Showing posts with label Atlanta murders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlanta murders. Show all posts

February 16, 2021

The Assassination of Sara Tokars

 

Sara Tokars with her sons, Ricky and Mike (photo source: Atlanta Magazine)

The Murder

It was Thanksgiving weekend, 1992.  Sunday night, November 29, was a quiet one in the Marietta neighborhood of Kings Cove, which housed comfortable, upscale homes that ranged from twenty years old to new.  It was not long after 10 p.m. when one of the homeowners heard a knocking at his front door and opened it to two little boys, who were spattered with blood and holding hands.  The older of the two told him that "a bad man shot my mom," "a bad black man" with a "pirate gun."  He wanted the man to call his grandfather, who was a doctor.  The little boy, six-year-old Ricky Tokars, thought that since his grandfather was a doctor, he could make his mom better.  

Ricky pointed to a white Toyota 4-Runner, parked in a field across the street only half a mile from the Tokars residence.  The homeowner took a friend to investigate and found a terrible sight.  When they opened the driver's-side door, the body of thirty-nine year old Sara Tokars fell out.  She had suffered a horrifying shotgun wound to the back of her head.  

The Cobb County police notified Sara's family in Bradenton, Florida and her husband, Fred Tokars, who was at a Montgomery, Alabama hotel.  Sara's father, John Ambrusko, later recalled that Fred was hysterical the first time they talked by phone following the notifications.  Detectives found Fred to be a sobbing mess, which was understandable, but they also smelled beer on his breath, which Fred claimed to be an attempt from his attorney -- one of his first calls--  to calm him.  Less understandable was Fred's refusal to cooperate and his resistance to walk through the family home with the investigators.  He provided sketchy details on how the house was secured, couldn't say whether or not Sara's jewelry had been disturbed, or why the safe was open.  He was certain, though, that his guitar had been moved.     

The Investigation

Fred Tokars (photo source: Oxygen)

As Fred was a well-known attorney and former prosecutor, the murder became an immediate big news story.  

The detectives had little physical evidence to go on.  No fingerprints, no gun casings and nothing apparently left behind by Sara's killer.  All they had was the massive amount of her blood and fragments of her skull and brain.

From Ricky Tokars, the police learned that after he, his mother and little brother had returned home on Sunday evening from a family visit in Florida.  By the time the SUV had pulled into the garage, four-year-old Mike was asleep.  Sara had left him in his car seat while she and Ricky and Ricky's spaniel, Jake, got out of the vehicle.  As she had opened the door to the house, a black man wearing a dark cap had appeared, holding a gun.  Jake began barking and the man kicked him, before forcing Sara and Ricky back into the car.  The man had climbed into the backseat beside the still-sleeping Mike and directly behind Sara and ordered her to drive.  By the time Sara had pulled the car into the cul-de-sac half a mile from her home, on the gunman's orders, Mike Tokars had awakened.  The gunman then shot Sara in the back of the head.  The car, motor still running, had coasted across the road and into a nearby field, where it came to rest.  Ricky, covered in his mother's blood, reached over and turned the ignition off before pulling his crying younger brother from the backseat and going for help. 

Police began investigating Sara and Fred Tokars in an attempt to find out who had wanted to kill her.  

Sara had first seen Fred on the evening news eight years earlier, when he was a junior prosecutor assisting in a high-profile murder case involving the slaying of an attorney by his lover.  The slim, attractive and outgoing Sara felt attracted to the tall and lean Fred, who sported a look of seriousness with his tortoiseshell glasses and hair he combed back behind his ears.   Then 31 years old, Sara was working at the trendy Elan nightclub by Perimeter Mall as a promoter and sharing a Dunwoody condo with her sister Krissy.  She had been an elementary school teacher in Florida before moving to Atlanta with her first husband, a health club owner she had met at the beach.  Sara became a fitness instructor at her husband's gym but the marriage did not last and ended in divorce.  

Fred had worked as an accountant before earning his law degree in night school.  Even while working as a junior prosecutor for the DA, he quickly began the aggressive self-promotion he would become known for.   Although he had no experience prosecuting cases involving white-collar crime or computer fraud, he deemed himself an expert and began teaching at local colleges and night law school, as well as tax and accountant seminars and law enforcement seminars.  He also gained a reputation for his eagerness to work on projects he found interesting -- as well as the Atlanta nightlife and women.  Soon enough, he was known as "Fast Fred" around the office.

On impulse following that television appearance, Sara called Fred at his Fulton County District Attorney's office.  A friendly chat led to a date and that date led to being married in Judge John Langford's chambers the following year.  For Sara, she felt she had finally found what she had been searching for:  a good man who was promising her a suburban home and children.  Sara, the middle child of seven daughters in a Catholic family, dearly wanted to recreate her own comfortable upbringing.  Fred, who nursed political aspirations and spoke of wanting to be a tax attorney with wealthy clientele, found Sara to be an asset; she was gorgeous, have a vibrant personality, and had the social contacts Fred desired.   

Within months of the wedding, Sara was pregnant with Ricky and the couple purchased their King's Cove home.  Cracks, however, were already beginning to form in the Tokars' marriage.  If Sara was disheartened by Fred's inattentiveness and long work hours, she was discouraged when her desire to quit working was met by resistance.   She continued working throughout her pregnancy and after Ricky's birth until the decline of the nightclub business led her to being laid off.   While Sara became a stay-at-home mom, Fred left the DA's office to start his own practice.  Where he had once worked to prosecute crimes, now he worked to defend the accused.  Starting first with criminal defense, he soon expanded his practice to include divorce and tax fraud in hopes of making as much money as quickly as possible.  

Sara was less than happy with her husband's new clientele.  As some of them paid Fred in cash, she worried that they were mixed up in the drug business.  Financial problems -- repairs needed on the house, the loss of Sara's salary, and the addition of baby Mike -- were compounded by Fred putting Sara on a budget.  He refused to allow her credit cards or her own bank accounts and insisted they pay for everything with cash.  Fred later claimed that he put his wife on a budget because she had a lot of debt when they married.  

(photo source: People)

Sara tried to start her own small promotions company but Fred refused her budget proposals and only gave her a small portion of the funds she requested.  She told her sister Krissy that Fred would now allow her access to the basement of their home, where he kept a safe and a bunch of files locked up.  He also began objecting whenever Sara wanted to visit her family, refusing to provide her with money for gas or a hotel room.  If she insisted on going, she would drive the nine hours with the children while Fred would fly down.  

Sara alleged to an attorney and private investigator she eventually hired that shortly after Ricky's birth Fred began physically abusing her, an allegation he later denied.  She wrote a new will after Mike's birth, naming her sister as her executor and leaving everything to her sons.  For his part, Fred took out three life insurance policies worth $1.75 million on Sara.  

By 1989, Sara was convinced that Fred's late nights had more to do with other women than work.  She sought out advice from a Buckhead divorce attorney but was clearly intimidated by Fred, who had threatened to take the children from her if she ever tried to leave.  By that time, she believed he had the political connections to do it.   He served as campaign treasurer for a superior court judge's winning race and was appointed by Mayor Andrew Young as a part-time city judge.  

Sara's private investigator confirmed her suspicions that Fred was engaging in extramarital affairs, leading her to gather information on Fred that she could use against him in any divorce action.  She broke Fred's house rules, got the combination to his basement safe and opened it, finding documents, bags and vials of what appeared to be prescription medication.  She asked her PI to turn his files on Fred over to the police should anything happen to her.

Fred was becoming better known to law enforcement and not for his seminars.  He was not only representing drug dealers but apparently going into business with the people who fronted them.  It didn't help that some of the clients he was representing faced allegations of drug trafficking and money laundering.  Sara was uneasy with Fred's clientele and, due to the fact that she and the children were alone so often at night, begged her husband to install an alarm system on the home, which he had done, and to fix the broken lock on the sliding door, which he did not do.  She seemed terrified of leaving Fred and taking any steps forward for herself, but she did volunteer as a teacher's aide several times a week at the Catholic school Ricky and Mike attended.  

Three weeks before Sara's death, federal agents were investigating claims of tax evasion and money laundering against Fred's client, Anthony Brown, who was also suspected of managing a cocaine distribution ring.  As Fred had been Brown's attorney, he was viewed not only as a witness but a target of their probe.  As such, had she not been murdered, it was possible that Sara might have been subpoenaed in the investigation.

On Tuesday, November 24, 1992, five days before Sara was killed, she and the children left to visit her family in Bradenton, Florida.  They stopped at the Tampa airport to pick up Fred, who had flown down from Atlanta.  On Saturday, shortly after 1:30 in the morning, the fire alarm in their Marietta home went off.  Six hours later, a second alarm sounded.  The alarm company, who phoned the Tokarses in Florida, was instructed to disconnect the alarm.  Fred would later insist that it was Sara's decision to disconnect it.  

Fred left Florida to return to Atlanta later that day, with Sara and the boys set to follow the next day after lunch.

Fred Tokars under arrest (photo source: Oxygen)


The Break

Through their investigation detectives learned about a 28-year-old man named Eddie Lawrence.  Lawrence was a classic slumlord who had amassed a small fortune using drug money to purchase ramshackle properties, fix them up and rent them out.  He would then default on his mortgage payments, while continuing to collect rent from his beleaguered tenants.   He had found Fred Tokars after getting into legal jams.  Fred not only represented Lawrence but chose to go into business with him.  Eventually their relationship began to crumble, with Lawrence owing Fred $70,000.  Fred had an affair with a stripper, who was an employee of Lawrence's.  She told investigators that during one of their rendezvous he had told her he was sick of Sara and he was going to get her out of the way.    

Lawrence had criminal charges pending against him for writing bad checks when the police picked him up but worse for him, informants told police that he had been shopping for a hit man before Sara's murder.  Lawrence denied killing Sara Tokars or participating in her murder but he was arrested anyhow. 

Curtis Rower (photo source: Ga. Dept. of Corrections)


Less than a week after Eddie Lawrence was arrested, the Cobb County Police were given the name of 22-year-old Curtis Rower.  Rower was a crack addict known as "Cornbread" who had gone on a binge following Sara Tokars' murder and blabbed to several people that he had been the one to kill her.  The informant who provided Rower's name said that Lawrence had initially offered to pay him (the informant) $5,000 for a hit.  When he turned the job down, Rower accepted it.   On December 23, 1992, Rower was discovered hiding under his cousin's bed and arrested.  He almost immediately confessed to Sara Tokars' murder but said he had not meant to kill her.  

Fred Tokars, upon hearing of the arrests of Eddie Lawrence and Curtis Rower, dropped Ricky and Mike off with Sara's family in Bradenton to go to a local hotel.  Locking the door and putting a "do not disturb" sign on the door, he then took pain pills with alcohol.  His attempt at suicide failed and he survived.  He recovered enough to speak in Atlanta on December 31 at a news conference, where he asked the media to leave him alone and to claim that Sara's murder had cost him everything.  

Ricky and Mike Tokars with their aunt Krissy (photo source: Atlanta Journal Constitution)


Only a few days later, Fred closed his law office and put the Marietta home on the market.  He moved to West Palm Beach with his mother, leaving Ricky and Mike in the care of Sara's parents and sisters.  Investigators in Atlanta, though, continued their probe into Sara's murder and in August of 1993, he was indicated by a federal grand jury.  

Justice is Served

Eddie Lawrence (photo source: Ga. Dept. of Corrections)

It would take until 1997 for Fred Tokars to be brought to trial.  In the meantime, Curtis Rowe was convicted of life in prison after two trials (the first ending in a mistrial) and Eddie Lawrence managed a plea deal in exchange for testifying against Tokars and Rowe.    The trial outlined what actually happened on the terrible night of November 29, 1992.

The prosecutors believed that Sara had confronted Fred with his secret bank accounts and illicit business dealings in an effort to get a speedy divorce.  He went to Eddie Lawrence, who owed him $70,000, and offered to clear the debt if Lawrence would get rid of Sara.  It served two purposes for Fred:  not only would Sara be gone but if Fred went down, so would Lawrence, ensuring his silence.   Fred made the deal even more enticing for Lawrence by offering him half of the proceeds from Sara's $1.75 million insurance policies as investments for his businesses.  Lawrence testified that he had tried to talk Fred out of the plan.  As one of Fred's clients, he had been to the Tokars home and had met Sara.  In fact the last time he visited the home Fred had insisted that Lawrence play his guitar; the same guitar that he told investigators in 1992 had been moved.  Lawrence had no problem being a conman and a slumlord but he apparently wanted nothing to do with actually pulling the trigger on Sara.  Fred insisted,  offering him $25,000 up front.  Lawrence agreed but decided he would contract the job out.

He went to the most desperate person he knew, Curtis Rower, and offered him $5,000 to commit the murder.  He accompanied Rower on two drive-bys in which the Tokars residence was scoped out before Curtis Rower agreed.  Shortly before Thanksgiving of 1992,  the two men entered the Tokars home in the early hours of the morning.   They knew the sliding glass door would be unlocked, the house alarm would be off and that Sara and the boys would be sleeping together in the children's bedroom.  What they didn't account for was Ricky's Springer Spaniel, Jake, who began barking.  When a light came on, Lawrence and Rower fled.   

On Sunday, November 29, Lawrence received two calls from Fred Tokars, who had just returned to Atlanta from Florida.  Tokars said that he was on the way to Montgomery, Alabama where he had an appointment with a federal prison inmate.  

