Suspect Held In 'Golden State' Murders, One Of US' Worst Unsolved Crimes

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
More than 40 years
after the so-called "Golden State Killer" began to terrorize Californians, raping dozens of women and killing at least 12, authorities
announced Wednesday that they had arrested 72-year-old Joseph James DeAngelo in the case.News of DeAngelo's arrest marked a sudden
development in what had been one of the most notorious unsolved crime sprees in U.S
history, one that stretched over a decade and terrorized scores of people across California
Police said DNA evidence helped lead them to DeAngelo, who had been living in Citrus Heights, California, a city outside Sacramento."We
found the needle in the haystack, and it was right here in Sacramento," District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert said at a news conference in
the California capital.The string of attacks - attributed to someone alternately dubbed the Golden State Killer, Original Night Stalker and
East Area Rapist - was horrifying for both the nature of the attacks and their grim sweep
Between 1976 and 1986, the FBI said, the attacker killed a dozen people and raped 45 people, attacking people who were as young as 13 and as
old as 41. The wanted poster for the man known as the East Area Rapist/Golden State Killer.This case, which involved one of one of the most
prolific and elusive serial killers in modern American history, had remained an object of intense focus for many
In 2016, the the FBI made a renewed plea - complete with a $50,000 reward - for help in finding what they called "the violent and elusive
individual."Everyone was afraid," Special Agent Marcus Knutson, who was born and raised in Sacramento and was heading up the FBI's portion
of the investigation, said in a 2016 statement
"We had people sleeping with shotguns, we had people purchasing dogs
People were concerned, and they had a right to be
This guy was terrorizing the community
He did horrible things."The Sacramento District Attorney had said a "major announcement" was coming in the case at noon Pacific time
Wednesday, following reports from several local news organizations reported that a man had finally been arrested in connection with the
case.Beginning in 1976, the Golden State Killer is believed to have raped dozens of women in their homes - meticulously planning his
intrusions, sometimes ambushing entire families, and killing several of his victims toward the end of his spree, before vanishing in 1986
The attacker was also behind numerous residential burglaries in the state, the FBI said.Since his disappearance, investigators and amateur
detectives have searched for the man across the United States and inquired as far away as Australia.Their efforts finally paid off early
Wednesday, the Sacramento Bee reported, when FBI agents and police from cities across California came to a Citrus Heights home, and arrested
its 72-year-old occupant on two counts of murder
Officials said Wednesday that additional charges followed."He was young - anywhere from 18 to 30 - Caucasian, and athletic, capable of
eluding capture by jumping roofs and vaulting tall fences," the crime writer Michelle McNamara wrote in a Los Angeles magazine profile of
the old cases."To zero in on a victim he often entered the home beforehand when no one was there, learning the layout, studying family
pictures, and memorizing names," she wrote
"He disabled porch lights and unlocked windows
He emptied bullets from guns
He hid shoelaces or rope under cushions to use as ligatures."These maneuvers gave him a crucial advantage because when you woke from a deep
sleep to the blinding flashlight and ski-masked presence, he was always a stranger to you, but you were not to him."Police first dubbed the
man the East Area Rapist, as he would not begin killing until much later in his spree.The first known attack, Katie Mettler wrote in The
Post, took place in the middle of the night in the summer of 1976, when the man snuck into a home in east Sacramento County, raped a young
woman and left.He raped again a few weeks later, then again and again, dozens of times
After a year, two dozen women had been attacked and a sheriff's department spokesman told the Associated Press that some residents had
started "sleeping in shifts," because the man would strike even if others were home.His 44th victim was a 13-year-old girl in the Walnut
Creek area in 1979, the Mercury News reported
He allegedly raped her at knifepoint while her father and sister slept down the hall, told her he'd kill her if she told anyone, and
departed through the back yard, past her playhouse.Police rebranded him the Original Night Stalker after he began to kill in 1978, Mettler
wrote
He found a married couple walking their dog in the Sacramento Area, chased them and shot them to death.Future killings would be much more
meticulous, and spread from Sacramento to southern California.On December 30, 1979, police in Goleta found a husband and wife dead in their
house - one shot through the heart and one in the back of the head."As detectives processed the crime scene, they stepped around a turkey
carcass wrapped in cellophane that had been discarded on the patio," McNamara wrote in Los Angeles Magazine
"The killer had opened the refrigerator and helped himself to [victim Robert] Offerman's leftover Christmas dinner."Another couple were
murdered in Ventura three months later, she wrote
Then yet another couple, in a gate community in Dana Point.He left few clues, and only betrayed a few patterns as his violence escalated: he
often ate from his victims' fridges; often took tokens from their personal belonging's, like class rings.He usually tied up the men before
he killed them and almost always raped the women.Police did not even realize the East Area Rapist and Original Night Stalker were the same
person until DNA tests linked all the crimes in the early 2000s, McNamara wrote.By then, his spree was long over - the last victim being
18-year-old Janelle Cruz, bludgeoned to death in Irvine in 1986 - and the trail had gone cold.(Except for the headline, this story has not
been edited by staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)