Original Night Stalker

The Original Night Stalker

This was one of the three sketches the FBI focused on when it reopened the case June 2016
Other names
  • The East Area Rapist
  • The Diamond Knot Killer
  • The Golden State Killer[1]
Height Approximately 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) (from witness statements)
Weight Approximately 170 lb (77 kg) (from witness statements)
Killings
Victims 12+ (murder victims)
50+ (rape victims)
Span of killings
February 2, 1978  May 4, 1986
Country United States
State(s) California
Date apprehended
Never

The Original Night Stalker is a media epithet for an unidentified serial killer and rapist who committed 50 rapes in Northern California during the mid-1970s and murdered twelve people in Southern California from 1979 through 1986.[2] Other monikers include the East Area Rapist, the Diamond Knot Killer, and since 2013, he has also been referred to as the Golden State Killer.[3]

The crimes initially centered on the then unincorporated areas of Carmichael, Citrus Heights and Rancho Cordova, all east of Sacramento, where at least fifty women were raped between June 18, 1976 and July 5, 1979.[2] In 2001, several of the Northern California rapes were linked by DNA to murders in Southern California. All of the DNA-linked assaults occurred in Contra Costa County but the distinctive modus operandi (MO) of the rapist makes it very likely the same man was also responsible for the attacks in the Sacramento area. His last crime (the only one after 1981) took place in 1986.

The Original Night Stalker has never been apprehended. Several suspects have been cleared through DNA, alibi, or other investigative means and methods.[4][5] On June 15, 2016, the FBI and local law enforcement agencies held a news conference to announce a nationwide effort and a US$50,000 reward for his capture. They plan to erect electronic billboards nationwide and other forms of exposure for the push.[6]

Crimes

California law enforcement authorities estimate fifty rapes in the California counties of Sacramento, Contra Costa, Stanislaus, San Joaquin, Alameda, Santa Clara and Yolo were committed by the Original Night Stalker. DNA evidence conclusively links him to eight murders in Goleta, Ventura, Dana Point, and Irvine, California, with two other murders in Goleta linked by modus operandi but not DNA.[7][8] Some investigators also suspect the same perpetrator in three other murders, two in Rancho Cordova and one in Visalia.[5]

East Area Rapist crimes

One of various police sketches of the suspect; this was not one of the three the FBI highlighted upon reopening the case in June 2016.

The Sacramento East Area Rapist is believed to have started as a prolific burglar, only later graduating to rape. His initial modus operandi was to stalk middle class neighborhoods at night looking for women who lived in single-story homes, generally located near a school, creek, or other open space that afforded a quick escape.[9] He was spotted on a number of occasions, but sprinted away upon detection. On one occasion, a youth who closely pursued him was shot and seriously wounded. Most victims had seen or heard a prowler on their property before the attacks, and many had suffered break-ins. Police believed the offender had a pattern of using extensive reconnaissance on several homes in a targeted neighborhood before selecting one for attack. As part of his surveillance, the stalker was also known to call victims both before and after the night of the attack, sometimes hanging up, sometimes pretending to have the wrong number, and sometimes (in calls placed after the attack) threatening them.[3][10] In one of these messages which was recorded by the victim in January 1978 the stalker repeats, "Gonna kill you."[10]

Although he originally targeted women either alone in their homes or with children, he later came to prefer attacking couples instead.[11] His standard procedure was to break in and awaken the occupants, threatening them with a handgun. Victims were generally bound with ligatures that the criminal brought to the crime scene, often blindfolding and/or gagging them with towels taken from the residence that he had carefully cut into strips. The female victim was made to tie up her male companion with bootlaces before being tied up herself.[12] In many cases, these bindings were made so tightly that the victims had no feeling in their hands for hours after they were untied. He would then separate the couple, often stacking dishes on the back of the male, and telling him that if he heard the dishes rattle he would kill everyone in the house.[12][13] The intruder at times spent hours in the home, ransacking closets and drawers,[14] eating food in the kitchen, and coming back to utter more threats to the victims, who were often unsure as to whether he was still in the home. The perpetrator was believed to use a bicycle to travel to and from his car, and also made extensive use of parks, school yards, creek beds, and other open spaces that allowed him to stay off the street.[5]

