels featuring FBI profiler Jake Donovan: Broken Wings, and its sequel. Man Down. Please visit him at his Web site: www. johndouglasmindhunter.com.

  MARK OLSHAKER is a novelist, filmmaker, and producer of the Emmy-nominated PBS Nova program Mind of a Serial Killer. He has written and produced numerous documentary films and won an Emmy as the writer of Roman City. He lives with his wife in the Washington D.C. area.

  An aerial view of the FBI Academy on the U.S. Marine Base in Quantico, Virginia. Our offices were sixty feet underground, behind the tall building at the lower right. (FBI photo)

  My era’s Investigative Support Group gathers together one last time at my retirement dinner in Quantico in June 1995. From left, Steve Mardigian, Pete Smerick, Clint Van Zandt, Jana Monroe, Gregg McCrary, Jim Wright, Greg Cooper, me, and Jud Ray. Not pictured are Larry Ankrom, Steve Etter, Bill Hagmaier, and Tom Salp. (Photo by Mark Olshaker)

  Special Agent Jim Wright on one of the firearms ranges at Quantico. Despite the “cerebral” nature of the work we do, each member of the Investigative Support Unit is first and foremost an FBI special agent. (Photo by Mark Olshaker)

  Special Agent Gregg McCarry, who confronted the unknown killer of Kristen French on national Canadian telivision, saving, “If you are watching, I want to tell you that you are going to be apprehended. It’s just a question of time.” (Photo by Mark Olshaker)

  Special Agent Jud Ray, who was a soldier, police officer, and detective before joining the Bureau. When police in Alaska told him they had a suspect who fit his profile of the murderer of a woman and her two young daughters in every way except that he didn’t know the victims. Jud confidently told them, “You don’t have the right man.” (Photo by Mark Olshaker)

  Cassandra Lynn “Cassie” Hansen was abducted from church in St. Paul, Minnesota, on November 10, 1981.Her body was found in a Dumpster the next morning. Through the combined efforts of the St. Paul police, the FBI, and heroic local citizens, her killer, Stuart Knowlton, was brought to justice.

  Stuart Knowlton, convicted killer of Cassandra Hansen. (St. Paul, Minnesota, Police Department photo)

  Thirteen-year-old Shawn
Moore, whom my colleague Special Agent Jim Harrington described as “a kid who had everything going for him.” On Labor Day Weekend, 1985, Shawn was abducted near a convenience store close to Brighton, Michigan, by Ronald Bailey, who killed him on Sunday at a friend’s hunting cabin.

  Ronald Lloyd Bailey, he convicted killer of Shawn Moore, was a young man with a long, bad record before he even committed that crime. (Livingston County, Michigan, Sheriff’s Department photo)

  Ronald Bailey’s recently purchased silver Jeep Renegade, which help lead to his arrest. (Michigan State Police photo)

  Stephen and Suzanne Collins, already best of friends, on their way to the school bus while their father, Jack, was stationed in Greece in 1972. (Photo by Trudy Collins)

  Suzanne Collins in her uniform for the Robert E. Lee High School Lancers softball team. (Photo by Trudy Collins)

  Suzanne Collins proudly standing in front of her regulation-made bunk bed at Parris Island, August 1984. Her parents saw this as quite a contrast to the way she’d kept her room at home. (Photo by Trudy Collins)

  Lance Corporal Suzanne M. Collins’s red Marine Corps T-shirt. Sheriff’s deputies found it lying in the grass near her body in Edmund Orgill Park in Millington, Tennessee, on the morning of July 12, 1985. (Shelby County, Tennessee, Sheriff’s Department photo)

  The authors with Jack and Trudy Collins at their home in Wilmington, North Carolina. (Photo by Carolyn C. Olshaker)

  Our work can be pretty grim, so occasionally you have to make an effort to lighten up. In the midst of my intense travels profiling cases in the 1980s, my colleagues at Quantico made up this “official” FBI Wanted poster inviting fellow personnel to a cocktail party in my honor.

  Amber Hagerman with her brother at what turned out to be the last Christmas of her life. (Photo courtesy of Richard Hagerman)

  Nine year-old Amber Hagerman was abducted in broad daylight on Saturday afternoon, January 13, 1996, in Arlington, Texas. Her nude body was found the following Wendnesday. She had been sexually assauhed and her throat was cut. So far, the monster who killed her has not been caught

 

 

 


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