By 9 p.m. Curtis Rower was in the Tokars home, which was left unlocked, awaiting Sara and the boys.  He waited for more than an hour, possibly taking the phone off the hook (or possibly Fred did that before leaving for Montgomery).  He confronted Sara with a .410 sawed-off shotgun and forced her and Ricky back into the car, kicking Ricky's barking dog on the way.  He climbed in behind Sara and next to Mike, who would indeed wake up en route to their final destination.  Rower had specific orders not to touch the children.

Rower forced Sara to drive to the location where Eddie Lawrence was parked and waiting.  When she saw Lawrence, she knew who he was and surely knew what was going to happen and who arranged it.   She begged for Rower to take the car, take her handbag but to leave her and the children alone.    Although Rower claimed he had had no intention on killing Sara, he pointed the shotgun at the back of her head and pulled the trigger.  Ricky and Mike saw their mother being killed.  

Rower and Lawrence then fled the scene, leaving the blood-spattered children to run for help.

Sara (photo source: Find a Grave)

Sara's family had hoped that Fred Tokars would receive the death penalty for orchestrating Sara's murder but the jury voted 10-2, with two jurors objecting.  Instead, he received life without possibility of parole.  He was also convicted in federal court of racketeering and money laundering and sentenced in federal prison to life without parole.   While in prison, he testified against other suspects in federal criminal trials, leading to six murders being solved.  According to his attorney, he was beaten for cooperating with the government.  He had been suffering with several diseases, including a form of MS, and had been unable to walk for a decade when he died in a Pennsylvania prison in May of 2020 at the age of 67.  

Curtis Rower remains incarcerated at Macon State Prison in Oglethorpe, Georgia.  

Eddie Lawrence remains incarcerated at the Coffee Correctional Facility in Nicholls, Georgia. 

Sara was originally buried at Arlington Memorial Park in Sandy Springs, Georgia on December 3, 1992.  Following her husband's conviction in 1997, her remains were disinterred and reburied at Mount Olivet Cemetery in her birthplace of New York.  Her mother was interred by her in 1998 and her father in 2002.

Sarah's final resting place (photo source: Find a Grave)


A Final Tragedy

Following Fred Tokars' arrest and incarceration, Ricky and Mike Tokars never spoke to him or saw him again.  Their father attempted communication by sending letters written from prison, but they rebuffed him.  The boys grew up in Florida, raised by Sara's parents and sisters.  Ricky went to college in San Diego, where he became an avid surfer and traveler before becoming an emergency medical technician.  Mike stayed in Florida for college and then toured the south by van and played guitar in bands before moving to New York, where he was inspired to become a reporter and writer.  He eventually graduated from Columbia's Master of Journalism program but despite his successes, he never got over his mother's murder.  He died suddenly and unexpectedly on April 3, 2020, a month before his father, of a pulmonary embolism in Newport Beach, California.  His obituary mentioned that he was "beloved by family and friends" and that Mike had been "cherished for his tenacious curiosity, compassionate heart, infectious sense of humor, kindred spirit and remarkable zest for life."  Mike Tokars was 31 years old.  He was interred by his mother at Mount Olivet Cemetery in New York.

(photo source: Contently)


August 18, 2020

The Unsolved Atlanta Ripper Case



The Five Points area of Atlanta, 1911 (photo source: georgiainfo.com) 


In 1911, Atlanta, Georgia was considered the gateway to the "New South," at least by Atlanta itself.  Less than four decades after Sherman burned Atlanta in a bid to destroy the morale of southerners and cripple the ability of major cities, like Atlanta, to transport goods from place to place, nearly a dozen railroads were now passing through Georgia's capital city.   There was a major boom in business, leading to Inman Park and Peachtree Street being much sought after as residences for the wealthy.

Atlanta wanted to project itself as being racially tolerant, touting Morris Brown, Atlanta University and Atlanta Baptist as some of the best "black" schools in the nation.  Black-owned businesses were also cropping up, lending credence to the idea of a New South.

However, the majority of the city's minority residents, rather than having their own business, worked long hours at menial jobs, doing manual labor, and living in the less-desirable areas of Reynoldstown and Pittsburg.

Five years earlier, in 1906, 40 black men had died as a result of a rampage in which a mob of white men had run rampant through the city after unsubstantiated reports of four white women being assaulted by black men.   The tension, and the ugliness of the riot, was still very much alive in Atlanta.

Segregation was law at the time.  Blacks could not walk through "white" parks; they could not eat in "white" restaurants; they could not drink in "white" bars; they could not drink from "white" water fountains; and they could not be buried in "white" cemeteries.  Accordingly, the city's white residents actively took steps to keep their white-only neighborhoods white.   In July of 1911, white residents of Ashby Street held a meeting in which they debated ways to keep blacks out, after four black families had moved in.

And so it wasn't surprising that when the murder spree started, the press and authorities gave it little concern. 

(photo source: American Hauntings) 


The Assaults and Murders

It's not possible to say with certainty exactly when the crime spree started and absolutely who the first victim was but on Monday, October 3, 1910, 23-year-old Maggie Brook's body was found at the intersection of the Atlanta and West Point Railroad Track and Hill Street.  A cook, Maggie's skull had been fractured.

On Saturday, January 22, 1911, 35-year-old Rosa Trice had the left side of her skull nearly completely crushed, her jaw stabbed and her throat cut so viciously that her head was nearly severed from her neck.  After being killed, the perpetrator drug her body some 75 yards from her house on Gardner Street in the Pittsburg neighborhood before abandoning it there, where it was discovered.  Two hours after her body was found, her husband was arrested for her murder but released the following night for lack of evidence.  The Atlanta Constitution reported her murder, including the grisly details of her killing. 

On Sunday, February 19, 1911, the body of an unidentified black female was discovered in some woods by the West Point Belt Car Line, just outside the city limits.  She was estimated to be 25 years old and her head had been crushed.  Beer bottles had been scattered around her body.  It was suspected she had been killed either on Friday, February 17, or Saturday, February 18.

On Sunday morning, May 28, 1911, the body of Mary "Belle" Walker was found just 25 yards from her home on Garibaldi Street.  A cook working in a private home on Cooper Street, Belle was found by her sister when she failed to return home from work the night before.  Her throat had been cut in a jagged fashion.  The Atlanta Constitution duly reported the crime in their May 29 edition on page 7, noting that a "Negro woman" had been killed and there were no clues.

In the early morning of Thursday, June 15, 1911, Addie Watts, a resident of 30 Selman Street, was found in some shrubbery at Krogg and DeKalb Streets, close to the Southern Railway.  Authorities believed she had first been hit in the head with a brick or a coupling pin from a train before her killer had stabbed at her skull with a coupling pin and then slit her throat.  After she had been killed, she was dragged into the bushes near the tracks.

It was only after Addie Watts was discovered that the local papers began to speculate that there may have been a lone, solitary killer preying on the city's young black women.  On June 16, 1911, the day after the Watts killing, The Atlanta Journal ran a headline questioning whether a "black butcher" was at work in the city.   It was this brief article (only four paragraphs) that first linked the Atlanta murders to those that occurred in London in the autumn of 1888, where five prostitutes were brutally stabbed to death and mutilated by the infamous Jack the Ripper.   According to the article, the police were advancing the theory that "Atlanta has an insane criminal, something on the order of the famed Jack the Ripper."  The competing Atlanta Constitution, however, was still holding firm that the killings were isolated, unrelated incidents.  

On Saturday, June 24, 1911, Lizzie Watkins, a resident of West Oakland Street, became the next victim.  She was found around 11 a.m. the following day at White and Lawson Streets.  Like Addie Watts, she was found in a clump of bushes.   Also like Addie Watts, Lizzie's throat had been cut and her body had been dragged to where it was found after the fatal injury.

Following the Lizzie Watkins murder, the crimes were (finally) moved to the front page of The Atlanta Journal.   The similarities between the victims and murders was pointed out, as was the fact that for five Saturdays in a row, young black or biracial women had been murdered.  Through these reports, the public found out for the first time that in each case, it appeared the women were choked into unconsciousness before they were assaulted and killed and that the victims had been mutilated in the same areas of their bodies.  Although not specified in the newspaper reports at the time due to the "delicate" nature, like London's Jack the Ripper's victims, Atlanta's Ripper victims were not raped but their injuries appeared sexual in nature.   Also like the British Ripper, Atlanta reporters claimed that the local killer had some type of anatomical knowledge.

Once again, The Atlanta Constitution was behind the eight ball.  Although it reported the most recent murder, the Constitution incorrectly opined that Lizzie Watkins' death was due to cocaine and whiskey. 

July 4, 1911 article from The Daily Mail (photo source: JTR Forums)
 


The first possible break or lead in the case came on Saturday, July 1, 1911 with the murder of 40-year-old Lena Sharpe.  The Sharpe case is notable not only for the eyewitness encounter but also for two varying versions of what happened.

In the first version, as reported by The Atlanta Constitution, Lena told her 20-year-old daughter, Emma Lou, that she was walking to the market.  When Lena had not returned to the Sharpe home on Hanover Street within an hour, Emma Lou headed toward the market in search of her mother.  As the Sharpes' neighbor, Addie Watts, had been killed only two weeks prior, Emma Lou was frightened to learn that her mother never arrived at her destination.  She was walking back toward the family home when she was confronted by a tall black man in a wide-brimmed black hat who asked her, "How do you feel this evening?"  Feeling apprehensive, she moved past him, and he responded with, "Don't worry.  I never hurt girls like you."  Emma Lou was then stabbed in the back while the man ran off, laughing.   She screamed, alerting a group of neighbors who came to her assistance.  While Emma Lou survived, her mother did not.  Lena Sharpe's body was found shortly after her daughter's attack, with her head in a pool of blood and her throat cut.

In the second version, as reported by The Atlanta Journal, Lena and Emma Lou were walking together to the store when the black man, who had been hiding, blocked their path and struck Lena in the head with a brick.   Lena fell to the ground and the man began slashing at Emma Lou, never uttering a word.  Emma Lou ran from the scene, screaming, but fainted due to blood loss.   It was then that the killer cut Lena's throat so severely that her head was nearly severed from her body.  He returned to Emma Lou, who had regained consciousness and saw him standing over her with a bloody knife.  Only the sound of feet running toward them sent the killer scurrying for cover.

Whichever version was accurate, Lena Sharpe was indeed killed -- and very nearly decapitated -- with her body found by the Seaboard railroad tracks, and Emma Lou Sharpe was stabbed.  The Atlanta Journal reported she was unlikely to live but it seems that she did indeed survive her wounds.  She also got a good look at the man who stabbed her and quite probably murdered her mother.

Detectives working the case almost immediately deduced that the same man who had stabbed Emma Lou had killed her mother and had gone so far as to connect that same man to the murder of their neighbor, Addie Watts, and the other victims.    

The Sharpe assaults and murder prompted The Atlanta Constitution to declare by July 4 that the Jack the Ripper theory had now been given further "substance."  The same article also reported that "while the ordinary Negro murder attracts little attention, the police department was . . . expecting a repetition of the long series of crimes which have baffled every effort of the detectives."  A $25 reward was offered by undertaker L. L. Lee for the capture of the man who killed Lena Sharpe.  Mr. Lee also requested that other black business owners open their wallets to increase the reward fund, making it more enticing and, hopefully, encourage residents to assist the police and bring the guilty party to justice.    

Coroner Paul Donehoo stated that the killings were the work of the same man; i.e., a single killer.  The city held its breath as another weekend approached; The Atlanta Journal headlined: "Will Jack the Ripper Claim Eighth Victim This Saturday?"   An unnamed policeman was quoted as saying the killer would take another victim Saturday before midnight.

The unnamed policeman was right -- and wrong.  On Saturday, July 8, 1911, 22-year-old Mary Yeldell left the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Selcer on Fourth Street, where she was employed as a cook.  Walking by an alley, she heard a whistle and stopped.  A large black man, tall and well built, was moving toward her, as she later said, with a cat-like tread.  She screamed and ran back to the Selcer house, where Mr. Selcer grabbed his revolver and headed for the alley.  The man, surprisingly, was still there.  When Mr. Selcer ordered him to raise his hands or be shot, the man ran down the alley.  The police were called but turned up nothing.

If, like Emma Lou Sharpe, Mary Yeldell had come face to face with the Atlanta Ripper, she had been fortunate enough to not only survive but survive without injuries.  The Yeldell incident appeared to have broken the Saturday night streak but the Ripper wasn't done yet.

On Sunday, July 9, a meeting was held at the First Congregational Church in Atlanta where the church's pastor, Henry Hugh Proctor, along with other black leaders in the community, asked that every black resident in Atlanta use his or her resources to locate the killer.  While asking its black residents to cooperate fully with the police, the community also began requesting the police force to hire black detectives to assist in the hunt.   Due to the segregation that was present in the city, Reverend Proctor and others believed that black detectives would receive more cooperation from black community members, as well as being less invasive.  