East Area Rapist Crimes 6/18/76 to 10/1/79

  1. – 6/18/76 Fri – 4:00am Rancho Cordova, CA
  2. – 7/17/76 Sat – 2:00am Del Dayo. Carmichael, CA
  3. – 8/29/76 Sun – 3:20am Rancho Cordova, CA
  4. – 9/04/76 Sat – 11:30pm Citrus Heights, CA
  5. – 10/5/76 Tue – 6:45am Citrus Heights, CA
  6. – 10/9/76 Sat – 4:30am Rancho Cordova, CA
  7. – 10/18/76 Mon – 2:30am Del Dayo, Carmichael, CA
  8. – 10/18/76 Mon – 11:00pm Rancho Cordova, CA
  9. – 11/10/76 Wed – 7:30pm near Greenback Ln, Citrus Heights, CA
  10. – 12/18/76 Sat – 7:00pm Carmichael, CA
  11. – 1/18/77 Tue – 11:00pm Glenbrook/College Greens, Sacramento, CA
  12. – 1/24/77 Mon – 12:00am Primrose Dr., Citrus Heights, CA
  13. – 2/7/77 Mon – 6:45am Crestview Drive & Madison Ave., Citrus Heights, CA
  14. – 2/16/77 Wed – ** Ripon Court Shooting **
  15. – 3/8/77 Tue – 4:00am Robertson & Whitney Ave, Sacramento, CA
  16. – 3/18/77 Fri – 10:45pm Rancho Cordova
  17. – 4/2/77 Sat – 3:20am Madison & Main Ave., Orangevale
  18. – 4/15/77 Fri – 2:30am Madison & Manzanita Aves, Crestview Area, Sacramento, CA
  19. – 5/3/77 Tue – 3:00am Glenbrook/College Greens, Sacramento, CA
  20. – 5/5/77 Thu – 2:40am Orangevale, CA
  21. – 5/14/77 Sun – 3:45am Greenback Ln & Birdcage St, Citrus Heights, CA
  22. – 5/17/77 Tue – 1:30am Sand Bar Circle, Del Dayo, Carmichael, CA
  23. – 5/28/77 Sat – 1:00am Fourth Parkway, South Area, Sacramento, CA
    Unexplained 3-month break in attacks, then first attacks outside Sacramento Area
  24. – 9/6/77 Tue – Lincoln Village West, North Stockton, CA - * First attack outside Sacramento *
  25. – 10/1/77 Sat – 1:30am La Riveria & Toulomne Dr, Rancho Cordova, CA
  26. – 10/21/77 Fri – 3:00am Gold Run Ave, Elkhorn Blvd, Diablo Drive, Foothill Farms, Antelope, CA
  27. – 10/29/77 Sat – 1:45am Woodson Ave., Sacramento, CA
  28. – 11/10/77 Thu – 3:00am La Riviera Dr. near Watt Ave., Sacramento, CA
  29. – 12/2/77 Fri – 11:30pm Lobrett & Revelstok Dr. Foothill Farms, CA
  30. – 1/28/78 Sat – 10:15pm Winding Way, E. of Walnut Ave., Sacramento, CA
  31. - 2/2/78 ** Brian and Katie Maggiore murdered **
  32. – 3/18/78 Fri – 1:05am Parkwoods, Stockton, CA
  33. – 4/14/78 Fri – 10:00pm Piedmont Drive, Seamas & Riverside Aves. South Sacramento, CA
    Attacks move out of Sacramento to Modesto and Davis
  34. – 6/5/78 Mon – 2:30am N.E. Modesto, CA
  35. – 6/7/78 Wed – 3:55am Apartment, N. side UCD, Davis, CA
  36. – 6/23/78 Fri – 1:30am North East Modesto, CA
  37. – 6/24/78 Sat – 3:15am Rivendell, Davis, CA
  38. – 7/6/78 Thur – 2:50am Westwood Div, Davis, CA
    three-month hiatus then attacks move to Contra Costa County and south
  39. – 10/7/78 Sat – 2:30am Concord, CA
  40. – 10/13/78 Fri – 4:30am Concord, CA
  41. – 10/28/78 Sat – 4:30am San Ramon, CA
  42. – 11/4/78 Sat – 3:30am San Jose, CA
  43. – 12/2/78 Sat – 4:30am San Jose, CA
  44. – 12/9/78 Sat – 2:00am Danville, CA
  45. – 4/5/79 Thur – 1:00am Fremont, CA
  46. – 6/2/79 Wed – Walnut Creek, CA
  47. – 6/11/79 Mon – 4:00am Danville, CA
  48. – 6/25/79 Mon – Walnut Creek, CA
  49. – 7/5/79 Thur – 3:45am Danville, CA[15] [16]
    Last known attack by the East Area Rapist, attacks move down south to Southern California

