Devil's Defender
Page 1
Copyright © 2016 by John Henry Browne
All rights reserved
Published by Chicago Review Press Incorporated
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Chicago, Illinois 60610
ISBN 978-1-61373-489-6
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Browne, John Henry, 1946– author.
Title: The devil’s defender: my odyssey through American criminal justice
from Ted Bundy to the Kandahar massacre/John Henry Browne.
Description: Chicago, Illinois: Chicago Review Press Incorporated, 2016. |
Includes index. | Description based on print version record and CIP data
provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015050333 (print) | LCCN 2015050255 (ebook) |
ISBN 9781613734889 (pdf) | ISBN 9781613734896 (epub) |
ISBN 9781613734902 (Kindle) | ISBN 9781613734872 (cloth: alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: Browne, John Henry, 1946– author. | Lawyers—United
States—Biography.
Classification: LCC KF373.B76 (print) | LCC KF373.B76 A3 2016 (ebook) | DDC
340.092—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015050333
Interior design: PerfecType, Nashville, TN
Interior layout: Nord Compo
Printed in the United States of America
5 4 3 2 1
This digital document has been produced by Nord Compo.
For Deborah Beeler and all victims of senseless crimes—
and all victims of an imperfect justice system.
They thought that it would be a disgrace to go forth as a group. Each entered the forest at a point that he himself had chosen, where it was darkest and there was no path. If there is a path it is someone else’s path and you are not on the adventure.
—Joseph Campbell, The Hero’s Journey
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication Page
Prologue
1 - The Ted Murders
2 - “Where’d You Get Those Shoes?”
3 - The Shadows of Secret Cities
4 - “Are You Experienced?”
5 - The Spiro Agnew Acid Test
6 - Deborah
7 - A Total Eclipse of the Sun
8 - Chicago
9 - I Go to Prison
10 - The Killer Beside Me
11 - Escape
12 - A Bargain
13 - Confessions
14 - Success
15 - “The Floor Is Supposed to Be Green”
16 - Defending Benjamin Ng
17 - I Want a New Drug
18 - Fighting for Women Who Fight Back
19 - The Execution of Ted Bundy
20 - Presumed Guilty
21 - Colton Harris-Moore
22 - A Massacre in Kandahar
Epilogue
Appendix A - John Henry Browne’s Ten Rules for Trials
Appendix B - The Letters of Ted Bundy
Acknowledgments
Index
PROLOGUE
On an unusually clear morning in May 2012 I took the ferry from Bainbridge Island, where I had lived for the past twenty-three years, to Seattle, where I’ve had a private law practice since the 1970s. From the ferry terminal I drove to the studio of Q13, the local Fox TV affiliate. Over the years reporters from all over the world had interviewed me on camera, but this was going to be different. Host C. R. Douglas would be asking me questions I had declined to answer for three decades. The subject would be my most notorious client, the sociopath and mass murderer Theodore Robert Bundy.
The decision to break my silence did not come easily. My counsel of Bundy has always been a complicated matter in my career and personal life. When I was twenty-nine years old I sat with Ted in a jail cell in Florida and he confessed things to me he said he’d never told anyone else. Finally, as I was about to leave his cell, he stopped me. He had one more confession to add: the reason he’d consulted me as a lawyer for so long—nearly five years—was because we were “so much alike.” I remember returning to my cheap motel room, lighting a cigarette, and looking at my reflection in the bathroom mirror. I felt sick to my stomach.
Bundy’s assertion, which of course I’ve never agreed with or even understood, nonetheless grinded at me for years. So much so that I avoided even thinking about the conversation. My memory of it, I hoped, would never be tapped again.
Recently, though, as I’ve thought and wrote about other events in my life, Ted and his words kept bubbling up. I made the mistake of digging out from storage “the Ted box,” which contained Bundy’s case files as well as numerous letters he had sent me. Many of the old feelings of disgust and resentment came rushing back.
