Thursday, April 16, 2020

Dr. No (serial killer)

Dr. No is the nickname given to a suspected American serial killer thought to be responsible for the murders of at least nine women and girls in Ohio, between 1981 and 2004. As victims, he chose prostitutes working in parking lots and truck stops located alongside I-71. In addition, there are suspicions that he committed three similar killings in New York, Illinois and Pennsylvania, committed between 1986 and 1988. Murders: Three of the victims worked at "Union 76" truck stop in Austintown, east of Akron and west of Youngstown, which is the largest in the state, making the investigation suspect that the killer is a truck driver. Most of them were found without their underwear and shoes. The killings began in 1981, when the corpse of a young woman was found in Miami County on April 24. After a forensic examination, it was determined that the woman died from strangulation, having received a head injury beforehand. At the time of her discovery, no personal belongings or documents were found on the deceased, making her identification difficult. She was nicknamed "Buckskin Girl", from a tasseled buckskin poncho she was when found. In 2018, the victim was finally identified as Marcia King. The next victim was 25-year-old Marcia Matthews, whose body was found by a trucker one mile away from the Union 76 truck stop. She had died from a traumatic brain injury, sustained after a beating with a blunt object. On July 20, 1986, the body of 23-year-old prostitute Shirley Dean Taylor was discovered, who was also beaten and strangled before death. Before her disappearance, she was seen at Union 76, where, according to witness reports, she went to meet a regular client nicknamed "Dr. No", whose identity was never established. Her body was discovered a few miles from the place of disappearance, with her underwear and shoes missing. In December 1986, 18-year-old prostitute April Barnett also went missing from the Union 76 truck stop, with her body found only a few days later 70 miles from Austintown. Like the previous cases, the victim was beaten and died from strangulation, with some of her clothes missing as well. A few days after, 28-year-old prostitute, Jill Allen was found murdered in Illinois, near the I-70. Despite the fact that she had been found in another state, she was also included as a victim, as her killer had the exact same modus operandi. Allen had also been beaten and asphyxiated, with strangulation marks found on her body. Her shoes, bra, and underwear were never found. The next victim of the serial killer was 27-year-old Anne-Marie Patterson, who went missing on February 7, 1987, from Union 76. Her semi-decomposed body was found 40 days later, 250 miles away from Austintown, near Cincinnati. A week before the disappearance, Patterson had been arrested by police. At the police station, she gave information about a murder suspect and described his car. During the investigation, law enforcement agencies discovered that Patterson had made an appointment via CB radio with the client, nicknamed "Dr. No", whom she characterized extremely negatively, and then disappeared. In connection with this, the police and later the media coined the nickname for the unidentified criminal. On August 10 that same year, another victim's body was found in Englewood. The victim's jeans and underwear were lowered to the ankles, while the upper parts of the clothes were missing. According to the nature of grass depressions and tire tracks located at the scene, forensic experts determined that the killer threw the victim's corpse out of his car. An autopsy revealed that the victim was a young woman, aged 20-25, and had died from strangulation. Despite the abundance of tattoos on her body, as well as jewelry the offender had not stolen, she remained unidentified until 2010. The victim was identified as Paula Beverly Davis, 21, after relatives recognized her tattoos pictured on her unidentified persons listing in the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System. Although she was included on the task force relating to the murders (formed in 1991), additional theories exist suggesting a drug dealer's retaliation, an unknown woman last seen in her company, or an unrelated serial killer. On November 22, the body of 19-year-old Lamonica Cole was discovered at a truck stop in Breezewood, Pennsylvania. Despite the fact that the truck stop was located on another interstate, Cole was included in the list of potential victims, because she had died from strangulation, was a native of Ohio and some of her things had been recovered, while others not. During the investigation, Lamonica's pimp, 24-year-old Derrick Mims, told police that the alleged killer with whom Cole left on the day of her disappearance was traveling in a blue lorry with white stripes. According to investigators, another murder was committed on March 29, 1988, this time in New York. The murder was 31-year-old Terri Roark, whose body was found on one of the bridges passing through the Mohawk River. The medical examiner found that the woman died from a traumatic brain injury that occurred during a beating with a blunt object several hours before the discovery of her body. Some of Roark's clothing, including underwear and shoes, were never found, on the basis of which she was included in the list potential victims of Dr. No. On April 19, 1990, the corpse of another female was found near a truck