Hillside Strangler

The Hillside Stranglers
Born
Bianchi: (1951-05-22) May 22, 1951 (age 72)
Buono: (1934-10-05)October 5, 1934
DiedBuono:
September 21, 2002(2002-09-21) (aged 67)
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment (without parole) (Buono)
Life imprisonment (Bianchi)
Details
Victims10 killed as a duo, 2 by Bianchi alone
Span of crimes
October 16, 1977 –
February 16, 1978
CountryUnited States
Date apprehended
Bianchi: January 12, 1979; 45 years ago (1979-01-12)
Buono: October 22, 1979; 44 years ago (1979-10-22)

The Hillside Strangler, later the Hillside Stranglers, is the media epithet for one, later discovered to be two, American serial killers who terrorized Los Angeles, California, between October 1977 and February 1978, with the nicknames originating from the fact that many of the victims' bodies were discovered in the hills surrounding the city.[1]

One unusual twist to the investigation was the arrival in L.A. of a psychic from Berlin. Detective Bob Grogan was polite, but unenthusiastic, when the psychic wrote in German what they should be looking for: Two Italians. Brothers. Aged about thirty-five.[2] It was initially believed that only one person was responsible for the killings. The police, however, determined from the positions of the bodies that two criminals were working together, but withheld that information from the press. The perpetrators were eventually discovered to be cousins Kenneth Bianchi and Angelo Buono Jr., who were later convicted of kidnapping, raping, torturing and murdering 10 women and girls ranging in age from 12 to 28.[3][4]

The Hillside Strangler murders began with the deaths of two prostitutes who were found strangled and dumped naked on hillsides northeast of Los Angeles in October and early November 1977. It was not until the deaths of five young women who were not prostitutes, but girls who had been abducted from middle-class neighborhoods, that the media attention and subsequent "Hillside Strangler" moniker came to prominence.[5]

There were two more deaths in December and February before the murders abruptly stopped. An extensive investigation proved fruitless until the arrest of Bianchi in January 1979 for the murder of two more young women in Washington and the subsequent linking of his past to the Strangler case.

The most expensive trial in the history of the California legal system at that time followed, with Bianchi and Buono eventually being found guilty of those crimes and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Background

Kenneth Bianchi mugshot in 1979
Angelo Buono mugshot

In January 1976, Kenneth Bianchi left Rochester, New York, and moved to Los Angeles, California, to live with his cousin Angelo Buono Jr.[6] Buono provided a strong role model for the docile Bianchi. When Bianchi was short of money, Buono came up with the idea of getting some girls to work for them as prostitutes.[7] Two teenage runaways, Sabra Hannan and Becky Spears, met Bianchi and Buono, and once under their control, were forced to prostitute themselves. Eventually, Spears happened to meet lawyer David Wood, who was appalled at her situation and arranged for her to escape from the city.[7]

Encouraged by Spears' escape, Hannan ran away from Bianchi and Buono a short time later. With their pimping income gone, they decided to find more teenage girls. Impersonating police officers, they eventually found another young woman and installed her in the previous girl's bedroom. Additionally, they purchased (from a prostitute named Deborah Noble) a supposed "trick list" with names of men who frequented prostitutes. Noble and her friend, Yolanda Washington, delivered the trick list to Buono in October 1977.[7]

Murders

Yolanda Washington

Yolanda Washington happened to mention to Buono that she always worked on a certain stretch of Sunset Boulevard. When Bianchi and Buono found that Deborah Noble had deceived them about the list but were unable to find her, they decided to take out their rage on Washington; her naked body was found on October 17, 1977, on a hillside near the Ventura Freeway. Detective Frank Salerno of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department was called to the scene,[8] where it was determined that the corpse was cleaned before being dumped, while faint marks were also visible around the neck, wrists and ankles, signs of a rope being used. The victim had also been raped.[4]