Original Night Stalker murders and attempted murder 10/1/79 to 5/4/86

  1. – 10/1/79 Mon – Queen Ann Lane, Goleta, Santa Barbara County, CA (attempted murder/botched attack)
  2. – 12/30/1979 – Sun – Goleta, Santa Barbara County, California
  3. – 3/13/1980 – Thur – Ventura, California
  4. – 8/19/1980 – Tue – Dana Point, Orange County California
  5. – 2/6/1981 – Tue – Irvine, Orange County, California
  6. – 7/27/1981 – Mon – Goleta, Santa Barbara, California
  7. – 5/4/1986 – Sat – Irvine, Orange County, California[8][17]

FBI Investigation

On June 15, 2016, the FBI released further information in relation to the crimes including new composite sketches, victims and investigator testimony.[18] They also announced a US$50,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of the East Area Rapist.[19] The initiative includes a national database to support law enforcement investigating the crimes and to handle tips and information.

These were the three sketches the FBI focused on when it reopened the case June 2016

Geographic profile

Geographic profiling seems to indicate he may have had a base in Carmichael or Rancho Cordova during the initial set of attacks.[20][21][22][23][24][25][26]

Murders of Brian and Katie Maggiore

Sketches released of two suspects in the Maggiore murders

On the night of February 2, 1978, a young Sacramento couple, Brian (a Military Policeman at Mather Air Force Base) and Katie Maggiore, were walking their dog in the Rancho Cordova area, close to a cluster of 5 East Area Rapist attacks.[18] A confrontation in the street caused the couple to flee, but they were chased down and shot dead. Some investigators suspected the couple had been murdered by the East Area Rapist due to the location and its vicinity to EAR attacks, and the fact that one shoe lace was found near the crime scene.[5]

On June 15, 2016, the FBI announced that they were confident the East Area Rapist murdered the Maggiores.[27]

Original Night Stalker crimes

1979

1980

1981

It is unknown how the Original Night Stalker selected Domingo and Sanchez as victims. Domingo's daughter Debbi (who was 15 at the time) was staying with friends on the night of the attack. Her son was out of state with other family members. The home in Goleta belonged to Domingo's family and she was staying there temporarily. The offender had entered the property via a small window in the bathroom. Sanchez had not been tied. He had been shot in the cheek, although not fatally. He was then bludgeoned to death with a garden tool taken from the property. Some believe Sanchez may have realized he was dealing with the man responsible for the murder of Offerman and Manning, and made a desperate attempt to tackle the killer rather than be tied up. As in the Offerman–Manning case, no neighbors responded to the sound of the gunshot.[5] Sanchez's head was covered with clothes pulled from the closet. Bruises on Domingo's wrists and ankles indicated she had been tied, although the restraints were missing. She had been raped and bludgeoned.[34] A single piece of shipping twine was found near the bed. Fibers of an unknown source were scattered over her body.