On Tuesday morning, July 11, 1911, a workman by the name of Will Broglin discovered some loose dirt on his normal route to work.  Sensing distress, he followed the disturbance to a blood trail in the road at Atlanta Avenue and Martin Street, near the new Orme Street sewer.  He found the body of Sadie Holley, who worked at a local laundry, in a small gulley, where it had lain since the previous night.  Sadie's skull had been fractured with a large stone, after which she was dragged roughly 15 feet and her throat slashed ear to ear so violently, she was nearly decapitated.  Her shoes had been cut from her feet and a comb from her hair was found next to the bloody rock used to bludgeon her.   The soft dirt by her body indicated her killer's route of escape.

An estimated 100 onlookers were at the crime scene within 20 minutes of the body discovery.  By the time the coroner arrived, the crowd had swelled to some 500, leading to a general sense of hysteria.  The victim count was increasing but the police seemed no closer to apprehending the suspect. 

Sadie Holley received the dubious honor of being the first murder victim of the Ripper to make the front page of The Atlanta Constitution, which stated "Reign of Crime Grips Atlanta" and "Negro Women Slain, and No Arrests are Made."   The Constitution, which had been slow to accept that Atlanta had a serial killer on its hands, now made up for lost time by recounting the killings that had taken place over the previous year and insinuating they were all committed by the same individual.    

There was a brief glimmer of hope when 27-year-old laborer Henry Huff was arrested on July 11, less than 24 hours after Sadie Holley's body was found, at his home on Brotherton Street.  Huff reportedly had been the last person seen with Holley and possessed trousers with a bloodstain on them, dirt up to the knee and scratches on his arms.  A cabman by the name of Will Williams claimed that Huff and Holley had been in his cab, quarreling, before he let them off near where the murder took place.  Huff, however, was only held on suspicion.  

Not long after picking up Huff, police picked up 35-year-old Todd Henderson at a saloon on Decatur Street after  a man claimed that Henderson had been seen with Sadie Holley in a drug store on the night of her murder not far from the scene.  Emma Lou Sharpe was brought into the station to listen to Henderson's voice; according to The Atlanta Constitution, she "shrank back" upon hearing him.  Although Emma Lou's identification was not considered solid or absolute, the lady herself told reporters that Henderson was "the man," and if not, she would be badly mistaken.  For his part, Henderson was quoted as saying that if he were the Ripper, he would have begun on his wife, as she gave him lots of trouble.

Police, however, grew more suspicious of Henderson after he asserted to detectives that he had not owned a pocketknife or a razor in over a year and they found that on the morning after Sadie Holley's murder he had dropped off a razor to a barber to be sharpened.

The case against both Henderson and Huff were purely circumstantial but police turned them over to the prosecutor, thinking the grand jury would figure out which man to indict in Sadie Holley's murder.  

Several days later, Governor Hoke Smith offered a $250 reward for the capture of the Atlanta Ripper.

(photo source: Catlick) 


On July 16, Reverend Proctor, who had asked Atlanta's residents to assist in finding the Ripper, preached to his congregation at the Black First Congregational Church that the "hand of God" was seen in the work of the Ripper and that the sins of the victims themselves were to blame.

On August 9, 1911, the grand jury indicted Henry Huff for the murder of Sadie Holley and a new suspect, a man by the name of John Daniel Huff (no relation to Henry Huff), in a related case, although the grand jury wouldn't say which one.  

Despite the arrests, the Ripper's reign of terror on the streets of Atlanta continued.

On Thursday, August 31, 1911, more than six weeks after the ravaging of Sadie Holley, the body of 20-year-old Mary Ann Duncan was found in an area west of Atlanta called Blantown.   Lying in between railroad tracks, Mary, like previous victims, had suffered a horrific throat wound, going from ear to ear.  Like Sadie Holley, her shoes had been removed.

This newest slaying made the media and the police certain they had not arrested the real Ripper, despite the grand jury indictments.  


On Sunday, October 22, 1911, the body of Eva Florence was found in a field at Rockwell and Elizabeth Streets.  She had been killed the night before, beaten in the head and stabbed in the neck (but not slashed as the other victims.)  Her brother, John Clowers, a waiter, posted a $100 reward with the police for the apprehension of the killer.  The coroner's inquest found that a firearm had been discharged on Elizabeth Street shortly before or at the time of the Florence murder.

On Friday, November 10, 1911, Minnie Wise, described by the newspapers as a "comely mulatto girl" was found dead in an alley.  She had been bludgeoned with a rock, dragged into a field on Connelly Street, where her throat was cut and then dragged 20 more feet to where she was discovered, near the corner of Georgia Avenue.  Her right index finger had been hacked off at the middle joint and her shoes were missing.  Minnie was found close to where two other victims had been murdered.

Early Tuesday morning, November 21, 1911, middle-aged Mary Putnam fell prey, being slashed to death.  Her body was found around 7 a.m. in a ditch at Stewart Street and University Avenue, buried under some loose dirt.  Her throat had been cut, her chest mutilated, and her heart was found lying next to her.  Her autopsy would reveal she had also suffered a broken skull.  As prints were seen in the dirt around Mary's corpse, police brought a bloodhound in to attempt to track her killer.   The dog was able to follow the scent for about 200 yards before losing it.  Mary had been a recent Atlanta transplant, having moved to the area to keep house for an elderly black man, who the police did not consider a suspect.  More than 1,000 people viewed Mary's body at the undertakers, including Mary's stepson, Walter, who did not identify himself or his stepmother at the time but only after returning to work as an elevator operator, when he informed a passenger.  Walter claimed he feared he would be arrested if he had spoken up any earlier.   The coroner's inquest into the Putnam case revealed that, as in the Florence case, a firearm had been discharged around midnight.    

Following the Putnam homicide, an unnamed detective bemoaned to a reporter from The Constitution that the case would never be solved "until we get some help from the Negroes."  He felt that the community knew who was committing the murders but were afraid to talk; if the city had the money, the community would be willing to offer up what it knew.

At Big Bethel Church pastors warned their female congregants about going out at night, while collecting $1,200 to go toward the reward for the Ripper's capture.  

Henry Huff, who had been indicted for murdering Sadie Holley, was found not guilty by a Fulton County jury.  During his trial, Sheriff Plennie Minor suggested that jealous black women were responsible for the slayings, not men at all.  (This theory was roundly laughed at by the police officers and detectives.)

On Friday, January 19, 1912, Pearl Williams had her throat slashed.  She was found the next morning in a vacant lot at Chestnut and West Fair, only a block from her home.  Like so many others, Pearl had worked as a cook in a private home. 

(photo source: Alchetron) 

In March of 1912, according to The Constitution, the grand jury concluded that the Atlanta Ripper was a myth and each murder had been committed by a different man - the result of jealousy following "immoral conduct."   How the grand jury reached this conclusion, though, was never explained.

On Monday, April 8, 1912, 18-year-old Mary Kates was discovered in an alley, her throat cut, and her body mutilated.  Her clothing was found in a neat pile next to her body.  The Leader, Lexington, Kentucky's local newspaper, reported the murder in their April 9 edition, noting that the mutilation on Mary was done by a surgical instrument and "the slayer had some anatomical knowledge."   

On Monday morning, April 15, 1912, the body of an unidentified black female was discovered in the Chattahoochee River, by the Chattahoochee Brick Company and underneath the Southern Railway Bridge.  Discovered by the chief engineer of the brick company, he and two of his men brought the body back to the Fulton County side of the river.  Her throat had been slashed and around her neck was a string with a key tied very tightly to it.  She was estimated to be 15 years old.  

Also during that month of April, the body of an unidentified 19-year-old black female was found in a clump of bushes at the end of Pryor Street.  She had been stabbed in the throat. 

On Saturday, May 11, 1912 at 6 a.m., the body of an unidentified black female was discovered behind shrubbery at the corner of Atlanta Avenue and Fraser Street.  She had been stabbed in the throat at least twice, with one wound going through her jugular vein.  Her body had been dragged after death.  At the time she was found, she had been dead for approximately six hours.

On August 10, 1912, Henry Brown aka Lawton Brown was arrested for killing Eva Florence in October of 1911.  Brown's wife informed the authorities that he had come home on successive Saturdays, the same Saturdays that many killings had taken place, wearing bloody clothing.  While being questioned, Brown reportedly revealed details of other crimes and police felt certain they had their man.  

In October, Brown went to trial for Eva Florence's murder.  A man by the name of John Rutherford testified that the police had chained Brown's arms and legs to a chair and struck him in the head until he confessed.  Brown, while on the stand, testified that he suffered from "hallucinations."  The jury acquitted him on October 18, feeling he would confess to anything under pressure.  

On Tuesday, February 11, 1913, the body of a young black girl was found at Fair and Christian Streets.  Estimated to be no more than 20 years old, the victim had suffered a cut to the face as well as terrible slashing to her throat and was badly bruised about the head and chest.  The inquest determined that her slayer had stabbed her in the head until his knife broke, while holding her in a "vise-like grip."   Based on the direction of a number of footprints found by her body, as well as the marks of a small rubber-tired buggy, police believed that the killer had returned to her body and turned it over, to verify that she was indeed dead.  She had been wearing a blue corded suit, brown stockings and high-top patent leather boots.  

In March of 1913, Laura Smith was found with her throat cut.  She, like the others, was young, of mixed heritage and worked as a servant.

A year later, in March of 1914, firefighters found notes stuck to fireboxes throughout the city which threatened to "cut the throats of all Negro women" who were on the streets after a certain hour of the night.  The newspapers attributed the notes to the Atlanta Ripper.

On Sunday, June 24, 1917, two boys picking blackberries early that morning discovered the partially concealed body of an unknown black woman just beyond the Atlanta and West Point Belt Line, 300 yards from Stewart Avenue.  Her skull had been crushed and battered by a heavy and sharp instrument.  

On Monday, October 1, 1917, schoolchildren discovered the body of an unidentified black female by the Clark University campus around 2:30 in the afternoon.  The body was in a mud puddle with the head crushed and "numerous other marks of violence about her person."   She was dressed in a black skirt and estimated to be between 30 and 35 years of age.

In November of 1917, Laura Blackwell, a scrubwoman at the Fulton County Superior Court, was killed by a blow or blows from an axe.  Found in her home at 233 East Fair Street, Laura's head was crushed, her throat cut, and her clothing reportedly destroyed by fire.  In March of 1918, John Brown went to trial and was sentenced to life in prison for killing her.  Granted a new trial, Brown was convicted once again for Laura Blackwell's murder in 1920.  As three other black women had been found with their bodies burned, or partially burned, before Laura Blackwell, it's possible that Brown was responsible for those killings as well.

On Thursday, April 30, 1918, the body of a 35-year-old black woman was found around 2 p.m. in a ditch in the woods near the Southern railway tracks, about a mile from Hapeville, by a farmer named R. P. Wood.   The victim's skull had been fractured and her throat cut.  At the time Wood, walking from his home to Hapeville, had discovered her, she had been dead for several hours. 

On Sunday, March 10, 1918, the body of an "unidentified dark mulatto" was found at the top of a densely wooded hill above the West Point Belt Line Railroad in the vicinity of Grant Street by residents in the neighborhood.  The victim was reported to be 5'6", weighing 130 pounds, and with hair slightly gray at the temple.  She had been dead for roughly 24 hours when found, stabbed in the neck with a sharp instrument.  The Atlanta Constitution reported that the ground around her body was "thickly coated" with blood and a small half-open penknife was found nearby.

On Sunday, March 16, 1919, Queen Esther Jackson was attacked and stabbed several times.  She told police that she had stepped into her yard on East Harris Street for a drink of water from the hydrant when an unknown black male stepped from the darkness and stabbed her.  Jackson died from her wounds on Tuesday morning, March 19, at Grady Hospital.   

On Sunday, May 4, 1924, the body of an unidentified 25-year-old woman was found on the Southern Railroad tracks between Peyton Station and Chattahoochee Station.  She had a knife wound to the temple and there was evidence that a fight or a scuffle had occurred before her murder.  

On Friday night, September 5, 1924, the badly decomposed body of a 17-year-old girl had been discovered lying facedown in  a vacant lot on Pryor Street, near the Southern Railroad.  Her throat was slashed "from ear to ear."   The Atlanta Constitution reported that three black women had been found with their throats slashed in the previous two weeks and in each instance, the shoes and stockings of the victims, as well as any jewelry, had been removed.

On Monday,  September 8, 1924, The Atlanta Constitution printed "Another Ripper Victim Reported."  The unidentified woman had been found on Sunday night on Stewart Avenue near Dill Avenue.  The victim, estimated to be around 30 years of age, had a bullet wound to the head, her throat cut, and "terrible" slashes to her wrists and back, and had been dead for roughly 24 hours when she was found.   

Eliminations

Although there were clearly many murders from 1910 through 1924, not all of them can conclusively be linked to the Atlanta Ripper.   Some that were credited to the elusive killer(s) at the time were likely not his/theirs.

Lucinda McNeal, killed in her home on Friday, February 3, 1911 with a straight razor, was murdered by her husband Charles who, after a night of drinking, had cut her so badly he nearly decapitated her.  He was caught immediately following the murder, as not only had witnesses given chase to him but while running from them and two police officers, he ran directly into another officer.  Although the McNeal case was open and shut, as she was a black female murdered during the killing period of the Ripper, with her throat cut, she is sometimes mentioned as a potential victim.

In the case of Minnie Wise, murdered in November of 1911, she was married to a man known to be jealous of the attention the attractive Minnie got and had been heard to threaten to kill her.  Police suspected that he may have decided to use the unsolved Ripper killings as a cover for his wife's murder. 

