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- <text id=89TT2002>
- <title>
- July 31, 1989: Stalking The Green River Killer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 31, 1989 Doctors And Patients
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 57
- Stalking the Green River Killer
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Police name a suspect in the serial murders of 48 women
- </p>
- <p> For seven frustrating years, law-enforcement officials in
- the Pacific Northwest have combed the region for the mysterious
- Green River killer, so named because many of his victims were
- found near the Green River in King County, Wash. Between 1982
- and 1984, when the murder spree appears to have ended, the
- shadowy killer may have snuffed out the lives of 48 women, most
- of them drifters or prostitutes, who were stabbed or strangled.
- After committing more than $15 million and as many as 55
- officers to one of the biggest manhunts in U.S. history, police
- have finally identified a "viable suspect": William Jay Stevens
- II, 38, a former law student who is in the King County Jail on
- charges that include burglary and assault.
- </p>
- <p> At first glance, Stevens seemed an unlikely candidate for
- a killer. Police were tipped off that he might be the slayer
- when a December 1988 episode of the syndicated television
- program Manhunt prompted calls from people who suspected he was
- the murderer. At the time, Stevens was in his last year at
- Gonzaga University Law School in Spokane and president of the
- student body. But his identity as an unassuming law student
- began to unravel quickly as investigators discovered that
- Stevens had been convicted in 1979 of stealing police equipment
- and had disappeared from a work-release program in 1981. Stevens
- was arrested on the old charges and sent back to jail.
- </p>
- <p> After he was returned to custody, even more damaging
- evidence began to emerge. Investigators had long believed that
- the killer was either a policeman or a person posing as a police
- officer who lured his victims to their deaths with offers of
- assistance or by intimidating them. A search of Stevens'
- parents' property produced a police car, 100 police badges, 29
- firearms and 26 license plates. This month the police obtained
- a search warrant in response to a 40-page affidavit prepared by
- the Green River Task Force, the group of King County officers
- assigned to the case. Recovered from Stevens' residence and his
- parents' home in Spokane were 55 boxes and bags of additional
- evidence, including 1,800 videotapes.
- </p>
- <p> The affidavit sets out Stevens' life as a fugitive in
- chilling detail. A paper trail of credit-card slips places
- Stevens in proximity to 17 of the Green River crime scenes. In
- addition to the 48 Green River murders, the affidavit suggests,
- Stevens may also be responsible for at least a dozen other
- killings in Seattle, Portland and Tacoma. Informants alleged
- that he carried photographs of mutilated women and frequented
- prostitutes. One source quoted him as saying that he worked with
- Seattle vice detectives and in the line of duty "often was
- involved in the torture of prostitutes." Stevens also reportedly
- said he would like to have a videotape of "cutting up
- prostitutes." Informants added that he led them to believe that
- he worked for a secret government agency and went on secret
- "missions."
- </p>
- <p> Stevens promptly issued a statement from jail categorically
- denying police claims. "I am not the Green River killer. They
- have made me out to be a very bad person, and I am not," he
- declared. His lawyer Craig Beles says his client "is a colorful
- character, but he's no murderer." Students and faculty at
- Gonzaga, who describe Stevens as quiet and studious, were
- stunned by the allegations that he may have lived a secret life.
- Chris Bales, a former Gonzaga law professor who taught Stevens
- criminal law, characterized him as a "gentle fugitive" who posed
- no threat to society when he was arrested last winter. Stevens
- had worked in Gonzaga's law clinic, helping low-income clients.
- </p>
- <p> Sirena Caruso, a tenant who lived in Stevens' house between
- 1981 and 1985, paints a different picture. "He was very
- bizarre," says Caruso. She moved out of the house soon after
- discovering bullet holes in Stevens' room. According to Caruso,
- Stevens had a collection of mannequins, X-rated videos,
- videotaping equipment and a secret room hidden behind a moving
- bookcase. Caruso and her boyfriend, she recalls, used to joke
- that Stevens was the Green River killer. One day she even asked
- Stevens about it. "Don't start that rumor," he reportedly
- answered. "People around here think I'm weird enough."
- </p>
- <p> The facts that have surfaced about Stevens are eerily
- similar to those surrounding Theodore Bundy, the serial killer
- who was executed in Florida in January. Bundy and Stevens were
- both enrolled as students at the University of Washington; Bundy
- was a senior while Stevens was a freshman. Bundy was also a
- former law student in the Northwest who had a fixation on police
- badges. And both men were avid consumers of pornography.
- </p>
- <p> Until this month's announcement, the Green River Task Force
- had been criticized for taking so long to solve the killings.
- Despite their suspicions, however, authorities are still not
- ready to charge Stevens with the crimes. "There's no way to know
- how long it will take to determine if Stevens is a bizarre
- victim of circumstance or the person responsible for some
- unsolved crimes," concedes Captain Robert Evans, head of the
- task force.
- </p>
- <p> By making the affidavit public, the police clearly hope to
- bring in more evidence. Stevens has repeatedly refused to talk
- with them. At week's end authorities had begun the laborious
- task of sifting through the material gathered from Stevens'
- residences, searching for the clues that would solve the
- stubborn mystery at last.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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