Judith Miller

On November 1, 1977, police were called to Alta Terrace Drive in La Crescenta,[9] a neighborhood 12 miles north of downtown Los Angeles, where the body of a teenage girl was found naked, face up on a parkway in a middle-class residential area. The homeowner had covered her with a tarp in the early morning hours to prevent the neighborhood children from viewing her on their way to school.[8] Ligature marks were on her neck, wrists and ankles, indicating to police she was bound and strangled. The body had been dumped, indicating she was killed elsewhere.[8]

Detective Salerno also found a small piece of light-colored fluff on her eyelid and saved it for the forensic experts. A coroner's report further detailed that she had been raped and sodomized.[8] The girl, who was described as being "small and thin, weighing about 90 pounds and appearing to be about 16 years old",[8] was eventually identified as 15-year-old Judith Lynn Miller, a former student of Hollywood High School. After dropping out, Miller was a runaway and small-time sex worker.

Miller was last seen alive on Halloween, October 31, 1977, talking to a man driving a large, two-toned sedan on Sunset Boulevard next to Carney's. The stranglers had told her they were ‘undercover’ police officers, handcuffed her, and took her to Buono's Auto Upholstery Shop at 703 E. Colorado St. in Glendale, where she was murdered.

Lissa Kastin

Five days later, on November 6, 1977, the nude body of another woman was discovered near the Chevy Chase Country Club in Glendale. Like Miller, her body bore five-point (neck, wrists, and ankles) ligature marks, and showed signs of having been strangled and brutally raped, but not sodomized.[8] The woman was identified as 21-year-old waitress Elissa Teresa "Lissa" Kastin, who was last seen leaving the restaurant where she worked the night before her body was discovered.[10]

In addition to working full-time, Kastin was also a professional dancer in the all-female dance troupe The L.A. Knockers and (unlike the previous two victims) was not a prostitute, drug user or runaway. The stranglers followed Kastin after she was seen driving home from work, pulled her over on the street she lived on, presented a fake ‘police badge’, and told her that they were detectives. They then handcuffed her and told her they needed to take her in for questioning.[10]

Aborted abduction of Catharine Lorre Baker

At some point in early November 1977,[11] the two men approached 24-year-old Catharine Lorre Baker, the daughter of actor Peter Lorre — famous for his role as a serial killer in Fritz Lang's film M — with the intent of abducting and killing her. However, when Lorre produced not only her driver's license when requested, but also a picture of her sitting on her father's lap as a child, the two let her go without incident, fearing the murder of a celebrity's child would attract an unusually high amount of police and press attention.[12]

Lorre did not realize who the men were until they were arrested, at which point she recalled that two men flashing L.A. police badges had approached her in the past.[13]

Dolores Cepeda (left) and Sonja Johnson

Dolores Cepeda and Sonja Johnson

On Sunday, November 13, 1977, two girls, 12-year-old Dolores Ann "Dolly" Cepeda and 14-year-old Sonja Marie Johnson,[14] boarded an RTD bus in front of the Eagle Rock Plaza on Colorado Boulevard and headed home. The last time they were seen was getting off the bus on York Boulevard and North Avenue 46, and approaching a two-tone sedan that reportedly had two men inside. Their two corpses were discovered by a 9-year-old boy who was treasure-hunting in a trash heap on a hillside near Dodger Stadium on November 20, 1977.[15] Both of the girls' bodies had already begun to decompose. It was determined that they had been strangled and raped.[10]

Kristina Weckler

Earlier that same day, November 20, 1977, hikers found the naked body of 20-year-old Kristina Weckler, a quiet, unassuming honors student at the Art Center College of Design, described by Detective Bob Grogan of the Los Angeles Police Department as a "…loving and serious young woman who should have had a bright future ahead of her".[15] Weckler was discovered on a hillside between Glendale and Eagle Rock. When found by Detective Grogan, the typical ligature marks were on her wrists, ankles, and neck, and when he turned her over, bruises were observed on her breasts and blood oozed from her rectum. Unlike the first three victims, there were two puncture marks on her arm, but no signs of the needle tracks that indicated a drug addict;[16] it was later determined that Weckler had been injected with Windex, a common ammonia-based window, glass and hard-surface cleaner.[10]