Ida Ferguson was killed on January 12, 1912.  That same year, Lucky Elliott, who had been dating Ferguson and was known to be horribly jealous, was tried and convicted of her murder after his bloody knife was found by Ida's body.  As he was convicted almost entirely on circumstantial evidence, the penalty was set as life imprisonment.  Elliott's attorneys appealed his sentence to the Supreme Court but a new trial was denied.   

Pearl Williams had her throat slashed on Friday, January 19, 1912, and her body discovered the following day in the middle of a vacant lot at the corner of Chestnut and West Fair.  She had been on her way to her home on West Fair around 7 p.m., a block away from where she was murdered.  Pearl had quarreled with a black man in the days before her murder.  Presenting himself as an old acquaintance at the home where she worked, he was overheard stating that she had promised to marry him and if she did not, she would not marry anyone.  Police arrested Frank Harvey the day after Pearl's murder; he was seen with her prior to her death (it's unknown if he was the man she quarreled with), was in possession of a large knife and had small bloodstains on his shirt.  The following day, another suspect was arrested - 17-year-old Edgar Evans, who was picked up on Peters Street.   Nothing else is known about Williams' murder or the arrests of Harvey and Evans.

Alacy Owens was murdered on February 15, 1912 but her husband, Charley, was arrested in short order, although the evidence against him was circumstantial.  His first trial ended in a hung jury.  He was convicted after the second trial in late April of 1912 and given a life sentence.  Interestingly, most newspaper accounts of the time reported that he had been sentenced for one of the "so-called Ripper murders committed in Atlanta during the last 18 months," without specifying it was that of his wife. 

Victims Outside of Atlanta

On March 28, 1913, The Augusta Chronicle reported that Otto Pague, a young white man, had been attacked around 1 a.m. on Broad Street in August, some 145 miles to the east of Atlanta.   Pague had thrown his arm up to ward off the knife blow, which had laid his cheek open rather than his throat.  He had reportedly lost three quarts of blood before he was found unconscious and rushed to a doctor, where he was stitched up.   Once he regained consciousness, Pague told police he and a friend had been walking down Broad Street when he was attacked from behind by a black male who had lain in wait.  

The Chronicle article mentions that a black woman by the name of Hattie Parkman had been attacked and nearly knifed to death only days prior to the attack on Pague.  

On December 14, 1913, the Chronicle reported another attack, this time on 29-year-old Thomas Gordon, a black male, who had been found by a police officer near death around 1 a.m. on Marbury Street.   Gordon died shortly after being placed on an operating table at Lamar Hospital, without making any statement on who had attacked him.  Despite this, the paper asserted that the police considered the murder a matter of revenge.  

On Wednesday, February 11, 1914, the body of 17-year-old Zeulla Crowell was fished out of the Chattahoochee River in Columbus after the girl had been missing for three weeks.  Her skull had been fractured in three places by a blunt instrument.    

Problems with the Coroner

Although not publicized for obvious reasons, the coroner, Paul Donehoo, was legally blind.  While he had attended the Atlanta Law School and graduated in 1911, he never obtained a formal degree in medicine.  Most coroners make their findings by visual inspection; in Donehoo's case, he had to rely on the verbal and written descriptions of others who may or may not have tainted views, missed evidence, or not understood what they were seeing.  

To further complicate matters, Donehoo had stated unequivocally that the killings were the work of a single killer - which could have led the police officers and detectives to tunnel vision and attempt to connect cases that weren't actually connected.

(photo source: JTR Forums) 


The Role of the Media and Race

When the killings commenced in Atlanta, the media was fairly silent on them because the victims weren't white.   Even after it was obvious that the city had a killer on its hands, the reports were often buried in the back sections and seemed little more than titillation for the publication's readers.   The victims were often described as "negresses," "mulattos," and "octoroons."   Even when The Atlanta Journal ran a headline questioning whether there was "a black butcher" in their midst in June of 1911, the article itself was a paltry four paragraphs.  Four paragraphs, when some of the city's population was under siege by a human predator or predators.  

Racism, sadly, was still alive and well in Atlanta and it was reflected in media's attitude and somewhat ambivalent reporting on the case.  Even when the murder of Lena Sharpe and attack on Emma Lou Sharpe was recounted in the press, it was mentioned that "the problem of help is becoming serious."   In other words, it wasn't just an emergency that women were being killed; it was also an emergency that the wealthier (i.e., and white) residents of the area were losing their help.

The same article also reported that the "murder of  Negroes by Negroes are frequent enough on Saturday nights" when whiskey was flowing freely.  And while it is true that copious consumption of alcohol can certainly lead to altercations, the reporting made it appear that these kinds of crimes, in the poorer areas, was to be expected.

In July of 1911, following the murder of Mary Yeldell, it was the black churches that put together a reward for information on the killer.  It was also the black community that demanded that the Atlanta Police Department find black detectives to solve the case, whether it be because they felt the white officers were not giving a hundred percent because the victims were black or because they felt black detectives might winnow out more information in the black community.   

Afterword

Despite the black community requesting the local police to assign black detectives to the case, there was outrage that only black men had been arrested for the murders.  There were accusations that these arrests reeked of racism; surely, white men were capable of murder, too.

However, in looking at the facts and considering the era in which these murders took place, the Atlanta Ripper was almost certainly a black male - and there was more than one killer.  Even when not considering Emma Lou Sharpe's description of the man who stabbed her and most certainly killed her mother, it would have been difficult for a white man to move so freely and relatively unnoticed through black neighborhoods.  Once the killings started, any unknown person, and especially a Caucasian, would have been met with wary glances or outright defense.   Since the Ripper was able to continue to kill undetected, even after the city was on alert, he was almost definitely a black man.

The location of the bodies, nearly always found by a railroad track or something to do with the railroad, had to have meaning.  It's possible that the Ripper worked for the railroad and didn't stray far from the area he was familiar with.  As the trains would run in and out of Atlanta, usually on the weekends, it's also possible that the Ripper was not an Atlanta resident at all but simply came into town with the train.   His schedule may have changed, which resulted in the murders going from Saturday nights to the beginning of the week.

Almost certainly the Atlanta Ripper's motive is much the same as England's Jack the Ripper:  a deep and abiding hatred, and possibly fear, of women.  Black women could have been chosen simply because they were easier for him to approach, due to segregation at the time.   As many of them were also biracial, he could also have had a prejudice and hatred toward them.

The police were in a no-win situation.  Oftentimes they arrived at the crime scene, or body dump site, after dozens of others had trudged through the area to view the body, potentially moving or destroying evidence.  With each subsequent murder, patrols were beefed up but since the Ripper seemingly had no particular pattern for how he chose his victims and then struck, the PD was at a serious disadvantage.  When they did make an arrest, they were met with criticism and accused of making those arrests because they were racist.  Even the Atlanta Constitution, which had devoted little space in reporting the crimes, chastised the police department for its inability to solve the very crimes they seemed reluctant to give wide berth to.   Atlanta's mayor also got into the act, throwing shade on the police by claiming he couldn't understand why they were "unable to cope with the situation."   It seems like the anger that should have been directed at the killer was instead projected to the police department.

To date, the Atlanta Ripper cases remain unsolved.  

(photo source: American Hauntings) 



September 11, 2019

Atlanta Reopens The Missing and Murdered Children Cases




This happened back in March but as real life got busy and in the way, as well as travels taking me out of the country for nearly all of May and into June, I am only now posting about this.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields reportedly made the decision to reopen the 40 year old (and nearly 40 year old) cases in an effort to take advantage of scientific and technological advancements as well as provide "some peace" and a sense of closure to the families of the victims that were denied that closure and peace when the State elected not to bring charges for their loved one's murder against Wayne Williams, thought by many to be the individual responsible for Atlanta's Missing and Murdered. Williams was convicted in 1982 for the deaths of Jimmy Ray Payne and Nathaniel Cater, both adults, but the prosecution used some of the cases of the missing and murdered children as proof of a "pattern" in the killings.  (For a more in depth look at the crimes, please see my earlier post.)  

For his part, Williams has publicly stated to the Atlanta Journal Constitution that he is "ready and willing to cooperate with any renewed investigation to find the truth on what happened with the purpose of straightening up any lies and misconceptions of my unjust convictions."   Is he sincere?  Will evidence clear him of one murder, two murders, all the murders, or no murders?  He has maintained his innocence since 1981, when he was stopped on the bridge overlooking the Chattahoochee -- but nearly everyone in prison maintains their innocence.

I said this back in my previous post about the crimes, I don't believe Wayne Williams acted alone or was the only killer stalking Atlanta streets.  Nope.  Sure, he could have committed some of the murders but I don't believe he committed them all.

So back to the reopening of the investigation.  First, it's about damn time.  There are so many factors in these crimes that were either investigated poorly or not investigated at all.   Too many of the victims were seen as runaways first and then just some kind of "by-product" of the street rather than children that were being snatched away.   The fact that many of the victims knew each other was either ignored entirely or swept under the proverbial rug -- which is astounding to me.  I remember being the in the age range of most of the victims and I remember how things were back in the early 1980s, before cable, before the internet and before cell phones.  You pretty much had your own "bubble" of friends -- those you went to school with and/or who lived in your immediate neighborhood.  Kids that lived a street or two over that went to private school, for example, I really didn't know.  I knew those kids that I saw daily.  So the Atlanta children knowing each other is a salient point because they didn't all live in the same neighborhood or attend the same school or were the same age.  Some of them reportedly did, however, associate at the same house where it was rumored child prostitution and pornography went on.  That lead should have been followed up and thoroughly exhausted.

Secondly, I hope that this reinvestigation is legitimate and that the so-called box or boxes of evidence that the State still has that's never been tested will be tested and provide conclusively whether the correct victims are on the official list and whether Wayne Williams was involved.

The victims deserve that and their families, who have been seeking justice, recognition and closure, deserve that.


To watch the press conference from March, go here.


What do you think?  Will the cases truly be reopened and will the evidence support Wayne Williams as a killer of some or all or his own innocence?


June 19, 2018

Investigating the Atlanta Child Murders of 1979 - 1981



     "You shouldn't cry over spilled milk." - former mayor Andrew Young on unanswered questions in the case

     "Wayne was just a scapegoat.  They had to get somebody to put in jail because the city was like a keg of dynamite." - Willie Mae Mathis, mother of Jefferey Mathis


I grew up in Atlanta in the era of booming economic change, African Americans coming into power with the city's first black mayor and the most horrible and horrifying serial killer to strike the so-called city "Too Busy to Hate."

The city and its residents lived in terror of the unknown boogeyman, who would snatch at least thirty children and adults over a two year period.  Those that turned up were dead.  Some had been gone for so many months, it wasn't possible to determine how they had died.  So prevalent was the media coverage by the end of 1981 and beginning of 1982, that even those of us who did not fit the demographic or live in the areas targeted were fearful.

When Wayne Williams was arrested in 1981 and convicted in 1982, most of the city appeared to breathe a sigh of relief.  Although Williams was convicted for the last two murders, the city officially connected him to 22 more and closed those investigations.  Nearly from the start, however, there was belief that Williams had not killed all the victims, if any at all.  Rumors abounded from political corruption and cover-ups to child prostitution rings to the Ku Klux Klan murdering the children to prevent African Americans from rising up in the city.  If some of these theories are to be believed, Williams was either only one of several killers operating in the city at the time or a patsy taking the fall.

The Missing and the Murdered


Edward Hope Smith.   Fourteen year old "Teddy," a football enthusiast who was hoping to join the high school football team in the fall of 1979, lived in a housing project on Cape Street in southwest Atlanta.  One of the more rundown projects in the city, it wasn't unusual to see more garbage on the street than actual people.  Teddy had tried to find a means to escape such destitute living but by July 21, 1979, he hadn't yet been able to.  It was just after midnight on that day when he left a skating rink, after spending the evening with his girlfriend.  He was headed home, alone and on foot.  He never arrived.


Alfred Evans.  Fourteen year old Alfred was friends with Teddy Smith and his cousin dated future victim Patrick Rogers.  Like Teddy, he was athletic with special interests in basketball, wrestling, boxing, and karate.  He too lived in a housing project but on the other side of town, off Memorial Drive.  Teddy had been missing for a few days when Alfred left home to see a karate movie at the Coronet Theater on Peachtree Street in downtown Atlanta.  A friend gave him a ride to the Glenwood bus stop, where he was last seen.  He never made it to the theater.

On July 28, 1979, the remains of the two friends were found in the woods off Niskey Lake Road by an elderly woman looking for cans.  Teddy had been shot in the back with a .22 caliber gun; the medical examiner guessed that Alfred had died due to asphyxia or strangulation.  Both bodies were clothed entirely in black.  Teddy's football jersey and socks were missing; Alfred was wearing a belt that wasn't his.

It was hotly debated back in that summer of 1979, and remains so today, that the body found with Teddy Smith was indeed that of Alfred Evans, given that it took over a year to make the identification.

Law enforcement had no idea -- couldn't know -- these two deaths were the start of a nightmare that Atlanta would be immersed in for years to come.  They concluded that both young men had involvement with drugs and therefore the killings were likely drug related.  The investigations into their deaths were spotty at best.