stop on the I-70. Most of her clothes were missing, but this time, her panties remained. An autopsy concluded that she had died from a traumatic brain injury resulting from a beating, and had had sexual intercourse 12-24 hours before her death. With these conclusions, the investigators suggested that the victim was a prostitute and had fallen victim to the serial killer. Despite multiple attempts to identify her, she remained unidentified (with the placeholder name "Jane Doe 2") until her identification as Patrice Anita Corley (29) in 2017. Investigation: During the course of the investigation, the police interviewed hundreds of prostitutes, pimps, service station employees and truck drivers, in an attempt to find witnesses and identify the offender. According to the witnesses, the killer appeared to be a tall, large man with fair skin and dark hair, aged 25-40, wore glasses and talked with an accent matching that of somebody from the Northeastern states. The vehicle he was driving was described as a 1984 silver truck with a windblocker and a red hood. The Ohio State Police Department and volunteers from various civil society organizations posted over 4,000 photographs of the victims and an identikit of the offender at 130 truck stops and service stations across the state, and 1,350 truck stops in 9 other states through which interstate motorways where the serial killer would ride through, offering $10,000 for information about him. As a result, five people were detained, who at different times were nicknamed "Dr. No", but subsequently no charges were filed against any of them and their names were never disclosed to the public. On most of the corpses, biological traces were discovered that, according to the investigators, came from the perpetrator. To establish if the sperm had the same affiliation, a forensic examination was carried out which gave mixed results, due to the fact that all of the victims had engaged in prostitution during life, and authorities started questioning whether the deaths were actually related. Since no other incriminating evidence was found at the crime scenes, such as fingerprints, hair samples and pieces of clothing, the investigation to this day hasn't established the killer's identity. Suspect: In April 1991, a resident of Lake County, 36-year-old Alvin Wilson, became the main suspect. Wilson, who worked as a trucker and owned two tractors, was among those whose hair samples matched those of the females. Credit card receipts and a number of other evidence indicated his possible responsibility for the Ohio murders. In 1990, he was arrested on charges of assault and attempted murder of a woman in October 1989. After his arrest, the girl contacted police, stating that in 1986, Wilson had picked her up in Akron after paying for her services, and had beat and attempted to strangle her afterward. Alvin Wilson was tested for any involvement, but no evidence proving his guilt could be found. In June 1994, a 36-year-old trucker from Ohio, James Robert Cruz, Jr., was convicted in the March 1993 murder of 17-year-old Dawn Marie Birnbaum in Centre County, Pennsylvania, whose dumped body was found along the I-80. The girl's body was discovered a few days after her death. Since most of her clothes were missing, Cruz was considered a possible suspect in the Ohio killings. He was tested, but subsequently, no charges were filed against him. In 1995, 28-year-old Sean Patrick Goble, a trucker from North Carolina, who had admitted to killing two prostitutes in Tennessee in April of that year, was among the suspects for the murder of a North Carolina woman in early 1995. In accordance with his occupation, Goble traveled to several dozen states across the country, where cases of disappearances and murders of prostitutes along interstate highways were recorded. Following his arrest, Goble was investigated for murders in at least 10 states. Nevertheless, he was cleared of suspicion when it came to being the elusive "Dr. No", since, at the time of the first murder in 1981, he was still in high school, and in the mid-1980s, when the majority of the killings took place, he was serving in the Army and was stationed outside Ohio. In November 2005, on the basis of DNA profiling, authorities arrested 46-year-old Dellmus Charles Colvin, a truck driver who killed five prostitutes in Toledo. Colvin later admitted to killing at least two others in New Jersey, but vehemently denied any involvement in the Dr. No murders during the 1980s. In early 2019, 49-year-old Samuel Legg was arrested in Arizona. Using DNA profiling, law enforcement agencies were able to prove his guilt in the four murders in Ohio and Illinois, the first of which he committed at age 20 in 1989. His initial arrested was thanks due to a match for an unsolved 1997 rape of a minor in Medina County, Ohio, where he was extradited to stand trial. In the fall of 1990, Legg was already in the police's sights, as he was a suspect in the murder of his stepdaughter, 14-year-old Angela Hicks, in Elyria, but as there wasn't enough evidence, he wasn't charged. Although the likelihood of him being "Dr. No" is questionable, since Legg was a teenager in the mid-1980s, it has been suggested that he could be responsible for some of the murders. If this theory is true, it links to another theory which proposes that the serial murders were the doing of several different individuals.

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