At the same time two new cases had thrown me back into the international spotlight. First, I took on, pro bono, the case of Colton Harris-Moore, the teenager known as the Barefoot Bandit, who’d been accused of breaking into countless homes, stealing airplanes, and leading authorities on a two-year manhunt that extended from western Washington State to the Caribbean.
Second, and also pro bono, I had accepted as a client Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of performing a solo raid on two Afghan villages on March 11, 2012. Bales allegedly shot, knifed, and in some cases burned innocent men, women, and children. Military prosecutors charged him with sixteen counts of first-degree murder, but the government’s case seemed shaky to me from the start, largely because Bales was on his fourth deployment in almost as many years and was clearly suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder. He was also under the influence of steroids, which his superiors had provided. “If Sergeant Bales did it,” I told anyone who would listen, “and I do mean if, we as a nation are to blame. We created this situation.”
Despite the weight and obvious intrigue of these two cases, reporters would invariably bring up Ted Bundy, a topic I didn’t want to discuss. But slowly I came to suspect that maybe, finally, it was time, that perhaps the public deserved to understand not only who Ted Bundy was but also why I and other criminal defense lawyers feel so duty bound to protect the rights of those accused of the most heinous crimes.
I decided to put pen to paper and open up about a life and career that included a leading role in the anti–Vietnam War movement, bringing awareness to the plight of battered women, and fighting for civil rights for prisoners, as well as my brushes with (as a fellow musician) the likes of the Grateful Dead and Jimi Hendrix and (as a member of the media) the Nixon administration. I would also talk about my work in some of the biggest criminal cases of the past forty years, including that of murder suspect David Kunze—when I put the forensic “science” of ear prints on trial—the Wah Mee massacre, and others, each seemingly more bizarre than the last.
I’d resolved to begin the process at this television studio on the shore of Seattle’s Lake Union, answering C. R. Douglas’s questions about Ted. I knew Douglas and I would only touch the surface. The biggest thing to come out would be that Bundy, whom history remembers as killing about thirty women, confessed to me that he had killed more than one hundred people, and not just women. I would describe a phone conversation I had with Ted shortly after his second escape from custody. And I would reveal that my former girlfriend had been murdered in a manner similar to a Ted Bundy victim.
That would be it. The rest is too big to fit into a twenty-five-minute conversation—partly because Ted told me so much more, but mostly because the story is larger and more complex than just Ted Bundy.
I have been thrown in jail myself. I have been a drug addict. I have been married more times than I care to tell you. But I have also followed a passion for justice and freedom since I w
as a child. I have won cases everyone else thought were impossible to win. I have defended innocent people. And I have defended monsters who nonetheless still deserved the fair trial our Constitution promises.
I stepped onto the set. A studio tech stuck a microphone in my left breast pocket. I sat across from C. R. Douglas, who looked out from a pair of horn-rimmed glasses, the glare of a klieg light bouncing off his impressive domelike head. The set behind us, seemingly lit with every conceivable shade of blue, convulsed in the manner known to anyone who watches cable news. Douglas looked at his notes. Then back at me. He asked the first question and waited for me to speak. I said what I could.
I’m going to tell you the rest here. While much of it, I hope, will be fun to read, we need to understand each other right now, from the top. A lot of this isn’t going to be pretty.
I won’t flinch if you won’t.
1
THE TED MURDERS
That’s all we had. A name. Women had vanished from Seattle and the surrounding region all year. And at first there was no way to talk about it—a woman, usually in her late teens or early twenties, would disappear and that was it: empty space where a promising young person had been. Aside from all the synonyms for fear, we had no language with which to discuss it. And then we did.
The Seattle Times, July 17, 1974, top of the fold: MISSING WOMAN LEFT BEACH WITH MAN, SAY WITNESSES. The article described the disappearance, three days earlier, of Denise Naslund, nineteen, and Janice Ott, twenty-three, at Lake Sammamish State Park. They were the eighth and ninth women to disappear in six months. Witnesses said the man had an injured arm and had asked the women for help loading a small sailboat onto his car. They described him, according to the newspaper, as “about 5 feet 6 or 7 inches, with a medium build and blondish-brown hair ‘down to his neck.’ He wore expensive-looking white tennis shoes, socks, shorts, and T-shirt. He also was described as smooth-talking with a ‘small English accent.’”