Milton Harvey.  Before his murder, fourteen year old Milton had been taken away from the higher risk environments by his concerned parents, who relocated him to a middle-class neighborhood in northwest Atlanta.  He had absolutely no connection to drugs nor seemingly any of the other victims.  September 4, 1979 was to be the first day of school but Milton did not go because his mother bought him the "wrong" shoes and he didn't want to be embarrassed.  Instead, he borrowed a yellow ten speed bike and took a check to the bank for his mother.  After leaving the bank, he disappeared.  A week later, the yellow bike was found on Sandy Creek Road, a dirt lane.

Milton wouldn't be found until mid-November of 1979, by which time his body was badly decomposed.  He had been left in a rubbish dump in the city of East Point, many miles from where the bike was located and from where he had lived.   With no obvious marks or violence on his skeleton, Milton's death was not initially considered a homicide.  As East Point was outside of Atlanta's city limits, the East Point PD worked on the Harvey case as an isolated incident, with no relation to Smith or Evans.


Yusuf Bell.   Yusuf was only 9 years old but was considered very gifted.  He lived in the McDaniel Glenn Housing Authority with his mother, sisters, and brother.  On October 21, 1979, Yusuf's neighbor, Eula Birdsong, had asked the little boy if he would run to the store for her to buy some snuff.  He did, making the purchase at Reese Grocery.  A witness claimed to have seen Yusuf, wearing no shirt or shoes, get into a blue car with a man she identified as the boy's biological father.

Yusuf's case was the first to get media attention -- certainly more than the earlier cases -- as his mother, Camille, went to the media to beg his abductor to release him.

On November 8, 1979, his body was found by a janitor at the abandoned E.P. Johnson Elementary School.  Yusuf, still wearing the brown cut-off shorts he had last been seen in, had been struck over the head twice and then strangled.  The bottoms of his feet, interestingly, had been washed clean.

Yusuf's funeral was a major event due to Camille Bell's interaction with the local media.  Mayor Maynard Jackson promised a full investigation but at this point, none of the deaths were connected by the authorities.  They were considered four isolated murders, the type that just "happen" in poor communities.


Angel Lenair.  After a lull of several months the murders started up again, this time with the first female victim.  Angel was a pretty 12 year old who had begun receiving male attention, especially from the enlisted men at nearby Fort McPherson --  something that caused great concern to her mother.  

On March 4, 1980, Angel finished her homework and left her apartment in southwest Atlanta around 4 p.m., clad in a denim outfit, to watch television at a friend's home.  She arrived there and watched Sanford and Son but never returned home.   Six days later, Angel's body was found tied to a tree, with electrical cord wrapped around her neck and white underwear -- not hers -- stuffed in her mouth.  The coroner determined she died from ligature strangulation and said that while Angel's hymen was broken and there was genital bruising, no sexual assault had occurred.  That particular finding would be one of controversy and debate.

Two men were questioned as to Angel's murder; one had been arrested for grabbing a child and currently wore a belt fashioned out of electrical cord.  He lived only half a mile from Angel's home.

No arrests were made and the case is still unsolved.


Jefferey Mathis.   On March 11, 1980, the day after Angel Lenair was found, 11 year old Jefferey, who lived in the West End neighborhood with his mother, brothers and sisters, left home to walk several blocks to the nearby Star Service Station to buy cigarettes for his mother.  Jefferey's father, who had been employed as a night watchman at a cemetery, had been murdered in a robbery while on the job at the cemetery in 1974.

Jefferey was an enterprising young man, who made pocket money by carrying groceries for customers at the neighborhood Kroger.   Wearing a white and green shirt, gray jogging pants and brown shoes, he was spotted by a barber, on whose window he knocked.  Like Yusuf Bell before him, Jefferey never returned home.  A friend reported he had seen the boy getting into the backseat of a blue car.  His mother worried after an hour passed and her son didn't return home.  When his brothers were unable to locate him, she called the police.  The responding officer instructed her to call the Missing Persons Department if Jefferey did not return home by morning.  The general attitude at the time was that missing young people and children were playing hooky or had chosen to run away but were certainly not victims of foul play.  Two of Jefferey's brothers reported seeing a blue car -- a Buick -- in the driveway of a house that Jefferey frequented.   Boys from the school Jefferey attended reported to their principal, shortly after the Mathis disappearance, that two black men in a blue car had attempted to lure them out of the schoolyard.  The children memorized the license plate and provided it to the police.  That lead apparently was not followed up on.

Jefferey's body was discovered in February of 1981 in a patch of woods.  It was impossible to determine the cause of death.


Eric Middlebrooks.  Eric was 14 years old and small for his age, standing at only 4'10" and weighing a slight 88 pounds.  He lived with his foster mother and father on Howell Drive as his birth mother had given him up at four months of age.  Eric had an older half-brother who was an officer and he enjoyed swimming at the neighborhood boys' club.  In the spring of 1980, he had been the eyewitness to a robbery and had testified against three juveniles.

On the evening of May 18, 1980, Eric answered the phone at his home around 10:30, grabbed his tools and told his foster mother he was going outside to fix his bike.  He was found early the next morning, next to his bike, in the rear garage of the Hope U Like It Bar on Flat Shoals Road.  Perhaps coincidentally, the Georgia Department of Offender Rehab was located next door.  His pockets were turned inside out and he had suffered slight stab wounds to his chest and arms but the cause of death was blunt trauma to his head.

Eric's funeral was held on May 24, 1980.  He was buried in an unmarked grave at the Kennedy Memorial Gardens in Ellenwood.  His biological mother, who was living in North Carolina, did not attend her son's funeral.


Christopher Richardson.  Twelve year old Christopher lived with his grandparents and mother just outside of the Atlanta city limits in Decatur.   On June 9, 1980, he was spotted outside a Krystal fast food restaurant near the Belvedere Plaza Shopping Center.  Dressed in blue shorts, a light blue shirt and blue shoes, he was headed toward the Midway Recreation Center to swim.  He never arrived.

Chris wouldn't be found until January of 1981, when his body was discovered in some woods by a resident who was alerted to the find by his dog.  Police searchers, who were looking for another missing boy nearby, were quickly notified.  Chris' body was clothed in swim trunks that did not belong to him and was laying alongside that of another victim, Earl Terrell, who would go missing the month after Chris.   Shotgun shells, Gallery and Penthouse magazines, a cigarette butt and magnetic recording tape were found by the bodies.  Fingerprints were lifted from the magazines but according to police, they were matched to someone who "was not a strong suspect" in the case.  The cause of death could not be determined.  In fact, the medical examiner said at first the teeth on the body did not match Chris' dental records.

Like Eric Middlebrooks, Chris was buried at the Kennedy Memorial Gardens in Ellenwood.


Latonya Wilson.  Perhaps the most brazen and amazing crime in the series happened in the early morning hours of June 22, 1980 when 7 year old Latonya was abducted from her home in the Hillcrest Heights apartment complex in Dixie Hills.  Wearing a slip nightie and underwear, she had been sleeping next to her sister in a room in which her brother also slept.  Her abductor had to have climbed over her brother's bed in order to snatch Latonya, then carry the child past her parents' bedroom before exiting out the back door, which was left ajar.   A witness claims to have seen a man enter through a window four times before carrying Latonya out in his arms and stopping to talk to another man in the parking lot.  Nathaniel Cater, who would become a future victim, was suspected to be one of the men in the parking lot.  Cater had once lived upstairs from the Wilson apartment.

A witness recounted that the day before Latonya was taken, he had seen an old model van with two males and a female in it, casing the area behind the Wilsons' apartment.  Several days before the abduction, a maintenance man had replaced the glass in the window of the Wilson apartment.  He later confessed to another murder and reportedly had pictures of the Atlanta victims on his wall.

On October 18, 1980, Latonya's body was found in a fenced in area at the end of her own street.  Her remains were skeletal and cause of death could not be determined.

Despite the confession of the maintenance man to another murder, and his proximity to Latonya, no arrests were made and her case is still considered unsolved by the state.


Aaron Wyche.  Only a day after Latonya Wilson was abducted, Aaron Wyche, 10 years old, vanished outside Tanner's Corner Grocery after getting into a blue and white late 1970s model Chevy with two black men inside.  A female witness would recall seeing Aaron being led from the grocery store to the car by a 6 foot tall black male with a goatee.  The witness said hello to Aaron and he returned the greeting, giving no indication that he was scared or concerned.  She watched him get into the car and sit close to the man in the front seat.  According to police, Aaron was spotted that same day around 6 p.m. at the Moreland Avenue Shopping Center.

His body was discovered the next day, June 24, 1980, under a six-lane bridge going over train tracks on Moreland Avenue.  He had suffered a broken neck and landed in such a way that he was prevented from breathing, leading him to asphyxiate.  It was assumed that Aaron had accidentally fallen off the bridge, although the guardrails were nearly the same height as the boy.   According to his family, Aaron was deathly afraid of heights and would never have climbed the trestle willingly unless he was running away from someone.


Anthony Carter.   Anthony Carter was a 9 year old who lived with his mother and took odd jobs around the West End Mall.   He was last seen around 1 a.m. on the morning of July 6, 1980, playing hide and seek with his cousin around his home.  He then vanished.   His body was found either later the same day or the following day, less than a mile from his home and behind a warehouse.  Anthony had been stabbed to death.

His case is still officially unsolved.


Earl Terrell.  Ten year old Earl went with some friends to the South Bend Park swimming pool on July 30, 1980.  After acting up, a lifeguard kicked him out and he was more or less said to be last seen sitting outside the pool area.  After his disappearance, he was reported to have been spotted looking for a friend outside a house, buying freeze pops at a grocery store a block from his home and/or crying on a corner in the city of Jonesboro.

The following day, July 31, Earl's aunt, who lived next door to Earl and his family, received a phone call from "a middle aged white man with a southern drawl" who said he had Earl and not to call the police.  He called again, repeating that he had Earl but adding the child was in Alabama and the man wanted $200 for his return.   The man stated he would call again the following day but he did not.

The investigation into Earl's disappearance possibly led police into a child pornography ring operating across the street from the South Bend Park pool.  A man by the name of John David Wilcoxen was arrested and convicted when a massive cache of pornographic photos featuring children was discovered prominently displayed in his home.  Although witnesses claimed that Earl had been to Wilcoxen's home several times, police did not believe there to be a connection between the missing child and Wilcoxen, stating that the photos were of white children only.

Because Earl's aunt had received a call that Earl had been taken to Alabama, and therefore across state lines, the FBI finally entered the investigation.

Earl's body would be found in January of 1981, alongside a body that was identified as Christopher Richardson (although that identification remains questionable to this day.)  Earl's cause of death could not be determined.  After a funeral service, Earl, like Chris Richardson and Eric Middlebrooks, was laid to rest at the Kennedy Memorial Gardens in Ellenwood.


Clifford Jones.  Twelve year old Clifford was not even an Atlanta resident but had traveled from Cleveland to visit his grandmother.  He was tiny - - not much over four feet -- and he and his brother had taken up collecting cans for extra money.  During one of their collection trips, they had rather ominously stumbled across the body of a murdered man.   Clifford was last seen on August 19, 1980 at the intersections of St. James and Lookout Avenue, looking for cans to sell.  The next day, August 20, 1980, his body was found in the Hollywood Plaza Shopping Center, next to a dumpster and by a laundromat.  His body was clad in red and blue jogging shorts that were not his, as well as white tennis shoes.  He wore no underwear.  He also had cuts and bruises around his mouth and had died as a result of ligature strangulation.  Found on Clifford's body were green, trilobal fibers.

Three individuals would report witnessing the manager of the Hollywood Plaza Shopping Center laundromat, as well as another man, fondle and rape Clifford before strangling him to death with a yellow rope.  The child's body was then washed with soap and a rag and reclothed.

Two other witnesses reported seeing a black man in a hooded robe place a large item wrapped in plastic next to the dumpster where Clifford was found.   The hooded robe was corroborated by another witness who claims to not only have seen it in the manager's home but heard that Clifford was taken there.  This witness claimed to have met the manager at the Silver Dollar Saloon and spent the night with him.  He also said that he met future victim Nathaniel Cater at the Silver Dollar.

The manager was given two polygraph tests, both of which he failed.  He admitted to having seen Clifford Jones the night he died and put himself in the child's company at the time of his death.  However, he was not charged because police determined that the one youth who claimed to have seen the man rape and kill Clifford was "retarded."

The manager would be charged in connection with aggravated assault with attempt to rape in another case unrelated to the Atlanta child murders but would be released by the time Wayne Williams was taken to trial.  He would later die of AIDS.


Darron Glass.  Darron was 11 years old and lived on Memorial Drive with his foster mother.  On September 14, 1980, he was last seen getting off a church bus after an Atlanta Braves game, wearing a yellow shirt, brown khaki pants and white tennis shoes.   That evening, his foster mother received an emergency phone call from someone purporting to be Darron but when she picked up the phone, the line was dead.

The police chose to give Darron's disappearance very little attention.  Since Darron had run away in the past, authorities assumed he had done it again.  Darron's foster brother claimed to know where Darron was and said he received phone calls from him as late as November of 1980.

Darron is still missing and his current whereabouts are unknown.


Charles Stephens.  Charles was a 12 year old who lived with his father, mother and sister when he went missing on the evening of October 9, 1980.  Prior to his disappearance, he had been accused of theft and dealing drugs.  He was known to hang out at the Zayre Department Store at the Stewart-Lakewood Shopping Center as well as with a man who drove a red Ford LTD with a red interior.  The LTD driver was reportedly a client of Wayne Williams' attorney.