Evelyn Jane King

On November 23, 1977, the badly decomposed body of 28-year-old Evelyn Jane King, an aspiring actress who had gone missing on November 9, was discovered in bushes[17] near the Los Feliz Boulevard off-ramp of the Golden State Freeway.[15] The severity of decomposition prevented determination as to whether she had been raped or tortured, but she had been strangled like the others. In response authorities created a task force — initially composed of 30 officers from the LAPD, the Sheriff's Department and the Glendale Police Department — to catch the predator now dubbed the "Hillside Strangler".[15]

Lauren Rae Wagner

Lauren Wagner

On November 29, 1977, police found the body of 18-year-old Lauren Rae Wagner, a business student who lived with her parents in the San Fernando Valley,[10] in the hills around Los Angeles's Mount Washington. She had ligature marks on her neck, ankles, and wrists. There were also burn marks on her hands indicating she was tortured.[18] Lauren's parents had expected her to come home before midnight, and the next morning, when they found her car parked across the street with the door ajar, her father questioned the neighbors.[18]

He found that the woman who lived in the house where Lauren's car had been parked saw her abduction. This woman stated that she saw two men: one was tall and young, the other one was older and shorter with bushy hair.[18] She also stated that she heard Wagner cry out "You won't get away with this!" during her abduction.[18]

Kimberly Martin

On December 14, 1977, the naked body of 17-year-old prostitute Kimberly Diane Martin, which also showed signs of torture, was found on a deserted lot near Los Angeles City Hall. Martin had previously joined a call girl agency because she feared exposing herself on the streets with the Strangler on the loose. The killers happened to place a call to her agency from a Hollywood Public Library pay phone, and she was the call girl who was dispatched. When the police investigated the apartment she had been dispatched to, they found it vacant and broken into.[19]

Cindy Hudspeth

The body of the final Hillside Strangler victim was discovered in Los Angeles on February 17, 1978, when a helicopter pilot spotted an orange Datsun abandoned midway down a cliff on the Angeles Crest Highway.[10] Police responded to the scene and discovered the nude body of the car's owner, 20-year-old Cindy Lee Hudspeth — a student and part-time waitress — in the trunk. Her corpse again showed ligature marks, and she had been raped and tortured. She had been strangled and her body placed in the trunk of her car, which was then pushed off the cliff.[19]

Hudspeth's murder had initially been unplanned. Bianchi had arrived at Buono's upholstery shop at closing time on February 16 to discover Hudspeth in the company of Buono, discussing upholstery work she wished him to perform on her car. The two men had a private discussion, opting to make her their next victim.[20]

Investigation and trial

In January 1979, after an intense investigation, police charged Bianchi and Buono with the crimes. Bianchi had fled to Bellingham, Washington, where he was soon arrested by Bellingham Police Department for raping and murdering two women he had lured to a home for a house-sitting job. Bianchi attempted to set up an insanity defense, claiming that he had dissociative identity disorder and that a personality separate from himself committed the murders. Court psychologists, notably Dr. Martin Orne, observed Bianchi and found that he was faking, so Bianchi agreed to plead guilty and testify against Buono in exchange for leniency.

At the conclusion of Buono's trial in 1983, Presiding Judge Ronald M. George, who later became Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, stated during sentencing, "I would not have the slightest reluctance to impose the death penalty in this case were it within my power to do so. Ironically, although these two defendants utilized almost every form of legalized execution against their victims, the defendants have escaped any form of capital punishment."[21] Bianchi is serving a life sentence at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla. Buono died of a heart attack on September 21, 2002, at Calipatria State Prison in California, where he was serving a life sentence.[22]

Veronica Compton

In 1980, Bianchi began a relationship with Veronica Compton. During his trial, she testified for the defense. While incarcerated, Bianchi had smuggled a semen filled condom to her in the spine of a book to use to make it look like a rape/murder committed by the Hillside Strangler. She was later convicted and imprisoned for attempting to strangle a woman she had lured to a motel in an attempt to have authorities believe that the Hillside Strangler was still on the loose and the wrong man was imprisoned. She was released in 2003.