1986

These murders in Southern California (Goleta, Ventura, Dana Point, and Irvine, California) were not initially thought to be connected by investigators in their respective jurisdictions. One Sacramento detective strongly believed the East Area Rapist was responsible for the Goleta attacks, but at first the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department attributed them to a local career criminal who had himself subsequently been murdered. Investigating the crimes that did not occur in Goleta caused local police to follow false leads related to men who had been close to the female victims. One suspect, later acknowledged to be innocent, was charged with two murders. Linking all of the cases together was achieved almost entirely by DNA testing, which was not done until many years later.[5]

The Original Night Stalker speaks

Letters and writings

"Excitement's Crave" poem (December 11, 1977)

In December 1977, letters were sent to the editor of The Sacramento Bee, the Sacramento mayor's office and the KVIE 6 TV station titled "Excitement's Crave" written in poem form by an individual claiming to be the East Area Rapist.[5] It should be noted that December 11 is also the same date that a masked man, likely the Original Night Stalker, eluded pursuit by multiple law enforcement personnel after he had apparently alerted authorities by telephone that he would strike on Watt Avenue that night.[35] Though the authenticity of his authorship of the poem has never been proven, it is entirely possible that his successful evasion of the police on that morning inspired him to write it.

'Excitement's Crave'

All those mortal's surviving birth
Upon facing maturity,
Take inventory of their worth
To prevailing society.
Choosing values becomes a task;
Oneself must seek satisfaction.
The selected route will unmask
Character when plans take action.
Accepting some work to perform
At fixed pay, but promise for more,
Is a recognized social norm,
As is decorum, seeking lore.
Achieving while others lifting
Should be cause for deserving fame.
Leisure tempts excitement seeking,
What's right and expected seems tame.
"Jessie James" has been seen by all,
And "Son of Sam" has an author.
Others now feel temptations call.
Sacramento should make an offer.
To make a movie of my life
That will pay for my planned exile.
Just now I' d like to add the wife
Of a Mafia lord to my file.
Your East Area Rapist
And deserving pest.
See you in the press or on T.V.[1]:p. 304

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference sudden_terror was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

"The homework" pages (December 9, 1978)

During the investigation of the 42nd attack in Danville investigators discovered three notebook pages not far from the scene of the attack where a suspicious vehicle had reportedly been parked.[3]

First page: "General Custer" essay

Written on the first page is what appears to be an essay on General George Armstrong Custer.[3]

Front side of the "Mad is the Word" page
Reverse side of the "Mad is the word" page
Second page: "Mad is the Word" journal entry

The second page contains a journal style entry where the author writes about a school teacher who made them write lines, and how humiliating they found the experience to be.[3]

Mad is the word that reminds me of 6th grade. I hated that year
I wish I had know what was going to be going on during my 6th grade year, the last and worst years of elementary school. Mad is the word that remains in my head about my dreadful year as a 6th grader. My madness was one that was caused by disappointments that hurt me very much. Disappointments from my teacher such as field trips that were planned and then cancelled. My 6th grade teacher gave me a lot of disappointments that made me very mad and made me built a state of hatred in my heart, no one ever let me down that hard before and I never "hated anyone" as much as I did him. Disappointment wasn't the only reason that made me mad in my sixth grade class, another was getting in trouble at school especially talking thats what really bugged me was writing sentences, those awful sentence that my teacher made
me write, hours and hours I'd sit and write 50-100-150 sentence day and night I write those dreadful paragraphs which embarrassed me and more important it made me ashamed of myself which in turn, deepdown inside made me realize that writing sentance wasn't fair, it wasn't fair to make me suffer like that, it just wasn't fair to make me sit and wright until my bones ached, until my hand felt ever horrid pain it ever had and as I wrote, I got mader and mader until I cried, I cried because I was ashamed I cried because I was discusted I cried because I was mad and I cried for myself, kid who kept on having to write those dame sentances. My angriness from sixth grade will scar my memory for life and I will be ashamed of my sixth grade year forever
Front side of the "Punishment" map
Third page: "Punishment" map
Reverse side of the "Punishment" map, showing the word punishment scrawled across the page.