The night Charles vanished, he had been watching tv and drawing at home.  He then left to go see a friend in Carver Homes and was spotted by a neighbor playing on his skateboard.

The next morning, Charles' body was found on a hillside on Norman Berry Drive near the entrance to Longview Trailer Park.  He was missing his t-shirt and one shoe and rub marks were found on his nose and mouth.  Charles' cause of death was suffocation with an unknown object.

The crime scene was contaminated when a police officer covered his body with a blanket, mixing fibers on the boy's body.  Dog hairs and two Caucasian head hairs were found on the body.  Charles' boxer shorts, with two pubic hairs on them, were found 950 feet from his body.  The hairs did not match Charles or Wayne Williams.

On October 11, 1980, a drug dealer went to police to say that he had gotten in the car of a client to sell drugs.  He noticed that a lifeless boy was laying on the backseat, wrapped in a sheet.   Inquiring about the boy, the client became angry and said the boy was merely doped up.   The client then threatened the dealer with his life should he say anything.  The dealer informed the police that this client was a pedophile and, in the past, had offered money if the dealer could find him young boys to have sex with.  

It appears this lead was not followed up.


Aaron Jackson.  Nine year old Aaron lived with his father and siblings, while his mother resided in Washington, D.C. with two other siblings.  He had been friends with Aaron Wyche, who disappeared in June.  He enjoyed swimming at the Thomasville Heights Recreation Center.  On November 1, 1980, Aaron went missing from the Moreland Avenue Shopping Center, wearing a printed shirt, dark pants and sneakers.

His body would be found beneath a bridge in the South River, not far from where Aaron Wyche had been discovered.  The medical examiner believed that Aaron had been smothered.

A witness came forward to say she saw a man at the scene around the time Aaron had been killed.  She went to the newly formed Task Force to report her finding but they failed to respond to her report.  The Force also got details between the Jackson and Wyche cases confused, leading to further issues with the investigations.


Patrick Rogers.  Sixteen year old Patrick loved to sing and practice karate (he was a big Bruce Lee fan) and lived in the Thomasville Heights housing projects, close by where Aaron Jackson liked to swim.  Patrick not only knew Aaron Jackson and Aaron Wyche but had a connection to at least fifteen other victims (some of whom were not on the "official" list.)  He carried groceries at the Moreland Avenue Shopping Center, where Aaron Jackson had vanished.

On November 10, 1980, Patrick was seen with his younger brother at a bus stop before visiting a friend's home, where he informed that friend's mother that a man wanted to record his songs.   A week earlier, a black man thought to be Wayne Williams was seen distributing flyers in this housing project.  That same week, Patrick had told his mother that he feared the unknown Atlanta killer was close.

Like many of the other victims, authorities initially assumed that Patrick had run away.  Two days after he was reported missing, a burglary warrant was issued on him.   It would become moot on December 21, 1980 when his body was discovered facedown in the Chattahoochee River, near the Paces Ferry Road bridge in Cobb County.   He died from a blow to his head.


Lubie Geter.  Fourteen year old Lubie, like many previous victims, carried groceries for extra money and worked at the National Pride Car Wash on Memorial, where he would get air fresheners to sell.  He was last seen at the Stewart-Lakewood Shopping Center on January 3, 1981, where he was selling car deodorizers outside of the Big Star grocery store.   Witnesses would later report Lubie getting into a red pickup, a white pickup, and a white and black Cutlass.  Another witness would later testify that she saw Lubie with Wayne Williams outside the Sears at the mall.

A man identifying himself as the killer made calls to police; the calls were traced to payphones on Stewart Avenue, not far from the Stewart-Lakewood Shopping Center.  The shopping center was also where Charles Stephens had gone missing in October of 1980.

Lubie was found on February 5, 1981 but the police did not begin their investigation until two days after the discovery of his body.  When he had last been seen, Lubie had been wearing a purple coat, green shirt, blue jeans and brown loafers.  When he was found, his body was clad only in underpants.  His blue jeans and belt were found in a bag nearly a mile away; his shirt and shoes were 300 yards away.  His body had been subjected to animal predation but the medical examiner determined he died as a result of manual strangulation.

Lubie was found to have a connection to John David Wilcoxen, the pedophile who also had a link with earlier victim Earl Terrell.  An acquaintance stated he had seen Lubie in the company of Wilcoxen several times.  Although a convicted child molester with connections to at least two murder victims, Wilcoxen was never considered a suspect in the Geter murder.


Terry Pue.  Fifteen year old Terry was last seen on January 7, 1981, when his brother had seen him board a bus on Hollywood Road around 3 p.m.  Terry had asked a neighbor to play basketball with him but, due to the rain, the neighbor declined.  Instead, Terry had traded bottles for money at an A&P grocery store near Memorial Drive and then taken his money to a Krystal fast food restaurant to spend.  Perhaps coincidentally, Terry had known Lubie Geter.

A day later, an anonymous caller, suspected to be a white male, had phoned the police and told them where to find the boy's body.  A search was undertaken but nothing was found.  The man called again, claiming to have placed another body in the area before Terry's was left there.

On January 22, 1981, Terry's body was found near Interstate 20 on Sigman Road in Rockdale County -- not by police but by a passerby.   Dog hairs were found on the body, as well as abrasions on an elbow and bruises on the head.   He had died from ligature strangulation.

A few years later, skeletal remains would be found in the same area.  The second body remains unidentified.


Patrick Baltazar.  Prior to his disappearance, 11 year old Patrick sold newspapers, washed dishes at Papa's Country Buffet, cleaned at the Fisherman's Cove restaurant, and sold cotton candy at the Omni -- the last two locations where his father also worked.  In the days before his disappearance, Patrick had called the Task Force directly, reporting that the killer was after him.  The Task Force never responded to the child.

On the night of February 5-6, 1981, he received some money from his father at the Fisherman's Cove before heading to the Omni, where he was said to have played games at the Galaxy Three Arcade until midnight.  He then vanished.  

One of Patrick's teachers claimed to have gotten a phone call she believed came from Patrick after his disappearance.  The boy on the other end of the phone never said his name but cried into the receiver.

Only hours after Patrick was last seen, on February 6, 1981, his body was discovered in the Corporate Square business office complex between Interstate 85 and Buford Highway.  There were scrapes, bruises and dog hair found on the body.  Patrick had died from ligature strangulation.  A rope, possibly the murder weapon, lay next to his body.

Patsy Jackson, a dental assistant who worked in one of the office buildings, reported seeing a light green Chevy Impala parked in the lot around 7:15 that morning.  She said the car's occupant was a white man in his late 20s with shoulder length brown hair, a small mustache and close-set eyes.  He was wearing a flannel plaid shirt and stared at her as she exited her car and entered the building.  When she looked out her office window, the car had gone.  A few hours later, a maintenance man discovered Patrick's body.


Curtis Walker.  Thirteen year old Curtis had formerly resided at Thomasville Heights, where earlier victim Patrick Rogers lived, before moving closer to Bankhead Highway with his mother, uncle and siblings.  He was last seen looking for work on February 19, 1981 at a gun shop on Bankhead Highway, where he and his younger brother often picked up trash for money.  From there, he headed toward a shopping center near the intersection of Hightower Road and disappeared.  Tracking dogs picked up his scent behind Center Hill School on Bankhead Highway and then lost it.

After Curtis' disappearance, the Reverend Earl Paulk of the Chapel Hill Harvester Church received phone calls from someone claiming to be Curtis' killer.

Curtis was found on March 6, 1981in the South River by Flat Shoals Parkway.  A fireman crossing the river had discovered the body snagged on a log.  The location was less than a mile from the Chapel Hill Harvester Church.

All of Curtis' clothing, sans his underwear, were missing.  Latent prints were found on the body.  His cause of death was reported as strangulation, manner unknown, but possibly with a cord or narrow rope.

A witness would claim to have seen an old green Chevy parked near the body site the Tuesday or Wednesday prior to the discovery.

In a sad coincidence, Curtis' uncle, Stanley Murray, was shot and killed later that year.  He was 21 years old.


Joseph Bell.   Joseph, or Jo-Jo as he was known, had already endured a tough life before 1981.  His mother was in prison for killing his father and Jo-Jo lived with his grandmother.  The 15 year old went to the John Harland Boys Club and worked at Cap'n Peg's Seafood when he wasn't attending school.  He disappeared on March 2, 1981 after playing basketball with a friend at Agnes Jones School, where earlier victim Latonya Wilson had attended.  That friend, a 21 year old, said he saw Jo-Jo get into a station wagon with Wayne Williams on Westview Drive.   That same day, Wayne Williams was reported to have been seen at the South River.

Two days later, a co-worker of Jo-Jo's at Cap'n Peg's said Jo-Jo had called him and said he was "almost dead," and then pleaded with the co-worker to help him before the line was disconnected.  The co-worker informed his manager who, in turn, called the police.

On March 7, 1981, Jo-Jo's grandmother received a call from a woman who claimed to have Jo-Jo.  The woman also called several of Jo-Jo's siblings.  The Task Force was contacted but never responded.  In frustration, Jo-Jo's family contacted the FBI.

On April 19, 1981, Jo-Jo was found by two bikers testing a new trail for horseback riders in Rockdale County, in or near the South River.  Like Curtis Walker, Jo-Jo was clad only in his underpants.  The cause of death was asphyxia by an undetermined manner.

A witness came forward and signed an affidavit stating he had seen someone other than Wayne Williams murder Jo-Jo at a house on Gray Street.  A schoolmate of Jo-Jo's said that he had seen Jo-Jo at the house on Gray Street.  The house was known as Uncle Tom's and was owned by Tom Terrell,  a 63 year old man who was known to have interest in young boys.

Jo-Jo's mother had befriended a fellow inmate; that woman turned out to be victim Alfred Evans' sister.  Jo-Jo had been friends with Timothy Hill, who would become the next victim.


Timothy Hill.   Thirteen year old Timothy knew many of the previous victims.  Besides Jo-Jo Bell, he also knew Patrick Baltazar, Patrick Rogers, Anthony Carter and possibly Alfred Evans and Jefferey Mathis.  He had relatives that lived across the street from where Eric Middlebrooks had lived.

On March 11, 1981, after playing with his niece, Timmy left his backyard.  The niece later said he departed in a taxi and a man put "mud" on his face.

Tom Terrell's next door neighbor reported seeing Timmy on Gray Street on March 10, the day before he disappeared.  He also told police that Terrell and Timmy frequently had sex together at Terrell's house on Gray Street.  Terrell himself admitted that he engaged in sexual acts with the boy that resulted in Terrell paying Timmy.   Timmy was also reported to have spent the night at Terrell's the day before his disappearance and was spotted speaking to a teenage girl right before he vanished.  A witness claimed he was told by someone, not Wayne Williams, that Timmy, who was still missing, and others would be found in the Chattahoochee River.

Timmy was found on March 30, 1981 in the Chattahoochee River by canoeists who were fishing.  The property the body was found on had also been a dumping site for victims employed in homosexual entertainment venues who had been killed in the 1970s.

Timmy's body had no clothing but his underwear.  The cause of death was undetermined asphyxiation.


Eddie Duncan.  Eddie would have the unfortunate distinction of being the first adult added to the victim list.  At 21, he lived with his mother in Techwood.  He worked in a small grocery at the edge of Techwood and did odd jobs at a local barbershop and a retail store next door.  Eddie had some physical and intellectual handicaps and had a small record for carrying stolen items, for which he had served a year in prison.  He had also been friends with Patrick Rogers and, reportedly, Timmy Hill.

On March 20, 1981 at around 2 p.m., he boarded a MARTA bus to drop off some dry cleaning for a friend and then meet the same friend afterward at Courtney's Games and Things, where Eddie did some odd jobs.  Records indicated that Eddie did not drop off the dry cleaning until almost 6 p.m. and then never showed up at Courtney's.  He didn't show up to meet his girlfriend later that day either.  A friend reported seeing Eddie around 7 p.m. heading toward his apartment mentioning that he had $20 and was going to play pool.   Eddie's brother stated that Eddie told him he was going to make $200 by helping someone move to South Carolina.   That seemed credible as a 15 year old neighbor told police that Eddie had told him he was getting $200 for helping someone paint.

Eddie was last seen either around Courtney's or getting into a car with a light skinned male at the corner of Techwood Drive and North Avenue, near the Varsity restaurant.

On March 31, 1981, Eddie was found in the Chattahoochee, a few feet from where Timmy Hill was found 24 hours earlier.  His body was clad only in his boxer shorts.  The cause of death was undetermined.


Larry Rogers.  The second adult to make the victim list was 20 year old Larry, who lived with his foster father on Ezra Church Drive.  Larry had known Wayne Williams.  It was Williams who, after hearing on a police scanner that Larry's younger brother had been struck with a 2x4, drove to the scene and took the boy to the hospital.  In another case, it was Williams who hid that same boy and another foster brother in an apartment and then brought their mother to them.

Larry was last seen either on the afternoon of March 30, 1981, getting into a faded green Chevy station wagon with a light skinned man, or on April 1, 1981 at the intersection of Simpson Road and W. Lake Avenue.  A witness testified she was a member of the True Light Baptist Church, across the street from Wayne Williams' residence, and could identify the man in the green Chevy station wagon on March 30 as Wayne Williams.  The pastor of the church denied having ever seen this woman at his church.

