Read The Stranger Beside Me Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #United States, #Biography, #Murder, #Serial murderers, #True Crime, #Serial Killers, #Criminals & Outlaws, #Criminals, #Criminals - United States, #Serial Murderers - United States, #Bundy; Ted
There would be appeals ahead, predicted to take years, but for all intents and purposes, the Ted Bundy story was over. Locked away from the rays of the limelight, the rays that for Ted seem necessary to sustain life, I know that he will con-tinue to sink deeper and deeper into the compulsive madness that grips him. He will never again be the Golden Boy beloved by the media. Ted Bundy is a killer. A three-times convicted killer, a throwaway man now.
I cannot forget his phone call in October, 1975, the call where he said calmly, "I'm in a little trouble-but it's all going to work out. If anything goes wrong, you'll read about it in the newspapers." I
I
Afterword
As I write this, it has been six years since Ted Bundy was sentenced-for the third time-to die in Florida's electric chair. In my naivete in 1980,1 ended The Stranger Beside Me by suggesting that the Ted Bundy story was at last over. It was not. I vastly underestimated Ted's ability to regenerate in both spirit and body, to pit his will and mind continually against the justice system. Nor was I able to extricate Ted from my mind simply by putting him and my feelings about him on paper. The relief that I felt when I wrote the last line was immense. This book was a healing catharsis after a half-dozen years of horror. But the next half-dozen years have forced me to accept that some significant part of my consciousness will be inhabited by Ted Bundy and his crimes-for as long as I live. I have written five books since The Stranger Beside Me, and yet when my phone rings or a letter comes from somewhere far away-several times a week still-the questions are invariably about "the Ted book."
My correspondents fall generally into four categories. Laymen have contacted me from as far away as Greece, South Africa, the Virgin Islands-consumed with curiosity about Ted Bundy's eventual fate. Most of them ask, "When was he executed?" Police investigators call wondering where Ted Bundy might have been on a particular date (Ted's comments to Pensacola detectives that February night he was captured in 1978
are well-remembered by homicide detectives all over America. Although officially a murder suspect in only five states, Ted told Detective Norm Chapman and Don Patchen that he had killed "in six states" and that they should "add one digit" to the F.B.I's victim estimate of 36). 414
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The calls that surprised me most were from Ted's burgeoning "fan club"-unofficial but passionately vocal. So many young women who had
"fallen in love" with Ted Bundy and who wanted to know how they could contact him to let him know how much they loved him. When I explained that he had married Carole Ann Boone, my words fell on deaf ears. I finally asked them to read my book once more, asking, "Are you sure that you can tell the difference between a teddy-bear and a fox?" Almost as fervent were the religious readers who hoped to get word to Ted so that they might prevail upon him to repent before it was too late.
Finally, there were the callers that Seattle policemen refer to as
"220's"-people deranged to greater and lesser degrees -who imagined that they had some bizarre connection to Ted.
The latter were the most difficult to deal with. An elderly woman came to my door near midnight, regal and impeccably dressed-and yet distressed because "Ted Bundy has been stealing my nylons and my panty-hose. He's been coming into my house since 1948-and he takes my personal files. He's very clever; he puts everything back so that you can scarcely tell it's been moved . . ."
It did no good to point out that her "thefts" had begun when Ted was still a toddler.
Her visit did, however, make me realize that I could no longer have my home address printed in the phone book.
In ways that I could never have imagined, Ted Bundy changed my life. I have flown two hundred thousand miles, lectured a thousand times to groups ranging from ladies' book study clubs to defense attorneys organizations to police training seminars to the F.B.I. Academy-always about Ted. Some questions are easy enough for me to answer; some may never be answered and s|>me provoke more and more questions in an endless continuum.
If, indeed, Ted claimed to have murdered in six statesthen which state was the sixth? Had there really been a sixth state-a hundred and thirty six victims or, God help us, three hundred and sixty victims? Or had it been, for Ted, a game
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to play with his interrogators in Pensacola? His cunning jousts with police were always akin to Dungeons-and-Dragons, and he so delighted in outwitting them, watching them scurry around to do what he considered his bidding.