A hand drawn map of what appears to be a suburban neighborhood.[33] Investigators were unable to identify the area depicted in the map. Detective Larry Pool believes the map to be a fantasy location representing the Original Night Stalker's desired striking ground.[3]

Phone calls

"Merry Christmas" call (December 9, 1977)

A previous victim received a phone call during the Christmas period of 1977. She identified the caller as the man who had previously attacked her.[5]

Merry Christmas, it's me again! (hangs up)

"Watt Avenue" call (December 10, 1977)

Shortly before 10:00 p.m. on the night of December 10, 1977, dispatchers from the County of Sacramento's Sheriff's Department and the City of Sacramento's Police Department received calls threatening an attack on Watt Avenue (the calls were apparently recorded, and the caller was subsequently identified as the same individual who had made a call to law enforcement on December 2, threatening to commit a rape later that night; a home invasion attributed to the Original Night Stalker was in fact made several hours after that December 2 call but was aborted before a rape could occur). Law enforcement patrols were increased on the night of December 10 in response to the new round of calls.[5] Sure enough, at 2:30 a.m. on the morning of December 11, sheriff's deputies spotted a masked man bicycling on the Watt Avenue bridge, but he was able to elude them. He was then located again at 4:30 a.m., this time by the city police. He discarded the bike and successfully fled on foot. The bicycle was quickly determined to have been stolen in Redding, California.[35] It is noteworthy that the "Excitement's Crave" poem is also linked with exactly the same date of this bike chase.

I am going to hit tonight. Watt Avenue. (hangs up)

"Is Ray There?" call (January 2, 1978)

The very first known rape victim received a "wrong number" call on January 2, 1978. The call was recorded, and law enforcement suspect that it may be the same caller who made a threatening call to her shortly afterward.[5][3]

Victim: Hello?
Caller: Yeah, is Ray there?
Victim: Pardon?
Caller: Is Ray there?
Victim: I'm sorry, you must have the wrong number.
Caller: Sorry. (hangs up)

"Gonna Kill You" call (January 2, 1978)

Later that evening, the same victim received another call, much more sinister in nature. This call was also recorded and identified by the victim as being the voice of her assailant.[5][3]

Gonna kill you...gonna kill you...gonna kill you...bitch...bitch...bitch...bitch...fucking whore.

"Counseling Service" call (January 6, 1978)

A volunteer for the Contact Counseling Service answered a call from a man who claimed to be the East Area Rapist.[36]

Caller: (male voice) "Can you help me?"
Volunteer: "What's the problem?"
Caller: "I have a problem. I need help because I don't want to do this anymore."
Volunteer: "Do what?"
Caller: "Well, I guess I can tell you guys. You're not tracing this call are you?" The voice became violent and angry.
Volunteer: "No, we are not tracing any calls."
Caller: "I am the East Side Rapist and I feel the urge coming on to do this again. I don't want to do it, but then I do. Is there anyone there that can help me? I don't want to hurt these women or their husbands anymore" The voice was pleading, but then became violent again. "Are you tracing this call?"
Volunteer: "We are not tracing this call. Do you want a counselor?"
Caller: "No. I have been to counseling all my life. I was in Stockton State Hospital. I shouldn't tell you that. I guess I can trust you guys." Normal voice, then angry again. "Are you tracing this call?"
Volunteer: "No, we are not tracing the call."
Caller: (very angry) "I believe you are tracing this call." (hangs up)

Final call (1991)

In 1991, a previous victim received a phone call from the perpetrator and spoke with him for one minute. She stated that she could hear a woman and children in the background, leading to suspicion that he had started a family.[2]

