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Neighbors paint mixed picture of BTK suspect


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Rader was being held at an undisclosed location, and it was not immediately clear if he had a lawyer. In Kansas, suspects generally appear before a judge for a status hearing within 48 hours of their arrest.

Prosecutor Nola Foulston said the death penalty would not apply to any crime committed between 1972 and 1994, when Kansas did not have the death penalty.

Clues to his identity
The BTK slayings began in 1974 with the strangulations of Joseph Otero, 38, his wife, Julie, 34, and their two children. The six victims that followed were all women, and most were strangled.

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Along with his grisly crimes, the killer terrorized Wichita by sending rambling letters to the media, including one in which he named himself BTK for “Bind them, Torture them, Kill them.” In another he complained, “How many do I have to kill before I get my name in the paper or some national attention?”

In several of the letters, BTK included clues to his identity. Police had long believed BTK was a graduate of Wichita State University, as Rader was. Letters sent in the past year included jewelry that police believed may have been taken from BTK’s victims and the driver’s license of one of the victims.

“He obviously was getting rid of his trophies; he was leaving us a wide-open trail,” said Richard LaMunyon, Wichita’s police chief from 1963 to 1989. “I think the ultimate goal was of him being caught.”

At one point, investigators made a list of white men who graduated from Wichita State in the 1970s. Officials said Rader’s name likely was on that list, but he wasn’t identified back then as a suspect.

Silent for decades
BTK stopped communicating in 1979 and remained silent for more than two decades before re-establishing contact last March with a letter to The Wichita Eagle about an unsolved 1986 killing.

Image: BTK suspect Dennis Rader
MSNBC TV
Sedgwick County Jail booking photograph of BTK Killer suspect Dennis Rader

The letter included a copy of the victim’s driver’s license and photos of her slain body. The return address on the letter said it was from Bill Thomas Killman — initials BTK.

Thousands of tips poured in, and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation gathered thousands of DNA swabs in connection with the investigation. In the end, DNA evidence was the key to cracking the case, said Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.

“The way they made the link was some DNA evidence, that they had some DNA connection to the guy who they arrested,” Sebelius said in an interview with The Associated Press. She did not elaborate.

The two newly identified cases were similar to the early ones with one exception, Sedgwick County Sheriff Gary Steed said: The bodies had been removed from the crime scenes. One of the victims lived on the same street as Rader.

“We as investigators keep an open mind. But only now are we able to bring them together as BTK cases,” he said.

On Friday, investigators searched Rader’s house and seized computer equipment.

Authorities, who generally declined to answer questions in detail after announcing the arrest, had little to say about why BTK resurfaced after years without contact.

“It is possible something in his life has changed. I think he felt the need to get his story out,” LaMunyon said.

The Associated Press and MSNBC reporter Michael Brunker contributed to this report.


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