Two weeks after he disappeared, Larry was found in the kitchen of an apartment in an abandoned building on Temple Street.  In front of the building was a green, four door Buick Skylark, missing all its tires, that had been stolen from a Northside apartment on March 28.

Larry had last been seen in jeans and a windbreaker.  When found, he was wearing white swim trunks under blue jogging shorts and a blue shirt stuffed into the trunks.  Dog hairs were also recovered from the body.  He had died from strangulation.

The location of the abandoned building was close to the place where Williams had taken Larry's younger brother for safety.  Larry's mother would later testify against Wayne Williams at trial.


Michael McIntosh.    Mickey, at 23 years old, would be the oldest victim to date.  He also had the most extensive criminal background, having served time from 1976 to 1979 for burglary, armed robbery, receipt of stolen property, marijuana possession and attempted rape.  It was said he had boxed with Jo-Jo Bell and he had done odd jobs for Cap'n Peg's, whose back door was across the street from his home.  Jo-Jo Bell had also worked at Cap'n Peg's.

Mickey was also reputed to be homosexual and had spent time at Tom Terrell's house on Gray Street.  He allegedly knew Timmy Hill from Gray Street and was familiar with Nathaniel Cater, who would become the last official victim.

On March 24, 1981, Mickey left his job at the Milton Ave. Foundry and never returned.  The following day, on March 25, he entered an import shop on Bankhead Highway crying and told the manager that he had been badly beaten by two black men.  Those men allegedly gave him $12 and showed him where the nearest MARTA station was.  Mickey was last seen leaving the store and headed toward the Chattahoochee.

On April 20, 1981, Mickey's body was pulled from the Chattahoochee after being spotted by a local farmer.  The body was found naked and the cause of death was undetermined asphyxiation.


John Porter.  Like Mickey McIntosh, John Porter was an ex-convict.  The 27 year old, who suffered with mental problems and had spent time in a mental hospital, lived off and on with his grandmother.  His grandmother had kicked him out of her home not long before his murder after she found him fondling a toddler she was caring for.  John then moved in with his mother near the Atlanta Fulton County Stadium although he would have disagreements with her as well.  When he was angry with his mother, he would stay with a man named James Gates in an empty apartment building.

John was found dead on April 12, 1981, in a vacant lot on NW Bender Street.  He had been stabbed six times on the sidewalk and then his body was propped up on the steps.

Although he was not initially considered a victim of the killer preying on Atlanta's streets, John's case was used as a "pattern case" in Wayne Williams' trial when fibers found on his body were tied to Williams.


Jimmy Ray Payne.  Twenty-one year old Jimmy, like John Porter and Eddie Duncan, had a record.  He had served time until the end of 1980 for a burglary charge.  He was a slight man, standing just above five feet tall, and suffered with depression.  At the time of his disappearance, he was under the care of a doctor and had reportedly attempted suicide twice.

On April 22, 1981, Jimmy told his sister he was headed to the Omni to try and sell some old coins.  He left their home in the Vine City Terrace Apartments clad in a red jogging suit and white tennis shoes.  He was due to meet his girlfriend at the Vine City MARTA bus stop that afternoon.  He had dropped her off there that morning but did not return as planned.

Police got tips that Jimmy had been spotted at a coin shop on Ponce de Leon, that he had been trying to assume a new identity in the days before he vanished, and that he was seen at a club on Peters Street.  It's unknown what actions the authorities took on these tips, if any.

On April 27, 1981, less than a week after he was reported missing, Jimmy was found by a couple fishing in the Chattahoochee.  His body wore only red shorts and in the pocket was a phone number that was traced to an address where first reported victim Teddy Smith lived.  The cause of death was undetermined; the medical examiner felt Jimmy could have been in the water the entire length of his disappearance.

A man by the name of Fred Wyatt would be arrested at Cap'n Peg's in possession of Jimmy's prison ID.  He would claim to have found the identification near Atlanta Fulton County Stadium.


William Barrett.  Seventeen year old "Billy Star" was already a juvenile delinquent when he vanished on May 11, 1981.  He had a record that included aggravated assault, drug violations, theft and receiving stolen property.  He had done a stint at a youth development center in Milledgeville in October of 1980 and had been admitted to the Georgia Department of Offender Rehab.  Perhaps not coincidentally, Eric Middlebrooks' body was found next door to the Georgia Department of Offender Rehab.

Billy Star was tied to previous victim Lubie Geter by a store owner who said both boys frequented his shop.

Prior to his disappearance, police had been notified that an elementary school student had been approached by a man and offered $3,000 to kill Billy Star.

Billy Star was last seen at the McDaniel-Glenn Housing Community Center paying a bill for his mother.  This was the same community center where Patrick Rogers, a friend of Billy Star's, would hang out.  A witness later claimed to have seen the teen just blocks from his home on Memorial getting into a white car with a black man.

On May 12, 1981, one day after he vanished, Billy Star's body was found near a wooded area near Interstate 20 and Glenwood by FBI agents.  The body was fully clothed minus a denim jacket.  White undercoat animal hairs were found on the body, along with membership cards for the East Lake Meadows Boys Club and Willie Johnson Paint Company and a Boy Scout pocket knife.  A phone number found in the pocket of his pants was traced to a white man seen at both the Omni and Five Points MARTA station, looking to pick up boys.  Billy Star and Lubie Geter were both reported to have been at this man's home prior to their deaths.

Cause of death was strangulation but Billy Star had suffered a post-mortem stab wound as well.

The Barrett case would be another "pattern case" according to prosecutors during the Williams trial.  An aunt and cousin of Billy Star's would claim that Wayne Williams had been to their home.


Nathaniel Cater.    Twenty-seven year old Nathaniel would be the last official victim of the Atlanta serial killer.  Until April 24, 1981, he had lived with his father in the same building that victim Latonya Wilson had been abducted from on Verbena Street; after that date, he moved into the Falcon Hotel on Luckie Street.  An ex-convict, he worked at Add-A-Man, a labor pool business on Spring Street where Mickey McIntosh had also picked up work.

An admitted homosexual, he also solicited for sex at the Silver Dollar Saloon on Spring Street, the same place frequented by the manager of the laundromat where victim Clifford Jones was seen.  Nathaniel was also known to be an alcoholic and drug dealer; according to a witness, he had admitted to selling his blood, his body and drugs for money.

He was last seen on May 21, 1981.  The Falcon Hotel desk clerk last saw him around 3 p.m.  Gardener Robert Henry reported seeing Nathaniel holding hands with Wayne Williams at the entrance to the Rialto Theater on Forsyth Street.  Nathaniel was also supposedly spotted leaving the Cameo Lounge, headed for the bus station, near the-then Central City Park (it's now called Woodruff Park.)

However, friends reported seeing Nathaniel on May 23.  One said he saw the man around 2:30 p.m. at the Cameo Lounge.  Another said he saw him entering the Healey Building, not far from Five Points.

Nathaniel's body was discovered on May 24, 1981, floating in the Chattahoochee.  The body was found nude; a safe, clothing and Thompson sub-machine gun was found as well.  The police would never disclose what was found inside the safe.  The medical examiner determined that Nathaniel had died as a result of asphyxia, manner unknown.  The M.E. was also unable to say specifically how long the body had been in the water.

Nathaniel's mother and sister would initially claim to have seen him with Wayne Williams on May 25, 1981 -- a day after Nathaniel's body was found.  They later retracted that statement and claimed May 18.

After Nathaniel's body was found, his roommate came to Add-A-Man, crying and terrified that he would be the next victim.  He said that a week earlier, a white man in a suit and a black man in expensive sports clothes had repeatedly approached him, looking for Nathaniel.

Wayne Williams: Capture and Conviction




In the early morning hours of Friday, May 22, 1981, two police officers were staked out at the James Jackson Parkway Bridge, where it crossed over the Chattahoochee.  The James Jackson Parkway Bridge was one of a dozen that the authorities were monitoring, since victims had begun turning up in the Chattahoochee.  As media coverage was at a fever pitch, the stakeouts were public information.

Officer Freddie Jacobs, stationed on the Fulton County, or south, side of the bridge saw headlights approaching southbound.  He was able to detect the car was a white 1970 Chevy station wagon; the car drove over the bridge into Fulton County toward a liquor store on the opposite side then turned around and re-crossed the bridge into Cobb County.  Officer Bob Campbell, stationed beneath the bridge on the Cobb County, or northerly, side heard a car driving over the bridge and then a splash. Campbell stated he looked into the water and saw ripples from whatever went in.  He radioed FBI agent Greg Gilliland, who pulled the car over about half a mile from the bridge.

The driver was a 22 year old freelance photographer and music promoter named Wayne Williams.  Williams was grilled for over an hour with questions about why he had been on the bridge at that unusual hour.  Williams said he had been at the Starvin' Marvin gas station up the road, had called a woman by the name of Cheryl Johnson, with whom he had an appointment later in the day to audition her and possibly promote her as a singer, and was driving to locate her residence.  His car, he said, belonged to his uncle.  Agents questioned his story when the phone number he provided for Ms. Johnson was incorrect and the address he was allegedly seeking did not exist.

The area of the Chattahoochee where the splash was heard was dragged for several hours but nothing of interest, and especially not a body, was found.  Authorities put Williams under surveillance and began digging into his background.

He was an only child born to two schoolteachers and had been doted on from an early age.  At sixteen, he had started his own radio station from his parents' home, something that brought him media coverage and community support.  He graduated from high school with honors and moved on to Georgia State University but dropped out a year into his studies.  He appeared with the future head of the NAACP, Benjamin Hooks, in Jet magazine, and spent the majority of his time marketing his own radio station and attempting to promote local talent.  He performed odd jobs to support his station, and began experimenting with electronics.   These experiments led him to sell footage of car accidents, fires and even a plane crash to local television stations for money.   He had a police radio scanner that allowed him to get to the scenes of accidents, sometimes before the police arrived.

He had dreamt of finding the next Jackson Five and although his parents continued to fund the recordings he made with local boys, he did not have the ear necessary to become successful in that end of the business, resulting in his parents near-financial ruin.  Despite this, he continued to assert that he had connections and major record deals in the pipeline -- all of which was untrue.

Williams had another hobby, one that got him into hot water in 1976.  He had equipped a car with red lights beneath the grille and flashing blue lights on the dash.  He was arrested in the city for impersonating a police officer and the unauthorized use of a vehicle.

Still living at home at 22, he had few friends and was rumored to be homosexual but closeted.

It was said that in the days following the bridge incident, Williams and his father did a major clean-up around the Williams home in Dixie Hills, including the burning of photographs and negatives in the outside grill.

Wayne Williams was given three separate polygraph exams by the FBI, all of which they reported he failed.  Williams responded by calling a press conference at his home and handing out exaggerated, misleading and straight out false resumes of himself.  He claimed he was innocent and being scapegoated into being the killer of the victims by the authorities.

The FBI, meanwhile, said they had gotten matches between fibers found on some of the victims and fibers found in Williams' home, as well as dog hairs on victims and the Williams family dog.  When the Fulton County District Attorney grew cagey about prosecuting Williams on the basis of hair and fiber evidence alone, new witnesses appeared with reports of seeing Williams with various victims or Williams with serious looking scratches and cuts.  These witnesses were not asked why they had not come forward with their information prior to Williams being named a suspect, especially with the media coverage.

On June 21, 1981, Wayne Williams was arrested for the murders of Jimmy Ray Payne and Nathaniel Cater.  However, since Georgia law allowed evidence from other cases to be brought in if the cases could prove a "pattern,"  the other 27 or so victims would be used as evidence.

The medical examiner who had autopsied Jimmy Payne had initially ruled his death "undetermined," which meant it could not be stated with authority that Jimmy had been murdered.  Before the trial started, the examiner issued a new death certificate in which he revised his opinion to reflect that Payne was the victim of a homicide.  The M.E. claimed he had made a mistake by checking the wrong box but there was no box on the certificate -- only a line in which to indicate the finding.

Jury selection began on December 28, 1981.  Nine women and three men would make up the jury that would hear evidence in the trial; eight jurors were black and four were white.

From the start, the defense was severely hampered by lack of funds and stressed on time to prepare.  The witnesses who claimed to have seen Nathaniel Cater on May 23, 1981 -- the day after Williams was stopped on the bridge and allegedly threw his body over the side -- were not disclosed to Williams' attorneys.   The prosecution had hundreds of witnesses and the defense simply could not speak to them all before the first week of January, 1982, when opening arguments were heard.  They didn't have the money to attempt to rebut the FBI laboratory's findings or that of the Georgia Crime Bureau.  Worse, while they knew the prosecution was going to bring in other cases, they didn't know which ones.

The prosecution made it more difficult for the defense by turning over their Brady files - - the body of information collected by police and other experts that points toward the innocence of the accused -- at the last possible moment.  It was noted that the judge in the case, who decided when the files should be turned over, was a former protegee of the Fulton County D.A.

Atlanta Safety Commissioner Lee Brown had publicly maintained during the series of murders that there was no connection between them.  However, during the trial Brown would testify and prosecutor Jack Mallard was use his testimony to introduce evidence of a "pattern," thereby allowing the state to bring in other cases.  The patterns according to Mallard included black males, poor households, broken homes, street "hustlers," death by asphyxia, and body found by expressway ramp or other major artery.