There may well have been myriad other victims, and yet it is an almost impossible task to deduce precisely where Ted Bundy was on a particular date in the late sixties and early seventies. I have tried to isolate periods of that time almost
20 years ago now, and so has Bob Keppel, the one-time King County detective who knows as much about Ted as any cop in America. But Ted was always a traveler, and an impulsive wanderer at that; he would say he was going one place, and head somewhere else. He hated to be made accountable for his whereabouts-by anyone-and he reveled in popping up to surprise those who knew him.
1969 found Ted visiting relatives in Arkansas, and attending classes at Temple University in Philadelphia, his childhood home. In 1969, a beautiful dark-haired young woman was stabbed to death far back in the
"stacks" of the library at Temple. That case, more than a decade unsolved, came back to a Pennsylvania homicide detective when he traced Ted's journeys in my book. In the end, he could only conjecture; no one could place Ted in that library on that evening.
Even more haunting is the unsolved murder of Rita Curran in Burlington, Vermont on July 19, 1971. Each born in Burlington, Rita Curran and Ted Bundy were twenty-four years old that summer. Ted had, of course, been raised on the opposite coast while Rita grew up in the tiny community of Milton, Vermont, daughter of the town's zoning administrator. Rita was a very lovely-but shy-young woman. Her dark hair fell midway down her back. Sometimes, she parted it on the left side; sometimes in the middle. A graduate of Burlington's Trinity College, she taught second grade at the Milton Elementary School during the school year. Like Lynda Ann Healy, Rita spent much of her time and energy working with deprived and handicapped children. Although she was well into her twenties, she hadn't really lived away from home until the summer of 1971. She had worked as a chambermaid at the Colonial Motor Inn in Burlington for three previous summers, but this year was the first she'd taken an apartment
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there rather than commuting from her parents' Milton home ten miles north.
She was attending classes in teaching remedial reading and language at the University of Vermont's graduate school, and shared the apartment on Brookes Avenue with a female roommate. Rita Curran had no steady boyfriend-and that was probably one of her reasons for spending the summer in Burlington. She was hoping to meet a man who would be right for her. She wanted to be married-to have children of her own-and she'd laughed to friends, 'Tve gone to three weddings this year-all the bachelors in Milton are taken!"
On Monday, July 19, 1971, Rita changed bedding and vacuumed rooms at the Colonial Motor Inn from 8:15 a.m. to 2:40 p.m. That evening, she rehearsed with her barbershop quartet until ten. Rita Curran's roommate and a friend left her in the apartment on Brookes at 11:20 to go to a restaurant. Both the front and back doors were unlocked when they left. Burlington, Vermont was hardly a high-crime area. People didn't lock doors.
When Rita's friends returned, the apartment was quiet and they assumed she had gone to sleep; they talked for an hour, and then Rita's roommate walked into the bedroom. Rita Curran lay nude .. . murdered. She had been strangled manually, beaten savagely on the left side of the head, and raped. Her Tom underpants were beneath her body. Her purse, contents intact, was nearby.
Burlington detectives traced the escape route of the killer, and found a small patch of blood near the back door leading off the kitchen. He had, perhaps, dashed through the kitchen and out through the shed beyond even as Rita's roommate came in the front door. A canvass of neighbors was fruitless; no one had heard a scream or a struggle. In 1971, there were approximately 10,000 homicides in America. What irtferigued John Bassett, a retired F.B.I. Special Agent-and also |
native of Burlington-when he read about Ted Bundy was the remarkable resemblance between Rita Curran and Stephanie Brooks, the fact that Rita had died of strangulation and bludgeoning to the head . . . and the proximity of the Colonial Motor Inn where Rita worked to an institution that had wrought so much emotional trauma in 418
Ted Bundy's life: the Elizabeth Lund Home for Unwed Mothers. The Lund home was right next door to the motel.
I had always assumed that Ted's trip to Burlington had occurred hi the summer of 1969 when he journeyed East, but John Bassett's call made me wonder. It was in the Fall of
1971 when Ted spoke to me of "finding out who I really was." If Ted was in Burlington in July of 1971, if he walked past the building where he was born, if he-perhaps-even checked into the Colonial Motor Inn, there are no records whatsoever to confirm or deny it. There is only a blurred notation hi the Burlington "dogcatcher's" records that note a person named "Bundy" had been bitten by a dog that week. . ..