But the next detail would prove the most critical. The witnesses said they overheard the man tell Janice Ott that his name was Ted.
Although the police were quoted as saying these disappearances were unrelated to the seven others, they would quickly change their minds, and the fear that had gripped Seattle soon had a title, a monosyllable you’d hear whispered in conversation all over the city—on the sidewalk, in the checkout line, the elevator. No one, it seemed, could avoid talking about it. Everywhere it was Ted, Ted, Ted.
As the new chief trial attorney with the King County Office of Public Defense, I had just moved to Seattle from Olympia, where I’d spent the two previous years working in the Washington State attorney general’s office. But like everyone else, I’d followed the missing woman cases in the media since the beginning. The story seemed to have started not with a disappearance but with a University of Washington student savagely beaten.
Near campus on the morning of January 4, 1974, roommates found Karen Sparks, eighteen, unconscious in her bed. Blood covered the sheets. She’d been beaten with a metal rod and raped with some sort of shaft or dowel.
Just blocks away, on February 1, Lynda Ann Healy disappeared from her basement bedroom. On March 12 Donna Manson left her dorm to attend a concert at Evergreen State College in Olympia and was never seen again. April 17 Susan Rancourt vanished from Central Washington State College in Ellensburg, a hundred miles east of Seattle. At Oregon State University in Corvallis, Roberta Parks disappeared on May 6, followed in quick succession by Brenda Ball (June 1) in Burien, just south of Seattle, and Georgeann Hawkins (June 11), apparently kidnapped as she walked down an alley directly behind her Kappa Theta Alpha sorority house at the University of Washington.
Now Denise Naslund and Janice Ott had vanished in front of thousands of witnesses. (July 14, 1974, was an uncommonly hot and cloud-free day in western Washington, and people had come out in droves to soak up the sun on the beaches of Lake Sammamish.) The nine women had much in common. They were all pretty and nearly all college students, and all wore their hair long, mostly parted down the middle, which in 1974 was the fashion. Women began to cut their hair short that summer, presumably to avoid abduction. Investigators fielded hundreds of tips from people who thought they might know “Ted.” People turned in their friends, their coworkers, their boyfriends. If your name was Ted or Theodore in King County in the summer of 1974 and you drove a Volkswagen Bug—another detail witnesses were able to provide about the man at Lake Sammamish—the police likely knew about you. The lead detectives on the case called themselves the Ted Task Force. All their leads came up empty.
Then, just as abruptly as the abductions started, they stopped. There were no more disappearances after Naslund and Ott. The cease in activity was as eerie as it was relieving. But hysteria rose anew in early September when bird hunters found an open grave in the woods two miles southeast of Lake Sammamish. Investigators identified the skeletal remains of Naslund and Ott and uncovered dozens of other bones. They would later discover the remains of four victims—Ball, Healy, Parks, and Rancourt—on nearby Taylor Mountain, including skulls that showed blunt force trauma.
And that was it. After months of no abductions, police assumed that the killer had died, been incarcerated on another charge, or moved somewhere else.
Just as the Pacific Northwest shed its abduction problem, the state of Utah gained one. On October 2, 1974, sixteen-year-old Nancy Wilcox went missing from a neighborhood in a Salt Lake City suburb. Two and a half weeks later seventeen-year-old Melissa Anne Smith disappeared from another. On October 18 another seventeen-year-old, Laura Aime, was apparently snatched in Lehi, thirty miles south of Salt Lake.