Media

Film adaptations

Year Title Cast Notes
as Angelo Buono as Kenneth Bianchi also starring
1989 The Case of the Hillside Stranglers Dennis Farina Billy Zane Richard Crenna as Police Sergeant Bob Grogan Made for television; based on Two of a Kind: The Hillside Stranglers by Darcy O'Brien
2001 The Hillside Stranglers Ron Gilbert Jeff Marchelletta Made for television; also known as Supersleuth
2004 The Hillside Strangler Nicholas Turturro C. Thomas Howell Marisol Padilla Sánchez as Christina Chavez (based on Veronica Compton)
2006 Rampage: The Hillside Strangler Murders Tomas Arana Clifton Collins Jr. Brittany Daniel as a psychiatrist Direct-to-video

See also

References

  1. ^ "How the Hillside Strangler case helped make L.A. 'serial killer capital of America'". Los Angeles Times. 2022-08-03. Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  2. ^ Buono and Bianchi, the Hillside Stranglers by Marilyn Bardsley
  3. ^ "'Hillside Strangler' dies in prison". cnn.com. Archived from the original on January 16, 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ a b Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin. p. 187. ISBN 0-425-19640-2.
  5. ^ Bardsley, Marilyn. "The Rampage Begins". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 9, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ a b c Bardsley, Marilyn. "Killing Cousins". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ a b c d e f Bardsley, Marilyn. "Early Victims". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. ^ Two of a Kind: The Hillside Stranglers ISBN 978-0-453-00499-2 p. 24
  9. ^ a b c d e f Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin. p. 188. ISBN 0-425-19640-2.
  10. ^ "Peter Lorre's Daughter was Near-victim of Hillside Strangler". Lakeland Ledger. November 17, 1979. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  11. ^ Edwards, Elisabeth (June 10, 2022). "'Casablanca' Star Peter Lorre Saved His Daughter from the Hillside Strangler". The Vintage News. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
  12. ^ Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin. p. 191. ISBN 0-425-19640-2.
  13. ^ Guiltenane, Christian (February 22, 2022). "Who Was the Hillside Strangler and Who Were all the Victims?". Entertainment Daily. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  14. ^ a b c d Bardsley, Marilyn. "Two Killers". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  15. ^ Bardsley, Marilyn. "The 'Hillside Strangler'". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ Two of a Kind: The Hillside Stranglers ISBN 978-0-453-00499-2 p. 52
  17. ^ a b c d Bardsley, Marilyn. "A Witness". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  18. ^ a b Bardsley, Marilyn. "Three More". Crime Library. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  19. ^ Two of a Kind: The Hillside Stranglers ISBN 978-0-453-00499-2 p. 143
  20. ^ Bachmann, Patrick (Writer/Producer) (1997). The Hillside Stranglers (television production). A&E Television. Retrieved June 14, 2020.
  21. ^ King, Gary C. "The Hillside Strangler: Angelo Buono and Kenneth Bianchi." Investigation Discovery. 2. Retrieved on January 10, 2010.

Cited works and further reading

  • Hall, Allan (1994). The Power and the Evil. Leicester: Blitz Editions. pp. 11–14. ISBN 1-856-05208-7.
  • Lane, Brian; Gregg, Wilfred (1995) [1992]. The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. New York City: Berkley Book. pp. 50–52. ISBN 978-0-425-15213-3.
  • O'Brien, Darcy (1985). Two of a Kind. Virginia: Nal Books. ISBN 978-0-453-00499-2.
  • Wynn, Douglas (1995). On Trial for Murder. London: Pan Books. pp. 30–33. ISBN 0-330-33947-8.

External links

  • "'Hillside Strangler' dies in prison", CNN, September 22, 2002
  • Crime Library's story on the Hillside Stranglers
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