Investigation

June 2016 nationwide billboard campaign to locate him

Detectives connect the crimes

Even prior to 2001's connection of the Original Night Stalker to the East Area Rapist, some law enforcement officials, particularly several from the Sacramento County Sheriff's Department, sought to link the Goleta cases separately to the East Area Rapist and the Original Night Stalker.[37][38] These postulated links were considered primarily due to similarity in modus operandi. One of the already linked Original Night Stalker double murders did take place in Ventura, California, 40 miles southeast of Goleta, while the remaining murders took place in Orange County, California, an additional 90 miles to the southeast. In 2001, several rapes in Contra Costa County believed to have been part of the East Area Rapist series were linked by DNA to the Smith, Harrington, Whithuhn, and Cruz murders. In 2011, DNA evidence proved that the Domingo–Sanchez murders were committed by the Original Night Stalker.[5][39]

Suspects eliminated

Throughout the course of the investigation into the Original Night Stalker murders, the following persons were suspected of committing the crimes, only to be determined to not be the culprit:

It would not be until 1996 when DNA testing came on-line that the murders would be linked.

In November 2002, journalist Colleen Cason wrote a newspaper series about the Original Night Stalker murders for the Ventura County Star. According to Cason's articles, Detective Larry Pool of the Orange County Sheriff's Department visited California's Death Row at San Quentin State Prison in an attempt to locate the Original Night Stalker. Detective Pool suspected that the Original Night Stalker had been captured and sentenced to death for some other violent crime. Nevertheless, none of the genetic samples collected from Death Row inmates at San Quentin matched the DNA of the Original Night Stalker.

Psychological profile

After criminologists matched serological evidence found at the southern California murder scenes, a psychological profile of the Original Night Stalker was compiled. According to Leslie D'Ambrosia, who was the primary author of the profile, it is likely that the Original Night Stalker would possess the following characteristics:[40]

In addition to describing the characteristics of the Original Night Stalker, the profile also speculates about the fate of the killer. According to the profile, the Original Night Stalker could have been incarcerated following Janelle Cruz's murder or killed in the commission of a similar crime. (However, the last known contact with the Original Night Stalker was in 1991 when he made a taunting phone call to one of his victims.) As to the latter point, the profile indicates that law enforcement agencies should look into attempted "hot prowl burglaries" in the late 1980s that resulted in the death of a lone male offender. The profile also indicates that there is a slight chance the Original Night Stalker committed suicide; furthermore, it is speculated that it is unlikely that he is confined in a mental institution.

The profile reveals that following the original homicides in this series, teletypes were broadcast to law enforcement agencies throughout the United States. These teletypes requested information on similar home invasion attacks involving sexual assault, murder, bludgeoning, multiple victims, and/or bondage. As of 2015, no similar crimes have been reported in the United States. The profile propounds the possibility, however, that the Original Night Stalker could have continued committing his crimes in another country where records were not consulted for linkage purposes.

As a psychological profile is based on a probabilistic analysis, its accuracy cannot be assessed before the offender has been apprehended.

The Original Night Stalker/East Area Rapist case was the motivating factor in the passage of legislation leading to the establishment of California's DNA database, which authorizes the collection of the DNA of all the accused and convicted felons in California. California's DNA data retrieval and storage program is considered by researchers to be second only to Virginia's in size and effectiveness in solving cold cases. While the California DNA database motivated by this case has solved numerous previously unsolved cold cases across the country, the original case remains unsolved.

The Sacramento County Sheriff's Department revealed that microscopic paint chips were discovered at three of the crime scenes, two homicides and a rape. This suggests that the Original Night Stalker may have worked in construction possibly using a paint spray gun. At one murder site there was construction work taking place nearby. The police are working with the developer to identify subcontractors working at the site and obtaining employment records.