On November 8 Carol DaRonch, a pretty nineteen-year-old telephone operator with brown hair parted down the middle, steered her maroon Camaro into the parking lot of Fashion Place Mall, the biggest shopping center in Salt Lake Valley. It was Friday night, and the place was packed. She found a parking spot in front of Sears, locked her car, and entered the mall. At a window display at Walden Books, a tall man with a mustache and a head of thick hair approached her. He introduced himself as Officer Rosebud and said he believed her car had been broken into. She needed to come with him to identify a suspect his partner had detained in the parking lot. She thought she smelled alcohol on his breath, but she explained it away in her mind when he flashed her what looked like a police badge.
Carol followed Rosebud out to her Camaro, which looked as if it hadn’t been touched since she left it half an hour earlier. There was no partner and no suspect. Officer Rosebud insisted she accompany him across the street to the “police substation,” the door of which was inexplicably behind a Laundromat. When the door wouldn’t open—it was locked—he insisted that she accompany him to the Murray police station. She followed him to what had to be the most decrepit police car ever issued to an officer: a banged-up VW Bug with torn upholstery.
Against better judgment, Carol climbed into the passenger seat, and Officer Rosebud drove them eastbound, which Carol knew didn’t lead to the police station. Suddenly he flipped a U-turn, stopped the car, and brandished a pair of handcuffs. He quickly cuffed her left wrist, and when she struggled to break free he inadvertently snapped the second cuff on the same wrist. She fumbled for the door handle, and he raised what looked like a metal pipe and swung it at her head. She dodged the blow and ran out into oncoming traffic. A car stopped, and the passenger door opened. Carol dove across the lap of its passengers, a married couple.
By then the VW was long gone.
An hour later, about twenty miles north of the mall, Debra Kent, seventeen, disappeared after a play at Viewmont High School. Witnesses reported seeing a handsome, if suspicious, man with a moustache lurking around the school before the play.
The abductions spread east into Colorado, where between January 12, 1975, and April 6, 1975, three women, all in their twenties, went missing, including twenty-three-year-old Caryn Campbell, who disappeared from a ski resort near Aspen. May and June saw the youngest victims to
date, a twelve-year-old in Pocatello, Idaho, and a fifteen-year-old in Provo, Utah.
Slowly, the authorities in the western states began to connect the dots. The kidnappings, and the few bodies that had been recovered, seemed too similar not to be related. Could the “Ted” that terrorized the Seattle region in the first half of 1974 be the same man stalking the young women and teenagers of Colorado and Utah?
Decades later retired Utah highway patrolman Robert Hayward would tell a Deseret News reporter he thought it was an act of “the Lord”—the wrong turn he took at 3:00 AM on August 16, 1975, in his own neighborhood, placing the Volkswagen in the beam of his headlights. The Bug sat in front of the suburban home of two teenagers Hayward knew and whose parents he knew were out of town.
The suspicious car bolted away, and Hayward pursued it for several blocks before it pulled over at an abandoned gas station. A man popped out of the car and said, “I’m lost.” He wore a black turtleneck, and his dark hair curled down the length of his neck. He said he was a second-year law student at the University of Utah and, at Hayward’s request, handed over his driver’s license: Theodore Robert Bundy, age twenty-eight.
When the man couldn’t explain what he was doing in the neighborhood at that hour to Hayward’s satisfaction, the patrolman got his permission—later contested—to look inside the car. The search revealed two pairs of handcuffs, an ice pick, a crowbar, panty hose, and a ski mask. A sheriff’s deputy arrived and arrested Bundy on suspicion of burglary.
Detectives soon connected Bundy to the DaRonch kidnapping nearly a year earlier, as well as the multiple missing persons investigations. Then, over the next few weeks, more dots as they consulted the Ted Task Force in Seattle. All agreed: they had found “Ted.” Bolstered by the positive lineup identification of abduction survivor Carol DaRonch—also later contested—Utah authorities charged Bundy with kidnapping.
Soon out on bail—it had been set for $100,000, unusually low given the nature of the crime—and bound for Seattle, where he was now the Ted Task Force’s top suspect, Bundy called two friends whom he’d met while working on Washington governor Dan Evans’s recent election. They were attorney Marlin Vortman and another attorney, who is now a judge and wishes to remain anonymous (we’ll refer to him as “Nick” here).