Jump to content

Dennis Rader: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[pending revision][pending revision]
Content deleted Content added
VTEX (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
VTEX (talk | contribs)
He confessed
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Current}}
{{Current}}


The '''BTK killer''' is a [[serial killer]] who police believe killed ten people in the vicinity of [[Wichita, Kansas]], [[United States]], between [[1974]] and [[1977]], and up to three more between [[1985]] and [[1991]]. The name, chosen by the killer, stands for '''B'''ind, '''T'''orture, and '''K'''ill, which was his ''[[modus operandi]].'' Letters were written soon after the killings to police and to local news outlets, boasting of the crimes and knowledge of details. After a long hiatus, these letters resumed in [[2004]].
'''Dennis Lynn Rader''' is a [[serial killer]] who confessed to killing ten people in the vicinity of [[Wichita, Kansas]], [[United States]], between [[1974]] and [[1991]]. He was known as the '''BTK Killer''', which stands for '''B'''ind, '''T'''orture, and '''K'''ill, which was his ''[[modus operandi]].'' Letters were written soon after the killings to police and to local news outlets, boasting of the crimes and knowledge of details. After a long hiatus, these letters resumed in [[2004]].


On Friday, [[February 25]], [[2005]], '''Dennis Lynn Rader''' (born [[March 9]], [[1945]]), a city inspector, [[Cub Scout]] leader, and church council president, was arrested near his home in [[Park City, Kansas]], and accused of the BTK killings. At a press conference the next morning, Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams flatly asserted, "the bottom line is that BTK has been arrested." Rader's trial has not yet started.
On Friday, [[February 25]], [[2005]], '''Dennis Lynn Rader''' (born [[March 9]], [[1945]]), a city inspector, [[Cub Scout]] leader, and church council president, was arrested near his home in [[Park City, Kansas]], and accused of the BTK killings. At a press conference the next morning, Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams flatly asserted, "the bottom line is that BTK has been arrested." Rader's confessed to his crimes on [[June 27]], [[2005]].


==Victims==
==Victims==

Revision as of 04:53, 28 June 2005

Dennis Lynn Rader is a serial killer who confessed to killing ten people in the vicinity of Wichita, Kansas, United States, between 1974 and 1991. He was known as the BTK Killer, which stands for Bind, Torture, and Kill, which was his modus operandi. Letters were written soon after the killings to police and to local news outlets, boasting of the crimes and knowledge of details. After a long hiatus, these letters resumed in 2004.

On Friday, February 25, 2005, Dennis Lynn Rader (born March 9, 1945), a city inspector, Cub Scout leader, and church council president, was arrested near his home in Park City, Kansas, and accused of the BTK killings. At a press conference the next morning, Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams flatly asserted, "the bottom line is that BTK has been arrested." Rader's confessed to his crimes on June 27, 2005.

Victims

The BTK strangler's victims include four members of one family (Joseph Otero, his wife Julie Otero, and two of their five children: Joseph Otero II and Josephine Otero); Kathryn Bright, Shirley Vian, Nancy Fox, and Vicki Wegerle. Two later murders, Marine Hedge and Delores Davis, were only recently affirmatively linked to the series. Police officials say the BTK killer murdered at least ten people between 1974 and 1991 and may be responsible for others as well.

Semen found on or near the bodies of his victims appears to be the critical evidence linking Rader to the crimes. Other cold cases in Kansas are being reopened [1] to see if Rader's DNA matches evidence collected at those crime scenes.

Letters

The BTK killer made headlines again in March 2004 when the Wichita Eagle newspaper received a letter from someone using the pseudonym Bill Thomas Killman. The writer claimed that he murdered Vicki Wegerle on September 16, 1986, and enclosed photographs of the crime scene and a photocopy of her driver's license, which had been stolen at the time of the crime. In December 2004, Wichita police received another package purportedly from the BTK killer. This time, the package was found discarded in Wichita's Murdock Park. It reportedly contains the driver's license of Nancy Fox, which was noted as stolen at the scene of crime, and other items which remain undisclosed to the public.

Most believe that the serial killer chose to resurface in 2004 as it was the thirtieth anniversary of his first killings in 1974. A number of experts hypothesized that he could have been incarcerated during this hiatus. In his letters, the BTK killer claimed to be born in 1939 and to have spent most of his youth living near railroads. He also claimed that his father was killed in World War II, and that he was raised by his mother thereafter.

Suspect

File:DennisRaderDL.jpg
Dennis Lynn Rader
Driver's License Photo From 2000

Dennis Lynn Rader (born March 9, 1945) has been named by Wichita police as the prime suspect in the BTK killings. At the time of his arrest he was a resident of Park City, a Wichita suburb seven miles north of the city. He was a city inspector, but was fired after having been charged with the criminal offences.

Rader was born in 1945, the first of four brothers. He grew up in Wichita and graduated from Riverview School and later Wichita Heights High School. Rader attended Kansas Wesleyan College in 1965-66 and then spent four years from 1966 to 1970 in the U.S. Air Force, including time in Texas, Alabama, Japan, Okinawa, South Korea, Greece and Turkey. When he returned, he worked for a time in the meat department of a supermarket in Park City, Kansas and married Paula Dietz in 1971. He attended Butler County Community College in El Dorado, earning an Associate's Degree in Electronics in 1973. He enrolled at Wichita State University in the fall of 1973. There he graduated in 1979 with a degree in Administration of Justice.

