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Lee Roy MARTIN
Date
On March 1, 1967, after several drinks,
Ann Lucille Dedmond took off, stranding her husband, Roger, outside a
doughnut shop in Gaffney, South Carolina. Roger wasn't very concerned;
she often did this after drinking.
The next morning he learned his wife
had been found dead in the center of the highway between the towns of
Union, South Carolina and Spindale, North Carolina. The police decided
that Roger was their killer and the jury chose to agree, despite the
fact that Dedmond clung to his innocence. He was sentenced to 18 years
and sent off to Union County Prison Camp. Normally that's the end of the
story, but not this time.
Two months later, on February 8, 1968,
the managing director, Bill Gibbons, of the local newspaper, The Gaffney
Ledger, received a phone call. The caller gave Gibbons detailed
instructions where two bodies could be found. He claimed he had killed
Ann Lucille Dedmond and insisted this was no joke. Gibbons was
unconvinced but passed the information along to police anyway.
He and the police followed the
instructions and discovered a nude female form near the People's Creek
bridge. It was 26-year-old Nancy Parris. She had been missing for one
day, having last been seen walking her poodle. On her back were
cigarette burns. When more officers arrived, they searched for the
second body. Where the caller had described, they found 14-year-old
Nancy Rhinehart. Nancy had been missing for ten days. As both victims
had been killed within a day of discovery, Rhinehart had to have been
held captive for those 10 days before being killed. Her body too, had
cigarette burns and they had both been strangled.
On February 13, 1968, Opal Buckson,
15, had been slightly quicker completing her morning chores, so that on
the way to the bus stop, a quarter mile from her home, her brother and
sister, Gracie trailed behind her. With a distance of 50 yards between
them, Gracie noticed a man grab Opal and force her into the trunk of his
blue Sedan. Both girls screamed while their brother ran home to tell
their father. Unfortunately the man closed the trunk and drove off.
Emanual Buckson ran out of the house to discover Opal's books sprawled
over the highway.
The day before this abduction, Bill
Gibbons had received another phone call. "If they don't catch me, there
will be more deaths," the caller threatened. He again claimed to have
killed Ann Lucille Dedmond. Gibbons tried to convince him to turn
himself in. "It's no use. I'm psycho and I'd get the chair. They'll have
to shoot me like the dog I am. The only reason I'm telling you all this
is to get that other boy out of prison. He's serving my sentence," was
the response.
To try to keep him talking, Gibbons
asked about Parris' poodle. The killer had exterminated the dog but
refused to give the location. There were tire tracks at the scene that
would be traced back to him. On the subject of Dedmond, he had stopped
her because she was erratically driving down the road. He had been
following the couple since they left the nightclub that evening. He also
described certain details of Dedmond and the murder that only the killer
could know.
On February 15, two days after Opal's
abduction, citizens of Union County were searching for her. On a back
road, Theodore Lang and Frank Henders saw a man beside a vehicle, who
promptly drove away. Suspicious, they took down the license plate number.
When they informed the police, the police drove to the site and
discovered fresh pine needles protruding from under a log. Under it lay
the strangled, cigarette burned body of Opal Buckson.
They were able to trace the plate
number to Lee Roy Martin, 30. On the surface, he seemed an unlikely
suspect. Yet inside, Martin claimed to hear voices. It wasn't him who
killed the women; but another Martin, a darker Martin. He led them to
clothing from the victim and the remains of Parris' poodle. He was found
guilty of four counts of murder and received four life sentences. Three
years into his sentences, Martin was killed by another inmate.
Roger Dedmond was released in 1969,
after a year in prison. Today, he works and lives in North Carolina.
Askyewolfe.com
Gaffney Strangler terrorized town
40 years ago, murdering 4 women
By Robert W. Dalton & Craig Peters - Herald Journal
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Gaffney has seen all of this before.
A serial killer's shooting rampage in this small town
in Cherokee County has stirred memories of Lee Roy Martin's killing
spree in 1967-68. Martin, called the "Gaffney Strangler," was convicted
of murdering four women and sentenced to life in prison.
Martin was stabbed to death by another inmate,
Kenneth Rumsey, on May 31, 1972.
State Sen. Harvey Peeler was a student at Clemson
University when the Gaffney Strangler killings paralyzed his hometown.
He said the five homicides in the county last week were "eerily similar
to that time."
"It brings out three emotions all at once: saddness,
fear and anger," said Peeler, R-Gaffney. "It's just unbelievable.
There's no rhyme or reason."
Martin claimed his first victim, Annie Lucille
Dedmond, on May 20, 1967. But her husband, Roger, was tried and
convicted of her murder.
On Feb. 8, 1968, Martin called Bill Gibbons at the
Gaffney Ledger. Gibbons was managing editor of the newspaper at the
time.
