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Neighbors paint mixed picture of BTK suspect

Some describe man
as a bureaucratic bully

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A friend's reaction
Feb. 27: A longtime friend of BTK Killer suspect Dennis Rader talks to NBC's Lester Holt.

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updated 11:57 a.m. ET Feb. 27, 2005

PARK CITY, Kan. - Dennis Rader, the man police believe is the BTK serial killer, hid for more than 30 years in plain sight.

He lived in this suburb of Wichita, the city he is suspected of terrorizing, with a wife and two children. He led a Cub Scout troop and was active in his Lutheran church. As an ordinance enforcement officer for the local government, he could be seen measuring grass in a front yard with a tape measure to see if it was too long, a neighbor said.

On Saturday, police identified Rader as a suspect in the BTK killings and announced an end to their 31-year manhunt. Although no charges have been filed, a jubilant collection of law enforcers and community leaders told a cheering crowd they were confident the long-running case could now be closed.

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Officials also said they connected two more deaths to BTK — a self-coined nickname that stands for “Bind, Torture, Kill” — bringing his total to at least 10.

BTK stoked fears throughout the 1970s in Wichita, a manufacturing center with 350,000 residents, with his grisly crimes and letters sent to police and media.

The killer stopped writing in the late 1970s but resurfaced about a year ago with a letter giving details of a 1986 slaying that had not previously linked to BTK.

'He was so strange'
In Park City, the suspect’s neighbors said he helped elderly neighbors with yard work but described him as an unpleasant man who often went looking for reasons to cite his neighbors for violations of city codes.

Bill Lindsay, 38, lived behind Rader and said his wife caught Rader in their adjoining backyards filming the back of their house.

“He really acted really funny,” said Lindsay, a truck driver. “I’d be on the road and my wife would tell me, ’Dennis has been out again, taking his pictures.”’

Jason Day, 28, said his brother was in Rader’s Cub Scout pack at the nearby Park City Baptist Church, but their mother pulled him out because of Rader.

“It was his demeanor,” he said. “He was so strange.”

Rader served on the Sedgwick County Board of Zoning Appeals and the Animal Control Advisory Board, according to official documents posted on the Internet, and was president of the Christ Lutheran Church in Wichita, according to the church's Web site.

Reported connection to some victims
Other information about Rader was sketchy, but the Wichita Eagle reported that he had worked for the Coleman camping gear firm in the early 1970s — as did two of BTK's early victims. He also apparently lived on the same street as one of his victims, according to media reports.

The newspaper said he had served in the military during the Vietnam War, though it was not clear whether he had seen action, and had worked for years at a home security company in Wichita.

Park City Mayor Emil Bergquist, citing a request of investigators, declined to comment about Rader’s employment record or any part of the case.

Messages left for Rader’s family members were not returned on Saturday, and no one answered the door at the home of his in-laws.

Not everyone had a bad story about Rader. David Cool said he had lived next to Raders’ in-laws for most of his life, and his parents knew Rader. He said Rader helped his parents, now in their 70s, with yard work.

“Mom doesn’t have a bad word to say about him,” Cool said.


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