From 1972 to 1973, Rader worked as an assembler for the Coleman Company, a camping gear firm, as had two of BTK's early victims. From November 1974 until being fired in July 1988, Rader worked at a Wichita-based office of ADT Security Services, a company which sold and installed alarm system for commercial businesses during Rader's years there.information Administrator note He held several positions, including installation manager. He moved to Park City in the 1970s.

Rader was a census field operations supervisor for the Wichita area in 1989 for 3 months, prior to the 1990 federal census.

Rader had worked since 1991 as a supervisor of the Compliance Department at Park City, a two-employee, multi-functional department in charge of "animal control, housing problems, zoning, general permit enforcement and a variety of nuisance cases." In this position, neighbors recalled him as sometimes overzealous and extremely strict.

Rader served on both the Sedgwick County's Board of Zoning Appeals and the Animal Control Advisory Board (appointed in 1996 and resigned in 1998). He was also a member of Christ Lutheran Church, a Lutheran congregation of about 200 people. He had been a member for about 30 years and had been elected president of the Congregation Council. He was also a Cub Scout leader.

Rader and his wife Paula (née Dietz) are the parents of two adult children, Brian and Kerri. Both were born after the BTK killings started.

Arrest

File:Dennis Rader booking.jpg
Rader's mugshot, taken during booking at the Sedgwick County Jail at around 8 p.m. on February 27, 2005.

The BTK killer's last known communication with the media and police was a padded envelope which arrived at FOX affiliate KSAS-TV in Wichita on February 16. A purple, 1.44-megabyte Memorex computer disk was enclosed in the package, and police reportedly traced it to Rader after FBI analysis of deleted data on the disk. Also enclosed were a letter, a photocopy of the cover of a 1989 novel about a serial killer (Rules of Prey) and a gold-colored necklace with a large medallion. Once the computer disk was analyzed, police began surveillance of Rader.

Sometime during this period, police obtained a warrant for the medical records of Rader's daughter, Kerri. A tissue sample seized at this time was tested for DNA and provided a familial match with semen at an earlier BTK crime scene. This, along with other evidence gathered prior to and during the surveillance, gave police probable cause for an arrest.

Rader was stopped while driving near his home and taken into custody shortly after noon on February 25, 2005. Immediately, law enforcement officials—including a Wichita Police bomb unit truck, two SWAT trucks, and FBI and ATF agents—converged on Rader's residence near the intersection of I-135 and 61st Street North. Rader's home and vehicle were searched, and evidence—including computer equipment, a pair of black pantyhose retrieved from a shed, and a cylindrical container—was collected. The church he attended, his office at City Hall and the main branch of the Park City library were also searched that day. Officers were seen removing a computer from his City Hall office, but it is unclear if any evidence was found at these locations.

File:DennisRaderArraignment.jpg
Pool video released March 1, 2005 of Rader's arraignment

Kansas reinstated the death penalty in 1994. The last known BTK killing was in 1991, making all known BTK murders ineligible for the death penalty. Even if later murders are linked to the BTK killer, it is unclear at this time whether the death penalty would come into play, as the Kansas Supreme Court declared the state's capital punishment law unconstitutional on December 17, 2004. The Sunday after his arrest, Associated Press reports cited an anonymous source that Rader had confessed to other killings in addition to the ones with which he was already connected. Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston called these reports "patently false." [2] On March 5, news sources claimed to have verified by multiple sources that Rader had confessed to the ten murders he is charged with, but no additional ones. [3]

On March 1, Rader was formally charged with ten counts of first degree murder (AP via the Wichita Eagle [4]). He was arraigned via videoconference from jail. He was represented by public defender. Bail was continued at $10 million.

On May 3, District Court Judge Gregory Waller entered not guilty pleas to the ten charges on Rader's behalf.

The initial trial date was set to June 27, and at that time Dennis Rader changed his plea to guilty. In a very calm manner he described, in detail, the killings. He made no apologies.


Some of the evidence in the case

Physical and circumstancial evidence links Rader to the BTK killings:

  • DNA analysis of BTK's semen and material taken from underneath the fingernails of victim Vicki Wegerle match the DNA profile of Dennis Rader.
  • Rader's grammar and writing style matches letters and poems received from BTK.
  • Rader was reportedly seen circulating frequently in the Home Depot parking lot near a BTK package drop site in early 2005.
  • ADT Security was located a few blocks from a payphone that the killer used to report a murder in 1977.
  • Rader had attended Wichita State University in the 1970s. The BTK killer used a photocopier on campus to copy one of his letters. A survivor of the attack on Bright reported that the killer had asked him if he had seen him at the university. A poem in one of the killer's letters was similar to a folk song taught by a professor on that campus in that time period.
  • Rader lived on the same street as Marine Hedge, just houses away. The BTK killer's other victims were in and around central Wichita.
  • The Coleman Company was located a few blocks from a payphone that the killer used to report a murder, and two of the victims (Julie Otero and Kathryn Bright) worked at Coleman during the same period that Rader worked there.
  • Rader and Joseph Otero, one of the first victims, both worked as Air Force mechanics.

Critics believe that Rader might have been identified years earlier had more of these links been followed and analyzed. Preliminary news reports indicate that physical evidence, probably including DNA and trophies such as driver's licenses, will form the basis of the prosecution.

Notes

Template:AnbTwiddy, David. "BTK suspect's career in security probed." Associated Press. February 28, 2005. [5] Template:AnbWilliams, Sarah T. "Camp novel crops up in the BTK case." Minneapolis Star-Tribune. March 3, 2005. [6]