Martin gave Gibbons a list of names and directions to
where their bodies could be found.
First on the list was 20-year-old Nancy Carol Parris,
whose husband had reported her missing the night before. Her body was
found beside a bridge.
Next was 14-year-old Nancy Christine Rhinehart. Her
body was found buried under a brush pile, with one bare foot sticking
out.
The last name on the list was Dedmond's. Martin
wanted people to know that her husband was innocent.
Martin called Gibbons again four days later, this
time with a warning: There would be more.
The next day, the Gaffney Strangler killed his final
victim. Martin murdered 15-year-old Opal Diane Buckson after kidnapping
her from her school bus stop.
Two days later, police arrested Martin.
Gibbons, author of the book "Martin: Profile of 'The
Gaffney Strangler,'" said during a telephone interview Saturday night
that the emotions generated by the two killers are the same, but the
situations are different.
"We knew what (Martin's) motive was. He was after
young women," Gibbons said. "This fellow here has killed men, women,
young and older, all in different parts of the county."
Clyde P. Thomas, pastor of Cherokee Avenue Baptist
Church, where two of last week's victims -- Stephen Tyler, 48, and his
daughter, Abby, 15 -- were members, said the shootings reminded him of
the painful time more than 40 years ago.
"There's an indelible memory in my mind of going to
the bus stop, and parents being there with shotguns in their hands,"
Thomas said.
Glenn Fuller, a state constable and former state
trooper, is a deacon at Cherokee Avenue Baptist. He said the two cases
are "very similar."
"We both lived through the Leroy Martin era when we
were younger," he said. "…People were afraid to go to school, afraid to
go shopping. They kept their children locked in the house."
Gibbons said 40 years ago, authorities were concerned
that terrified residents would start "shooting at shadows."
He's fearful the same thing could happen this time.
"People really don't know what to do," Gibbons said.
"They're armed, which is what happened 40 years ago,"
he said. "If you step up on somebody's porch, you don't know whether
you'll get shot or welcomed."
Kill and Kill Again
By Catherine Skipp - Newsweek.com
Jul 9, 2009
Nine days of terror for
residents of Gaffney, S.C., have apparently come to an end. Early Monday
morning, police in Gaston County killed Patrick Tracy Burris, 41, the
man suspected of murdering five people in Cherokee County, 30 miles away.
Cops found Burris, who has a 25-page rap sheet, at a private home and
tried to haul him in for a parole violation. When he opened fire and hit
an officer, they shot him dead.
For residents of Gaffney (population:
13,000), the episode revives memories of another killer who stalked the
town 41 years ago. Lee Roy Martin murdered four young women over the
course of nine months in 1967 and 1968. He picked up his first victim,
Annie Lucille Dedmond, on a roadside after she'd fought with her husband,
then strangled and raped her. After months of lying low, he targeted
Nancy Christine Rhinehart, who was walking home from a friend's house.
Martin took her to a wooded area, where he choked and raped her. Soon
afterward, he did the same to Nancy Carol Parris, who'd been sitting on
the side of the road with her dog. And finally he snatched Opal Diane
Buckson on her way to school. When she fought back, Martin stabbed her
to death. Authorities finally caught him after a nine-day chase,
following a series of phone calls to the then managing editor of the
Gaffney Ledger, Bill Gibbons, who went on to write "Martin: Profile of
the Gaffney Strangler."
To learn more about the
parallels between the two rampages, NEWSWEEK's Catharine Skipp spoke to
Gibbons, now retired. Excerpts:
How did the town respond
to the latest killings, compared with the ones four decades ago?
[The manhunts] were both about
the same length. But the old one seemed longer to me. The reaction was
the same as this time—stores selling out of ammo, people packing guns,
people locking doors and turning on lights. You didn't dare go onto
anyone's porch or go in their yard for fear of being shot, and it
worsened as time went on.
Tell me about the first
killer, Lee Roy Martin.
He was a textile worker in
Cherokee County and a part-time taxicab driver. He was an all-around
good fellow, everyone thought.
How did your
interactions with him unfold?
It all started with a phone call
to me [in February 1968]. I thought it was a kook and a crank call. He
said, "Take out three sheets of paper," and he told me he would give me
three stories. He gave me some information and I wrote [the three
messages] down in my shorthand. At the end he said, "You take the
sheriff with you. Don't you go by yourself." I had just returned from
lunch and our reporter and photographer were out, or I probably would
have sent them. But I did go over to the jail, where the sheriff used to
live at the time. He said, "There is probably nothing to it, but we
better check it out." The sheriff said it seemed more plausible to
[check out] the second message because it was easier. It was to go to
the bridge on Ford Road and look in the water on the down side. We
thought we'd look right in the water and see a dog or a goat. We thought
it might be some trick or even a liquor deal. We looked over the side of
the bridge, and partly in the water and partly in the sand was Nancy
Carol Parris, nude and dead. We knew then, my God, this is real. The
Parris girl was dead only about a day and thrown over probably the night
before.