A clear problem with the prosecution's case would reveal itself in their pattern analysis.  The victims they would eventually attribute to one killer -- Williams -- were not all male.  They had not all come from broken homes.  They were not all "street hustlers."  They were not all asphyxiated.  And not all were found by expressway ramps.  The two murders for which Williams was being charged and tried had bodies found in water.

The prosecution also informed the jury that the fibers found on some victims' bodies matched the carpeting found in the Williams home and it was conclusively impossible for the victims not to have been there.  What they neglected to mention was that the carpet in the home was not rare; the carpet could readily be found in many residences, apartment homes and business offices throughout the Atlanta area.   Their suggestion also was that evidence transference happened when the fibers adhered to the victims and/or their clothing but they never did explain how fibers, hairs, etc., from the victims was never discovered in the Williams home or Wayne Williams' car.

The defense did their best to call into question whether Jimmy Payne and Nathaniel Cater had died as a result of foul play.  Payne had attempted suicide twice and Cater was a known alcoholic and drug abuser.  They were also adults, which did not correspond to the prosecution's theory on motive -- that Wayne Williams hated black youths.

Williams took the stand to defend himself against the state's accusations.  He claimed there was no way he could have quickly stopped his car on the bridge -- something he disputed anyhow -- and hoisted Nathaniel Cater's body from the back of the car and thrown it over the shoulder-high guard rails.  Not only did the timing not work based on the police officers' recollections but Cater was bigger and heavier than Williams.

Unfortunately for Williams, prosecutor Mallard succeeded in getting him angry and riled up, Williams insulted the government agents on the case.  His flashes of hot temper did not sit well with the jury and his attorneys were unable to recover.

It probably would have made little difference if they had.  The state had mountains of evidence and many, many witnesses to call to testify as to why Williams was the monster taking Atlanta's children and young adults.  The quality of that evidence never seemed to be truly questioned and Wayne Williams was found guilty of murdering Jimmy Payne and Nathaniel Cater.  He was sentenced to two life terms and the Atlanta PD announced that 22 of the 29 cases had conclusively been linked to Williams and, therefore, the cases were solved.

Not the End






Nearly from the moment Wayne Williams was convicted of murder, doubts arose as to his guilt.  Many black Atlantans, including family members of victims, believed that there was a conspiracy and the government and local authorities simply wanted to close the case.  The murders had been bad publicity for the growing city, which in 1981 had been crowned with the sad title of "Murder Capital of the United States," and closing the book on them was the best for all concerned.

In truth, while Williams was a terrible witness and a textbook example of his own worst enemy (losing his patience on the stand; not having a good reason for being on the bridge that night) there wasn't one person who could testify as to having seen him abuse, assault or kill a single victim.   It was also a stretch, even a legal mistake, to link him to the Middlebrooks, Porter, Evans, Stephens, and Baltazar cases.  The standard wasn't met and the evidence simply wasn't there.  Even former DeKalb County Sheriff Sidney Dorsey, who, as a homicide detective, searched the Williams home for evidence does not believe Wayne Williams committed the crimes.

In 2004, DeKalb County Police Chief Louis Graham reopened the investigations into the five DeKalb County victims -- Aaron Wyche, Patrick Baltazar, Curtis Walker, Yusuf Bell, and William Barrett.  Graham had been one of the original investigators in the case and, like Sidney Dorsey, did not believe Williams was guilty of any of the murders for which he's been attributed.

In June of 2006, DeKalb County dropped its reinvestigation after Louis Graham had resigned.

In January of 2007, the state agreed to DNA testing of the dog hairs found on some of the victims.  These hairs were used to tie Williams to the crimes and convict him.  Williams' attorneys hoped that such testing might exclude German Shepherds, the breed of dog the Williams family had at the time of the murders.  The results came back in five months but they did not exonerate Williams.  Only mitochondrial DNA could be tested, which is not unique to each breed.  The results didn't conclusively point to the Williams' dog as the source of the hair, which was significant, but they also couldn't eliminate the dog either.

Later that same year, DNA tests were run on two human hairs that were found on one victim.  The mitochondrial sequence would eliminate 98% of African Americans; Williams was not one of them.  His mitochondrial sequence was one of the 2%.  It doesn't absolutely say he was guilty but it does not eliminate him either.

The distasteful issue of the KKK came up throughout the murders, investigation and Williams' trial.  With the mayor being black, as well as the chief of police and a substantial number of police officers in the city now black, word on the street was that the KKK was anxious to start a race war and begin eliminating as much of the black population as possible.

A suspect by the name of Charles Sanders came to the authorities' attention.  Sanders, along with his father and brothers, was a member of the KKK.  According to a confidential informant, Sanders told him in December of 1980 that he was going to choke Lubie Geter to death for hitting Sanders' car with a go-cart.  Another informant claimed that Sanders had admitted to "killing the little bastard [Geter]" and that "they" had killed about 20 black kids so far and would soon begin killing young black women.  In a telephone call recorded by the GBI, Don Sanders said he might go out and ride around a bit, to which Terry Sanders replied, "Go find you another kid?  Another little kid?"  Don answered with, "Yeah.  Scope out some places."   GBI officials later destroyed the recording.  Police would say that Sanders and his family had been thoroughly investigated and kept under close surveillance for some seven weeks, during which time four more victims were abducted and killed.  Sanders and two of his brothers allegedly volunteered to take lie detector tests, which they passed.

There was also reportedly more victims than the "canon" twenty-eight,  twenty-nine or thirty.  Chet Dettlinger, once a private detective and someone the police eyed as a suspect due to his knowledge on the case, wrote a book called The List, a harrowing recounting of the murders.  He believes they started in 1979 and continued into 1983.

John Douglas, an FBI profiler who has written a handful of books and was consulted on the case, profiling the killer as a young black man, believes that Williams is guilty of some of the murders but not all.  He believes the Atlanta PD knew full well who was responsible and the truth was far worse than thought.

I don't believe there was one serial killer operating in Atlanta during the deadly years of 1979, 1980, and 1981.

For one, most killers stick to one type of victim gender-wise.  If we take Angel Lenair and Latonya Wilson off the list, that would make at least two killers.  However, Angel was 12, disappeared on foot after leaving a friend's home and was later found tied to a tree, most likely sexually assaulted and strangled with an electrical cord.  She was taken nearly six miles away from her home, certainly by a vehicle.  Latonya was only 7 and taken from her home while she and her family slept.  She was found down the street from her residence, which could indicate that her abductor and killer was on foot.  The person who took her almost certainly knew the pane of glass in the window had been replaced and had been inside the home, as he knew exactly how to get to Latonya.

For these reasons, I don't think the same person took Angel and Latonya.  It's far more likely that Angel was taken on impulse, possibly by one of the enlisted at nearby Fort McPherson.  Can it be a coincidence that Campbellton Road, where her body was found, is at Fort McPherson?

Latonya's abduction was almost certainly planned and thought out.  The maintenance man who replaced the pane of glass in the window reportedly had pictures of all the victims and confessed to another murder.  If he had been responsible for Latonya's murder, that would make three separate killers so far.

Going back to just the male victims, again, killers normally have a preference.  The male victims ranged in age from 9 to 27.  While some of the teens were small for their age and possibly could have looked much younger than they were, a killer would normally stick to pre-pubescent boys, adolescents or adults.  Not all three.  That could mean another two or even three killers.

The victims were also killed in different manners -- some were shot, some stabbed, some strangled by a ligature, some smothered.  Some victims were disposed of in bodies of water while others were left in woods, parking lots and abandoned buildings.  Some victims were fully clothed, some partially clothed and some nude or nearly nude.

Serial killers tend to be creatures of habit.  They have an M.O. they almost always stick to and that includes victim types, methods of killing and methods of disposal.

The first victim on the list, Teddy Smith, was shot; four days later, his friend Alfred Evans was grabbed and killed.  Because the M.E. determined Evans had died due to strangulation, his murder was attributed to Williams.  Smith's murder was not, even though the bodies were found together.  The only logic to this was that the strangulation murders were credited to Williams; other manners of death were not.

In suggesting that Wayne Williams was responsible for nearly all the crimes, the investigators chose to ignore the obvious connections between many of the victims.  To wit:

Moreland Avenue Shopping Center.   Aaron Jackson went missing from the location; Patrick Rogers carried groceries there; Aaron Wyche was spotted at the center the day of his disappearance; and Wayne Williams claimed to have found a boy to distribute his flyers there.

Thomasville Heights.  Aaron Jackson frequented the rec center; Curtis Walker had lived there; Patrick Rogers resided there at the time of his death.

Stewart-Lakewood Shopping Center.  Charles Stephens hung out at a department store in the center; Lubie Geter was last seen at the center.

Cap'n Peg's Seafood Restaurant
Cap'n Peg's.  Not only did Jo-Jo Bell and Mickey McIntosh both work at the restaurant but Mickey lived behind it.  Fred Wyatt was arrested there, in possession of Jimmy Payne's ID.  Wayne Williams used this address (325 Georgia Avenue) on his flyers as his business location.

John David Wilcoxen.  Earl Terrell disappeared after last being seen across the street from Wilcoxen's  house and witnesses placed him at the home prior to his disappearance and murder.  Lubie Geter was seen in the company of Wilcoxen several times before his own disappearance and murder.  Wilcoxen was the pedophile who was arrested with scores of child pornography and photographs in his home

Gray Street house
Tom Terrell/House on Gray Street.  Timothy Hill was reported to have been a guest at Terrell's home frequently before Hill's death, with Terrell himself admitting that he paid the teenager for sex.  Hill reportedly spent the last night of his life at Terrell's home.  Jo-Jo Bell and Mickey McIntosh also reportedly spent time at the house on Gray Street.  Hill's connection to seven of the victims could link them as well to the property.  The house burnt down in a mysterious fire.

Their lives overlapped in ways that simply cannot be ignored.  Many were friends.  Many worked odd jobs to make extra money.  Some were reported to have sold themselves for sexual favors; many of those that did were connected to the Gray Street house.  Yet it appeared that the child prostitution ring was either downplayed or ignored entirely as a connection or potential motive.

While the KKK angle got more ink and investigation, it didn't appear to be considered as much as it could have.  In theory, obliterating an entire race, or attempting to, by snatching children here and there doesn't make a lot of sense, but neither does the KKK.  An accident at a local daycare, which kicked off the intense media interest in the killings, was officially caused by a faulty heater.  To this day, there is still speculation that the KKK could have been behind the explosion.

Was there a conspiracy in this case?  There certainly seems to have been.  Police incompetence could explain one or two mistakes but the continual lack of response and flat out indifference to phone calls and requests for help goes beyond incompetence and into full-fledged intention.  If the authorities were choosing not to act, why?  Because the victims were black and poor?  Or because someone in power was involved in the disappearances and murders?

It's an ugly and discouraging thought but it's there.  In many of the cases, there was evidence that pointed to persons other than Wayne Williams and the authorities chose not to follow up on it or dismissed the witnesses as being confused, wrong or "retarded."  Since Williams' trial, some witnesses have come forward to recant what they testified to, claiming they had received financial compensation to commit perjury.

So too did the police officers who had claimed to have heard the famous splash on the bridge that night in May of 1982 when Wayne Williams was pulled over.  They eventually admitted they had heard nothing.

The dog hairs found on 15 of the victims were typed at the time as coming from a Siberian Husky.  The Williams family owned a German Shepherd, as the authorities well knew.  The Sanders family, however, allegedly bred Siberian Huskies and owned a green Chevy Impala - - the type of car witnesses recalled seeing at many of the abductions and body dump sites.

The media, then and now, chooses to ignore any facts or information that suggests there was more than one killer.  During the crime time, they behaved deplorably.  They camped out on lawns, accosting the children's parents and families as they attempted to come and go, or peer out of their windows.  They attended the funerals of the victims, cruelly pointing their camera lenses in the grief-stricken faces of loved ones who had come to mourn.  At one funeral, a cameraman actually leaned over the casket of a murder victim in order to get a good shot of the boy's mother. Another mother was approached by the press as she learned her son's body had been found; a camera was pushed in her face and she was asked how she felt.

Rather than help to solve the case or prevent anyone else from dying, the media seemed to feed on the fear and grief, glorying in the tragedy and doing their part to keep Atlanta's ugly legacy in the headlines.   In this way, the media victimized the children and their parents.

I think it's possible that Wayne Williams killed some of the victims, just as I think it's possible he didn't kill anyone.  I think a majority of the victims were killed by someone they knew, or thought they did.  Especially those who were taken after the killings began.  Once word got out in the community about children being taken, it seems unlikely that these kids would go with anyone they didn't trust.  Most of these kids were street smart and savvy.  Unfortunately they were also from poor environments, which not only led to lack of importance and attention, at least for a time, but also to the need of some of them to prostitute or involve themselves in the seedier, more dangerous cultural aspects in order to make money.

The greatest tragedy is the excessive loss of life, that so many were taken before they could begin to live and realize their potential.  Also tragic is that, if my opinion is correct, at least one and possibly two to five more, killers got away with their crimes.  If Wayne Williams wasn't one of them, a terrible miscarriage of justice has been perpetrated upon him, denying him freedom and the victims real justice.

Wayne Williams in 2017
Killer of all, killer of some or killer of none?