See also

References

  1. McNamara, Michelle (February 27, 2013). "The Five Most Popular Myths About the Golden State Killer Case". Los Angeles. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Hallissy, Erin; Goodyear, Charlie (April 4, 2001). "DNA Links '70s 'East Area Rapist' to Serial Killings / Evidence suggests suspect moved to Southern California". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 McNamara, Michelle (February 27, 2013). "In the Footsteps of a Killer". Los Angeles. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  4. Cold Case Files, "The Original Nightstalker" - (Episode #46), A&E Network, most recent broadcast March 20, 2009
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Crompton, Larry (August 2, 2010). Sudden Terror. AuthorHouse. ISBN 1-4520-5241-7.
  6. Domonoske, Camila (June 16, 2016). "FBI Asks For Tips In Decades-Old Cold Case Of 'Golden State Killer'". NPR. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  7. "A Memorial to the Victims and their Loved Ones". Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 "EAR/BK MASTER TIMELINE" (PDF).
  9. "Sacramento Is Up Tight Over Rapist and Threats". The Gettysburg Times. Associated Press. May 20, 1977. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  10. 1 2 McNamara, Michelle (February 27, 2013). "Hear the Golden State Killer". Los Angeles. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  11. Fetherling, Dale (May 22, 1977). "Sacramento Area Rapist Sends Public Into Streets". Los Angeles Times. pp. 3, 25. Retrieved March 22, 2017 via Newspapers.com.
  12. 1 2 Packer, Bill (November 11, 1977). "Sacramento rapist hits again–27th time in 16 months". Valley News. p. 6. Retrieved March 22, 2017 via Newspapers.com.
  13. "$50K reward offered for 'Original Night Stalker' as 40th anniversary nears". The Oregonian. Associated Press. June 15, 2016. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  14. "Suspect In Brutal 1983 Fairfield Murder Commits Suicide After Positive DNA Test". CBS San Francisco. March 5, 2014. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  15. "East Area Rapist/Original Night Stalker". ear-ons.com. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  16. "Cold Case EARONS: The Attacks". Retrieved May 24, 2017.
  17. 1 2 "East Area Rapist/Original Night Stalker". Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  18. 1 2 "Help Us Catch the East Area Rapist". FBI. June 15, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  19. "FBI Announces $50,000 Reward and National Campaign to Identify East Area Rapist/Golden State Killer". FBI. June 15, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  20. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  21. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  22. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  23. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  24. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  25. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  26. "East Area Rapist Sacramento Area Geographic Profile".
  27. Thompson, Don (June 16, 2016). "Reward offered in 40-year-old California serial killer case". Salon. Associated Press. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  28. 1 2 Shelby, Richard (September 15, 2014). Hunting a Psychopath: The East Area Rapist / Original Night Stalker Investigation - The Original Investigator Speaks Out. Booklocker.com. ISBN 978-1-63263-508-2.
  29. Leonard, Jack (October 5, 2000). "Victims' Relatives Urge Public to Help Solve Serial Killings". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  30. Chawkins, Steve; Santa Cruz, Nicole (May 6, 2011). "DNA testing sheds new light on Original Night Stalker case". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  31. Chawkins, Steve; Santa Cruz, Nicole (May 6, 2011). "DNA testing sheds new light on Original Night Stalker case". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 10, 2017.
  32. Macfadyen, William M. (September 7, 2013). "Public's Help Sought with New Clue in 1981 Original Night Stalker Double Murder in Goleta". Noozhawk. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  33. 1 2 Koerner, Claudia (September 10, 2013). "Original Night Stalker: Could O.C. clues lead to killer?". Orange County Register. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  34. 1 2 "Murder 8 & 9 -- Cheri Domingo & Greg Sanchez -- Night Predator EAR/ONS Files -- Goleta, 1981".
  35. 1 2 "In Brief: Masked Bike Rider Eludes Police". The Sacramento Bee. December 12, 1977.
  36. "Letters, Calls, and Sightings from December 1977 to January 1978". Retrieved May 24, 2017.
  37. Wilson, Wayne (March 13, 1980). "Police Debate Tie Between East Area Rapist, Killings". The Sacramento Bee.
  38. Wilson, Wayne (February 26, 1980). "Link to East Area Rapist Probed in Couples' Slaying". The Sacramento Bee. p. B1.
  39. Chawkins, Steve (May 5, 2011). "30-year-old slayings of Goleta couple linked to serial killer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  40. "Criminal Investigative Analysis" (PDF). A&E. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 7, 2012.
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