What did the other
messages say?
The first message was to go to
the second ridge, turn left at the woods, and walk a quarter mile to a
pile of brush. Nancy Christine Rhinehart had been dead for several days.
In fact, the body was already deteriorating. He had gone back several
times to have sexual relations.
And the third message?
The third message was: "March 9,
1967, Jerusalem Road, Union County. Annie Lucille Dedmond." Everyone
knew the Dedmond deal. Her husband was serving an 18-year sentence for
her murder. I don't think he would have called me except he said that
another man was serving his time. He was concerned about it.
So he had a conscience?
He had a split personality. One
side was a good guy. He said that this thing comes over him and he can't
control it. He feels like he is standing on a hill looking down on
himself. He said that he felt bad about the Parris girl because she was
hungry and he should have gotten her something to eat. She had a little
dog with her, and he killed the dog also.
Did he call again?
We had pooh-poohed the Dedmond
thing, and this is what kept him calling. He called four days later to
tell me about some items Mrs. Dedmond had with her and where to find
them. I told him, "This thing has to stop. Let's get together." He said,
"No, they are going to have to kill me like the dog that I am." That was
at nighttime. The next morning, the sheriff calls to say he has gotten
another one. This was an African-American girl on her way to school. He
picked her up on the roadside on his way to work. He threw her in the
trunk, but her sister got a good look at the car and gave a description
to police. Our paper put out a description of the car. That was the
Buckson girl, Opal Diane Buckson, 14.
How did he kill his
victims?
He stabbed Buckson. He had to [because
she fought back]. The others he choked with his belt. He would strangle
them and rape them, in that order. He told me that "fat and ugly women,
they don't need to fear me, and the men don't need to fear me either." [All
his victims were attractive young women.]
How was Martin caught?
Two citizens were out looking
around, and they spotted a car matching the description. The car took
off and he gave them the slip, but they got the license-plate number. It
went on another couple of days, but the police pretty much decided it
was him and had their eye on him. [The South Carolina Law Enforcement
Division] and the local authorities kept a close watch on the car. They
were gathering evidence and came to the conclusion he was the Gaffney
strangler. They arrested him one morning at the mill. He was tried,
convicted, and went to prison. While in prison, he had a little
disagreement with another prisoner. They liked the same guy. He was
stabbed and killed by the other prisoner, and that's the end of the
story.
Why did he wait so long
after the Dedmond killing in 1967 to commit the other three murders in
1968?
He attended the Dedmond trial,
and that had a lot to do with him doing the other murders. He was upset
with the miscarriage of justice, and that was the crowning blow. He
turned from his good side to his bad side.
What's known about the
new spree-killer suspect, Patrick Burris?
We don't know that much about
Burris yet, but he had a 25-page rap sheet from Maryland, Florida, West
Virginia, North Carolina—all those places. He had been convicted of
armed robbery in North Carolina and served time until April. He was on
work release, but he had immediately left. That is why [the Gastonia
Police Department] was looking for him for a parole violation. That's
why they went to the house. The two people he was with, he had just met
a few days earlier in a bar. He apparently was just going around with no
motive, just wanted to kill someone, and whoever ran up on him, he did.
The gun was not registered to him. The auto wasn't registered to his
name. He took some stuff off several victims, but he didn't get much. It
all happened in the same time frame, in the afternoons.
Why do you think your
small town has been terrorized by these two series of killings? Is it
just bad luck?
The first one was a Gaffney
native. The second one is pure bad luck. [Burris] has no connection to
Gaffney. He just happened to go up Highway 11. Highway 11 is the scenic
highway off I-85. If he came up, like it seems, from Gastonia, it would
be natural to go off on Highway 11, and all of [the murders] were on or
just off 11. If he'd gone up on 5, he would have gotten people in
Blacksburg, or on 74, it'd have been Shelby or Kings Mountain.
Any chance there's a
connection to your giant peach water tower, the Peachoid?
If we thought it did, we'd drain
that sucker. But we didn't have it the first time.
SEX:
M RACE: W TYPE: T MOTIVE: Sex.
MO:
Strangled females age 14-32.
DISPOSITION: Four life terms;
murdered in prison, May 1972.
Lee Roy Martin, center,
is led from the Cherokee County courthouse in 1968. Martin, called the
“Gaffney Strangler,” was convicted of murdering four women and sentenced
to life in prison. Martin was killed by another inmate in 1972.