In talking with Bassett, with Rita Curran's parents, and with a detective from the Burlington Police Department, I too was fascinated by so many similarities-but there was little I could do to confirm their suspicions about Ted Bundy. Meg Anders writes hi her book The Phantom Prince that she saw Ted sometimes that summer, and sometimes he didn't show up for dates. She had begun to notice a moodiness in him. But was Ted gone long enough to make a trip to Vermont? And is it simply too easy to imagine Ted Bundy's shadow wherever a beautiful dark-haired woman died by strangulation and blows to the left side of the head?
There are many commonalities between Rita Curran's murder and those that came later and -were attributed to Ted.
How many victims were there for Ted Bundy? Will we ever know?
A dozen or more young women have called me since 1980, absolutely convinced that they had escaped from Ted Bundy. In San Francisco. In Georgia. In Idaho. In Aspen. In Aon Arbor. In Utah ... He could not have been everywhere, but, for these women, there are terrified memories of a handsome man hi a tan Volkswagen-a man who gave them a ride, and who wanted more. They are sure that it was Ted who reached for them, and declare that they never hitchhiked again. For other women, there is a man with a brilliant smile who came to then-door, ingratiating, and then angry when they would not let hun in. "It was him. I've seen his picture, and I recognized him."
Mass hysteria? I think yes, for most. For some, I wonder.
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There have been other calls that left no doubt in my mind. Lisa Wick, nearing forty now, called me. Lisa was the stewardess who survived a bludgeoning with a two-by-four as she slept in a basement apartment on Queen Anne Hill in Seattle in the Summer of 1966. Her roommate, Lonnie Trumbull, died. Like so many of the later victims who were struck again and again on the head as they slept, Lisa Wick lost weeks of memory forever.
Lisa did not call to tell me that she had read my book; she called to say that she could not read my book. "I try to pick it up and read it, but it is impossible. When my hand touches the cover, when I look at his eyes, I get sick to my stomach."
Somewhere, buried in her deepest forbidden memory, Lisa Wick knows that she has seen those eyes before. But long after her physical injuries have healed, her mind remains bruised, and protects itself. "I know that it was Ted Bundy who did that to us-but I can't tell you how I know. . . ."
There have been no calls from Anne Marie Burr-who would be thirty-one if she was alive. From the night she disappeared from her own home in Tacoma in August of
1962, there has been no sign of Anne Marie. And yet I have had more calls-with information, and with questions-about Anne Marie than any of the other victims.
A young woman, whose brother was Ted Bundy's best boyhood friend: "We lived right across the street from the Bundys-and when that little girl disappeared, the police were all over our street. They searched the woods up at the end of the street many times-they questioned everybody because we lived so close to the Burr's house." An older woman, now living in a retirement home, who lived near the Burrs in 1962: "He was the paper boy, Ted was -the morning paper boy. That little girl, Anne Marie, used to follow him around like a puppy-she really thought he was something. TheyJcnew each other all right. She would have gone with him if Se asked her to crawl out the window." It is so long agjk 24 years.
A young woman called from Florida one day, an assistant in the State Attorney General's Office. "I'm a Chi Omega," she began, "and I read your book."
"I was a Chi Omega too-" I said, and she interrupted, 420
"no. I mean I was a Chi O at Florida State-I was there in Tallahassee-that night-in the house when ... he got in."
We talked about how it could have happened-with all those girls-39 of them-and a housemother. How could anyone have done so much damage-so quietly-in such a short time?
"He had already scouted it out-that afternoon-I think," she mused. "For some reason, we were all gone Saturday afternoon, even the housemother. The house was empty for a couple of hours. When we came home, the housemother's cat was acting spooked, and its hair was standing on end. It ran through our legs and out the door-and it didn't come back for two weeks."
She said some of the girls had felt the presence of a kind of evil that night. The Chi O's had wondered only a little while about the cat's behavior, but, later that night, at least two of the girls who were upstairs in the sleeping area had experienced stark terror, a free-floating dread with nothing to pin it to.