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ID Claims Bounty for Documentary Series Golden State Killer: It's Not Over
Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over documentary assembles to clues to catch evasive serial killer.
The FBI put out a reward for any information leading to the arrest of the most prolific, at-large, serial predator in the history of the state of California. Investigation Discovery’s upcoming four-part documentary series Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over promises to assemble all intelligence necessary. They will lay it out over two consecutive nights, beginning Monday, March 5 at 9 p.m. ET.
“After a series of more than 170 combined incidences of burglary, rape and murder from 1974 to 1986, California’s most sought-after serial killer garnered several titles: The East Area Rapist, The Original Night Stalker and–most notably–The Golden State Killer,” reads the official statement from ID. They called in forensic expert Paul Holes to join “former law enforcement, citizen sleuths, civil district attorneys and victims themselves to expose the aging killer before he dies.”
The Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over will put existing evidence through new DNA technology, audio recording analysis and geographic profiling. The series will interview Carol Daly, an original Sacramento County investigator of the Golden State Killer; Jane Carson-Sandler, a survivor of the fifth known attack; Debbi Domingo, a “teenager at the time of her mother’s murder with a continued commitment to working with law enforcement to find the killer; and Keith Komos, a citizen sleuth with no personal connection to the case but a resourcefulness and a sense of urgency needed to find a resolution,” according to the statement.
The East Area Rapist, who evolved into the Original Night Stalker, then the Golden State Killer, killed 12 people and raped 45 in a ten-year period. He burglarized more than 120 California homes. He wore ski masks during the attacks and no accurate rendering of him has ever been made. He was described as white, with a six-foot-tall, athletic build, he was proficient with guns and may have had military training.
The Sacramento FBI’s 2016 national campaign for new leads, coupled with Michelle McNamara’s upcoming novel, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark, brought the old case back into the spotlight.
“Burglaries and rapes began occurring in the Sacramento area during the summer of 1976,” according to an FBI press release. “During these crimes, the subject would ransack the homes of his victims and take small items such as coins, jewelry, and identification. … Burglaries .. tended to precede clusters of sexual assaults. On February 2, 1978, Rancho Cordova couple Sergeant Brian Maggiore and his wife, Katie, were on an evening walk with their dog and were chased by the subject who overcame the couple and shot at close range.
“By October 1979, his activity escalated into rapes and homicides/attempted homicides along the California Coast. … During the commission of the homicides, the subject tied up both victims, raped the female victim, and then murdered the couple. … After July 1981, no associated incidents are known to have been reported for five years. In 1986, an 18-year-old woman was raped and murdered in Irvine. No additional crimes have been connected to the subject after this incident.”
The killer’s voice may have been caught on tape in late 1977, when an unknown male called 911, claiming to be the East Area Rapist. Sacramento detectives taped on the phone of one of his rape victims. There is a theory that the Golden State Killer might also be a killer known as the Visalia Ransacker who burglarized homes starting in In April 1974, and attempted to abduct the 16-year-old daughter of journalism professor Claude Snelling on September 11, 1975.
ID Claims Bounty for Documentary Series Golden State Killer: It's Not Over
Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over documentary assembles to clues to catch evasive serial killer.
The FBI put out a reward for any information leading to the arrest of the most prolific, at-large, serial predator in the history of the state of California. Investigation Discovery’s upcoming four-part documentary series Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over promises to assemble all intelligence necessary. They will lay it out over two consecutive nights, beginning Monday, March 5 at 9 p.m. ET.
“After a series of more than 170 combined incidences of burglary, rape and murder from 1974 to 1986, California’s most sought-after serial killer garnered several titles: The East Area Rapist, The Original Night Stalker and–most notably–The Golden State Killer,” reads the official statement from ID. They called in forensic expert Paul Holes to join “former law enforcement, citizen sleuths, civil district attorneys and victims themselves to expose the aging killer before he dies.”
The Golden State Killer: It’s Not Over will put existing evidence through new DNA technology, audio recording analysis and geographic profiling. The series will interview Carol Daly, an original Sacramento County investigator of the Golden State Killer; Jane Carson-Sandler, a survivor of the fifth known attack; Debbi Domingo, a “teenager at the time of her mother’s murder with a continued commitment to working with law enforcement to find the killer; and Keith Komos, a citizen sleuth with no personal connection to the case but a resourcefulness and a sense of urgency needed to find a resolution,” according to the statement.
The East Area Rapist, who evolved into the Original Night Stalker, then the Golden State Killer, killed 12 people and raped 45 in a ten-year period. He burglarized more than 120 California homes. He wore ski masks during the attacks and no accurate rendering of him has ever been made. He was described as white, with a six-foot-tall, athletic build, he was proficient with guns and may have had military training.
The Sacramento FBI’s 2016 national campaign for new leads, coupled with Michelle McNamara’s upcoming novel, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark, brought the old case back into the spotlight.
“Burglaries and rapes began occurring in the Sacramento area during the summer of 1976,” according to an FBI press release. “During these crimes, the subject would ransack the homes of his victims and take small items such as coins, jewelry, and identification. … Burglaries .. tended to precede clusters of sexual assaults. On February 2, 1978, Rancho Cordova couple Sergeant Brian Maggiore and his wife, Katie, were on an evening walk with their dog and were chased by the subject who overcame the couple and shot at close range.
“By October 1979, his activity escalated into rapes and homicides/attempted homicides along the California Coast. … During the commission of the homicides, the subject tied up both victims, raped the female victim, and then murdered the couple. … After July 1981, no associated incidents are known to have been reported for five years. In 1986, an 18-year-old woman was raped and murdered in Irvine. No additional crimes have been connected to the subject after this incident.”
The killer’s voice may have been caught on tape in late 1977, when an unknown male called 911, claiming to be the East Area Rapist. Sacramento detectives taped on the phone of one of his rape victims. There is a theory that the Golden State Killer might also be a killer known as the Visalia Ransacker who burglarized homes starting in In April 1974, and attempted to abduct the 16-year-old daughter of journalism professor Claude Snelling on September 11, 1975.